Creed – Satan’s Fury MC Little Rock Read Online L. Wilder

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, Contemporary, Mafia, MC Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 86
Estimated words: 83777 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 419(@200wpm)___ 335(@250wpm)___ 279(@300wpm)
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Brian:

You’ve always been so damn dramatic.

The kids will get over it.

Me:

Yeah, kids usually do.

But they also remember.

That’s the part you never seem to get.

Brian:

I remember quite well.

I remember you packing your bags and walking out. You left. If the kids

are hurting, it’s on you.

I stared at my phone long after the screen went dark. I was stuck in a moment between past and present, and even though I tried not to let him get to me, the weight of his words settled into my chest. It was a familiar feeling.

He was an expert at finding ways to make me feel bad. I could’ve responded with some kind of defense or jab, but it wouldn’t have mattered. Brian would never own up to his mistake. If anything, he would just buckle down and put the blame on the kids.

With that thought in mind, I tossed my phone on the counter and tried to shake off the frustration. The kids were home. They were safe and loved, and in time, all of this would pass. I wished it would pass sooner than later, but unfortunately, I had a feeling that wasn’t going to be the case.

7

CREED

“Heard anything else from the cop?”

“Not a peep,” I answered. “And I hope it stays that way.”

“We should get word if he plans to come sniffing around, but we took the protective measures we discussed.” Preach motioned his head towards the back office. “Seven and the boys cleared the grounds, and we’ll halt sales until this shit gets sorted.”

“I think it was a smart move.” I turned to Grim and asked, “You getting anywhere with the two assholes who started this whole mess?”

The Vault was quiet. It was the calm before the storm when it was too early for the regulars and too late for peace of mind. There was no music or crowds. There was just a low hum of the girls bustling around the floor as they prepped for the night ahead.

I was sitting at one of the back tables with Grim and Preacher, and I was listening as Grim filled us both in on what he’d gotten from the two dipshits he’d spent the last couple days working over. He looked agitated as he told us, “They start off saying that it was just a one-time thing. That they’d drank too much and got carried away.”

“Bullshit,” Preacher scoffed, clearly not buying it.

Neither was I.

“But the story changed the second I turned up the heat.” Grim leaned forward and rested his elbows on the table. “They’d eventually admitted that they were sent to find her.”

“Sent by who?”

“Still working on that.” Grim shook his head. “They’re scared, though. Real scared. And not just of me. They’re scared of whoever’s pulling the strings.”

“Then, keep at it.” Preacher leaned back in his chair as he told him, “I want a name.”

I didn’t say anything.

I didn’t have to.

We all knew something about it was off. Grim got up, and as he headed for the door, my burner started ringing. I reached back, pulling it from my pocket, and when I saw Shep on the screen, I stood and stepped into the hallway. “Yeah?”

“I got what you asked for,” he answered.

“Alright. Give it to me.”

“Not sure what you already know about her.”

“I got the basics. I need the more recent stuff.”

“Well, then you probably know that she was an officer over in Hot Springs. She was at a smaller precinct before that.”

“Yeah, I got that.”

“Then, you know she married a detective she worked with named Brian Maddox, and they have two kids together.” I didn’t respond, so he added, “Well, she’s done with all that.”

“Woah. Done with what?”

“The force and the husband,” he answered matter-of-factly. “She quit them both.”

“How long?”

“Just over a year now.”

Damn.

My mind started racing with questions, and I barely heard him when he added, “She’s been teaching part-time at the community college and is living across town.”

He continued, but I didn’t hear anything he said.

I was too wrapped up in the fact that she was no longer hitched. It shouldn’t have matter. I’d done the work. I’d put this woman behind me years ago but seeing her the other night ignited something in me that refused to be ignored. I had to see her again, even if it was just for a moment.

It was the only way I was going to get her out of my head.

Even then, while I was standing there in the hallway talking to Shep, I could picture her in that damn short skirt. The curve of her back. The fullness of her lips. And the sparkle in her eyes.

The images were bombarding my mind as he said, “She got custody of the kids, but only because of the ex’s work schedule. He couldn’t commit to a routine, so the court leaned her way.”


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