The Learning Curve

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The Learning Curve Page 13

by Collins, Kelly


  Dad would shout, the report is important, school, and getting educated is the only job you have. And I’d roll my eyes or shake my head or just let my shoulder’s slump. Abraham Lincoln couldn’t teach me a thing. He was dead.

  Ask me to write about the gun that killed him, and I would have brought home an easy A. Guns, I knew.

  I snaked through the bikes lined up like dominoes in the gravel parking lot as my backpack slipped from my shoulders.

  So many bikes at the club meant trouble. Dad was busy, so maybe I wouldn’t get a butt blistering after all.

  As the president of the War Birds MC, this was Dad’s world, and Mom said he ran it like he was God.

  God made the laws. He made the rules. He handed down the punishments. Raptor Savage could make people shake in their sneakers with the lift of an eyebrow. I got that look a lot.

  Mom always said my spirited nature would serve me well when I grew up and took over the club. Dad always put an “if” before that statement. “If he grows up.”

  I stepped back from the door and slipped around the side of the building. Mom was out back with my brothers, Silas and Decker. Next to them was that pesky little girl, Sparrow. She always looked up at me like I was a movie star.

  “Glad you’re home, sweetie.” Mom never called me sweetie in front of anyone else because that would make me seem like a sissy, but I liked when she said it. “Today’s Dad’s big meeting, so I need you to hang out here with the kids. I have to get inside and serve beer.”

  I looked around the parking lot at the motorcycles I didn’t recognize. “Who’s here?”

  “Friends of your father’s. It has nothing to do with you.”

  I glared at the kids playing in the dirt. “That’s not true.” My voice didn’t sound like eight-year-old me. It sounded more like six-year-old Silas when Mom told him to take a bath. “I have to babysit, and that means it has everything to do with me.” I hated babysitting. Silas was fine. At six, he took care of himself. But Decker was just a baby, which meant diapers, and then there was Sparrow. She stuck to me like gum on a shoe.

  I threw my backpack toward the stairs. It skidded across the gravel and clunked to a stop against the bottom step. “Is this about Goose?” Goose was a War Bird who’d been killed last week after a cop stopped him for speeding. I didn’t understand it—Goose was a good guy.

  Mom looked over her shoulder toward the club entrance. “Not now, Ryker.”

  Uh oh. She’d called me Ryker, which meant she was losing her patience. I looked toward the kids and let out a long breath. “Okay, but is this about the cop who shot Goose?” Officer Stuart had said Goose pulled a gun first, but that had to be a big, fat lie. Goose would never shoot the police. Dad’s words replayed through my head: ‘That cop has been targeting motorcycle gangs. His goal is to clean up Fury.’ Fury was a small dot in the mountains. The entire town couldn’t fill up the high school sports stadium. How much cleaning up did we need?

  “Dad invited the Rebels over to discuss the growing tension in the area. He needs to get it under control before more people get hurt. I need you to help me out.” Mom put her fingers under my chin and closed my open mouth. “Take good care of them.” She didn’t wait but walked in to the club. The club that would someday be mine.

  “Hi, Hawk,” Using my nickname, Sparrow pulled on my hand. Her fingers were pink and sticky. “Want some candy?” She reached into the pocket of her dress and pulled out a piece of lint-covered licorice.

  “Gross.” I yanked the candy from her little fist and tossed it toward the parking lot. “It’s dirty.”

  “It’s mine.” She took off toward the candy that lay in the dirt.

  With two giant steps, I grabbed her around her waist, swiping her off the ground.

  The rumble of motorcycle engines stopped me like I’d walked into a brick wall. Pulling in front of the club were at least ten more Rebels. “Too many.”

  I raced back to the playpen where Decker slept. Silas drew in the dirt with a stick, and I dropped Sparrow to her sandaled feet.

  “Silas, watch them for a minute.” I’d never seen the Rebels up close, and I didn’t want to miss my chance.

  He looked up at me with Dad’s eyes. Steel, gray eyes that said it all even before the words came out. “You’re supposed to stay with us.”

  Sparrow stomped her little feet, causing the soles of her shoes to light up. “Yeah.” She looked up at me with the crazy cool eyes only she had. “You’re supposed to sit with me.” Her one blue, and one brown, eyes begged me to stay.

  “I’ll be right back. Stay here.” I crept to the corner of the club and wiggled the loose board just enough to slip inside the storage room. The place smelled like leather and sweat and anger, but I tiptoed forward and slid behind the stack of crates. I pressed my ear to the crack between the boxes.

  Dad’s voice was loud and clear and calm. He talked about rival gangs, feuds, the sheriff, and what they were going to do.

  I peeked over the crate of brake pads and counted the heads I didn’t recognize. There were twenty-five Rebels in our nest. This was epic. Never had there been so many enemies in one place without someone needing a doctor.

  Something creaked behind me, and I swung around.

  Sparrow squeezed through the hole. Little brat. “What are you doing?” I whispered. “Go back,” I gritted through my teeth.

  “No.” She said, a little too loud.

  I slapped my hand over her mouth. “Shh. This is a secret.” I pulled her close. “You can stay if you can be quiet.”

  She nodded, and I went back to my hiding place. She tucked up next to me, and we listened. Or, really, I listened while she peeled the stickers from the boxes in front of us. At least she was being quiet.

  All the War Birds were there. Well, all but Goose. Kite, Dad’s vice president, screamed about being targeted. Some of the members paced the room. They reminded me of the time I cornered a stray cat in the garage. Its hair stood on its back while its tail twitched from side to side.

  I’d once heard someone say, ‘the tension was so thick you could cut it with a knife.’ I never understood what that meant until now. The air was thick like Mom’s pudding, and it was hard to breathe.

  “Your problems aren’t my problems.” The rebel leader leaned back and crossed his hulk-sized arms over his chest.

  “It won’t be long before it spreads to your club.” Dad leaned forward with his elbows on his knees. “Can’t we have a truce between the two clubs until the problem with the police is under control? We don’t need to be fighting wars from every side.”

  Mom crossed in front of me with a full tray of bottled beer. I ducked lower so she wouldn’t see me. Sparrow’s mom, Finch, followed behind picking up the empties. I didn’t know her real name. No one went by their real name at the club. We were War Birds with names like Hawk, Raptor, Kite, and Vulture. The women always chose stupid sissy birds like Warble, Robin, or Sparrow. I looked down at the little bird next to me. She wasn’t so bad. She was like me—spirited.

  The front door burst open and a pair of cops filled the doorway.

  Dad jumped from his seat. “This is a private meeting,” he pointed to the door, “and private property.”

  The big cop, the ugly one, put his hand on the butt of his gun. “Just here to keep the peace.” There was something creepy about his voice. Something dangerous about the way his fingers scratched against the gun.

  “Only peace here.” Dad spread his arms wide enough to stretch open his leather jacket and show off his War Bird belt buckle. The belt usually held his gun, but he carried no gun today. He was in a room of enemies—unprotected. Or so it seemed. I knew Dad, and he no doubt had a plan.

  Mom popped the tops off two beers and handed them to the cops.

  To my surprise, they took them. I guess they didn’t have to obey the rules. They were cops.

  Finch passed in front of us, and Sparrow sprang to her feet. I knew she would bolt toward her mother, so I picked her
up and tossed her backward toward the broken panel. She stumbled against one box, knocking it down. The loud bang shattered the silence.

  Everything changed in an instant. Guns drew and shots fired—lots of shots. Bullets flew through the air with the hiss of a mosquito, only a thousand times louder. Metal hit metal with the ding of a pinball machine. Wood splintered from the rafters above.

  People fell to the ground in front of me. Sparrow screamed and I grabbed her, crouching with her behind the brake boxes and prayed we wouldn’t be next. Prayed until my mom crumpled to the ground. “Mom.” Still holding Sparrow, I sprung from my hiding place and ran to where she lay in a pool of blood.

  “Where are your brothers?” Her words, no more than a whisper, were hard to hear with the popping sounds filling the air. I crushed Sparrow beneath me and hugged the cement floor.

  “Outside. They’re safe outside.” I reached for Mom, trying to find her wound.

  Sparrow popped her head from under me and screamed.

  Mom’s eyes grew wide. “Get her out. Save her. Save your brothers.” Her words slipped slow and wet from her lips. “Promise.”

  The wooden beams splintered, sending chunks of wood flying through the air. Clouds of white chalk burst from the walls.

  My heart exploded in my chest, and tears ran down my cheeks. “Mommy.”

  Her head fell to the side.

  “Mommy.” I was a man but cried like a child. “Don’t leave me.” I turned her face toward mine and wiped the blood that trickled from her mouth. “I promise.”

  Her once bright blue eyes faded to the color of cold, gray concrete.

  Bullets buzzed. People collapsed. Sparrow screamed and screamed and screamed. I swept her into my arms and ran toward the door, but hot fire shot through my shoulder. I stumbled. I fell. Blood covered the walls, the floor, the bodies.

  I scrambled to stand, but my sneakers slid on the smooth concrete. I slipped and fell over and over again until I couldn’t move. I couldn’t breathe. I was going to die.

  Sparrow lay beside me, but she was quiet. Dead quiet. Blood seeped across her yellow dress like spilled ink on paper. The bright sunflower pattern disappeared in the crimson pool.

  I’d failed. I’d failed Sparrow. I’d failed my brothers. I’d failed to keep my mom’s final wish. “I promise I’ll never fail anyone again,” I cried. Everything turned to black.

  Click here to read more.

  Other Books by Kelly Collins

  An Aspen Cove Romance Series

  One Hundred Reasons

  One Hundred Heartbeats

  One Hundred Wishes

  One Hundred Promises

  One Hundred Excuses

  One Hundred Christmas Kisses

  The Boys of Fury Series

  Redeeming Ryker

  Saving Silas

  Delivering Decker

  The Boys of Fury Boxset

  The Second Chance Series

  Set Free

  Set Aside

  Set in Stone

  Set Up

  Set on You

  The Second Chance Series Box Set

  Making the Grade Series

  The Learning Curve

  The Dean’s List

  Honor Roll

  Making the Grade Box Set

  The Decadent Series:

  Just Dessert

  Brownie Points

  Whipped

  The Decadent Series Box Set

  Stand-Alone Novels and Novellas

  True North

  Tempo

  Blue Ribbon Summer

  Holiday Novels: Cole for Christmas

  The Trouble with Tinsel

  Wrapped around My Heart

  Cole for Christmas

  Mistletoe and Millionaires

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  About the Author

  International bestselling author of more than thirty novels, Kelly Collins writes with the intention of keeping the love alive. Always a romantic, she blends real-life events with her vivid imagination to create characters and stories that lovers of contemporary romance, new adult, and romantic suspense will return to again and again.

  Kelly lives in Colorado at the base of the Rocky Mountains with her husband of twenty-seven years, their two dogs, and a bird that hates her. She has three amazing children, whom she loves to pieces.

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  For More Information

  www.authorkellycollins.com

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