by Zoey Parker
“Okay,” Jameson clapped his hands together and stood up. “I’m going to go and check on your sister.”
Zack tensed. He knew what his friend could be like with women. He could be charming and sweet, he could also be forceful when he didn’t get his way.
“If she’s not into it, just back off, you hear me?” Zack warned tersely as Jameson sauntered off down the hallway, not acknowledging his comment.
Looking back at the television Zack considered playing with himself right there on the couch. His hand already rubbing his hard cock through his jeans, keen to pull them down and give himself some much needed sexual release.
“Hey,” Jameson was calling him. With a groan of annoyance, Zack spun around on the couch to look at his friend. Jameson was in the doorway to Brittany’s bedroom, one hand shoved into his pocket.
“What is it?” Zack demanded angrily.
“We have a problem.” Jameson explained.
“If she’s asleep, just let her rest,” Zack exclaimed.
“It’s not that,” Jameson was shaking his head and intermittently glancing into Brittany’s bedroom.
“Then what is it?” Zack had no time for this. He stood up and glared down the hallway at his sheepish friend. “Well?” he prompted heatedly when Jameson remained silent.
“She’s not here,” Jameson explained softly.
“What?!” Zack narrowed his eyes and tried not to give into his rising levels of annoyance. “What do you mean she’s not there?”
“I mean,” Jameson gestured in to the bedroom, “that she’s not here. The window is open and the room is empty. There’s no Brittany. Your sister is gone.”
“Are you fucking kidding me?” Zack sprinted towards Jameson and gazed into the empty room to see that his friend was right. Brittany was gone. All that remained were the curtains which flapped in the cool night breeze, taunting them.
“Fuck!” Zack pressed his hands to his temples and kicked at her bedroom door. “Fuck!” he yelled again. With Brittany gone they wouldn’t be able to go and join the rest of the Red Riders until she was found.
“This is so what we don’t need right now!” Zack raged. “Fuck!”
Chapter Eighty-Seven
Max breathed her in as he held her against his chest. She smelled so sweet, like cherries and cinnamon. His entire body trembled with the relief of holding her again.
“I’m so sorry,” he whispered breathlessly. “I’m so sorry for everything.”
Standing on the small bridge just outside of town, they were silhouetted against a darkening sky. Max wanted to keep holding onto her never letting her go. But he couldn’t stop thinking about the gang he’d left behind. Even though Henry said he didn’t need to, Max lifted his head and glanced over his shoulder. Behind him the road was empty in the twilight, his bike rested against the brick bridge.
“It’s okay,” Brittany reassured him as she burrowed deeper against his chest. “I forgive you.”
Max bit back tears. He knew that he didn’t deserve her forgiveness. Before she came along, his life had been a string of bad choices and only now did he see the path he should take clearly laid out before him.
“There’s no excuses for the things I’ve done in my past,” he sighed, running a hand up and down Brittany’s back. “I’ve hurt people, Brittany. I’ve hurt them and not even cared about it.”
“But you see it. You don’t deny and get defensive about it. You know how bad you fucked up,” Brittany leaned back and looked up at him, her eyes sparkling as though they held fallen stars. “You want to break away, to move on with your life.”
“Yes,” Max agreed emphatically. “More than anything I want to move on now, to start a life with you away from them, away from all their expectations of me.”
“I wish my brother felt like that,” Brittany looked forlorn as she stepped away from Max and wandered sadly back along the bridge.
“Did you… ask him about it?” Max hated that he’d been the one to tell Brittany just who her brother was. He understood why her brother would have been keeping the secret from her, seeing as how Max had been keeping his own secrets for the same reasons.
“No,” Brittany replied tightly, pulling her arms together across her chest. “I just left,” she hung her head shamefully. “I figured it would be easier to talk to him about leaving his pack together.”
Max tensed. She was expecting him to talk to her brother? A Red Riders member? Such a conversation would inevitably end in bloodshed. Even though Max had no intention to ride again with his own gang, in the eyes of the Riders, her brother’s membership to his own pack had a lifetime guarantee.
“He won’t listen to me,” Max insisted. “Besides, there’s no time. We need to get out of here, Brittany, before anyone comes looking for us.”
“We have to talk to him!” Brittany looked at him pleadingly. “We have to go back and talk Max out of fighting your pack. I can’t just run away from him.” Her beautiful face crumpled with hurt. Max rubbed his hand against the back of his neck and tried to think. He knew that they were already wasting precious time. They should be out on the open road putting as many miles between them and his uncle, as possible. Max still wasn’t sure he trusted Henry, but he had no choice but to heed the other man’s advice. Especially when it meant that he was now able to be with Brittany. But he didn’t want their time together to be short lived. He had to keep her safe.
“We really need to go,” Max looked at his bike, yearning to get on it and leave nothing but a trail of dust in its wake.
“Please,” Brittany approached him and reached for his hands, cupping them in her own. “I have to go back for Zack. I have to at least try to reason with him.”
“And what if it doesn’t work?” Max countered sharply. “What if we go there, white flags waving, and he still guns me down.”
“He wouldn’t do that!” Brittany objected, her voice high-pitched with horror.
“He’d do far worse than that,” Max told her flatly. “And the ties we have to our packs, it runs deep, deeper than blood. We pledge our lives to our packs.”
“So how can you just turn your back on that pledge now?”
“Because of you,” Max reached for her delicate face and drew her close to him. She looked so perfect in the fading light. She opened her mouth to speak, but he kissed her deeply, silencing her words. When they parted, her eyes glistened with joy.
“Don’t you think Zack will abandon his pack for me too?” she asked softly. Max wanted to tell her what she wanted to hear, that yes, of course her brother would leave his gang for her. But the truth was that he wouldn’t. He loved Brittany but not like Max did. For Max, Brittany was his destiny, his future, and for Zack she was a link to his past, someone he’d forever feel responsible for.
“I have to ask,” Brittany stated contritely, sensing Max’ misgivings.
“We don’t have time.”
“We’ll make time,” Brittany was approaching his motorcycle with quick, determined steps. Max groaned in frustration before jogging after her.
“This is a bad idea,” he warned as he swung his leg over. Brittany climbed on behind him, wrapping her arms around his waist. It felt good to have her so close. With them both on the bike, it truly felt like them against the world. Max had to fight the urge to take off in the opposite direction and just burn rubber until the streets around them became blurred and alien.
“Do this for me, please,” Brittany was speaking directly into his ear; her breath feather light and hot.
“Okay,” Max turned the throttle on his bike and the engine purred to life. “We’ve got one hour. That’s at most.” he told her before roaring off into the night.
Chapter Eighty-Eight
Nancy had drawn all the drapes in her apartment and sat on her sofa, her legs curled up beneath her as she held a large mug of hot cocoa and watched a marathon of Next Top Model. She had no intention of leaving the safety of her home until the following morning. Over the sound of
the television, she strained to hear any sides of chaos drifting in from the outside but so far the evening had been still.
She was about to fast forward through an ad break when her phone whirred to life on her nearby coffee table. Nancy strained forward to glance at the screen. Zack was calling her. She groaned and considered just letting the call ring out and have her answering machine pick it up. But after the fifth ring, she conceded and grabbed the device, pressing down hand on the green answer button.
“Hello?” annoyance flooded her voice, making it sound much sharper than usual.
“Is Brittany with you?” Zack barked the question at her.
“Wait, what?” Nancy blinked and lowered her cup of sweet hot chocolate to the nearby table. “You call me up and the first thing you do is bark a question at me like some sort of drill sergeant!”
“I don’t have time for this,” Zack groaned. “Is she there or not?”
“No.” Nancy was alone in her apartment and she intended on keeping it that way, at least until the trouble in town had blown over.
“Shit.”
“Zack, what’s going on? Where is Brittany?”
“If I knew that I wouldn’t be calling you asking that very question! Fuck!”
Nancy could feel her chest tightening with panic. Where was Brittany? Surely she was secure in her own apartment. She hadn’t been foolish enough to leave, had she? To seek out her biker boyfriend?
“She’s probably just at her apartment,” Nancy said logically.
“No, I took her from there,” Zack replied tersely. “I bought her home.”
“Why?”
“You know why.” Ice coated each word Zack spoke.
“How bad are things going to get here?” Nancy glanced dubiously at her concealed windows, her vow not to leave that night strengthening with each passing second.
“Bad. Really bad.”
“Jesus.”
“And now Brittany has up and left my place,” Zack admitted. He sounded so desperate, so out of control. So unlike his usual strong self.
“Do you have any idea where she might be?” Nancy wondered, wishing there was some way she could help. Brittany was a sweet girl, she certainly didn’t want to see her pulled into all the biker’s mess and possibly hurt.
“No,” Zack sighed. “I’ve got my mate running laps around the block searching for her, I’ve called you. She must be with that… bastard.”
“Probably.”
“I’m going to fucking kill him.”
“Don’t you think you need to let all this hate go?” Nancy suggested. “After all, the reason Brittany is in danger is because of all the hate you harbor towards this other gang.”
“Don’t talk about things you know nothing about!” Zack raged down the phone.
“Don’t make assumptions about me,” Nancy’s rebuttal was swift. “You’re not the only one who got dealt a shitty hand in life, Zack. But other people don’t allow it to weigh them down like you do, they don’t wear their tragedy on their sleeve, like some heinous accessory.”
Zack hung up. Nancy blinked at her phone in surprise, and then put it down and continued to fast forward through the ad break on the television.
Chapter Eighty-Nine
“She’s here,” Jameson ran into the house, just as Zack was angrily shoving his cell phone back in the pocket of his jeans.
“You found her?” Zack felt hope swell inside him, warm and pleasant. Of course, Jameson had found her, it wasn’t like Brittany could have gotten far.
“Not exactly,” Jameson jerked his head behind him to the driveway. The thunderous roar of a bike engine erupted across the neighborhood. Zack watched the motorcycle approach the house in disbelief, its single headlight illuminating the house as it turned to the driveway. Even in the darkness, he could make out his sister clinging to the rider like a limpet out at sea. He ground his teeth together and cracked his knuckles. Had Brittany really been foolish enough to bring a rival gang member to his home?
“Go grab the crowbar,” Zack ordered his friend, never taking his eyes off the rider who was now turning off the engine, killing the headlights, and climbing off his motorcycle. Brittany held his hand in hers as they came towards the house, her hair wild around her head from her time on the bike. Zack steeled himself. The fight had now moved from Colridge to his own living room. So be it. He’d still do the Red Riders proud, still honor all his pack brothers. There was no way he was letting him walk out of his house alive.
Chapter Ninety
Brittany felt sick with nerves as she approached the front door of her home. She could see the rage rippling beneath the surface of her brother’s face. At any second, he was liable to explode. Gripping Max’ hand tightly, she was starting to fear that she’d made the wrong decision, that they should never have come here. What if Zack wasn’t as willing to turn his back on his pack as Max was?
She was now inches away from her brother, the extent of the hardness in his face was in full view.
“So you came back?” he asked icily.
“Yes,” Brittany nodded and swallowed nervously. “I wanted to talk.”
“I don’t talk to his type,” he nodded towards Max.
“Humor me,” Brittany took a deep breath before barging past her brother and dragging Max along with her. She prayed that she hadn’t just made a huge mistake as she led both men into the living room. The same space which had once radiated with laughter in happier times. Brittany pushed away those memories as tears filled her eyes. This was her chance to save Zack from himself, to give them all a clean slate and a new start away from motorcycle gangs and violence. This was her shot and she couldn’t blow it.
Chapter Ninety-One
“Don’t you come another fucking step closer,” Zack extended his hands towards the couple, his face twisted with fury. Brittany froze, anchoring his rival beside her. Zack heard Jameson return, instantly reassured by his arrival. Out of the corner of his eye, he could see the crowbar held tightly in Jameson’s grip. When he glanced back at Brittany’s boyfriend, the color had drained from the man’s face. Zack struggled to suppress a satisfied smile.
“Zack, please, I just want to talk,” Brittany pleaded, gazing at him helplessly. “We don’t want any trouble.”
“Then you shouldn’t have bought him here,” Zack raged. Every second a Skeleton Kings member continued to draw breath on his property, Zack risked losing favor with his own pack. He could sense Jameson struggling with similar thoughts. Both men knew how deep the divide between the two packs went, how letting a Reaper walk free could be costly for them in ways they couldn’t yet imagine.
“You lied to me!” Brittany cried contritely, moving forward from her companion so that she was just inches away from Zack. He could see the torment reflected in her eyes, the tension in her jawline. “You ride with the fucking Red Riders!!” she roared.
Zack cowed beneath her vitriol, but only slightly. He shot Max a hate filled glance, feeling his insides become churned with disdain.
“He tell you that?” he scoffed.
“Yes,” Brittany confirmed stiffly. “He did. When it should have come from you. It should have been you who told me, Zack. How could you keep that from me?”
“Because it doesn’t concern you!” Zack was so angry he feared he might spontaneously combust, splattering all those around him with his feeble innards. “Brittany, do you have any idea how hard it was when Mom and Dad died? Of course, you don’t. I shielded you from all of that!”
“I didn’t ask you to!” Tears were sparkling in Brittany’s eyes, her mouth down-turned in anguished sorrow. “You chose to take that burden on, Zack.”
“What choice did I have? I had to protect you, Brittany. To take care of you.” Something unpleasant crept up Zack’s spine as he spoke. It reached his mouth and left an unpleasant taste there. He realized that he resented his sister for unknowingly stealing his childhood from him. For her, he had sacrificed so much ,and now she repaid him by bringing hi
s enemy to his home.
“I did it all for you,” he wanted to be free of his burden, to be free from all the responsibilities which had weighed him down for so many years.
“Let’s just kill the fucker and be done with it,” Jameson took a menacing step forward, raising his crowbar to eye level.
“Wait,” Zack pushed him back. Brittany looked so defeated, faced with his anger. Her pretty faced crumpled, and she was once again a little girl lost in the world. Zack remembered the day their parents had died, how she’d wilted against him and cried herself hoarse. He’d vowed at that moment, to always take care of her, to always love her.
“If he’s come all this way, the least we can do is hear him out.” He stepped aside, allowing a bemused-looking Brittany and Max to enter the house.