“Because I’ve been the cause of so many problems.”
I caress her cheek. “You’re a victim of shitty circumstances. You were a kid when this all started. How can you blame yourself? Reggie and Bear did this. Not you. Not even your mother.”
I get a sad smile.
“Don’t regret anything, Angel. Whatever we suffered was worth it. We’re here now. Together. Nothing can change that. Nothing.”
She cups my face between both hands and kisses me, parting her lips and letting me have that one taste of an angel worth dying for. Angel Laramie is all I need. She’s the air I breathe, the light in my dark life. If that makes me less of a man, so be it. Some brothers choose to keep their old ladies at a distance. Not me.
The patch I gave to my wife says it all. PROPERTY OF EAGLE runs deeper than her simply belonging to me. We’re blood. “I love you.”
She runs the pad of her thumb across my bottom lip. “I love you, too.”
“Love is an ever-fixed mark that looks on tempests and is never shaken.” I quote her favorite sonnet. “And this man can never be shaken, baby.”
Epilogue
Eagle
Ten weeks later
I’m sitting in my new office at the cabin. We officially opened the new chapter in Shreveport two weeks ago. Someone knocks on the door and I look up from my paperwork. “Come in.”
Lazaro Mendoza steps inside and grins. “Eagle.”
I stand and offer him my hand. “How’s married life?”
He rolls his eyes. “Good. I guess I should ask you the same thing.”
“She’s pregnant.”
“Who?”
“My wife, asshole.”
“Congratulations,” he says.
We both laugh and grip each other’s arms.
“About that little problem . . .” Lazaro reaches inside his jacket pocket and pulls out a business-sized envelope. “Thought you’d like this back.”
I take it. I find thirty thousand dollars inside. “What’s the extra ten G’s for?”
“A wedding gift from Tito.”
I nod and stash the envelope in the top drawer of my desk. “How’s your primo doing?”
“Not so good,” he says. “He took a one-way trip. No one has heard from him.”
When Lazaro found out what his cousin had done, he insisted on personally taking care of the problem. I let him. We’re still best friends, though our paths rarely cross. Some things from the past just stay the way they were meant to be.
“Are you staying for the barbecue?” I ask.
“Just dropped off three cases of Coronas and ten pounds of fajitas to the old ladies. What do you think?”
I round my desk and open the door so we can join Angel and my brothers outside. The Iron Norsemen throw several parties a year, for the charter, their families, and the people from the community who support our club. There’s a couple hundred people waiting for me. Just as I step out of my office, a man I don’t know wearing a club cut blocks my path.
“Are you Eagle Laramie?” he asks.
I look him up and down. He’s a couple inches taller than me with a week’s worth of stubble on his rugged face. He’s lean but strong looking. Definitely an outsider. “Yeah,” I say, offering my hand. “Who wants to know?”
“Brick,” he answers.
My new enforcer? He’s four weeks late showing up. “Where ya been, brother? Your old prez was starting to worry about you.”
“Took the scenic route down from the East Coast.”
I can appreciate his stay-the-fuck-out-of-my-way attitude. Austin Anderson, born in Texas, but raised in Philly. “Hungry?” I ask, pushing by him. “In case you didn’t see it, there’s a party outside. Grab a beer and come meet your new brothers.”
We walk outside and I spot Angel standing with her best friend Asia, her mother, and the other old ladies. Angel looks up at me and smiles. Pregnancy has only made her more radiant, more beautiful—if that was even fucking possible.
I join her and give her a hug, draping my arm across her shoulders. “Remember Lazaro?”
She nods. “It’s nice to see you again.”
“You, too, Angel,” he says, taking a sip of Corona. “Congratulations on your wedding and pregnancy. Eagle will make a good father.”
We chat for a few minutes and then Brick makes his way over. I introduce him to Angel. I recruited Brick to help secure our assets in Shreveport. If he proves himself over the next six months, that nomad patch on his cut will be replaced with a vice president patch. Our club needs new blood.
“This must be a big change for you, Brick,” Angel says. “Moving from the city to a small town like Shreveport.”
“I like it,” he offers. “The heat, clean air, and women.”
“You just rolled into town,” I observe. “What women did you have a chance to meet?”
“This one.” He hands me an expired ID card. I read the name on it, Starlet Vega. “Who is she?”
“That’s what I hope you can tell me. She’s from Holly Beach.”
I share the card with the old ladies. No one recognizes her. “Sorry, bro.”
Brick takes the ID back and tucks it in his vest pocket. “I’m going to unload my bags and take a shower.” He walks away.
“Tall, dark, and brooding,” Angel says.
“We’ll see how he works out soon enough,” I say, hoping I chose the right man, knowing the future of our club depends on it.
Keep reading for a preview of
* * *
ONE CHANCE WITH STARLET
* * *
Coming October 2017 from SMP Swerve
Chapter One
The rain starts, providing some relief from the brutal Louisiana humidity. Even late at night with a breeze blowing, I can’t get used to this heat. Not that I’m complaining much; the southern air is cleaner than the pollution I breathed in Philly for fifteen years. There’s no traffic. No congestion on the highway, even. But when the rain gets horizontal, even my Nightrider needs a break, and so do I.
I speed up, looking for the closest overpass, maneuvering carefully around the deep puddles so I don’t hydroplane. Three miles down the road, I spot one.
I’ve spent some hard years travelling the states on my bike, hundreds of miles between each Iron Norsemen clubhouse I visit. My latest destination: Shreveport, where I’m helping to launch a new chapter. I’m a nomad, a secret enforcer who goes where I’m needed to make sure my brothers are true to their patch. I don’t live by the same rules as other members. I don’t owe my allegiance to any one president or charter. I live for the club—for what our patch signifies. FEAR NONE, RESPECT FEW. That’s my code, the only thing I know.
I park under the overpass and climb off my bike. I reach inside my vest pocket and grab a cigarette. I light up and take a deep drag, liking the stale taste the smoke leaves in my mouth. I usually only smoke on the road, a habit I picked up from my father a long time ago. The bastard is worm fodder; three years ago he was buried at Arlington National Cemetery. A lifelong Marine, he beat the military way into my head and body from the time I took my first steps.
When I turned eighteen, I told him to go fuck himself. I said I wasn’t interested in following in his miserable footsteps, and he threatened to kill me. I laughed in his face, grabbed my backpack, and walked out of his house forever. The next time I saw him, he was laid out in an open casket—dead of a heart attack at fifty.
I flick the filter into the trees lining the road. Look where the fuck I ended up, old man. Sometimes I talk to him when no one is around. Usually when the weight of the world is bearing down on me and I realize how alone I really am. There’s no going back, no matter what I do. I can’t resurrect my father and apologize for never calling him, for not reaching out to him when I heard about his sudden illness from a family friend in Philly.
Instead, I dug my boots in deeper and embraced my solitary lifestyle—loving the nomad patch on my chest, living for it.
Just
as I’m about to unpack my bedroll to take a quick nap, I hear screeching tires and see the flash of headlights. Through the blur of the heavy rain, I spot the only car I’ve seen on the highway for hours. It weaves to the left, then right, passes me, then drives off the road, hitting the trees up ahead. Shit.
I jog the hundred yards or more, prepared to find someone gravely injured or even dead. There’s no cell service out here, so whoever it is, they’re fucked.
I scramble between the trees to find a late-model convertible, the front end buried in a tree. The headlights are still on, and I wipe the wet from my eyes as I tug the driver’s side door open. There’s no one inside. Music blares from the speakers, and the AC is still blowing strong. I check for any sign of the driver. There’s nothing to speak of, just a bottle of water on the passenger seat. In fact, the vehicle is too clean.
That’s when I hear someone behind me. I twist around and, from pure instinct, grab whoever it is by the throat. Blame my quick reflexes and paranoia on my father. He taught me to react first and ask questions later.
She’s soaked to the bone. There’s a cut above her right eyebrow. Confusion and fear show in her wide eyes, but she doesn’t say a word. I let her go slowly, my gaze fixed on her beautiful face. She’s shivering so hard her teeth chatter.
“You need to get out of the rain,” I say.
She gestures at the car. “Do you suggest crawling back into that death trap?”
Her long red hair is plastered to her face and shoulders, and she’s only wearing cutoff shorts and a skimpy halter top. I look down at her feet and find cowboy boots, then shake my head. Every woman I’ve ever met is unprepared for emergencies.
Thunder cracks overhead, and she flinches.
“Can you walk?” I yell over the noise.
She nods.
I turn back and reach inside the car and turn the ignition off, then pocket the keys. She walks to the other side of the vehicle, opens the door, and grabs a backpack off the floorboard. Once she joins me on the driver’s side again, I take a last look around, knowing there’s nothing we can do for the car right now. “Come with me.” I grab her hand and drag her to the overpass where she can at least get out of the rain.
My bike’s headlight illuminates the bridge, so we can see each other clearly. I dig in my saddlebags and pull out a blanket and thermos filled with hot coffee and offer them to her.
She meets my gaze, then eyes the stuff in my hands. “Thank you.” She wraps the blanket around her shoulders and then tries to uncap the thermos. When she fails a third time, I take it and easily pop the top off.
“Here.”
I watch as she takes a deep drink, still shaking from the wet cold.
Now that she’s safe, I scrutinize her appearance a bit more. Green eyes and burgundy hair, a color no woman is born with. Her eyes are wide-set and her nose is thin and perfect. There’s just a hint of freckles on her cheeks. And her full lips would be a welcome pleasure on my cock. There’s a tiny diamond stud in her nose, and her arms are tattooed—the right one a full sleeve.
I silently admire her ink: intricate Celtic knotwork and magnolia trees, the sun and moon, and the name of some asshole I bet she doesn’t fuck anymore.
“Who’s Sammy?” I ask, testing her.
She frowns and glares at me. “No one you need to worry about.” She tucks her wet hair behind her ear. “Who are you?” She considers my vest, her eyes lingering on my nomad patch. “You’re a brother?”
“I’m something.”
“I bet you are.” There’s no warmth in her tone, like she disapproves of who and what I am.
Ignoring her icy demeanor, I stare out at the pounding rain. “This isn’t going to let up anytime soon. Do you have family nearby? Somewhere I can take you?”
She wraps her arms around her middle, hugging herself. “Do you always ask so many questions?”
Rough around the edges. Defensive. Almost scared. “Only when I need to.”
“And what about that choking shit?” she asks.
“Don’t sneak up on a brother next time.” She’s obviously spent some time around an MC. Maybe an old lady or a passaround, or maybe she just doesn’t like what we represent. I shrug, losing interest. “No loss to me, girl,” I say. “You can stay here all night or accept a ride to whatever bayou-side shack you want. Your choice.”
She chuckles then. “Bayou-side shack? Let me guess: You’re not from around here.”
“Does it matter?”
“Nope.”
An awkward moment of silence follows, then she speaks up again. “Thanks for checking on me.”
“You’re welcome.”
“I’m Starlet.” She extends her hand, and I notice she’s wearing thin gold bands on each finger and her thumb.
“Brick,” I say, shaking her tiny hand, feeling her warmth and liking it.
“Brick? What kind of name is that?”
I don’t miss the quick glance between my legs. I smirk, used to that reaction whenever a woman hears my name. “Want to find out?” I ask.
The blanket slips off her shoulders as she hooks her fingers on her belt loops and looks me up and down. “You are a sonofabitch, aren’t you?”
I laugh. “Sometimes. Something tells me I’m the kind of dude you like. A lot.”
She rolls those startling green eyes at me and smiles, revealing a dimple in her right cheek. “Maybe. If you give me a ride on that badass machine of yours.”
I turn to my bike. “You like Harleys?”
“I like Fat Boys and Nightriders.”
Aphrodisiacs don’t exist, but a hot woman talking bikes might just be it for me. I look at her again, admiring her thin legs and smooth, white skin, determined to fuck her before we part ways tonight. “Get on, Starlet. We’ll find a place to have a drink before I take you home.”
She steps back as I repack the saddlebags and then hand her the half helmet I keep for passengers. Without complaining, she straps it on her head, once again demonstrating her comfort around bikes and a man like me. I climb on first and watch as she straddles the seat behind me, wrapping her arms around my waist, pressing her tits into my back, lighting me up inside like Fourth-of-July fireworks.
Within seconds, we’re racing down the highway. I’m hoping to find a bar first, then a motel.
About the Author
David Jensen Photography
Violetta lives in Alaska and spends her days writing romance. When she’s not reading, writing, or editing, she enjoys time with her husband, pets, and friends. She loves to hike, fish, and ride motorcycles and 4-wheelers.
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Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-n
ine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Epilogue
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Excerpt: One Chance with Starlet
About the Author
Copyright Page
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
ONE TASTE OF ANGEL. Copyright © 2017 by Violetta Rand. All rights reserved. For information address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
www.stmartins.com
Cover photograph: couple © feedough/iStock
ISBN 978-1-250-14781-3 (ebook)
First Edition: May 2017
Our eBooks may be purchased in bulk for promotional, educational, or business use. Please contact the Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department at 1-800-221-7945, ext. 5442, or by e-mail at [email protected].
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