“One of the Reapers is fighting with Clay Allen,” she said. “He’s a hangaround. He showed up with some girl and the guy went crazy.”
“Is Puck out there?”
“Oh yeah . . .” she replied, her tone somehow dirty.
Great.
“Excuse me,” I said, pushing through. A wall of big, beefy backs covered in leather blocked my view so I ran over to the bar and climbed up to see if my man was fighting. I really hoped not. I hadn’t scoped out any coffeepots around here to rescue him with.
I saw Puck right away. He wasn’t fighting. He just stood in the center of the ring of bikers, watching Painter beat the shit out of the unfortunate Clay Allen, whose name was new to me. Not a Callup man.
A woman shrieked, and I realized that the Reapers MC president was holding someone prisoner in his big arms. She kicked and screamed, obviously enraged.
“You asshole!” she shouted. I couldn’t tell if she was shouting at Painter or Picnic or the guy on the ground. The big man just held her tighter, his face grim.
Painter kept punching Allen viciously, the blows sending painful, wet smacking noises echoing through the room. After what felt like an eternity, Puck waded in, grabbing Painter and pulling him back. He shrugged him off, ready to go at it again, but when Puck said something the big blond man stopped, panting heavily.
“Get him out of here,” Painter ordered. Nobody moved. “Get him the fuck out of here before I kill him!”
“Fuck,” Horse said, stepping forward to grab Allen under the arms. A path cleared for him to drag the man out of the clubhouse. Painter turned on the girl, stalking toward her purposefully with an air of menace. Picnic abruptly swung her around behind his body. Then he turned to face down Painter, arms crossed.
“Not happening, son.”
“It’s none of your business,” Painter snarled. “She’s the one who came here.”
“I didn’t even know where we were going!” she yelled from behind the other Reaper. “It was just a date, you asshole.”
“He’s a fucking biker. You broke the rules, Mel. Get your ass over here.”
“Not happening,” Picnic repeated, his voice firm. “I am not dealing with this shit tonight. Painter, get your ass home. Melanie, you’re with me.”
Painter growled and then the girl shoved Picnic out of the way, stunning me. How the hell had she done that? In an instant she was in Painter’s face, shouting at him so loud it hurt my ears.
“You need to get the fuck out of my life! What I do is none of your goddamned business.”
“Fuck it,” Picnic announced. “I’m done with both of you.”
With that he turned and walked away. It took an instant to sink in, then the girl got a strange look on her face. Painter started to smile—not a nice smile.
“I’ll give you a ride home, Mel,” he said, his voice full of soft menace. “We can talk when we get there. Privacy, you know?”
The unfortunate Melanie looked around, then realized she was surrounded by men who took their lead from the Reapers president.
“Fuck . . .”
“Maybe we’ll do that, too,” Painter said. Then he caught her arms and started dragging her toward the door. She screamed again, this time in fear. I saw Darcy push forward, face determined. Boonie caught her. Melanie started slapping at Painter and he laughed. Then he picked her up in a firefighter’s carry and walked out the door.
Silence filled the room. After an eternity, Darcy spun and glared at Boonie until he let her go, then she glared at the rest of us, too.
“The kitchen is fucking closed,” she announced. “I’m going home.”
Then she stalked out the front door without looking back. Boonie shook his head and I heard several of the guys laugh.
Jesus. What had just happened?
“Becca?” Puck stood below me, his expression serious. “You need a hand down?”
“No,” I said quickly. What I needed was to get the hell out of this clubhouse. I had no idea who that woman was or why Painter had been fighting, but I knew a bad thing when I saw it. I dropped to my butt and slid off the bar. “Can we go home?”
“Yeah,” Puck said. “Night didn’t quite go the way I expected.”
No shit.
He took my hand, stopped off to say good-bye to Boonie, Picnic, and a few others. I didn’t look at anyone—I was way too busy trying not to freak the hell out. Then we were on Puck’s bike and he kicked it to life, roaring off down the road. I held him tight, burying my head in his back, wondering what I should say to him when we got home.
PUCK
“I think you should go back to your place tonight,” Becca told me. We stood outside her apartment, which she had taken care not to unlock. Message received. “I need to think about what happened.”
“Let’s talk about it,” I replied, knowing I was fucked here. Becca was all kinds of screwed up in her head. That little show Painter put on with Melanie obviously set her emotions spinning.
“I think I saw everything pretty clearly.” Her face had closed off and she wouldn’t look at me.
“No, I think you saw something so far out of fucking context you couldn’t possibly understand it,” I argued. “Just tell me this—before the fight, were you having a good time?”
She glanced away, then nodded.
“You know I was.”
“Don’t judge what you don’t understand. That’s between them, and believe me—it’s complicated and it’s nobody’s business but theirs. Not yours, not mine, not the club’s.”