The Lost Boys MC Series: Books 1-4
Page 48
“Fuck coffee. I need a beer,” I grumbled.
I walked over to the fridge and pulled one out. Even though no one had dismissed church, this was a waste of everyone’s time. I stepped out onto the back porch and cracked the beer open, then sat down in one of the rocking chairs. I sank into the wood, listening as the arguing started back up in the house. Fucking hell, the girls had to be awake. Listening to this nonsense and fearing for their safety. We had to pull ourselves together. We were spiraling into a tailspin, and it wasn’t good for anyone involved.
And Asher needed to get a handle on his fucking guys.
I tipped the beer up and took a long pull. That didn’t sit with me. If the Celtic Riders were dealing with their own shit, they didn’t need to be wrapped up in ours. Because once they did us this favor, they’d surely be asking for one in return. So, we’d dig ourselves out of one situation only to be thrust back into another. One that wasn’t ours to sort out.
Sure, it was a selfish idea. But we’d been floundering for months. Bronx was being forced to put all plans of legalizing our activities on hold because Stone fucked and fell in love with the wrong woman.
This is why I don’t mess around with women and their feelings.
Fuck and duck was my game for a reason. And this bullshit with Stone and Hayley and Hayley’s fucking father was one of them. This plan would be easy to execute, and Stone wouldn’t have batted an eye at it if he wasn’t fielding the interest of his fiancée. Not only did I not trust where Stone’s head was at, I didn’t trust the men that had come to help us out of this situation.
Then again, I’d never trusted anyone.
The Lost Boys were as close to trust as I could get. And even then, that was touch and go. I trusted their actions. I trusted that, if I ever needed to be bailed out of a situation, I could call one of them to come help. But when it came to their judgment calls? The decisions they made that affected this entire fucking crew? I didn’t. Case and point, this entire thing. First, Stone’s decision to let Jett marry his sister in the first fucking place, despite me telling him Jett was a damn scumbag. Then, telling Stone to back off Texas when I saw something blossoming between him and Ella. Then, trying to warn Bronx that something was off about Boulder once the damn detective infiltrated our ranks.
No one wanted to listen to me, and here we were.
“Great,” I murmured.
This was why I didn’t trust people, and this was why I didn’t get involved with women. It was simply the nature of the beast. It was easier this way, not getting attached. Not getting emotionally involved. Because when shit exploded—and it always did—I was never out any hurt feelings. No broken hearts or shattered dreams for me.
But that kind of lifestyle came at a cost.
And the loneliness was sometimes unbearable.
4
Maya
It had been three days since my brother came to see me, and I was still shaken by it. I kept looking over my shoulder. Out the window of my apartment above my shop, wondering if someone was watching. Stalking me and following me. I hated it. I hated every bit of it. That feeling was why I left China in the first place. Why I left my home country at such a young age to try and make a better life for myself. In San Diego, no one from my family was watched by that gang. No one tried to track us down or pop in to make sure we were “doing okay.”
Which was code for “doing shit we weren’t supposed to be doing.”
I knew it was bad if my brother came to visit. It always was. Every time my father tried to really check in with my brother and myself, it meant something had gone wrong. A vendetta had been bountied for someone’s head or the people my father rolled with had pissed off the wrong person. I mean, I knew my father checked in on us out of sheer worry. I knew he had bodyguards following me around as a teenager out of a sheer will to keep us safe.
But what would have also kept us safe was not getting involved with those assholes in the first place.
I knew my brother thought I was an idiot. I knew he was under the assumption that I didn't know what he did. Sure, he knew I knew who he rolled with. That he’d taken father’s place at the family business whenever our parents had been killed by the same people that employed him. What he didn’t know was how I figured it out. How I came about the concrete proof that solidified my want to stay hidden, no matter what.
And that was the night he came home with blood on his shirt.
I sat at the top of the steps one day after my father and my brother had left. To do “men stuff,” they’d said. Whatever the fuck that meant. I saw the worry in my mother’s face whenever it first happened. The sorrow that dripped from her features after my father and brother left the house. She paced the house all day, cleaning and re-cleaning. Organizing and reorganizing. She stayed up until all hours of the night, waiting for them to come home.
Waiting to make sure they were okay on their “boy’s day out”.
I peeked down the stairs when they came back inside and saw my brother’s shirt splattered with dull red splotches. It was the first fight I’d ever heard my mother and father have out loud. Without closed doors shutting them off from the rest of the house. My brother argued that it was ketchup and my father tried to calm my mother down. Saying everything was okay and that nothing happened.
But we weren’t idiots.
I knew it was blood on my brother’s shirt that night.
That night did two things. It solidified my brother’s legacy in that gang, and it gave my father fuel to send me to the U.S. His explicit instructions were to not tell the family where I had gone. To not call, unless I was called first. My father always said he had ways of tracking me down if he had to, but I wasn’t sure what they were. There was a lot I wasn’t sure about my life. About my childhood. About the legacy of my family.
However, when my brother Harry showed up in San Diego a year ago and started popping by, I knew my father was right.
The gang had ways of finding me if they needed to find me.
And I didn’t like that.
I talked myself in circles. For the past two days, I argued I was safe and argued I wasn’t. I convinced myself things were good before talking my own self out of it. I was about to go insane, really. The only thing that gave me focus was my work. Piercing skin and blurring the lines between artistic canvases and the human body. It was the only thing that kept me rooted. Planted. Sketching and tattooing were the only things in my life that had become untainted by anything salacious. Or desperate. Or disgusting.
Or bloody.
“Hey! Someone here workin’!?”
The slurred words pulled me from my trance and I peeked out of my office.
“Welcome to Siren’s Tattoo Shop. How may I—”
“Dude, you should get a penis,” one of the guys said.
“And make the balls boobs!” another exclaimed.
I smelled the alcohol seeping off their bodies before I crossed the threshold into the main waiting area. Thank fuck no one was there. Because whenever drunken assholes came into my shop, it always scared the legitimate customers. Yes, it wasn’t very smart for me to have my tattoo shop on the same strip as three of the most notorious and packed clubs in San Diego. But it drove a great deal of business.
I just had to chase out the drunkards sometimes.
“There’s a ‘no drunk’ and ‘no high’ policy in here, boys,” I said.
They all turned their heads toward me, their eyes glassed over from the booze in their stomachs.
“Please tell me she’s the one tattooing your cock and boobs,” one of the boys said.
“I’m not tattooing anything of the sort. So, I’d appreciate it—as the owner of this shop—if you’d leave,” I said.
The man in the middle’s eyes cased me. Ran up and down my body, as if I was a slab of meat for him to behold. I sucked air through my teeth and sighed, then walked over and opened the front door for them. I was three seconds away from pulling my gun and telling them to get the
fuck out. I was already on edge from the visit of my brother. I didn’t need another reason for this shop to be in danger.
“Out. Now,” I said.
“What a bitch,” one of them murmured.
“We’ll come back later. Maybe for some real tits. Unlike the mosquito bites you have,” another said.
“She’s as thin as a fucking rail. Eat a damn cheeseburger!”
I slammed the door behind them, hearing one of them yelp. Good. I caught one of them in the ass. He slammed his fist on the door, and all I did was roll my eyes. The police would pick them up soon enough. They always did. The police around here were good to my shop. Hell, good to this entire block. They kept it as safe as they could, and I never saw a drunkard or someone who was high in my shop twice.
I knew it would be the same for those asshats.
I sighed and walked back to my office. The sun began to set, which meant I only had two or three more hours to be open. I didn’t have anyone on the schedule, which was how it went for a random Thursday. I sat down and continued filling out paperwork. Ordering more needles and colors and replacing some equipment. I dove headfirst into the mound of work I had to do, typing and looking up numbers in a reference catalog.
Then, the bell over the door rang out again.
“I swear to heaven on high, if that’s them—”
“Anyone here?”
A smooth voice resonated down the hallway and I froze. An actual customer? The man didn’t sound like most of the customers I got. Mine were pretty stereotypical, if I were being honest. I stood up and made my way down the hallway, bracing myself for whatever was coming.
And when I opened the door to the main waiting room, I was struck by the most beautiful man I’d ever seen.
“You the tattoo artist at this shop?” he asked.
I paused. “Welcome to Siren’s. How may I help you?”
“Nice accent,” he said, grinning.
“Nice leather jacket,” I said plainly.
“I’m looking for someone who can do a tattoo on my arm. Already got it drawn up. You got time?”
“Depends on the piece,” I said.
He pulled a folded-up piece of paper from his back pocket. I walked over and took it from him, my eyes flickering up to his. I was used to being able to get a read on people. Looking into their eyes and, within seconds, figuring out if they were serious or not. But the baby blue nature of his stare gave of a mischievous glance I wouldn’t have associated with someone who looked like him. Milky pale skin. Dark brown hair. Tall. Very, very tall. I easily stared at his chest, and one look at the veins in his neck told me his lanky form held cut muscle underneath that genuine leather.
I didn’t know if he was being serious or not just yet.
I folded open the piece of paper and was shocked by the detail of the picture. It was a tree of life tattoo. With a leafless, shaded black tree reflected perfectly in a lake. The sky and the clouds were shaded around it, wrapping around his shoulder and covering his arm to just above his elbow. There were dark hills with a moonlit sky in the background, giving it an ominous feel that still felt beautiful.
Just as confusing as the man looming in front of me.
“This’ll have to be taken in steps. Phases. Outlining, then coloring, then shading,” I said.
“Even if it’s only three distinct colors?” the man asked.
I fluttered my eyes up to meet his. “If I stayed open for another hour, we could do outlining and coloring in this sit-down. But shading would still have to be for another time. And yes, that would cost you greatly in terms of money.”
“Fine by me. I got the money.”
My eyes danced over the man, taking in his smaller features. Like the scar that broke up his left eyebrow or the way one eye didn’t quite open as much as the other. He had a scar donning his lower lip, piercing through the fullness of it. He had stubble on his face. The growing of dark red stubble despite the brown hair on top of his head. His chest swelled with natural pride before dropping into a tapered waist his shirt clung to, leaving my eyes to trail along his long legs.
“Like what you see?” he asked.
Even if I did, I couldn't afford to. I had plans. A need to survive. I had plans to hide away forever once I could stash away enough money. I owned this small building. A building with a studio apartment overhead that was disconnected from the strip, but still stood proud among the restaurants and the clubs. Ten more years of working, then I’d sell this place off and move somewhere cheap. Somewhere rustic. Somewhere in the middle of nowhere and build a life outside of my past until I had to take a part-time job in a grocery store somewhere to cushion my investments.
I looked up just in time to watch him lick his lips and I scoffed.
“Let me get this sketched up on outline paper and we’ll get you started,” I said.
“You don’t want to sit down and talk for a bit? Figure out why I want this tattoo?” he asked.
I rolled my eyes. “Not necessary. I’m not your therapist. Just your neighborhood tattoo artist.”
“Then, I should take a little neighborly time and figure out why you decided to move to the area.”
I walked behind the register counter and pulled out some outline paper. I smoothed his folded piece of paper out and began sketching it. I felt him approach me. Loom his shadow over me and watch. But when I felt him move off to the side to come around to where I was, I paused.
I whipped my head over to him and locked my eyes with his.
“I’ll tattoo a shoulder-sized cock on your arm if you don’t stay in front of me,” I said.
The man grinned. “What if that’s the kind of foreplay I enjoy?”
“Then, I’d tell you that you were flirting with the wrong gender.”
“I could be bisexual. You never know. You haven’t even asked me my name.”
“Is that important information for giving you this tattoo?”
He chuckled. “I’m Notch.”
My eyes fell down his body one more time before my hand started sketching again. Before my eyes fell back to the piece of outline paper I was working with.
And I found it hard to bury the grin trying to slide across my cheeks.
5
Notch
The tattoos were a trend I started back in my EMT days. Every time I saved someone’s life, I got a tattoo in their honor. Most of the tattoos I’d gotten over the years were small. Little things that added up to half a sleeve on my leg or a design on parts of my back. But this one? Saving Texas? That man had been an important figure in my life. He was my recruiter. The one who turned my head toward The Lost Boys in the first place. He gave me the semblance of family I needed because he understood what it was like to grow up without one.
And in honor of making sure he didn’t die, I was going to get the kind of tattoo deserving of a man like him.
At this point, it was time for me to start a new sleeve. I had one going down my entire right arm, though I didn’t talk about those tattoos much. Both of my shoulders blades and my chest were covered in designs that flowed effortlessly from one into the other. Which meant the only other place I had was my left arm. Shoulder tattoos were a bitch on me. I was lean and trim. Not thick with muscle like the guys that surrounded me. So, the tops and the crests of my shoulders always made me grit my teeth.
The burn and the pain helped me to remember why I did what I did, though. It helped me to remember and respect every decision I’d made with my life up until this point.
Even though I wasn’t an EMT any longer, the tradition stuck with me. I didn’t get nearly as many tattoos now as I used to. But sometimes, the situation called for it. I had one for Stone on my left shoulder blade. One for Bronx, on my right. It was only a matter of time before Texas emblazoned himself onto my skin, no matter how much he touted the fact that he could sneak up on any enemy and get the best of them, no matter what.
Everyone had their day. Just like I’d had mine.
When I first w
alked into the tattoo shop, the young girl who came out to greet me looked almost pissed. Like I was some sort of inconvenience for her. She came out with her fists balled up and her shoulders tense. And I wondered if her reputation really did precede her. It was the only thing that kept me around long enough to hand her the drawing I’d come up with. The tree of life reflected within a lake’s mirrored state. She took the drawing from me without so much as a look into my eyes. And her comical stature made me grin.
But when she spoke to me, I quickly understood how fiery she was. How commanding her presence could become. I saw her come alive as she drew on that outline paper. As her hands carefully traced and her eyes darted back and forth.
I saw her reputation prove itself in front of me.
Her feistiness was simply an added bonus.
“Here,” she said.
She handed me the finished sketch she had created. An outline of the entire picture, with small symbols denoting where she needed to shade and where she would have to fill in. I narrowed my eyes as I looked at it. There were a couple of things that were off.
“Give me your pen,” I said.
“A ‘please’ would be nice,” she murmured.
I shrugged off her comment and set the drawing down. I made a few tweaks to the image itself, elongating a couple of branches and really outlining the shaded sky that would create the outline of the clouds simply by not filling them in. I wanted that to be done perfectly. It was a complicated process, and this shop came highly recommended by many people in some of the bars I frequented.
At least half of the women I’d had the pleasure of tasting in my lifetime had a tattoo on their body done by this woman. And yet, I hadn’t paid attention enough to ask for the name of the gal that ran this place.
The woman who stared me down as I tweaked her picture.
“Here,” I said.
I handed her the drawing and the pen back as she sighed. She tucked the pen away in her breast pocket, then slid a strand of hair behind her ear. Her eyes danced over the finished piece of work, and I watched as her lips moved softly. Her head nodded as if she were having a conversation with herself.