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CORRUPTED: A Dark Bad Boy Romance

Page 33

by Mia Miles


  “Just make sure you don’t say anything to her about it, okay? I don’t want her to know that he’s looking for her yet. She’s been through enough, man,” I said before we finished up our call.

  “Yeah, I understand. Don’t worry. She doesn’t have to know anything. I’ll make sure everything comes to you,” Blades told me.

  “Thanks, brother.”

  We hung up to the phone, and I stared at the wall for a few minutes, wondering what to do about Missy’s father. As far as I was concerned, he’d given up his right to check on her. She was an adult, and he’d run her off. He had no business coming after her like some kind of pimp looking for his best girl after letting her go.

  I needed to figure what to do about him before he got himself hurt getting too close. It was only a matter of time before she asked the wrong one or ended up at the club.

  This was her new life. She didn’t need her old life trying to creep in on her. She needed to be surrounded by people who were going to look after her and take care of her, especially with the baby coming. I was glad she was at the clubhouse, where she was safe.

  If I could have stayed away from the strip club completely, I would have devoted all of my time to making sure Missy was settling in alright at the clubhouse. Fortunately, she was going to have just about everyone there. Ren had assured me that he was going to throw her a kind of welcoming party so he and Lynn could introduce her to everyone for me. I hated that I wasn’t there for her, but I knew she could handle herself. As independent as she was, it really would have been insulting if I had insisted on standing over her the whole time. I didn’t want to do that to her.

  Still, despite knowing she was perfectly safe under the watch of the MC, I couldn’t stop worrying about her. She was an incredibly strong-willed young woman, and she was having to put up with a lot. Her world was being turned completely upside down. I just hoped I could help her keep some dignity through it all. I couldn’t believe she had even considered dancing for me. There were people out there who could put her to work, like Jay. They just didn’t exist in the world where she was from. They flew below her radar, which put them below her father’s radar as well. Thankfully.

  Meanwhile, I sat in my office, listening to the music thump through the walls while one of the new girls took to the stage. She went by Diamond, and she’d been blowing the guys away so far. She had platinum blonde hair and large natural breasts with a small waist and a perfect, round ass. She looked like any number of blondes in porno magazines, but the customers ate her up. She was quickly moving to headlining status, which was going to be good for Jasmine. It meant I was going to be able to give her some time off every once in a while.

  I decided I wasn’t going to say anything to Missy when I talked to her. I was going to keep the news of her father quiet for a while, until we had a plan, or until I was sure he wasn’t going to be a bigger problem.

  Out of paranoia, I walked out to the main room of the club to keep an eye on things with Lex. We had the place packed out with Diamond and Jasmine both performing. Diamond had been one of the girls I didn’t want to hire, so I’d lucked out there.

  “Hey, got a second?” I asked Lex when I stepped up to the bar.

  She held up a finger and checked along the bar to make sure everyone was okay. She signaled to one of the other girls to watch the bar, and then she stepped away with me. She could already tell we needed to talk.

  We stepped outside where I could get a good look at the parking lot. I could feel trouble coming.

  “What’s up?” she asked in her razor sharp voice. She always sounded like she was ready to kick somebody’s ass. With Lex around, it wasn’t often that I needed a bouncer.

  “Has anyone come around asking about Missy?” I asked.

  “Oh, someone’s looking for her? Damn, you really are robbing the cradle with that one, aren’t you?” she teased.

  I couldn’t help but laugh. “Yeah, I guess so. Unfortunately, that tree rocked and he cradle came tumbling down.”

  “Oh shit.” I could tell from the shift in her tone that she got what I was trying to tell her. “So, her folks are trying to take her home now?” she asked.

  “Her father is snooping around. He’s asked at least one of the Lions on the street if he’d seen her,” I told her.

  “Everyone knows to keep their mouth shut, right?”

  I laughed again. Lex sounded like she was ready to handle someone for snitching. She wasn’t a member of the MC, and she’d never been anyone’s old lady, but if we ever opened it up to women, she would have been the first one brought in. She’d proven herself for us time and time again over the years. They didn’t make people more loyal than Lex.

  “Yeah, and I told them to run anything they find through me. So that means you might get some calls when I’m not around if anything comes up,” I warned her.

  “Okay, before everyone goes home, I’ll make sure no one has seen her,” she assured me.

  “And if anyone has?” I asked, because I loved to hear her talk shit.

  “Oh, no one has. Trust me.” Her voice was as solid and hard as the pavement beneath our feet. What most people didn’t realize was that her fists were just as hard.

  I glanced out at the parking lot again, looking for any indication that something was off.

  “Just keep an eye out for me,” I said absently. “Something’s coming. I’m getting a feeling in my gut. This man is going to end up causing some serious trouble.”

  “Nah, you’re just paranoid, Cutter. You need a drink. Come on, let Lex take care of you,” she said as she put a hand on my shoulder and pushed me back inside.

  As soon as we opened the door, the steady rhythm of the music hit me. There was so much going on. I had new girls on the stage, cops keeping an even closer eye on me than normal because of those idiots trying to run their own business in my establishment. I was falling for this young, innocent girl. And her dad was looking for her. He was powerful, too.

  It wasn’t like the others, when some drunk from the trailer park on the south side showed up with rot gut whiskey or shine on his breath. Usually one good beat down took care of them. No, Mr. Jones was a force of nature. He controlled a lot of the city. His reach didn’t quite make it to where we were, but he had enough influence to give me a migraine if he caught wind that she was with me.

  “Hey, Lex, remember how we used to give the police free draft beer?” I asked as she slid a glass of whiskey to me.

  “Yeah, I remember those days. You thinking we need to go back to that?” she asked.

  “Yeah, off duty, on duty, whatever. You see law enforcement, let them know they get drafts. That goes for pitchers, too,” I told her, tapping the bar.

  “Whatever you think will help.” She was amused. She had that smile that she got when she thought I was making a mistake. Maybe I was, but it was hard to be too careful with so many people snooping around.

  “I think we could use all the help we can get,” I told her, knocking back the whiskey in one gulp, like it was a shot.

  I winced as it burned all the way down. Straight whiskey with no ice was good for burning off stress and most ailments. When I opened my eyes back up, I felt like I could see for the first time in days. I looked around the room again.

  I noticed a couple of plain clothes officers sitting at a table near the stage with untouched beers. They just looked like cops. They were probably on duty. That probably explained the untouched drinks.

  “Lex, see those two cops up front with the full beers?” I asked her.

  She stopped wiping the bar down and looked. “Yeah, they’ve been sitting there for a while,” she said.

  “Take them a couple of glasses of ice water so it looks like vodka on the rocks. Take those beers back and don’t charge them. Those bottles are a dead give-away. If they have ice water in rocks glasses, they can at least look like they’re drinking,” I told her.

  She laughed. “Rookies.”

  I watched as she prepared th
e glasses and took them over to the table. I could see her explaining to the men that it was water instead of vodka. They sipped their glasses and thanked her as she picked up the bottles and started back to the bar.

  The cops looked over to me and raised their glasses. I nodded. I hated having them in the bar, but I needed to keep them happier than anyone else in there. Happy cops seemed to ask fewer questions.

  Chapter Fourteen

  Missy

  “You ready for work?” Jay was intimidating, even in his work clothes. He was a wide, tall man with a full, dark beard and short wavy black hair that he kept mostly pushed back. He wore a long sleeve work shirt – to cover his tattoos, I assumed, since everyone seemed to have so many – and khaki work pants, along with work boots. He looked out of place in his work clothes, but I was starting to see why he didn’t need a street name like everyone else had. He didn’t need it.

  “I guess so,” I told him, trying not to be intimidated by him. In the world where I found myself – the world of biker clubs and strippers – he fit in just fine. He was a little bigger than everyone else I had met so far, and that was all.

  “Come on, then.” He tilted his head for me to follow as he walked around his work truck and opened the door to let me in. They had all been gentlemen so far, something else I wasn’t completely used to. Each of the Renegade Lions seemed to treat women with the highest respect.

  I sat quietly as Jay climbed into the driver seat and buckled up before putting the truck in gear and pulling away from the clubhouse. I was on my own, it seemed, among Cutter’s people. I hadn’t spoken to him since he dropped me off, and I had stayed in my room alone overnight, despite what he’d said about making it work so that I could stay in his bed every night even when I was “staying” at the clubhouse.

  “So you’re Cutter’s new old lady, huh?” Jay barked on the way to his office.

  “I wouldn’t take it that far,” I told him.

  “Oh, that’s right. He’s just watching out for you.” I could tell from his voice that he wasn’t buying the story.

  “Well, now it looks like he’s got everybody watching out for me, doesn’t it?” I asked, laughing nervously.

  “Yeah, I guess so. Hey, do you want some breakfast? I like grabbing a little something to eat before work, something fast.”

  “Sure.” I was along for the ride. I wasn’t going to turn down free food, not when the sun and I were competing to see who was up first.

  We stopped at a drive-thru and grabbed a couple of sausage biscuits and coffees. He ate in the truck on the way to his office. I’d had a few summer jobs over the years, mostly little retail deals, but nothing that felt so comfortable or informal. It felt like I was just going to be spending the day with a cousin or uncle, not with an employer. It was very relaxed.

  I expected things to change once we got to the office. I expected Jay to introduce me to everyone and then crack down on me, but he didn’t. His office was a small work trailer, the kind that normally popped up on temporary job sites and disappeared afterwards. It sat in the middle of a plot of land surrounded by a tall chain link fence, where his company kept the equipment that wasn’t in use.

  Once inside there were several desks along the walls of the trailer. It wasn’t a very big space, but there was enough room to walk around between everyone. The desks were either covered in scattered paperwork or piled high with organized files. I figured it depended on who worked where. There were three other women in the office, all dressed in jeans and blouses. It was a very business casual atmosphere.

  There was even a small radio on the ledge of one of the windows, playing music from the light rock, adult contemporary radio station. I wanted to ask him if my coworkers were other old ladies from the MC, but I got the distinct feeling that they weren’t. They didn’t look like any of the women I had met at the clubhouse cookout the night before. Besides, I figured he would have told me if they were.

  For some reason, it made me uncomfortable that they might have been from the outside. I had just started coming to terms with the fact I was part of an elite group of people, and I was being thrust back among people I couldn’t share that knowledge with.

  It also seemed odd to me that Cutter and Jay both owned and ran businesses that weren’t actually associated with the Renegade Lions, outside of their membership in the club. Something about that didn’t ring true to me. I knew nothing should have seemed shocking at that point, so I put the questions out of my head and let him introduce me to the other women who worked in the office for him.

  There was Emily, who had curly sandy blonde hair and the cutest green eyes; Amy, with straight red hair and brown, puppy dog eyes; and Candace, with jet black hair and eyes as blue as the sky. Despite their natural beauty, they all looked very studious and reserved. Something about the expressions on their faces gave off an air of experience and knowledge, like they’d been working for Jay for years.

  “Missy is going to be working with us for a while, so please make her feel at home. I’ve pulled her in as a customer service specialist,” he said to the others, letting me know for the first time what my job was actually going to be. I figured I was going to be another secretary. Having four women running his office made it seem like his company was very busy.

  He led me to the back where his private office was. We went past the break room, which was across from the office restroom. The office was laid out like a camper or RV, except smaller. He closed the door to his office and gestured for me to sit down in the chair in front of his desk.

  “Alright, I haven’t told you what you’re going to be doing yet,” he said with a sigh as he took the chair behind his desk. It was the most professional his voice had sounded all day so far. He started to roll up his sleeves.

  “I figured I would just be filing paperwork or something secretarial like that,” I suggested with a shrug.

  “If you’re willing to get up and dance for Cutter for a living, you can talk on the phone for me. Sometimes, people call in with questions or complaints, or whatever they call about, and I need someone to take those calls. My company operates at three separate locations. I have three teams out there, and that’s why there are three people in there. Each one handles work orders, invoices, schedules, whatever for their team. Taking calls on top of what they do is just too much. However, there aren’t so many calls that I need three people on the phone. So, I’m going to see if it will help to have someone in here answering the phones for them,” he explained.

  “What happens if I can’t answer their questions?” I asked.

  “Then just find out who is handling that team and send the call over to her. No big deal. That way, they’re only on the phone if they need to be,” he answered.

  I nodded, as the picture started becoming clear to me.

  “Don’t worry about it. Like any other job, the first day is scary, and by the time you clock out, you start to get the hang of it,” he said lightly.

  “Right.” I didn’t know what to say, but it felt like he was expecting something else from me. He sat back and stared at me like he was waiting on me to ask him questions or something.

  “So tell me, what do you think of all this?” he asked all of a sudden.

  “What do you mean?” I responded, unsure if he was asking how I felt about the job, or the MC, or even the situation I was in with Cutter.

  “This whole new world, man. Cutter told me about your situation and the falling out with your father. Man, I’m sorry to hear about that, but it happens.” He was reaching out to me, just like everyone seemed to do when they met me.

  “It’s definitely different. One thing gets me, though,” I mused.

  “What’s that?” A smile spread across his face. He looked pleased to get the opportunity to explain something to me.

  “The names. I know Cutter, Renegade, and Blades, and I know those are just street names. What about Jay? Why don’t you have a name like theirs?” I asked.

  He laughed. “I guess th
ey never came up with anything. I haven’t done anything to get a name.”

  “You have to do something to get a name?” I felt a little chill. I remembered then that Cutter had said the same thing to me. He’d told me that Jay always stayed out of trouble and hadn’t earned a name from the rest of them.

  “Pretty much. I mean, Blades has an extensive knife collection and isn’t afraid to pull one out in a fight. I don’t know if he’s ever used one or anything, but he always has at least one blade on him. Cutter didn’t tell you his?” he asked.

  “No, he’s never really mentioned it. Has he done anything bad?” I wondered aloud.

  “Oh, we’ve all got our stories, Missy. I think that’s something you should talk to him about,” Jay told me.

  I started to think that maybe he’d cut someone up pretty bad and that was how he got his name. But I knew there had to be another reason. These men had reputations to uphold, I reminded myself. There were bound to be stories that were nothing more than just stories, to make them seem big and bad even when they weren’t.

 

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