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HAWK: MC ROMANCE (Forsaken Riders MC Romance Book 5) Page 4


  “That must be where they brought me in,” she whispered to herself as she counted the steps. Seven in total, all stone and deep, leading up to a set of short double doors which were angled at a slant.

  The rest of the room was relatively empty. There wasn’t anything she could see that would give her any clues as to whether anyone else had been down there lately, but her mind did register the fact that there appeared to be a set of chains on the walls and what looked to be wrist restraints. She shuddered.

  She really was in trouble.

  Somewhere outside she heard the roar of bike engines and she jumped. She cowered closely into the corner and prayed that they weren’t all coming to find her, but with relief the sounds got more distant and she could tell that the bikes weren’t approaching the house, but leaving. She imagined them flying off down the desert into the afternoon sun and wondered if the storm was going to return. If they were leaving, could they be going back to Ironhill? Was taking Destiny just the first stage of a much bigger plan?

  She knew that it wouldn’t just be her that they were looking to punish. Surely, they would have more in store for the bike club that had been responsible for such a massive loss of earnings, face, and the life of one of their most well-loved members…

  Destiny’s head began to pound. She was freezing cold and her migraine was flooding back to her, brought on by the stress. She felt woozy and she lay down on the mattress and wedged herself up against the cold wall. Even though it made her feel worse, she also felt as if she was hiding… as if anyone who came down there wouldn’t be able to see her right away and she would have an advantage.

  She closed her eyes and breathed deeply and slowly, trying to calm herself down. The migraine flashed across her vision and blotches swirled around her. There was no time in the dank room anymore, she had no idea what was happening or how long she had been there. She drifted off to sleep with the sound of roaring engines swimming around her imagination and her body trembling with shivers.

  The only release was sleep. All she could do was switch off and hope that when she woke back up it would all have been a terrible nightmare.

  ***

  The air was so icy her muscles were stiff with cold. She couldn’t move. She was frozen to the spot and she groaned as she tried to roll onto her back and push herself up onto her hands. She opened her eyes slowly and blinked as her vision came into focus.

  It hadn’t all been a dream.

  She was still there. Held captive in a dark and dingy basement. She sighed, her heart weighing heavy in her chest. Her migraine had dispersed, but she could still feel the twinge of anxiety flowing through her. She sat upright and stretched her arms high above her head. As she did so she turned to the left slightly and her heart almost stopped as she realized suddenly that she wasn’t alone.

  There, in the darkness beside her, about ten feet away, was a man sat on a chair watching her.

  She blinked to make sure that he was real and not just a figment of her imagination. But he was there. There was no mistaking it.

  In an instant she jumped backwards and flattened herself against the wall. Her pulse was racing and her breath was short with panic.

  Was this it? Was this the end?

  The man leaned forward and his features were caught in a beam of light shining in from one of the small slits of a window high up near the door that led to the outside, and in an instant, she found herself no longer panicking, but feeling a wave of relief.

  Whoever he was, she didn’t know him.

  “Destiny?” he said in a low, deep voice.

  She didn’t dare speak, but she nodded slowly. She didn’t want to anger him, but she also didn’t know how much she could trust him, after all, he was part of the Forsaken Riders.

  He studied her for a moment. She could feel his black eyes on her, working over each curve of her body and taking her in. She felt exposed and on display, much like she had the night she had first climbed up onto the stage at Red X… but this time, she only had an audience of one.

  “Who, who are you?” she stammered. “Where am I?”

  “I think you know,” he mused.

  She nodded and bowed her head.

  “I’m in the Forsaken Riders’ clubhouse?” she asked with teary eyes.

  “Yes,” he said as he leaned back into the shadows.

  She swallowed and looked up at him again. She could make out the outline of his physique, and although he wasn’t as hulk-like as Lev, he was a big man and his muscles were bulging out of his tight t-shirt. His shoulders were wide and he had a deep chestnut tan that almost looked dirty in the darkened, underground room. His eyes were big and black and his hair was long and dark, falling softly around his face. She could make out a five o’clock shadow on his cheeks and chin, but she couldn’t be sure for certain if it was only her imagination. His teeth glinted as he reached into his back pocket and pulled out a bottle of water. He opened the cap and held it to his lips and glugged it down. Destiny felt herself swallowing and realized how dry her own mouth was. She hadn’t drunk anything since she had crawled out of bed hours before. She yearned to ask him for some, but bit her tongue. It was too soon for her to be dishing out requests.

  “I’ve heard a lot about you,” he said. “There are plenty of people around here that aren’t your biggest fans…” he trailed off and dropped the water bottle onto the floor next to his feet. Destiny watched with agony as it spilled out across the dirty ground. She swallowed again, trying to make her mouth moist.

  “I know,” she said. “And I don’t blame them.”

  “So you don’t deny your involvement in what happened at Red X?” he said angrily as he sat forward and his features were caught by the light again. She had been right about the stubble. He had a fine dark smattering across the bottom half of his face.

  “No,” she said. “But it’s not what you all think… I never wanted any of it to happen…”

  She felt the tears rising within her again. She wanted to tell him so badly about how she had been forced into it all, but she knew at this stage there was no way that he would possibly believe her.

  “Well,” he said. “I guess that’s what you’re here for…” he trailed off as he got to his feet and stretched.

  “What do you mean?” she asked hesitantly.

  “I mean,” he turned and stared down at her, “Some people seem to believe your innocence.”

  Destiny felt herself tense up. Someone was on her side?

  “What?” she asked with disbelief.

  “It’s not all enemies you have here,” he concluded. “There may be hope for you yet.” He smiled at her and she felt herself relax, even if it was just for the briefest of moments.

  He sat back down on the chair and faced her. She was still crouched in the corner, flat against the wall and on the filthy mattress, but she knew she wasn’t in any immediate danger. Whoever had brought her here, could have killed her by now if that’s what they truly had in mind.

  She looked at him. He was handsome in a way she could only ever imagine to exist. He had Hollywood looks. He wasn’t as rough and rugged as some of the other bikers she had met in her time in both towns. He was tall, broad, muscular and tanned, but even with his stubble there was a softer edge to him. He didn’t seem as wild and feral as some of the other men. It was as if he had been brought up properly and had only stumbled into that way of life by accident. He seemed more relatable to her than Lev ever had.

  She turned her eyes back to the floor, worried that she was staring at him too much, but she simply couldn’t look away.

  She could feel his eyes on her too… She felt them gloss over her… She felt him take in every inch of her quivering body as she sat there timid as a mouse and completely at his mercy. He could have done anything to her and she wouldn’t have been able to stop him, and that’s how she knew that he wasn’t at all like Levitt. He was a different breed… and more of a man than Lev could ever be.

  She rubbed her hands down h
er arms and tried to make herself warm.

  “You look like shit,” he said to her. “Are you thirsty?”

  She nodded shyly and he got to his feet, picked up the water bottle and marched to the back of the basement. Destiny hadn’t noticed it before but there was a sink right in the corner, not far from the furnace, and she watched as he turned on the faucet and filled the bottle to the brim.

  “Here,” he said as he walked back over to her.

  She took the bottle from him with both hands and as she brought it to her lips she sipped greedily. The feeling of the water spilling into her was the most incredible release from being dehydrated and dry. She relished every moment and looked up at him with adoring eyes.

  “Thank you,” she whispered.

  He nodded and sat back down on the chair in front of her and crossed his arms over his chest.

  “I’m Hawk,” he said finally after a long pause. “They’ve sent me here to look after you.”

  7.

  Hawk. His name rattled around her head like an echo. He bent forward and rested his elbows on his knees and brought his fingers in a peak up to his chin. As her eyes took him in again, she could see the edge of a winged tattoo peeking out from the neckline of his t-shirt.

  Maybe she had got him wrong… Maybe he was just like all the others.

  “What do you mean, look after me?” she asked, feeling brave.

  “I mean I’m here to make sure none of the members of this charter who are out for your blood come down here and rip you to shreds,” he said with a snort of amusement. “You have a lot of enemies here…” he leaned back and crossed his arms over his chest, “But as I said before, you also have a few friends left.”

  “Why have I been brought here?” she asked. “If it’s not to kill me… what is the reason?”

  “Pay back,” he said matter of factly. “The Iron Riders have really fucked us over… And now it’s our turn to shake things up their end… Get under their skin… Make them suffer…” he trailed off and looked past Destiny as if he was thinking of something in particular.

  “Well I hate to disappoint you,” she said. “But I don’t think taking me away is going to have the desired effect.”

  “Aren’t you Lev’s woman?” Hawk asked with confusion.

  “I suppose you could call it that,” Destiny rolled her eyes and lay back against the mattress. Just the mention of his name was bringing her migraine back, and she really didn’t want to talk about him.

  “Elaborate,” Hawk said as he pulled the chair forward, closer to her. It screeched across the floor and the sound made her wince.

  “I don’t know what to tell you,” she whispered. “But the whole thing… the accident at Red X… me being there in the first place… all of it was them. I didn’t want to do any of it…”

  “Go on…” Hawk raised his eyebrows.

  She didn’t know even where to begin without it just sounding as if she was trying to offload an excuse. How could she explain how she had been broken down by the men of Ironhill and scared into acting as their puppet… Hawk, being as strong as he clearly was, surely couldn’t and wouldn’t understand what it was like being a woman in this kind of situation.

  “I met Lev when I arrived in Ironhill,” she said as she looked across at him. “I thought he was great at first… but it wasn’t long after he managed to convince me to move into their clubhouse that he started to change.”

  Hawk snorted as if he knew the scenario all too well. He nodded and urged her to continue.

  “He treated me like a slave, and then so did the others… I was like a maid to them all… but then things started to get worse.”

  She swallowed and blinked back tears as the memories came flooding back.

  “He kept me there like a prisoner… And he knew how to scare me… I haven’t had a life of my own since I met Levitt… I’ve become a ghost of the person I used to be.”

  She felt the tears roll down her cheek and she noticed that Hawk was looking at her sympathetically.

  “But you still did their dirty work?” he asked.

  “All I did was what they forced me to do,” Destiny said with a shrug. “They told me I had to apply for the job at the club, make sure I got it, and then feed back any information that may be of an advantage.”

  Hawk snorted and clicked his teeth. He clearly didn’t like that admission.

  “But,” she continued. “I never did… I never did tell them anything… I knew deep down that I’m not that person. I was so afraid of them, but I made friends here in Slate Springs… I cared about the girls at the club… Hell I even cared about Marv. I had no idea what the Iron Riders wanted to know, but I was sure I wasn’t going to tell them…”

  “But you told them Tanner was going to be at Red X with Marv on the night he was killed?” Hawk said with a snarl.

  Destiny shook her head.

  “No,” she said. “I didn’t.”

  She watched him for a moment, letting it sink in to him that she was as lost in all of this as he was.

  “I didn’t know the Iron Riders were coming that night… and I certainly didn’t know Tanner was going to be there.”

  “So you didn’t pass back any information?” Hawk asked sternly.

  “Not one thing,” she admitted. “All I did was work there and give them lame pieces of info about how pervy Marv was and about how he didn’t have much clue about running a business.”

  “So how did they get in?” he asked.

  Destiny looked down at the floor and sighed.

  “I left the back door unlocked by accident… But I swear, I didn’t do it on any orders and I didn’t do it as a betrayal… I had no idea what the Iron Riders wanted me there for, and I sure as hell didn’t know anyone was going to end up dead. I’ve gotten myself mixed up in all of this somehow and all I want is to get out…”

  “And what happened afterwards?” he was on his feet and pacing up and down the basement.

  “I knew I couldn’t come back here,” she said. “I knew I couldn’t run to anyone in Slate Springs… I didn’t know any of the Forsaken Riders well enough, and Candy had just disappeared… She was the only person I felt like I could trust, but she was nowhere to be found.”

  Hawk nodded and studied her from his vantage point. She could tell that he was listening to her and considering everything she was telling him. She just hoped to God that he believed her.

  “And Lev?” he asked.

  “He’s brutal,” she shook her head and shuddered. “He’s been beating on me and keeping me isolated for months now. My life hasn’t been my own.”

  “How come you were out today wandering around town if that’s the case?” he looked proud of himself, as if he had just found a huge flaw in her story.

  “He passed out drunk and I made a run for it… Like I said, I have nowhere else to go… If I could have come and sought refuge here, I would have done it. But I knew that no one would believe me and that the people of this town wanted me dead.”

  She started to cry and she pulled her knees up to her chest and buried her head between them. She couldn’t bear to look at him. Going back over all of this was too painful and raw, even after six long months.

  “Okay,” Hawk said with a hint of compassion. “Don’t get upset.”

  Destiny wiped her eyes, but she was still shaking. All of this was too much for her to stand.

  “Try to stay calm,” he said. “I’m here to listen to what you have to say… And I do believe you.”

  “You do?” she looked up at him, just hoping he was telling the truth.

  “Yes,” he said. “I do… Because I know what the men of Ironhill are like… and I know what can happen when you get caught up with men like Levitt Cleveland.”

  Destiny nodded in agreement. Hawk really had no idea how evil Lev could be.

  “I’m going to get you some warm clothes,” he said as he turned to face her and backed towards the door. “I don’t think it’s fair you be down here fre
ezing like this… It’s not exactly the nicest of places.”

  She didn’t know what to say. This certainly hadn’t been the welcome she had been expecting from one of the Forsaken Riders. She smiled and nodded her head, and then he started to climb the staircase that led towards the main body of the house.

  When the door opened and he stepped up and out she could feel a blast of warm air filter down behind him and the scent of cooking. She must have been near the kitchen and her stomach started to churn with hunger. She dug her hands into her sides and willed herself to forget about things such as food, and instead reached for the bottle of water and took another long sip.

  She couldn’t tell exactly how long Hawk was gone for, but she estimated at around twenty minutes, when suddenly the door opened and a stretch of light appeared down the stairs. She held her breath, hoping that it was him and not someone else, and she sighed with relief when she saw the scuffed bottom of his jeans and his muscular frame come into view.

  “Here,” he said. “It’s not exactly ideal, but these will have to do for now…”

  He handed her a big oversized sweater that she guessed had to be one of his own. She pulled it close to her and put it on over her head. The inside was cozy and warm and she smiled at him and thanked him.

  “Honestly, you have no idea how good this feels,” she said as she nuzzled into it, the heat slowly returning back to her frozen limbs. She breathed the scent of the sweater in deeply. It was a mix of cologne and bike oil.

  Hawk bent down and handed her a big pair of socks and some sweat pants. Destiny slipped her skinny legs into them and pulled them up to her hips. They were massive on her and he laughed as she stood there with them hanging low.

  “Wow,” he joked. “Looks good.”

  Destiny felt herself blushing. She had no idea why he was being so nice to her… she certainly wasn’t used to men, especially bikers, treating her with any kind of care and respect. It was almost overwhelming.

  She sat back down on the mattress and fiddled with her hands. The silence between them was overbearing and although she wanted to ask him a million questions and get to know him better, she was aware that this was not a regular situation…