Book Read Free

Wild Rides: 10 Blazing Hot Alpha Bad Boy Biker and MC Romance Box Set

Page 52

by Dez Burke


  The officer comes back with the traditional cardboard box and offers to carry it to my car for me. As we reach the car, I open the trunk.

  "I'm really very sorry for your loss," he says as he puts down the box. "I really liked your brother."

  "Did you work with him? Are you a member of the task force?" I ask.

  "No, not exactly. My forte is more administrative work. But still, we connected when we were at the academy. I was happy to see a familiar face when I was assigned to this station."

  "So, you two graduated at the same time?"

  "Yes, and we often ended up in the same team because he followed me in alphabetical order. My name is Michael Mayfair so Mayfair-Mayfield, we stood and sat together often," he says, and the smile on his face leads me to believe that he must have pleasant memories of David. "Call me Mike, please."

  "Mike, can I ask you a question about your time at the academy?" I ask.

  "Sure. What do you want to know?"

  "What happened to Brian Hatcher? What did he do to get kicked out of the academy?"

  Mike's face goes somber, and he says, "Honestly, at the time I had no idea. You know your brother and he were thick as thieves. They were friends, and yet they had that incredible rivalry. It was fun to watch them compete. They both had top grades, excelled in everything from criminology to precision shooting. They were our regular rock stars, and the only question we had was which one of them was going to graduate at the top of our year."

  He stays silent for a moment, staring at his shoe and frowning as if concentrating on his recollection of the events.

  "It was less than two weeks before we were done. I remember because that's when the final interviews were set up for those who had applied for special divisions. David and Brian had flown through the preliminary tests for the organized crime task force. They were looking for guys who were comfortable around bikes, so of course those two made the cut. That's when Brian just stopped coming. We were all flabbergasted when he didn't make it to the interviews and then was a no-show for the final exams. I asked your brother. He just said that he would rather not talk about it."

  Mike hesitates, so I prompt him with a question.

  "So you didn't know then but you know now?"

  "Well, I did run into Brian in town," he says. "And it didn't make any sense. One day Brian's applying to the task force, and then, the next day, he's a fully patched member of the Iron Tornadoes."

  The idea that Brian joined a motorcycle gang is so preposterous that I'm about to laugh out loud, but then it hits me. Brian's father has now become the president of the Iron Tornadoes.

  Aunt Nancy's warning is starting to make sense.

  Before driving away, I thank Mike for his help and give him the information about the funeral and the wake.

  In the car, I try to wrap my head around this absurdity. Brian can't be part of the Iron Tornadoes. They claim to be just another MC, but they do make the news way too often for me to really believe that. Many people claim they are a menace to society, and they may be right. I remember a few years back a young woman had asked for police protection after running away from the club. She had testified that the strip joints they run are actually whorehouses. At the time, I had even heard talk of underage sex.

  This can't be. Brian, my childhood hero, the heartthrob of my teenage years, the sweet guy who rocked me when I cried last night and then held me until I fell asleep... No. He can't now be one of them.

  I scold myself. As a future lawyer, I should know better than to listen to rumors. I will see him at David's funeral and I'll ask him.

  CHAPTER FIVE

  After I leave the police station, I drive to Costco. If I'm going to hold the wake at my mother's house, I need to stock up. I go through the aisles mindlessly, and when I check out, I remember I have an errand to run for Aunt Nancy. I park next to the pharmacy and go pick up Uncle Tony's prescription. On the way out, I walk by the "family planning" section of the store, which is the prude name given to the condom section. Three guys are looking at the selection and making crude jokes about the flavor of the gels on the shelf. As I'm about to open the door, one of them grabs my arm.

  "Hey, sweet butt," he says with what I assume is his charmer's smile. "Give me your advice. Which of those flavors would you prefer if you had to lick my dick?"

  I blink, wondering if this guy's for real.

  "I'm not into popsicles, so I wouldn't know," I answer before my brain registers that these guys are wearing biker jackets with the Iron Tornadoes patches.

  Oh, me and my big mouth.

  The one holding my arm strengthens his grip and looks stunned, as if I had just slapped him.

  The other two turn around slowly to face me. There's a moment of silence in the store. I glance at the cashier and the regular customer by the register. They are both staring at me with wide eyes. There will be no help from them.

  Then one of the bikers starts laughing and slaps his buddy's back.

  "Hey, Waxer, your memory ain't what it used to be. Obviously you've done her and she was not impressed," he says.

  Waxer is turning crimson. I can almost hear the wheels of his slow brain engaging. I'm not sure if he's going to hit me, hit his friend, or laugh with him. Before he's able to come to a decision, someone closes the door behind me and a hand lands heavily on my shoulder.

  "Waxer, you let her go. This one's mine," says a familiar voice at my back. Waxer doesn't let go. On the contrary, his grip gets firmer, and he spins me around until I bump my nose into Brian's chest.

  Brian's dressed like them, in full biker's regalia. I'm too close to have a good look at his jacket, but I'm sure he's sporting the Iron Tornadoes patches.

  "Well, if she's yours, you'd better teach her manners," Waxer growls.

  "Yeah, I know. She's got a big mouth." He sighs, and then he grins and winks at his buddies as he says, "But then again, that's one of the things I really like about her."

  Seriously?

  Looking down from his face to his chest, I'm about to deny being his when he gives a harsh tug on my ponytail to make me look up at his face again. His stare is so cold I barely recognize him.

  "Now you apologize to my brother," he commands me.

  I stare at him and blink a few times, wondering if I've fallen into another dimension.

  "Come on, girl, enough wasting our time," Brian says, pulling so hard on my hair that the elastic holding it breaks. "I told you to apologize."

  I realize he's dead serious, and then it dawns on me that this is could be the gang that my brother went after. They're not just loud and obnoxious; they're dangerous. I need to protect myself before things get out of hand.

  I turn my head around toward Waxer, cast my gaze to the floor, and mumble, "I'm sorry."

  That's obviously not enough because when I turn around again, out of the corner of my eye, I can see Waxer shaking his head.

  Brian says with a chilling voice, "You turn around properly, look at him in the eyes, and tell him what you're sorry for."

  I do as he asks, raise my head, and stare at Waxer as I tell him, "I'm sorry I was not respectful."

  I bite my lips to keep from saying something like, Yeah, I really am sorry for you because the only reason my stupid answer about the size of your dick got to you is that it must have hit too close to home. Seriously, his penis has got to be the size of a tiny pencil for him to react that way.

  "That's better," Brian says. He catches a new handful of my hair and almost drags me out of the store. As soon as we're in the street, he pushes me back against the wall. He's in my space, breathing hard, and when the door closes behind us, he says between clenched teeth, "Are you out of your fucking mind?"

  He doesn't give me a chance to answer as his lips cover mine. With his hand still fisted in my hair, he tilts my head to a perfect angle for his invasion of my mouth. His kiss is violent and passionate, and there's something really wrong with me because I'm actually enjoying this. I can't believe how much I'm tur
ned on by his caveman behavior.

  I don't know if it's the adrenaline from the confrontation or just the fact that Brian's seriously improved since the last time we kissed, but my body betrays me completely and I melt against him. His free hand slides to the small of my back, and he pushes a knee against my crotch. It takes all my willpower not to grind myself against his thigh, but before I make a spectacle of myself, he pulls away.

  I look in his eyes, and I can't read anything on his face. It's as though he's not the same man anymore. I catch my breath and shudder. Yep, there's something seriously wrong with me because I think Brian the badass biker is actually sexier than the sweet Brian who held me last night.

  But then I get hit with a cold shower when he says, "Now scram, sweet butt."

  I'm no expert on the biker's lifestyle, but I know that a "sweet butt" is a girl that's passed around, and I resent him calling me that. But I'm so embarrassed by the way I just behaved that he doesn't need to repeat his order. I rush to my car as if I had the devil behind me.

  Just before I start the engine, I see Brian's buddies come out of the store and hear one of them say, "Hey, Ice, remember I'm interested in your firecracker—you know, if you get into a sharing mood or when you get tired of her."

  I can't hear Brian's answer but think to myself that Ice is a perfectly suitable name for the stone cold son-of-a-bitch I have just met.

  CHAPTER SIX

  It’s eight, and most of the guests have started to leave. My mother's already gone to her room. She held herself together much better than I expected. David's captain stood by her side at the cemetery, and then when we got back home, he talked to her for a very long time. Whatever he told her seems to have helped somehow.

  I go to check on her and she's crying. I never thought someone could cry for so long. I give her a glass of water and one of the sleeping pills her doctor prescribed when she left the hospital. I'm keeping them hidden in my bedroom just to be on the safe side. I stay with her for five minutes until she falls into a deep slumber. I hope hers is a dreamless sleep because I've been having nightmares in which I see David killed in all kinds of horrible ways, and I can't imagine what it would be like if I was trapped in dreamland, unable to wake up when I have those dreadful dreams.

  I go back downstairs and make small talk with a neighbor. She tells me things he remembers about David when he was a kid. Of course, it's a Dave-and-Brian story, since those two did everything together. The neighbor is smart enough not to ask about Brian, but I'm sure his absence has not gone unnoticed.

  I half listen to the old lady's story. Through the window I see a few gruff-looking guys sitting on the porch swing. They were introduced to me as members of the task force David joined.

  They're talking with the captain. His dress uniform has so many medals pinned to his chest he makes me think of a Christmas tree. He appears to be very well acquainted with everyone on David's team. I'm not surprised—the captain exudes the kind of physical power that does not sit well with a desk job. Maybe he had been part of the task force, too.

  They're telling street war stories, and every so often they burst out laughing loudly. Their laughter doesn't sound natural. They throw their heads back, and it's clear what they're really doing is letting off some steam after putting up with a tense situation. Burying one of their own is probably one of the most stressful things they have to do. It makes them confront their own mortality.

  I go to the kitchen to get some more beer out of fridge and interrupt Tony, who's calling Brian a Judas and a bastard. Nancy is sitting on a kitchen stool crying. I'm shocked because she doesn't fight back. Usually when Uncle Tony raises his voice, Nancy gives him a run for his money. Not today. Today she's defeated; her shoulders are slumped like a rag doll.

  Tony storms out the kitchen door. Nancy stands up a little straighter and wipes her tears with the back of her hand. She gestures toward the sink, which is all cleaned up.

  "I've cleared as much as I could..." She can't finish her sentence. Her voice is too hoarse. The sad look on her face is so unlike her it breaks my heart.

  "Talk to me, Nancy," I say.

  "No." She shakes her head. "I'm so ashamed," she whispers and then starts sobbing uncontrollably.

  I crouch before her the way Lyv did before me a lifetime ago, and I take her hands in mine.

  "What are you ashamed of? That Brian didn't come to be with us today?" I ask her.

  She raises her eyes and nods. I let go of her hands to frame her face between my palms. Looking her in the eye, I tell her with all the conviction I can muster, "There's nothing for you to be ashamed about. If Brian didn't see fit to come to my brother's funeral, it's on Brian, not on you. You raised him just fine. You and Uncle Tony did a really good job, and now he's a grown man. You're not responsible for his actions, and I will never—you hear me?—never blame you for what he does or did."

  "She's right, ma'am," says a low voice behind me.

  I jerk around. One of the task force guys has come in. I remember his name because I thought it was funny when he introduced himself as Ernest-something, and then I heard his buddies call him Everest—cool nickname for a mountain of a man, who apparently moves silently, since I never heard him come in.

  "You can't be held accountable for your son's actions," he adds, and then he picks up two cans of beer from the ice bucket on the kitchen table and leaves.

  I smile at Nancy and say, "There's something to be said for men of few words. They get straight to the point."

  She smiles back at me and nods. "I'll go look for your uncle now. He's feeling even more guilty than I am."

  We hug, and she leaves through the back door. I hope they're able to console each other.

  I go back out to the living room with a tray, and the neighbors have gone. There's no one left besides Ernest and the captain. It's kind of incongruous to see those two macho men on the flowery cushions of my mother's swing. I let them be and go into cleaning mode.

  For an instant I can make myself believe that I'm in New York at the restaurant, cleaning up after a very busy evening. I can dream that next week I'll start my summer internship in the law firm that hired me for their eight-week summer program. I would have made a bundle of money, had something to brag about on my resume, and learned what the life of a criminal attorney is like.

  They were very polite and nice when I called to let them know that I had a family situation that would prevent me from joining them this summer; still, now I'm probably blacklisted for any possible future internship there.

  I miss my life in New York; I miss Lyv. She's been calling me every other day to cheer me up. This morning she said that she had moved everything out of my dorm room. She's storing my stuff in the restaurant's basement, and she had spoken to the dean of the law school about my situation and asked me if I was considering a transfer to a Florida university.

  I'm not sure what I need to do for my third year.

  What's going to happen to my scholarship if I request a transfer? David used to say, "No need to worry when it's only about money."

  Oh, God, no. David's dead.

  I drop the tray on the counter in the kitchen and fall apart.

  I've been holding my head up all day, and now all the tears I've held back are coming out at once. I lean against the wall and slide down to the floor. I cry my heart out until I hear the kitchen door open.

  Captain Williams and Everest walk in.

  "There you are," says the captain. "We were looking for you."

  I want to scramble to my feet and apologize, but I just can't.

  Everest says, "You can go, sir. I'll stay until she's better."

  The captain thanks him and leaves.

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  Everest grabs another beer from the bucket and sits on the kitchen floor next to me. He's close enough that my shoulder touches his arm. After a moment, I pull myself together and I stop crying. When my breathing is back to normal, he hands me a tissue. I wipe my eyes and blow my nose.


  Everest's got amazing green eyes. It’s almost the same shade of green than Brian’s eyes. But Everest has blond hair trimmed by a buzz cut. Everest is sexy.

  What's wrong with me? Brian's kiss has kicked my libido awake. It had been asleep for years, and it's coming back with a vengeance. Seriously, Lisa, you're thinking about sex on the day you buried your brother? Yeah, I guess I am, but then, is there a better way to celebrate life?

  "How are you feeling?" Everest asks, compassion in his eyes, but not just that. There's a twinkle of something else.

  "Lost... broken... sad... angry... and also scared," I answer slowly as I think about it, looking in the emerald sea of his eyes. He's got incredibly long lashes for a man.

  "Wanna talk about it?"

  "No, not really," I say, but then, because there's something about him that makes him easy to talk to, I start thinking out loud. "I need to do the best that I can with the hand I'm dealt. I'm thinking about moving back here with my mother because she can't live alone. But that'll be okay as long as I find a way to finish school. I know in time I'll be fine... Oh, and even if I just hang around for the summer only, I need to find a job to keep myself busy until the fall."

  Everest chuckles when I stop talking, so I smile at him and ask, "What's funny?"

  "Your version of not really wanting to talk. I wonder what it's like when you spill your guts," he says.

  I mock-punch him in the shoulder and say, "You're not allowed to make fun of me today."

  He tilts his head sideways to get a better look at me and says, "Then I guess I need to come back another day to get another shot at it."

  "I would like that very much," I spontaneously say. I really like him. What's not to like? He's not handsome per se, but he's pleasant to look at, and he seems sweet and caring.

  "The good news is that your mother won't be able to object to your going out on a date with a police officer," he says.

  "Why not?" I have no idea why he's saying that. On the contrary, I believe my mother is going to tell me to stay as far as possible from anyone whose job can get them killed.

 

‹ Prev