Read The Devil's Due Online

Authors: Vivian Lux

Tags: #biker gang romance, #Motorcycle Club romance, #biker romance, #contemporary motorcycle club romance, #new adult urban contemporary romance, #biker mc romance thriller, #biker club romance suspense

The Devil's Due (7 page)

BOOK: The Devil's Due
2.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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Suddenly I ached to see trees that scraped the sky. I grew more and more excited until I couldn’t hold it in any longer.

“Where are we going?” I propped myself back up eagerly, wanting to see his face again.

His brow furrowed and I felt the excitement that had been blossoming inside of me wither and die just like those water-starved plants.

“We’re taking you to meet the president.”

I sat up, confused. I was still sore from the initiation I had endured in front of all those bikers. The man, that imposing man sitting on the chair like a king, the one who had laughed at me and encouraged more men to jump in and use me like a toy; who the hell was he, then?

“Didn’t I already?” I asked hesitantly.

His jaw clenched and jumped, the relaxation that had been there a moment ago gone entirely. For a moment, his face contorted with the most unutterable grief, a sorrow like I had never seen before. But just as quickly as it flickered it was gone, replaced with the same anger he had shown me when he had looked at me at the bar when he had tried to warn me away.

His growl started low in his belly, like a dog’s, then ripped from his throat.

“I warned you, didn’t I?!” he shouted. He sat up quickly and hunched over, planting his elbows on his knees and studiously avoiding my gaze. He took a breath and seemed to gain mastery over his rage. In a steely voice, he continued: “I told you. I told you what you’d have to do to ride with us.”

Hot shame flooded my belly, and suddenly I was pissed. What the hell had I gone through all that for if it wasn’t enough?

“I did it already!” I shouted. All those eyes on me. I punched the mattress at the memory. They had taken me, used me, made me vulnerable and what’s worse, I had loved it. The uncontrollable orgasms, over and over again—they were the worst part of it.

What did it say about me that I’d came like I did, while three men fucked me as the rest of the club watched? What did that make me? I was a slut, just like Darryl had insisted.

I brought my knees to my chest and hugged them close. Cade was still looking away from me but the rage had gone out of his stance. His shoulders hung, and once again this proud, strong man looked defeated. The voice that rumbled back at me was gentle and resigned.

“That was just our chapter, Lainey-girl,” he said softly, speaking my name for the very first time. “Now you have to be approved by the president of our whole club.”

The way he said those last words made me shudder instinctively. “Who’s he?”

“Moloch.” He spat out the word like a curse.

A small memory stirred in the back of my brain. It was a distant memory, from Cora and her Bible study classes. “Like... like the demon?”

Cade nodded. “We give him his due,” he recited mechanically. His eyes went dead as he said the words, like someone else controlled his voice

The words of his tattoo were facing me, a bright, blaring warning right there in front of my face. And I was too blind to see them for what they were. They were a promise of danger and suffering. They were the price you paid for freedom.

And true freedom comes from having nothing to lose.

I couldn’t go back. I
wouldn’t
go back to Flint Springs and Darryl’s trailer and a life of being beaten around by a miserable drunk. I was moving forward. If this was the path I was on, so be it. I squared my shoulders.

“What’s he like?”

Cade turned at the new note in my voice. He looked at me searchingly. “You’re going through with this?”

“I’ve got nothing else.” My fingers touched the bruise on my cheek again. It wasn’t nearly as painful now, more of a memory than a bruise. Like my old life, it was fading quickly.

Cade nodded. “I understand that,” he said darkly. Once more, that unutterable sorrow clouded his face.

I hesitated again, then decided it was okay to press. “Where are you from?”

“Where we’re headed. Puerta de Fuego.”

I gasped. “The big city?” I squealed before I could help myself.

He looked at me sharply and laughed. “I guess compared to Shit Springs, yeah, it’s pretty big.”

I laughed too and leaned back dreamily on the bed, kicking my legs back and forth.

“The pastor in our town—he was always warning us that Puerta de Fuego was an ‘evil’ place.” I lowered my voice to match the sonorous boom I’d heard whenever I went to church with Cora. “The name will tell you, my children. "The door of fire," it’s the door to Hell!”

I expected Cade to laugh again. Instead he turned from me, his fists clenched at his sides. “He’s not far off,” he muttered.

“Cade?”

He looked back up at me and his eyes softened. “I haven’t been back in months, It’s been nice being away.”

“Where have you been?”

His expression softened further and he perched at the edge of the bed. “Got a place all my own up in the mountains. Gives me space to think.”

I leaned forward, captivated by the sudden change in him. “I’ve never been to the mountains,” I breathed. “I’d really like to go.”

“You’ve never been to the mountains?”

“Never even seen ‘em.”

He chuckled and smoothed back my hair. “Where have you been, Lainey-girl?”

I swung my legs back around so that I was sitting next to him. “Well, I’ve been to my stepdad’s store. I’ve been down in the dry stream-bed that runs outside town. I’ve been to my friend Cora’s house.” Cade laughed again as I continued, ticking off the places on my fingers. “I’ve been to Cora’s church. I’ve been to school a bunch of times. And I went to the bar... once.”

He smoothed my hair again and looked at me, his eyes darting back and forth like he was trying to read me. “That’s it?”

I nodded. “That’s it. This is as far as I’ve ever been from Flint Springs... .and I don’t even know where we are.”

Cade motioned to the darkened window. “We only made it over the county line before your... episode,” he smirked at me. “Place called Dry Gulch. It’s even smaller than your little shit town, but it has a good diner.”

“Where is everyone else?”

He lay back on the bed and closed his eyes. “A few brothers stayed back with us... for protection.”

“Protection?”

“You never leave a man behind. You never know.”

I opened my mouth and then closed it. “Where is everyone else?”

“We’ll ride out early and catch up with them in Porter Crossing.”

“Porter Crossing?” I jumped. “Isn’t that where that awful hold-up was?”

His face, so open and happy a moment ago, snapped shut like a book. “We have to get up early. Shut up and go to sleep now.”

I opened my mouth, ready to strike back with a witty response when I saw the thunder in his eyes. Chastened, I slid over to the side of the bed and slipped under the sheets.

I held perfectly still as he grunted and shifted his massive frame onto the too-small mattress. He finally settled with his back to me, broad and strong like a wall between us.

Chapter 11

I
listened in the darkness, hoping he’d say more.

The hold-up at the bank in Porter Crossing had been in the news for weeks. Two men had stormed into the branch, guns blazing, killing two customers instantly. The only teller on duty was a woman who had tried to hit the alarm, but one of the men had grabbed her and hauled her into the back office at gunpoint.

She and the rest of the customers ended up being held hostage for four days, during which time there were several intense shootouts with the police. I couldn’t remember how it had finally ended, only that the name “Porter Crossing” quickly became synonymous with “dangerous” in Flint Springs.

Cora’s pastor had spoken at length about the dangers of the big city and the perils of godless heathens who knew no laws. Cora had recited these dire warnings to me wide-eyed, completely unaware of how much they had excited me.

But instead of sating my curiosity, Cade fell asleep. The low sound of his even breathing lulled me, and I started to drift. The exhaustion of this wild day took hold and I sank into sleep.

The whirling faces of the men of the Devil’s Due M.C. swirled in front of me, mixing as they did with the snarling face of Darryl as he stood on our front lawn in his underwear. The last thought I had before I succumbed to slumber was how angry he must be right now. And who would he take it out on, now that I was gone forever?

It felt like only seconds had passed when the first roar of the engines startled me from my sleep.

I made to sit up, but found that I was pinned. During the night, Cade had rolled over and flung his arm over my body. I lay perfectly still, listening to the sound of his breathing in the sudden silence left in the wake of the engine’s roar.

Cade’s chest was like a boulder under my shoulder blade. I squirmed slightly, trying to find a comfortable place in his crushing embrace.

He stirred and pulled me closer with a long exhale. His breath was in my ear, brushing across the skin of my shoulder. It changed in tone and I could tell he was waking.

He stretched his arm over his head and I gasped in a quick full breath, grateful to not be squashed anymore, but missing his arm around me. I didn’t have to miss him for long.

“How did you sleep?” he rumbled, his lips brushing the sensitive skin of my earlobe. A little thrill went down to my core at that soft touch.

I struggled and kicked my way to roll onto my other side, working my way under his heavy arm so that I could face him. I ducked my head into his chest, aware that my breath may not be entirely pleasant.

“I think I was in a coma,” I murmured into his skin, inhaling his scent.

He smoothed my hair and cupped my face to his. “Not funny,” he murmured, but the quirk of a smile at the corner of his mouth told me he wasn’t serious.

I stretched my arms up around his neck and peered into his eyes. They were relaxed again, the furious glint snuffed out. I hoped it was because of me.

“How about you?” I asked him. “How did you sleep?”

He squeezed his eyes shut and looked pained. I looked back and forth, trying to read him.

“Do you want to talk about it?” I ventured.

“I get nightmares sometimes,” he explained. “Last night, they were bad.”

“I didn’t hear anything.” Darryl would cry out in his sleep sometimes, usually when he was blasted drunk, and wake not only me but our neighbors too.

Cade opened his eyes. “Good,” he said softly, smoothing my hair again. “You don’t need to worry about them.”

He rolled to the side, treating me to another view of his broad back and taut buttocks. His hair was knotted at the end, the tawny gold strands tousled with sleep. I ached to run my fingers through them and smooth the tangles.

I was just reaching for him to do that very thing when a thunderous banging shook the flimsy door to our room.

Cade moved like lightning, swiftly pressing his back to the wall. With the slightest of movements he lifted the ugly curtains and peered outside, letting in the watery-blue, pre-dawn light.

I pulled the sheets up to my chin and my knees up under myself. I was poised to leap for the bathroom if necessary. But when Cade got a view of who was at the door, his shoulders relaxed.

I sat up and watched him curiously as he grabbed his jeans from where they lay in a puddle on the floor. He hitched them over his narrow hips, not even bothering with the boxers that lay bunched and wadded in the corner. When he put his hand on the doorknob and unlocked the bolt, I wrapped the sheet around my bare breasts.

I was grateful to be covered when Wyatt entered the room. The sight of his smirking face sent a wave of shame through me. He let his eyes wander lasciviously up and down my body and I found myself both grateful for the sheet and painfully aware that it left very little to the imagination.

“Can’t get enough of the Devils, can you, girl?” His smile was wide and evil. I remembered that mocking voice in my ear, laughing as he thrust himself roughly inside of me.

My pussy clenched at the memory too, reluctant wetness that made me suddenly angry. I didn’t want to like what he had done to me. With a sudden boldness, I lifted my chin at him.

“ I just needed a real man inside of me after that piss-poor fucking you gave me,” I spat recklessly.

Cade sucked in his breath. Wyatt’s eyes darkened in fury and my sudden boldness fizzled as I spied the dangerous vein bulging from his forehead.

“Mouthy bitch, ain’t you?” He moved towards me and his hands were already at the zipper of his jeans. “Maybe I’d better find some way to shut you up, huh?”

I panicked and made a desperate gamble. With a carefree smile, I tossed my hair and mimicked his rough way of speaking,

“Ain’t no cock big enough in the world can shut
me
up!” I sang out gaily, letting the sheet fall lower on my chest to treat him to a view of my naked cleavage.

He froze as if I had slapped him. Slowly, the broad, twisted grin returned to his face. He stood back up off of the bed and barked out a loud, hyena-like laugh.

“You got balls, girl,” he said as he shook his head at me. “We gonna have to teach you some
respect
.”

Cade made a low warning noise and Wyatt turned away from leering at me to face him. Cade’s mouth was pressed into a thin line of disapproval, but his eyes twinkled in amusement.

BOOK: The Devil's Due
2.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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