“No,” she bit out, damned cute.
“So… no,” he answered.
“Ugh!” she grunted, also cute, so he looked her way and saw her drop her head to the back of the couch, which was again cute.
He twisted to her, wrapping an arm around her and leaning up to get in her face.
“I’ll buy you a laptop for your birthday.”
She lifted her head off the couch an inch. “That’s not going to help me sell the furniture now. Dad’s paying for that unit. He has two boxes in there. We can put the boxes in the garage and he can save that money.”
“An early birthday present.”
She rolled her eyes and dropped her head back.
He knew that wouldn’t go over.
Still.
“Butterfly, you made a date with Elvira to return eight thousand dollars’ worth of clothes and shoes and two of the outfits in that mix would look spectacular on you and cost nowhere near eight thousand dollars. You got money in the bank but you won’t splurge. Thank Christ you didn’t feel the same about the panties and bras. But none of that costs as much as a laptop and you still didn’t keep it. So with that, I gotta ask, when’re you gonna lay out the cake to buy a laptop that in this day and age you need?”
She lifted her head up another inch. “After I put the bedroom furniture in the front yard, tape signs up around the neighborhood, and sit out there all day waiting for someone who’ll happen by and pay me what I’m asking, making it so I don’t have to take a hit to the savings I like having to buy a laptop.”
“That’s one way to go. But how much do you want outta that shit?”
“It all cost nearly six thousand dollars, it’s seen nearly no use, and is less than three years old, so I was hoping maybe five hundred dollars.”
He sat back, still turned to her and she came up.
“Six thousand dollars?” he asked.
“His mother picked it,” she mumbled. “It includes mattresses, which are expensive, and the furniture wasn’t exactly Ikea.” Her eyes slid away. “She might break into hives if she went to Ikea. Though the maze bit scares me, I love the bottom floor where all the gadgets are.”
“How ’bout this,” he ignored her rambling on Ikea and the fact she spent six times more on a guest bedroom set than he did on rent his first year away from his dad. “I take the laptop in and see if Cherry’s got a fix on someone who looks at computers. She’s got one in the office, it can’t work all the time, and the woman is a lot of things, but an IT geek isn’t one of them. We also pass it around you got that shit available. But you don’t take anything less than three K for it, Carrie. If it’s near-new and quality, you do not take that hit. You sell for as much as you can, get a laptop that’s dependable, and bank the rest.”
“That sounds like a plan,” she said.
That was easy.
Now for the last.
“You’re worried about your dad payin’ for that unit, we’ll shift crap around at the Compound or the stockroom at the store. We put it there.”
She grinned. “My manly man biker. He has an answer for everything.”
“My goofball Butterfly. She’s got a knack for makin’ me hard even when she’s bein’ a total goof,” he shot back.
Her eyes fired and her hand came up to hit his chest.
“Little high, baby,” he muttered.
Her gaze heated further, but as she slid her hand down, she asked, “Is this much sex natural?”
That said her ex not only didn’t have talent, but it would seem he also didn’t have stamina.
“Natural to what?” he asked back, going in, aiming for her jaw.
“Natural to a body’s health. I mean, I wouldn’t want you to have a heart attack in your twenties with all the effort you put in to pleasuring me.”
Pleasuring me.
And the woman didn’t think she was a goofball.
He grinned, finished running his lips down her jaw, lifted up, and pressed closer.
“I think my body can hack it,” he told her.
“Well that’s good,” she mumbled, eyes on his mouth, which he felt on his mouth and also in his dick.
“What you want, Carrie?” he whispered.
She lifted her gaze to his and whispered back, “You can start by kissing me, sweetie.”
He started there.
Some time later, he finished a fuckuva lot differently.
Tack
Tack stood on the deck of his house, his eyes to the silent dark of the woods on his mountain.
He had his phone to his ear and it was ringing.
“Tack,” Knight greeted.
“Yo, you hear?” Tack asked.
“Not yet,” Knight answered.
“Lee found Tine. He sang for Hank. They’re booking Monk right now for conspiracy to commit murder,” Tack told him.
Knight was silent.
Tack gave him that for a few beats before he said low, “We need to deal.”
“He stands trial,” Knight returned quickly. “He goes down. I want him to squirm.”
“Agreed,” Tack replied.
“He’ll be taken care of after he goes down.”
Tack drew breath in through his nose.
Then he stated, “You got a Chaos marker.”
“No,” Knight said quietly. “No marker from Chaos. I do this for a woman I didn’t know named Heidi.”
Tack heard the disconnect.
He didn’t smile at his phone.
He dropped his hand and stared at the quiet peace of his mountain.
Then he turned and went inside to his woman and their boys.
Chapter Twenty-One
My Place
Carissa
THE NEXT EVENING, I was at the stove making dinner. Joker was still at Ride. There was a meeting of the brothers. Therefore, for the first time when we’d both worked during the day, he was going to be home later than me.
This meant I got my house all to myself, another first.
I didn’t mind solitude. I liked it.
But I wasn’t a woman who wanted a big family just because.
I preferred company.
So I was looking forward to him being home.
On that thought, my phone rang.
I turned down the water that would eventually be boiling the broccoli and went to the counter where my phone was.
I saw the name on the screen and sighed.
Then I took the call and put it to my ear.