PRIDE: A Bad Boy and Amish Girl Romance (The Brody Bunch#1) (21 page)

BOOK: PRIDE: A Bad Boy and Amish Girl Romance (The Brody Bunch#1)
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4

M
aggie took
one more wandering tour around the small house Drake had “acquired” from his realtor friend. It had the same kind of Nuclear Age charm that the entire town of LeBeau held. It wasn’t the prettiest property, but it had character. It was clean, not far from the clubhouse, and the small bedrooms felt more cozy than confining. The sliding backdoor opened into a modest yard ringed by giant, leafy trees and a six-foot privacy fence. Had she actually been house-hunting, Maggie probably would have put this place in her top five.

As far as Maggie could tell, Drake’s connections with the realtor gave him and the MC access to rent a place for straight cash as long as they needed it. Nothing was written down or signed, of course. After their chat, Drake and the realtor in the fine black suit had gone outside, and the realtor threw the “For Sale” sign from the yard into the back of his big shiny Escalade. Drake came back inside with the keys for her and the promise that it was hers and paid for until she decided to move. He carried in the single box of possessions she had managed to get out of Eagleton before she fled and put it on the white Formica counter.

“The old lady who used to live here died about four months ago,” said Drake, even though she hadn’t asked. “But her kids took their sweet-ass time getting her shit out of here, so it’s only been on the market a few weeks.”

“She took care of the place, at least,” said Maggie. She distantly wiped her hand across the sill of the kitchen window. “Did they leave a bed?”

“A what?” said Drake. He plucked away at the keypad on his phone screen.

“A bed…” said Maggie. “You know, where people sleep and stuff.”

Drake looked up at her with a scrunched face. He wandered back to the bedroom without saying a word, then immediately came back muttering curses under his breath—mostly to himself, it sounded like. He walked right past the kitchen and into the front yard, his phone already up against his ear and calling someone to solve this new problem.

Maggie let out a low chuckle at him and shook her head. He was a weird guy, but at least he’d been mostly behaving himself since they left the clubhouse. That was not to say he hadn’t made her uncomfortable, though. On the car ride over, Drake didn’t hesitate to ask her why Jase had thrown her beer at the wall when he walked in.

“Jase and I… go back,” she had said. The anger in his eyes still simmered in her memory, rooted, refusing to budge. “We have history.”

“What, did you break his heart or something?”

“Why do you say that?” she asked, surprised.

Drake shrugged without moving his eyesight from the road. “I can’t really think of any other thing that Jase would still be pissed about after all these years. He’s a fighter, not a grudge-holder. He fixes his problems fast. You musta done something deep. I’ve never seen him like that—well, not outside of a legitimate fist-fight, anyway.”

Maggie let the conversation fall into silence. When they pulled up to the house, the realtor was already waiting in his shiny black SUV, and Maggie was thankful to give the subject a chance to be forgotten entirely. The rest of the time had been spent nailing down the details of her rental, and now she waited while Drake tried to find her an actual place to sleep. The house was adorable, but there was no way the carpet was soft enough for 40 winks.

“Alright, alright! I’ll owe you, Joey, just get this done for me, pronto!” Drake ended whatever call he was on as he walked back through the open front door. “Sorry about that, darlin’. I’ve got a guy on the way with a few pieces. They may not be choice…. Fuck, they might not even match….”

“It’s last minute,” said Maggie for him with a wave of her hand. “I understand. As long as I have a bed to sleep on that preferably hasn’t been died in, I’ll be settled.”

“We’ll get you set up. It’s gonna take about an hour or so, though.”

Fuck
, thought Maggie. She was over this day, through and through. She had faced her father, and practically bent at the knee to him; she had faced Jase and his anger, even if just for a moment. Maggie was exhausted, but it wasn’t necessarily just sleep that would fix her. She really needed some time to step outside of the darkness for a little while. Since sleep was off the table for the time being, she decided on a new course of action.

“I really need a drink,” said Maggie.

Drake leaned on the counter and lit up a cigarette. “There’s a Sev just up the street, we could head over and grab something.”

“No, I need to get out. I just feel… cooped,” said Maggie. She wanted to say
trapped
, but she didn’t want to give this new guy the wrong impression. She was going to need allies in the MC to survive this. Drake offered his box of smokes to her and she pulled one out slowly. “Is the roadhouse still open? The one with the neon-pink cowgirl sign?”

Drake’s silver lighter flipped open in front of her face. “Hot Tamales? Yeah, of course they’re open.”

“I think I’m gonna head over and grab a drink there.”

Maggie took a long first exhale of smoke. She expected him to be more resistant to her plan, but he was already half on his phone again, texting someone. “Okay girl. Well, look, if I head out to Tamales with you, I will almost certainly lose track of time, and I don’t trust Joey as far as I can throw him. He won’t wait for us if he gets here and we ain’t here.”

“I don’t mind going on my own.”
In fact, I prefer it.

“That’s fine,” said Drake. “I can wait here for Joey. I’ve been relieved of duty anyhow.” He looked up with a grin.

Before she could ask him what that was supposed to mean, Drake’s phone erupted in the light and sound of an incoming call. He accepted it and immediately began berating whoever was on the other end as he walked off out the front door and into the yard.

Maggie figured this was as good a chance as any. Leaving Drake in a corner of the yard hollering into his phone, she climbed in her car and configured her phone GPS to find Hot Tamales. She was tired, it was dark, and she wasn’t sure she could find her way even through familiar territory.

Construction on Spruce Avenue sent Maggie on a GPS-guided detour through a relatively quiet neighborhood of the town. Houses sat dark and soft, nestled in the early night. It was almost peaceful until she heard the sound of a motorcycle a few cars behind her coming up loud as a lion’s roar through her open windows. It was moving fast by the sounds of it, almost as if she were a gazelle it was chasing.

Relieved of duty
, she thought to herself, and rolled her eyes.
That’s what Drake had meant. My next “escort” has arrived.
She was so overcome with the anxiety of the day that she hadn’t realized how fully her father would react to her request for help. She was in danger, so of course he wasn’t going to let her out of sight of the MC.

She pulled up to a stoplight and seethed to herself. Knowing she had no choice but to accept this provision didn’t do very much to lessen the weight of it on her shoulders; that feeling of being treated like a child; of being powerless against the whims of powerful men. She couldn’t get it to sit right in her stomach.

When Maggie finally got back on-route to the roadhouse, she made a promise to herself that she would not take out her aggression on whoever was unlucky enough to have been given “first watch” by her father. She had likely never met him and none of this was his fault. She would swallow the fact that she had a babysitter for the time being.

Hot Tamales was right where Maggie had left it, so to speak. The roadhouse had been built as one of the first structures connecting LeBeau with the nearby town of Howlett, and had for decades been a popular destination for bikers, truckers, and other professional nomads and adventurers. The long flat building sprawled across what had once been a verdant meadow tucked up against the foothills. While most of the meadow was now under the building or the huge gravel parking lot, tufts of wildflowers still bloomed in the spaces surrounding the dive. The hot pink outline of a sexy cowgirl riding a bull had been the roadhouse’s calling card since Maggie could remember, and the sign buzzed in the dark night as she pulled up and parked her car. A few other cars were pulling in from the opposite side of the lot, coming from the direction of Howlett. She heard some of the cars behind her pass by with a
whoosh
, continuing down the highway without pausing. The motorcycle driver was clearly breaking, however, and pulling into the Tamales lot behind her. She sighed to herself. Part of her had still been hoping it was a coincidence.

Maggie waited and saw the biker pass by in the dark and park out of view. She gave herself a quick check in the visor mirror. She was not terribly pleased with the tired, vaguely dusty reflection that stared back at her but a bit of lipstick she found in the console seemed to brighten her up enough. By the time she opened her door and hopped out of the SUV, a huge dark figure was already leaning against the end of her car, waiting.

She jumped a little. “Oh, hi,” she said as soon as she saw the MC cut. Backlit from the bright pink glow of the sign, she couldn’t make him out. “I’m Maggie. I guess you’re my bodyguard.”

“Yeah, no shit.” It was a familiar voice from the dark. The man put a cigarette to his lips and lit it, his familiar silhouette framed behind the flame of the lighter.

Maggie’s heart stopped. She felt a jolt run up her spine and down her legs, so strong she thought she might take a tumble right there in the lot of Hot Tamales. Her left hand instinctively shot out and grasped the SUV. There was no recovering composure after that.

“Jumpy?” said Jase. There was nothing playful in his voice, though. It was all brutish and bitter.

“Well, I
am
on the run, so that typically comes with the territory, yeah,” said Maggie, drudging up a bit of acid from her tired soul.

“I wouldn’t know. I’ve never run from anything.”

Before, at the clubhouse, Maggie had felt scared. Her empathy for Jase overflowed in that moment their eyes met in the den. Ridden with guilt for having to come back and interrupt his life again after what she did, she couldn’t find room to be angry with him for being so cold in front of the other Black Dogs. But the mental pressure of the past few hours had worn her down. Drowning in emotions she neither understood nor controlled, she felt like little more than a tired, cornered animal.

Jase had every right to be hurt by her presence, and she would never argue that. But right there, at that moment, in the dark of night outside Hot Tamales, she wasn’t going to take anything she didn’t deserve. She had never asked him to follow her. She hadn’t begged Henry for Jase as her detail. And she wasn’t about to take the shit for its consequences.

“Paragon of virtue, Mister Jase Campbell, everyone,” said Maggie to the imaginary audience around them. She even mustered up a sarcastic little curtsey to top it off with.

Jase blew out his cigarette smoke in a mean scoff. “You’re still a fucking piece of work, I see. You come crawling back here asking for help and you’re gonna give me this attitude?”

“I came back to ask for
Henry’s
help,” said Maggie, her voice an angry hiss. “It’s not my fault he put you on bitch duty.”

“You can say that again,” said Jase.

Maggie rolled her eyes. Already she felt that tiny hope for a restful evening spinning out of control. “Look, I just came here to get a fucking drink. So why don’t you and your brooding just stay the hell out of my way and let me get one in peace. I’m sure you can do your job from across the room.”

“What would you know about my ‘job’?” said Jase. He threw the cigarette butt to the ground near her feet and used it as an excuse to come a few steps closer as he snuffed it out with his boot. Now he was a mere foot away from her, and she had to crane her neck to look up at him. He smelled like musk and gasoline. “What would you know about a fucking thing around here, Maggie?”

Maggie’s heart pounded, and it wasn’t just from her anger. It was the sudden shock of having Jase so close to her, of smelling his distinctive musk once again. It flooded her emotions in slow, fat waves, until she felt nearly consumed by a distant longing. Her feet wouldn’t move, rooted in place. She tried to draw strength from that knowledge, because she neither wanted to move away from him, nor did she want to move closer. She wanted both. She wanted neither.

She must have been lost in her thoughts for longer than a moment, because through the muffled sound of blood crashing in her ears, she heard him ask if she was ignoring him.

“No,” she responded, coming back to herself. She centered the moment by holding on to her anger. “Just stay the hell away from me, Jase.”

Before he could respond, Maggie stormed around his big frame and headed for the roadhouse. The silence in the gravel behind her betrayed that Jase didn’t follow right away. Maggie was glad for it.

By the time she got the bartender to serve her, Maggie’s anger had died a bit. The roadhouse jumped with line dancers, dart-throwers, mechanical bull-riders, and a crowd of frat boys celebrating something or other with endless pitchers of cheap draft beer. They co-mingled with bikers from at least three MCs that Maggie could recognize, including a few Black Dogs from a chapter north of Howlett. The room was a smoky, noisy mess, and perfect for the restless part of Maggie’s soul that needed care now more than ever. She loved the way she could melt anonymously into a place like this. She downed her first shot of whiskey and pint of beer in a rush, and then ordered another pair immediately.

Maggie tried her damnedest to get lost in the moment and mood of the bar, but as hard as she tried, she couldn’t sink into it. She hoped Jase had decided to stay outside to attend to his guard duties, even though she could feel his eyes on her back as she sat at the bar. This was such a fucked-up development. She laughed coldly to herself when she wondered how Henry would feel after her bodyguard killed her before her hunters got the chance.

Jase would never hurt me
. The thought came out of nowhere from the quiet part of her mind, but it made Maggie roll her eyes at her own naivety and order another shot. Drake wasn’t the only one who had never seen Jase as angry as he had been that moment at the den. Maggie would never admit to anyone how truly scared she had been when he stepped up to her.

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