Ride Steady (Chaos, #3)(18)
It was a long walk, and when I made it to the end, balanced the pie, grabbed the handle to one of the doors, pulled it open, and chanced a look back, I saw what I had a feeling I’d see.
Not a single one of them had moved, and their eyes were on me.
More strangeness invaded but even if it was quite a distance, they had to know I was looking at them. So I lifted a hand to wave before I slid through the door.
Only the coveralls guy waved back.
I rebalanced the pie in both hands, took two steps in, and stopped because I had to due to the fact I couldn’t see a thing.
The place was dark. After the bright Denver sun, my eyes needed time to adjust.
This took time, neon beer signs finally coming into focus. Then more.
None of it good.
Tatty furniture. Pool tables. A long sweeping bar. Flags on the walls like the one flying over the auto store under the American flag. Pictures also on the walls. Harley-Davidson stickers, again stuck to the walls. It wasn’t tidy. It wasn’t even clean.
It was just scary.
“Yo!” I heard and turned my head right.
I had company.
At the curved part of the sweep of the bar, a man was standing, leaning into his arm on the bar. He had a goatee. He was large. He was rough but nonetheless very good-looking. He had a lovely redheaded woman in a dainty blouse and tight skirt in front of him on a barstool. He was standing very close to her. Although he looked firmly the manly biker yin to her girly classy yang, she clearly didn’t mind this.
Behind the bar was another man with dark, messy hair, a mustache over his lip that also grew down the sides. A patch at the indent in the middle of his lower lip. An adorable baby younger than Travis tucked securely in the curve of his arm, an arm that was decorated in tattoos of dancing flames. And finally, an elegant, tall, stunningly beautiful brunette in the curve of his other arm (which also had flames).
Last, sitting beside the redhead was a black lady in a dress I might sell a kidney for if it was my style (it wasn’t, it was chic, cutting-edge, and sophisticated, I was flirty, ruffles, and sometimes flowers, definitely butterflies, none of this I knew in a glance she’d ever wear, even upon threat of death). Her hair was coiffed to perfection. Her eyes were sharp in a way she could never play dumb and get away with it.
Those eyes, as were all the others, were on me.
And the remains of their fast food lunch was all over the bar.
“Hey!” I called and took several more steps in.
The men’s eyes dropped instantly to my skirt.
The women’s eyes moved directly to each other.
“I’m looking for Joker,” I informed them.
The women’s eyes instantly swiveled back to me.
“Say what?” the black lady asked, sounding like she was choking.
“Um… Joker.” I lifted up my pie. “He helped me out a couple of days ago. I wasn’t in the position to say a proper thank-you then. So I popped by to say it now.”
The second I was done talking, I jumped when the goatee guy turned his head to the side and roared, “Joker!”
“Holy crap,” the redhead breathed.
“This… is… awesome,” the brunette whispered.
“Girl, get your butterfly ass over here,” the black lady ordered. “I need to get a better look.”
Disregarding this order, sensing his movement, my eyes skidded to the mustachioed man to see his head dropped. He was looking to his feet, but his shoulders were shaking.
The baby in his arm gurgled.
The door behind me opened. I turned to it and saw lanky guy entering.
He looked right to the bar. “Couldn’t miss this.”
With a deep biker voice (that was not as attractive as Joker’s, but it was still attractive), that voice shaking like his shoulders, the mustachioed man replied, “Bet not.”
I was confused.
“Sister,” the black lady started and I looked to her. “I see either Joker didn’t communicate the dress code to you or, better option, you chose to ignore it, struttin’ your butterfly ass in here not wearin’ a halter top and daisy dukes.” She tipped her head to me. “Kudos to you. Be who you are. Bikers be damned.”
The redhead and brunette started giggling.
I was still confused. More so now since there were three women among me and none of them were in halter tops and daisy dukes.
“Sorry?” I asked.
“Joker!” the goateed man roared again.
I jumped again.
“What?”
This came barked from the back of the big room, and my eyes flew there to see Joker striding out of a door that appeared to lead to a hall. He did this looking irate.
He also did this looking like a tall, dark, bearded, broad-shouldered, sinister biker.
And I liked the latter.
A whole lot.
My legs started shaking.
“Company,” a gravelly voice declared.
Joker looked to me.
I nearly dropped the pie.
I held on and called a chirpy, “Hey!”
He kept striding in, his eyes glancing toward the bar then back to me. He stopped five feet away.
“I came in to, uh… take care of my tire like you said I should and I made you this.” I extended the pie to him, both hands still under it, a smile I knew was tentative on my face. “To say thanks.”