Steel Crew : Books 1-3 (Steel World Box Set Book 7)

Home > Other > Steel Crew : Books 1-3 (Steel World Box Set Book 7) > Page 1
Steel Crew : Books 1-3 (Steel World Box Set Book 7) Page 1

by Mj Fields




  Copyright

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of MJ Fields, except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976.

  This is a work of fiction. All characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Tagged Steel

  Published by Blue Valley Publishing LLC

  Cover Design by Jersey Girl Design

  Edits by C&D Editing

  Proofed by Wicked Proofing

  Cover model Andrew England

  Copyright © 2020 by MJ Fields

  Branded Steel

  Published by Blue Valley Publishing LLC

  Cover Design by Jersey Girl Design

  Editor: C&D Editing

  Proofreading by: Julie Deaton

  Proofreading by: Virginia Tesi Carey

  Photo Credit: Wander Aguiar

  Cover Model: Lucas Loyola

  Laced Steel

  Published by Blue Valley Publishing LLC

  Cover Design by Jersey Girl Design

  Editor: C&D Editing

  Proofreading by: Julie Deaton

  Photo Credit: Wander Aguiar

  Cover Model: Kaz Vanderwaard

  Thank you for downloading/purchasing this eBook. This eBook and its contents are the copyrighted property of the author, and may not be reproduced, copied, or distributed for commercial or non-commercial purposes. If you enjoyed this book, please encourage your friends to download/purchase their own copy from authorized retailers, where they can also discover other works by this author.

  Thank you for your support.

  Contents

  Being the daughter of Jase Steel

  Date Night

  Eighteen To Life

  Tag Time

  The Last D

  Artistic Expressions

  Asshole(s)

  Thugs

  New Position

  Ditch and Dine

  Introductions

  Real Talk

  Breakfast

  Mayhem

  Vegas

  Or Bust…

  The Strip

  Go Time

  Blazing

  Meet the Family

  He Loves Me

  Two Dads

  That’s a wrap

  To the Moon

  Richmond

  The Past

  Convicted

  Travel Time

  Forever Steel

  Epilogue

  About Branded

  Playlist

  Labor Day Weekend

  F’ Me Friday

  Friday Night

  Gasoline

  Nun Nonsense

  This Can’t Be My Life

  Midnight Madness

  A Whole New World

  Mantoloking

  Not So Thankful

  Black and Blue Friday

  Blue Balls

  The Lake

  The Landing

  Dream Land

  All Night Long

  Home and Away

  The Talk

  Life Changes

  Heart Problems

  Gifts

  Inked

  Award Night

  Not Ready For Goodbye

  Seashore Academy Bound

  Germany

  TMI

  The Heart Of The Matter

  Trust

  Here and Now

  Epilogue

  Title Page

  Thank you

  Synopsis

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty One

  Chapter Twenty Two

  Chapter Twenty Three

  Chapter Twenty Four

  Chapter Twenty Five

  Chapter Twenty Six

  Chapter Twenty Seven

  Chapter Twenty Eight

  Epilogue

  Next In Steel

  Justified Steel Synopsis

  Justified Steel

  Also by Fields

  About the Author

  Thank you

  Being the daughter of Jase Steel

  Sunday dinner is a Steel family tradition. We rotate between Momma Joe and Thomas’s, Cyrus and Tara’s, Zandor and Bekkah’s, Xavier and Taelyn’s, and our house. Today, it’s at our place.

  Eleven of us are at the regular dining room table, with the eight youngest Steels seated at the kids’ table. Salad and garlic knots have been served, and lasagna and roasted vegetables are being plated and passed around.

  Like Garfield, lasagna is my father’s favorite, so I decide this is the absolute best time, and safest place, to tell my father, at sixteen, that Chad Wentworth asked me to a movie the following Friday night. My very first date.

  The normally, noisy room falls silent, even the kids’ table decides to follow suit, and that didn’t even happen when Momma Joe said the blessing.

  Uncle Cyrus, the oldest of the four, is the first to speak. “You shoot the first one, word will spread.”

  His wife, my aunt Tara, covers her face and shakes her head.

  “That’s enough, Cyrus,” Momma Joe scolds him.

  “Tell him, whatever he does to our Little Bell, Zandor will do to him.” Xavier chuckles and so does his wife Taelyn.

  I look at Uncle Zandor as he smirks, shrugs, looks at his wife Bekkah, and then asks, “You okay with that?”

  “None of y’all are right,” she replies, sitting back and taking a healthy drink of her wine.

  When I look back to Dad, I realize that his eyes haven’t left me and there is no expression to be read in them … at all.

  Then he simply states, “No.”

  I hear a large thud, then he whips his head left. “What the hell, Carly?”

  “She’s sixteen, for God’s sake,” she whispers like no one will hear her.

  We all do.

  They have a stare off until he finally looks over at me. “Let’s talk about God, shall we?”

  “Really?” I roll my eyes.

  “Jase,” Momma Joe snips quietly.

  “With all due respect, Momma, you raised four amazing men, but girls, well, they’re nothing like boys.”

  “You don’t say?” Momma Joe slowly raises an eyebrow.

  “I know you’ve helped us the whole way, but this is my little girl.”

  “She’s sixteen,” Momma Joe and Carly say at the same time.

  I figuratively raise a victorious fist in the air, and then I just sit back and listen to them bicker.

  Out of the corner of my eye, I notice my sister Kiki and my cousin Truth watching it all go down, eyes darting back and forth like they’re watching a tennis match. When Kiki looks at me, she smirks, and I give her a wink.

  It’s a win.

  It’s Thursday or, as I am secretly deeming it, first date eve.

  After Kiki’s piano lesson, Carly, Kiki,
and I got haircuts. When we started walking out of the salon, Momma Joe was walking in.

  “Three of my favorite girls.” She hugs us all. “Would you care to join me for mani/pedis?”

  “Heck yes!” Kiki squeals. “Perfect idea! Tomorrow’s date night, Momma Joe.”

  The wink shared between my seven-year-old sister and my grandmother makes it obvious this was planned, even before we are greeted by the staff and brought back to the four pedicure chairs already waiting for us.

  “I think she’s more excited about your date than you, if not even more so,” Momma Joe says with a laugh as we sit.

  “Don’t let her fool you,” Carly whispers. “She has an ulterior motive. She’s just hoping you break him in so it’s not as difficult when it’s her turn.”

  Kiki smiles. “I already have a boyfriend.”

  “You do, do you?” Momma Joe asks.

  She nods. “He just doesn’t know it yet.”

  “Dad doesn’t or the boy doesn’t?” I ask my bright-eyed little sister.

  “Neither!” She laughs hysterically at herself.

  After we’re finished, Carly asks Momma Joe to come over for dinner.

  “I would love to,” Momma Joe replies.

  The look exchanged between them also tells me that this was planned.

  When we pull up the driveway, Dad is filling the doorway, my brother Max beside him. As Momma Joe rolls up behind us, he narrows his eyes, and Carly smirks as she waves.

  All week, he’s been extra. Extra edgy, extra stress-y, extra … just extra.

  Carly has been keeping me close, and when they don’t think I’m in earshot, she’s keeping him in check, telling him, “I see what you’re doing.” Or, “You better check yourself, Steel, or you’ll be on the couch.” Or, “She’s sixteen, Jase, and she’s a hell of a lot more street smart than I ever was. She’ll be fine. It’s him you should feel bad for.”

  When we walk up the front steps, he looks at me. “Got a minute, Bella?”

  “She’s already promised to help me get dinner on the table.” Carly smirks as she pushes up on her tiptoes and gives him a loud peck on the cheek.

  “Carly,” he grumbles as Kiki leaps at him.

  “Catch me, Daddy!”

  Momma Joe and Carly keep Dad busy the entire night; Kiki even seems to be in on it.

  By the time he has read to Max, and Kiki has made him listen to her newest song, in which she has also choreographed—on the fly, I’m sure—I have showered and shut myself in my room.

  Lying in bed, unable to sleep, looking at the time on my phone as I switch between scrolling through Instagram and watching Snapchat stories, I hear a light knock on my door before it is opened.

  Dad.

  He walks in. “Scooch.” He sits on the edge of my bed and waits for me to move over before lying on top of my duvet.

  “Not gonna say I’m always rational.”

  I stifle a laugh.

  He raises an eyebrow then continues, “Got you back less than ten years ago, Little Bell. So, to me, you’re ten, not sixteen, making this extremely hard.”

  I want to point out that is a messed-up way of thinking, a piss poor excuse for treating me like I’m Kiki’s age, but I also don’t want to get grounded.

  He looks at me, expecting me to say just that, but I know better.

  “I love you, Bella.”

  “I love you, Dad.”

  “I know you’re smart, but I also know the mind of a teenage boy, because I was one. I have a few things I need you to hear, Bella, really hear about dating.”

  I roll to my side and look at him.

  He takes a deep breath then exhales slowly. “They earn every fucking thing you give them, starting with a yes to him asking for a date. Did he earn it?”

  “I think he did. Before I even asked you, I told him he’d have to pull into my driveway, get out, and meet my family before I’d be allowed to leave the premises.”

  He fights to hold back a smile, then it’s gone. “You don’t put yourself in a situation you don’t feel comfortable being in. No means no.”

  “He hasn’t even sent me a message that is suggestive at all.”

  His eyes widen, and his jaw tenses before he says, “You said he; have others?”

  “I’m sixteen. Sexting is—”

  “Not dating. Any little fuck sends you sexual messages—”

  “They get blocked.”

  “They?” His voice is higher than I’ve ever heard.

  “I’m going to a movie, Dad. We’re meeting friends—”

  “I can drop you off at a movie, where you can—”

  “Dad,” I groan exaggeratedly. “You told me when I got my license that I could ride in a car with my friends. I haven’t yet.”

  “Never said boyfriends,” he grumbles.

  “Never said he was my boyfriend, Dad. It’s a first date.”

  He stares at me; I stare back. Then he nods.

  “What do you really want to say?” I ask.

  “He doesn’t deserve you.”

  “He’s a friend, who asked me on a date, not for a freaking—”

  “Don’t you dare,” he warns.

  “Then trust me, Dad. Trust. Me. He’s not the one you should be afraid of.”

  “What the fuck is that supposed to mean?”

  “It means he’s the first one to ask, not the ‘first’ one.” I air quote first. “I’m not going to sleep with the first boy I date, get knocked up, and—”

  “That’s not cool, Bella.”

  “Then tell me what you want to tell me, Dad.”

  “He doesn’t deserve you,” he states matter-of-factly, again.

  “How will I know if anyone deserves me, Dad? I haven’t even been kissed.”

  He doesn’t even fight to hide his smile this time. He beams.

  I flop back on my pillow. “Oh my God, can I just go to sleep?”

  “When you even think he’s possibly the boy who deserves your first kiss, Bella, you make damn sure he deserves you. Which means you know him. You know he treats his momma right, because that’s the way he’ll treat you. You remember you can do anything he can, and if he makes you feel like that’s not the case, he’s out. You remember to still dress like you and don’t change for him. No over-the-top makeup shit, Little Bell. Never let him think for you. Don’t get your head stuck up your ass, because the right guy for you will love that you’re intelligent and can think for yourself. And remember, you never have to do anything to make someone love you. The right person will cross the fucking desert in tin foil just to open a door for you.”

  He pushes his arm under my head and pulls me into a hug. “Compare every single boy you ever meet to the man I was when you came back into my life. Nobody will love you like I do. If he even comes close, I will shake his hand and give him my blessing.”

  Date Night

  I’m done getting ready for my date long before Chad is expected to pick me up so that I could be out the door ASAP, giving little time for Dad to embarrass me.

  When Chad, the son of two doctors, shows up in his BMW to take me to a movie, Dad beats me to the door.

  “Come on in, Chad.” His smile is big, bright, and welcoming.

  I feel it’s safe to allow such a thing for two reasons. One, it’s a first and he doesn’t seem all that “Jase Steel” over it. And two, I overheard Carly threatening him with a week on the couch if he was, in her words, an asshole.

  I start to feel good about this meet and greet … until Chad smiles back, walks in, and I see Dad narrow his eyes as he glares at the back of his head.

  Then Dad offers him a beer, to which Chad thankfully declines, saying, “I’m sorry, sir, but I’m not of legal age, nor would I put your daughter in harm’s way by drinking even a sip of alcohol before driving her in my vehicle.”

  Nice, I think … until I see Dad looking at him with his eyes and jaw set.

  “Chad”—the way Dad says his name is rather obnoxious—“you’ve neve
r had a drink?”

  “Yes, sir, with my parents on Christmas, I had some spiked eggnog, and it was disgusting.” He laughs, and Dad narrows his eyes.

  “Hey, Chad, I’m Katherine Steel, Little Bell’s sister.”

  Little Bell? Ugh, seriously?

  I turn and see her reaching out her hand to shake his and notice the tee-shirt she’s wearing.

  On top, it says, “Heads-up, Boys.” Below it is a picture of my father, shirtless, inked, and jacked. Below that, it says, “This is my father.”

  I notice Chad’s eyes widen, and then he smiles and shakes Kiki’s hand. “Pleasure to meet you.”

  Max runs into the room in one of Kiki’s tutus … and nothing else on.

  I glare at Dad, and he holds his hands up as if to say, wasn’t me.

  When Carly walks into the kitchen, her smile falls as she looks at Kiki then at Dad. “Really?”

  He grins. “Hey, Carly, can I get you a drink?”

 

‹ Prev