Long Way Home (Thunder Road #3)

RAZOR AND I sit on stools at the clubhouse bar and we’re both working on math.

I got in from Louisville around nine and my plan to hang and talk with Violet went wayward when she packed up and headed home. A quick hug and a kiss and she told me she’d see me tomorrow.

Too jacked in the head to return to an empty condo, I stuck around here, playing pool, playing darts, watching the MMA fights with the other guys from the club, and then when Razor settled in to do his homework, I did the same.

We’ve been doing this since we were kids. Papers sprawled out along the bar during quiet weeknights. There’s a reddish glow on the pages from the neon signs on the wall, a low hum from the refrigerator that holds the longnecks, the background noise created by whatever sport is on TV, and the cracking of pool balls and murmur of low conversation that keep us company.

Back in elementary school, we were doing coloring sheets and seek-and-finds. Now Razor is working on college-level math. I do well in school, but don’t hold a candle to him in the brains department.

Razor absently rubs at a healing wound on his arm, then goes back to his pencil flying at a hundred miles per hour. Razor’s a genius at math. He’s also a genius at technology, writing programs and cracking computer code. Actual life skills that will help him in the future.

Me? Razor’s phone on the bar vibrates. He goes for it, stretching his arm, and his elbow collides with an open beer. It falls off the bar. In a second it’s in my grasp, then back near Razor and not a drop spilled. Yeah, Razor’s got brains and I’ve got fast hands.

As long as I was playing ball, there was a usefulness for my fast hands, but now, with football gone, I’m feeling lost in my purpose.

Razor blinks several times. “Reflexes of a ninja.”

I shrug and close my math book, today’s homework and most of what I missed last week now completed.

“I’m serious,” he says. “You border on superhero with how fast you can move.”

“Not like it helps me.”

Razor’s cold blue eyes flicker over my face. “What’s that supposed to mean?”

To be honest... “I don’t know.”

I shove my math book and folder into my pack and open my English folder. Staring at me is my makeup assignment.

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both. Instructions: Write an essay explaining how you’ve handled two roads diverging in your life. Use parts of the poem to explain how you made the decision of what path to take.

I hate English. “You do this yet?”

Razor gives a grim nod.

“What did you write about?”

He takes a slow drink from that longneck, then sets it back on the bar. “I wrote about Breanna.”

Punch to the gut. It’s been a few weeks since her parents sent her to a private school far from here. “You don’t mind our teacher reading something personal?”

“I don’t care if she knows I love Breanna. Besides, the lady hates me and probably won’t read it anyhow.”

“Still haven’t heard anything?” Breanna’s parents have forbidden them to have contact.

“The club has reached out to her parents, though. They’re trying to make things work so they’ll let her talk to me again.” He peels at the label on the beer. “Can’t help but wonder if by being away she’ll figure out she’s better without me. Find somebody else.”

Razor’s not one to talk feelings. Not one to talk much at all. He must be hurting. “I saw the way Breanna looked at you. That was love.”

“Violet loved you.” His response stings, but it’s true.

“We’re figuring things out.” She told me she loved me, and for a brief minute, all was right in my world.

Something dark flashes in his eyes. Everyone in the club was cool when Violet and I started dating, but Razor was the one who was hesitant. He and Violet were best friends growing up. No feelings or attraction. Just friends, and Razor’s protective of his friends, especially her.

“She’s not happy in the club, so how exactly are you figuring that part out?”

“We haven’t.”

He rolls his neck. “Be careful with her.”

“I will.”

“Chevy.” He waits for me to meet his eyes. “Be careful with you.”

I nod. Razor doesn’t want to see either me or Violet hurt.

My phone rings and my forehead furrows when Stone’s face pops up on the screen. It’s after eleven and past his bedtime. Quick swipe to accept, then phone to my ear. “Hey, Stone.”

“Chevy?” Don’t care for the quiet nervousness in his voice.

“It’s me. You okay?”

Razor’s now watching me like a bear ready to tear into a stranger for throwing rocks at its young. If something is going down at Violet’s, he’ll be in that mix alongside me.

“I tried calling Eli, but he didn’t answer.”

I slip off the stool and go deadly serious myself. “Eli’s in Church. Tell me what’s wrong.”

“Eli told me to keep an eye on Violet and to call him if anything strange happened.”

“Is she okay?”

Razor’s now on his feet and digging his keys out of his pocket.

“I think... It’s just that she’s downstairs in Dad’s office going through drawers. Everybody went to bed, and I fell asleep, but then I thought I heard a door open and shut. Then I heard footsteps and I was scared, but I thought of how you protected Violet, so I forced myself out of bed. Violet saw me and told me everything was okay and that she was hanging out downstairs. Then she went into Dad’s office. We don’t go into Dad’s office. Nobody goes in there.”

I wave Razor off, then rub my neck to ease the tension that had built there. “Maybe she’s always gone in there and you didn’t know.”

“No.” Stone hardens his tone. “She doesn’t. Violet doesn’t go in there. Mom doesn’t go in there. None of us go in there. Something’s wrong.”

“I get it.” But Violet’s expression when she received her Dad’s cross broke nearly all of us. Bet she’s feeling sentimental tonight, especially with this being her first official night home after the kidnapping. “I’ll swing by and check on her. Will that make you feel better?”

“Yeah, it would. Should I tell her to get out of there? Dad didn’t like us in there without him. That was his rule.”

“Leave her alone and I’ll take care of it.”

“Okay.”

We share goodbyes and I’m the one digging out my keys, but Razor’s still on alert. “Everything okay?”

“Violet’s missing her dad.”

Razor sits back on the stool, pencil in hand and already figuring out a problem. “Tell her if she needs me, I’m there.”

“Will do.”

*

I’ve been in a cage too much lately and I’ve missed the wind on my face, the vibration of my bike beneath me, the feeling of complete freedom. My headlight illuminates two prospects hanging near their bikes at the end of Violet’s drive. As long as Violet, her mom or Stone are in that house, someone from the Terror will be watching over them.