“A guilty conscience always recognizes another.” I walked out, although I couldn’t be smug about it, because I’d hated the look on her face. I’d been right. And whether or not Holly was someone the MC should trust wasn’t entirely up to me.
Preacher had heard the entire thing. I didn’t like the look in his eyes, but he didn’t say a word when he drove me home and walked me up to the apartment. When Cage opened the door, all Preacher said was, “Thanks for talking to her,” and walked away.
“What was that about?” Cage asked.
“I don’t think you want to know.”
* * *
Cage had managed to get Eli a tutor, and he was in Rocco’s apartment with her now, so Rocco could supervise. I told Cage about my lunch with Preacher and a little of what happened with Holly.
“Did you ask Preacher to take me to lunch?”
“You couldn’t go anywhere on your own.”
“Ever?”
“I didn’t say that.”
“Okay, good.”
“But for a long time. And you can only go where you’ll be supervised by club guys.”
“What?”
“Did you think you could just stroll around and go shopping?”
Honestly, I hadn’t given it any thought at all. My future was all a big, yawning abyss and I didn’t know what I was supposed to do or feel. “For how long? And don’t say, ‘For as long as it takes.’”
To his credit, he didn’t say it, but just pointed at me when I said it.
I threw my hands in the air and turned my back. I should be grateful, not frustrated to the point of tears, which would spill down my cheeks soon if I didn’t pull it together. I bit it back because, with or without Cage, I’d be in a lot of trouble. Without him, I’d have no place to go.
“Calla.” His voice rough to my ears, and his hands rough to my skin. I couldn’t stay angry at him. And that was the problem.
“I need to know there’s an end point.”
“I’m trying to get us there.”
I knew that Flores was trying to bring trouble down on me and the MC because of Ned. I knew that. I also knew too much about the Heathens. But I couldn’t stay caged forever. “You have to let me do something. I don’t have any money of my own. I’m a burden to you.”
“This is my fault. And you’re not a burden.”
“Maybe it is your fault, but I’m not used to being taken care of.”
“Get used to it,” he growled.
“No,” I told him. “Don’t get all sexy and possessive and ruin what I’m trying to say.”
“Sexy and possessive, huh?”
“Don’t,” I warned.
“I’m listening.”
“I have to at least make my own money. That’s important to me.”
“I’m not keeping you with me out of guilt, Calla. If that was the case, you wouldn’t be sharing my bed. But the other stuff, I get that. It won’t be forever that you’re hiding, but I can get you a temporary ID. Actually, it’s good for you to have something.”
“No.”
“No? Jesus, women are fucking confusing.”
That gave me a momentary grin. “I think it’s time I just used my own ID. My own money. Because isn’t it better that way? The more it’s out there—”
“The more questions you’ll get. The more the Heathens will know about you.”
“Like they don’t already.”
“Fuck.” He ran his hands through his hair as he paced. I thought about how I’d grabbed his hair the night before when he was between my legs. He caught the tail end of my expression, even though I tried to school it and smiled. “I swear, you think about sex as much as I do.”
“That’s not a bad thing.”
“Not at all, babe. What is a bad thing is thinking you can go up against the Heathens and win. They don’t value life, especially female life. This isn’t like going up against the law. I’ve got to fight like with like, or this won’t work.”
I buried my head against his chest. “I don’t play the rescued-princess role well. The fact that you tracked my phone—”
“Not changing that,” he said stubbornly.
“I’m surprised you haven’t found a way to plant a tracking device on me. Wait—” I stared at his smirk.
“Maybe you’ll need to strip to find out?”
“Nice try.” But he didn’t have to try . . .
“How about the bar? Amelia’s already said she’d be happy to take you on.”
I wore an armful of bracelets from that very first night I’d met her. “Thanks, Cage. I’m just . . . trying to find out who I am.”
“Take your time finding that out.”
“Are you?”
“Every damned day, baby,” he told me. And he was serious. Completely.
And that afternoon, Amelia showed me the ropes in the bar while Cage and Preacher played pool. As evening rolled around, it got more crowded.
I was better here. I wiped down the bar, served drinks, managed the crowds with a little help from the bouncers.
I was back in my element. I’d done this regularly during the summers when I could escape from the boarding schools. I’d grown up watching Mom and Grams do it. I’d spent summers learning to bartend when I was much too little to even think about it.
Last time, I’d been too focused on Cage and fitting in to appreciate being back behind the bar. This time, all the memories flooded back to me. I inhaled the scent of oiled wood and stale beer and good whiskey. Smoke mixed with the leather and I swore I could hear the conversations that had happened here, like ghosts in the wind, whispering in my ear, telling me about the good old days.
After Amelia closed up, she shooed me away. “I’ve got guys to help clean up. Your man’s waiting for you.”
He was, and he’d been very patient all night, especially because I’d been too busy to do much but serve drinks. I walked out with him and he put his arms around me. “Let’s take a ride.”
“In bed or on your bike?”
He grinned. “Bike first.”
He handed me the helmet and I got on behind him, but before we could go, I heard Vipers bikes circling back toward us.
“There’s trouble,” Preacher called.
I held on and Cage gunned the bike after him. We were headed to the clubhouse two blocks away, where Eli was left with Holly and plenty of other Vipers to guard them both. But as we pulled up, I saw a pile of men. Cage stopped the bike and we both got off quickly. He ran toward the group with Preacher and I saw Eli waiting in the alley.
“What’s going on?”
“Heathen Enforcers,” he said. “They came for me.”
I looked and watched the man whose hands—always so gentle on me—were now beating several Heathens senseless. Tals was pulling Cage away and the men were starting to separate, even as a police siren sounded.
“Shit, they had to be watching,” Eli muttered. It was true—the clubhouse was in a quiet area, especially with the tattoo shop being closed, which meant that the Vipers were under surveillance.
The Heathens and Cage and his guys stood across from each other, none of them moving as Detective Flores got out of the car. “What’s going on here?”
“Just a friendly discussion, Detective,” Preacher said.
None of the other men said a word.
“You look like you’ve been fighting,” she commented.
“No, ma’am,” Preacher said, and none of the Heathens argued. “They were just leaving.”
As Flores’s partner stepped in between the men to ensure that was happening, I looked down the alley and saw Holly there. Her cheek was bruised, her lip bleeding, and she held a metal pipe down by her side. She put the pipe down and came to join me, just as Detective Flores reached me.
“I’m sure this somehow ties back to you, Calla.” I didn’t say a word. Her eyes flicked over me, and then Holly. “What happened to you?”
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