by Zoey Parker
The jewel was extremely valuable, though there was no set amount anyone could agree upon. Many of the world’s wealthiest collectors listed it as priceless, simply because they had never seen it. No one knew what to expect other than a possible yellow hue. The closest valuable golden diamond was a deep, almost brown color, not truly golden like this one, and nowhere near as large. It was maybe half the size of the Sun Stone.
“Sir, your car is waiting,” one of my guards told me, stepping in through the open door of the vault.
“Yes, I’m on my way,” I said with a sigh. Then, before turning around to leave, I looked back down at my diamond and said, “It has been a pleasure. I will see you again before you leave.”
I turned to walk out, and my guards closed the door behind me. The vault sat inside several feet of solid, reinforced concrete in the middle of my cellar. There was one large metal door in the front wall of the vault. I had two specially trained guards standing on either side of the door. They were large men who didn’t need to be armed, but they were anyway, just in case. Of course, I still had them wear unassuming suits for appearances.
“I don’t think I need to remind you how precious this jewel is,” I told them as I walked past. “Remember, no one is allowed down here.” I ascended the stairs to the door leading to the cellar. It was concealed on the other side so that no one would know how to get downstairs except for myself and the guards I assigned there.
I crossed the marble floor of the entryway in my mansion to the front door. As I stepped down to the car that was waiting for me, I checked over my shoulders to make sure my snipers were in place on my roof. My house was heavily guarded, but I didn’t like the look of guards lingering around outside. It seemed too conspicuous, so I had a few hiding on the grounds and a few snipers in special places on my roof where they could see the majority of my property.
“Good evening, Mr. Gunner,” my driver said as I slid into the backseat of my sedan.
“Evening,” I returned his greeting.
“Eden?” he asked, double checking my destination.
“Do we ever go anywhere else?” I asked with a slight chuckle.
“No, sir. I guess you don’t.”
As he pulled away from the house and started down the drive, I looked out the window. Sometimes it struck me as absurd that I had made it all the way from the grimy streets of the city to a large estate on the outskirts of town. I had managed to take The Immortal Devils MC from drinking and fighting in bars to being a multi-billion-dollar operation, making all of the founding members billionaires. Not bad for a street kid.
Now we were in possession of the most valuable diamond in existence. I had put my men on high alert once the diamond had been delivered. We weren’t going to hold onto it for long. The longer we had it, the harder our lives would be because of the people seeking it out. No, we had already put the word out that we had it in our possession and were looking for buyers.
In the meantime, it was time to celebrate. We had gone from the dirtiest, roughest bars in town to Eden, a club open exclusively to members, and membership was expensive enough to keep out the small-time criminal element we didn’t want to deal with. We rubbed elbows with the wealthy elite and politicians these days.
Eden wasn’t the type of place where we could just roll up on our bikes and storm in like a bunch of punk street kids. We had to dress and play the part of high society to enter, even with our membership cards in hand. We didn’t mind. We only went Immortal when we had dirt to handle. Business was handled like business. And partying was handled like business as well.
We all arrived at about the same time. Five black sedans with government-black windows pulled up in a line to let each of us out. We exited our cars in our tailored suits and ties. We walked up together, five men with broad shoulders underneath suits just large enough to hide the bulging muscles we kept underneath. We dwarfed the bouncer as we each showed him our membership cards and entered.
Inside, Eden was as ritzy as the clientele. It was a cross between a high society jazz club from the 1920s and a ballroom. The place sparkled with grand chandeliers suspended over a dance floor in front of a stage that often featured jazz singers. Glitzy lights lined the walls over booths and tables draped in white cloths. The staff wore formalwear, and the patrons were treated like royalty. Hell, some of them probably were.
That wasn’t to say that the place was well-lit and garishly bright. Though the club seemed to sparkle like fine jewelry, the lighting was still dim and discreet. Not everyone in attendance wanted to be seen, except by the people they wanted to see them.
We sat at the bar along the left side and ordered our drinks. We all still drank like we were just a bunch of biker thugs on the street, each of us ordering whiskey or beer instead of some of the special cocktails they served with names none of us could pronounce.
“Here’s to success and our latest prize,” I toasted my brothers with our first drink.
I watched my Immortal brothers drink from their glasses and bottles. Duncan and Bryce drank whiskey on the rocks. Venom preferred cheap light beer. Luther always took his liquor in shots and chased it with a heavy, dark beer.
For a while, we sat and drank in silence, no one quite sure how to address our recent prize. It wasn’t an awkward, uncomfortable silence, but I sat and wondered which one would break his silence first. We all sat staring forward, and I realized as I looked into my brothers’ eyes in the mirror behind the bar that we were playing one of our oldest drinking games. Whoever spoke first had to pay the tab at the end of the night.
“Fine, I’ll be the first to talk,” Duncan said excitedly to cheers from the other three. I simply laughed as he slid his card across to the bartender.
“Paying for everyone tonight?” he asked Duncan with a smile.
“Yeah, start a tab for The Immortal Devils,” Duncan told him nonchalantly. It was cool. The bartender knew who we were.
The other three patted him on his back and thanked him for taking one for the team.
“Well, I figured we needed to start talking about what’s going on,” Duncan said.
“Yeah, I was wondering who would be first,” I told him. “But now that we’ve handled that, have we heard anything from anyone yet?”
“Nothing. It’s quiet,” Venom answered. “I don’t like it, Gunner.”
“Don’t worry. I’ve got everything under control. It’s locked away somewhere safe, and no one knows where it is or how to get there,” I assured him.
“What about your guys?” Bryce asked, leaning over the bar so I could see him around everyone else.
“Don’t worry about them. Their loyalty has been bought,” I said. “Besides, I could see them fighting over it too long for anyone to actually get away with it,” I added, laughing.
“Hey, I don’t mean to be a downer here, but do you think we should be talking about this here at the bar?” Duncan asked. “I was going to suggest moving to a booth or table, something out of the way.”
“You guys can,” I told him. “I was going to suggest setting business aside tonight so we could have some fun. We’ve earned a night out.”
I turned around on the barstool and watched the powerful, rich women scouting out the room like predators. Everyone in Eden was a predator. Some were looking for a match. Others were looking for someone to overpower. It wasn’t the kind of place where someone could pick up a typical barfly. Everything that happened behind the closed front doors was about power, even for the people who were just meeting business partners.
“I think we should find a good time here tonight, gentlemen,” I told them. I turned back around and nodded for the bartender. When he approached, I handed him my card so he could give Duncan his back.
The guys looked at me like I was crazy.
“Gentlemen, we are about to increase our fortunes exponentially. Tonight is on me. Get into whatever you would like. I’ve got the tab covered,” I explained.
They didn’t linger, in case I c
hanged my mind. They quickly dispersed throughout the club, making their rounds, looking for whatever vice would easily turn the night into a celebration. I returned my focus to the women in the club, each one a lioness in her own right. My vice was taking powerful women and making them mine for the night.
One of the reasons we frequented Eden even when there wasn’t business for us to conduct there was because of the endless supply of wealthy, powerful women who needed to be reminded of what it meant to be a woman, to be pleased like a woman.
The night was young. I watched patiently, waiting for the right one to appear. One of the problems with the exclusive membership of Eden was that there weren’t new faces very often. The best I could hope for most of the time was that a member who rarely showed up would decide to come in while I was there. Occasionally, a politician would send an aid or a secretary in on their own, and that would always be fun to watch.
I had expensive tastes, however, and the bright-eyed, star struck look of someone entering the club for the first time, discovering they were in over their head, was a turn-off. I didn’t want to be the one to corrupt one of the young, innocent assistants who were enjoying a taste of the good life. I wanted to take someone who had already been corrupted by wealth and power, and show them that there was still more to learn. Always more to learn and explore.
I turned around and ordered another drink.
“Slow night?” the bartender asked me.
“Yes, but the night is still young,” I told him.
“That’s the spirit,” he said. “I’m sure it’ll pick up.” He poured more whiskey over fresh ice for me and handed me the glass.
I sipped and watched the people walking behind me in the reflection of the mirror behind the bar. I saw her coming. She had straight dark red hair, fair skin, red lips, and gentle green eyes. She appeared out of nowhere, parting the crowd behind me as she approached the bar. I had never seen her face before. I would have recognized it if I had. Still, she didn’t seem out of place. In fact, she had a confident look on her face, as if she owned the club.
I turned to look at her as she reached the bar. She wore a tight black dress with a short skirt that stopped about halfway down her thighs. It hugged her curves perfectly, showing off her flawless figure.
When, she spoke, I heard her commanding voice over everything in the club, though she clearly spoke at a normal volume. I had found my predator to dominate for the evening.
Chapter Two
Sierra
I approached the doorman with my hand in my purse, clutching the membership card Coyote had given me. He simply nodded, admitting me without so much as asking me for my membership. I gave him an appreciative smile and wink as I walked past him and let my purse hang down from my shoulder.
I was no stranger to mingling with high society. Somehow I always ended up at all the balls, the charity events, and even most of the most exclusive clubs, usually on the arm of this one or that one who wanted to show off the latest catch.
Even though it was my first time walking into Eden, I knew that I couldn’t let it show on my face. Letting it be obvious that it was my first time would have marked me as a target for some of the men and women looking for a new face. It would have also blown my cover. I kept a stern face. I belonged among these wealthy and powerful people. I was one of them, even if I had probably lifted something belonging to someone in the room.
One of the dangers of my lifestyle was being spotted in a crowd. It rarely happened, but I also made sure to cover my tracks so that when it did happen, they never suspected me of being the one who lifted their priceless jewels.
I knew Gunner and his men didn’t look like typical bikers. They dressed in tailored suits or formalwear. They couldn’t be spotted by their colors like most bikers. They had other ways of marking themselves apart, namely the small pins they wore on their suit jackets sporting what would have been the back patch on their vests. It was a skull with fire in its eyes.
The club was filling in nicely by the time I arrived, but I had no trouble spotting Gunner Kaye at the bar. He was the broad man sitting alone watching the room through the mirror behind the bar. He wore his long dark brown wavy hair slicked back and stared out at the world through deep brown eyes set in a clean-shaven, chiseled face. As I approached, I could see the pin in his reflection. I had found my mark.
Then he found me in the mirror. Our eyes met, and I felt drawn to him. He turned as I reached the barstool next to him.
“Is anyone sitting here?” I asked him as I sat down, not waiting for an answer.
“Someone is now,” he said with a smirk. His voice was inviting and seductive. He turned and called the bartender over, telling him to put whatever I ordered on his tab.
“You know, I wouldn’t be here if I couldn’t afford my own drinks,” I teased him. Then I turned to the bartender and told him, “Just a glass of your best champagne.”
“You’re going to try to make me regret putting you on my tab, aren’t you?” he joked.
“If you can’t handle it, maybe I should be paying for you,” I shot back.
“That would be a first.” He laughed and extended his hand to me. “Gunner Kaye,” he said.
“I know who you are,” I said through narrow eyes as I took his hand in mine. His grip was firm around my lithe fingers. His grip was more than a casual handshake. I could feel his desire in the way his fingers wrapped around mine. My stomach tingled with desire.
“And you are?” he asked.
“Sierra Farrow,” I answered, using my real name. I caught myself and smiled, but it was too late. He had distracted me enough that I hadn’t used an alias. He was good.
My champagne arrived, and his whiskey was refilled, while we sat and stared at each other.
Finally, I pulled my hand gently out of his grip and turned to my drink.
“It is a pleasure to finally meet you, Mr. Kaye,” I said.
“Please, call me Gunner, and I’m intrigued that you know who I am already even though I’m pretty sure I’ve never seen you,” he said.
“No, you probably haven’t,” I assured him. “We don’t exactly move in the same circles.”
“So, what brings you to Eden tonight?” he asked.
I had to decide in that moment just how open I wanted to be. I had already been too open by giving him my name. I had to be careful with this dangerously disarming man, before I told him everything.
“Same thing you are,” I told him, smirking, and I returned to my drink.
“Just looking for a good time, huh?” he asked.
“Now, don’t tell me,” I said after I set my glass down on the bar. “I’ve already found it right here.” I could see from the look in his eyes that he enjoyed it when I presented myself as a challenge.
And I could tell from the tingling between my legs that I enjoyed the way his desire for me was so obvious. Gunner was a powerful, sexy man. To see such unguarded desire in his eyes was the biggest turn-on I could have asked for.
“Well, I certainly appreciate your vote of confidence, Sierra,” he said to me, “but if you think you can do better, then by all means. You certainly have your pick of wealthy, powerful men in the room.” He turned back to his whiskey, but I could tell he was only trying to see how long it would take me to make a move.
The little game we were playing was rather entertaining, but I figured if what I saw in his eyes was real desire, there was no shame in making my move. I wasn’t going to get anywhere sitting at the bar with him all night. The information I needed definitely wasn’t at Eden. I needed to get closer to him than a barstool to get what I needed.
“That wasn’t the answer I wanted,” I told him as I placed a hand on his leg. His skin felt electric through his pants. I could almost feel him trembling with longing as I slid my hand up far enough to tease him, but not far enough to give him too much pleasure there at the bar.
“Oh, it wasn’t?” he said in a teasing tone.
“No, it wasn’t.”
I leaned over to him and whispered in his ear, “But I’ll let it slide for now and still give you another chance.”
I sat back and finished my glass of champagne while he stared at me. The look on his face was a mixture of shock and amazement. He obviously wasn’t used to having a woman put him in his place the way I was. Hopefully, I was leaving my door open enough for him to still want to come through. I was fairly confident I was, but I knew I needed to let him buy me at least one more drink before I tried to seal the deal.
He needed to feel like I was giving him at least some control over the situation no matter how strong and powerful I came across. I laughed to myself as I signaled the bartender for another glass. They were all the same. They wanted a powerful woman but they wanted to maintain some power over her. I kept his reflection in the corner of my eye while I waited for my drink. I wondered how much power he wanted to hold over me, and how much power he was going to let me have.