Welcome to the Dark Side: Chapter 37
Welcome to the Dark Side: A Forbidden Romance (The Fallen Men Book 2)
Thank fuck it was raininâ.
Yeah, it fit the mood, which was good. Loulou woulda liked that.
But even better, it hid the fact that my grown ass son was cryinâ beside me as he comforted his woman and his sister. I didnât blame him for cryinâ. How could I when Iâd spent the past forty-eight hours leaking tears like a broken fuckinâ faucet?
Besides, I was fuckinâ thankful that he had it in him to take care of Cress and H.R.
I was barely keepinâ myself together.
The crater in the middle of my chest kept yawning open like the jaws of a monster to swallow up every ounce of strength I mighta had under other circumstances. I was no father, no Prez. I was barely a man, held together by three bottles of Canadian whiskey and a serious prayer.
Thatâs right, Zeus fuckinâ Garro, President of the maddest, baddest, fuckinâ richest MC in the country was praying.
And he was praying with every atom of his crumblinâ black soul that God would send Lou back to him.
She wasnât gone yet, I reminded myself for the thirteen-thousandth time. She was hanging on tight to life, fighting like only my little warrior could.
The docs said she had inhalation injury made worse by the preexistinâ condition of her lungs âcause of the chemo. There was a thick tube stuck down her throat and theyâd put her in a medical coma so her body could have a chance of healinâ.
Wasnât allowed to see her for the first five hours I sat there in the hospital reception, yellinâ and demandinâ to be let in to see my girl.
They refused.
She was seventeen and technically, still under the guardianship of her parents.
So, Iâd had to wait five hours while the cops contacted the Lafayettes then visited with Lou. The mayor had glared at me as he came and went but there was genuine fuckinâ panic and sorrow in his face when he left after an hour of visitinâ.
It was the panic, I was stuck on most.
Iâd been railinâ at the fuckinâ nurses and doctors for the eighth time about lettinâ me in to see Lou when Phillipa Lafayette appeared beside me.
Sheâd been wearing a pink suit with a pink band in her hair. It struck me in the throat that she looked like an older, sadder Loulou. Phillipa tried to hide it behind her conservative, ugly clothes and a shit-ton of pearls, but she was almost just as much a bombshell as her daughter.
Thank fuck, Iâd gotten to Lou in time to stop her from becominâ her frigid bitch of a mother.
The woman had stared at me for a long minute. Watched my chest heave with the force of my fury, my fists tight at my sides and my eyes, I knew it, were crazy. I was a beast at the end of his rope, threatening to go green as the Hulk in about two seconds fuckinâ flat if someone didnât let me see Lou.
âYou can come in,â sheâd said in such a soft voice Iâd had to lean forward to hear it and sheâd flinched as Iâd done it.
âCome a-fuckinâ-gain?â
Her lips pursed and she held her purse to her chest like a shield. âI said, you can come in and see her. Sheâd want that.â
I blinked at her for a sec before decidinâ not to give a fuck about the reasons for her change of heart.
âPut my fuckinâ name on the approved list,â I snarled as I stormed across the hall and into the white room housinâ my fallen angel.
Since then, this was the third time Iâd been forced to leave her bedside and the only time it was worth it.
My brother Mute deserved a funeral befitting of the gods.
And we were givinâ it to him.
Every single brother from every chapter of The Fallen on the west coast of North America and our neighborinâ province of Alberta was in First Light Church Graveyard. They spread nearly as far as the eye could see like a murder of ravens and when weâd done the funeral procession through town, seemed every citizen in Entrance had come out to watch The Fallen flood Main Street on a tide of rolling thunder.
Only family was close to the deep wound in the earth where the casket was beinâ lowered, a circle of people linked by choice insteada blood that would always and had before, bled for each other.
Cops ran like a loose chain-link fence around the perimeter, hemminâ us in and watchful of so many outlaws in one space. It was standard procedure for an MC funeral to have the cops up our ass but I fuckinâ hated that they were there today watchinâ like they always did instead of . The only thing they were fuckinâ good for was keepinâ the press at bay.
âZeus Garro, I understand you would like to say a few words.â Pastor Lafayette was doinâ the ceremony. It was fucked as shit but I respected the guy. He didnât like my way of life, didnât like that his granddaughter was livinâ that same life beside me, but he supported me anyway because it was what she wanted.
So, he was doinâ the ceremony for a biker and not carinâ that it was unconventional as fuck.
I stomped through the mud to the microphone beside the pastor and pulled my presidency all around me like a fuckinâ shroud. The sound of tears underscored the rain, could see the tracks of âem on the cheeks of women and brothers alike. This was not a happy time for the club. The loss of a brother hadnât happened to the main charter of the MC since Iâd killed Crux and inadvertently started this whole mess.
It was up to me to be strong, to be Atlas bended on one knee with the world on my shoulders, holdinâ up my family for as long as they needed that from me.
I took a deep breath, thought of Lou to give me strength, and started.
âWonder if those motherfuckers who ended Mute woulda done it if theyâd seen a movie of his life. They woulda seen a neglected, abused kid with huge brown eyes wiser anâ more soulful than ten grown mens. They woulda seen his character grow with the struggle of beinâ different, how he found acceptance with a brotherhood that nurtured âim and how he threw himself body and fuckinâ soul into givinâ that back and more.â The sobs were louder now, in my ears with more in my throat. Fuck, if I was gonna cry but fuck me if Iâd ever had a better reason to.
âYeah, I wonder if they woulda killed a man like that if theyâd known him; if theyâd known his quiet fuckinâ wit, how he could play us all like fuckinâ pawns without even sayinâ a word. He lived by a simple mandate like the rest of us, brotherhood, loyalty, livinâ free and even in the end, dyinâ hard. Brings me some small degree of comfort to know my brother died how he woulda wanted to, defendinâ his and my girl. Whatever place heâs in where fallen angels go, I know heâs livinâ a dead manâs dream âcause a soul like his woulda bought him first class seats to paradise.â
I nodded out at the sea of my people, catchinâ eyes with Nova as he held Lila, with Buck as he cranked the mechanism that lowered Muteâs black coffin into the cold, wet earth.
âAnd while Mute finds peace in the Underworld, weâll be busy up here findinâ justice for âim,â I declared, hand over the microphone so only the force of my lungs carried the promise of vengeances to the eager ears of my brothers.
A shout swelled in the air like a punctuation mark.
I nodded, tipped my chin at the pastor, and stepped down.
King was the first to step forward when the coffin was finally bedded down, a silver coin in his hand, probably a nickel. His face was gaunt like a fuckinâ skeletonâs, his lips held tight against the force of his misery. I wanted to go forward and wrap my kid in my arms like Iâd done when he was a boy, but he was a man now and it was manâs walk to the edge of the grave to pay last respects.
âGo easy, brother, knowinâ you touched our lives like the hand of God âimself.â He flipped the coin into the grave, payment for the ferryman or the pearly gates, wherever death mighta taken him.
The Fallen always pay their debts, even in death.
So one by one, my brothers stepped up to toss a coin onto the coffin and pay Muteâs way to Eden.
It took half an hour just for the Entrance brothers and when I stepped up last, we were all soaked through past the skin to the fuckinâ bone.
But I took my time âcause I had two coins, one for me and one for Lou.
My heart burned like a torch in my chest, never fuckinâ goinâ out, not since Iâd rode into Entrance straight to the fuckinâ hospital and found Lou with tubes in her mouth and so many damn needles in her arms she looked like a pin cushion. Fuck but she shoulda been there beside me. I coulda been strong for her the way I didnât feel strong for anyone else.
Instead, she was fightinâ for her life in a fuckinâ hospital bed and her brother, my brother, was in the cold ground.
âRest in peace, Walker Nixon,â I said, usinâ his full name for the last time. âDeserve more than this for the guardinâ you gave my girl. Wish you could know Iâd sell my fuckinâ soul to get you back. For you, for me, for the club and for our girl.â
I tossed the coins into the ground but couldnât see âem through the wet in my eyes.
Fuck me.
A small hand went to my back and I jerked around to see H.R. starinâ up at me with red-stained eyes.
âDad,â she whispered through her tear-swollen throat.
I lashed my arms around her and carted her up against my chest, tryinâ to breathe through the knife in my heart as I held my sobbinâ girl in a group of mostly grown men who wanted desperately to sob too.
âNeed to talk to you.â
The party was windinâ up, not down.
It was the way of biker funerals. First came the procession markinâ âMuteâs Last Rideâ, then the ceremony, then the reveling. No one could celebrate a life well lived like my MC brethren.
The clubhouse was overfilled and spillinâ out into the complex, the big industrial lights on across the lot so that everything was coated in yellow. People were shitfaced, high off their rockers and drunk as Irishmen. Families had left when the food the old ladies had put out disappeared and now it was just the brothers, partying hard to forget and celebrate.
I wasnât.
I didnât want to be with my fuckinâ brothers drinkinâ beer and doinâ shots.
I wanted to be by my girlâs bedside just in case she woke even though the docs told me that wouldnât be for days yet even if she did wake up.
She would.
She would wake up âcause no God was cruel enough to give her to me only to rip her from my hands months later. No God would take away the idol of a manâs religion just when he needed it most.
Sheâd wake up.
And I needed to be at the clubhouse with my brothers. They needed their Prez. I loved Lou more than most grown men are capable of ever lovinâ anythinâ. Loved her enough to kill and die for her âcause only the finality of death could match the finality of my kinda love for that girl.
But it was my brothers who had taught me how to love like that. To do it eternally with loyalty and pride.
So, I was leaninâ against the wall beside the front door of the clubhouse, sippinâ a beer gone warm and listeninâ to Bat, Buck, Blackjack, and Priest shoot the shit.
Then, Bat said, âNeed to talk to you.â
âSo, talk.â
He rubbed his head and I noticed his hair was longer, that all our hair was longer now. Itâd been nearly two months since weâd shaved our heads for my girl.
âHate to say this, âspecially right now, but we donât got shit to go on âere. The cops have been fuckinâ assholes about not sharinâ their intel and the only thing we know is that Ace Munford is leadinâ the Nightstalkers and the manâs got a helluva a bone to pick with you. We donât know where their fuckinâ base is or how they knew about Lou and H.R. beinâ up at the cabin unless we have a rat in our ranks.â
ââCourse we have a fuckinâ rat,â I growled. âI need to know who the it is so I can gut the bastard with a chainsaw.â
Blackjack laughed. âWhat makes you so sure thereâs a rat? They coulda been followinâ Lou or H.R. knowinâ theyâre your weak spot and then just struck when the chance came.â
Buck thumped him on the back with a meaty fist. âDonât be a fucktard, B.J.â
B.J. ran a hand over his pale buzzed head and peered up at me. âSheâs your weakness, boss. Just sayinâ you should be careful with who knows that. Shame somethinâ happened to her âcause of ya.â
I took a step forward, the fury that lay at the heart of me ignited with one fuckinâ little match. Trouble was I was fuckinâ furious with myself. âYou wanna say that again, brother?â
He laughed nervously. âNah, listen, I just meant, sheâs a good girl. Maybe, maybe this is a sign that this ainât the life for âer.â
His words fucked me dry. They were the same words been goinâ âround my head for the last four days since the fire.
She was too good for this life.
Too good for murder, wrath and greed, too good for all the vices I lived and breathed.
My girl was an angel and Iâd taken her to the dark side like she had a hope in hell of thrivinâ there.
I did it âcause I was a selfish fuckinâ bastard and once a manâs tasted the kinda sweet ambrosia Louâd given me, there was no goinâ back.
So I didnât pray to God that Iâd leave her to a better life ifâno âshe pulled through.
I knew myself and I knew I wasnât capable of that level of self-sacrifice.
But I did pray.
I went every goddamn day to First Light Church and sat in the same front pew Louâd spent almost every Sunday morninâ of her life in âtil she found me again, and I fuckinâ prayed to God for her life. Pastor fuckinâ Lafayette had seen me the first day and sat with me each time, sayinâ nothinâ just lendinâ me his goodness so I could use it to amplify my own and make my prayers shine brighter.
If Godâd give her back to me, Iâd never let âer go. Not to violence, wrath or greed. Not to vice or virtue. Not even to death.
Iâd keep her safe, I promised the Almighty, and Iâd do it keeping âer at my side and guardinâ her âtil my last fuckinâ breath.
Still, I didnât need fuckinâ B.J. remindinâ me of the dark voices in my head sayinâ I was no good for her and where the fuck did he get off thinkinâ that shit himself?
âYou got a problem with me, Blackjack?â I asked low.
Somethinâ dark flashed in his eyes then fled like prey. âSorry, brother, you donât need my shit.â
âDamn right, he doesnât.â Buck hit him again, this time in the shoulder. âShut your mouth âtil I tell you to fuckinâ open it again.â
âPrez, thereâs someone here you need to see,â Axe-Man said as he came up the steps.
âWho?â
âLysander Garrison.â
Immediately, I was tearinâ down the steps to the front gates. The fuck stood there talkinâ to a mean lookinâ Nova.
âWhat the are you doinâ here? It better be to fuckinâ explain why you were with those fuckers who killed my brother and got my girl wastinâ away in the hospital,â I roared as I picked the six-foot-two motherfucker up by the neck and shoulder and shoved him into the chain-link fence.
He blinked at me, calm as could fuckinâ be. âIt is.â
âStart talkinâ then.â
âAfter you let me go and told me to get lost forever, Officer Danner picked me up as I was hightailinâ it outta town. Told me he needed my help puttinâ the Nightstalkers down for good.â
Buck snorted behind me. âLike the cops could take down an operation like that. Fuckinâ pigs.â
Blackjack laughed his nervous, yippy laugh.
I turned to glare at him and found him sweatinâ, lookinâ back and forth between Lysander and me like we were puttinâ on a tennis match.
He was high as a fuckinâ kite and somethinâ about havinâ a high brother involved with club business had always seemed like a bad fuckinâ idea.
âGet him in a cold fuckinâ shower âfore he keels over and dies,â I ordered Priest who immediately acted, his face twisted with disgust as he dragged the tweaker away.
âYou gonna tell me where those motherfucking Nightstalkers are hidinâ?â I asked, turninâ back to Lysander.
âNo,â he said. âBut mostly âcause they donât have a base of operations here. They have a clubhouse down in Vancouver right now, but they wonât relocate âtil they flush you out. Like I said, Iâm workinâ with Danner and even the cops canât get a location on âem.â
âWhy the fuck would you help Danner? You think I was lyinâ when I told you Iâd put you in the ground if you showed your face again in Entrance?â
âWanted to be able to look my sister in the eye again and tell âer Iâd made things right.â
âAnd how are you makinâ things right? Far as I can tell, my brother is dead âcause of you,â I snarled in his face.
âI know. Iâm so fuckinâ sorry. But Ace is a maniac and no matter how long I ride with him, I canât predict what that high motherfucker is gonna do. Someone told him your girls were up at that cabin. One of The Fallen.â
âFuck,â I roared into his face and squeezed his neck tighter. âWho!?â
âDonât know. All I came âere to tell you was that Dannerâs a good cop and between the two of us weâre fuckinâ close to nailinâ âem.â
âAnd what the fuck do you want me to do about it?â
I stared at his neck to center the anger threateninâ to overwhelm me. I stared at the pulse in his throat thumping up against my thumb and I thought about how easy it would be to snap his neck. Iâd done it before; it wasnât as hard as youâd think.
âOne of the players, Warren, he has a thing for Louiseââ His voice cut off with a garble because I now had my hand pressed to his windpipe.
âYou dare to fuckinâ mention her name when sheâs barely fuckinâ breathinâ?â I said quiet. âDonât think you understand that Iâm a fuckinâ monster, Sander, and I ainât afraid to kill a man. Not even one thatâs kin to my sonâs woman or one in bed with the fuckinâ police. Iâll snap your neck and have you with the pigs in record time. You know it takes pigs eight minutes to eat a full-grown body?â
Finally, there was fear in his eyes and his body stank of it, of sweat and somethinâ more metallic.
âYou go back to Danner and you tell him to get his glory on his fuckinâ own. The Fallen is not helpinâ anyone but their own,â I growled then shoved off him before I throttled âim and stalked off to take my frustrations out on a fuckinâ punchinâ bag instead of Garrisonâs motherfuckinâ face.