He Doesn’t Care_A Bad Boy Secret Baby Motorcycle Club Romance

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He Doesn’t Care_A Bad Boy Secret Baby Motorcycle Club Romance Page 23

by Naomi West


  Max, of course, had never forgiven me for that, and I wondered how that would affect the announcement that Halley and I were engaged and that we needed to use club resources to protect her and our son. There would, undoubtedly, be a vote — because that's how things were always handled when club resources were in the mix. Max would vote down anything that I wanted, but I didn't know how many people would go along with him.

  Towards the end of the meeting, Frank nodded over at me, and I stood up. “I have some business,” I said, folding my hands behind my back and presenting a strong and confident front. “I'm engaged.”

  There was a quiet pause, and then a couple of the older guys broke out clapping, while some other people gave wolf-whistles or cheers.

  “About damn time,” Chris said loudly. “Is there a woman in this city who you haven't slept with?”

  There was raucous laughter at that. I held up my hand, though, before everyone could get too far into celebratory mode. “I've got a son as well — Cole. He's seven.” That sobered some people up. “I just learned about Cole, and … well, I'm going to do right by them. But there's apparently some trouble with Halley's ex-husband...”

  That brought silence to the table. “So, another man's been taking care of your son for seven years?” Max jeered.

  “I didn't know the kid existed,” I said defensively. Then, I relented. “But yes. He's apparently a drunken, abusive piece of shit, though. Halley served him the divorce papers last week, but now she's terrified that he'll come after her and—”

  “And you want us to protect her,” Max surmised.

  “Let the man talk,” Frank said, a sharp rebuke, and although I appreciated his standing up for me, I winced a little, wondering how that would further widen the gap between me and the younger generation of bikers, many of whom had grown up with Max.

  Max stood up angrily, ignoring his father. “No, listen everyone. We have much bigger problems than Jake's latest whore and her abusive husband. Are we forgetting about the fact that Emilio Alvarez and the Holy Flames MC are encroaching on our territory?”

  “We've had a truce with the Flame for years,” Bryce said, rolling his eyes a little. At least that was one younger supporter that Jake could always count on to be at his side.

  “They've been encroaching on our territory for months now,” Max insisted. “First, they started doing their drug-running in the same area as ours, but with all their fucking ineptitudes, this is really just drawing heat to our guys, meaning that we either have to move out or risk being busted. And then lately they been squeezing our arms buyers, which–”

  “What the hell does this have to do with Halley and Cole?” I interrupted heatedly. “Yeah, we all know that that's going on, but—”

  “Rather than using our resources to protect your little slut and her offspring, we should have every man we can working against the Flames.”

  “And just what do you suggest we do?” I sneered. “We've been fighting back against the Flames. Why do you think their guys keep getting busted and our guys keep ending up clean? Anyway, one or two guys isn't really going to make a difference there.” I turned to the group at large. “Look, I'm not asking for a full army to protect her or anything like that. I'd just like one or two guys there, when I can't be there, mainly during the days, when I'm at the shop.” I cracked a smile. “I'd do it myself, but I don't trust Bryce to take over for me!”

  Bryce snorted, and a few other guys chuckled. I'd left Bryce in charge of the shop in the past; that was never a problem.

  “It's really just until the divorce is finalized and everything goes back to normal,” I insisted. “It's not forever, just until things get a bit less heated.”

  “I think we should take a vote,” Frank said, before Max could say anything else. “All those in favor?”

  To my surprise, most of the group raised their hands. As expected, Max was the main, sulking dissenter, and a couple of his close friends voted with him purely out of principle. But it seemed that my good work for the club was beginning to pay off, and they were beginning to go along with my decisions. I had no doubt that that would help in the long run.

  For now, I smiled up the table at Frank and nodded gratefully towards him for giving me the seal of approval.

  “You're going to regret this,” Max snapped, and I wasn't sure if he was talking to me or to the table at large. “Just wait until we find our arms supply totally cut off — until our main source of income is gone, because the Flames have taken over everything. Just you wait until then.”

  A couple of the other men rolled their eyes at his antics, but for the most part, he seemed to be totally ignored.

  “Well, I think that's all of today's business, then,” Frank said, and the room began to empty.

  Chapter Eleven

  Halley

  I knew Jake had his meeting with the Devil's Route that day, when he was going to tell them about our engagement. When I heard a knock on the front door, I expected it was him, coming to tell me how things had played out.

  Cole was in the kitchen with me — we were baking chocolate chip cookies, all put together from scratch. “Can you keep stirring this just like that for a minute?” I asked him, even though I knew that was probably a recipe for the bowl of batter falling down on the floor and going everywhere. But my parents weren't home at the moment; they'd taken a weekend trip to their beach house, so there wasn't anyone else who could supervise him, and I wasn't about to make him come to the front door while I signed for a package. If anything happened to the batter, we would just make another batch. We had plenty of time.

  “Okay!” Cole said enthusiastically, continuing to stir, his tongue poking out the corner of his mouth as he focused on it.

  I walked to the front door and pulled it open, trying to remember if Mom had said anything about having things delivered to her or something like that. I couldn't remember anything, but that didn't mean something hadn't just slipped her mind.

  I practically choked on air when I saw Brian standing there.

  He wasn't the sexy, clean-cut man who I had fallen in love with. His beard was a little too scruffy, and his hair was limp and dull. His face was gaunt; he probably hadn't been feeding himself well now that he had to take care of himself again and couldn't just order me to have something ready for him when he came home from work. His eyes were bloodshot, and he looked half-mad. And he stank of vodka.

  “You little bitch,” he snarled, striding forwards and forcing me back into the hallway before I could slam the door shut, before I could even move, stunned as I was. “You think you can just run off one day, and I'm not going to come find you? Thanks for serving me the divorce papers. As soon as I saw the address on them, I knew you must be back here. You dumb cunt.”

  I cowered back against the wall, curling in on myself. “Brian, please,” I whimpered, hoping that Cole would stay out in the kitchen. The house was big enough that he probably wouldn't be able to hear us from there, but if he came out here…

  Brian slapped me hard across the face, and I collapsed to the floor, crying out in pain.

  “Please, Brian,” I repeated. “Cole's just in the other room; let's not—”

  Brian hauled me up by my hair, putting his face in close to mine. “Good,” he said. “That'll make it easy to take him with me once I've finished with you.” He grinned sharply. “It's not kidnapping if you left the kid in my care when you came out here, which is what we'll tell the jury when we go in for our custody battle, isn't it, sweetheart?”

  He hit me again, and when he released my hair, I fell to my knees, cracking them hard on the linoleum. I fumbled in my pocket for anything I could use as a weapon against him, but all I could find was my phone. As much as I'd like to call Jake, there was no way Brian was going to let me do that.

  Brian kicked me in the stomach, and I folded forwards, coughing.

  That was, of course, when Cole came into the kitchen. “Mama!” he cried out, running towards me.

  �
��Hey, Cole,” Brian said, scooping the kid up. “Haven't you missed your papa?”

  Cole struggled against him. “Is Mama okay?” he asked fearfully.

  “Your mama is just fine,” Brian said impatiently. “But we're going to have to leave her for right now while we go on back to Louisiana to see Grandma and Grandpa.”

  “No!” Cole cried.

  I used Brian's distraction to pull out my phone, opening the dialer to the last person called and putting out another call. Then, before Brian could realize I had done it, I jammed my phone back into my pocket, praying that Jake picked up.

  Brian had put Cole back on the floor, clearly sick of the way the kid was squirming and struggling against him, but he kept a firm hold on the kid's wrist, tight enough that it would probably bruise.

  I narrowed my eyes at that grip and launched myself at Brian, who had no choice but to let Cole go. “You bastard,” I spat, trying to claw him. “Leave Cole alone! Fight me if you want to. I'm the one who—” The rest of what I was planning to say was cut off as Brian swung a fist around again and slammed it into my jaw.

  I fell back against the wall, tasting blood.

  Cole crawled over to my side, curling into the dubious safety of my arms. “Mama,” he sobbed, his fingers tightly twisted in my shirt. “Mama, why is Papa being so mean?” he asked. “I don't want to go away from you. I want to stay here, with you and Jake and—”

  “Who the hell is Jake?” Brian snarled, towering over us.

  The door suddenly swung open. “I am,” Jake growled.

  He hauled Brian away from us, his hands strong and sure. He yanked Brian out the front door. I could hear the two of them yelling at one another, but I could barely process what they were saying.

  “Are you okay, baby?” I asked Cole over and over again, running my hands over him, examining his wrist.

  He nodded, though, and that eased something in my chest. He was still crying, but he was all right. We were going to be all right.

  Suddenly—or at least, it felt sudden, but my sense of time was feeling totally skewed at the moment, as though everything was passing by in slow motion—I realized I couldn't hear the shouting anymore, and I jumped to my feet, terrified of what I might find outside.

  Jake had Brian pinned down on the driveway, and he was raining punches down on the man.

  Before I could see more, cop cars were swarming out of nowhere, with policemen streaming out of the cars and surrounding the two men.

  “Mama, what's happening with Mr. Jake?” Cole asked, sounding scared as he clung to my jeans.

  I watched white-faced, unable to respond as Jake was handcuffed and dragged to a cop car. An ambulance showed up to that Brian away, but I could barely spare a thought for him. Jake, my love and my only hope for salvation, was being arrested.

  I swallowed hard, putting an arm around Cole's shoulder and pulling him closer to me, using that contact to try to ground myself.

  Jake shot his eyes towards me as they pushed him into the cop car, and I began to cry.

  Chapter Twelve

  Jake

  It wasn't my first time in jail, and I had a feeling it probably wouldn't be my last. Not that I'd done anything too horrible in the past, but there had been a couple bar fights and a few drunken and disorderly conduct charges that had landed me in the slammer overnight.

  I had never really flown off the handle like I had with Brian, though. I winced, remembering the horror in Halley's face as I'd be pushed into the cop car. I doubted she wanted anything to do with me anymore, and she almost certainly wouldn't let me near Cole again.

  I hadn't been able to help it, though. Seeing her cowering there in the hall, with tears on her face, looking terrified and disheveled — it would take a much stronger man than me to not react to that. And the fact that Cole had been there as well, just as terrified and upset, with tears on his face… Well, the bastard deserved to be killed for doing that to them.

  I hadn't been able to stop myself as I punched Brian over and over and over again, feeling rage course through me in a way that I had never felt before.

  A guard appeared at the doorway to my cell. “There's someone here to bail you out,” he said, sounding displeased, as though he hoped I was going to be stuck in there for longer.

  I stood and dusted off my jeans, following him out the cell and down the hallway towards freedom. I collected my personal effects and went through the door into the lobby of the station. Of course, it was Frank standing there, giving me a stern look. Without a word, he steered me out of the station and towards his truck. “You've botched this one,” he finally said, his eyes fixed on the road.

  I swallowed hard and ducked my head. I had never been on this side of his disappointment before; that was the tone he normally reserved for use with Max. Still...

  “I couldn't help it, Frank,” I muttered, hating how sullen I sounded. “God, you should have seen the bastard. He had Halley and Cole backed up into a corner and was just threatening them. I don't doubt that he hit Halley before I got there, either. I mean, fuck, if I hadn't been heading over there after the meeting anyways, I don't know what would have happened to them. I think the fucker was about ready to murder them.”

  Frank frowned. “And fighting for the ones that you love is all well and good,” he agreed. “But you weren't thinking. If you had done it in private, that would have been one thing. But now a nice suburban neighborhood is worried about beastly biker dudes coming to pick fights on their front lawn, and the local law enforcement is breathing fire down our necks.”

  “I just didn't want to beat up Brian in front of Cole,” I said, even though I could see where Frank was coming from.

  “That was a good thought,” Frank said. “But unfortunately, the club has decided to call a meeting to discuss your misconduct.”

  I swallowed hard and nodded. The thing was, this wasn't unexpected. I'd spent the whole night in the jail thinking about what I'd done, and I'd come to the same conclusions. I'd been sloppy. I'd been acting with my heart rather than my head. That wasn't the way to conduct missions, and that was exactly what always got Max into hot water. The club had every right to come up with some sort of punishment for me, and I didn't doubt that there would be plenty of them asking for me to be demoted, for Frank to pick someone else as a successor.

  I sighed and scrubbed a hand back through my hair. “I'm going to have to stand trial against that bastard now, and that's going to make things even messier.”

  Frank gave me a strange, crooked smile. “Well, fortunately for you, Brian has generously agreed not to press charges.”

  I gaped at him. I should have known Frank would spend the time I was in jail cleaning up after me. “What did you do?” I asked.

  He shrugged. “I bribed the hospital to let me in to see him. And then I suggested it might be best for Brian to leave town and to never go near Halley and Cole again. I stressed the fact that if he stayed in town, he would have a whole hoard of demon bikers out for his blood. Anyway, there are going to be repercussions to him for violating the restraining order. So, he'll be out of your hair for at least a little while. And he won't be pressing charges.”

  I breathed a sigh of relief. “Thanks,” I said, as we pulled into the parking lot of the clubhouse.

  Frank waved away my gratitude. “Don't thank me yet,” he said grimly. “We still have to see what sort of punishment the rest of Devil's Route want to lay on you.”

  I shook my head, knowing that he was right, and got out of the truck, squaring my shoulders and following him into the building.

  Everyone was already gathered in there when we arrived, and they all stared at me with varying amounts of grimness on their faces. Frank and I took our seats.

  “So, I'm sure that by now, everyone knows what happened with Jake last night,” Frank said wryly.

  Mike snorted. “Of course we do; it's been all over the news. Apparently one of that girl's neighbors filmed the whole thing once it spilled out into the yard?
It's pretty gruesome viewing.”

  I felt the tips of my ears burn. “Look—” I began, but Frank held up a hand and I fell silent.

  “We all know what happened,” Frank repeated. “And we all know what the police reaction was to it, mainly that they're putting pressure on us. It's not the end of the world; we've been keeping out of their way and under the radar for the most part in recent years, so they're not too upset. But we can all agree that Jake's actions were … less than ideal. All those in favor of punishment for him, this is the chance to make your voice heard.”

  For a moment, no one said anything. Then, Max stood up. “I say we eject him from the club,” he said, folding his arms across his chest.

 

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