Read Outlaw Road (A MC Romance) Online

Authors: Nora Flite,Adair Rymer

Outlaw Road (A MC Romance)

OUTLAW ROAD

A MC Romance Novel

FROM
USA TODAY
Bestselling Author

Nora Flite

&

Adair Rymer

Copyright © 2015 Nora Flite/Adair Rymer

All rights reserved. Outlaw Road is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

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More books from Nora Flite:

Exposing the Bad Boy

Last of the Bad Boys

Only Pretend

For the Thrill

For the Fight

For the Bond

Hard Body Rock

Slow Body Rock

Flawed Body Rock

True Body Rock

Watch Me Fall

More books from Adair Rymer:

Too Rough for Love

Too Wild to Ride

Too Fast for Hope

Riding for Her

Table of Contents

Copyright Page

Connect with Nora!

Connect with Adair!

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Epilogue

THE END

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Connect with Nora!

www.NoraFlite.com

Facebook-
www.facebook.com/NoraFliteAuthor

Goodreads-
www.goodreads.com/noraflite

Amazon-
www.amazon.com/author/norafliteauthor

Connect with Adair!

Facebook-
https://www.facebook.com/Adairrymer

Goodreads-
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8990152.Adair_Rymer

Amazon-
http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B00P5PQ4GE

Prologue

Ronin

––––––––

“W
hat's your name, hon?”

The speaker—a bored Irish girl in a buttoned up leather halter top and tight, cut-off denim shorts—slipped into the seat next to me with practiced ease. She propped her head up to look at me, diluted emerald eyes fluttering. It was an expression that was
just
flirty enough, keeping this interaction from feeling too forced.

I knew immediately that she was an old lady—a girl claimed by one of the much older Road Devils club members sitting across the room. They'd sent her over to feel me out; to see if I was a cop, a part of a rival MC, or just some stupid fuck that had lost his way.

This charming dove was a warning shot. They wanted me to know they were watching and that I should vacate the bar while I still had use of my legs enough to walk out of here.

Otherwise, I'd end up leaving in a black body bag.

“Trouble, to most,” I said with an easy smile. A spark of interest flashed across her eyes. Maybe I
was
looking for a black bag my size. It would certainly explain my compulsion for shitty bars like these.

Nah, I didn't want to die. I wanted to live. Living, to me, wasn't the same as just being alive. It was why I chose the nomad MC lifestyle instead of falling in with any one chapter. Freedom within a free institution. Nowhere else on earth could I have what I had now.

“Buy me beer,” I said, reveling in the confusion that marred her fair features. The comment took her off guard. If I were a betting man, I'd say that this was the first time she'd ever been on the other side of such an instruction.

And I was sure as hell a betting man.

I disregarded her, calling out to the bartender. “Killians, if you have it.” Then I leaned in and breathed in the fruity satin tang of her cheap perfume. “What's
your
name, love?”

She eyed me cautiously. “Tash.” It was said with a bit of reluctance. She freed a pack of smokes from her small purse.

The surly bartender popped the bottle cap and poured the heady, dark auburn brew into the glass that he'd set down in front of me. “Four-fifty,” he said, eying me suspiciously.

“Put it on Tash's tab.” I shifted my gaze to the girl with a smirk, daring her to say otherwise. The bartender followed suit and looked at her, his brows furrowing.

Tash regarded each of us in turn. “It's alright, Pete.” Her voice was silky with curiosity.

I had her now.

The bartender disappeared to wait on another member. Tash's full lips trapped a hanging cigarette as she brought her lighter to it. She pulled the smoke in, long and slow, her eyes narrowing as she tried to figure me out. “That was ballsy for man who knows where he is.” She blew a long line of ghostly white out of the far side of her mouth “Who are you?”

It was the second time she'd asked me. Answering her only seemed right. “Your old man can call me Ronin.” I brushed a hanging strand of her hair behind her ear, then closed the gap between us. I was close enough for her to feel the heat of my breath on her cheek. I looked past her at the fifteen grizzled bikers, all of whom were staring at me. “Now run along, Love. Before I find something thicker for those pink lips to wrap themselves around.”

My audacity left her wide eyed. The corner of her agape mouth betrayed her by wrinkling into the edges of a startled smile. “Are you crazy? They're gonna kill you.” She slipped easily off the stool. Her night had just got a lot more exciting.

“They can try.” I smiled and nodded for her to go.

I was just getting started.

She looked me over, biting the creased side of her lip to stifle a smile before she turned back toward her Devils. She was flirting with danger. I could tell that she was the kind of girl that loved to be the center of attention.

The thought of a man beaten to death for coming on to her must've really gotten her juices flowing.

The Road Devils were a small MC, just west of my club's territory. They weren't openly hostile to us but that was only because they didn't have the members or the firepower to challenge any of our chapters. They were relegated to being just another dwindling remnant of the violent, mid-eighties biker wars. In twenty years, no one would even remember their name.

They knew they were on their way out, too. The Devils were relics of the badass bikers of old. They didn't even try to blend with their community, instead they lived out the old days as fast and as often as they could, waiting for the end. Spiteful, racist and pissed off at the 'perversion' of the old ways; the Road Devils had cultivated a deadly reputation for dealing with anyone foolish enough to cross their path.

I was very much looking forward to meeting them.

Tash sat on the lap of her old man and relayed what had happened during our talk; her opinions of me, whatever they were. The old man, who looked to be almost three times her age, nodded, never breaking eye contact with me. He was a gnarly-looking, bearded, long haired man that had gone completely gray. He was obviously their president.

Had the old man thought I was a just reckless nobody, they'd have rushed over to stomp me the second I leaned in to get a taste of Tash's perfume. The table he and three other members sat around was bigger and nicer than the rest. They probably used it as their meeting place when they called church, deciding things on behalf of the club.

Tash was pushed off onto her own chair while the men discussed how they wanted to handle me. She beckoned me with sultry glances, daring me to be suicidally brave enough to pursue her. Lucky for her, I was in a brave mood. I was only in that bar to get my dick sucked and to win some money. I didn't care which came first, as long as I came eventually.

Those two things would only happen if I went to church and sat down with the Devils. I stood up, downed the rest of my beer and slowly made my way across the smokey room toward them. No one approached an outlaw biker gang on their home turf without being invited first.

I wasn't
no one,
and I was done waiting around for them to fucking deliberate.

Hang-arounds—friends of the Devils MC and patrons who understood the pecking order in the bar—gave me the wide berth of a plague victim. They saw me as an oblivious dead man out for a casual stroll along the green mile, every foot fall bringing me one step closer to execution.

They didn't know if it was courage or stupidity that guided me to the ominous table that was meant only for patch holders, but whatever it was, they knew it was contagious in the eyes of the brutal Road Devils, and they sure as hell didn't want to be standing next to me when shit got really ugly.

There were no free seats where the bikers were, so I grabbed the back of a chair from a nearby table. The man sitting in it quickly shot up to let me have it. I cocked my head towards him in thanks. Not a step away, I realized that I was still thirsty and the bartender wasn't going to be coming over unless the Devils called on him. I doubted they'd do that just for me. Left without a drink, I took the generous man's beer off of him as well before parking the chair next to Tash at the Devils' table.

“Greetings, friends.” I swept my mid-length, wavy hair back, taking a sip of the stolen beer as I sat down.

“The name Ronin supposed to mean something to us,
friend
?” It was their President who had asked.

“Guess not.” I shrugged, took another sip and pulled out a small wad of bills. “Deal me in, maybe I'll tell you another name that will.”

“How 'bout we just stab you in the fucking face and take your money instead,” said a large, surly man with a bush for a mustache.

I chuckled. “You don't think you're good enough to win it from me? If you come over here, you're liable to bust your hip, old man. I’m guessing you're not as spry as you used to be.”

“You motherfucker!” The big, mustachioed biker stood up, pulling out his gun and pointing it at me. “The only thing I'm gonna be bustin' is your ass!”

The room hushed. People behind my chair moved out of the line of fire. Others just straight up left, not wanting any part of the coming bloodshed.

I put my elbows on the table and leaned toward the biker's gun. Then I out stretched my hand in a motion that said
oh well,
before clasping them back together. I met the eyes of the other four guys. “Seems the old man is out, who else wants to win some money?”

Impressed, or entertained at my carefree demeanor, the other guys just laughed.

“Sit down, Jerry,” Tash's old man chuckled. “We'll kill him
after
the game.”

I smiled, snapped up the cards and started shuffling. “Five-card?”

They nodded.

I dealt out the poker hands to all four members, even the mustachioed behemoth—Jerry. He snarled at me before reluctantly picking them up.

Five-card draw was the simplest variation of poker, easiest rules to remember when you've been drinking, so it was the game I tended to play the most. I've done the rounds enough in shitty bars like this to be scary at darts, pool and craps, but poker...

Poker was my first love.

I was downright deadly in a game of poker. These assholes had no idea what was in store for them.

The first few hands were butter, I was just lubing them up to get fucked down the line. I lost more games than I won, which was all part of the plan. If you want to run a table and make
real
money, you have to throw a few hands, lull them into a false sense of superiority. Play smart first, then, when they feel like they have you beat, you play mean.

The stack of cash in front of me grew like cancer. Three-four-five hundred... Tonight would be a nice haul. Honestly, I wasn't here for just that. I wanted to see how far I could push it. Every dangerous situation had a hard line that, when crossed, there was no coming back from. It was just bullets and bodies. The thrill for me was finding that razor's edge and seeing how far I could stroll down it without falling off.

“Another beer, Wrex?” Tash asked her old man. He grunted in affirmation, not paying her any real heed while sliding the glass towards her. Wrex had stopped telling stories when he realized how much money he was down and started really focusing on the game. The other three bullshitted everything and anything. I could see Wrex's frayed, edgy disposition finally surface. He was getting tired of losing money.

Tash looked me over again. “You want something, stranger?” The girl was as subtle as a sledgehammer, not that any of the other bikers cared enough to notice. They all had their own girls hovering around. Tash was unfulfilled and hungry. Her eyes damn near screamed for some actual excitement. That was probably how she'd gotten mixed up with these rabid, old dogs to begin with.

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