Breezy Simmons leaned against her pickup for a moment,
staring at the large building that housed the Torpedo Ink
Motorcycle Club. Her heart beat so hard in her chest she was
afraid she might vomit. The world spun uncontrollably, and
she quickly leaned down, putting her head between her legs,
drawing in great gulps of air. She caught a glimpse of two
men on the other side of the compound as her head went
toward the asphalt, and she didn't recognize either of them.
That made her pounding heart sink.
She couldn't possibly have the wrong club. This had to be
them. She was running out of time and options. She slowly
righted herself and took another cautious look around. The
two men stared at her from across the parking lot. She was
careful not to look at them too long. She didn't want them
coming anywhere near her. She needed to get in and out very
fast.
The Torpedo Ink compound was extremely large and had a high
chain-link fence surrounding it. There was even razor wire
up on top of the fence, making the place look like a
fortress. The rolling gates were wide open, and she'd driven
her truck right inside, parking as close to the clubhouse as
possible. She deliberately left the door to her beat-up
pickup open and the engine running. Hopefully, no one
recognized her, and she could get in and out of the building
quickly, once she asserted these were the right people, the
ones she was looking for.
In the early morning hours, the club was just beginning to
stir. Clearly, they'd partied hard over the weekend. In the
enormous side yard, the one with the beautiful ocean view,
she could see embers in fire pits glowing as the breeze
stirred them up. A man with his back to her watered them
down with a hose. He wore a tight tee and jeans, but no
colors. Still, she knew this was the home of the club that
called itself Torpedo Ink. She sent up a silent prayer that
this was the one she'd been looking for.
There were empty bottles strewn around the grass and on the
ground to the side of the building in the wide expanse of
open field. Cars, motorcycles and trucks were scattered
around the parking lot, although no one parked where the
club did. Their motorcycles were lined up neatly and a
prospect watched over them. He sat on the curb looking at
her. She was parked too close to the precious bikes, but she
didn't care—other than it had drawn the attention of the
prospect.
Another long line of motorcycles was parked a short distance
down from the clubhouse and a prospect watched over those
bikes as well. He looked at her without much interest, which
indicated to her that these bikes belonged to a visiting
club. He wasn't as interested in protecting the grounds as
the one closest to the clubhouse.
She had to get this over with. Just being in such close
proximity to an MC made her sick. The fact that she knew
what went on at the party made her even sicker. That this
might be his club, and she had to risk running into him,
made all that far worse.
Breezy squared her shoulders, dragged the envelope off the
seat and turned all in one motion. The prospect was on his
feet. If she knew for certain this was the right club, she
would have thrust the letter into his hands and left, but
she was guessing from a process of elimination.
She purposely hadn't kept track of him, especially when
she'd heard, a year after she'd left, that eighteen members
of the Swords had set up the international president for
assassination and had, allegedly, wiped out a number of
members and then disappeared. She knew who those eighteen
members were immediately and knowing them, she knew it was
possible when others said it wasn't. She'd run as far from
the life as she could and now she was pulled right back in.