Fire Inside (Chaos #2)(30)
A knowing smile in his voice, I heard the reply, “Got gash in there?”
This voice I knew. High, one of the brothers. I liked High even if he was less approachable and good-humored than some of the other guys. He’d always been nice to me.
But at his words, my body tensed. “Gash” was one of the not-so-nice words the guys used to refer to women, not so nice in a way that I hated it, as any woman would.
“You like your nose like it is?” Hop growled and my eyes opened so they could blink.
He had been talking quietly, thinking I was sleeping.
Now he was unmistakably ticked in a way it was clear he didn’t care if he woke me.
“Come again?” High asked. His tone no longer smiling. He sounded surprised.
No, shocked.
“You like your nose like it is, brother, you shut your f**kin’ mouth,” Hop warned.
This was met with silence.
Hop broke the silence. “You not leavin’ tells me you got somethin’ to say. Say it. Got shit to do.”
“Tug and Roscoe were on patrol last night,” High declared.
Patrol?
“And?” Hop prompted.
“Three of them on the corner of Broadway and Mississippi.”
I stared at the pillow uneasily and with some confusion, since I didn’t know what these words meant, but I could feel a hostile wave rolling through the room.
“Benito put three bitches on a four-lane road that leads into the heart of the city?” Hop asked, his voice dripping with disbelief that was less incredulity and more hope that High would tell him he was joking.
“Dick has balls,” High answered, which I took as affirmative.
“Christ,” Hop muttered.
“Tug says they ousted them but those bitches know we got no beef with them so they got no danger from us. This means they ain’t scared of us. They’re scared of Benito. And you know that means, Benito sends them to a corner on Chaos, they’ll go back,” High stated. “Tack’s up the mountain, comin’ down. Roscoe reported in to him, Tack called me. You and me are up for patrol tonight. We find gash, he needs us to make a stronger statement than Tug and Roscoe can make.”
Oh dear.
What did that mean?
“Talk to Dog or Brick. Got somethin’ on tonight,” Hop told him and I closed my eyes.
“Tack wants you. You got a way with gash,” High replied, and I didn’t like the sound of that at all so I closed my eyes tighter.
“Talk to Dog or Brick, High. I got somethin’ on tonight,” Hop repeated, his voice low and impatient.
This was met with another long silence. Then, “I’ll talk with Dog or Brick.”
“Obliged,” Hop muttered and I heard the door click.
Moments later, the bed moved as Hop got back in it.
His body shifted right to mine, curving in, his hand finding the bunched up end of his tee and moving in, up my skin, toward my breast.
My body tensed.
His fingers curved around my breast, warm, claiming.
Sweet.
I pressed my lips together.
I felt him shift again before I felt his ’tache at my ear.
“Babe, know you’re not sleeping,”
I said nothing and continued to feign sleep.
Hop pressed closer. “Lady, you sleep loose and you’re wound up tight. I know you aren’t sleeping.”
I kept my eyes closed but asked, “Who’s Benito?”
His fingers around my breast curled tighter before they relaxed and his hand moved up to my chest. His body moved away from mine and I found myself on my back because his hand on my chest pressed me there.
Then his hand moved out of his tee as he rolled over me. I opened my eyes just as his fingers slid into the side of my hair and his thumb stroked light at my temple.
He looked good in the morning, his stubble around his mustache thick and dark, his eyes still holding a hint of sleep.
Not to mention, the thumb at my temple thing felt nice.
Gah!
“First,” he began softly, “good morning.”
“Good morning,” I replied, then asked again, “Who’s Benito?”
He grinned before his head dipped closer and his lips brushed mine.
That felt nice, too.
Then again, it always did.
He lifted his head and caught my eyes as he muttered, “She starts right up, not even waitin’ for coffee.”
“Who’s Benito?” I repeated.
He studied me.
Then he said, “You want it, baby, you got it.”
His hand moved to cup my jaw and I waited but not long.
“Depending on the brother, old ladies can be in the know or not. If they are, they don’t talk. Not to other brothers, not to each other. As for you, what you heard was unfortunate. I opened the door to get rid of who was behind it and I did it buck na**d so I couldn’t move into the hall. That shit won’t happen again. Beyond what you heard, you aren’t gonna know.”
There were not many sentences there but, regardless, there was a good deal to go over.
“I’m not your old lady,” I declared.
He grinned and asked, “You aren’t?”
“No,” I stated firmly.
“In my tee, in my bed, after a night where my condom stash got lighter by three, lady. Beg to differ,” he replied.