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Break Hard (Steel Veins MC Book 1) by Jackson Kane (9)


 

Star

 

Holy shit! I just killed a man!

The words buzzed around my head like a mosquito. Murder was so heavy and foreign to me that I didn’t know how to deal with it. I pushed it away as much as I could, but I might as well have been fighting against the tide. The big waves would crash eventually, and I was already starting to feel sick.

But nearly sick enough. And that worried me.

The scenery blurred as I absently drove, passing cars on the highway like they were parked. Remy’s chest rose and fell with shallow breaths. I had no idea how bad his injuries were, and talking to him now was useless. The fingertips of my right hand lightly traced the hard lines of Remy’s chest and abs through a ridiculous, crimson red, collared hotel uniform shirt.

I could only guess as to how he’d gotten that.

Remy had used up all his willpower just to stay awake out on the street. Whether it was the pain or the concussion, he was barely intelligible when he’d gotten into the car then he just passed out.

If I weren’t touching him, I wouldn’t be convinced that he was actually real. Even after stealing the vehicle, I never really expected to see him again. The city was very small, but it wasn’t that small. He could’ve fled in any other direction, and I would have missed him. I had been incredibly lucky that he raced by me on my way to the motel.

It was almost like I was meant to find him.

My car – my stolen car – maneuvered long S-curves in between the sparse islands of traffic. The otherwise open road was hypnotic, just wheel vibrations and wide-open expanses on either side. It gave me far too much time to think.

I had killed a man.

My skin crawled as I relived the event over and over in my mind. It wasn’t that he was dead that bothered me. He’d just shot a man in the neck in front of a school bus full of children! Not to mention him trying to kill Remy.

That man was no saint.

It was the sound and feel when it happened. Another sharp shiver tore through me, and I clenched the steering wheel harder. I was going so fast that the initial impact barely slowed the car down. He was immediately sucked underneath the car’s front fender, followed immediately by a sharp crack – his head connecting with the pavement. After that, it wasn’t unlike driving over a shopping mall speed hump too quickly. The main difference was how much the human speed bump gave under my wheels – at least several bounces to the man as I drove over him.

I felt him die.

His body impacted under my feet through the floor. His bones crackled like a burning wood in a fireplace. The weight of the car shattered everything. When we pulled away, I couldn’t help but check my rear view mirror. All that was left was a red smear. He was a popped ketchup packet on the blacktop.

His corpse reminded me of a mangled, broken marionette with all its strings severed.

I had hit a deer once in New Hampshire. It went right onto my car’s hood and smashed my windshield. Then it limped away with what looked like a fractured leg. I think I cried for a full hour until my parents came and picked me up. I was terrified at the time, and I felt so horrible for the deer. And that was all over an animal. This – this was a human life.

Why didn’t I feel worse now?

I glanced over at Remy, hoping to get some kind of reassurance that the biker deserved to die, but he was still passed out. I grasped Remy’s unconscious hand just to feel the warmth and focused back at the road.

A word echoed in my mind before dropping into my heart like a stone into a well. It was the sound of my own voice – the one I’d heard in my dream.

“Finally.”

Oh, God. What was I becoming?

“Slow down,” Remy groaned, waking back up. “...need to be more inconspicuous.”

He didn’t need to check the speedometer to know that we were driving way too fast.

I had been racing my own beating heart, and even at around a hundred miles per hour, I wasn’t sure I was winning.

“Star!” Remy shouted.

“Fuck!” My heart in my teeth, I stomped on the brakes. A minor accident up ahead had everyone stopped, but I was too lost in the long hallway of my dream to realize it until the last possible second. I swerved, then careened completely off the road. Fortunately, there was just brush, dirt, and flat land in every direction. The brakes and shocks got a hell of a work out, but I was pretty sure the car itself was okay.

Ohmygodohmygod! I’m so sorry!” I was hyperventilating on the verge of passing out myself. People laid on their horns behind me. My whole body was shaking to the point that I needed to grip the steering wheel tight to stay steady.

Remy’s hand grabbed my knee.

It startled me even further. Then he squeezed it. Something about the gesture was calming. With deep, deliberate breaths, I was able to force my lungs to work and drag my heart back into my chest. I noticed he wasn’t wearing a seatbelt but had grabbed the Oh-Shit-handle above the door just in time to keep himself from being thrown around inside the car.

“Are you alive?” He wore a weak grin that reached his eyes as he gazed at me.

“Y-y-yes.” My breath came in short bursts.

“Then you have nothing to apologize for.”

“Oh God...” I rolled my head backwards and closed my eyes for a moment. I peeled my white fingers from the steering wheel. How I hadn’t snapped it in half would be a mystery for the ages.

“Can you still drive?” he asked with obvious effort.

“Yes. Yes, I think so. I just need a – just gimmie a sec.” The air flowed a little easier through me with each passing breath.

“Then drive. Can’t stay here by the side of the road.”

I nodded, exhaling, and placed my hands back on the wheel. The car was still on and idling with my foot stomping the brake.

“Drive along the dirt. Go around this mess. No one will hassle you.” Despite the pain in his voice, Remy’s calm was incredible.

I put it in drive and went around all the traffic. A few daring cars behind me even followed. Soon enough, we were back on the road and the traffic was long behind us.

“Slowly this time.” Levity crept into his voice.

“Heh, shut it.” I managed a frail smile back at him.

“Stop at the first rest stop that has a store.” A stubborn coherence began to return to him as he slowly righted himself in the seat. “Where did you get this car?”

“It was in the parking lot of the police station. I found the keys in one of the officer’s desks.” I flashed him an embarrassed grin. I was sure he could see that I was a little proud of myself for it, though.

“You stole a cop’s car?” Remy laughed loudly before immediately doubling over in pain.

“Are you okay?” Concern raised my pitch an octave.

“Eyes on the road,” he warned through short, labored bursts. The intense grimace on his face diffused after he calmed himself. “Just a few cracked ribs. Try not to make me laugh.”

“I was just as surprised as you. I didn’t think you knew how to laugh.”

“Oh, you’ve got jokes today, huh?” He reclined back and pointed to a rest stop that was coming up.

The highway pull-off area was pretty big with a gas station, food court, maintenance shop, and even a little knick-knack store attached. It was also empty enough that no one would bother us. I parked at the back of the parking lot near the tractor trailer rigs.

“Pop the trunk. Let’s see what we have.” Remy pushed his door open with his foot and carefully exited the car.

Aside from some clutter, a bottle of antifreeze, and trash, the truck was mostly empty. Remy and I both hoped for a first aid kit, but we weren’t that lucky. Remy had me pull up the floor where the spare tire and jack were usually kept on cars like this.

“Not a bad consolation prize.” Remy reached in and uncovered a blanket-wrapped shotgun. Next to it were a few boxes of shells.

I hoped we wouldn’t need them.

Before I went into the building to use the bathroom, Remy handed me some money for lunch and a few things. Unfortunately, they didn’t have any first aid kits, but they did have his other request – duct tape. I also brought some clean shirts and a small tool kit.

When I came back, Remy had just finished cleaning the blood and…other gunk off the car with the antifreeze and some rags.

Remy made an effort to not let on how sore he actually was as he tossed the rags in a nearby dumpster, but he slightly favored his right leg and one of his shoulders was raised up a bit. I didn’t see him get thrown into the vehicle when I arrived to rescue him, but it was fairly obvious from his placement on the ground and the damage to the bus.

He peeled off his motel staff shirt and tossed that in the trunk. His lean, corded muscle frame was already starting to bruise. It was hard to believe he could function after a beating like that, and I could see how his many tattoos hid so many other scars.

It was easy to see that Remy had extensive practice dealing with pain.

I helped him wrap his ribs with the duct tape. It looked horrible, but he told me it’d be fine enough for now. Remy had me drive behind the maintenance shop and park next to a shitbox car with similar plate numbers as ours, then he switched our plates for theirs.

He pulled the other biker’s gun from his waistband and with effort, laid on the asphalt and slid underneath our car. “Hand me the tape.”

“Is that a rainy day gun?” I asked before hearing the distant boom of thunder that travelled so far in this flat terrain. It was something I could never get used to. I stared at the ominous charcoal clouds off on the horizon.

“Something like that,” he grunted with the exertion. Remy carefully slid further up behind driver’s door and taped Rock’s handgun to the frame behind the side wheel well. “In a man-to-man fight, the winner is he who has one more round in his magazine.”

Why did I get the feeling that we were going to be driving into a fire fight rather than a thunderstorm?

We talked a little in the hours after the rest stop, mostly light stuff like pop culture that we enjoyed. Remy hadn’t seen many movies or TV shows since he was a kid but was alarmingly knowledgeable about classic literature. He even recited me some of his favorite Shakespeare passages from memory.

“That was amazing.” I was blown away by how eloquent he could be when he wanted to.

Remy’s only reply to my praise was a soft, vulnerable smile. The wind from the slightly open window rustled his hair as he looked back at me with those deep, brown eyes.

Soda bubbles flitting through my ribs.

“Pull over,” he said, insisting on driving when it was apparent that I was having trouble keeping my eyes open.

I watched him in contented silence for a while as he drove. It was crazy that I felt safer with Remy in that car than I did at the police station. Soon enough, all my adrenaline wore off, and I didn’t stay awake for long.

It was a worried, restless sleep, but at least it was sleep. The same dream returned again, but this time the dark version of me didn’t frighten me as much. The acceptance at the end came much sooner than it had before.

The distant echo of a car horn woke me with a start.

My eyes were greeted with the blue hues of early evening twilight that flooded through the spacious, concrete walls of the parking garage. Flickering overhead lights were turned on for the night, scattering uneven shadows around long concrete corners.

“Oh,” I groaned, shifting in my seat. I had a nasty cramp in my thigh from hours of pressure against the arm rest. “Where are we?” I yawned, looking around at what was clearly a multi-level garage. It was dark outside, and we were in a parking space on an almost completely empty level.

“Santa Fe,” Remy replied in a groggy, recently woken voice, his seat reclined all the way back. His eyes were covered with the crook of his elbow to block out the harsh parking lot lights, and he looked and sounded exhausted.

How long had we been here? How long had we been asleep?

“How are you feeling?” I asked.

“Still alive last I checked,” he grumbled in response.

I wasn’t at all surprised that was the best kind of answer I’d get out of him. Tough to a fault. “Are we okay to stay in this car? Shouldn’t we abandon it somewhere?” It was a stolen car after all…

He finally lowered his arm to look at me. “They have at least a half a dozen bodies to sort, bag, and tag at that motel. Maybe the owner of this car is in one of those bags.” Remy saw the concern on my face. “Either way, LVPD has a lot more going on than to care about one car-jacking, so we should be good for a little while.”

The image of the Vasquez family in their gaudy Christmas sweaters came to mind. The thought of them being robbed of their husband and father struck me in a very painful way. I know that gunfight wasn’t my fault, but I couldn’t help but feel shitty about making their lives potentially worse by stealing this car. Everything that happened lately seemed to have these rippling repercussions like a stone dropped into a still pond. We had no say as to when the stone would drop and who would be affected by the waves.

Did the man I killed have a family? Did he have children and pets in ugly sweaters? Probably not. And if the kill teams were as bad as Remy says, then he definitely deserved what happened. I guess it just reminded me how suddenly and unapologetically the end comes.

It just happens.

Then you’re gone.

“Did you know that man? The one that I—”

“Yeah,” Remy interjected, hearing that I was having trouble saying that word out loud.

If I said it, would it make what I did feel more real?

“His name was Rocks. Can’t remember his civilian name.” Remy’s arm covered his eyes again.

“Who are these men that are coming after you – us?”

“Criminals and ex-cons mostly.” Remy frowned. Those gears inside his head no doubt ran through the connotations of the word “us” in this situation. “They’re the most loyal members in each chapter. Men we pay a lot of money to do things in a very violent way. Hitmen, arsonists, occasionally rapists.” Remy’s frown deepened, and his voice took on a bitter edge.

“Jesus.” I swallowed hard. That was horrible. “You said that you used to be involved with these guys?”

“Each team did its own thing. Our deal was mostly demolitions. If another club stepped up and needed to be dropped down a peg, the SV would send us. We’d pop a weapons cache or an entire clubhouse, whatever it took to send a message. We killed when we had to, but that wasn’t the main goal. Lorenzo’s team... that’s a different story altogether.”

“Is that the team Rocks was in?”

“Yeah. Lorenzo and his guys specialize in murder. We did it because we had to. Those sadistic fucks reveled in it. That was one of the many reasons we never got along.”

“Oh...” If a man like Remy is wary of guys like these, then they really must be bad news. “Do you still do that?”

“No. Maria convinced me to stop.”

That woman again. I bit the corner of my lip. Why did hearing about her make me feel so apprehensive? Who was she? What happened to her? “Do you have a plan?”

“My plan is to put you on a plane back home tonight.”

“What?” I shot up reflexively. “No!”

“This isn’t a game, Star.” Remy raised his elbow just enough to peer at me with intense eyes drained of all exhaustion. “They will kill you. And it’ll be an ugly death. Maybe after it all shakes out, we can—”

I hit him and punched him in the shoulder. Then I hit him once again. “No!” My eyes went wide as I pushed back the tears at the thought of being abandoned again, especially after what I did to save him. “I rescued you. You don’t get to get rid of me!”

Remy grabbed my wrists eventually, forcing them down.

I started crying but stifled it. I needed to be strong.

“Listen,” he spoke with hard edges. “When you get inundated with this kind of violence, it doesn’t just wash off. It becomes you. You can’t walk this dark path with me without paying for it. Even if you survive… the things you’ll see and do will be battery acid on your soul.”

I turned away.

“Look at me.” Remy shook me, forcing my gaze to meet his. “You need to understand this.”

“The way I see it…” I set my jaw, pushed through the flood of emotions, and spat defiantly, “I’ve already killed one of them. I can do it again.” My words and even my voice had the dark edge of the voice in my dream. I should’ve been horrified by what I said, but I wasn’t. The resolve I suddenly felt admitting that out loud was reaffirming. I didn’t feel like crying anymore.

Was this darkness always inside me?

“It’s not just them, goddammit!”

I shrank a little at Remy’s raised tone.

After a moment, the anger dissipated and sadness crept into his voice as he spoke, “I don’t want you to see the kind of man I truly am. I… care about you Star, and these hands—” Remy let me go and held up his strong, calloused palms. “—have taken everything from people. Most of them deserved it, but some of them… All those people! That’s all on me,” Remy growled softly to himself, struggling to get the words out. “I’m afraid, Star. Too, fucking terrified that maybe they’ll take everything from you, too.”

“You don’t get to make that decision,” I returned resolutely. “I’ve seen you and what you’re capable of. What you did to Rio...” Remy grimaced and pulled away, but I caught his hands and pressed them to my chest. “I want you, Remy. Scars, dirt, blood, tattoos, brooding stares —  all of it.”

“Star...” He looked back at me with softened features.

“You’re the reason I’m alive. I owe you everything. You saved me.”

“Star, I had my guys search the back of the garage when I saw that fuck with you. I didn’t save shit. I dragged you into all this.”

“When I said you saved me... I didn’t mean from the bikers, but from my old life. You saved me from becoming a person I didn’t like.”

The confusion in him was apparent so I continued, “I was sent out to live with my aunt and uncle, not just because of college, but also to get me away from New Hampshire. There was a professor at my old school. Professor Jonathan Baker. He was handsome, smart and kind. I would stay after class to talk with him. Eventually, he invited me to a bar, and we kissed. We started secretly seeing each other. He was adamant about keeping it quiet because he was my teacher and could get in trouble. One night I texted him, he said he was feeling under the weather and wanted to cancel on a movie we’d made plans to check out. I picked up some soup and went by his place just to make sure he was okay. Before I walked in, I heard noises and peeked through his door window. Jonathan was fucking a classmate of mine on his couch. That’s when it all started clicking. The excessive secrecy, even at his house, the occasional evasiveness, his weirdly random after-school tutoring sessions.”

This happened a while ago, but my face got hot and my stomach turned like it did that night. It felt like I was tearing fresh stitches open. It was so difficult to say this out loud, to face it so nakedly. “I was so blinded by rage that I hurt him the only way I could think of.”

“You killed him?” Remy’s eyes opened a little wider in suspicion.

“No! Jesus, Remy... I didn’t fucking kill him!” I reflexively glanced at him in disbelief.

Nothing in his expression showed any embarrassment at such an extreme assumption.

“Seriously?”

Remy shrugged then patiently waited for me to resume the story.

I swallowed hard and continued as my throat felt like sandpaper, “He had this beautiful, cherry-red Mustang. He loved that car. I would come over just to help him wash and wax it sometimes. I was just going to key the side of it but when looking inside, I started thinking about all the other girls he probably fucked on those black leather seats. I pried open his gas tank and lit one of my socks on fire. Jonathan rushed to the window when the real love of his life exploded. He saw me there in the street looking back at him with the rest of his neighbors watching the blaze. He immediately knew it was me that did it. There was a trial. He told everyone that I was a crazy stalker and that I was mentally ill. Being that I had no history of any of that shit and there were no witnesses who actually saw me do it or any other evidence, the charges were eventually dropped. That was also when I learned that Jonathan was married. She traveled a lot for business which was why she was never around. Maybe she wasn’t ready to face the truth about her marriage, but she came after me and my family with a vengeance. Our mail was stolen, our trash was riffled through, and private detectives followed us around everywhere we went. She stopped at nothing to dig up any dirt she could. When she didn’t find anything, she went after my father’s boss. He apparently wasn’t as clean as Dad was. I don’t know what she had on him, but my father was laid off indefinitely. It was crazy!” I shook my head, still living through the disbelief at how rabidly angry she was at me and not her own husband.

“What happened to Jonathan?” Remy narrowed his eyes. “The school fire his ass for sleeping with his students?”

“I wish. I mean, yeah, they did, but his wife threatened to sue the college, and they immediately reinstated him.” I snorted, scratching my head. It wasn’t itchy. I just felt so dumb that I let Jonathan hurt me so badly that I had to look away and do something else. “He had all these girls swooning over him. I think he got off on the power, you know?”

“The small-minded always do.” Remy snarled at a memory of someone he must’ve known personally.

“I heard he even approached some of the girls that were failing his class and offered to bring their grades up for sexual favors.”

“Sounds like a real, stand-up guy.” Remy had been listening keenly to my story, his dark gaze hinting of compassion. Then he smiled like a hungry wolf. “Hope I get a chance to meet him someday.”

Remy did bad things because he needed to or because he felt they were necessary. I was manipulated like a fool and just lashed out blindly. In truth, I got lucky. I could’ve easily been caught. I was still glad I burned his car. He deserved so much more than that, but I wish my parents didn’t have to pay the price for it.

“If only.” I’d give my left tit to see Remy knock on Jonathan’s door. My knuckles twitched with anger at Jonathan even all these years late. “I guess what I’m trying to say is I have my own demons, too.”

“Arson, huh? You probably would’ve been on my team.” Remy cracked a thin smile.

“You fucking asshole. That’s not funny!” I smiled despite myself as I wiped my eyes and nose.

He lifted my chin to see me better. “Think long and hard about this. We’re talking about the rest of your life. Once you get a rap sheet, legitimate jobs will be hard to come by.”

“I feel like all I’ve been doing in my life is thinking and waiting. We’re sitting in a cop’s car I stole. I’m in this all the way.”

“I don’t know…” Remy leaned back to clear his head. He ran a hand over his face and hair then reached in his back pocket for his pack of cigarettes.

Part of me was still scared that he would make me leave, but another small, yet growing part reassured me that I could take care of myself even if he did. I didn’t want to play the side piece of ass or the ignored maiden and definitely not the damsel in distress.

Whatever happened, I didn’t feel as afraid anymore.

“Remy,” I asked. “Why are we even in Santa Fe?”

“I need to go to a strip club.”

“What?” A laugh escaped me at how absurd that notion was. We were on the run from a violent gang of bikers, and he wanted to go watch topless women bounce around? “You’re joking.”

Remy gave me a stern look then shook his head. “I need a bargaining chip. If I can convince the Lobos that the Veins are gearing up for war and that I’m being hunted by them, they’ll have reason to believe I need their protection. Then I’ll just have to convince them of my value.” He then cracked his neck. “Lorenzo’s team is out looking for me. I’m going to make sure they find me at Mama Loca.”

“But why here?” It didn’t make any sense.

“It’s the only meeting place I know of that has a metal detector.” Remy exhaled long, before continuing, “Lorenzo will show up with what’s left of his crew, but at least none of them will be armed. It’s about as even a playing field as I’m going to get.”

“I take it Lorenzo has the chip you need?” I asked.

“No. Lorenzo is the chip. The Lobos hate the Veins, but Bones, the current Lobos president, especially hates Lorenzo. If I can deliver Lorenzo to Bones, I’ll have proved that I’m trustworthy enough to protect.”

Mama Loca... I rolled all the pieces together in my head. A Latin strip club in a Mexican MC’s turf. “The Lobos were at the motel before the cops,” I concluded. Everything was slowly falling into place. “We’re still in their territory, aren’t we? The strip club is owned by them, too, isn’t it? Just like the convenience store.”

“Indirectly, but yes.” Remy looked surprised and a little impressed. “How did you figure out the convenience store?”

“I heard the cops in Vegas talking about it, and pieced the rest together.” I shrugged, pleased with myself. “So let me get this straight. You’re going into a rival MC’s strip club unarmed and hilariously outnumbered to hopefully subdue and kidnap the leader of a rival gang’s kill team who’s hunting you.”

“I’m… still trying to work out the details, but, yeah.” Remy frowned at hearing the craziness out loud.

We sat in silence for a little while as Remy ruminated on how the hell he was going to actually pull this off.

“That last gun magazine remark you made earlier, was that a quote from someone?” I wondered. It had been eating at me for a little while.

“Erwin Rommel,” he replied. “German commander in the Second World War.”

“German? So he was a Nazi. Why were you quoting a bad guy?”

“Bad guy.” Remy chuckled at the term’s relativity then looked at me with his smoldering brown eyes, all the sleep brushed from them. “History is written by winners. Anyone on the losing end of a war is a bad guy. Not all the Germans were Nazis. Rommel tried to assassinate Hitler.”

“You need me.” I suddenly realized.

Remy raised an eyebrow at me. He opened his mouth to question what I was talking about but closed it again and eyed me with confusion instead.

“Do they search the strippers, too?” I smirked at a plan forming in my head. The odds were hopelessly stacked against Remy. He didn’t need a level playing field. He needed an advantage.

I was that advantage.

“I don’t think they do.” His eyes narrowed, slowly figuring out what I was getting at. He shook his head. “No way. You’re not posing as a stripper.”

“I can smuggle a gun in for you!” My chest filled with excitement. “I can be your eyes and ears! I’ll let you know how many guys Lorenzo has with him and where they are. And when you confront Lorenzo, I can distract them, so it’s just you two.”

Remy frowned but couldn’t shoot the plan down. We both knew that it was his only real chance at pulling this off.

After some time brooding that he couldn’t come up with anything better, he agreed. Okay…” He sighed with resignation. “But you do what I say when I say. Hesitation of any kind could get you killed. You hear me?”

“Yes! Yes! I hear you.” Something inside me glowed. No one but me could do this for him. We were a team now. I really loved feeling like I was a partner in something. I threw myself at him awkwardly for a hug. My pants snagged on the E-brake, and I hit my ribs on the center console.

He caught me in those great, big arms at a safe distance so I didn’t crush his injured ribs then lowered me against him in his fully reclined seat. “Careful,” he groaned. There wasn’t much room in the front seats of this car.

“Sorry.” I wrinkled my nose, remembering how hurt he already was. “The next car I steal will have to have bench seating. Promise.” I curled myself onto him as comfortably as possible. Warm and safe in his embrace, I wondered if I’d made a mistake by choosing this life with him. I then thought about all the meaningless things I’d left behind, and my resolve solidified. This is where I needed to be, not on a shelf somewhere as a porcelain doll, waiting to be discarded or forgotten. In a weird way, I felt like I had a future now. Granted, it was probably going to be a short and bloody future, but fuck it.

It was my future.

The one thing about this borderline suicidal plan that bothered me was why he was doing it at all.

“You’ve already got the Steel Veins after you. Why are you stirring up another MC’s hornet’s nest? Why don’t we just run away, like maybe go to Canada?” I asked.

Remy took a moment to really think about that. “Maybe Rommel was a decent guy surrounded by the corruption of a country he loved,” he replied distantly in a mournful tone. He held me in his arms but was also so far away. “A lone candle in a dark, dark night.”

Was that what Remy was too?

“The Steel Veins used to be a brotherhood I loved more than anything else in this world. They were my family. We protected the community and each other. All the violence was justified. We had a purpose. A code.”

“So why fight them?” The concept of that kind of family was hard to wrap my head around. “Let’s just leave!”

“Any beloved relative of yours ever get cancer?” Remy asked.

“Yeah.” I started at the radical shift in conversation. “My Grandpa Bob.”

“You brought him to the hospital and got him all the treatment you could, right?”

I blinked. “Yes, of course!”

“Deadeye’s gone soft over the years and allowed low men like Lorenzo and even his shitty kid, Rio, into the club. These men are the cancer that’s killing the greatness of the Steel Veins.” Cold, hard steel filled Remy’s tone. “I’m going to be the scalpel and radiation. I’m going to use the Lobos’ resources to cut off the dead limbs in the Veins and then destroy the Lobos from the inside.”

“Will the Veins accept you back if you pull this off? You did kill the national president’s son.”

“Honestly, I don’t know.” He paused as the thoughtfulness of his words gave them weight. “I never thought about what happens to the scalpel after the cancer is removed. Rommel was eventually linked to the conspiracy against Hitler. He allowed himself to be executed for high treason so that his family and staff might live.”

“What about me?” I asked weakly. That glorious moment when he defied his whole club to save me felt tarnished now.

Had he said nay because he chose me over them, or had he done it because he chose the old Steel Veins over the new? The way Remy described his MC made it sound like a better, more honorable organization than anything I’d personally seen. If he really was a part of something like that, I could understand a yearning to get back to it, but a part of me still felt betrayed.

I selfishly wanted that defiant moment all to myself.

He saw the budding sadness on my features and raised my chin.

Then he kissed me.

His lips were full to bursting with passion, born not of lust but of something infinitely deeper. The way his mouth worked and his hands held me... In his embrace, I truly understood how much he cared for me. It didn’t have to be me or the Veins. It could be both.

I had a new moment. One that truly was all mine.

“You gave me the strength to be the scalpel. To make a change,” he finally said, pulling away. “As long as I have you, I have a reason to fight for them.”

His words warmed me to the core. As beautiful as both metaphors were, I couldn’t find the strength to tell him.

My grandfather’s cancer went into remission, but eventually… it came back and killed him.

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The Family We Make: An Mpreg Romance (Helion Club Book 1) by Aiden Bates

A Capital Mistake by Kennedy Cross

BABY IT'S COLD OUTSIDE by Wyatt, Dani, Kitty, Pop

Tempted & Taken by Rhenna Morgan

Possessive Canadian: An Older Man Younger Woman Romance (A Man Who Knows What He Wants Book 72) by Flora Ferrari

Quick Start (Quick Family Ranch Book 2) by Aden Lowe

Jaz: A Simple Need Story by Lissa Matthews

SEAL’d By The Billionaire (A Navy SEAL Billionaire Romance) by Alexa Davis

Shattered Destiny (Reclaiming The Throne Book 1) by Yumoyori Wilson, Tamara White

Legally Mine (Spitfire Book 2) by Nicole French

Sex Coach by Parker, M. S.

Fireman's Filthy 4th: An Older Man Younger Woman Holiday Romance (A Man Who Knows What He Wants Book 22) by Flora Ferrari

What if by Bella Rye

A Very Accidental Love Story by Claudia Carroll

FILTHY SINS: Sons of Wolves MC by Nicole Fox

One Night Bride (Only Pretend Book 2) by Snow, Nicole

Everlasting Circle: The Everlast Series Book 4 by Haygert, Juliana

The Wicked Deep by Shea Ernshaw