Fallen Lords MC: Books 1-3
Page 42
No one had ever been on my side. Sure, I had Cora and Jezebel, but when bad shit had happened to me, no one had been there to save me. “You get two minutes, motorcycle man, and then I’m calling her.”
He smirked. “Motorcycle man?”
It was fitting. Although, I had never seen him drive a motorcycle. Whenever we went to the store, we always took the truck, but his bike was always parked next to the porch. “Yeah.”
I tried to take a step back from him again, but he tightened his grasp on my waist. “Nothing is going to happen to you or your friend, Wren. I promise.” His low, gravelly voice wrapped around me, and I couldn’t help but lean into him.
There wasn’t a reason in the world I should believe him. He hadn’t done anything to prove to me he was a good man.
You’ve stayed in the same house as him for weeks, and he’s never laid a hand on you.
I looked down at his arm.
You’re stretching looking for a reason to run from this man, Wren. I hated when my head thought reasonably.
“Please let me go,” I whispered.
His arm slackened, and he stepped back. He held his arm around my waist for a second to make sure I didn’t fall over, and then he dropped his arm to his side. “I’m sorry, darlin’.”
There wasn’t a damn thing he needed to be sorry for. He didn’t do anything wrong. Hell, he was doing everything right, but I couldn’t get over my own shit in my head.
He’s not a Hell Captains.
Now that was the damn truth.
“They got her.”
I whirled around. Wrecker was standing in the doorway shoving his phone in his pocket. “She lived five minutes from one of my guys, and they were with her before I even got off the phone.”
My anxiety crashed. “Thank God.”
“What are you going to do with her now?” Maniac asked.
“Not sure yet. Once the Hell Captains find out she’s not there, they are going to know we got to her first.”
“You know it’s only a matter of time before they come directly at the Fallen Lords, right?”
A sick, satisfied smile spread across Wrecker’s bearded face. “We can only hope so.” The thought of the Captains messing with the Lords obviously amused Wrecker.
Maniac laughed. “So, what are you up to now?”
“Dealing with The Ultra bullshit. I gotta spend some time setting shit up.” He grabbed the door handle and turned to leave.
“She good to call Jezebel?” Maniac asked.
“Probably be a good idea. She’s rather spooked right now. She didn’t believe what was going on until they mentioned Wren.”
I knew Jezebel wouldn’t know what the heck was going on. I grabbed my phone off the bed and looked up at Wrecker. “Um, thank you for, well, everything.”
He nodded and pulled the door shut behind him.
“Call your friend, darlin’,” Maniac called. He moved to the back door.
“Uh, where are you going?” I asked.
“Thought I would try to give you some privacy.”
Privacy. Something I had silently been begging for, and now he was giving it to me, it felt weird. “Oh, uh, thanks.”
He slipped out the back door, and I looked down at my phone.
How had Maniac always being around become my new norm?
The man had finally given me some time, and now I had never felt more alone.
Damn, my head and heart were so messed up.
*
Chapter 7
Maniac
“We need to go to the grocery store.”
“We just went the other day.”
“I thought I would try to make a cake.”
My gaze traveled from the TV and landed on Wren, who was standing in front of the open fridge. “Cake?” Now she had my attention.
“Yeah. I watched a baking challenge thing the other night when you were sleeping, and now I’ve been craving cake.” She shut the fridge and opened the cabinet above the stove.
“You sure you’re okay, darlin’?” All morning, she had been up and down, unable to sit still for more than a few minutes.
“Just restless,” she muttered.
It had been five days since Wrecker had brought the news of the Captains heading for Jezebel and her kid. After I had given her space to talk to her friend, something had changed with her.
It was like the light I was always looking for inside her was finally starting to spark. She was more open, talked to me, and even hung out with me without me having to badger her into it. We had plowed through all of the movies in the cabinet, and now she was currently addicted to watching the food channel. Hence her wanting a cake. Not that I was going to argue with her making one.
“I’ll call the store, and we can go tonight.”
She slammed the cabinet and turned around. She put her hands on her hips and smiled. “Can we just go now?”
I glanced out the window. “Uh, you know there are people out there, right?”
She rolled her eyes and grabbed a piece of paper off the counter. “Yeah, I kind of figured.” She scribbled a few things on the paper and tucked it into her back pocket. “So, can we go?” She looked up at me expectantly.
“Uh, yeah. If you want.”
“I want.” She padded over to the door, while I sat dumbly on the couch. I was struck stupid by the fact she wanted to leave the house, in the daylight, with me. “You think we can take your bike, or is it too cold?”
And those words were music to my ears. “Not too cold at all, darlin’. Although, I’m not sure how much you’re going to buy at the store.” I had the saddlebags, but they weren’t going to fit a ton of shit in them.
“Just a handful of things. Nothing big.”
I watched as she shoved her feet into a pair of sandals and grabbed her purse off the small table by the door. “We take the bike, you need to put shoes on.”
She glared at me but kicked off the sandals. “Men,” she mumbled under her breath.
“What does being a man have to do with it?” I tossed the remote on the couch and slowly rose.
“Always telling me what to wear or do.” She stalked to the bed and bent over, her ass wagging at me in the air while she looked under the bed.
God damn. I had been trying to be a gentleman and not look at Wren like the fine piece of woman she was, but she hadn’t been making it easy on me. I would have to be blind to not notice her, but ever since she started coming out of her shell, I couldn’t take my eyes off her. Now with her ass in the air, my eyes were unable to look anywhere else, and I wanted Wren. Bad. “Last I checked, that was the first time I’ve ever commented on what you were wearing, and it’s only because I don’t want your pretty feet to get ate up by the black top.”
She huffed but didn’t respond. While she strapped a pair of black converse on her feet, I managed to get my wits about me and stuff my feet into my boots.
“Do I need a coat?”
I grabbed my cut and tugged it on. “Sweatshirt should be good enough.” She was wearing the same damn pale pink sweatshirt, but it would do for today. There was only a slight breeze, and it was over sixty. “Ready?”
She stood up and hitched her purse over her shoulder. “As I’ll ever be.”
I wanted to ask her if she was sure she wanted to do this, but I didn’t want her to think twice and not want to go. I was a selfish bastard who wanted her body wrapped around me on the back of my bike. “Let’s hit it, darlin’.”
*
Wren
The trip to the store took twice as long as normal.
Maniac managed to find a back way that more than likely weaved us around the town of Durham and back to the store.
Maniac killed the bike in front of the store, and my arms relaxed around his middle.
That was amazing.
Whenever I had been on the back of Rack’s bike, I hated it. I hated it because I knew we were either headed to some party I would just be passed around at, or back to the c
lubhouse where I would either be used or ignored.
On the back of Maniac’s bike, I didn’t feel that. I felt free. The weight of the world wasn’t weighing down on me as he glided through turns, and I felt the bike rumble beneath me.
With Maniac, I felt free.
“You gotta get off first, darlin’.”
I jumped slightly and dropped my arms from around him. “Sorry.” I scrambled off the back and stood on the sidewalk with my arms folded around my middle.
“Nothing to be sorry about.” He kicked down the kickstand and held his hand out to me. “Helmet.”
My fingers fumbled with the clasp, and I yanked it off my head. “I suppose I don’t need to wear that walking around the store.”
His laugh rumbled around me, and he hooked it on the handlebars. “Don’t think I need to worry about that with you. Unless I get a couple of drinks in you.”
“Bourbon really isn’t my thing.” That was the only type of alcohol we had in the cabin. Once I had gotten comfortable in the kitchen, I took stock of what we had, and the liquor cabinet was lacking.
“We’ll get you something you like.” He gracefully dismounted the bike and slid his sunglasses on the top of his head. “I’m more of a whiskey man myself.”
“Wine.” I could totally go for a bottle or wine. Or ten.
“Wine it is,” he chuckled. He stepped close and placed his hand on the small of my back. I pivoted, and he propelled me into the store, with his hand touching me the whole way.
And I didn’t freak out.
I was finally getting used to being around him. It had only taken weeks.
I grabbed a basket from by the door and exhaled. Three people bustled past me, and two were standing in line at the checkout.
Deep breathes, Wren. No one knew about me. Hell, they didn’t even know my name, let alone the things I had been through, or the scars I carried beneath my sweatshirt.
Maniac’s warm touch radiated through the thick material at my back. “Breathe, Wren. No one is looking at you.” His breath was hot on my ear, and his body was slightly pressed against me.
How did he know what I was thinking?
“Uh, okay,” I whispered.
“Think about that cake you’re going to make me. What did you have on your list?” He was trying to distract me, and I was going to grab onto it.
“Sugar. Flour. Vanilla. Maybe almond extract. Butter. Powder sugar. Baking powder. Maybe ice cream.”
His chuckle radiated next to me. “Maybe we should have brought the truck.”
“Most of that is small besides the flour and sugar.” He guided me through produce, and my eyes landed on green peppers. “What are your thoughts on stuffed peppers?”
“Sounds good as long as we can fit them in my saddlebags.”
I looked up at him over my shoulder. “All we need is green peppers and rice. We have everything else.”
He grabbed the basket from me and pointed at the peppers. “Load ‘em up, darlin’. I’m never gonna tell you no when you want to cook or bake. If anything, we can come back with the truck to pick shit up if it doesn’t fit on the bike.”
We made our way down the rice aisle with six large green peppers in my basket. “We just need a bag of white rice.” I mentally ran through the canned food cupboard. “And maybe a can of diced tomatoes.”
Maniac shook his head but didn’t say no.
By the time we made it to the checkout, my basket was overflowing, and there was no way in hell we were going to be able to fit everything in his saddlebags. I turned to put back a bunch of things and ran smack dab into Maniac.
“Where you going?” he asked as he wrapped his arms around my waist to steady me.
“I’m gonna put some of this back. I don’t want you to have to drive back in to town.”
He grabbed the basket out of my hand and reached around to set it on the checkout. “I got it figured out, darlin’.” He looked down at me. “You can make it up to me later.” He winked and stepped around me.
Whoa, whoa. Make it up to him? I had no idea what he was talking about.
“You think we can get this all delivered to the house, Ron? We drove the bike today.”
I turned to see the guy who always lets us in, when the store was closed, standing behind the cash register. “Sure thing. At your folk’s place, right?”
Maniac nodded and started unloading the basket onto the moving belt. “Yeah.”
“Damn shame what happened to your folks.”
My interest piqued, and I stepped closer to Maniac.
“She loved him something fierce, Dalton.”
It was strange to hear Maniac’s real name from someone’s lips. Even though I knew his real name, I still only thought of him as Maniac. At first, it had been strange to call him that, but now it just felt right.
Maniac nodded his head and set the empty basket under the checkout. “Yeah, they were good together.” His voice was strained, and I could tell this wasn’t something he wanted to talk about.
“You actually planning on staying in Durham?” Ron glanced at me. “It’s a good place to start a family.”
Ha! This man was crazy.
Maniac chuckled and fished a few twenties out of his wallet. “Just here for a little bit, Ron. Weston is home for me now.”
Ron tsked and shook his head. He opened the register and started counting out change. “Weston is too big.”
Maniac shook his head at the change Ron held out to him. “Keep it for delivery. Think you can drop them off around seven?”
I looked at the clock above the door. It was only one-thirty. How did the man expect me to bake a cake, when he wasn’t going to have the ingredients delivered for over five hours?
“Can do.”
Maniac dropped his sunglasses over his eyes and ushered me out of the store.
“Um, why did you tell him to deliver everything at seven?” I was wanting cake now.
Maniac kicked his leg over the bike and looked up at me. “Thought we could go for a ride.”
That sounded nice, but for five hours? “Uh, where are we going?”
He shrugged and cranked up the bike. “Wherever the road takes us, darlin’,” he hollered over the roar of the engine.
I looked up and down the sidewalk, my mind racing trying to find a way to tell him no. I didn’t have any other choice.
Maniac held out the helmet to me, a smug smile on his lips. He knew I didn’t have any other choice.
I strapped on the helmet and swung my leg over the bike. Not that I would ever say it out loud, but getting back on the bike with Maniac really wasn’t that bad.
It was right where I wanted to be.
*
Chapter 8
Maniac
“You good with this?”
Wren tilted her head back and looked up at The Bar. “We drove an hour to come to a bar?” She seemed less than impressed.
This hadn’t been my planned destination when I had started driving, but before I knew it, we were in Kales Corners and a beer sounded good.
“Yeah.” No sense in letting her know I had no idea where we were headed.
“We couldn’t have gone to bar in Durham?”
I threaded my fingers through hers. “We could have, but I wanted to go for a ride too. Now, you wanna get a beer, or stand here?”
“Not really a beer girl.”
I looked down at her and smiled. “Pretty sure we can find you something else to drink.”
“But will the glass be clean?” she muttered.
A huge, old Cadillac careened into the parking lot and parked in front of The Bar. I quickly tucked Wren behind me and rested my hand on the butt of my gun.
I had kept an eye out the whole way here, but that didn’t mean the Hell Captains hadn’t found us. “Stay behind me, Wren. Don’t move unless I tell you to.”
“Okay,” she whispered. Her body was pressed firmly against my back, and her hands were clutching my cut.
The doo
r to the Caddy opened.
“You gotta be fucking kidding me,” I cursed.
“You two are in Kales Corners, and the only way I find out is by chance driving past The Bar and seeing it with my own eyes.”
Alice. Exactly what I didn’t want.
Wren was finally opening up to me and not running like a scared deer. I didn’t need Alice’s loud mouth and craziness to drive her back into her shell.
“We’re just driving through.” The thought of a beer wasn’t so appealing anymore if Alice was going to be joining us.
Alice stood next to her car with her hands on her hips. “You’re a mountain of a man, Maniac, and while I can’t see her, I know Wren is behind you. Stop hiding her like I’m the devil come to snatch your souls.”
Wren giggled behind me. “I think she would more likely snatch our underwear than our souls.”
I glanced over my shoulder down at Wren. A small smile played on her lips, and there was a slight sparkle in her eyes. “More accurate,” I agreed.
“So are you two going to come in for a drink, or are we just going to keep shouting across the parking lot?” Alice called.
“You wanna stay or go?” This was all up to Wren.
“Uh, well, I really wanna make a cake, but you made it so I can’t make it ‘til tonight, so we might as well kill a little bit of time with Alice. She’s kooky, but she appears to be harmless.”
Harmless. I suppose she was. “Two drinks, and then we head back to Durham.”
Wren stepped out from behind me and grasped my hand. “You’re driving. One for you, three for me.”
Why that little minx. “We’ll see about that, darlin’.”
*
Wren
“And then he just dropped me at the door and rode off.” Alice fanned herself with her hand and lifted the other to the bartender. “We need another round, Reierson.”
The bartender lifted the lid off the blender. “The fact you have a blender in your trunk boggles my damn mind, Alice.”
She shrugged and pushed her glass toward him. “If you guys would get with the times and realize blended drinks are the shit, then I wouldn’t need to.”