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Wallflowers: Double Trouble

Page 25

by CP Smith


  “I take it you don’t look like your siblin’s, and that bothers you?” Bo approached on silent feet, watching me.

  I rolled my lips on my teeth, searching for the right words. “My whole life I wanted to fit in. My brother and sister made sense with my parents. I didn’t. Once I found out why I didn’t, all I could think about was finding those who were like me. I wanted to belong. To make sense.”

  Bo’s eyes glittered, and he reached up and grabbed my neck, pulling me closer to his body. “You belong to me,” he ground out. “You make sense to me. My past haunted me for years, and in the stretch of a week, you made it all disappear. I keep thinkin’ it will end. That somethin’ this special isn’t meant for me. Hell, I keep lookin’ over my shoulder waitin’ for someone to walk up and take you away.” I opened my mouth, and then I shut it. I didn’t even know how to respond to that. “I’ll find your father if he’s out there,” he continued, “but even if I don’t, you belong. Don’t ever think you don’t.”

  How could a man be this wonderful? I loved him. No ifs, ands, or buts. I loved him and his stormy gray eyes that brightened when he laughed at me. Loved the way his eye twitched when I’d pushed him too far. The way he came for me and never gave up. I. Loved. Him.

  “I won’t disappear,” I whispered, running my hand down his face. That scared little boy who had lost so much stared back at me from inside Bo’s gaze. “I’m caught, and I’m stayin’ caught.”

  “Damn straight you are.”

  “And you’re caught, and you’re stayin’ caught,” I let him know.

  He grinned. “A man would have to be nuts to walk away from you.”

  “I thought you said you were nuts?”

  “Nuts for you,” he whispered.

  A falling star flashed across the sky, drawing my attention up. It reminded me of how I’d stared at those same stars a few nights ago, wondering if fate had finally smiled down on me. She had.

  “So,” I said, snuggling in closer, “are you goin’ to feed me, or what?”

  Bo looked at my mouth. “Or what,” he replied softly.

  I mentally pumped my arm.

  “Does it involve bein’ naked?”

  He nodded.

  “Does it involve ropes?”

  He raised a brow.

  “What? A girl can dream, can’t she?” I drawled, batting my eyes again.

  “Naughty.” Bo grinned. “Very, very naughty.”

  Thirteen

  LARRY DWAYNE DANIELS

  Three days later . . .

  BO STROLLED INTO JACOBS’ LADDER and looked up. The Wallflowers were sitting at what they’d deemed ‘their table,’ toasting each other with shots. The green liquid glistened in the light above them. It looked like cough syrup to Bo, but his woman’s eyes always glazed over when she drank it, her mouth pulling into a sexy grin, and the effects of the liquor on her mood were spectacular. One shot, and they were on their backs within five minutes.

  Sienna looked down at him, and she stuck out her tongue.

  Bo raised a brow.

  She raised one back, and he saw the challenge in her eyes. He looked back at Jacobs’ office and considered taking her up on it, but it would have to wait; he had a man to interview. Larry Dwayne Daniels had woken up the night before, and he wanted a word with the man.

  Bo mouthed, “Later,” to Sienna, and her eyes hooded with anticipation.

  Fucking spectacular.

  Turning to the bar, Bo took a seat on a stool next to Devin. “Daniels is finally awake,” Bo said.

  The beer Devin had lifted to his lips paused. “You headed there now?”

  Bo nodded. “I came by to see if you wanted to join me.”

  Devin put his tongue to his teeth and whistled. Nate looked up from across the restaurant and jerked his head, raised a finger to stop a tirade his aunt was having, and headed in their direction.

  Bo watched Nate as he approached, grinning when he caught the big man’s eyes darting to the Wallflowers.

  “What’s holdin’ him back from Poppy?” Bo mumbled to Devin.

  Devin looked over his shoulder at the Wallflowers. “Abusive father. He used to beat him and his mother. He’s got it in his head he’s predisposed to follow in his old man’s footsteps due to his genetic lottery. He keeps a tight rein on his temper because of it.”

  “So he doesn’t date?”

  “Not more than a couple of weeks, and that’s not often. He’s married to his bar rather than a woman.”

  “He ever lose control?” Bo asked as Nate walked across the restaurant toward them.

  “Only once since I’ve known him,” Devin smiled.

  Bo’s forehead creased. “What’s so funny?”

  “What’s funny is, the only time I’ve seen him lose his cool was at Craig’s place.”

  Bo lifted a brow.

  Devin looked over his shoulder, then back. “After you called, tellin’ us to meet you back at the house, I found Nate checkin’ an old rickety outbuildin’. When he saw me ride up, he asked if they’d been found. When I said no, he put a fist through one of the walls, then proceeded to dismantle the entire buildin’.”

  Bo whistled low. “He’s in deep.”

  “He’s in deep,” Devin agreed.

  They both turned to watch Nate walk up.

  “What’s up?” Nate asked, stopping in front of both men from behind the bar.

  “Daniels woke up,” Bo stated, trying to hide a smile. “I’m headin’ there now to interview him.”

  “Good,” Nate ground out, “it’s about time we knew what’s goin’ on.”

  “Can you keep an eye on the girls while we’re gone? We don’t want them out of our sight until we know what we’re up against,” Devin said.

  Nate looked up at the girls and nodded. “None of them will get past me this time.”

  “Easiest way to keep an eye on them is to introduce them to Gertrude. The way they sing, they’ll love her,” Devin chuckled.

  Nate grinned. “They might actually get Gert to shut up with their caterwaulin’.”

  Devin cringed. “Never heard women that bad at singin’.”

  The girls burst out laughing, and all three men turned to look at them.

  “Did you hear that Poppy tried to sacrifice herself so Calla and Sienna could get away?” Bo mumbled, keeping his eyes on Sienna.

  There was silence for a moment, then Nate growled, “You wanna repeat that?”

  Bo turned and leaned on the bar. He held Nate’s eyes for a moment. They were glittering with anger. “Craig’s granddaughter was gonna shoot all three of them, so Poppy decided she would sacrifice herself. She lunged for the gun and told Calla and Sienna to run.”

  Nate’s eyes shot to Poppy, and his nostrils flared. “She’s got no sense.”

  “No. She’s got no man to fight for her,” Devin said, tapping the bar twice with his knuckles before stepping away and heading for the door.

  Bo followed, looking up at Sienna. When he caught her eyes, he held up his phone. She nodded and dug her phone out of her purse. Bo answered on the first ring. “We’re headed to the hospital to interview Daniels. We don’t want you ladies leavin’ until we know what’s goin’ on. Nate’s got your back.”

  “Roger that. We’ll stay here and wait for your return,” she answered, saluting him as he opened the door to exit.

  Bo’s lip twitched. They were taking the whole ‘we’ll listen to you from now on’ to heart.

  “Sienna?”

  “Yeah?”

  “Dinner at your place tonight. I’ll teach you how to cook pasta, then I’ll worship you while you practice.”

  She gasped, then, and in a breathy voice said, “Lookin’ forward to it.”

  Beautiful. Fucking spectacular. “Later, baby . . . Love you.”

  Her eyes warmed as she looked back at him. “Later, Bo. I love you, too.”

  Devin grinned at him. “She can’t cook worth a shit, either?”

  “As bad as her singin’.�
��

  “Good thing they’re worth lyin’, stealin’, or killin’ for,” Devin laughed.

  “Amen.”

  Twenty minutes later, they walked into Daniels’ hospital room. He looked like he’d been pounded with a sledgehammer. Both eyes were swollen, and his nose had been broken. Bo figured he’d eat through a straw for a few weeks, and he didn’t give a shit. Daniels had gone after his woman with a gun; he’d shake the hand of the man who nearly beat him to death.

  “Wake up,” Bo barked.

  Daniels jerked, swallowing. He opened his eyes to slits and scanned the room.

  “Who are you?” he rasped out, his voice dry.

  “I’m Detective Bo Strawn, and this is Devin Hawthorne. We need to ask you a few questions about the truck you crashed last Saturday.”

  Daniels expression turned cautious. “What truck?”

  “The truck,” Devin hissed, leaning down so the man could see him better, “you used to chase three women through the streets of Savannah.”

  Daniels color turned ashen, and he swallowed hard. “I don’t know what you’re talkin’ about.”

  “Yeah, you do. You pulled a gun on them as they left the Tap Room, thinkin’ you’d score easy money,” Bo taunted. “What I really want to know is why you chased them.”

  Daniels raised a shaking hand to a cup resting on his bedside table and brought it to his mouth. He struggled with the straw, then winced as he swallowed.

  “You gonna answer the man?” Devin bit out.

  “I want a lawyer,” was his response.

  “You’ll get a lawyer once you’re discharged. And a comfortable bed in county lockup. What I need to know is why. Are these women still in danger?”

  Daniels looked between Bo and Devin, weighing his options, then shook his head slowly.

  “So no one else is lookin’ for them?” Devin growled.

  Daniels closed his eyes and shook his head again. “I’d been drinkin’ and heard one say she was Calla Armstrong. I figured I’d make a quick buck seein’ as she’s loaded. I hadn’t been tweaked in days, and I was desperate.”

  Bo looked at Devin to gauge his reaction. His hands were balled into tight fists, the knuckles white. “If you weren’t already broken, I would beat you myself,” Devin rumbled low. “That’s my woman you went after.”

  Daniels moved further up the bed, looking at Bo for help. “I’m done,” he whispered. “Her father already put me in the hospital. I’m not goin’ anywhere near her.”

  Bo’s eyes shot to Devin. “Isn’t her father dead?”

  Devin nodded slowly. “Describe this man.”

  Daniels looked at Bo. “He’ll kill me.”

  “Hawthorne’s not gonna kill you,” Bo sighed.

  “Not him.” Daniels jerked his head at Devin. “Her father.”

  “Her father is dead,” Devin growled, “so start talkin’.”

  “I’m tellin’ you I can’t,” Daniels shot back. “He’s associated with the Serpents. A nomad with no club affiliation.”

  Bo narrowed his eyes. “And he told you he was Calla’s father?”

  Daniels nodded.

  “He said her name?” Bo ground out.

  Daniels shook his head. “He said, ‘Nobody fucks with my kids.’ I assumed he meant Armstrong, since I was goin’ after her.”

  Jesus, this guy is an idiot.

  Bo pulled out his phone and flipped through the pictures Sienna had taken during their stay at the ranch. He found one of the three Wallflowers together and held up his phone. “Which one?”

  Daniels squinted at the photo, then raised his hand and pointed to Sienna.

  Bo gritted his teeth. If this man beat a punk half to death over his kid, and Daniels was goin’ after Sienna . . . Christ.

  “You’re an idiot,” Devin growled. “You went after the wrong woman.”

  Daniels narrowed his eyes at Devin. “Fuck you, man.”

  Devin shook his head. “Tweaker with no brains who goes after the wrong woman and gets manhandled by a middle-aged man isn’t exactly Einstein.”

  “I need a name,” Bo bit out.

  “I’m not givin’ it to you, man.”

  “You’re givin’ it to me,” Bo growled.

  “He’ll kill me,” Daniels bit back.

  Bo’s smile turned sinister. “I’ll kill you if you don’t.”

  Ten minutes later, they exited Daniels’ room with a name. Knox. One name. No last name, just Knox.

  “You’re gettin’ good at lyin’,” Devin chuckled.

  “Bite me,” Bo said. “What are the chances this Knox is Sienna’s biological father?”

  “I’d say slim, but it makes you wonder why the hell he went after Daniels. Mistaken identity?”

  “A nomad biker? They survive by knowin’ everyone and everything.”

  Devin rubbed a hand across his face. He had no answers.

  “How the fuck do I tell Sienna her father may be a biker? And how the hell do I find a biker with one name?”

  “You could lie. Say you can’t find him.”

  Bo shook his head. “If he’s who he says he is, this guy knows Sienna’s his daughter. It’s only a matter of time before he comes sniffin’. She needs to be prepared.”

  “You wanna head to the Tap Room and knock some heads?” Devin asked.

  “Thought you’d never ask,” Bo grinned.

  “I don’t think we sounded that bad,” Poppy grumbled low in my ear as Nate led us away from his apartment. We’d been playing with his adorable bulldog Gertrude, singing along with her to an Italian opera.

  He turned at her whispered complaint, rose both brows, and shook his head. “Never heard three more tone-deaf Georgia peaches in my life.”

  “Four,” I chuckled. “Gertrude is one of us now.”

  “Oh, wouldn’t she look darlin’ in a studded UG shirt,” Cali said. “There are a few at Frock You I could cut down to size and take a Bedazzler to.”

  Poppy and I nodded, smiling wide at how cute Gertrude would be in a custom shirt. Nate stopped in his tracks, turned, and pointed right in Cali’s face. “No fuckin’ bedazzlin’.”

  “But—”

  He glared her into silence.

  She looked and me and bit her lips to keep from smiling.

  I grabbed her hand so the big man didn’t explode and pulled her around Nate, heading for our table.

  “He’s testy,” Poppy muttered as we climbed the steps. “He’s been on edge all afternoon.”

  “That’s true,” I answered. “He’s been glarin’ most of the day.”

  “Devin gets grumpy when we haven’t . . . you know what.”

  “Cali, you’ve been together a little over a week. You’re still in the honeymoon period. You haven’t had time not to have time for you know what.”

  Now she had me saying ‘you know what.’ Pretty soon, I wouldn’t be able to say ‘ass,’ without slapping my hand over my mouth.

  She settled in her seat before answering. “We went twenty-four hours once. He was a bear by the time he got home. When I asked him why, he said it’s because he needed to work off his frustration.”

  “How is that the same?” I questioned.

  “He was frustrated at me.”

  “What had you done?”

  “Pulled an all-nighter at the office when we got back from the ranch.”

  Poppy and I snorted.

  “Do you think when men find someone they want, their bodies need you know what all the time?” Poppy asked.

  I looked at Cali and smiled. “Yeah. Most definitely.”

  She bit her lip. “Do you, um, think it’s the same for women?”

  Cali and I both nodded . . . rapidly.

  Poppy chuckled. “You both look like bobbleheads.”

  A loud, husky female voice rang out from below, and we looked over the railing into the restaurant. Nate’s aunt Martine was leaning on a table with a bunch of college boys, smiling seductively.

  Nate’s aunt was a sassy red
head who was born and raised in Glasgow, Scotland. She had a quick wit and a smile that turned heads, and a body that stopped traffic. She was in her mid-forties, unmarried, and flirted with every man between eighteen and seventy. I’d watched her interact with men most of the afternoon and decided she liked flirting with the college crowd best because she could rattle them easily.

  “Did you hear Nate say she’s puttin’ down roots in Savannah and will be managin’ the bar for him?”

  “Yeah. I wonder where she’s stayin’?”

  “With his mother, Devin said.”

  Poppy’s phone began to ring, so she pulled it from her purse. I started to ask Cali if she was hungry, but my attention snapped to Poppy. She’d gasped at whatever she heard on the phone.

  “I’ll be right home, Momma,” she rushed out and stood, swiping her phone off.

  “What’s wrong?” Cali asked.

  “Nothin’. I need to go.”

  I looked at Cali. “We promised Bo we’d listen from now on. You can’t leave until he calls.”

  Poppy grabbed her purse from the chair, mumbling, “You promised. It has nothin’ to do with me. I need to go,” then fled the table.

  “Poppy!” I called out, but she ignored me and hit the stairs two at a time.

  I searched the restaurant for Nate. He was behind the bar, and his focus was on Poppy as she rushed through the crowd. Before I could call out to him, he threw a bar towel down, muttered something to a waitress, and then headed swiftly toward the door Poppy had just exited.

  I fumbled for my phone and started to dial Bo’s number, but it rang in my hand.

  “Bo?” I rushed out.

  “You’re in the clear, baby. Daniels won’t be comin’ after you. Tell the girls.”

  I looked at the door Poppy had fled through, and relaxed. Whatever her problem was, we’d find out soon enough. At least she was safe.

  “You there?” Bo asked.

  “Yeah,” I answered. “So, we’re safe?”

  “Yeah, you’re safe, baby. I’ll meet you at your place in a few hours. There’s somethin’ I need to look into first, then we’ll talk.”

  “Talk?” I questioned.

  “About your biological father.”

 

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