BULL: MC ROMANCE (Forsaken Riders MC Romance Book 6)
Page 134
Candy smiled. She was pretty sure no one had figured her out. She was so cute looking and she had the act down to a fine art. There was no way anyone would suspect that she was really a well-bred girl with a stellar education… She pushed up her boobs, glossed her lips, flicked her hair and perfected her doe eye. She had all of the men eating out of the palm of her hand, and she was loving every second.
It was just what she needed to make sure she could start again without anyone asking too many questions, or figuring out why she had turned up in Slate Springs in the first place… Because that was a conversation she was sure she never wanted to have.
“Candy!” Marv hollered to her from on top of the stage. He had his hands on his hips and his beer gut swelled out between them.
“What’s up, Marv?” she asked with an eye roll.
“Destiny here doesn’t seem capable of restocking the bar,” he snorted. “Give her a hand, will you?”
If she didn’t feel so bad for the girl, she would have flipped Marv the bird behind his back and told her to figure it out. But she knew what she had coming, and it wasn’t pretty. The newest girl at Red X always had it the toughest, and because she was recently relieved of the role, she felt as if she owed it to the newbie to be kind.
“Sure,” she smiled sweetly, still sucking on the lollipop.
She turned to Destiny and shrugged, and Destiny chewed her bottom lip.
“Sorry Candy,” she sighed. “You’re all done up and spritzed and everything.”
“Don’t worry about it,” Candy smiled. “I don’t mind.”
She walked behind the bar and opened up all of the refrigerators. It really wasn’t rocket science, but the way Marv liked things was so meticulous she remembered herself how nervous she was of getting something wrong. And if anything went missing…even just one bottle, there would be hell to pay. Candy remembered back to how Lexi had been fired… She had been drunk and helping herself to free liquor, and it had been the beginning of the end of her stripping career.
“How are you finding it so far?” Candy asked as she heaved a crate of beer up onto the bar top, making sure she didn’t snag her lingerie or break a nail.
“It’s certainly, um, different,” Destiny shrugged. “I mean I’ve worked in places like this before, just not in Slate Springs… I’m from Ironhill,” she said.
Candy nodded. She had never been over to Ironhill, but she knew it was about ten miles away. Another small town full of secrets from what she had gathered from the locals who drifted into the club and from what she overheard at the diner.
“How come you’re down here then?” Candy asked, more just for something to say rather than actual interest.
“Well, I didn’t really see eye to eye with my old boss,” she said. “And when I saw the ad for a barmaid, I just thought, hell, it’s about time I had a change.”
Candy nodded and smiled. She knew that feeling.
“Well, it’s nice to have you here,” Candy smiled as she loaded the last fresh bottles of vodka into the optics and wiped her hands on a dishcloth.
“Thanks,” Destiny grinned. “And thank you again for the help.” She motioned to the fully stocked bar and then chewed her bottom lip again.
“It’s no problem.” Candy walked back out the other side of the bar. “Always ask me ahead of Marv.”
Destiny nodded.
“Trust me, it’s not worth the hassle,” Candy winked. She slipped the lollipop back into her mouth and turned on her heel before power-walking back towards the stage.
The music was booming and the doors were now open. The night was just beginning, and she was ready for anything. Even though Candy was the kind of girl who could have been anything, there she was in a small town, twirling around a pole and flashing her body for cash.
It should have made her sad, but it didn’t… She knew where she was going in life, and she knew what she wanted out of it. Things should have been different, but she had plenty of time to change that…and she had a plan. Candy might play dumb, but she was switched on and ready to take charge of her life.
As she hooked her leg around the pole and made eyes at one of the truckers who had just sat down in front of the stage, she could have roared with laughter. She was exploiting them all for her own benefit, and it felt damn good.
2.
Her body ached as she climbed down from the stage for the last time that night. Who needed to be a member of a gym when they had a job like hers? Candy sat down at the bar in front of Destiny and mopped her brow with the back of her hand. Her heart was still racing and so was her breathing. She smiled out across at some of the customers and unwrapped another red lollipop. As she sucked on it and took a quick look around to check Marv wasn’t in sight, she leaned in closer and ordered a shot from Destiny.
“What would you like?” Destiny shouted to her over the music.
The truth was, she didn’t even care, but she wanted to act as if she was giving the power over to the new girl.
“It’s okay, hun, I’ll let you surprise me,” she giggled as she twirled her hair.
She squinted her eyes to check the time on the cash register. It was almost 3 am. The club was quieting down and although it rarely closed during the early hours, Candy could tell that Marv wouldn’t keep it open that night. She had barely gotten any money, and the other girl working the stage looked like she had all but given up.
Destiny slid a small, thick shot glass across the counter, and Candy could smell the strong aniseed immediately.
Sambuca.
She hated Sambuca… But she would give it a go, just to be polite.
As she knocked it back and it burned her insides, she wished she had just asked for something she knew she could handle, like a straight vodka, but it was too late. She swallowed hard and fast before breathing out and coughing and motioning for a glass of water.
“Shit, sorry,” Destiny cringed as she passed her a tall glass.
Candy glugged the tap water and even though it was lukewarm, it took the horrible bitter taste and sick feeling away.
“It’s okay,” Candy shrugged. “I knew what it was.”
She wiped the corner of her mouth and checked the time again. She was desperate to get out of there and head for home, but she knew she’d have to stay until the very end.
“Candy,” Marv yapped at her from the front door. “You done?”
She knew what he really meant was Get back up there and don’t stop shaking it until I tell you, so she rolled her eyes and turned around.
“That depends, Marv,” she smiled. “Is that okay?”
She looked up at him with big, innocent eyes and sucked on the red cherry pop. He considered her for a moment before he snorted and shook his head.
“Of course it’s not fucking okay. We’re still open, aren’t we?”
He marched towards her with his arms folded, sat down on a high stool next to her and breathed his whiskey breath right down her neck.
“Listen,” he said heavily, “I could do with some help out the back…” He nudged her suggestively and her whole body froze. She had been unlucky enough to be on the receiving end of his lecherous behavior before, and it was definitely where she drew the line. She’d play dumb until the cows came home…but she would never let him treat her that way.
She fluttered her eyelashes and tried to remain calm. She rubbed the side of his shoulder and smiled.
“You’re just like a dad to me, Marv,” she shrugged.
He snorted and slammed his hand down on the bar top, signaling to Destiny that he wanted another drink.
Candy cast her mind back to Lexi, the girl he had fired for refusing his advances and taking drinks from behind the bar. Surely, this was about to go the same way… She braced herself for the onslaught by gripping the bar top and taking a deep breath.
It’ll all be fine, she thought. Even if he fires you, you can just move on to the next town and start all over again. Maybe Destiny could point you in the right direction
over at Ironhill… Her mind was racing a mile a minute, and before Marv even had a chance to say another word, she had already dreamed up another hundred scenarios and was planning her next adventure.
“Well,” he said with a slap of his gut, “that’s one way to kill a guy’s drive.” He downed the whiskey and belched.
Candy sighed with relief.
She looked up at Destiny to see her smirking, and she couldn’t help but grin in return. She had no idea how that had even worked, but at least the crisis was averted.
Behind them, the main door banged shut as the last customer walked out into the night and the girl on the stage stopped twirling. The club was empty, and Candy sighed with relief.
“That was the last one,” the girl on the stage called across to Marv at the bar. “Can we shut this shit off now?” She pouted and blew a big pink bubble.
Marv waved his arm nonchalantly around his head, and Destiny jumped over the bar top and made her way to the sound system. She slapped off the music and the room instantly fell silent. Candy yawned to try and get the ringing out of her ears. She could still hear and feel the music pumping through her, and her head was spinning. She closed her eyes and rubbed them gently. What she wouldn’t give to be at home in her comfortable bed.
Marv prodded Candy in the ribs and motioned for her to get him another drink. She reluctantly got to her feet and made her way around to the other side of the bar and slung his glass up into the optic. She pressed it in and waited a moment before doing it again.
May as well give him a double and save me having to get up twice, she thought.
She slid the glass to him and smiled sweetly. Behind her, Destiny was making her way over to the main door to lock it, and the girl who had been dancing was already clacking her heels down the corridor on her way back to the dressing room, a red robe billowing out behind her.
“Her attitude fucking sucks,” Marv said as he sipped his drink. “If I didn’t want to bang her so much, she’d be out of here.”
He was drunk. That much Candy could tell. Even though he was usually just as hideous, he rarely put himself down in any capacity, and that was a direct admission that he was being rejected by one of his employees, someone he supposedly had control over.
“She’s got a bit more time,” he slurred. “I’ll give her until the end of the week.”
He drained the rest of his glass before throwing it on the floor where it smashed beneath his feet. Candy sighed and looked across at Destiny who was watching them from the doorway. Her shoulders dropped as she realized she was the one who was going to have to get down on her knees to clean it all up.
“Whoops,” Marv giggled insincerely.
“It’s okay, Destiny,” Candy said as she got down on her knees. “I’ll do it.”
Destiny shouted “Thank you!” and then turned back to the door. Candy wasn’t paying much attention because she was too busy collecting the shards of glass that were splintered all around and under Marv’s feet. But it was strange—it was like all of a sudden she sensed a change in the atmosphere. She stopped what she was doing and dropped the pieces of glass on the floor, before she got slowly to her feet and turned around. Marv was looking in the same direction with his lip curled, and Destiny stopped still like a statue, facing the main door with her arms held open as if to suggest she was unarmed.
Ahead of her, walking into the club, were two mean-looking men…and clutched between their fists were two huge shotguns.
Candy gasped and gripped onto the bar. Destiny moved backwards, quickly trying to get back closer to her and Marv, as if somehow that would guarantee her safety. The men were swift and from the leather and chains, she could tell they were bikers. Candy was shaking, but when she looked up and got a good look at them, she knew instantly who one of the men was. It was King, Lexi’s boyfriend… He had come back again, no doubt to settle another debt. She had never seen the other guy with him before, but the second she lay eyes on him, her heart began to race even harder.
“What the fuck,” Marv drawled. “Haven’t you boys caused me enough trouble?”
King lurched forward and grabbed Marv by the scruff of the neck. He pulled him to his feet and threw him face down onto the bar. Candy breathed in deeply and steadied herself. The shot of Sambuca giving her a tiny bit of Dutch courage, she looked up at the man she had never seen before and caught his eye before she looked shyly down at the ground. Destiny yelped and cowered down behind the bar, clinging onto Candy’s feet. She swallowed and looked up at the men. King smiled at her and winked before he pulled Marv’s head up by his hair and smashed it down against the wooden counter top. Candy winced and looked away.
“We had a deal,” King spat. “And yet, we’re still waiting for you to pay up…”
“It’s been a slow week,” Marv pleaded with them, holding up his hands and looking scared for the first time in his life. “How can I pay you if I don’t have anything?”
King sneered and slammed the gun down right in his eye line.
“You wouldn’t even have been on my radar if it wasn’t for what you did to Lexi,” he growled. “Now you better stick to your end of the deal, or the rest of The Forsaken Riders will be down here with me, and we’ll be taking this whole place over, you hear?”
“B-b-but,” Marv stammered, “I can’t… I can’t…”
“Thirty percent of each week’s takings,” King said. “Or Red X is ours…”
“Please!” Marv begged. “This is all I have… Without it, I’m nothing.”
King and the other guy laughed and Candy had to restrain a little smirk from dancing across her lips, too. She could barely hide how nice it was to watch Marv squirm.
“Do as we say…or we’ll take it by force,” the other guy reiterated.
When Candy heard him speak for the first time, her eyes shot straight up to meet his. His voice was so deep, so powerful and strong, she was almost put in a trance by it. She looked at him deep in the eyes and felt her pulse quicken. They were icy blue and pulled her in instantly. They looked so intense and spectacular against his tanned skin.
“Please guys,” Marv kept begging. “I’ll do anything, but don’t ruin my business. It’s all I have, and the girls will suffer.”
King cut him off and pulled him to his feet by the scruff of the neck. He held his face millimeters from his and the rage and fury that radiated from him was terrifying.
“No,” King said sternly. “The girls won’t suffer… If anyone is going to lose out because of this arrangement, it’s you.”
“But I…”
“But nothing,” King said. “We’ve told you how it is. You either stick to it or the club is ours.”
King dropped hold of Marv’s collar and he fell in a heap to the floor. He began to sob, and although there was a small part of Candy that wanted to feel sorry for Marv…she just couldn’t.
“We’ll be back tomorrow, Marv…” King said playfully.
He waved and grinned like a maniac as he backed up to the main door. Destiny was still hiding under the bar, and Candy could feel her fingernails gripping into her ankles, but she didn’t care. All she could focus on was the man in front of her… The one with King… The guy who had barely taken his eyes off her since the second they burst in.
3.
After the bikers left and Destiny calmed down, Candy just wanted to get the hell of out there. Marv was shaken; he had acted like a wimp and she had seen it happen. She knew that it could only mean bad things for her and Destiny, and she wanted to make sure they were both out of there before he had the chance to snap.
She got into her car and started the engine. The moon was high overhead even though the sun was already creeping over the horizon. She slammed the car into reverse and spun around in the parking lot before pulling out onto the highway. She thundered down the road with her music blaring and her head still spinning, and as she drove through town and reached Main Street, she had the overwhelming urge to stop at the gas station and grab a coffe
e. Mainly she was intrigued to see if the bikers were there.
She pulled off the road and into the gas station. The lot was quiet and there were no bikes to be seen, and she instantly felt a pang of disappointment. She had no idea what she would achieve by seeing them again so soon, but she kind of wanted them to know that she was more on their side than Marv’s. Who knew, maybe one day they would take it over and if she hadn’t moved on, then the bikers would be her bosses. The idea was both terrifying and exhilarating, but she pushed it to the back of her mind before restarting her engine. The last thing she needed right then was strong gas station coffee that would keep her wired until noon. All she wanted to do was get home and crawl into bed.
As she pulled up onto her driveway, she turned off her headlights and stretched. Her house wasn’t much, but it was home and she loved it. She had gone for a small ranch with two beds, and even though she knew she would never have any visitors, she always kept a single bed in the spare room…just in case. She often thought about clearing it out and having the room purely as an office, so when she finally went back to school or got a real job, she would have somewhere to work. But at this point, it would be giving the game away. Everyone in Slate Springs thought she was a dumb blonde, not an intelligent go-getter with serious qualifications.
She slid the key into the lock and walked into the front room. She had spent weeks decorating when she had first moved in and loved every second. She had gone as neutral as possible with the walls and floors but accessorized with as many colors as possible. It almost made her feel as if she were walking into a rainbow. The explosions of blues, pinks, reds and yellows that hit her the second she walked through her door always made her smile. And they always seemed to keep her spirits up so she didn’t dwell on the past.
She closed the door behind her and turned the key in the lock before bolting it and pulling across the chain. Even though she knew that no one would find her in Slate Springs, she still didn’t want to risk being unprepared or safe. She had to keep her home secure.