“Don’t you fucking be nice to me.” Shelly-Ann’s face curdled. “You think you’re something now that you’re wearing that cut? You think being with the Sinners will solve all your problems? You’re too damn good to be bad. You don’t have what it takes to be a biker chick. When Jimmy finally comes for you—and nothing will stop him now that he thinks you’ve got his money—I’ll be fucking relieved ’cause I’m tired of watching you fight. Just give up. You’ll never beat him. I don’t understand why you never give the fuck up.”
“What money? I don’t understand.”
Cade put a steady hand on Dawn’s shoulder. “I almost forgot. I brought some ammo for your gun, babe.” He reached into his pocket and handed her a magazine. “That enough?”
She stared him in disbelief. “Um … thanks for giving me that ammo, and so subtly threatening my ex-sister-in-law in the parking lot of the zoo.”
Totally oblivious to her sarcasm, Cade smiled. “Pleasure, sweetheart.”
Shelly-Ann rubbed her wrist, bouncing back to her nasty, officious self in seconds. “You’re quite the pair. A regular Bonnie and Clyde. I’ll be glad when Jimmy’s done with you and I can go back to my nice quiet life.”
Cade’s eyes lit with humor. “Teamwork. You should try it sometime.”
Five minutes later, after a flurry of tears and good-byes, Dawn followed Cade to his motorcycle in the parking lot. But when he put out a hand to help her mount, she took a step back.
“Did you really think I would shoot her? I felt good when I hit Stan because what he did was so utterly wrong, and so deeply personal, but it doesn’t mean I’ve changed my views about violence. I’m not going to run around with a gun shooting anyone who pisses me off. Not Jimmy, and certainly not Shelly-Ann.”
Cade cupped her face between her hands and stared at her intently. “You can’t avoid violence in this life. Even when you left Mad Dog, you were still a part of his world. He’s playing the game by different rules. Now you’re on even footing. You have options. And one of them is me. Not just now. Always.”
“What are you saying?” Her heart thudded in her chest. She knew what he was saying. She just didn’t want to hear it.
He leaned down and brushed a soft kiss over her forehead. “I’m saying I’m here for you. Anything I am and anything I have is yours. However you want to deal with this situation, I’m on board. And when we both get what we want, when you’ve got your girls, and I’ve got justice, I’m not gonna let you go.”
FIFTEEN
My ink is my heart. My cut is my bond. My bike is my soul.
SINNER’S TRIBE CREED
Cade joined Gunner, Zane, and a handful of Demon Spawn brothers crammed into the only strip bar in Whitefish. The dark, scuzzy dive in the center of town contained a small stage with a pole, no more than twenty worn, wooden tables, and enough smoke to conceal a wildfire. But it fitted Cade’s mood to a T. He didn’t want to be here. The Sinners didn’t want to be here. And Demon Spawn definitely didn’t want to be here since they suspected the Sinners hadn’t come for a simple social visit.
And they were right. The Sinners hadn’t just traveled to Whitefish to deal with the Demon Spawn members who attacked Zane and Cade in the alley. Dax had obtained some very disturbing information from Matchstick in the Sinner dungeon, and Cade and Zane intended to find out if it was true.
So now they were all pretending to celebrate, but the only person with a smile was the stripper on the pole.
Gunner slid over in the booth and Cade joined him, falling back against the plush, black velvet cushions. The prospect hovered at his shoulder, and he sent the kid away to find him a drink.
“Nice of you to join us.” Gunner grabbed a beer from the collection in the center of the table. “I wasn’t sure you’d make it tonight.”
“Neither was I,” Cade said, keeping his voice low. “Who woulda thought I’d be spending my honeymoon offing a bunch of betraying Demon Spawn bastards?”
“Whaddya think of our girls?” The Demon Spawn VP, Skid Mark, soon to learn he was the new president, leaned over to shout above Warrant’s “Cherry Pie,” while the dancer spun around the pole. He was clearly drunk, his eyes at half-mast and his words slurred. “I hear you’re the expert.”
“Not anymore. Got an old lady now.”
“That’s right. I heard about that, too. You stole Mad Dog’s old lady.”
Gunner tensed, but Cade played it cool. “Can’t steal something if it didn’t belong to him.”
“You steal his kids, too? They’ll ruin your life, man. Suck your wallet dry.”
Gunner was out of his seat now. And Zane, too. The prospect put down the beer he’d brought for Cade and moved to intercept the bouncer heading their way.
“You got a lot of personal information about Mad Dog’s situation.” Cade sipped his beer and fought for calm. “Kinda curious since Mad Dog lives way down south and you live way up north. But then, he likes to visit up here, doesn’t he? Maybe he’s a big skier, or does he come for the roads? Or maybe he likes disrespecting a brother’s old lady, just like you.”
Theory of a Deadman’s “Bad Girlfriend” blasted through the tinny speakers and a new dancer took the stage, but the audience was now watching the conversation between Cade and Skid Mark. Tension thrummed through the bar, a powder keg ready to explode.
“Hey man, no offense. Just rumors. Congrats on getting hitched.”
“He didn’t mean to offend.” Skid Mark’s companion offered Cade a beer. “Sometimes he runs off at the mouth when he’s had too much to drink.”
Cade pushed the beer away. Disrespect was disrespect and it couldn’t be smoothed over with words. Plus, he’d been itching for this fight since he left Conundrum. According to Matchstick, a handful of Demon Spawn members were Black Jack puppets, bikers who did the Jacks’ dirty work in exchange for the promise of being allowed to form a new Black Jack chapter, or be patched over to the club, and it was time to put them in their place.
Justice for their treason would be swift and fierce, and Cade was leading the charge.
“Not interested in beer, but I am interested in teaching shit-for-brains a lesson in respect.” He grabbed Skid Mark by the hair and smashed his head down on the table. “You can fucking apologize to me outside for disrespecting my old lady.”
The music kept playing.
The dancer kept dancing.
The bikers drew their weapons.
Zane paid off the bouncers.
Cade’s phone buzzed in his cut.
“Gotta take a call.” He thudded Skid Mark’s head on the table again. “You gonna walk outside or I gotta drag you?” He hadn’t expected to have to make a show of the Sinners’ dominance so soon, or in public, but what the hell.
Let’s get the party started.
“Fuck you,” Skid Mark said.
Cade pulled his gun from his cut and held it to Skid Mark’s head. Skid Mark’s Demon Spawn brothers pointed their weapons at Cade. He almost laughed at their lack of resolve.
“Tell your brothers to stand down or someone is gonna get hurt and I promise it will be you.”
“Stand down,” Skid Mark shouted, blood trickling from the side of his head.
The dancer on the pole did a Hands-Free Marley to Mötley Crüe’s “Girls, Girls, Girls” and the dudes in perverts’ row at the front clapped. Clearly there had trouble in the bar before. Cade had never seen a more brazen performance of “the show must go on.”
Once upon a time, Dawn had been that girl on the pole. She’d danced, not because she wanted to dance, but because she had been given no choice. She would have finished her show and then gone down to perverts’ row for the lap dances that were a dancer’s bread and butter. Men would have touched her. Maybe more. And all the while Mad Dog would have watched and done nothing to protect her. Cade clenched his hand by his side, pushing the thoughts away as he tried to focus on the task at hand. As if he weren’t wound up tight already.
His phone buzzed again
. Zane, Gunner, and T-Rex disarmed the Demon Spawn brothers and tossed their weapons into the prospect’s backpack. They wouldn’t have been quite as bold if there hadn’t been twenty more Sinners waiting on their bikes outside.
Cade threw a wad of money on the table and forced Skid Mark up at gunpoint. “Let’s go for a walk. I’ll leave your mouth alone so you can apologize and tell me which of your members are Black Jack puppets.”
Skid Mark paled and Cade snorted a laugh. “Yeah, we know about the Jacks, and you’re gonna give us a list of the puppet members. If your list doesn’t match the one we got from Matchstick, you get to make up the difference.” He yanked Matchstick’s cut from his pack and threw it at Skid Mark. “Congrats, by the way. Looks like you got a promotion. Matchstick won’t be needing that anymore. Wear it while you can, ’cause it won’t be for long.”
His phone buzzed again—probably Jagger wanting an update. Damn irritating. He nodded at Gunner and Zane to take his hostage, and then he turned off his phone. Punishment time. Jagger would damn well have to wait.
He headed outside where his Sinner brothers had herded the rest of the Demon Spawn members into a field behind the strip club. The local sheriff and his deputies were hog-tied in the police station, and the roads were blocked. No one was coming to help Demon Spawn now.
Cade handed Skid Mark a piece of paper and a pen. Skid Mark shuffled over to a patch of grass, silver in the moonlight, and wrote down a list of names that matched the one Dax had given to Cade. The traitors, including Skid Mark, were culled from the rest of the herd, and Gunner ushered the remaining Demon Spawn members away. Cade held a gun to Skid Mark’s head.
“Bad fucking decision.”
“Yeah. We should never have listened to Mad Dog, but Matchstick trusted him. They were friends going way back. He told us the Jacks were the stronger club. He said they’d been making up puppet members all over the state, hiding their numbers so they could take you down when you weren’t expecting it. He said we should join the winning team before it was too late.”
Cade didn’t know what Mad Dog had to do with the Black Jack puppets in Demon Spawn, because Matchstick had kicked the bucket before he could share that information. Usually Zane kept Dax under control during torture sessions, but he’d been busy gathering intel on the Jacks and Dax got carried away. He loved his work, but sometimes the sadist in him got a little too greedy.
He kicked the gravel underfoot, struggling between offing the bastard now and pumping him for more information. “Mad Dog didn’t think his own club was the winning team? Demon Spawn and the Devil’s Brethren would have been a good fit.”
Skid Mark cast a worried glance at his brothers and Cade cuffed him on the head. “Don’t look at them. Look at me. I’m the one who chooses whether you live or die. If you’re cooperative, you might wind up in the hospital instead of the grave the brothers are digging just outside of town. I’m interested in Mad Dog and why he’s sniffing around.
“Mad Dog is a Black Jack puppet in the Brethren, like some of his men. The Jacks are backing him to win the Brethren election on the condition he patches the entire club over to the Jacks. He’s been paying off Wolf’s supporters to vote for him ’cause the Jacks made him all sorts of promises if he can get the job done.”
Good information. Cade shared a glance with Zane who nodded in silent agreement. If they’d picked up Skid Mark instead of Matchstick, Dax wouldn’t have had any fun. They hadn’t even had to break a finger. “You shoulda called us.”
Sweat beaded on Skid Mark’s forehead, and he wiped it away with the back of his hand. “Hell … we’re a small club. Most of us have families and we support them mainly by running guns for the bigger clubs. I’m a single dad with two little girls. Mad Dog came here recruiting for the Jacks. He said the Jacks would let us form our own chapter, fully funded, and give us a cut of the arms trade up north. How could we pass that up? You Sinners just came in here, forced us to be a support club, and walked away. We helped Mad Dog empty a warehouse where the Brethren were storing their weapons, and he paid us for our trouble.”
Gunner kicked him in the side. “You pass it up because you’re a Sinner support club. You pass it up out of loyalty, respect, and the fact that if you don’t you fucking die.”
Cade felt a curious stab of conscience. By rights the Sinners could beat the shit out of all the Demon Spawn traitors, trash their bikes, burn down their homes, take their women, and anything else they owned. And yet he couldn’t shake the image of Skid Mark’s little girls and how they would feel if their daddy didn’t come home. What would Maia and Tia do without Dawn?
You don’t have to solve every problem with violence. Dawn’s words filtered through his mind, and yet, his dad had taught him the opposite. His dad used his fists to make a point, regardless of who was on the other side, or whether his little boy was watching.
Still, he couldn’t let it slide. This was the life he’d chosen to lead and if the Sinners didn’t make a show of force, word would spread, and the vultures would start circling. But death wasn’t the only way.
“Destroy their bikes, burn their cuts, then beat the fucking crap out them.”
Gunner frowned. “You don’t want ’em dead?”
“No. I want them punished. Then I want them thrown into a van and driven to the Black Jack clubhouse. Paint ‘em with the Sinner’s Tribe logo and toss ‘em by the back door like the trash they are. They wanna play at being Jacks, they can find out what it’s really all about. And the Jacks will get the message. We’re gonna find their puppets and root them out. And then we’ll be coming for them.”
* * *
“I can’t believe you dragged us here. Jagger is going to go ballistic when he finds out we’re meeting with Bunny.” Arianne followed Dawn through Sticky’s Pool Hall, weaving through the crowds milling around the vast sea of pool tables. Banks followed behind Arianne, growling at anyone who crossed his path. He’d come along as muscle and he was doing a bang-up job at playing the part.
”I can’t believe Cade agreed to this.” He side-stepped a trip of college girls, and fell back in line.
“I didn’t give him a choice,” Dawn said over her shoulder. “And I have a feeling he wasn’t really paying attention. But Bunny knows everyone. He’ll know the private investigator in the video and through him, he may be able to find out who was on the other side of the camera. I can let the Sinners bring the girls home through force or politics, but I’ll always be looking over my shoulder. This way, no one will question my ability to look after my children.”
“Is Bunny gonna drag them to court and make them talk, too?” Banks asked. “Or you got another plan? No way is that PI gonna hold up his hand and say he handed you a bag of crack and then lied to the court for money.”
“I’m working on that part. I might need some help to convince him.” She skirted around a table and headed for the back where it wasn’t as busy. Located in the basement of an ancient brick building on the far edge of Conundrum, Sticky’s was famous for its pristine tables, local beer, and sticky floors. Dawn had never been in the bar when it was less than packed and she couldn’t believe her luck when she’d spotted an empty table at the back when they walked in the door.
“You’ll need a gun, maybe a knife, and a whole load of Sinners to make him show his face in court.”
Dawn staked her claim on an empty pool table, tossing her jacket on the padded bumper. Yeah, she knew her plan had holes, but secretly, she was hoping Bunny might have some dirt on the PI, or his accomplice, that would make the second part of her task that much easier. If not, she would have to deal with her violence issues and ask for Cade’s help because nothing was going to keep her away from her girls.
“Why didn’t you meet with Bunny before?” Arianne ran an expert hand over the pool table. Viper had given her a pool cue for her third birthday, and she was now the best player in the MC. None of the Sinners would play against her because of the shame of possible defeat by a woman, so the lure
of a good match at Sticky’s had been enough to convince her to help Dawn out, despite the bad memories she had of Bunny’s dungeon.
“I was just so desperate to be done with this world, I pushed everything away. Even when I brought you here last year, I didn’t really think about how I knew Bunny or what he could do for me. I just thought about helping you.”
“And now I get to return the favor.”
“Don’t like pool,” Banks muttered as he stared at the table. “Don’t like Sticky’s. Don’t like spending my night off playing pool at Sticky’s just to keep you outta trouble.”
“You love pool,” Dawn countered. “I know for a fact you spend hours playing with the bouncers after the bar closes at night. They say you win back all the money you paid them for the night so they have to keep working.”
“Gonna fire them when I get back to the bar.” Banks stared down at the empty table and shook his head. “Crooked. Felt’s not been looked after. Cues are bent. Balls are probably weighted.”
Arianne laughed. “Well then, since you know everything that’s wrong, I guess you won’t mind playing against me. I promise to go easy on you.” She grabbed a cue and a block of chalk. “We’ll have a quick game until Dawn needs us. How much do you want to put down? I’m thinking of buying a new bike and I’m a couple grand short.”
“Don’t like playing against sharks,” Banks said, but he took a cue and the faintest smile curved his lips.
“I’ll go let him know I’m here.” Dawn left them and headed over to the bar. Back when she’d been a dancer, Bunny paid Jimmy a small fortune for Dawn’s exclusive attention at the Pink Cherry dance club, and although Jimmy didn’t allow her to have sex with her clients—that privilege was his alone—he did allow almost anything else. Bunny took full advantage. However, he was always respectful and civil, often chatting with her after a dance despite the extra cost, and they forged an understanding. Sometimes Dawn would break the rules. In return, she earned a mark in Bunny’s book.
The Sinner’s Tribe Motorcycle Club, Books 1-3 Page 53