by Blair Grey
Not Warranted
Red Eyes MC Series Book #2
Blair Grey
Copyright © 2018 by Blair Grey
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Contents
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1. Marcus
2. Leila
3. Marcus
4. Leila
5. Marcus
6. Leila
7. Marcus
8. Leila
9. Marcus
10. Leila
11. Marcus
12. Leila
13. Marcus
14. Leila
15. Marcus
16. Leila
17. Marcus
18. Leila
19. Marcus
20. Leila
21. Marcus
22. Leila
23. Marcus
24. Leila
25. Marcus
26. Leila
27. Marcus
28. Leila
29. Marcus
30. Leila
31. Marcus
32. Leila
33. Marcus
34. Leila
35. Marcus
36. Leila
37. Marcus
38. Leila
39. Marcus
Epilogue
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NOT WARRANTED
By Blair Grey
This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places and incidents are products of the writer's imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locales or organizations is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2018 Blair Grey
1
Marcus
Monday
I wasn’t surprised when Ray called me into his office following the club meeting on the Monday after Belle and Will’s wedding. But I was surprised that he still didn’t want to make a solid plan.
“Why a fish, though?” Cameron asked, frowning from behind his steepled fingers. “Is that something to do with Red Eyes’ past?”
Red Eyes was one of the most powerful motorcycle clubs in New Mexico, but even though the fish that had landed outside the reception hall had red eyes, there was no obvious connection between our club and the fish.
Ray shook his head. “It’s not a reference to the club,” he said, his tone grave. “It’s a reference to what they’ll do to us if they get their hands on us.”
Cameron snorted. “We’re in New Mexico,” he said. “It’s a bit of a drive to the nearest lake, let alone the ocean. Seems like there’d be a better way to dispose of us than to send us swimming with the fishes.”
“That’s not it,” I said slowly, glancing at Ray. “They mean they’re going to gut us.”
A look of dawning comprehension spread across Cameron’s face. Ray shook his head, though. “I think it’s directed at me personally,” he said. “They knew I would be there; it was my daughter’s wedding. And they chose that place, rather than our headquarters or here at the house, to send us a message. It was directed at me. Where my daughter could see.”
He growled the last part. Everyone knew he didn’t want Belle to have anything to do with Red Eyes business. He hadn’t even wanted her married to Will, one of Red Eyes’ best enforcers, or at least, not at first. I was still surprised he had agreed to the wedding, but then again, maybe he thought Will would be able to protect her. She was growing past the age where Ray could protect her forever.
Still, I knew he had to be pissed. The assholes who had threatened him had ruined his daughter’s wedding day, pretty much killing the celebration. What was meant to be the perfect day for her had ended in fear and confusion.
I leaned forward, using that as my angle. “We have to go after them,” I said fiercely. “You know you can’t let them get away with this. Next thing you know, they’ll grow even more brazen. Maybe they’ll even go after Belle in an attempt to get to you.”
Ray silenced me with a look. “We don’t know who ‘they’ are still,” he said.
“Bullshit,” I said, unable to hide my temper even though I knew I didn’t want to cross Ray. At least it was just Cameron and me in there with him, not the whole club. Ray was a lot more lenient when my insubordination happened in the semi-privacy of his home or office.
I narrowed my eyes at him. “It’s the Unknowns. Just like it was when they ransacked our clubhouse, something that we still haven’t answered even though that happened months ago now. They’re trying to move in on our territory; we know that.”
“Sure, we know that they’re trying to move in on our territory,” Ray agreed, sounding aggravated. “But we have no proof they were the ones behind the mess here at the clubhouse.”
Although today the place looked pretty much like it always had, it had taken some time to put it back to rights after it had been plundered, glass shattered all over the floors, and all the furniture stolen. What’s more, whoever had broken into the place—and I was sure it was the Unknowns—had stolen hundreds of thousands of dollars from the safe that had once been here, in Ray’s office.
It was clear what their motives had been: cause a scene and convince the local businesses that we were losing our hold on the area. If we couldn’t protect ourselves, how could we hope to protect them?
Anyway, we’d managed a good cover-up, thanks to Will getting his hands on a hefty inheritance at just the right time and lending the money to the club. But all the same, we should have taken action then, not waited for the Unknowns to make their next move. Ray didn’t agree, though. He didn’t want to risk members of the club by starting some sort of violent showdown.
Ray spread his arms in an expansive shrug. “Look, I’m not too worried about this,” he said. “It’s not the first threat on my life I’ve ever received. And yet, here I am. Still kicking.” He paused. “If it was the Unknowns who threw the fish, well, I have to figure that if they had the manpower to attack us, then they would have done so. They continue to just posture and stay out of our way. That means they’re still scared of us.”
“We should give them something to really be scared of,” I declared. “Something to get them off our territory once and for all. You don’t have to worry about putting me in harm’s way; I volunteer to go.”
Ray shook his head. “We’ll make a move when the time is right,” he said. “I still want more information about them before we dive in headfirst, fists swinging.”
“Especially because the new sheriff won’t take kindly to an outbreak of violence,” Cameron murmured.
I tried to hide my surprise. “What have you heard?” I asked.
Ray sighed. “He’s promised to crack down on the illegal activity going on in Las Cruces,” he explained. “And as you know, that’s something that appeals to a lot of the local residents. And especially the business owners who grudgingly pay us every month. He’s promised to do away with those systems.”
I snorted. “Like that’ll ever happen. I assume you’ve already bribed him to look the other way as far as Red Eyes is concerned?”
“Not yet,” Ray said grimly. “We have a meeting set up, but I haven’t managed to meet him yet.” He paused. “We need to get a good read on him. And we need to hold off on attracting his attention in ways we can’t afford, at least until we’ve got a good read on the guy. We need to know jus
t what he’s willing to overlook.”
“Hopefully he’ll be on our side,” Cameron mused. “If we tell him about the Unknowns and can prove that they’re a threat to the local community, maybe he would allow us to stay in exchange for making that little problem go away for him.”
“It would be nice,” Ray agreed. “And that is the way these things have worked in the past as far as Las Cruces is concerned. But we don’t want to count on anything until we’ve met in person. People only like to do business with people they know. Especially politicians. He needs to trust us before he’ll agree to look the other way. And he’s never going to trust us if we prove that we’re a nuisance before he knows what the situation is.”
We were all silent for a moment, thinking things over.
My blood was boiling, to be honest. I couldn’t believe that, yet again, Ray was willing to let them come on to our territory and mess with our club. This was their third strike, as far as I was concerned. We had dealt with them for long enough.
First, they’d convinced one of the new local businesses that they were the top dog around here, that the Unknowns were the ones that businesses should be paying their dues to each month. Then, they had met up with Ray and Will out at a place of their choosing and tried to kill them. They’d outnumbered our two guys, and Red Eyes had simply gotten lucky that Ray could fight like he did. Next, there had been the incident with the clubhouse. And now the gutted fish outside Belle’s wedding.
Enough was enough. I didn’t understand why Ray didn’t see it that way.
I exchanged a glance with Cameron and then decided to try one more time. “If we go after them now, we could have them out of here before—”
But Ray didn’t give me a chance to finish. “We aren’t going to go after them until I say so,” he said firmly. “The time isn’t right, not just now.”
I stared at him for a long moment and then got to my feet, shaking my head. “I hope we don’t regret this,” I muttered before stalking out of the room.
The thing was, I trusted Ray. I knew the kind of experience he had better than most other people in the club. He and my dad had been partners, once upon a time, back when Ray had formed Red Eyes. Dad never told me all the stories about Ray, but he had hinted at enough of the things he had known the other man to do.
I had no desire to cross Ray. But at the same time, I didn’t always agree with the choices he made in the running of the club. Personally, I thought he spent too much time thinking and not enough time doing. It was why most clubs had divided leadership: so that no one person’s ways of dealing with a situation could handicap the whole club. But no one in Red Eyes dared to stand up to Ray.
And who really was supposed to stand up to him? Of the main crew, Will was just another enforcer, and anyway, his heart wasn’t in the club anymore. He was more invested in his classes at the local college, in building a future for himself and Belle, than he was in anything to do with the Unknowns. Oh, he did what he had to, but he wasn’t going to cross Ray, especially not now that the man was his father-in-law.
Who else was there? Braxton and Landon? The twins didn’t have enough of a brain between them to pose any sort of challenge for Ray. He’d walk right over any of their suggestions. Grant? He was twenty-two and the newest member of the MC. He was still getting his feet wet, only learning the business. He had no choice but to listen to Ray.
That left Cameron and me. No one really knew why Cameron was part of the MC to begin with; he didn’t seem the type. He was quiet, bookish, a fucking whiz with numbers but definitely noncombative. He didn’t have the size or the power to stand up to Ray.
Then there were the other part-time members, the guys who were there when we needed a specific job done. But they didn’t know the day-to-day business of running the MC, and they wouldn’t know about this thing with the Unknowns until Ray gave them a plan against them. They wouldn’t be able to stand up to Ray then; their only response would be to tell Ray that either yes, they could follow the plan, or no, they couldn’t.
All that left was me. If anyone was going to challenge Ray, it had to be me.
But without an official position in the MC, other than sometimes an enforcer, Ray could easily choose to ignore me. It drove me up a wall. Especially since it wasn’t like I was just spouting shit. I was smart. I had a master’s degree, even. I understood more about politics, risk and reward, psychology, and all those other social sciences than anyone ever gave me credit for. But that never seemed to matter.
To my surprise, though, Cameron hurried after me as I stormed out of the clubhouse. He didn’t say anything for a couple of minutes, just matched my strides as I stalked briskly down the street, keen to put as much distance between myself and the clubhouse as I could before I did something I would really regret.
“You’re right, you know,” Cameron finally said, his voice quiet but his eyes flashing. I stopped, turning to face him, wondering if he was serious. He shrugged when I stared at him. “We can’t wait for Ray to decide what he wants to do. It’ll be too late by then,” he continued.
I narrowed my eyes at him. “Is this some kind of trick?” I asked. “Did Ray put you up to this, to test my loyalty or something?”
“No,” Cameron said, shaking his head, the hint of a smile lifting the corners of his lips. “Look, I’m not going to fight Ray on it. We both know that he’d have my hide if I did. He doesn’t respect me the way that he respects you. But you’re right. We can’t let this go unchecked. We can’t let the Unknowns take things too far. And they’re sure to do so if we keep letting things slide.”
“What about this business with the new sheriff?” I asked.
“I’ll try to figure out what I can about him,” Cameron offered.
“Good, do that,” I said. “I’ll handle the Unknowns. I’ll be discreet.” It was good to know I had some support from other members of the club, that I wasn’t the only person who thought we needed to act. But at the same time, Cameron wasn’t known for being involved in the physical side of things. He didn’t even want to stand up to Ray, let alone stand up to the Unknowns. I had to respect that.
I balled up one fist, silently vowing that I was going to do something about this. Even if it meant going against Ray’s wishes.
2
Leila
Monday
I scrubbed my hands, glad to be finishing up another shift. It had been a long one; I’d come in late the previous evening and worked the whole night, had a quick break around breakfast time, and gone right back to work until early afternoon. Monday—I guess it was Monday. With a schedule like mine, sometimes I lost track.
Amanda, the nurse I was switching off with, finally showed up. She was a few minutes late, as usual. I fought the urge to roll my eyes.
“All the paperwork is filed for everyone who came in during my shift,” I told her immediately, wanting to get out of there. I had things to do that afternoon. But I wasn’t going to shirk my duties even if she was late. “There are three people who are here to stay for at least tonight. Two were in accidents and had blood transfusions. Everything looks good, but you’ll need to keep an eye on them.”
“I know,” Amanda said, rolling her eyes at me. “Leila, tell you what? Why don’t I just read their files? I’m sure you’ve listed everything in your notes there. You don’t need to give me the verbal report.”
“Uh, yeah, I do,” I said, frowning at her. “It’s hospital policy. Otherwise, something might be overlooked.”
“I know how to do my job,” Amanda said peevishly.
“I’m not saying you don’t,” I said sweetly, even though I had my doubts about how detail-oriented she really was. No point in voicing that aloud, though. “But it’s hospital policy.” I paused and then continued. “The third patient is an elderly man, Mr. Winters. He’s got pneumonia. I’m pretty sure he’s going to be all right, but better safe than sorry. There were a few other people who came in last night, too. A couple—”
“Okay, okay,”
Amanda interrupted, throwing her hands in the air. “If you’ve already discharged them, I really don’t need to know.”
“Unless they come back,” I protested.
“Then you know what I’m going to do?” Amanda said, narrowing her eyes. “I’m going to get their names, and then I’m going to look up their records. Which I trust that you updated, with copious details about each patient and their situations.”
I wanted to protest further, but finally, I just shook my head. If she didn’t want to do her job the right way, that was her business. I made a mental note to talk to our supervisor about her, and then I left her to it.
It was a relief to walk outside. The warm sunlight and fresh air revived me a little after a long night in the stale, clinical smells of the emergency wing at the hospital. I stretched broadly, reveling in the way my shoulders cracked at the movement, relaxing me.
The truth was, no matter how difficult these long shifts were, I loved doing them. I loved working the night shifts; that was when things happened around here. You could wait around whole afternoons with no one coming in; it wasn’t like Las Cruces was that happening of a place. Or if people did come in, it was with little things like appendicitis or chicken pox. The night stuff was always new.