“You know, if being with me is too much for you to handle, the door’s that way.” I spit the words at him with a certainty that doesn’t reflect my inner fear that he’ll take me up on my offer. Pointing in the direction of the front door, I continue. “Don’t let it hit you on your fine ass on the way out.”
Swinging back to my feet, I step up into his personal space and glare at him through narrowed eyes. “We both know I’m damaged. Hell, nobody’d blame you if you walked. Nobody wants a woman as scarred as me.”
Putting space between us, I wave my right hand over my abdomen. “Inside and out.”
Turning my back to him, I make my way to our bedroom. Slamming the door shut behind me, I flick the lock before throwing myself face down on our king-sized bed. The tears that are constantly trying to escape from my eyes—the tears that I have to fight everyday—run down my cheeks. The only time I let them fall is when no one else can see them. When I’m alone, they’re stronger than me. So much so, that I should be out of tears to cry since it feels like it’s all I do lately.
Keeping my anguish to myself is becoming too much. It’s making me treat Mik like shit, when he’s the only one who has a chance of understanding how I feel because he’s the only one who knows the full truth of what happened to me. The guilt that my behavior brings just adds another layer to what I’m already struggling under.
If I’d listened to him, none of this would have happened. If I’d gone to him after the first time Brendan hurt me, it wouldn’t have got so bad. If I’d listened to the voice in the back of my mind that told me to tell him the truth, I wouldn’t be broken now.
The handle rattles as Mik tries to open the door, interrupting my mental blame game. He raps his knuckles against the hard wood. “Lainey, let me in. Fuck me dead, I’m trying my best here. If I try to touch you, it makes you freak out so when you kissed me I didn’t have a fucking clue how to react.”
I hear a soft thud, and I can picture him resting his forehead against the door. Swallowing the lump in my throat, I sit up and stare at the wooden barrier that separates us. Wiping my face, I press my lips together, so they’ll stop trembling while I breathe deeply through my nose, making my lungs expand before letting the air out slowly. It’s a technique my therapist reckons will calm me, although it hasn’t worked so far.
“Angel. Talk to me. Tell me how to help you. I’ll do anything you want.” He pauses, a loud sigh coming from the other side of the door, telling me that he’s not only confused—he’s hurt and frustrated with me for shutting him out. I open my mouth, unsure what words are going to leave my lips when I speak, when he interrupts me with the words that are the main reason why I can’t confide in him. “Fucking hell, Mo Ghrá. I know this is my fault and I’m fucking sorry. More than you’ll ever know.”
My mouth closes of its own volition. I throw myself backward on the comforter, landing on my back as the tears call an end to the brief reprieve they’d granted me. Flailing my hand toward the head of the bed, I reach for a pillow. Jamming it over my face, I open my mouth and scream … and scream and scream. My mind joins in, shrieking two sentences at me over and over in a matching rhythm to the cries that my pillow is muffling.
It’s not your fault. It’s mine.
Mik must mistake my silence for agreement. A louder thud makes the door shake—I’m not sure if he’s hit it with his head or his fist—before I hear him walk away from our bedroom, his heavy biker boots sounding against the jarrah floorboards. My attention is drawn from my screams as I listen to see if he’s leaving the house.
Ten. Eleven. Twelve. After the thirteenth step, there’s a resounding bang as the front door is thrown open, hitting the wall behind it. I jump on the bed when a louder boom echoes through the house as Mik slams the door shut behind him.
Barely five seconds later, I hear his Harley roar to life before the squealing of tyres heralds his departure from our street. With straining ears, I listen as the rumbling engine gets further away, the sound receding until I can’t hear it anymore.
Rolling onto my side, I pull the pillow against me and curl into the foetal position around it. Burying my face in its softness, I drag in a ragged breath and Mik’s scent overcomes me. I must have grabbed his pillow. The familiar smell makes me long for him. Yet, I know that after my actions this afternoon, this might be all I’m left with. An empty house, a broken heart and body, and the slowly disappearing scent of the man I love.
It’s with that thought that the never-ending tears pick up pace and begin pooling on the pillow as a liquid tribute to my sorrow.
TWO
Mik
Squeezing the throttle, I rev my bike harder and start weaving in and out of the end-of-workday traffic. The stinging from the broken skin of my knuckles and the laser focus needed to navigate the vehicles in front of me is the only thing stopping me from letting thoughts of Lainey fill my mind.
Madelaine Alanah O’Brien. My Lainey, my angel, my fucking everything. The moment I’m past the worst of the traffic she pops straight back into my head. Shame makes me want to turn around and apologise for punching our bedroom door and then smashing up the front door as I stormed out, but the guilt that had me heading for the exit crushes that need.
A beer, a bong, and hopefully someone’s ears to box at the Compound will have to serve. No sooner has the thought entered my head before the snarky voice in the back of my mind reminds me that it was those three things that got us into this mess. Too many beers, too many bongs, and one half-hearted punch-up later and I’m agreeing to hook Benji up with the fucker I get my weed from just to get the little prick off my back. Only problem with that—I didn’t know he didn’t just sell weed.
One dumb decision ending with irreversible damage—total devastation of the woman who owns my soul and a secret that feels like it weighs ten-fucking-tonnes trying to crush me alive whenever I draw in a breath. Every time I look at her and see the pain in her eyes, the guilt gets heavier.
My fuck-up has destroyed her.
*
“Oi, Mad Dog,” Timber waves me over to him when I walk into the front bar of the Shamrocks Clubhouse. He’s got a beer in his hand and a half-dressed Club slut on his knee.
Taking one look at his glazed eyes, a glint of trouble barely hidden by the icy-blue depths, I shake my head and make my way for the bedroom at the back. Before I can think about getting drunk and into a fight with my best friend, I have shit to get done. That look in his eye means one thing—his demons are haunting him as hard as mine are tonight. It also means that we’re probably going to go toe-to-toe over something stupid before the night’s done.
Rapping my busted knuckles on the door leading to Kid’s bedroom, I take a second to steel myself before I open the door and step into the chaos that awaits me. It is as I expected. Benji’s curled into a ball in the middle of Kid’s bed, pleading for a hit while Kid and Joel try to talk some sense into him.
I pat Kid on the shoulder and tilt my head toward the door. Our newest Prospect jerks away from me. Embarrassment at this reaction turns his face red, the colour on his cheeks only just visible under the two fading black eyes and split lip that he’s sporting from the persuasive tactics I was forced to use on him to get the name of Benji’s dealer. My dealer, as it turned out.
Throwing as arm over Joel’s shoulder, I pull him into my side as Kid exits the room like the devil is on his heels. He’s fucked up from watching his brother detoxing; it’s too much to expect from a barely eighteen-year-old. Yet, we have zero choice but to use him. Lainey’s my priority. Timber’s job is to keep our parents from finding out the connection between Benji’s drug use and Lainey’s nightmare. So, it falls to Kid and Joel to deal with the brunt of Benji’s issues, with as much help as the rest of us can offer them.
The whole situation is fucked. More than fucked when you add in Lainey’s refusal to tell everyone what really happened between her and her psycho ex.
Joel leans into me for a second, then pulls away. Throwing
a quick glance in the direction of his older brother, he swallows, then speaks. “I need to get outta here. Can’t do it anymore today.”
With a small incline of my head, I give him the permission he’s requesting. “Go have a beer, get laid, whatever. I’ll watch him for a few hours then Kid can take the night shift.”
“Thanks.”
Without exchanging another word with him, I sit on the edge of the bed. The door closes behind Joel, the sound of the latch catching sounding like a gunshot in the silence that’s overtaken the room.
“He hates me.”
Patting Benji’s closest leg, I answer his declaration in a tight voice. “No yet. Keep going like you are and he fucking will.”
He rolls over, scrubs a hand over his eyes, then hits me fair in the face with a gaze that’s identical to his twin sister’s. Visions of the look in Lainey’s eyes when my touch surprised her push their way to the forefront of my mind. Her expression is mirrored in Benji’s.
Fear. Self-loathing. Desire to end it all.
“How do you figure I fix it? All I want to do is get the fuck outta here and away from you all. Yet, none of you will let me leave.” Pushing himself upright with shaking arms, he turns to me and shakes his head. His gaze fills with pleading, and I know his next words before he says them. “Mad Dog, I need something to smoke. Just a little. Something to take the edge off.”
“N-o.” I don’t get the word the whole way out before he’s taking a swing at me. The only thing that stops his fist from connecting with my nose is his own sloppiness—it’s certainly not my reflexes since I wasn’t expecting the little shit to get physical.
“Fuck you.” Benji swings at me again, this time missing me by a mile. I grab his arm and twist, wrenching it up his back until he bellows with pain.
“No. Fuck you.” Pushing him away from me, I growl. He lands face first on the bed, curls into a ball, and starts moaning again. With my fingers jammed in my hair so I don’t give into my rising need to belt the shit out of him, I stare down at him. He’s fucking pathetic. Writhing in pain on the bed, sweat dripping from him, blubbering like a fucking baby. “Man the fuck up, Benji. Do you honestly think any of us have sympathy for you? This is all self-inflicted. You picked up the pipe. You put it to your mouth, and, you went back for seconds. For fuck sake, your sister nearly died and all you’re worried about is your-damn-self.”
Kicking the side of the mattress, I purge the rest of my frustrations. “None of us have time to babysit you. We should be concentrating on putting Lainey back together; instead we’re here taking it in turns to help you get straight. You’re a fucking idiot if you can’t see how much your shit is affecting everyone else.”
Benji doesn’t move. He doesn’t make another noise. Dead silence fills the room, letting the voice in my head mock me about my sins without interruption. The need to purge my soul is choking me. I need to tell someone the full truth before I shatter into a million pieces under the strain.
“It wasn’t the first time.” The lump on the bed doesn’t move, but I know he’s listening, so I continue. “What we walked in on was the worst time, but it wasn’t the first. That was when she took him home during your eighteenth birthday party.”
“No way.” Benji shifts until he’s lying on his side facing me. “How do you know?”
It takes me a second to meet his gaze. Deliberate disbelief covers his face. He’s trying not to let the clues that we missed back then slide into place. “Lainey told me. It started on your birthday, ending the night our flight was cancelled because of fog and we walked in on them.”
I sit down on the edge of the bed and drop my head into my hands. Staring at the floor, I wait for it to open up and swallow me so that I don’t have to tell him the worst part of the whole fucked-up situation. Of course, it doesn’t. Nothing is ever that fucking easy anymore.
The mattress dips next to me when Benji pushes himself upright and swings his legs over the side. He leans heavily into me, as if the effort to keep himself upright is beyond him. I feel tremors running through his entire frame while I wait for him to speak.
“There’s more to it, isn’t there?”
The floor is still determined not to grant me a reprieve no matter how hard I stare at it, so I lift my head and look at him. The black circles under his eyes and his pale skin are testament to how shit he feels at the moment. I shouldn’t add to his burdens, but I’m going to. If I’m to blame—and I am—then he’s just as guilty.
Nodding, I let the words that answer his question tumble into the air without censure. “Brendan blackmailed her with your drug use. Threatened to tell the fucking newspaper’s so you wouldn’t be drafted. That’s why she stayed with him.”
I expected some sort of response. For him to lose his temper. Maybe throw something or try and storm out. I didn’t expect him to cover his face with his hands and starting crying.
This isn’t like the whining he’s been doing for the last week while we’ve been cleaning him up. He breaks into sobs that make it sound like his heart is fucking breaking. They bounce off the walls and hit me right in the fucking chest like a bullet. I’ve cried twice since I was a kid. Once when my mum died and again when I thought Lainey was going to—I have no plans of adding to that list tonight. No matter how fucking close I’m getting from watching Benji break down.
Swallowing the lump that’s taken up residence in my throat, I bury all of the anger that I’ve let fester toward him since Lainey told me the truth and lift my arm, so I can put it around his shoulders. Benji falls into me, dropping his head further. We sit like this for fuck knows how long. He lets his guilt out and I bottle mine up a little tighter.
“I’m gonna get clean.” He nods, lifting his head and looking me in the eye. “And, I’m gonna stay clean.”
Straightening his shoulders, he sits up and lets out a sigh. What I’m guessing is shame turns his face red before he pushes to his feet and makes his way unsteadily to the window. Lifting onto his toes, Benji swipes his hand along to top of the window frame until he finds what he’s looking for. I can hear the ripping of what sounds like tape as he pulls the small package away from the painted frame.
Grinding my teeth, I watch the little shit shuffle his way over to the built-in-robe and mess around on one of the shelves until he pulls whatever he’s looking for. My hands curl into fists and I’m on my feet before I can talk myself out of it. Benji turns back to me, his eyes widening when he sees me so close to him. He holds his hands up in surrender, one holding a fucking taped up baggie of meth and the other a dirty glass pipe. Seeing what’s in his hands doesn’t calm me, it’s like a red rag to a bull, igniting my temper. My left hand closes around his neck while I drive my right fist straight into his deceitful fucking face. Throwing him to the ground, I sink my boot into his ribs for good measure.
“You little fuck. The whole time we’ve been trying to clean you up, you’ve been getting high behind our backs.” Crouching over him, I rip the baggie out his hand then grab his pipe. Standing up, I throw the pipe to the ground and crush it under my boot. Glass shatters, spreading over the floor next to him and he groans. “Good luck trying to get fucked up now.”
Leaving him on the threadbare rug, I slam the door shut behind me as I go searching for his accomplice. Finding him talking to Timber, I push my way through the crowd. I grab Kid by the back of his cut, rip it down his arms, and hold it in front of his face when he swings around to see who’s messing with him.
The moment it registers with him that it’s me, he ducks his head. I grab him by the front of his T-shirt and yank him closer to me. “Look me in the eye and tell me that you didn’t know.”
I don’t tell him what he’s supposed to know. I don’t have to. When Kid lifts his head, I let the baggie hang between my fingers and shake it in the air. To his credit, he doesn’t drop my gaze when he answers. “I’m sorry, Mad Dog.”
Tossing his cut to Beast, who’s come to find out what the commotion is about, I show hi
m the drugs as well. “Found this on Benji. Kid was in on it. Think it’s time for you to step up and do something about your fucking son right-about-now. Don’t you?”
Beast inclines his head to acknowledge my words but doesn’t agree. He hands Kid his cut back then melts into the crowd without saying a fucking thing. I take two steps after him, determined to have it out with the bull-headed fuck, only to come to a stop when Timber grabs me by my arm. “Let him go. Once he’s wrapped his head around it, he’ll deal with Benji. Gotta be hard when it’s his son going off the rails.”
Tilting my head so I can look my giant-sized best friend in the eye, I growl. “Shouldn’t be fucking hard when he’s been given proof.”
Timber shrugs. “Just keep your mouth shut for now. You wanna keep your SAA patch, then I wouldn’t advise pissing off the Prez.”
Ignoring his advice, I glare past his shoulder at Kid. “What the fuck are you still doing here? Go deal with your best friend. He’s probably still lying on the floor whining like a little pussy.” Kid nods, turning on his heel to head for the bedrooms. “If I was you, I’d make sure he stays clean. Next time I find out you’re helping him; I’m removing my name from your noms.”
His step falters at my threat—it’s a big one, threatening to take away my backing of his nomination to become a Black Shamrock. “Won’t happen again, Mad Dog.”
“How’s Princess,” Timber brings my attention back to him with his mention of Lainey.
“The same.”
Nudging me with his shoulder, he moves me in the direction of the exit. “You should get back to her, then.”
It takes an effort to stop him from pushing me along, but I manage it. Cocking my head to the side, I take a good look at him. Usually, he’d be on my ass to stay and party with him, not pushing me outta the door. “You cool?”
Butch (Black Shamrocks MC: First Generation Book 3) Page 19