Filed to story: Reclaimed Book by Roxie Ray
“No, no problem,” I said. “Just confirming, since it’s a big order. You said you’re dropping off the cars next week, and all are getting a full paint job with tinted windows to start?”
“Right.”
“Have these vehicles seen any recent trouble?”
“…Trouble?”
“Trouble, brother.”
Anyone in the life would know I meant gunshots or other damage, either in the car, or the people driving them. The client hesitated for a second too long. “No, no trouble. Not a repair job, just a customization.”
Lying. Plain as day. My dragon could sense it like a scent on the wind. This new client was a fed.
“Great,” I said. “Then we’ll have no problem filling this order. Bring the cars in next week at your convenience.”
“Will do,” this ‘Mr. White’ said, and hung up.
I circled the client’s name on the invoice for later reference. No matter how many times they tried to catch me moving weapons, it wouldn’t work. It’d be a cold day in hell before I ended up in prison again. These feds were in for a disappointing sting when they got their cars back with perfect bodywork and zero weapons. I’d tell my guys not to open the cash compartments in the cars.
A knock on the door jerked me out of my ruminations. It swung open before I answered, which meant it could only be one person.
“Yo, Ace,” Hawk shouted over the classic rock filtering in behind him. “Sorry I’m late, that meeting ran long.”
Hawk was two years older than me and my second-in-command. We both had blond hair, but he was clean-shaven where I had a full beard.
As the alpha, I led our clan. Even though he was a beta, Hawk had stepped up and kept everything running while I was locked up. He’d been more than happy to hand the reins back when I got out. I was lucky to have a brother like him on my side.
He closed the door, and the soundproofing cut off the rock music. Hawk looked relieved. “I don’t know how those guys get anything done. It’s ninety-percent karaoke down there.”
“Hey, whatever gets the work done.”
“And makes the money,” Hawk said. “How’d the new invoices look?”
“One’s a fed. The others look good, though.”
Hawk snorted. “They’re never going to give it up, are they?”
“No. Which is why we’re getting out of this.”
“I know you don’t love gunrunning, but it’s a lot safer than moving drugs,” Hawk said.
I grimaced. “You say that, but we don’t really know that for sure.” Before we’d turned to weapons, we’d sold drugs out of the body shop. It was good money, and we had a reliable source for good product across the Mexican border. But when our source was caught, he’d turned us in. The feds had hit me with a distribution charge. The weapons were a cleaner operation than the drugs, but I didn’t like it, and it made my dragon antsy. It felt like only a matter of time until we got caught.
“True. So, you’ll be glad to hear that this meeting went well.” Hawk sat down and slid a file folder across the desk to me. “You remember what you told me the last time I visited you in prison?”
“You told me Mia was pregnant, and I told you we were getting out of this trade. It’s been three years, and we haven’t done it yet. We need to get things moving fast. If something happens, and you miss something in your daughter’s life?-“
Hawk waved a hand before I could go down that spiral again. “And I’m not leaving the clan behind, either. You know that.”
I nodded. We’d had this argument before. I’d tried to get Hawk to move away and leave the crime life behind. But he insisted that if he was out, I was getting out, too.
“The gunrunning has been good to us financially.” He flipped open the folder and tapped his finger on a long list of numbers. “I followed all the instructions you gave me from prison, managed the money to your specifications, all that stuff. It’s grown a lot. And I know I was iffy on this distillery idea, but after talking to these guys, I think you’re right. This is a killer opportunity.”
I was surprised to hear him so excited. Hawk had been reluctant to take the meeting at all.
“These guys are really onto something. Alcohol that gets shifters drunk is basically nonexistent. They’ve figured out how to distill alcoholic beer that actually gives a buzz. I know, because I was buzzed after the meeting. If we invest in this now, we’re going to make a killing. They’ve got a massive untapped market. Here, look at their documentation.”
I thumbed through the papers. Hawk was the personable one-I was the business-minded one.
The distillery’s projections looked solid. More than solid. Really, really good, in fact. We had the right amount of money to invest. And if Hawk was right about them, we were getting in at exactly the right moment.
If this went well, it could be the venture that got our clan out of the criminal world for good.
“All right,” I said. “Let’s do it.”
Hawk grinned. “Hell yeah. Let’s do it.” He left me with the paperwork and a promise to call after he talked to the distillery’s guys again.
I stood and walked back to the window. Hawk hurried down the steel stairs and back to the unfinished concrete of the shop floor. His mate, Mia, leaned against the open garage door in a pair of overalls, her wavy hair tied up in a bun. Their two-year-old daughter, Bella, held her mom’s hand and jumped up and down excitedly when she saw her dad coming down the stairs. Hawk weaved through the garage, then scooped Bella up and swung her around. Though I couldn’t hear my niece’s voice in the soundproofed office, I could see her laughing loudly.
I wondered what Harley was doing.
My dragon whined as soon as her sweet face came into my memory. Harley. Her long auburn hair, her bright blue eyes, her round face and those perfect curves. She’d been the most beautiful woman I’d ever seen. Hell, she still was.
Maybe in a different world, we could’ve had a life like Hawk and Mia. Harley could’ve showed up to the garage like this, wearing a pair of my old shop coveralls with the top tied around her waist, and one of those thin tank tops she wore all summer. Maybe she’d drag me out of my office and take me out to the lake where we’d roll around in the grass in the late-spring afternoon.
I could still remember the sound of her laughter. Her perfect, soft lips. The smell of her skin when she was spread out on my sheets.
My dragon whined again, and I shoved the memory away before I got too wrapped up in it. The fact of the matter was that Harley was gone. I’d been dragged off to prison before I could tell her I loved her. I’d never had a chance to claim her, even though it was all my dragon had wanted.
It was for the best, though. That summer was a lifetime ago. Harley was a sweet girl, a soft girl, and she didn’t deserve to be wrapped up in this fucked-up life. Before I’d even touched her that summer, I’d known she was better off without me. Even so, neither I nor my dragon could resist her.
I hadn’t had to reject her, though. The feds made that decision for me when they locked me up. I had no way to contact her. By the time I got out seven years later, she was long gone, and to her, I was probably nothing more than a distant memory of a summer fling.
I watched Hawk take Mia’s hand in one hand and Bella’s in the other, then lead them out to his car. He’d upgraded from a motorcycle to an SUV with a car seat in the back. I honestly had never thought I’d see the day.
If this investment worked, we could finally pull out of the crime world completely.
Maybe then, my world would be safe for Harley.
It was a ridiculous idea. It’d been a decade. For all I knew, she was happily married with kids-though the thought of that made my dragon growl furiously.
Maybe it would be worth it.
Maybe I needed to track her down.
HARLEY
Three weeks later
“How long is the drive?” Dylan asked.
“Three hours, kiddo,” I said.
Dylan made a sound like a balloon deflating. As he leaned over his luggage, he kind of looked like one, too.