Outlaw's Wrath - An MC Brotherhood Romance Boxed Set (68 page)

Read Outlaw's Wrath - An MC Brotherhood Romance Boxed Set Online

Authors: Evelyn Glass,Carmen Faye,Kathryn Thomas

BOOK: Outlaw's Wrath - An MC Brotherhood Romance Boxed Set
10.06Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

“Why?”

 

“Because I have to sort some things out first.”

 

“What?”

 

He sighed. “Alex…I want to stay. But I can’t. How would I live?”

 

“You can stay with me until you find something.”

 

“I have no skills, Alex. I will be pushing a broom and emptying trash cans. How would I support a family on eight bucks an hour?”

 

“We can make it work.”

 

“I know. And we will. But give me a chance to do better than minimum wage. Alex, I make over a hundred thousand a year now. That is the life I want to give you. Not the life of a guy that flips burgers.”

 

A hundred thousand dollars a year? The amount ricocheted around in my mind. I thought I was doing well at sixty. What did he
do?
“How much you make isn’t important.”

 

“It’s important to me.”

 

I thought about that a moment. I knew some men didn’t want their partners making more than them, but I was surprised that Cain was like that. Or was he? Maybe it wasn’t the money as much as being a good provider.
“Why? Why does it matter?”

 

“Because, it does. I remember when we didn’t have
anything
and I want better for my kid.”

 

“Tell me what you do, Cain. Please. I won’t tell a soul.”

 

He was quiet for a long time, but I waited him out. “I can’t,” he whispered.

 

“Okay.” I felt the connections that had formed with him wither.

 

“Alex, please understand. I swore an oath. I can’t break that. The only thing I ever had was my word. I can’t break it. Just like I’m promising you, I will be here for you. All you have to do is call and I
will
be here. Every doctor’s appointment, every class, every time you need me, I will be here.”

 

I didn’t say anything.

 

“I’m sorry, Alex,” he murmured.

 

“So am I,” I whispered
as I rolled to my side and turned my back to him.

 

He pulled me in close but the connection was gone. There was so much about him that I didn’t know, so much that he wouldn’t tell me. Was I just supposed to trust him? There were just too many unknowns. The 1% patch was a big problem. He could tell me it meant he rode his bike rain or shine, but I didn’t believe it for a moment. Not with him pulling down six figures working for the club. No, he was mixed up in something illegal, no matter what he said. Maybe it wasn’t drugs, but it was something.

 

Machined Parts…
Something they imported and put together. I tried to figure out what he wasn’t saying, but I kept coming up empty. Something illegal, but not illegal. Something that generated a lot of cash. As my eyes began to grow heavy I finally gave up thinking about it. It didn’t matter what machine they built, it was still obviously illegal. If it was machines at all. It was just as likely it was all a bunch of lies and they were dealing drugs, despite what he said.

 

I sighed. I always thought I would be a mother someday, but not like this. Tomorrow I would take him to get his bike, and then he would be gone. Out of my life. I knew I could do this on my own. I had no choice.

 

Epilogue

 

Cain dismounted his bike after leaning it over onto the stand in the Hellhounds’ clubhouse parking lot, tired and saddle sore from the eight-hour ride from New Orleans. The time on the road had given him a chance to think, to think about Alex and all that could have been. He needed to check in, but as soon that was done, he was out of there and headed home. First thing in the morning he would contact the bank and start the paperwork to get checks cut for her every week. She would either cash them or not, but if she didn’t, the next contact she received from him would be from a lawyer. He was ready to wash his hands of her.

 

“Cain! Where have you been, man? Thad has been looking for you,” Clyde said as Cain walked into the clubhouse.

 

“Yeah. Something came up while I was in New Orleans. I called him yesterday and told him I would be late. I’m going to see him now.”

 

“Glad you’re back. Trouble’s brewing, bro.”

 

“What kind of trouble?”

 

“Bulls trouble.”

 

“Shit…okay. Where’s Thad?”

 

“Try the office.”

 

Cain walked down the short hall to the President’s office, dragging his hand along the restored, teal, 1950 Panhead that decorated the main room.

 

“Thad?” he asked quietly as he stuck his head into the President’s office.

 

“Cain, glad you’re back. Get your…issue…resolved?”

 

“Yes. No. Hell, I don’t know. Maybe.”

 

“Well, I need you to get your head back in the game. The Bulls are making a move on us.”

 

“What kind of move?” The Blacktop Bulls were a rival club and were a constant pain in the Hellhounds ass, always yapping at them like one of those little dogs chasing cars. All bark, but if they ever caught the car, they wouldn’t have the first idea what to do with it.

 

“They are trying to make a move into our business.”

 

“Guns?”

 

“Yeah.”

 

Cain snickered. “Let ‘em. We have the best supply chain in the business. They’re all bark.”

 

“Not according to New Jersey.”

 

Cain’s brow furrowed. “Why? What happened?” New Jersey was the club’s nickname for some very heavy hitters out of Newark, just across the river from New York City. They were the Hounds biggest customers.

 

“They said the Bulls were offering US and NATO weapons at the same prices we get for our stuff.”

 

“Bullshit!” Cain spat. “There is
no
fucking way they can get NATO arms at those kinds of prices. This is bullshit, Thad. New Jersey is trying to screw us.”

 

“Maybe. But I had to let their last shipment go at our cost…less shipping…to get the deal through.”

 

Cain sat in the chair and fumed a moment. “I’ll call Nicolaus and find out what the fuck is going on. I think either the Bulls are fucking with New Jersey or New Jersey is fucking with us, one of the two. Did New Jersey actually see the weapons?”

 

“Don’t know. Are you sure we are on top of this?”

 

“Abso-fucking-lutely! Thad, I’m telling you, this stinks to high heaven. The Bulls are just trying to screw us. Why can’t they just stick to running their whores and leave us alone? We don’t shit in their sandbox; why are they shitting in ours?”

 

“Bad blood, brother. It’s always been this way.”

 

“We need to clean their clock.”

 

“If it comes to that, we will. But for now, just find out who is fucking who, and get it straightened out. Let me know if you need anything.”

 

“I don’t need anything at the moment, and I will find out what the
fuck
is going on. That it?”

 

“That’s it. Make it happen, Cain.”

 

“Yeah. I’ve got it.”
Cain kicked the chair back so hard when he stood that it fell to its back. He jerked the chair off the floor and slammed it upright before storming out of the office.
Goddamnit! When it rains, it fucking pours!
He snarled to himself as he stomped out of the clubhouse, kicking over a trashcan along the way.

 

Turn the page to read Book 2: Devil’s Ride

Click Here to Return to the Table of Contents

Devil’s Ride

Prologue

 

“I understand, Mr. Castellino,” Cain Rodgers said into his phone as he oscillated a pen between his finger and thumb, “but I have checked with our source and he knows of no new players entering the trade. Like me, he doesn’t believe that the Bulls can obtain the weapons they claim to have access to and sell them at such low prices.”

 

“Cain, it’s nothing personal,” Gianni Castellino said, “it’s just business. They said they could deliver and—”

 

“Mr. Castellino, have you
seen
the weapons?”

 

“We saw a sample. My Weapons guy checked it out and said it was legit.”

 

“But have you seen the
entire
shipment? Have you selected a few at random and inspected those? I could provide you with one or two M27s and tell you I picked them up at the local gun dealer for a hundred bucks each. But providing two hundred at that price… that’s a different matter.”

 

“You really think they’re trying to screw us?”

 

“Mr. Castellino, let me put it to you this way. If you
can
buy them at that price, do so. It is the deal of the century. But just make
sure
you know what you are buying. The Blacktop Bulls have been a pain in our ass for years and I think they’re just trying screw up our deals. But they don’t have the resources to do it on the up-and-up, and this whole deal smells of a scam. We have dealt squarely with you for fifteen years, passing along every discount we could negotiate. I’m asking you now, as a favor, before you kick us to the curb, to just make sure you know what you are buying. I don’t want to see you make a mistake.”

 

Cain sat quietly and let Castellino think over what he had said. “You’re right, Cain. Since you took over our supply chain, you have delivered every single time. You, and the rest of the Hellhounds, have never given me reason to doubt what you are supplying me. If you think we are getting fucked, then we need to dig a little deeper.” Castellino paused and, when he spoke again, Cain could hear the amusement in his voice. “I sometimes forget that not all of you cowboys can be trusted.”

 

“Playing games with the customer is a great way to ruin a working relationship,” Cain said, putting as much conviction into his voice as possible. “That’s why we don’t do it. We only promise what we can actually deliver.” 

 

“Yes. Yes you do. Thank you for bringing this to my attention. We have our own reputation to think about and I don’t need some swinging-dick cowboy screwing that up.”

 

“No sir. That’s why I contacted you when I couldn’t verify the Bulls’ supply.”

 

“Thank you, Cain. You have done me a great favor.”

 

Cain smiled, flipped the pen into the air, and caught it. Crisis averted, just like he told Thad it would be. “Taking care of the customer is what I do. You know that,” he teased.

 

Castellino’s laugh echoed from the phone. “Yes you do. Especially the last time I was in Dallas. We’ll be prepared to take our next scheduled shipment like normal until we can verify what the Blacktop Bulls are selling.”

 

“It will be here. Thank you Mr. Castellino.”

 

“Thank you, Cain.”

 

As soon as Cain disconnected, he dialed Thad’s number.

 

“Thad. Go.”

 

Cain grinned. Thad always answered his phone like he was mission control for NASA. “President Thaddeus Wilton, the noble and wise, your humble servant has news of great import!” he cried in his most dramatic voice. He was feeling good about himself having once again made chicken salad from chicken shit.

 

“Cut the shit, Rodgers. What do you want?” Thad growled playfully from the phone.

 

“I just hung up with New Jersey,” Cain continued in his normal voice.

 

“And?”

 

“And…I think it is all straightened out. I told him if he
could
buy those weapons at the price the Bulls are selling them, he should do so. But I also told him to make damn
sure he knew what he was buying.”

 

“You’re that confident the Bulls’ deal is a scam?”

 

“I’m that confident.
Nicolaus doesn’t know of anyone entering the game, and he
would
know. In fact, he told me if the deal was on the up and up, we should buy from the Bulls and sell them to him. He could buy them from us and sell them on, and still make a profit. It’s too good of a deal to be real, Thad.”

 

“Okay. Good to know. One of these days we’re going to have to deal with the Bulls. They never stop pushing.”

 

“Yeah. It may be time to slap them down again,” Cain suggested.

 

“Yeah. Or worse. Every time we kick their ass, they come back at us sooner. It’s only been a couple of years since the last time we fucked them up. I’ll send word that if they don’t cut this shit out, the next time we come at them, it will be for keeps.”

 

“It’s about time,” Cain mumbled into the phone.

 

“Listen to me, Cain, killing a person, even a Bull, is bad shit. It’s not how we operate.”

 

“Yeah, I know. But I get so sick of their shit all the time.”

 

“Yeah. Me, too. But we have you, and they don’t, so let ‘em try.”

 

Cain grinned at the compliment. “Does that mean I get something extra in my envelope this time?”

 

“Fuck no! I like you, but I don’t like you that much,” Thad teased. “Seriously, good job, Cain. You pulled our nuts out of the fire again.”

 

“Thanks, Thad,” Cain said, warming with his praise. “I do it for the club.”

 

“I know what you mean, brother. We all do. That’s why the Hounds kick ass.”

 

Other books

Protect by C. D. Breadner
The Death of Us by Alice Kuipers
Marshal Law by Kris Norris
Drowning Is Inevitable by Shalanda Stanley
The View from the Cherry Tree by Willo Davis Roberts
Chain of Command by Helenkay Dimon
Decadent Master by Tawny Taylor
Unveil by Amber Garza
El arca by Boyd Morrison