Free Read Novels Online Home

Hot on the Trail by Vicki Tharp (7)

CHAPTER SEVEN

“C’mon,” Quinn said as he took Jenna’s hand and dragged her back to Main Street. “I need a drink.”

Jenna jogged to keep up with Quinn’s long stride. “Slow down.”

At the corner, they crossed at a diagonal. A horn honked, a car skidded to a stop, and Quinn slapped his hand on the hood. Jenna waved an apology. The driver flipped her the bird and screeched his bald tires as soon as they were clear.

Quinn? What the heck? You’re gonna get us both killed.” Jenna pulled her hand free when they’d made it to the other side.

Quinn kept walking, his angry strides chewing up the ground faster than a piranha through a guppy.

At the Mustang, Quinn said, “Get in the car, Jenn.”

“Not until you calm down.”

He yanked the driver’s door open. “I am calm.” If most of the paint on the Mustang’s roof hadn’t already been gone, Quinn’s tone would have stripped it bare.

All those warm fuzzies that had flooded Jenna’s belly when Quinn had kissed her earlier froze solid. “If you’re gonna feed me that much bull, I’m gonna need a good steak knife to go with it.” She held out her hand. “And the keys.”

Quinn laid his hands on his hips. “What the hell for?”

“The keys. Or I’m walking home.”

“It’s over twenty miles.”

Yeah. Wasn’t much of a threat. “I’ll call Mac to pick me up.” Even better.

Quinn’s head dropped between his shoulders, and he took several deep breaths. His chest was rising and falling. If he’d been a cartoon, there would have been steam coming out of his nose and his ears, and a high-pitched whistle from a kettle as the pressure blew off. He glanced back up at her and tossed her the keys over the roof. “You fight dirty.”

“Don’t you forget it.”

They switched places, and Jenna plopped down in the driver’s seat and started the engine. The seat vibrated beneath her as the engine chugged and idled, and the raw power beneath the hood bubbled her blood like cheap champagne, making her drunk with anticipation.

She shifted into Reverse and glanced over at Quinn. He fastened his seat belt with a solid slap of metal and clamped a hand against the dash.

He looked a little green.

She smiled. “Where to, Flyboy?”

“That biker bar the girl at the pawnshop told us about.”

“Since when do you drink?”

“Since it’s the same bar as the one on the matchbook we found in Kurt’s footlocker.”

Ten minutes later, they’d pulled into Cruisers’ parking lot. The potholes tested the limits of Kurt’s worn-out suspension. What was left of Kurt’s muffler scraped against the gravel.

Pickup trucks and motorcycles littered the lot, scattered this way and that as if a giant toddler had been playing with cars and had been called away to dinner.

“There.” Quinn pointed to an empty spot near a telephone pole next to a side street. “Don’t want to get blocked in.”

“Expecting to have to make a clean getaway?” Jenna was only joking, but Quinn didn’t laugh; he didn’t even smile.

“With a place like this, you never know.”

With enough trips to an architectural salvage yard, a talented designer might have pulled off the exterior’s grungy look. A few add-ons to give the sense that the building leaned to one side, and faux painting and precise sanding to give the corrugated sheet metal that painted-multiple-times vibe.

But if they had, the motorcycles in the lot would have been new Ducatis and Gold Wings, not old Harleys and Indians. The exact placement of the broken-down tractor would have been discussed ad nauseam, not simply abandoned where it had died. The guys walking in would be on their lunch break, in their Dockers and skinny jeans, not men in leathers and colorful tattoos, with no jobs and no better place to be in the middle of the day.

Quinn pulled Kurt’s Sig out of the bag and slid the magazine home. “Shoulda picked up some ammo.”

“This place isn’t that bad.”

Quinn locked the gun in the glove box and glanced over at her. “The way the hair is standing up on the back of my neck and my gut is twisting, if I was in my helo, I’d be giving my gunners a heads-up. So, yeah, it’s that bad.”

“So, we go home?”

“All the more reason to stay.” Quinn glanced at the door of Cruisers. A biker, complete with a sleeveless, studded leather vest, boxer’s build, and a mastiff’s jowls, stumbled outside. Quinn glanced at Jenna. “You could stay in the car. Or better yet, pick me up later.”

Jenna offered a soft, compassionate look. “Aw. You hit your head when you crashed?”

He frowned, and a crease formed between his brows. “No, why?”

“Thought you might have amnesia. Something to explain why you think I’m the kind of person who would let you go in there without backup.”

He smiled, though it fell short of a dimple. “Just because you’ve been hanging out with Mac and Boomer, and just because you know your guns now, doesn’t mean you have their skills.”

“Just their stubbornness.”

That time when he smiled, she got both dimples. “No, Jenn, that’s all you.”

She knew Quinn felt protective of her. No daughter of Hank Nash could go through life without knowing how that felt. She understood it, even if she didn’t need it, but that was the kind of man Quinn was. What was that saying about girls marrying guys like their father?

“Then you know that arguing is only going to waste our time.”

Quinn looked at her, the relief evident in his eyes. As much as he wanted her to stay in the car, to stay safe, he wanted her along, too.

He reached up and cupped her jaw, his fingers warm on the back of her neck, his thumb brushing her bottom lip. She waited for his gaze to drop, for him to lean forward and press his lips to hers.

But he kept his eyes locked on hers and said, “I’ve really missed you.” His words were quiet and clear and deceptively casual, but the stark intensity in his eyes almost made her believe him.

She popped the door latch before he made her remember too much of how they had been together. Right now was not the time to be reminded of what she couldn’t have. “We should go.”

What might have been disappointment flickered across his face before he dropped his hand. Anger, long banked, sparked and burned low in her gut. He didn’t have the right to be disappointed when he’d been the one to walk away. When he’d been the one to break contact.

When he’d been the one to break her heart.

She came around the car and met him on the other side. “Come here,” he said.

Reluctantly, she stepped over to him. He plucked her hat off the top of her head.

“Hey, wh—”

“Hang on.” He tugged the tie from her ponytail, and her hair dropped free. He ran his hands through her hair until it settled across her shoulders, then plunked her hat back on her head. “Might as well use your wiles to our advantage.”

“I don’t have wiles.”

He chuckled.

“What?”

“You’re kind of cute when you’re clueless.”

The fact that he’d called her clueless was lost on her heart. All the stupid thing heard was “cute,” and it had dropped several beats, like a novice drummer at a Battle of the Bands contest. Before she could walk off, he grabbed her hand and linked his fingers between hers.

“What’s this about?” She shook their joined hands.

“Now who’s the one with amnesia?” He pulled her along with him as he headed for the front door. The biker revved his engine and pulled out of the parking lot. Whatever Quinn said next was lost beneath the engine’s roar.

She stopped him at the door. “What are we doing here?”

“I don’t know.” He squeezed her hand. “All I know is, the guy who pawned Kurt’s gun likes to hang out here.”

“What are you going to do if you spot him?”

“I don’t know that, either.”

If nothing else, she appreciated his honesty. She stepped toward the door, but he beat her to it.

“Let me go first,” he said.

For once, she didn’t argue. As they stepped over the threshold, she was glad she had his protection. On the way over to the bar, she settled in his wake. The stares from the men made her feel like the sacrificial virgin at a maximum-security prison. But if the natives got restless, she might need more than Quinn to keep her safe.

Not even a world-class decorator could have matched the bar’s interior. No, scratch that, wouldn’t have matched it. More rough than rustic, dark not atmospheric, real dirt and grime, not the faux kind. The way her boots stuck to the floor with each step—she didn’t think there was a way to fake that. And the smell—stale beer and bleach and unwashed bodies?—She sniffed the air…urinal cakes? She rubbed her nose, but there was no getting the stink out.

“What’ll it be?” the bartender said. He had a damp bar towel over one shoulder, and a black gouge in his left ear so large she could read a whiskey label through it.

She slid onto an empty bar stool, and Quinn’s arm landed across her shoulders, a firm nod to the guy drinking alone on her right. It didn’t matter what she ordered. She didn’t plan on drinking any of it. “Whatever you have on tap.”

The bartender raised his brow at Quinn.

“Whiskey.”

Quinn paid, and they took their drinks away. Jenna leaned into him and whispered, “Now what?”

He steered her toward the far corner near the back door and a pool table. “Now we wait and watch.”

* * * *

Quinn tipped the whiskey to his lips but didn’t take a sip. Drinking wasn’t an option when he needed to keep his reflexes honed and his wits sharp. He’d blended in better at the gastropubs in Japan than he did here. He knew it. Everyone else in the bar knew it, too.

And by the looks on the men’s faces, the open mouths, the flagrant stares, the naked lust, not many women of Jenna’s caliber dared set foot in this joint.

“Wanna try that phone number again? The guy who hung up on us?”

Quinn pulled out his phone, found the number, and hit Redial. They both scanned the bar, waiting to see if someone’s phone rang. They waited. Waited. Nothing.

Quinn hung up. “No luck.”

“Guess it couldn’t be that easy.”

“Guess not.”

He brought the drink to his lips again, tapping his toes to the country beat pouring out of the jukebox, then set the glass down on the side of the pool table. The felt was worn from use, the wood dinged. He chose the best of the warped cues and handed one to Jenna.

She racked the balls, and Quinn nodded for her to break.

With cue in hand, Jenna leaned over the table and lined up her shot. The blood in Quinn’s brain drained south as if the floodgates had been lifted on the Grand Coulee Dam. Another fake sip of whiskey. The way her ass filled out her jeans, the curve of her hip, the—

The whiskey slid down his throat as he sucked in a breath. He choked and sputtered.

“You okay?” Jenna glanced at him over her shoulder, the cue shaking in her hand.

Jesus. What the hell was he doing bringing her here? He coughed and cleared the burn from his throat. “Fine,” he wheezed. He nodded toward her trembling hand. “You?”

She tightened it around the stick until her knuckles went white and her hand became steady. “Ready to kick your ass. Five bucks a game? Make it interesting?”

“Low stakes. What’s the matter? Afraid you’re gonna lose?”

She straightened and gave him a slow, sly smile. In the darkness of the bar, it lit up her face. If they were anywhere else, he would pin her against the wall, wrap her legs around his waist, and—

He shook off the daydream. “That wasn’t a rhetorical question.”

Still that smile.

She muddled his brain as if he was already three whiskeys into a bender.

“What did you have in mind?” she asked.

“Something a little more personal.”

She gave it some thought. “Okay. If I win, you agree to work with Vader every day that you’re here.”

Wasn’t much of an incentive to win. He’d enjoyed the training session with Vader. Had decided to help the horse out as much as possible with the time he had. But Jenna didn’t need to know that yet. He grumbled, as if reluctant, then agreed. If he made it too easy on her, she’d know something was up.

Quinn stepped toward her, and she backed up a step, and another, until she backed into the pool table. He eased between her legs and pressed up against her, his hand resting on her hip. “And if I win?”

She didn’t push him back or try to run away. She leaned into him. “What do you want?” Her words came out breathy, and he read her lips more than heard her words.

She smelled of hay and horses and innocence, and he whispered in her ear, “One night. With you.” One night would never be enough, but he would take whatever she would give.

“Doing what?” She wasn’t that innocent. By the look in her eyes, she knew what he meant, and that not-so-innocent part of her wanted to hear him say it.

He grinned and shifted enough for her to feel what she did to him. “Anything we damn well want.”

She swallowed hard, and the pulse at the base of her neck thumped in response. Her hand gripped the front of his shirt, and she pulled him down until his lips touched hers. God, he’d missed those lips. Those hands.

He nibbled on her bottom lip and took the sting away with his tongue. She opened her mouth for him, and he fell in. Setting the drink down, he cupped her ass in the palms of his hands and pulled her tighter against him. His tongue explored the sharp ridge of her teeth, the soft strength of her tongue—

Behind them, catcalls pierced the air. People tapped their mugs on the table. Others clapped or stomped their feet. Quinn pulled back, and the flush burned on Jenna’s cheeks. So much for keeping a low profile.

He bobbed his chin toward the table. “Your break.”

Without thinking, he picked up the whiskey, tossed a mouthful into the back of his throat, and cursed the rotgut brand as the caustic liquid cauterized his esophagus. He turned so he could watch her and the room at the same time.

Most of the men had gone back to whatever they’d been doing before he’d kissed her. A few couldn’t keep their eyes off her ass, which was understandable. They sized him up, calculated their chances of getting by him to get to her. He glowered at them one by one by one, until they each turned away.

This biker bar was no place for him to be. It certainly was no place for a woman like her. He wanted her out of there, he wanted to keep her safe, and…he wanted her in his bed.

He downed the rest of the whiskey.

He hadn’t deserved her then.

He sure as hell didn’t deserve her now.

Quinn clocked the time by the number of games they played. Some he won, some he lost. Some he thought she threw.

People came and went. Quinn kept one eye on her and one on the rest of the bar. Trouble wrapped in testosterone and muscle and drug deals. A lot of deals went down in the john. Either that, or the guy with the buzz cut and the beard down to his chest was in dire need of a urologist.

And still no sign of the man with the black dragon tattooed on his arm.

Quinn stretched across the pool table and lined up the shot. “Eight ball, corner pocket.”

If he sank this one, he’d win the series. Win the night with her. A long shot. Literally. Across the table, banking against the opposite side to make the corner pocket. Not an easy shot. Not a particularly hard shot, either.

This shot was nothing.

Or everything.

Quinn wiped his brow on the sleeve of his shirt and took the shot.

The shot went wide, the eight ball hitting the side and smacking into one of Jenna’s balls. Then the eight ball skirted across the short end of the table, headed for the corner, but now the angle was off and the ball ping-ponged against the adjacent sides. Without sufficient backspin, the cue ball screamed across the felt, headed straight for the corner pocket.

He was going to scratch.

The eight ball lost momentum, and the cue ball glanced off of it. The eight ball danced and spun in the corner like a prima ballerina. Then it slowed. Teetered on the edge. The front door slammed open, shaking the bar’s foundation. The ball dropped in.

Holy hell, he’d won. Quinn grinned at Jenna.

Moose stormed through the open door. Quinn didn’t have to see the tattoo to know this was the guy they’d been waiting for. The guy was massive. He’d make the guys on the SEAL teams look like the kids chosen last for the kickball team.

Moose had a long face, and thick brows and meaty fists that looked like they possessed the explosive power of a pipe bomb. The man scanned the near capacity bar. “Who’s driving the Mustang?”

There was a collective exhale of relief. The men drank their beer and glanced over their shoulders trying to spot the poor schmuck about to get his ass kicked.

Jenna went white, and adrenaline dumped into Quinn’s system. His veins heated, and sweat formed between his shoulder blades, his heart matching the frantic beat of “The Devil Went Down to Georgia” blasting through the bar’s speakers.

“Get the balls,” Quinn told her as he went from one pocket to the other, rolling all the balls to one end, trying to formulate a game plan. He’d only wanted a look at this Moose guy. Size him up. He hadn’t expected a confrontation.

Jenna arranged the balls in the rack, and Quinn added a couple more, keeping one eye on Moose as the man talked to a couple of people at the bar.

“Everyone knows everyone here. He would have to be stupid not to figure out we drove the Mustang,” Jenna said under her breath.

Quinn turned her back to the bar and placed a casual hand on her hip, slipping the car keys into her front pocket. The bartender pointed Moose their way, and Quinn leaned in and whispered in her ear, “If you have to leave without me, do it.”

“Quinn—”

“Don’t argue. And don’t do anything stupid.”

He kissed her on the forehead and turned his attention to the charging Moose.

“That your Mustang?”

Quinn picked up one of the cues. Wasn’t much protection against a force of nature, but it was all he had. “Who’s asking?”

Jenna picked up the other cue, and before he could stop her, she walked to the other end of the table and nudged Moose out of the way with a bump of her hip.

“You mind?” she said. “We’re playing a game here.”

Jesus, she had big, bad, beautiful, brass balls. Pressure built in Quinn’s chest that he could only describe as pride. Every day, Jenna dealt with animals that outweighed her ten times over. Moose was twice her size, but potentially as quick and certainly more lethal than the horses. She would be insane to underestimate him.

Moose smiled at her, the kind of smile the cat gives the mouse as it bats the prey between its paws, its sharp nails sheathed until it tires of the game.

“What’s your name, doll?” He raised a hand to brush the hair off of her shoulder, and she slapped it away. Jesus Christ. She was going to get them both killed.

“I’m not your doll.” She bent over and hit the cue ball with a solid blow. The balls at the other end scattered with a loud crack, sending two striped balls into opposite corner pockets.

Heavy brows shadowed the man’s eyes, and his grin spread behind his thick, dark beard with one of those expressions Quinn didn’t like the look of. Particularly on a man looking at Jenna—the look a man gets when he accepts a challenge.

She brushed past Moose to set up her shot, sending Quinn a look that said, Your turn.

“You must be Moose,” Quinn said, trying to steer the conversation. “I’ve been looking for you.”

Moose stared at Quinn over the top of Jenna’s warm beer, then took a sip. No confirmation. No denial.

“My partner told me about you.” Quinn bobbed his chin toward the parking lot. “The one who owned the Mustang.”

“Partner.” Moose downed the rest of the beer in two large swallows, wiping his mouth with the back of one giant paw. “What kind of partner?”

“He was procurement. I’m distribution.” Quinn didn’t have to say what he procured and distributed. With a guy like Moose, Quinn figured it was understood that the “what” wasn’t coffee beans or Beanie Babies.

Jenna had cleared half the table before Quinn got a turn. He lined up. A short shot into the side pocket. “Only, the dumbass ODed on me. What the fuck am I supposed to tell my guys when the supply runs dry?” Quinn banked the five ball into the far corner pocket. “Last fucking time I partner with a junkie.”

Jenna sucked in a breath, the words, and the cold, angry delivery, hitting her as hard as they had Quinn. He refused to look at her. If he did, he’d have a hard time keeping it together. You’re playing a part. The words are meaningless.

They weren’t.

They sliced.

They diced.

They nicked his heart. He’d given voice to his fear, letting perhaps a bit of the ugly truth spill out.

What if Kurt had been using again? What if Kurt had killed himself?

No.

Someone had to believe in Kurt. Give him the benefit of the doubt. Quinn owed him that much.

The next shot, the cue hit low and to one side. He missed the number two ball and scratched. Damn.

“Why were you looking for me?” Moose finally swallowed the bait.

“Kurt had said if we wanted a man who could meet our supply demands, you were the one to talk to.” Quinn was talking out of his ass, but Moose pulled the balls out of the pockets closest to him. Jenna retrieved the others. “I would need samples to test the quality, of course.”

Moose picked up a cue and started racking the balls at the end of the table. “Your partner did that.”

Bingo! Holy crap. They’d found Kurt’s supplier.

Quinn leaned on his cue, acting like he didn’t have a care in the world. Like he wasn’t talking to the guy who might have murdered his friend. “Yeah, well, he’s dead, so now you deal with me.”

“Who says I want to deal with you?” Moose walked around the table and placed the cue ball in position. When Moose broke, the crack of the balls sounded like bones breaking.

“You wouldn’t still be here if you didn’t,” Quinn said, giving the animal his best right, buddy? smile.

Despite the way the balls had exploded across the table, none of them fell in. Quinn lined up on a stripe, a hair short of the corner pocket. Moose picked up the ball. “Not you. Her.”

“Stakes?” Jenna tapped Quinn’s thigh with the cue and took his place.

“I win,” Moose said, with cold humor in his eyes as he looked at Quinn, “I buy your woman a drink. Alone.”

“That’s not—”

“And if I win?” Jenna leaned across the table and lined up for the shot, flashing her cleavage at Moose beneath the V-neck of her shirt.

If Quinn was smart, he’d grab her hand and drag her from behind enemy lines. Far, far away. Someplace safe, like Fiji, where Moose couldn’t find her.

“I give you the samples.”

* * * *

Merle Haggard’s “The Fightin’ Side of Me” blasted through Cruisers’ speakers, the twang settling in her bones, filling her with a bravado and a bit of that outlaw spirit. If she lost this game of pool to Moose, she owed him a drink, but if she won, they might catch a lead. Matching those samples to the drugs found in Kurt’s system might help tie Moose to Kurt’s death. Jenna held out her hand for Moose to shake. “Deal.”

Moose’s hand engulfed hers. Ann Darrow to King Kong. “I like her,” he said to Quinn. “She’s got balls.”

She leaned over again and aimed. Her hand trembled again.

It’s no different than playing Quinn.

Yeah, right.

Spending a night with Quinn was more of a win than a loss.

If she lost to Moose, he got to buy her a drink, but she didn’t believe that was all the man wanted.

And with only Quinn there to stop Moose, things could get ugly fast.

The front door opened as Jenna took her shot. The daylight distracted her, and her shot spun off to the right, missing all the balls.

She set a hip against the table, the cue in both hands as she leaned against it. Five men walked in. Not as enormous as Moose. Not as bad, but close. Jeans and boots and leather and tattoos. All muscles and meanness.

Moose straightened. “What the fuck are you doing here?”

Someone killed the jukebox, and Jenna’s ears rang in the silence.

“Without your boys with you,” the guy with the bull ring through his septum said, “anything we damn well want.”

The Bull stepped toward Moose, his gorillas flanking him on either side. Then the Bull’s eyes caught hers, and he stopped. “Who’s this?”

Moose wielded his cue like a sword, the tip resting an inch from the Bull’s chest. “Ah, ah, ah.”

Quinn stood in Jenna’s peripheral vision, his cue over his shoulder. Derek Jeter waiting for the 3-2 home-run pitch.

Quinn gave Moose a look. One of those looks men give each other in acknowledgment of a favor owed. Moose gave Quinn a nod back, and they both stepped in front of her until all she saw was the Bull’s face and nose ring above their shoulders.

“Isn’t that cute,” the Bull said, to his goons. “They think they can protect her from me.”

The goons stepped forward. Moose stepped back. Quinn shot him a what-the-fuck? look. “You want her?” Moose said. “Go ahead.”

The Bull sent his men ahead. Moose stopped the first man with a hand on his chest. “But El Verdugo wants this one for himself.”

El Verdugo? The Hangman? A fuse on her heart lit. The rate skyrocketed until her pulse pounded in her ears, at her throat. Her breath caught, and her knees went weak, and she leaned on her cue for support. El Verdugo. The leader of the cartel that had nearly killed Boomer and Sidney.

The men glanced back at their leader. Not many people dared to mess with the man who hung people for entertainment like it was his own personal movie channel.

“You need to leave.” Moose’s words came out with a deceptive calm. A sharp contrast to his firm fists and bunched-up biceps.

“What I need,” the Bull said, “is for you to give me my money.”

“No.”

“Or the girl.”

“No.”

“Not gonna happen.” Quinn tightened his grip on the cue.

The mention of El Verdugo might have slowed the Bull down, but it didn’t look like it was going to stop him.

“Take her,” the Bull said.

The goons spread out. Jenna eased back. The rear exit was only three feet away. But she couldn’t leave Quinn. Three against five was better odds than two against five. She glanced around the rest of the bar, expecting someone to come to their rescue. Or at least to call the cops. But all eyes were on them. No one made a move to help.

No one dared.

“Go.”

Jenna didn’t know who said it first, Quinn or Moose. The word echoed in her head.

She didn’t get the chance to quibble before Moose and Quinn shifted, giving her a clear shot out the back door.

“Go,” Quinn repeated, his tone low and lethal. “Now.”

That time, she didn’t hesitate. She ran. Out the back door, sprinting out into the bright sun. Her eyes watered, and she held her hand up to shield her eyes from the glare. Tripping in a pothole, she stumbled around the corner, going down on one hand and knee. The gravel gouged her knee and skinned her hand, but she shoved up and ran for the Mustang. She didn’t stop until she was safely locked inside with the engine running.

Glancing at the building, you would never know a fight was raging on the inside. But she knew. She could still hear Quinn’s grunt of pain in her head as he’d taken a hit. The cussing. The slap of fist against skin.

The cheers from the crowd.

She dug into her pocket for her cell phone. With fumbling fingers, it took her three tries to dial 911.

* * * *

Cruisers’ back door slammed closed behind Quinn. It might as well have been the starting bell at an underground cage fight.

Five against two. Crap odds. But he didn’t have to win. He just had to buy Jenna enough of a head start to run to the Mustang. Quinn rushed the first guy headed after Jenna.

He plowed his shoulder into the guy’s gut with a thump and a loud oomph, and drove him into the next goon, their combined momentum sending all three of them to the ground. They crashed in a tangle of punching fists and kicking legs.

Quinn landed a solid blow to an even more solid jaw. Pain exploded up his right hand, the fingers going numb for a flash. He straddled his opponent, taking two short jabs to his kidneys, but as close as he was, the power wasn’t there despite the fact that the guy had biceps as thick as thighs. He probably bench-pressed buses for fun.

As it was, Quinn would be lucky not to be pissing blood for the next week.

Another guy moved in on him. A kick to Quinn’s knee, another to his abdomen, and Quinn tasted breakfast from two weeks ago. He rolled away and regained his legs. His left knee buckled, then held.

Moose was off to his left annihilating his attacker, landing blow after sweetly brutal blow. The massive dump of adrenaline kept some of Quinn’s pain at bay, but he’d be paying the piper—in bumps and bruises and blood. Quinn’s lungs burned, air rasping in and out, his heart beating, battering his lungs, his ribs, until they bruised.

A goon clambered to his feet, and Quinn floored him with a devastating kick to the groin, landing so hard that the guy’s descendants would be talking soprano for generations.

Two down. Three to go.

With his attention turned, Quinn was blindsided with a roundhouse kick to the side of his face, spinning him around and knocking him to his knees. His brain rattled in his skull, his teeth sliced his tongue, and his vision went wonky. He tasted blood.

Lots of blood.

He spat and shook his head, the stars refused to fade, but Quinn caught a blur of movement, the long, arching swing of a bat—Babe Ruth swinging for the fences. Only this ball was bigger. No way the guy would miss Moose’s head.

“Watch out!” Quinn hollered at Moose. Quinn’s vision tunneled, and his strength started draining away. With a roar, he lunged at the guy wielding the bat. Quinn’s left knee gave way, but he managed to ram a shoulder into a knee and wrap his arms around a booted leg like a starved anaconda.

The bat slammed into Quinn’s solar plexus. Air whooshed out of his lungs, his skull smacked the floor, and what remained of his vision went black. Warning bells clanged in his head, then nothing—

Global.

System.

Failure.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Flora Ferrari, Zoe Chant, Alexa Riley, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Kathi S. Barton, Bella Forrest, Madison Faye, C.M. Steele, Dale Mayer, Jenika Snow, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Penny Wylder, Mia Ford, Sawyer Bennett, Sloane Meyers,

Random Novels

Wanted by the Lawman (Lawmen of Wyoming Book 2) by Rhonda Lee Carver

Unveiling Ghosts (Unveiling Series, Book 3) by Jeannine Allison

Dirty Mechanic (Hard and Ready Book 1) by Sam Crescent

Unteachable by Leah Raeder

Treasure Me (One Night with Sole Regret Book 10) by Olivia Cunning

Dirty Little Secret: Carolina Devils MC by Brook Wilder

Christmas Kiss by Smeltzer, M.A.

Alien Commander (Zerconian Warriors Book 11) by Sadie Carter

Friends With Benefits by H J Perry

The English Duke by Karen Ranney

The Beast: A Sci-Fi Alien Romance (Betania Breed Book 0) by Jenny Foster

Save Me by Cecy Robson

Boxed In (Decorah Security Series, Book #16): A Paranormal Romantic Suspense Novel by Rebecca York

Pirate: Space Gypsy Chronicles, #1 by Eve Langlais

Teacher’s Pet: A Bad Boy Secret Baby Romance (Fury’s Storm MC) by Heather West

Bearing it All: Bear Brothers Mpreg Romance Book 2 by Kiki Burrelli

Just Joe (Smirk Series Book 2) by Jen Luerssen

Beckett (Drake Brothers Series Book 4) by Casey Peeler

Dark Devotion: Dangerous Desire Book 2 by Samantha Wolfe

Young Love: Wolves of Gypsum Creek: (A Paranormal Romance Story) by Meadows, Serena