Miles (Highway Reapers MC): Inked Hearts

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Miles (Highway Reapers MC): Inked Hearts Page 15

by West, Heather


  “Is that so?” he made his voice as husky as possible as he asked the question.

  “You think you can run out on me before dawn,” Gina cried haughtily. “Well, I don’t think so. I’m not just some - ”

  Her words were silenced as Sylar’s mouth landed against hers. She uttered a brief cry of disdain before hungrily kissing him back. Sylar scooped her in to his arms and hungrily pressed his tongue against hers as he kicked the door to the shop closed. His hands were now roving over her breasts, eager to unleash them from their cotton cage.

  “Oh, Sylar,” Gina gasped as they broke their kiss so that he could hastily unbutton his jeans and hoist up her skirt. He gave a groan of appreciation when he noticed that she wasn’t wearing any panties. So this had been her plan all along, to seduce him.

  Sylar pressed her against the reception counter and eased himself inside her. Gina gasped with desire and dug her nails in to his shoulders, gripping him tightly against her.

  “Fuck me,” she pleaded breathlessly. So he did.

  Chapter 58

  When Brea was quite certain that Miles was fast asleep she crept away from the bed. She grabbed a spare blanket and cloaked herself in it as she wandered in to the main living area of her apartment. Her head felt heavy and her body ached. Miles had all but admitted to having dark secrets of his own. Why were the men in her life so intent on keeping secrets from her?

  Brea went and stood by the large window which overlooked Colridge. The few lights that were on at night sparkled among the darkened streets like precious stars. Brea loved the vista her apartment afforded her. She imagined what a bigger place would look like at night, somewhere like New York City where there would be a thousand more lights on at night, sparkling like unnatural stars. For so long Brea had only known the streets of her small home town but since moving to Colridge she’d awoken a desire within herself to travel. She wanted to see all of America. Her parents used to talk about how they used to travel together before having children. They had such great adventures.

  There was a faded photograph of the pair of them at the Grand Canyon, arms looped around one another and wide smiles on their tanned faces. They looked so happy, so carefree. So alive. Brea traced a finger down the pane of glass in front of her. She wished she’d bought some pictures of her parents with her to Colridge. She needed to somehow feel their soothing presence now more than ever. What would they make of her life now? Of Sylar and his penchant for keeping secrets?

  “I miss you,” Brea sighed tearfully, her breath misting against the glass. She drew a heart in the fog and then cut through it with an arrow. If Miles truly loved her then why would he keep secrets? But Brea knew she could ask the same thing of Sylar. There was too much she didn’t know about both men. Too much that was being kept in the shadows, hidden from sight. But no more. Brea stepped back from the window, her body tense with purpose. Whatever secrets Miles and Sylar were keeping she was going to find out. And if they didn’t tell her the truth she’d remove them from her life. She didn’t need relationships built on a foundation of lies.

  She wanted what her parents had – someone to love and trust and go on epic adventures with. Someone she could smile with above the Grand Canyon. Someone she could, one day, start a family of her own with. As Brea slowly headed back to bed she realized that she was crying. Miles was still fast asleep as she joined him beneath the sheets. She envied his ability to just silence all his thoughts and sleep. It would be another hour before the questions in her mind quietened enough to enable her to fade to black.

  Chapter 59

  “Where the hell have you been?” Hank unleashed the words sharply from his tongue like a whip. Miles stared at him in surprise. He’d thought he was back at the motel early enough so that both guys would still be resting, sleeping off their latest hangover. But he was wrong. Colin and Hank were stood waiting for him, their bodies tense and their eyes alert.

  “I’ve been out,” Miles growled dismissively, moving deeper in to their motel room.

  “Yeah, well we got a call from your Uncle.” Hank explained tersely. Miles froze. He could feel the blood in his veins turning to ice. His Uncle had called. That meant that they had new orders.

  When Miles was with Brea it was easy to forget the real reason for his visit to Colridge. With her in his arms, he could forget all about the monster he sometimes had to be. Staring at Hank and Colin his skin started to itch and feel hot as though it now longer fit him right.

  “We’ve got orders,” Colin added, cracking his knuckles. When Miles had left his two companions had seemed like lovable drunks. Now they appeared more like seasoned killers. Their hardened expressions spoke of all the punches they had thrown and they were eager to do more.

  “What are the orders?” Miles lowered himself on to the bed, doing his best to remain calm. He feared that the orders would be to turn over the tattoo parlor, to rough Brea and her friends up. Miles had been so careful to keep his relationship a secret but what if he hadn’t been careful enough? What if he’d somehow made Brea a target?

  “That quaint little bar we went to the other night,” Hank raked his hands through his golden mane and smiled maliciously. “We’re to go and turn the place over.”

  Miles swallowed uneasily. It was a small bar off a side street in town. He doubted it was even Blood Pact territory. But he knew his Uncle’s style. Whether it was Blood Pact territory or not, turning it over would still send a message.

  “We were thinking we’d head there around eight, wait until it picks up a bit and then start some trouble,” Colin explained, his eyes bright with excitement.

  Members of the Highway Reapers were always excited by the prospect of violence. It was what drew them to the pack in the first place. They were violent men who’d led difficult, violent lives. But among the other pack members they found kindred spirits. They found a family.

  Miles squeezed his eyes shut in frustration. He’d promised to see Brea later. They were going to go the movies together. He didn’t want to start letting her down, especially when he knew he wouldn’t be able to tell her the true reason for his cancellation.

  “Does it have to be tonight?” he ventured.

  “Yes,” Hank nodded briskly. “Your Uncle was very specific about that.”

  Miles shot a dubious glance at the telephone on the table in the motel room. He’d wager that there was a possibility that his Uncle hadn’t called at all and that his roommates were just getting itchy feet. He could imagine them sitting together plotting in his absence. It would make sense for them to agree on the bar as a target since it was small enough to not make too big a stir.

  “He was?” Miles narrowed his eyes at Hank.

  “Yes, he was,” Hank repeated slowly. “He said it’s high time we start some shit in the Blood Pact territory. And I, for one, am not going to let him down, are you?”

  Miles wished he’d been present when his Uncle had supposedly called. He’d perhaps have been able to make the old man see sense. The small bar was a poor target. All they’d done is cause hassle for the owners, the Blood Pact probably wouldn’t even notice if it got trashed, it wasn’t like their members frequented it.

  “Don’t you think it’s a strange target?” he asked his companions. Hank gave Colin a sideways glance and shrugged.

  “I suppose,” Colin agreed, “since no Blood Pact members even go there.”

  “What were my Uncle’s exact words?” Miles pressed.

  “He said it’s time to start shit,” Hank swiftly recalled. “And he suggested we start small, go with a ripple rather than a wave.”

  “Hmm,” Miles thoughtfully massaged his neck. It wasn’t like his Uncle to show caution. If he really wanted to anger the Blood Pact he’d surely go all in.

  “I think we should hit something bigger,” Hank declared with a grin. “Like the biker bar outside of town on the highway. If we hit that, we really send a message.”

  Miles tensed. If they did that they’d be sending one hell of
a message, they’d be making a declaration of war.

  “If my Uncle wanted us to start small then we hit the bar,” Miles decided. He hated himself for agreeing to the plan but it was better to turn over the bar then to start something they possibly couldn’t finish out at the biker bar.

  “Good, I’m itching for a fight,” Hank cracked his knuckles dramatically.

  “Let’s try and keep things as clean as possible,” Miles pleaded, glancing between the two men.

  “We don’t do clean,” Hank laughed, his mouth twitching up in to a grin.

  “Your Uncle will want this done right,” Colin agreed darkly. “We crack a few skulls, break a few noses, that should get our point across.”

  Miles pitied the poor saps who’d be in the bar later that day. They’d have no idea what was coming, they were just going to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Guilt pressed heavily against his shoulders, causing him to slump down. The worst part of it all was that he was going to have to cancel on Brea. And in the morning sunlight she’d smiled so sweetly at him when he’d said he wanted to take her to the movies. She always looked so beautiful first thing, with her skin effervescent in the early morning light. He didn’t want to be the reason her sweet expression turned sour with disappointment.

  “Tonight at eight it is then,” Hank grinned manically. “I can’t wait.”

  Chapter 60

  Brea was just finishing up a tattoo of a Celtic cross. It ran down the back of the petite woman she’d been working on and had a vine of roses growing around it. It was a beautiful, ornate design, one Brea had designed herself especially for her client.

  “Urgh, my back kills,” the woman exhaled tensely.

  “It will all be over soon,” Brea confirmed softly. “I’m nearly done.”

  “How does it look?”

  Brea leaned back to take in the full image. It looked beautiful and gothic. “It looks amazing.”

  “Awesome,” the woman titled her head to smile up at Brea. “I can’t wait to show it off tonight at the bar.”

  “You won’t be able to show it off tonight,” Brea warned. “It needs to be kept under wraps for a while to let the skin heal. But you’ll be good to show it off at the weekend.”

  “Urgh, that’s like ages away,” the woman protested though she still smiled.

  “So is the bar where you work?” Brea asked, finding it best to engage client’s in small talk to distract them from the pain of their tattoo. Towards the end of a design, once all the more intricate work had been done Brea found that she was able to chat more easily.

  “Sure is,” the woman confirmed. “I’m busting my ass there to save up enough money to put me through college.”

  “Where’s the bar?” Brea asked. The woman was now face down on the table again, her short dark blonde hair fanning out over her shoulders.

  “In town, down the street by the Laundromat. It’s called O-Hannigans.”

  “Oh yeah, I’ve been there, it’s a nice little bar.” She’d taken Sylar there and watched him spend all night talking to Gina instead of paying attention to her. Brea frowned to herself, considering how strangely Gina had acted that morning. She’d barely said a word to Brea and hummed to herself as she pottered around the parlor.

  “I wish more people went there so that I’d get more tips,” the woman said, her voice slightly muffled.

  “You close to having enough to go to college?”

  “Pretty much. The plan is to go to ol’ Miss that’s where my brother went.”

  Brea smiled with understanding as she finished off the tattoo. “Your brother still go there?”

  “Probably. We’re not that close, haven’t spoken in like two years.”

  Brea was rubbing down the new design, the black ink as dark as tar when it was shiny and newly applied.

  “Okay, we’re all done.” Brea pushed back her swivel chair to give the woman space to get up. She moved slowly as though her limbs were stiff from lying down for so long.

  “Oh, wow,” she clocked the design in the full length mirror on the other side of the small treatment room. “That looks killer.”

  “Glad you like it.”

  The woman took a moment to stand up and admire her new tattoo. “I love it,” she declared breathlessly. “Thank you so much.”

  “You’re most welcome,” Brea smiled warmly as she applied antibacterial ointment and bandaged the newly completed tattoo. “Good luck with college and finding your brother.”

  “Thanks,” the woman wiggled back in to her vest top and tucked her hair behind her ears. “I just miss him, you know? Family is so important.”

  “Yeah,” Brea agreed with a nod. “It is.”

  Chapter 61

  Miles lingered in the stairwell of Brea’s apartment; it was six o clock and she was due home any minute. Outside the sun was already losing some of its brightness as the day prepared to turn in to night.

  He heard the door at the bottom of the stairwell open, followed by quick, light footed steps. Brea soon appeared below him, her pretty face breaking out in to a smile when she clocked him.

  “Hey,” she hurried up to his level. “I didn’t expect you to come round so early. The film doesn’t start for another few hours.”

  Miles swallowed the guilt that seemed to bubble like bile in his throat, and waited for Brea to unlock the door to her apartment. When they stepped inside she turned and placed her palms on his chest, gazing up at him flirtatiously.

  “Or did you think of something we could do before the movie?” she asked, biting her lip.

  Miles wanted to go with his instincts and take her there and then. He’d bend her over the coach and fuck her hard until her legs shook from delight. But for now he had to ignore his desires. He had other things to worry about.

  “Baby, I’m so sorry,” he clutched her hands in his but kept them pressed to his chest. He liked how it felt when she touched him. “I’m going to have to take a rain check on tonight.”

  Her face crumpled, clearly she was hurt but it was only momentary. She quickly recovered and smiled confidently at him.

  “Okay, how come?”

  Miles wanted so badly to lie. To have her think he was doing something noble like saving orphans from a burning building. Instead he was going to be beating up innocent people but she certainly didn’t need to know that level of detail.

  “I’ve got to work,” he hung his head against his chest in regretful shame. “It sucks, I know. But I wanted to come and tell you in person rather than send a message.”

  “Oh, well if you’ve got to work that’s fine. I understand.”

  Miles wondered if she’d be so sweetly understanding if she knew what his line of work actually entailed. He doubted it. And he didn’t blame her. He loathed what he did. Riding with the Reapers had stopped being fun twenty bar fights ago. He felt like he was always starting trouble without good cause and being overly reactive to things for no reason. He got the feeling that his Uncle just enjoyed seeing people bleed which was why he was always keen to start shit in the pack’s name.

  “You okay?” Brea reached up and stroked his cheek. Her touch as soft and tender as velvet. Miles leaned in to her. He wanted to stay there in her apartment, with her, but instead he had to go out and run errands for the Reapers. It was far from ideal and the worst part was that he had no choice. If he disobeyed his Uncle’s orders all he’d do was shine the light of violence directly upon himself. And he knew that both Colin and Hank would beat the living shit out of him if it was his Uncle’s say so. Every member of the Reapers was loyal first to their leader, second to one another.

  “You seem troubled,” Brea continued, tiling her head to the left.

  “It’s because I’d rather not be working,” Miles replied honestly. “I’d rather just stay here with you.”

  “I’d rather you just stay too,” Brea said breathily, leaning up to kiss him on the lips. Miles kissed her back. It was soft and tender at first. It reminded him of stolen kisses
in the rain when he was younger, back before he knew the world could be such a savage place.

  “I love you,” Brea uttered the words with beautiful softness as their lips parted. Miles wanted to bottle up those words and listen to them over and over again until he lost the ability to hear. Those three little words were the greatest thing anyone had ever said to him.

  “I love you too.” He kissed her again, with more vigor. He wanted so badly to stay. But as they parted he saw the darkening of the sky. If he wasn’t back at the motel before eight he’d be in a world of trouble.

 

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