Have Gun, Will Travel (The Bare Bones MC Book 5) (25 page)

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Authors: Layla Wolfe

Tags: #romance, #motorcycle

BOOK: Have Gun, Will Travel (The Bare Bones MC Book 5)
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Sax said tightly, “The women would think so, too.”

“And Roman Serpico,” added Harte, mentioning the guy whose father had been turned into a soccer ball by Tormenta.

“Is my dog in here?”

A stranger’s voice cut through our brotherhood. With great force I managed to open my eyes. Some guy in a plaid shirt was standing in the sliding doorway. It seemed to me he was one of the hikers from yesterday—
damn
, was that scene only yesterday?

“Is this your dog?” said Wolf. “Yeah, come get him. He wants to play. As you can see, we’re not up to playing.”

The guy came forward. “Yeah, I know. I was hiking by when I saw some guy—oh, maybe this guy here—tying your girlfriend with zip ties and forcing her into the house. Sure didn’t seem like you were enacting a scene, you know?”

“We weren’t,” I said lazily. “He was a major fucking asshole.” Then I realized I said “was.” This stranger, probably one of our audience from yesterday, would see our guns, realize the culprit was dead, and be forced to tell the cops on us.

“Fuck,” said the hiker, “I hope you don’t mind, but I called the cops. I didn’t know what was going on, just that you”—he nodded at Sax—“weren’t here, your bike was gone, and some stranger was manhandling her. So just a warning, the cops are on their way. Don’t know how urgent I made it sound, just that I saw something that might be wrong.”

“No, that’s fine,” said Sax. They were finishing up wiping blood from me, and Sax squeezed a narrow ribbon of Neosporin onto my lacerated breast. “Wolf, Harte, just drag that motherfucker into the garage and put a bike cover over him. I’ll just tell cops we were playing. Make sure there’s no blood anywhere. I’m glad you did that, friend. If I hadn’t of gotten here, things could be hairy by now.”

“Hairy,” I echoed. I put out a hand to pet the white dog as the two other men slung Tormenta like a hammock and carried him off. The dog was cute. “I want a dog, Sax.”

Sax smiled. “You can have any dog you want, sister.”

“I like them big and fluffy, like this one.”

“All right. We can get a sidecar for him.”

“Her.”

“Her.”

“What happened to Slayer?”

“Well, Tormenta dropped him off halfway down the hill. We saw him wandering with his hand held to his head, poor guy. That’s why we were late. We would’ve arrived sooner, figuring Tormenta would come directly here. But we had to drop Slayer at the hospital. Tobiah stayed with him.” He was wrapping my boob like a sling around the shoulder, like a very tight sports bra. This wrapped the shoulder wound too. No more blood.

“Wow,” said Plaid Blue Shirt. “You guys sure live an exciting, dangerous life.”

Sax snorted. “Yeah. Sometimes
too
exciting and dangerous. Harte, you find the bike cover? Cover him good?”

Harte was back in the kitchen. “Yeah, he’s covered fine. Let me get these drops from the floor in case the cops want to take a gander.”

“Harte, you ever hear this saying? ‘The sun never sets on a Bare Bones patch.’”

Wolf snorted. “Tobiah claims it’s a real thing.”

“Sure, I’ve heard it,” said Harte. “My mom embroidered it on a sampler. It’s on the wall behind my dad’s desk.”

“Your dad.” It sounded like Sax muttered skeptically under his breath. “Your
dad
,” as though his dad was a piece of radioactive bear shit.

Now Harte squatted next to the love seat. “Sax. I’ll deal with the cops. You put Bee into bed. Maddy will be here pronto.”

“But don’t let her sleep,” said Wolf, “in case she’s got a concussion.”

Sax cut the end of the tape with scissors and fastened it down securely. “You guys hide your pieces somewhere. If we were having a bondage scene, there’d be no reason for you to have irons.”

“Wow,” said Blue Shirt. “I’d like to join The Bare Bones.”

As Sax stood me up, Wolf made a lip fart. “You serious, you tree hugger?
I’m
a fucking Prospect.
Been
a fucking Prospect for over six months now. Know how many guys I’ve killed?”

“You don’t need to brag,” Sax warned as he dragged me to the bedroom, my arm slung across his shoulder.

“Well,” said Wolf, “a lot. I can’t tell you how many, but a lot. A whole hell of a lot. Are you prepared to kill a lot of men? I didn’t think so.”

“I might,” said Blue Shirt, “if I was defending my brothers’ honor.”

“But it’s
more
than honor, I tell you! You’re defending the dignity, esteem, and reputation of every single Bare Boner when you are forced to kill some crappy, wife-beating, woman-slashing scumbag! It’s a credit to your name, I tell you, when you are forced to bury some low-life spitter like that guy there who can’t be bothered to take the gold grill out of his mouth before he spits back up the bags of crystal that have been cut with drain cleaner…”

We left Wolf spouting his stories of glory, and Sax put me down gently on his bed. I had made the bed earlier, and now was glad I had.

“We’ll have to find a shirt for you, cover up those bandages in case cops want to see you, make sure you’re okay.” Sax was rooting in his walk-in closet for a boyfriend shirt, I guessed.

“Zane?” I said groggily. I was still halfway in a daze. I had to focus my attention on Sax, otherwise he started to morph into Roscoe Flantz, into Baldy Avery. It was my brain telling me I needed to learn to trust. I couldn’t trust those former two guys. Sax, I could. “Now that we’ve got Tormenta, are you gonna let me go back to my nursery?”

His answer wasn’t immediate. He pretended to be choosing between two shirts, finally selecting a button-down light blue thing. I wondered where Sax ever wore that, with a tie. Maybe some BDSM awards dinner.

He sat next to me on the bed, bowling me toward him. He took a small white bottle of something from his nightstand. It was ibuprofen, and he shook out four. “I should. But we should also gauge to what extent Tormenta’s organization is going to want revenge. We made no bones about it being us—we wore our cuts, we wanted him to know who it was.”

“Post a guard at my nursery?” I grinned.

He handed me a glass of water and the pills. Suddenly his attitude was so gentle. He was the epitome of the classic gentle bear. “Maybe. Maybe we’ll need to do something like that. I know you need to get back to your job.”

“Yes,” I slurred, gulping four pills at once. “Lots of stuffed animals waiting for me.”

“What? But I don’t want you going back to your tiny apartment. That place is the pits. You’re moving in here with me.”

“I am?” The idea had never occurred to me. Everything was moving so fast. But then again, maybe everything was moving at just the right speed.

“Yes.” Sax took my chin between his fingers. “I love you, you know that, Bee. I already let you get injured because I didn’t leave a guard on you today.”

“You didn’t know Tormenta would get away from you.”

“I could have predicted the possibility. It could take months, even years, for this whole thing to die down, Bee. And I want you with me anyway. I want you to have all the kids you want.”

I nearly choked. “Kids…with you?”

“I hope to hell with me. Listen.” Sax kissed me on the forehead. In the stillness of the pine forest, I could hear the crunch of a car’s tires on the driveway. “I’d better get back out there, talk to cops, let them see I’m okay. Put this shirt on and get under the covers. The cops might want to question you.”

When Sax shut the door and I slid between the sheets, I had never felt safer.
He wants me to have his babies
…I had never been more flattered and honored in my life.

Was it possible I had finally attained the safety and security I’d been longing for since leaving the convent? It seemed too good to be true.

But I was definitely off to a good start.

EPILOGUE

SAX

“W
ith this water the past is washed away. All the fear, sorrow, and danger that has trapped your soul is washed from you.”

Sax handed Beatrix the bowl of warm water. Taking the sea sponge from it, he kneeled and began “washing” her legs.

If the collaring ceremony had been performed, say, at the house of a fellow in the community, Beatrix would have been naked. But because they were crammed into Ford’s office at The Citadel with twenty other people, she had changed into a simple short shift. Lytton was playing the part of the officiant. Ford and Maddy had finally taken a romantic trip to Greece and Italy for a few weeks. Roman Serpico was there. He had profusely thanked Sax for taking out the asshole who’d turned his father into a sporting good. Of course Roman only wished he had been the one to do it, although he understood the situation. To make up for taking that joy away from Roman, Sax had allowed him to oversee the transition of Tony Tormenta’s head into a dartboard. Sax didn’t know and didn’t want to know, but suddenly, it was done.

So far there had been no retribution. Sax had even heard from a few guys within Tormenta’s organization that they were relieved to be rid of him. He was becoming out of control, they said. It was painful to work for him. Some guys even thanked Sax. It might be too good to be true there would be no blowback from the ops Sax had run, but two months later, that seemed to be the case. Their pants would be down around their ankles for many months to come waiting for Tormenta’s camp to make a move.

Lytton intoned, “Now is the time the two incomplete people realize something is missing in their lives. They’ve come into each other’s lives to fill that void. They have felt the same emptiness. Today their souls will combine and their lives will be whole. We invite everyone here to share today, to share their joy.”

Sax finished “washing” Beatrix’s neck. He admired the way the water had trickled down and bathed her breasts so the thin cotton was plastered to them. Bee was capable of so many looks, and today she was the innocent, eager virgin. Sax imagined she couldn’t wait to get him alone, to display her slutty side, to let her inner whore run rampant. In the two months they’d been living together, he hadn’t regretted choosing her for one moment. He’d made the right decision staying in Pure and Easy and letting a few minions run the road for him, going to mineral shows, selling his wares. Cassie helped him run Box of Rocks—in fact, she was there now holding down the fort—and Bee went to her Flagstaff nursery every day. It was the perfect, idyllic setup Sax had forgotten he had once wanted with Anna. She had even cooked naked for him a few times in nothing but an apron and high heels.

Taking the bowl of water from Bee, Sax took a goblet from Lytton that contained a lit candle. Handing this to her, Sax took the sage smudge stick from Lytton and lit it. Starting again at her feet, he smudged Bee up her entire body, front and back, winding it around her like a kinbaku rope.

Sax said, “I pledge my heart, mind and soul to your welfare. I willingly give you everything I am, everything I ever will be.”

A few of the older guys, Duji and Tuzigoot, coughed, so Sax gave the sage bundle back to Lytton and allowed him to pour some oil into his cupped hands. Clove, anise, and ginger bloomed inside Sax’s nostrils as he shared a sly look with Bee. She had been cleaned, perfumed, and now she was being oiled. It wasn’t a strange feeling for Sax, performing this ritual in front of his brothers’ eyes. He was used to performing in public. But he imagined Bee was a bundle of heart-pounding nerves. It wasn’t your usual biker ceremony.

As he oiled her calves and as far up on her thighs as he dared, Sax recited. He had only halfway memorized his speech—he was basically winging it, being accustomed to this sort of thing. “I pledge my insight and wisdom, my property, and my shelter to you. I will guide you, defend you, and meet all your needs.” He oiled her neck, her hands, and her face, showing attention to the details of her fingers.

Now Lytton handed Sax the collar he’d taken back from Bee for the ceremony. This wouldn’t be her everyday, nursery collar. He’d given her a much plainer one for that. This was her dress-up collar, embedded with fire opals, garnets, turquoise, and banded pink rhodochrosite like candy. “With this collar I bind you as my own, my property, my soul. You give these things to me of your own free will. You know what this collar represents. You freely give me everything you possess.”

“Yes,” Bee said in a small, chaste voice. “I do.”

As Sax fastened the collar behind her neck, he kissed her. The kiss was almost chaste too, and the room full of bikers erupted in a hearty cheer. In addition to the top Pure and Easy officers, the abovementioned allergic men, and Faux Pas, Gollywow, Wild Man, members of the Flagstaff chapter were here too, the few who remained after Leo had gone into the WITSEC program. Sax’s son Harte and his sometime lover Dayton Navarro stood on opposite sides of the room. After the ceremony, Harte was heading out to “find himself” on a road trip with one of Sax’s geology assistants. Fred Birdseye had stayed on as Veep once Leo had vanished, pledging his loyalty to the new Veep, Sax Saxonberg.

After Sax’s beatdown in the Citadel parking lot, Leo’s cover had finally been blown. On the surface, Leo been indicted on a racketeering charge, but Harte had gone to see him after he’d been transported to the U.S. Marshal Service, along with his extremely pissed-off wife Lulu. Leo admitted to Harte that WITSEC was his next destination, and that he’d been cooperating with law enforcement. He’d been secretly taping Flagstaff’s church meetings. Agents from the Department of Health had raided the P and E nail salon as well as a dozen others used as money laundering fronts for Tormenta and Leo. The fate of the unpaid or underpaid women was not known.

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