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Vicious: Steel Jockeys MC

Page 20

by Claire St. Rose

She still had the gun, and she still had her wits. She could read people, and she trusted Aaron and Brenda just enough to know she couldn't trust them as far as she could throw them. She hated to leave Kyle's bike, but she couldn't ride it – not 400 miles through the desert, anyway. Aaron Beeson, whose back she clung to all the way down I-5, didn't share his cousin's dark looks; he was Welsh, with solid muscle packed into a small frame, thick, professionally-styled hair, and impressively full lips that distracted from his constant gum-chewing. He rode a shiny black-and-cerulean-blue Harley Dyna Glide, dressed in faded Nudie jeans and a black John Varvatos leather jacket, one belonging to no M.C., but making him look intimidating nonetheless.

  Aaron swiveled in his restaurant chair toward a tall, intimidating figure who had just entered the restaurant and was striding toward them with purpose.

  "And Fox Keene," he added.

  Ruby froze and then leapt up from the table. Aaron grabbed her hand to stop her, gentle but firm. There was no escape. "Please, Ruby, sit down. I didn't mean to startle you, and I can't stay long," Fox said, pulling up the empty chair. "I hated the idea that you might have gotten the wrong impression of me. If you still want to go to Mexico after this, I totally understand. But I happened to be in town when Aaron called and said he was here with you. You haven't taken any of my calls, and I totally understand why.” Fox had left dozens of messages, in fact, which she’d deleted without listening to. She was afraid of what she would do if she heard them. “But I want to try to clear the air."

  Ruby blinked, her hand poised on top of her fork, and her hand shaking so hard the whole table must have felt it. She opened her mouth. "There's nothing...nothing to say. I--" she tried to get up again, but Fox now put a gentle but firm hand on her arm. She was too shocked to even yank it away.

  "Ruby, look at me." Automatically, she raised her head and swallowed, meeting his ice-blue eyes for a second before fixing them back on the tablecloth. She always obeyed Fox Keene. It was where she'd gone wrong.

  "Joseph Ryan told you I played a role in Kyle's death, didn't he?" Ruby didn't dare to nod. "I was afraid this would happen. Ruby, I know Joe can be incredibly charming, but his version of the truth bears very little resemblance to it.”

  "There’s something we've been meaning to tell you," Brenda cut in, sliding her tanned, manicured hand over to cover Ruby's. "We know how Kyle was killed."

  Ruby suddenly felt as if her head were underwater, the buzz of the restaurant coming from miles away. "A plainclothes cop was doing some investigations into Kyle," began Fox. "Of course, we all know he wasn’t up to anything illegal, but given his history, it's not surprising they thought he was. The cop tailed him into a warehouse and surprised him. Kyle struggled with him and grabbed his gun,” he added grimly. “Cops do what they have to do in that situation."

  "No,” Ruby breathed.

  "It was all a terrible misunderstanding," said Brenda. "It never should have happened. But there's nothing anyone can do now. We know how it must have looked to you, that Fox was responsible. We were suspicious, too,” she said, gesturing to Aaron, who nodded seriously. “But it’s not fair to blame him for something he had no responsibility for and couldn't have prevented if he tried."

  Ruby sank into her seat, staring down at the lemon slices on her plate of salmon.

  "Ruby, honey," remarked Brenda, all motherly. “We’re so sorry.”

  "My offer still stands you know," Fox said after a second. "To send you to school. Think about it, Ruby. You could catch up on those years you missed while you were working, those years of being young and carefree. You could finally reach the potential I know you have. That your brother knew you had. And best of all," he said with a smile, "you have a safety net if you ever fall. Come back to me, Ruby. I will take care of you. I can do it, and I want to do it. It's all I ever wanted to do." He rested his elbows on the table, mild, unthreatening. But she knew better now. “Unless...is this about Joe?” She looked at the table. “Listen. He came from nothing, Ruby, and that’s all he can give you. Nothing. Sure, he’s pretty, and he looks good in leather, but where will that get him? Same place it gets all outlaws. Dead or in prison.” He cupped her chin. She could feel a tear forming that she blinked away as she let him meet her gaze. “You deserve so much better than that. Kyle wanted better than that for you, and so do I.”

  It would be so easy, she thought. To give in, to envelop herself in the luxury of life with Fox. Maybe it wouldn’t be giving in; it would be giving herself every advantage. With Fox’s support, she could at last become the woman she knew she could be, and wouldn’t that give Kyle, wherever he was in the universe he was, some peace? She looked at Fox, his chiseled, runway model features, and turned away. She felt nothing but revulsion at the idea that she could shut her heart away and deprive it of oxygen for a little temporary happiness. Kyle wouldn’t have demanded that of her. There had to be another way, but even if there wasn’t, she couldn’t give in. Ruby shook her head. "I'm going to Mexico."

  Fox rose from his chair almost regally. If Ruby had been expecting a scene, she wasn't going to get it. "It’s your choice. It makes me happy just to see you and know you were safe." He rose from his chair. She touched her handbag, feeling the comforting barrel of the gun, and exhaled. "Think about it, though. I know you'll make the right decision."

  ***

  She stepped out of the shower and onto the cold marble tile in her private guest suite, wrapping herself in a plush robe. Out of the window, the moon shone silver on the Pacific Ocean. Palm trees poked up from the surrounding hills. Like everyone, she’d heard scary stories about the Mexico border, especially involving women, but the level of security surrounding Aaron's villa was pretty astonishing – barbed wire, a drooling pack of pit bulls, and two heavily armed guards were just for starters. Plus, once they’d gotten past all that, Ruby had quickly lost herself in luxury. Of all the borrowed rooms she'd lived in the past few days, this was by far the nicest, so why did it feel so empty? Because unlike the other places, she could not take comfort in the fact that Joe was merely a shout away or that she would ever see him again.

  He would have loved this place, she thought as she gazed out the window, because he'd probably never seen any place like it, not from the inside anyway. It was souvenir-perfect. The palm trees looked like plastic, the sunset over the ocean, which she'd caught earlier on the highway, like a paint-by-numbers. It should have been romantic, invented for couples on honeymoons to send quaint "wish-you-were-here" postcards. But the king-size bed was empty and cold, too large for one person. What would it be like to relax there with Joe, she fantasized. To watch the storm in his eyes melt away, the weight on his shoulders ease, to wake him up with gentle strokes, caresses, licks, to feel that thrilling hardness beneath her touch and know she had created it. To watch his amber eyes flutter open, his pupils dilate in lust, and to let him know he was safe and cared for.

  That was why he'd decided to marry Lydia, she reminded herself darkly. With her, he could come here whenever he wanted, with money to throw away, to relax and forget, for the first time in his life, about the wolf stalking the door. She didn't begrudge him that; she'd longed for it herself. After everything he'd been through, he deserved it. Why should he choose someone like Ruby who could offer him nothing more than he had? True, she thought. He hadn't been man enough to come tell her himself, which enraged her. But, she thought, staring at the dark line of ocean, the row of resort lights, there was nothing to tell. She'd been merely a conquest, a fling. A throwaway, like every other girl he'd been with until Lydia. And there was no point telling a throwaway when she was no longer needed. She was just expected to disappear. She'd given him what he wanted. He'd said that he could have her whenever he wanted her, and what had she done but go ahead and prove him right? And now he could go back to his real life.

  She dropped the robe in a puddle on the floor and crawled beneath the fresh-smelling sheets. Tomorrow, there would be no Thunderbird Bar to keep herself busy at, no Regan bo
uncing around serving drinks, no gigantic bikers benignly flirting, no Colt and Holly asking her how her day was, and no Joe stopping by. She tried to tamp down a lump in her throat.

  Madelia was not her home; it had never had been, and never could be. There was no use getting sentimental about it. She should know that by now. Maybe she could help the housekeeper in the kitchen if she would let her. Even that would be better than sitting around the pool in a sundress pretending everything was okay. Or maybe she should try to get on the Internet and start looking for a job. She had sales experience now, and maybe if she found something good, she'd be able to qualify for a college loan that she could pay back in a mere twenty years. Or she could call Fox and beg for his forgiveness. But either way, she would be giving up part of herself. Either way, there was a price to pay. Either way she was cursed, to never be whole.

  The air conditioner was blasting, keeping the room at an artificial seventy-five degrees, and the atmosphere felt antiseptic, artificial. She sank beneath the down comforter feeling as if she'd been weighted down with rocks. She buried her head trying to get cozy to get rid of the feeling of desolation and emptiness. Joseph Ryan had landed on her like a bomb, and when it all dissipated, here she was lying here alone, in a hollow crater where her life used to be.

  Ruby sighed and reached over to the bedside lamp, knocking her handbag to the ground accidentally. Some dollar bills fluttered out along with a photo that had been printed at a drugstore off a digital file. She blinked. Bright gray-green baby eyes showed under a mop of curly hair, looking up and to the right, a delighted smile on his face. Written on the back in a rounded, young woman's handwriting:

  Kyle Axel Clarke, 6 mos.

  ***

  "So?" demanded A.J., cornering Joe in the doorway of the Thunderbird before he could slip out back to Colt’s. Behind him, Rex and Wings stood in ranks, arms crossed.

  Joe took a deep breath, trying to remember all the details of the story he'd rehearsed, the story he and Aaron had agree would be their version of the truth--whatever it really was.

  “Aaron knows a guy in the D.A.'s office, and he looked into it,” Joe said. “A plainclothes cop was tailing Kyle, thinking he was up to no good, and he surprised him in Stop ‘n’ Shop warehouse. Kyle wrestled for his gun, and that was the end of it,” he finished flatly, noticing the skepticism in A.J.’s eyes. “I wish there was more to it, but there isn't."

  “That blows, man,” said Wings, clapping Joe on the back. “I’m sorry.”

  The others still looked skeptical, shuffling their feet. “Are we seriously meant to believe that Fox was innocent in all this?” asked Rex.

  “I told you, Rex. If you go after Fox, you’ll be going after the wrong man. And angering Fox is just kicking the hornet's nest for us. We don't need that kind of trouble. We need him on our side. And Aaron can help us do that." The idea of hanging out with Fox drinking margaritas, as Aaron had put it, made him want to retch. It was all wrong--especially if there was any chance of Ruby going back to him. But this wasn’t about Ruby anymore, Joe told himself fiercely. Or not just about her. It was about keeping the Jockeys from destroying themselves, or being destroyed.

  Wings and Rex nodded. Behind the bar, Mark was obviously listening as he refilled the ice container, stroking his scraggly beard, silent and thoughtful as usual, the Christmas lights reflecting off his reddened face. But A.J. still seemed to ripple with angry energy.

  "Well, I think it’s bullshit,” he exploded, looming closer, invading Joe’s space. "You expect me to believe that?"

  "Yeah, I do," growled Joe, grabbing A.J. by the neck and slamming him against the wall. "And believe me, if I hear another word about it, you won't have to look for Fox, because you're going to have all the trouble you can handle right here."

  A.J. swallowed. His face was red, snorting like a bull, and Joe knew he was trying to decide whether it was worth the risk to challenge his president further. Joe had seen A.J. in fights before; shattering his opponent’s teeth was just for starters. But Joe was the president, and he had a right--in this case, a need--to show the other man who was boss. Not only did his own survival depend on it, but Ruby's did as well. If the feud with Fox and the Reapers wasn't halted right now, she would end up in the middle of it all over again. And Joe wouldn't be able to protect her from 400 miles away.

  A.J. said nothing as Joe let him loose, just brushed himself off with dignity and sat down in one of the chairs. "Are we finished here?" Joe asked. He nodded. “I’m going over to see Colt.”

  CHAPTER THIRTY TWO

  The pool shimmered as waitresses worked the patio, carne asada sliders on one tray, pomegranate margaritas on another. In the corner, a Mexican band with a female singer in a strapless white dress and a huge rose in her hair was doing a Spanish version of Rihanna's "We Found Love," shaking her butt seductively, making the ruffles on her dress bounce up and down. She was probably trying to get someone to dance, though none of the guests were taking the bait. It was all decadent and glamorous, but the barbed wire peeking over the wall and the guardhouses on three sides only served to underscore the artificiality of it all. That's all this place was, Ruby thought as she clutched a margarita in two hands, trying not to sip it too fast, as she tended to do. A luxurious tropical prison.

  She stared down at the platform sandals she was wearing and the polished coral-pink toenails beneath, realizing she barely recognized her own feet. She probably wouldn't recognize the rest of her either. Brenda and Araceli, the housekeeper, had delighted in dressing her up, trimming her split ends, diffusing her curls until they bounced. They'd even plucked her eyebrows. The blue-and-white patterned halter dress she wore was from Alice + Olivia, bought from the most exclusive boutique in downtown Tijuana, the kind that catered to rich American tourists and the Mexican moneyed class.

  Brenda Weston looked drop-dead glamorous as usual in a short, pink Oscar de la Renta dress, backless, showing off her tramp-stamp-style tattoo, a modified version of the Steel Jockeys’ winged horse logo, jabbering in her bad Spanish to some blinged-out women in the corner who didn't seem to mind. Aaron Beeson was ensconced at a glass table on the other side of the pool with more tanned, swarthy guys in linen suits, as draped in gold as their wives were.

  Turning her head, Ruby noticed a pale young guy with strawberry-blond hair and freckles sitting a bit uncomfortably by the pool, smoking a cigarette. Tattoos covered his shoulders, shirtless except for a Steel Jockeys cut-off jacket that looked bulky for some reason, until she realized that it was because most of his torso was wrapped in bandages. He looked like hell, frankly, with dark circles under his eyes and more bandages covering one side of his face, and he looked like he truly didn't want to be there. He smiled at her, and she relaxed a little as she made her way over.

  "You must be Tony," she said.

  "How did you know?" he asked sarcastically. "Sorry. Even the waitresses are ignoring me."

  "Here," she said leaping up to grab a waitress as she passed. She handed him the margarita, which he brought to his lips, downing most of it in one sip. "Thanks," he said, sighing and relaxing into the chair like he'd just been given a morphine shot. "I needed that. Could have used an extra tequila shot or three, though."

  "Is it bad?" she asked.

  "Only when I move." He tried to smile, though Ruby suspected it wasn't really a joke.

  "How come you came here instead of going home?"

  "When they released me from the hospital, my mom insisted I come down here to...what did she call it? Convalesce. I didn't argue. I was just glad to not be in prison. Joe and Colt both told me I should never try to do business alone outside of our territory, and I should have listened. I never thought I'd be glad to be ripped off of fifteen grand and a kilo of smack before, but I guess without the evidence they couldn't hold me."

  "You mean you haven't talked to any of the Jockeys since you got out of the hospital?"

  "No. And I was under police guard the whole time I was there, so they wouldn't
let anyone in to visit except my mom."

  Ruby furrowed her brow. Something about that didn't sit right with her, though she couldn't quite put her finger on it.

  "I thought I didn't have a reason to go back, but..." she reached into the hand-woven straw purse she'd borrowed from Brenda that she kept close at her side, just in case. She may be in a fortified compound, but that didn't mean its inmates were any more trustworthy than those they were trying to keep out.

  "He looks like Kyle," said Tony, blinking at her. "Holy shit, is this Kyle's..."

  "I don't know," she said quickly. "I'm pretty sure I wasn't supposed to find this. Regan only gave it to me by accident," she said, although, looking at the photo now, those eyes that were like Kyle's warm, bright face looking back at her, egging her on, daring her to laugh; she wasn't so sure it had been an accident. After all, Regan had tried to convince her to stay; maybe this had been her last Hail Mary pass. "The thing is, if Regan's the mom, where has she been hiding this kid? I stayed with her for three days. If he was in there, he must be the quietest, most well-behaved baby ever born – and definitely not Kyle's," she added with a laugh.

  "Maybe she's not hiding him," suggested Tony. "I remember when Regan took a leave from bartending and went with her mom to stay at her grandma's place in Arizona for like three months. We all thought it was a little weird, but we figured she was still dealing with what happened to Kyle and needed to get away for a while. She definitely didn't have a kid when she got back, though. Maybe he's with her mom?"

 

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