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“The fuck? Who the hell is this source of yours?” I asked.

“If I told you, I’d have to kill you,” Mac said.

“So, what? You want us to just ride up with our loud ass motorcycles and check them out? Mac, that place is gonna be on high alert. They’re gonna sniff us out in a heartbeat,” I said.

“That’s why you’re taking me,” Fox said.

“Fox is good at this kind of thing,” Mac said. “Follow his lead.”

“Fuck. Fine. Okay. Fox, you ready to head out?” I asked.

“Let me get my helmet, and I’ll be good to go.”

I looked back down the hallway and saw Talon with my sister pinned up against a wall. He was smiling down at her, and she was looking up at him with those doe eyes she got from our father. His had been wide with anger and booze most of our lives, but hers were wide with innocence. I knew that’s one of the things that drew Talon to my sister and I could feel my blood boil. There was no one that was ever gonna be good enough for my sister. Especially anyone in this fucking gang. But she’d made her choice, and I had to respect that.

But I sure as hell didn’t have to be happy with it.

She looked over at me and waved before Talon turned his head. His eyes connected with mine and he nodded like he was trying to show some sign of brotherly love or bullshit like that. But brothers didn’t fuck their friend’s sisters.

I stared him down before he turned his focus back to my sister.

She was giving me a nasty look, but I didn’t care. Just because people supported their relationship didn’t mean I had to like it. I respected her decision as a grown woman with a degree, but I was never gonna appreciate it. I was never gonna like the fact that they snuck around behind my fucking back. I was never gonna be okay with how she got dragged into all this bullshit because Talon was too selfish. He couldn’t have kept his cock to himself until all this shit was done and wrapped up.

Now my sister was involved, and a target and that was on him.

“Ready to go?” Fox asked, pulling me from my thoughts.

“Yep.”

We hopped on our bikes and stuck to the back roads. We scoped out everything along the way. Everything from power lines that could be tapped into to possible surveillance equipment that could’ve been installed on power lines. We rode as slowly as we could in order to keep our bikes quiet, but the closer we got to the Devil Saints compound the more alert I became. They had patrols on bikes for days. People fucking zooming past us in the woods with Devil Saints jackets on their backs. It would only be a matter of time before Fox and I were caught by one of them, so I rode up beside him to get in his ear.

“This is a shit situation, Fox. We need to get back,” I said.

“You scared?” he asked.

“Are you fucking kidding me with that card right now? We’re a mile outside the damn compound, and we’ve already passed four patrols.”

“I know. Just stick close,” he said.

Shaking my head, I backed off and trailed behind him. The closer we got to the compound the more people came whizzing by us. Fox and I had to turn our bikes off and started walking them to make sure we weren’t heard, and I was pissed. My legs burned and the woods were dark. Everyone was yelling and cussing all around us. My head was on a swivel, looking for anything we could take back to Mac.

But there was no proof of this ammunition they were loading up on.

Of course, there wasn’t. Mac’s source was off his fucking rocker. The Devil Saints were crazy, but they weren’t stupid. They were on every single fucking government radar this country had to offer right now. Why the fuck would they be stocking up on shit like grenades at their main compound?

If anything, they were doing it offsite somewhere.

“I’ve got eighteen wheeler trucks ahead,” Fox said. “But they look empty.”

“Of course they are. They aren’t stupid,” I said.

“You think they were full with all that shit Mac was saying?” he asked.

“Don’t jump to conclusions. Just observe, and we’ll report what we see.”

“I don’t see any boxes being unloaded or opened. They’re just empty.”

“How many are there?” I asked.

“Two,” he said.

But then, my eyes saw it. From a distance, but I knew it was there.

“Fox. Stop. Right now.”

He looked back at me, but he listened.

“What?”

“Just shut up and do what I say when I say it,” I said.

It was almost indiscernible, but I could see it. The outline of the black sedan at the tree line. It was across the street from us, tucked back into the woods. They hid that shit well, but I was better than they were. I wasn’t looking out for grenades or guns or any other bullshit Fox had his mind trained on.

I was looking for signs of those fucking government rats.

And I found it.

“We need to call church,” I said.

“What do you see, Snake?”

“Look across the street, a little up ahead. Tell me what you see.”

“Trees. And grass. And… oh, shit. Wait a second. Is that-”

“Yep. It’s a black sedan. And by the looks of it, The Devil Saints haven’t even caught it.”

“They’re fucking scoping this place out.”

“Which is why we need to get out of here,” I said.

We turned our bikes around and made a run for it. We ran for almost two miles before we struck up our bikes and rode back into town. We stuck to the back roads and kept our eyes peeled for any other black sedans tucked away in the woods, and I could feel the hair on my arms standing on end.

The DEA was still scoping out The Devil Saints.

Which meant they were probably still scoping us out as well.

Chapter 2

Laiken

It was strange for me to be back in Nevada. I hadn’t been back here since I left for the police academy. I had dreams of getting out of this dusty old town and never fucking coming back, but I guess life had a way of bringing things full circle. Now, I was back in a town I never thought I’d see again taking care of a mother that didn’t give a shit about me when I was growing up.

I guess that was what happened when family got sick.

I graduated high school and went to a local college. I doubled down on my classes and lived with my mom who guilted me into staying because she didn’t want to be abandoned again. My father died when I was young. A drunk driving accident where he was the shithead drunk driver everyone in the scenario hated.

It was nice to know I wasn’t the only one who hated my father as much as I did.

From that point on, Mom felt abandoned. Every time I went to go do something with friends, she would always throw me for a guilty loop. She’d accuse me of never wanting to spend time with her and told me she was afraid I wouldn’t come back. Every late night I kept, she always had to smell my breath to make sure I hadn’t been drinking. She went through these episodes where she could accuse me of being like my father, saying that I’d turn to alcohol when I was done with her.

I could see how her crazy attitude drove my father to drink in the first place.

For a while, I put up with the shit. I spent every free minute I had in college with her. But things got worse when I met people I wanted to spend time with, so I started lying to her about my classes. How many credit hours I was taking and lying to her about the times I needed to be at school. College went from being a requirement to a safe haven, and the more time I spent on campus, the less stress I felt. I cried whenever I had to go home. I cried whenever my classes were canceled due to weather. School got me out of this controlling, manipulative house. School got me away from a mother who didn’t want to admit she had mental issues.

And now, I was back home and dealing with them again.

After college, I knew I had to get out. I had to get away from my mother, but I also had to get away from him. He had been the best

of me and the worst of me. He had brought out the good in my soul and delved into the parts of me that reflected more of my mother than I wanted. I had fallen in love with a man who kept secrets. A man whose lips felt good on the skin of my neck and whose hands held the globe of my ass as we made love against his motorcycle.

I fell in love with a man whose mind swirled with lies he told me constantly, and between the lies and the manipulation, I felt stifled.

So, I moved to Los Angeles after I graduated college. It broke my mother, but I didn’t care. It pissed him off, but I didn’t care. I attended the police academy and obtained every certification I could. I trained and tested in every area-- including the ones that weren’t required--, and I retook them until I passed with perfect scores. I wanted to work with the LAPD. I wanted to help people that couldn’t help themselves. I wanted to work alongside good people who didn’t manipulate. I wanted to work alongside individuals who were bound by the law to tell only the truth and nothing but it.

But I also needed to get out of Nevada because everything reminded me of him.