Having It All: A Hellfire Riders MC Romance (The Motorcycle Clubs Book 9)
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If the Henchman had aimed just a little more to the right, Saxon would have bled out.
And everyone keeps asking if I’m all right. Half a dozen cups of coffee have been shoved into my hand, but I can’t get warm and I can’t wake up from the nightmare of seeing him bleed and bleed and then pass out.
I thought I was watching Saxon die. He came back from it. Thank God he came back from it.
I don’t think I have yet.
• • •
“You know what’s stupid?” my friend Anna asks. “The whole ‘I’m gonna rape you in revenge’ thing.”
I tear my gaze from the hallway where Saxon’s hospital room is. The sheriff hasn’t come out yet. “What?”
“The Eighty-Eight and the way they’re after you.” She says that quietly, so that she can’t be overheard. “Because, really, what does anyone get out of that? Especially when you’d be worth so much more for your brain. I mean, think about it. You brew beer and you’ve got a degree in chemistry. How hard would cooking meth for them be?”
God. “I’m not exactly Walter White.”
“I bet you could do it. So if I was a criminal mastermind, I wouldn’t want your pussy. I’d just chain you up and force you to make drugs all day and I’d get rich selling them. Then I’d hire a bunch of cabana boys and bang them. In revenge.”
“Reichmann isn’t a mastermind.” And he doesn’t want my pussy. He just wants to hurt me.
She snorts. “Like I said. ‘You know what’s stupid?’”
True. But stupid can still be pretty damn dangerous.
Sheriff Landauer isn’t in Saxon’s room long. He’s already talked to me but I’m not surprised when he heads my way again. When she sees him, Anna gets that fighting look on her face, like she’s going to tell him to back off or wait until tomorrow or go sit on a sharp stick. I shake my head and she deflates.
“You sure?”
I nod and she gets up, moving across the waiting room to where her brother, Stone, and a handful of other Hellfire Riders are sitting. There were more here earlier, but after Saxon woke up and they got the news that he was going to be all right, some of them started taking off for home.
Landauer folds himself into the chair at my left and caps his bony knee with his hat. He’s lean and wiry, with short blond hair salted by gray and sporting a Clint Eastwood jut in his jaw. A scar on his upper lip makes him look like he’s always sneering, but he’s not so bad.
“You doing all right?”
I can only manage a short, hollow laugh.
“Yep, that’s what I thought. I thought I saw Red earlier? I didn’t get a chance to say hello to him.”
My dad. I don’t know if they’re really friendly enough to exchange hellos, or if Landauer is just making it sound like they are so I’ll relax around him. I’ve never heard my dad say a bad word against the sheriff—which isn’t the case for almost every other cop around the area. “He’s picking up clothes for me.”
I tug at the front of the scrubs that the hospital gave to me. I came in half naked, with my shirt wadded against Saxon’s neck and my shorts soaked in his blood. My suitcase is in my truck but the sheriff has already said I won’t be getting anything out of it until they’ve finished processing the vehicle.
His gaze skims over the assembled Riders, who are looking this way. Maybe thinking they need to extricate their first lady from the cop’s grasp. I meet Blowback’s eyes. I can handle this. He says something to the others and they’ve all suddenly got other things to look at.
“You know I always thought your man got a bum deal all those years ago. Crane was a real hard-ass.”
The county prosecutor. “I guess.”
“He should have dropped the charges when you came forward.”
“A jury didn’t agree. They didn’t seem to think anything I said mattered.”
“Well, Crane did a good job of painting him as a troublemaking piece of shit, didn’t he?” He leans forward, hands clasped between his knees, watching my face. “Now here we are.”
“Where are we?”
“Fifteen years ago he was kicking Timothy Reichmann off of you. Now Reichmann’s little brother is president of a biker gang, and word is he’s after you. You, even though it was Saxon Gray that killed his brother.”
Because Luke Reichmann is a misogynist coward who thinks that his brother was just giving me what I deserved—and because he knows better than to go after Saxon. Or at least, he did know better. But he still didn’t come himself. He sent two of his men, instead.
But, supposedly, I don’t know that. “‘Word is’ he’s after me? Who’s saying that?”
Landauer doesn’t tell me but continues, “And word is, there was an altercation between Gray and Reichmann out at the Corral a couple of weeks ago, and that maybe you were in the middle of it.”
I wasn’t in the middle of it. I was in a booth and shoved up against a wall with Reichmann threatening me until Saxon pulled him off. But I only shrug. “I was there with Saxon but I didn’t see any altercation.”
“Word also is that Reichmann came into the ER about a week after that to have three of his fingers reattached. Says he got them caught in a mower. The doctors saved two.”
His fingers had been cut off? I don’t have to lie about this. “I don’t know anything about that.”
But I’m not sorry or shocked, either.
The sheriff lifts his shoulders in an easy shrug. “Eh, he lives on a farm. All kinds of accidents can happen, especially if you’re mowing at night as he says he was. But it occurs to me that a pattern is forming—and escalating—and that your man might have taken the latest hit tonight. Which means the next hit will be worse.”
He’s right. I can’t imagine that the Hellfire Riders won’t strike back hard and fast, and that it’ll be bloody. I’m not giving Landauer what he wants, though. “So all these words are flying around—and they’re saying I might be in danger—and this is the first time you’re talking to me? Why is that? Maybe because until someone is shot or raped, there’s not much you can do to help me? That’s a little too late, isn’t it?”
“I can help now.”
No, he can’t. Because even if I hand him the men who attacked us tonight and he makes an arrest, those Henchmen aren’t going to point their fingers at Reichmann and say he’s the one who gave the orders. They’re going to keep their mouths shut and nothing will change. I’ll still be in danger. Landauer can’t protect me. Saxon can.
The only question is how much he’ll pay for protecting me. Again.
“I might have run over one of the shooters,” I say. “Or maybe it was Saxon’s mailbox. I don’t know; I was hunched down in my seat because they’d just shot out my back window.” All of which he’ll find out by looking at my truck; I’m not telling him anything he doesn’t already know or won’t discover. “You’ve got my truck so I guess you’ll know whether it was a man that I ran over, and if you find a body with tire tracks on it, I guess you’ll know whether I killed him. So, what do you think? Is Crane going to come after me for manslaughter because I was in a rush trying to save a man after he’d been shot? Because that doesn’t seem much different than prosecuting a man who accidentally killed someone while saving a girl from being raped.”
“It doesn’t sound much different at all,” he surprises me by agreeing. “What does sound different is taking out the ‘accident.’ Say, if a man trying to protect his woman decides to retaliate instead of just defend. Maybe you think the only difference is the law drawing a line, because protection is protection…but it’s a difference that will send a man away for a long time.”
I know. And the crushing weight in my chest is suddenly heavier, colder. “I wish I could help. But I didn’t see who they were. I was turning to go into the house when he was shot and then I was ducking behind the truck.”
“And you didn’t hear anything?”
The boss wants his whore. “No. Maybe they said something, but I didn’t hear it. I was making a lo
t of noise, too—I started screaming after the shot went off and I realized Saxon had been hit.”
Saxon’s neighbors will confirm that.
He gives a deep sigh. “All right. If you suddenly do remember seeing or hearing something, though, you’ll let me know?”
“I will.”
“Good thing.” Landauer slaps his thighs like he’s about to get up, then pauses. “Because word is, during that altercation at the Corral, your man was in the process of retaliating…but then you asked him not to. Word is you said you couldn’t bear losing him or seeing him in prison again. Which he would be, if he murdered someone.”
My throat is a ragged burn. I can’t answer.
“I guess I’ll just hope evidence turns up that can help me get the bastards who shot at you locked away—along with anyone who might have told them to pull the trigger. Then there will be no one around to threaten you, and no one your man will need to protect you from, you see?”
I nod and he gets to his feet, hat in hand.
“Well, maybe just sleep on it, Miss Erickson. A bit of rest has a way of jogging the memory.”
And he obviously knows that being terrified of losing someone you love does, too.
Chapter Four
Jenny
“I never hated hospitals the way that some people do,” my dad says.
It’s the first thing either of us have spoken in a little while. The clock reads just after four. Anna’s dozing against my shoulder. In a room down the hall, Saxon’s pumped full of painkillers and he’ll be sleeping until morning, at least—and I can’t sit with him, because Pine Valley’s hospital is tiny and now he’s sharing space with a teenager who fell from a window while trying to sneak out of his house. The kid’s parents are sitting beneath the silenced TV mounted in the corner. The mom is sleeping and the dad looks about to nod off. Whatever happened, the kid must not have been hurt too bad. If he was, they’d have shuttled him to the hospital up in Bend.
I don’t like hospitals or hate them. But I would have guessed my dad hated them. Especially now, when being here must make him think of everything that’s coming for him.
Or not coming for him. Because I don’t think he’ll wait until he’s in a hospital. I don’t think he’ll make me sit in a room like this. No. He’ll take a ride down to Crater Lake, maybe. It was always one of his favorite runs. And the north road winding up around the caldera doesn’t have guardrails or a shoulder, despite the sheer drop on the other side of the white line. A sick man could just…fly.
So I can’t even ask him why he doesn’t hate them. The iceberg in my chest has become a glacier moving into my throat. I just look at him instead. He’s not looking back but watching the woman at the nurse’s station.
His voice is a little rougher now. “They remind me of your mother.”
Who’d been a nurse, too. She hadn’t worked here. Her scrubs were a different color. But I guess it doesn’t matter.
I take his hand. Years ago, when I’d first gone to college, I started on a medical track mostly because of my mom. Hoping to carry on some kind of legacy for her, because she hadn’t got much of a chance to make her own. I ended up majoring in organic chemistry, but instead of heading to medical school, I went for a master’s in business admin and started up my brewery. I’ve never regretted it until now. If I’d gone to medical school, maybe I would have known that Saxon wasn’t dying, that his artery wasn’t perforated.
Instead I brew a lot of beer. I don’t know if I could ever drink enough to make me forget the moment I thought he was dead.
“And you know what your mom would be doing right now, Jenny? She’d be sitting up at that desk and thinking that all of these assholes just need to go home.”
“Dad—”
“He’s right,” Anna mumbles next to me. My pillow of a shoulder has left a big pink splotch on her cheek. She signals to Stone, who nods. “And I need to get going, or Saxon’s going to be really pissed and fire me for falling asleep at the Den tomorrow. You want to crash at my place?”
“I’m not going.”
She looks over my head to my dad. I don’t see what passes between them but she nods and stands, stretching her arms and popping her neck. “God, I’m going to feel this crick all week. All right. Call me if you need me, okay?”
“Okay.”
“If he’s still here, I’ll come back before my shift tomorrow and bring you lunch.” She leans down to hug me. “He’s fine. You know he’s tough and way too mean to let this slow him down.”
“I know. Thanks.”
She’s only gone a minute when my dad says, “We ought to get going, too. You need to sleep.”
Maybe I do. That doesn’t mean I can. “I won’t be able to.”
“When you came in, they checked you over. Prescribed you a sedative, didn’t they?”
One that will knock me out longer than I want to be. If I take it, Saxon will probably wake up before I do. “Yes, but—”
“I picked it up at the pharmacy when I went to get your clothes. Now you listen, all right? These guys aren’t going anywhere.” He gestures to Blowback, Stone, and Gunner—the three Riders still here. “They’re going to watch and make sure that no one gets to him while he’s sleeping. He’ll be safe.”
Safe. How can he be safe? My eyes are burning. “Daddy, you didn’t see him. There was so much blood—”
“And it’s stopped bleeding. They’ve given him more. They’re taking care of him. But you look like shit and if he sees you like this, it’s not going to help him. He’ll just worry more than he already is. And I know that, Jenny. I know it because I’m feeling the same. I’ve never seen you look so close to breaking.”
Because I’ve never felt so close. Closer now, because that ragged edge to his breath has returned, the one that comes just before he has a coughing fit and spits a little blood.
“Okay,” I whisper. “We’ll go home. I’ll try to sleep.”
He nods and wraps a strong arm around my shoulders, squeezing. “You’ll be all right, baby girl.”
Maybe. I just don’t see how.
• • •
Saxon
“So they’re letting you walk out of here?” Gunner asks, and his careful tone tells me that he really wants to say I’m batshit crazy, but he knows better than to speak those words to me.
“I didn’t give them much choice.” Besides, they only wanted to keep me to watch for infection. There’s nothing more they can do to patch me up. But I’m not stupid. I’ll take my antibiotics like a good boy and come back if I start running a fever. What I don’t want is to hang around here, doped on morphine when Landauer can walk in and start questioning me again. I need a clear head. The pain of moving around will give me that. “How’s Jenny?”
“She’s holding up. Red pretty much dragged her home around four.”
It’s only seven-thirty now. I’d have been ready to go earlier but I had to wait on paperwork and the doctor giving me a final look-over. I pull on my jeans and grab the shirt lying folded on the chair. This is going to hurt like a motherfucker. Luckily I’m still floating on the shit they gave me last night.
Carefully I wind the sleeve up my arm. A big padded bandage covers the front of my shoulder. I’m told it looks like ground beef underneath. The chunk out of my neck is the one I’ll have to be most careful about, making sure not to rip open the stitches. The one that hurts most, though, is on the side of my jaw, in a spot covered by a measly square inch of gauze. One little pellet hit bone, and opening my mouth makes me want to slam my fist through a wall.
But I keep jawing, because what I have to say is more important than a little pain. “I want either Hashtag or Scarecrow with Jenny every second. And find a way to get the phones working out there. Or get them a sat phone for now.”
“We’ll do it.”
“I’ve got a list of prescriptions.”
“We’ll send a prospect to pick them up,” Gunner says and looks over as Stone and Blowback come in.
r /> Stone’s gaze shoots to the other bed. “The kid’s asleep?”
“He’s pretending,” I say. “And he’s going to keep his fucking mouth shut. Aren’t you, boy?”
He doesn’t open his eyes but just nods. I’d grin if my jaw wasn’t aching so bad. There’s nothing we’ve said I care about getting out, anyway.
“What’s your name, kid?”
“Thomas James Clark,” Blowback answers me before the boy can. By now, he probably knows how much the kid weighed when he was born and which girl in town he’s sneaking out to stick his dick in.
Stone adds, “But we’re calling him the Defenestrator, because it’s much more badass to be thrown out a window than to fall out, right? So you should use that at school, kid. Put it on the back of your jacket.”
The boy finally speaks. “I don’t even know how to spell it.”
“Jesus. I’m gonna look you up in month and kick your ass if you can’t spell it for me then.”
“Listen to him, kid. He gets real serious about defenestration.” Shoving my feet into my boots, I pick up the sling the nurse left for me. “Let’s roll. Get Widowmaker on the horn and have him start contacting the brothers. I want everyone who can get there out at the lodge in two hours. My kutte’s at the house. So is my phone and my bike. Someone needs to ride it out to the ranch.”
It won’t be me. Not for a few days, at least.
“I’ll do it,” Stone says. “Gunner has his rig. You can drop me off and ride out to the lodge with him.”
Good. We’ll see if the cops are still around my place, too. I won’t be.
I haven’t earned my place in Jenny’s home yet. But I don’t fucking care. We didn’t expect this move from Reichmann. And we always assumed she’d be safe out at the ranch. I’m not assuming she’ll be safe anywhere anymore. Not until Reichmann’s a dead man.