Page 73 of Reap


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“You two are on your own. Radio silence. No back-up. No one in, all in. No one can find out about it. The Viking doesn’texist and somewhere in our club I’ve a fucking mole. I also want it done in order. Prospect up to officer. And not Grim.”

“Why not Grim?”

“This is one charter. Grim needs to tell the others that we wiped them out. One charter in the largest MC in the world, and these northern MCs can take them.”

“You know they’ll never stop coming, don’t you?” The Reverend leant forward now, his hands together like he was saying a prayer.

“Aye. But not for another ten years. More. Because every time the fuckers try it, the MCs in the North stop them. We’ll stop them this time. And the next.”

“And what if it doesn’t work?”

“Then we’re all dead or wearing fucking hands on our backs. You. Angels and Demons. All of us.”

Tomahawk and the Reverend glanced at each other, something passing between them.

“Tell V he can meet with Rev to sort the details.” Tomahawk stood, the chair scraping back on the wooden floor underneath us loudly. “Now we need a fucking drink.”

*****

Darkness had consumed the coast on the ride back, Harleys roaring through the night. My hands were numb, my grip on the throttle stiff, and my mind swimming with scenarios and uncontrollable thoughts. I hadn’t seen that coming when Indie had instructed us to meet for a run up to the Valhalla’s Vandals. And now I understood why he’d brought me in to hear the plan and no one else. I’d always kept my silence. Even whensomeone tried to beat it out of me. And this one would be no different.

I glanced in my mirrors again, at the same prick of light that had been following us since we left. I hadn’t quite noticed it before, not until now. The bright white orbs didn’t move. Never getting bigger or smaller. The distance between us perfectly maintained. Too perfect.

Opening the throttle, the bike roared beneath me. Magnet glanced sideways, watching me move out of formation and racing the bike to the front, slowing as I pulled up alongside Indie. I gestured behind me and watched as he studied the mirrors before nodding at me and giving the signal to go faster. I let them pass, making the same gesture to each brother until I slipped back into position at the rear, the white lights still there. Still holding.

Waiting. Then they moved. No warning. No hesitation.

The engine behind us roared louder, the lights swelling fast as the car closed the distance in seconds. Too fast. Too deliberate. I could see it now. An Audi. Fast fucker. Sitting on the road like it meant to take us with it.

“Fuck,” I muttered, already shifting my weight as it came up hard on my back wheel.

It didn’t slow. It pushed. Metal edging too close, the front of it nudging into the space we occupied like we were nothing more than cones in the road. I swerved instinctively, the Rocket biting back under me, Magnet doing the same beside me as the rest of the boys tightened around Indie, forcing him forward, pushing him out of reach.

The car lunged again. Closer this time. I felt the rush of it at my leg, the threat of it clipping us and sending us both sliding across the tarmac.

“Go!” I shouted, though no one could hear me over the engines, and I just hoped my brothers did what I knew they should do. Protect the fucking president.

Magnet peeled with me, the two of us breaking off, drawing it away like we’d done this a hundred times before. The rest surged ahead, Indie swallowed up in the pack as they forced him out of the line of fire.

It worked. The car chose. And it chose us.

The engine screamed as it chased, headlights flooding everything, too bright, too close. I pushed the Rocket harder, weaving between lanes, the road narrowing, stretching, the world reducing to nothing but speed and survival. Magnet held tight beside me, matching every move, every shift.

Then, something changed. A flicker. His bike jolted.

Once.

Twice.

Like something had grabbed it from underneath.

“Mag—”

Too late. The rear locked. The bike snapped sideways, metal screaming against tarmac as it threw him clean off, his body slamming hard, rolling, disappearing into the dark as sparks lit the road behind him. The car didn’t stop, just drove on into the night.

I slowed quickly, not waiting for the Rocket to come to a complete stop before dropping my bike and running up the road.

Magnet was on his side, halfway off the road, his bike a few feet away like it had been gently set down instead of thrown. No fire. No blood spraying. Nothing dramatic enough to explain the way my chest locked tight.