Walk Through Fire Page 10
It totally blew.
But he needed to give them what they needed.
And when they needed their dad, when he had a place, when they felt safe there, when they got in a zone (or close to it) where they would become women and they’d have their mom right there when they did, a time Deb and he agreed would be when Cleo was fourteen and Zadie was twelve, they’d have their dad. So after two years that he knew would be two long years, they’d do half custody.
It was all in the agreement.
He just needed to find a fucking house and he didn’t want to wait two years to do it.
His RV was the shit. Even Deb, who didn’t agree with hardly anything he did the last thirteen years, dug that RV and she did this even knowing how much that fucker cost.
But he’d been living in it off Boz’s house for nine months.
He needed to find a fucking house.
He got to the side door, unlocked it, went in, and powered her up.
He turned on one of the TVs (the thing had four, including one built into the outside) and sat to pull off his boots.
He didn’t get the first one off before something caught his eye and he tensed.
Then instead of taking off his boot, he pulled the knife out of the side.
Slowly, he got up and moved to the cupboard, alert while opening it, reaching high, pushing aside the bag of flour that was there just to hide what was behind it. He reached in, grabbed his gun, and moved carefully down the hall, stopping in front of the bathroom.
Standing outside, cautiously, he curled his hand around the door and flipped on the light. Even more cautiously, he looked in.
And saw nothing.
He proceeded until he hit the bedroom.
He did the same thing as with the bathroom.
But no one was there.
Chaos didn’t have many problems these days, not like back in the day when they had their allies… but they also had their enemies.
They did still have one problem, though. A big one. A psychopath with power called Benito Valenzuela who wanted to undo all the work Chaos had done to get clean and get their turf clean, work they’d kept strong now for years.
Things with Valenzuela had been quiet. But things had been coasting too long, the men were getting antsy and players in Denver weren’t taking the Club seriously, so Chaos recently stepped up their maneuvers to warn him off, which meant all the brothers were on edge.
And these days with Millie back, High was on edge about a variety of things, not just Valenzuela.
He clenched his teeth and stared at the big blue plastic crate on his bed with its white top.
Then he made an annoyed noise in his throat when he saw a folded piece of paper on top with High written on it in Cherry’s handwriting.
He’d loaned Tack and her the RV more than once for them to take the boys to stay at state parks and do other shit.
She had a key.
“Fuck,” he muttered.
Shoving his gun in his back waistband, tossing the knife to the bed, he reached to the paper.
He unfolded it and read:
High,
Millie gave Lanie, Elvira, and me this crate. She said she couldn’t bring herself to get rid of what’s in it so she asked us to do it for her. When we saw what it was, we couldn’t bring ourselves to do it either. I’m guessing, from our conversation today that you can.
So go for it.
I’m really sorry I stepped into it with you and Millie. I upset you and Millie was in a really bad way. Clearly, she also just wants to move on. I should have left it alone.
Now I’ll leave it alone and I’ll talk to Lanie and Elvira so they will too.
Sorry again, High.
xCherryx
Not wanting to but not able to stop himself, he flipped the latches, tossed back the lid, and sucked in breath at what he saw.
“Fuck,” he whispered. “That fuckin’ bitch.”
He didn’t waste time reaching beyond the crate, nabbing the lid to put it back on, and refastening it.
Then he stared at the crate.
Jesus, but she knew how to play the game. What was in that crate would have Cherry and her crew panting to dig in, do it deep and not quit until the job they wanted done got done.
He just did not get what she wanted. He didn’t put it past her to come after him just because she was rabid for his cock. The lie they’d lived didn’t include sex being fucking spectacular.
It was.
Every time.
And she’d panted for it.
Every time.
Maybe she’d hit a dry patch.
Maybe she was just bored.
He didn’t give a fuck.
Whatever it was, he had to shut it down.
Why she kept those pictures, he had no clue, except she kept everything. Concert stubs. Half-ripped movie tickets. Ribbons from gifts. Plastic cups with their names written on them from parties. Strings of Christmas lights that didn’t work that she was sure she could fix if she could find the blown bulb (then she never found the blown bulb, but the woman tried, sitting on the floor pulling out one and sticking in another for fucking hours).
And every picture taken of them together, even if it was out of focus or one of their faces was cut off or half the shot was obscured by a finger.
Those didn’t make her albums but she didn’t get rid of them.
She kept them.
All of them.
For twenty years.
And she’d found a use for them.
He lifted the crate, hauled it through the RV, set it down to open the door, and then tossed it out into the cold. He heard it land with a thud but paid it no more mind as he shut the door and locked it.
Then he went back to taking off his boots, doing it thinking again that he had no idea why she’d come back. He had no idea what she wanted from him. He didn’t even fucking care.
He just knew she was all in to get it.
And no man could fight a war and win without information.
He thought he knew Millie Cross twenty years ago, but he didn’t.
He didn’t know dick about her now.
So he reached into his back pocket, pulled out his phone, went to his contacts, and touched the screen to connect.
He put the phone to his ear.
“Tell me you’re callin’ to set up a game,” Shirleen Jackson said into his ear.
“Take your money anytime you want,” he replied.
She drew out her, “Please.”
But she was all bluff. This was why she was always losing. That and the fact he could read her hand by looking at her face.
Hell, the woman used to run poker games in Denver and she was the worst player he’d known.
But now she was also the receptionist at Nightingale Investigations, the premier private investigation firm in the entire Rocky Mountain region.
And she was a friend.
Shirleen and High had history. She’d do anything for him and he’d return the favor.
It wasn’t about markers.
It was about bond. The kind circumstances in life can make that can’t be broken.
She’d been dirty.
He had too.
But she’d been dirty when she’d had only her nephew at her back.
He’d been dirty when he’d had all his brothers at his, but the Club was broken.
He still had his brothers and she’d only had Darius.
Darius was loyal and he was smart but he was only one man, one man Shirleen felt the need to protect.
So there was a time when there was no one to protect Shirleen.
Except High.
He’d done it.
She’d never forgotten it.
And she was the kind of woman who never would.
“Need somethin’,” he told her.
“Hit me,” she invited like he knew she would.
“Anything and everything you can dig up on Millicent Anna Cross. Female. Forty-one. Lives in Denver.
I’ll text you what else I got on her that’ll make it easier on you. But first, I’ll need an address.”
“You got it,” she replied.
“Boys aren’t in this, Shirleen,” he told her. “Nightingale or any of them. You keep this on the down low. Only you know. Yeah?”
“Yeah, High,” she agreed, then asked probingly, “You good?”
He didn’t hesitate to give it to her.
“In a game I don’t wanna be in but I’m in it, and this time, I intend to win.”
“Right,” she said quietly. Then, quieter, “Met you after it was over, boy, but anyone who was a player in Denver back then knew you had a girl named Millie.”
He drew in a deep breath.
Then he said, “Just get me what you can get.”
“Okay, High.”
He rested back against the cushions of the couch. “We’ll set up a game soon.”
“Just don’t bring Hound. Sure that boy’s a cheat,” she muttered.
With anyone else, that kind of slur against a brother would invite retribution.
But for High, Shirleen was family, so nothing invited retribution.
“Hound sniffs out a game, no stoppin’ him from showin’.”
“Whatever,” she muttered. “Now, we gonna shoot the shit or you gonna let me get my beauty rest?”
“Wouldn’t dream of disturbin’ your beauty rest.”
“Already did, boy.”
After delivering that, she hung up.
High took the phone from his ear and grinned at it.
Then he tossed it on the cushion beside him and saw the stack of dishes in the sink where he’d left them that morning telling himself he’d take care of them that night.
He wasn’t going to wash dishes.
He was going to hit the sack.
This he didn’t delay in doing.
The RV was a mess.
But his sheets were clean. He’d made sure of that in order to wash Millie’s scent away.
Unfortunately, in the dark, lying in the bed where he’d had her ass in his hands, his tat on her back inescapable so he’d eventually had to cover it with his hand so he could concentrate on coming instead of fucking her for as long as he could, even if he managed to do it until his last breath, he couldn’t keep his mind off her.
Cleo and Zadie.
Deb had picked his oldest girl’s name, High had picked his baby’s.
Neither of them were anywhere near the ten names he and Millie had picked out.
Five for boys. Five for girls. That way they were sure to be covered whatever happened.
Her two top picks for girls were her two grandmothers’ names.
Katherine and Ruth.
Katy and Ruthy.
He wondered if her girls were with her now or with some ex.
He clenched his teeth at that idea but that didn’t stop the thoughts, which included wondering, if she’d instead had boys, if she’d picked the top names they’d decided. Flynn and Chance.
He wouldn’t put it past her, even though giving another man’s kids his boys’ names would be beyond the pale, even for her.
But she’d been rabid about picking the right names. Three fucking years they went over it. It was like a game, one they both enjoyed, going from the bizarre to the sublime in choices, trying to make each other laugh, but also being serious, settling in on some, rearranging favorites, until they were sure.
But they never quit talking about it, running a name by the other just to see if it’d make the cut.
Until a couple months before she sent him packing.
Then she’d quit doing it and any discussion they had about it when he did was stiff and forced, like she wanted him to think she was still into it when she absolutely wasn’t.
He hadn’t really noticed at the time.
Like Zadie, he was living in a dreamworld.
Then Millie booted him out.
And now here he was, forty-four years old and he’d fucked up huge along the way. He’d had a loveless marriage that lasted for thirteen years. He’d had so many close calls of so many different varieties that could have bought him a different life, or an early death, it wasn’t fucking funny.
But out of his life he still had his brothers and he had his two girls.
And he’d had three years living a dream.
A dream that was a lie.
But at least it felt like a dream before he found out it was a lie and he’d take that.
In High’s life since he’d lost Millie, he’d take it.
And be glad for it.
Twenty-three years earlier, Chaos Compound common room…
“She’s it for you, ain’t she, High?”
At Black’s words, Logan tore his eyes off Millie, who was across the room with Chew, giggling as Chew’s tarantula crawled all over her.
Chew’s tarantula and the fact he had seven of those fuckers and had always had one—by his word even since he was a little kid—being why the brother was called “Chew.”
“So light!” Millie cried. “And furry. She tickles!”
Chew grinned at her in a way Logan didn’t like but he didn’t do anything about it because he knew, even though Chew clearly had a thing for his girl, she was Logan’s girl and Chew was his brother. Not only would Millie not act on it, Chew wouldn’t either.
Millie looked to him. “Logan! We need a tarantula!”
He did not want a fucking tarantula.
But if she wanted one, he’d get it for her.
He did not say this.
He just grinned.
She turned back to the spider crawling up the arm she had lifted in front of her face.
Logan turned to Black, who was standing with him, as was Tack.
“Yep,” he answered.
“Moved in fast,” Tack muttered, eyeing him, friendly but there was concern.
Logan liked Tack but the brother freaked him because he was like a genius or something. He saw shit others did not see. And he thought not a step ahead, or two, or five, but fifty.
There was trouble brewing because of that.
A man like Tack was not a soldier.
A man like Tack was a leader.
All the men knew it.
Including their current president, Crank, who didn’t like it.
“Yep,” Logan repeated, answering Tack’s question, because he was right.
Millie and him were living together and had been for a couple of weeks. She was in school and had a part-time job. He’d been initiated into the Club officially and had a brother’s cut of Club profits.
So it was all good, by his way of thinking.
That said, her parents had been ticked they’d moved in together. They’d agreed to cover her tuition, pay for books, but because she’d moved in with him, done it quick and done it without a ring on her finger, they were giving nothing else.
This meant Logan was covering her even though she was working her ass off, both at school and at the shit job she had at a store in the mall that she took so she wouldn’t have to lean on him too much.
He didn’t give a fuck.
He went to bed beside her, he woke up beside her, she was his. She could quit and sit around watching television and eating M&M’s all day for all he cared. As long as she smiled at him like she smiled at him, like no other man breathed on the planet, he’d take care of her.
“Good choice,” Black noted, and Logan gave him his attention to see Black had eyes on Millie. “Face of it, she ain’t no old lady.” His gaze slid to Logan. “Deep down, where that shit needs to be, she’s all about it.”
“Yep,” Logan said again because this was true.
She was all about family. Hers. His. The one they were going to make one day.
So, yes. Definitely.
She was all about it.
Old lady through and through.
But only because he was a biker. She’d be what he needed her to be.
That was Millie.
“Ha
ppy for you, brother,” Tack said. “Your age, men don’t find the right one.” He clapped Logan on the shoulder. “You did.”
Logan jerked up his chin.
“Yeah, I did,” he agreed.
Another giggle erupted from Millie and all the men’s eyes went to her.
She now had two of Chew’s tarantulas crawling all over her.
And she loved it.
And Logan loved her. He didn’t give a fuck what it said, how impossible it was that was the case since they’d only been together a couple of months. He fell in love the minute he laid eyes on her. More in love at her first “hey.” Then more when she told him her name. And more when she looked so adorably hurt when she thought he was laughing at it.
And then more.
And even more.
It’d go on forever, he knew it.
Every day until he died, he’d fall more in love with her.
He’d been a lucky fuck and he knew it. He had a good family. Left that, had some fun, caused some trouble, found Chaos, and earned himself a new family.
Then he found Millie.
Yeah, he was a lucky fuck.
And staring at Millie with her tarantulas, feeling his lips twitch, he knew it.
CHAPTER SIX
You’ll Give
Millie
AFTER I PLOPPED the sour cream into the bubbling contents of the skillet, my phone rang.
I looked to it, saw it was Dottie calling, and snatched it up. I put the phone to my ear as I reached for the Dijon mustard.
“Hey, babe,” I greeted.
“You rang,” my sister replied as I squirted mustard into the bubbling sauce.
I had earlier that day, leaving a voicemail.
“Yeah,” I said. “Listen, I need a favor.”
“You know the drill,” she replied instantly. “You need it, free babysitting and that’s gonna happen soon, seeing as Alan and I are really in need of a date night.”
Two kids, both young, I knew that to be true.
Then again, it was always true. Dottie and Alan had been dating for years, pre-marriage, post-marriage, that’s the way they were.
I liked that for my sister.
My sister liked it too. And she wanted it for me.
“Done,” I told her, stirring my brew, talking to my sister, listening to Macy Gray from the new dock I’d bought, my candles burning, the steak and mushrooms already done and set to go in when the sauce was complete, the noodles resting in their water, ready to drain.