Jack of Hearts (Desert Sons MC Book 1) (6 page)

BOOK: Jack of Hearts (Desert Sons MC Book 1)
3.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

The rest of the Sons looked at each other. “Sure, why not. What is it?”

 

“Ah, ah, ah. If I told you it would give it away. We’ll show you a little later.” Jack grinned down at her. “You up for this?”

 

“Jack … I don’t know. I don’t want to make anyone, you know, mad,” Tina muttered under her breath.

 

“They will be okay with it. And if not, they can be mad at me because I want you to do it.”

 

Tina took a deep breath. “Okay. If you want me to.”

 

“I do,” Jack said before he leaned down to whisper in her ear. “We normally break up about eight, after dinner. Mingle, then right after dinner, we will reveal what you took. I want you to take everything you can. The more, the better.”

 

“Why, Jack?”

 

“Trust me,” he said before he kissed on her head.

 

***

 

Tina began to mingle. Everyone was awkward around her at first, but she turned on the charm and slowly everyone began to relax around her. She didn’t go fishing until the Sons started breaking out the grills. While everyone was busy and distracted, she began to work. She took keys, wallets, watches, sunglasses, cell phones, a package of condoms and a couple of rings. It took her a couple of tries, but she even managed to lift a pistol and a wallet chained to a belt.

 

She hid the items she took in a basket she found behind the bar. The best part of the day was when she saw Jack look at his watch, only to realize it was no longer on his arm, then feel for his wallet, only to find it missing as well. When he caught her eye, his grin and wink gave her a warm glow.

 

During dinner, she sat between two women that she had become especially friendly with, and she managed to get one’s St. Christopher necklace and the other’s sunglasses from the place they had been all evening, the top of her head.

 

“Are you done?” Jack asked her as the meal began to break up.

 

“I think I have gotten all that I can. I wanted those dangly earrings of Rachel’s, but I can’t get them.”

 

“Let’s see what you have taken. I notice that a few people are acting like they are looking for something,” Jack said. “Sons! You guys ready to see what Tina can do?”

 

“Sure. But has anyone seen my cell phone? I don’t know what I did with it,” Greg asked.

 

“Where’s the stuff?” Jack asked.

 

“Under the bar, behind the towels.”

 

Jack found the overflowing basket, and he felt his eyes widen in surprise as he broke into a huge grin.
Oh, she’s good. She’s very good,
Jack mused. He set the basket on the bar, reaching back under the bar to pull out a few items that had fallen out when he moved the booty.

 

“Nic, I believe these are yours,” Jack said, handing the woman the sunglasses, her hand flying to the top of her head to feel for her missing glasses.

 

“Here is my wallet, and my watch,” Jack said, retrieving his items and putting them away. “And my cell.”

 

While Jack began to distribute the take, everyone felt their person, realizing just what had happened. “Whose phone is this?” Jack asked holding a phone up.

 

“That’s mine!” called a man from a back as he strode up and took the phone. “And my sunglasses. Fuck! There’s my wallet. And watch. Shit! How did she get my ring?” he asked, laying claim to each item as he recognized it.

 

“Brett, you need to keep a better eye on this,” Jack said as he handed the pistol back to its owner.

 

As the items were distributed, the growing irritation began to give away to good natured ribbing, and Tina began to relax.

 

After all the lifted items had been distributed to their owners, Tina demonstrated how she was able to take their wallets, watches, and rings. Like Jack, each person was amazed that she could do it while they watched, and almost not feel a thing. Michelle, the woman whose St. Christopher medal she took, was especially impressed and wanted Tina to show her how to do it.

 

“Michelle, why don’t you, Tina, and Nic go shoot some pool, or have Tina show you how to steal Seth’s wallet for when you want to go shopping.”

 

Michelle and Nicole got the hint. “What a great idea. Will you do that, Tina? Please,” Michelle asked.

 

“Alright, Jack. What the hell is going on?” demanded Seth, the president of the Desert Sons.

 

“Just what I told you. I just left out the part that after I caught her, she took my wallet. Anyway, that got me to thinking. The most sketchy part of the deal is the getting in, agreed?”

 

Seth and Marshall, the Sergeant at Arms of the club, nodded in agreement.

 

“What if we had the keys to the building?”

 

“Okay. I see where you are going with this. But how do you know you can trust her?” Marshall asked.

 

Jack grinned at his best friend. “I don’t. That’s why I haven’t breathed a word to her about this. But if we can, imagine how much easier this will be.”

 

“I don’t know, Jack. We have a plan, and it’s a good one. Kind of late to be changing it around, isn’t it?” Seth asked.

 

“That’s the beauty of it. We don’t have to change anything except how we get into the building. The rest of the plan goes as we planned it.”

 

“I agree. But how do we know we can trust her? That’s a big unknown,” Marshall pointed out.

 

“I know. But I have given her several chances to cross me, and she hasn’t yet. I’m not ready to fully trust her, but if you two are agreeable, I will bring her in if I think I can. I think the risk of using her is less than the risk of not using her.”

 

***

 

Tina knew that Marshall, Seth, and Jack were talking about her from the way they kept looking in her direction as she showed Michelle how to distract Nic while reaching into her pocket. Something was going on, but she couldn’t figure out what.

 

“Tell me about Jack,” Tina said as Michelle practiced dipping into Nicole's pockets.

 

“Not much to tell. He’s the vice president of the Desert Sons. It’s his club, even if he is just the vice president. He said he doesn’t want to be president. ‘Too many headaches’ he says,” Nic said.

 

“Any idea why would he give me a second chance like he did?”

 

Michelle and Nicole twittered. “You’re really not sleeping with him?”

 

“No, why?”

 

“That’s a surprise,” Michelle said. “He’s a real ladies’ man. Rumor is that he’s quite the stud, too. I’m surprised you haven’t fallen under his spell. Lord knows if I weren’t married, I would fuck the shit out of him.”

 

“Michelle! I can’t believe you just said that!” Nic scolded playfully. “You and Seth are perfect for each other. Hell, you even do those body builder competition things together.”

 

“Oh, please, save it. You would do the same, and you know it.”

 

Nic opened her mouth as if to deny it. “Okay, you’re right. I would. But Marshall and Jack are best friends, and I couldn’t do that to Marshall even if I wanted to.”

 

“The night he caught me, there was a woman here,” Tina said quietly. She didn’t know what Michelle and Nicole were bitching about. Yes, Jack was good looking, but Seth and Marshall weren’t exactly frogs. Especially Seth. He filled out a shirt nicely.

 

“Just one?” Nic asked, then laughed. “Sorry, that wasn’t nice. I’m not surprised. He picks up two or three different women a week sometimes. A few have tried to tie him down, but he’s not going to be tied to just one woman.”

 

“Have you known him long?” Tina asked Nic.

 

“About ten years. He and Marshall were friends when I met him. They grew up together.”

 

“He said he buys and sells cars.”

 

“Jack? Yeah, something like that. He’s too much a free spirit to be tied to a desk job.”

 

“What’s Marshall do? Or you, for that matter?”

 

“I work at the DMV. Marshall, he works at the Harley dealership. He’s the customer finance guy there. Seth works there too as the sale manager.”

 

“Sweet!” Tina teased. “Seth sells them, Marshall makes sure they can afford them, and you make sure they can ride them.”

 

Nic laughs. “I hadn’t thought of it that way, but yeah.”

 

“What about you, Michelle?”

 

“Me? Nothing so exciting. I work at Walmart. Assistant store manager. What about you, Tina? How did you end up breaking in?”

 

Tina grimaced and gave them an abbreviated story. “I nearly pissed myself when I heard that gun being cocked,” she finished.

 

“Yeah. I can imagine. I’ve been with Jack and Marshall when they have gone shooting. Jack, he just doesn’t miss. You’re lucky you’re still alive,” Nic said.

 

“I know. I will always be grateful to Jack for … well … taking the time to help me. So he can shoot, and according to rumor, fuck. What else is he good at?” Tina asked as she tried to fill in the blank spots in her picture of her benefactor.

 

“I haven’t seen it myself, but according to Marshall, he can handle a car like a stunt driver,” Nic said.

 

Tina mulled over all the new information. “Jack sounds like an interesting guy,” she finally said.

 

 

 

CHAPTER SIX

 

“Join me for a beer?” Jack asked Tina as he locked the door behind Marshall and Nic, the last of the Sons to rumble away on their hog.

 

“I would like that. Thanks.” She turned for the rec room, what she considered her room now, but he headed toward the back and she adjusted her course to follow.

 

As they entered Jack’s apartment, he headed straight to the refrigerator and pulled out a pair of dark bottles. He twisted the lids off and placed them on the table. Tina pulled out one of the two chairs and Jack took the other.

 

“You did good today,” he said after taking a pull on his bottle.

 

Tina took a sip of her beer. It was a Samuel Adams Boston Lager, a beer she had never tried because of its cost, but she liked it. It was much better than the cheap, watery stuff she normally drank … when she could afford a beer.

 

“I have to tell you, I was more than a little nervous.”

 

“I told you it would be okay.”

 

“I know. But, well …”

 

“What?” he prompted when she ground to a halt.

 

“Nothing,” she said, looking at her bottle.

 

“Come on, spill it.”

 

“I … just want someone to like me for who I am, that’s all. Not like me even if I am an ex-con. Not like me even though I have messed up. I’ve made some bad choices, but I don’t think I’m ‘bad,’ you know what I mean? I did what I had to do to survive. I didn’t steal cars because it was fun. I did it because I needed the money to have a place to live, to put food on the table.”

 

Jack looked at Tina, feeling a bit sorry for her. He wondered how she would have turned out if her father hadn’t been killed. Maybe he shouldn’t drag her back into that life when she so clearly wanted out. “I’m sorry, Tina. If it makes you feel any better, I like you. Just as you are.”

 

Tina gave him a sad smile. “Well, there’s one.”

 

“I think Nic and Michelle like you as well.”

 

“Yeah. Maybe. And I like them, especially Nicole. I can’t see us having our nails done together, though.”

 

Jack laughed. “I can’t see them having their nails done, period. But give us a chance. I think by the time the Sons had left, you had won most of them over.”

 

“You think so?” Tina asked, brightening.

 

Other books

Rules of War by Iain Gale
The Puffin of Death by Betty Webb
Sisters in Law by Linda Hirshman
The Midwife by Jolina Petersheim
Crushed Ice by Eric Pete
Stuffed by Eric Walters