Diesel (Dead Souls MC Book 5)

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Diesel (Dead Souls MC Book 5) Page 13

by Savannah Rylan


  I heard the Black Hornets chattering in my ear as me and my men stayed by the truck. They continued to rattle off information that was crucial in allowing my mind to map out the place. I stood beside the truck and looked at the giant structure. Two stories. A rooftop that most certainly had a stairwell entrance. Windows wrapping around the entire second floor but barely any windows on the first. Just slivers of glass that would let the most minimal of light in.

  “Diesel.”

  Knox’s voice ripped me from my trance as I looked over at him.

  “Another dead end, taking another left. Very few lights, and none of the doors lead into the main warehouse floor. Just a bunch of small rooms that look like pathetic offices,” Dean said.

  “What is it?” I asked.

  “Do you see what I see?”

  He pointed over to one of the windows and I squinted. At first, I shook my head. I didn’t know what he was talking about or what the hell I was supposed to be looking at. Then, I saw it. The smallest motion that looked as if someone was moving around. I squinted my eyes in the darkness as the guys started rattling off in my ear again, but I wasn’t paying attention.

  The movement from the window.

  It looked like someone was waving.

  “Knox, beam your flashlight,” I said.

  “That might give away our--”

  “Do it now,” I said.

  I heard him sigh before the light flashed on, and the second it caught the window I knew who I was looking at.

  Brynn.

  Holy hell, Brynn was in the building.

  “Dean,” I said.

  “On my count,” he said.

  “Dean, stop. I know where Brynn is.”

  But before I could get the entire statement out, we heard gunfire. I watched Brynn’s eyes widen before she ducked out of the window and my guys went racing for the door. The gunfire was our cue, but I wasn’t headed anywhere near the firefight. I rushed in behind Knox and diverted off to my right, going in search of Brynn. I turned on my flashlight and waved it around, casing the darkened hallway.

  “Brynn!” I called out. “Where are you!?”

  Then, I felt something come down onto the nape of my neck.

  I groaned as I stumbled forward, keeping a strong grip on my gun. I turned around and hit someone with the barrel of it, listening as they stumbled back into the wall. I swept the gun behind my back and reached for the man, wrapping my hands right around his neck. I wanted him to struggle. I wanted him to feel death take him under. No easy death was good enough for these assholes, and I’d make sure each and every one of them suffered.

  “Diesel!”

  I heard Rock come around the corner as the man in my grasp fell limp. His flashlight shined on me before I looked down at the body on the floor. A Black Saddle shithead with a pistol in his hand.

  Idiot.

  “Come on. We need all the help we can get,” Rock said.

  “Brynn’s around here somewhere. I saw her through the window,” I said.

  “And we’ll find her. But right now, we have to eliminate the threat. You know this. Don’t go stupid because a woman is involved.”

  “She isn’t any woman.”

  “Trust me, I know that. I know that more than any one of you. But that doesn’t change the order in which we do things. We get rid of the threat, then we go looking for the survivor.”

  I took one last look down the hallway and my heart screamed to run down it. That was where I had seen Brynn. I knew that was where she was, in one of the rooms that shot off the damn hallway. But Rock was also right. If we could eliminate the threat to her, then no matter where she was, we’d find her alive. So, I whipped my gun around, grasped it between my hands, and nodded.

  “Come on,” I said. “Let’s go.”

  I followed Rock down the hallway as gunshots bounced off the walls. I ducked into a room to take cover, then peeked out only to take aim and shoot. There were several Black Saddles that seemed to come out of nowhere, and the more we shot the more they seemed to multiply. I went from room to room, clearing it before rounding corners and doing it all over again. But my mind wasn’t in the shooting, or with my men.

  It was with Brynn.

  If she knew I had been out in the hallway, why hadn’t she come out to me? Was she scared? Did she think maybe I’d shoot her thinking she was one of the men we were chasing? I didn’t know, and part of me didn’t want to know. Brynn was a strong woman, but everyone had their breaking point. Maybe she was scared and cowering. Begging through her tears for me to go find her.

  The urge to run after her was strong, but I knew I was where I needed to be in order to keep her safe. Not at the forefront of the fighting, but in the middle of the action to make sure they couldn’t get to her.

  “Another one down.”

  “How many bodies?”

  “I count four.”

  “Yep, got four as well.”

  “Anyone seen Brynn!?”

  A round of gunfire popped off before heavy breathing could be heard over my earpiece.

  “I saw her looking through a window down the hallway. I turned right through the doorway instead of left. There was a Black Saddle already down there that I choked to death. There are actually five bodies,” I said.

  “Make that six,” Grave said.

  “How many of those fuckers are here?” Dean asked.

  The gunfire ceased and silence fell over all of us.

  “No way of telling,” Rock said. “All we can do is keep pressing forward.”

  “Then that’s what we’ll do,” I said.

  “You said you saw Brynn? Alive?” Dean asked.

  The sorrow and anxiousness in his voice punched me in my gut.

  “Yes,” I said. “Alive. So, let’s end these fuckers, get your daughter, and get the fuck out of here.”

  We weaved our way down the corridor, striking men as they popped out. A few of them shot off some rounds at us, but between the camouflage and the tactical gear the Black Hornets had on them, no one stood a fucking chance at taking us out. It was the hardest I’d ever had to concentrate. I had to physically tell myself to keep focused. I had to mutter it to myself until I was listening to the sound of my own voice and nothing else.

  “You good, Diesel?” Knox asked.

  I looked over at him as I changed out the magazine in my gun.

  “I’ll be better once we have Brynn,” I said.

  “You and I both,” Dean said as he stepped up beside me.

  Then, I heard it.

  I heard Brynn’s voice.

  “D!”

  My head whipped around in the same direction as Dean’s.

  “Did you hear that?” he asked.

  “Daddy!”

  “That’s Brynn,” I said.

  “Help!”

  Every single hair on my body stood on end as I charged back down the hallway. I followed the echoing of her voice and ignored the cries from my men behind me. This ended now. Within the next few minutes, I wanted Brynn in my arms and nowhere else. I barreled down a small side hallway I had to turn sideways in order to get down, my feet taking me as fast as they could go. I charged down the narrow hallway before spilling out into another one. I heard a gun cock and whipped my gun around to take aim at the person down the hallway. Two shots, a groan, and a body that hit the floor.

  Good.

  None of these men would survive tonight. Not if I had anything to do with it.

  “Rex! Stop it!”

  “You, stupid bitch. Did you really think you could kill one of my men and get away with it!?”

  A resounding crack made my vision boil and my blood race through my veins. I ran down the hallway, following the sound of Brynn’s crying. Tears. Sobs. A heaving chest. I’d seen Brynn cry maybe three times in the years I’d known her. She never cried. It wasn’t something she was capable of. Strong wasn’t even a word to define her. More like rock solid. A foundation. Rebar encased in cement and solidified with a founda
tion of molten rock.

  And she was crying.

  “Brynn!” I exclaimed as I hit a dead end.

  “D! I’m in here!”

  “Can you find us?” Rex asked.

  Their voices bounced off the walls as I looked around.

  “Can you find your way through the maze?” Rex asked.

  “Stop it. Just stop. Stop it, Rex! No!”

  My eyes fell onto the wall in front of me before I raised my gun. I shot off bullets, piercing the rusted sheet metal and watching it break apart in front of me. I was done with this maze. Done with this warehouse. Done with this club and this part of the world and this part of my fucking life. Rex died today, and if I had anything to do with it, Brynn would be mine by the end of the fucking week.

  I riddled the wall with bullets until the rusted sheet metal crumbled away, revealing the highly-coveted warehouse floor.

  And in front of me was Rex, peeling himself off the floor with his arm wrapped around Brynn’s neck.

  “How nice of you to join us,” he said as he cocked a gun.

  He stuck it right against Brynn’s temple as she gasped.

  “D. You’re alive,” she said. “I thought they’d--”

  “It’s going to take a lot more than a sedative to kill me,” I said as I stepped through the wall. “Now I want you to close your eyes.”

  “What?” Brynn asked.

  My gaze fell to hers, clocking the tears streaming down her cheeks.

  “I want you to close your eyes,” I said.

  Chapter 22

  Brynn

  I stood there, looking at Diesel and thinking back to the decisions I’d made. Poor decisions I’d made that now had me within Rex’s grasp. I closed my eyes like he told me to, knowing damn good and well this wouldn’t end without someone’s death.

  The only thing I could hope was that it didn’t end with his.

  When the shootout began, I inched the door open of my room. I knew Diesel had seen me. I watched as his friend alerted him to my presence. The flashlight had been bright, and the illumination in the room had caught someone’s attention. I heard them screaming and calling out for Rex as I ducked down, and I crawled back behind the door with my stick in my hand.

  I heard their footsteps. I heard their gunfire. And slowly, I inched myself out of the room. I watched bullets fly down the hallway as shadows turned down the wrong way. Holy hell, I had only been a few feet away from the back exit. But there was one figure that turned the right way down the hallway.

  And I knew exactly who it was.

  I listened as Diesel called out for me, but I was paralyzed with fear. The first rule my father ever taught me was to keep still. To not run out to voices that called for me. Why? Because danger that couldn’t see me meant I had the upper hand. Running to Diesel meant I would expose myself and put myself in more danger. At least if I was curled up behind a door, I had the advantage of sneak attacks. I wouldn’t have that if I ran out into the hallway and fell into Diesel’s arms. I’d still be vulnerable, even if I had the illusion of safety.

  So, I stayed put.

  I heard a scuffle going on before Diesel started growling. And I knew that sound very well. I stalked out from behind the door and peeked around, watching as he physically lifted the man off his feet. He was choking the life of out one of the Black Saddles, and I couldn’t take my eyes off the spectacle. Off the raw anger and strength bleeding through him. Gunshots rained down in the background, but all I could digest was Diesel.

  He was standing. Breathing.

  Alive when I thought he was dead.

  I knew it didn’t compare to what he had gone through with me, but it gave me a glimpse. A small taste of what my funeral and burial had put him through all these years. Tears rushed my eyes as the body dropped to the floor and I heard another man’s voice.

  “Come on. We need all the help we can get,” the man said.

  “Brynn’s around here somewhere. I saw her through the window,” Diesel said.

  “And we’ll find her. But right now, we have to eliminate the threat. You know this. Don’t go stupid because a woman is involved.”

  “She isn’t any woman.”

  My heart soared at those words as a smile crossed my cheeks.

  “Trust me, I know that. I know that more than any one of you. But that doesn’t change the order in which we do things. We get rid of the threat, then we go looking for the survivor,” the man said.

  He was right. He was absolutely right, and D needed to listen to him. I watched him turn around and take one last look down the hallway, and for a second, I thought he wasn’t going to listen. And if he ran down that hallway, I’d step out and catch his running form. I didn’t know these hallways well, but I knew them better than he did. There were so many places for so many other people to be hiding, and the last thing Diesel needed to be doing was losing his head in all this.

  His mind was his greatest asset, and he had to keep it in the game.

  “Come on,” Diesel said. “Let’s go.”

  I watched the two men disappear around the corner before I looked both ways down the hallway. I rushed over to the dead body and pulled his gun off his hip, then dug around in his pockets for more ammunition. I dropped my stick in favor of the cold gunmetal, and the second I whipped around I saw a body barreling for me.

  “I found you,” the man said.

  I raised my gun and pulled the trigger, watching him stumble backwards. I pulled the trigger again, listening to him groan before he sputtered on his own blood. My eyes widened as the man sank to his knees. Even in the darkness of the corridor, I saw the whites of his eyes. How scared he was. How petrified he had become of bleeding out onto the floor. He fell face-first into the dust as his limbs twitched as tears of fear ran down my cheeks.

  The gunfire on the other side of the building was heavy. Thick. I heard bullets bouncing around and I fell to the ground, hoping none of them would pierce me. Sounds were muddling together and my fear was getting the best of me. The rational part of me that was still alive and breathing tucked the gun into my pocket. I needed to get away. Hell, I needed to get out. If I could get to the back of that truck, I could keep myself safe until all of the guys made it back.

  I was minutes away from being in Diesel’s arms again.

  Until a hand came down onto my back.

  “There you are,” Rex said.

  “D!” I called out.

  “Shut up, bitch.”

  “Daddy! Help!”

  Rex’s hand twirled into the fabric of my shirt as he wrenched me off the ground. He held me to him and pressed his lips disgustingly against mine. I opened my mouth and bit down onto his lip, drawing blood as he pulled back and hissed. He slammed me against the wall and I tightened my arm against the gun I had taken off his man, praying and hoping he wouldn’t find it.

  “Rex! Stop it!” I yelled.

  “You stupid bitch. Did you really think you could kill one of my men and get away with it!?”

  He ripped me from the wall as I scrambled to cover the gun with my shirt.

  “Did you do this?” he asked as he thrust my face into the dead body.

  I whimpered as blood smeared across my cheek.

  “Huh!? Did you!?” he roared.

  I didn’t even try to hold back my tears any longer.

  “Stop it, please,” I said between my sobs.

  He rose me up and cracked his hand against my cheek. Again. I wailed out in pain as blood trickled along the tip of my tongue. I didn’t even know whose it was, that was how bad everything had gotten. I didn’t know whose life force filled my mouth as he pulled me away from the body. I whimpered as he pulled me down the hallway. We turned left and right. My arms and legs bashed against metal corners as his hand tugged at my hair. At my shirt. He grabbed onto anything he could in order to force me to go where he wanted me to be.

  Then, we spilled into a cavernous room that seemed all too familiar.

  Shit, I was back to w
here I had started.

  “Brynn!”

  The sound of Diesel’s voice ripped me from my tears. He sounded so close.

  “D! I’m in here!” I called out.

  “Can you find us?” Rex asked. “Can you find your way through the maze?”

  “Stop taunting him. Just stop all this. Why are you doing this? Why are you--?”

  Rex tried to bring my lips to his again, but I shoved him away. I stumbled onto my feet, trying to run and get away from him. My hand fell to the gun in under my shirt as I stumbled forward, tripping over something before I fell to my ass.

  Rex started laughing maniacally as I looked down at what I had stumbled over.

  Oh my gosh, it was the man I’d clocked with the nail-pierced stick.

  Two.

  I had killed two people that night.

  “Stop it. Just stop,” I said.

  “I’ll never stop when it comes to you,” he said as he gripped my shirt.

  “Stop it, Rex! No!”

  The second bullets started roaring through the wall, he threw himself on top of me on the ground. There I was, crushed between a dead body and Rex as his breath pulsed against my neck. It was disgusting. I wanted to throw up all over him. Bullets filled the room as I tried to catch my breath, my body filling itself with panic.

  And that was how I had gotten to that point. To a point where Diesel stood in front of me and Rex stood there with a gun pressed to my temple. So many things swirled through my mind. The men I had killed. The trouble I had caused. The heartache I had inevitably brought down onto the heads of the men I cared for. I looked into Diesel’s eyes, searching for any sign that we would all get out of this.

  But his gaze stayed locked on the man beside me. The insane lunatic with a gun to my head and a hand trembling so hard I figured he’d probably kill me by accident.

  If we all made it out of this alive, I’d never waste my chance. If we all made it out of this intact, I’d live my life to the fullest. I wouldn’t doubt myself for a second and I’d never actively try to hold myself back from anything. I’d start opening my own business and settle down in Redding and never stop chasing Diesel until he agreed to be mine and mine alone.

 

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