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Mine Forever #1
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Mine Forever Book 1
The Billionaire Biker Series
Weston Parker
BrixBaxter Publishing
Contents
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Description
Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
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Copyright
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Description
I never cared about my family’s billions.
I’m a military man, honorable and true.
But my brother felt differently. He had me tossed in prison for a crime I didn’t commit, and now, all I think about is revenge.
It slowly becomes an obsession until something finally breaks through the dark cloud.
My high school sweetheart.
It’s been ten years since graduation, and she isn’t a little girl anymore.
She’s a woman. My woman.
I thought prison would undo me, but nothing could prepare me for the secret my girl held back from me.
A baby. A family. One I didn’t know I had.
And now my brother knows, too. He’ll use anything to destroy me, including my kid.
Money creates opportunity, but there’s a cost it requires. The payment for wealth is high, and my brother is willing to go all in.
I might have started out honorable, but now?
There’s nothing this ex-con won’t do to keep his family safe.
Even kill.
Introduction
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Chapter 1
Ax
My eyes shoot open as the nightmare collapses around me. A nightmare of smoke, filled with the cries of women and children, and the leaden gazes of corpses with empty eyes.
Without looking at a clock, I know it’s six am. I’ve woken up at six since basic training, a habit that hasn’t changed in my present surroundings, although I have stopped sitting bolt upright after hitting my head on the bunk above me a half dozen times.
I rub my eyes with the palms of my hand then move over to sit on the edge of my bunk. The bed above me lays empty, a testament to my reputation. Roommates don’t last in my cell. The warden finally accepted that point.
I stand, stretching my muscles and staring past the bars. Today begins like every other day for the last five years. But it won’t end the same.
Today everything changes.
Two hours later, it’s time for breakfast. The cells open in coordination with a shrill buzz. I consider staying in my cell but decide a fight with the guards isn’t worth it today, so I get in line with the rest of the inmates and shuffle slowly toward the mess hall.
Carrying my tray of unappetizing slop toward my usual table, I catch sight of a figure pushing his way toward me. I almost decide to swing my tray in an arc, spraying its contents all over the room and smashing the metal tray into his scarred face. Instead, I let him approach. Guess I’m getting soft in my old age.
“Today’s the day, isn’t it?”
His voice is gruff, his eyes filled with an unfamiliar light. Rico scratches at his neck which is decorated with an off-center tattoo of the Virgin Mary. We’ve had our fair share of run-ins, and his crew has, at last, realized that I’m not worth the effort. But every now and again, Rico gets bored and decides to take a run at me. Is he bored today?
I stare at him, then nod. He shakes his head, a rare grin appearing on his face, making him seem even more sinister, surprisingly. “Won’t be the same without you.”
I resist the urge to roll my eyes. “Don’t tell me you’re becoming sentimental.”
“What’s that word mean?” he asks, his face blank but a cagey look in his eyes.
I start to push past him, but he grabs my shoulder. I tense, and he releases his grip, his hands in front of him, palms up. “I wanna ask you for a favor.”
Now I’m shocked. Rico Reyes asking me for a favor. Everything is changing, perhaps faster than I’m ready for. “What do you want?”
“I got a sister. She’s younger. A good girl. Angel.”
“What’s your sister got to do with me?”
“I want you to look in on her. Check on her for me.”
“Why?”
Rico looks past me, his expression stony. “You’re not like us, man. You don’t belong here, not really. You’re an honorable man. A hero.”
An honorable man. A hero.
Maybe once, but those days are gone, ground away by five years of grueling monotony, locked in a cage like an animal.
“You’re wrong,” I say. “I’m not a hero. I’m a villain. Find someone else to babysit your kid sister.”
“Puto,” he spits out under his breath. Without warning, his lieutenants appear behind his shoulders, twin snarls on their faces. “I tried to be nice.”
The one on the left charges forward, and at last, I do swing my tray, the fluorescents glinting off its surface, creating a blur of light that collides with the asshole’s jaw. A spray of slop covers Rico and his companion, and I allow myself a grin.
The first one’s down, but the other one is on me, trying to get a grip on my neck. Driving my elbow into his stomach, I whip my fist back, enjoying the cracking sound his nose makes. His hands slide off me.
It’s just Rico and me now. He’s shorter but has a few pounds on me. And he’s mean as a goddamn viper.
“Break it up, ladies,” comes the lazy drawl of the captain of the guards, his lackeys swarming around him. The captain looks me up and down. “Fighting today, Craven? Do you want to stick around here?”
I shrug, then start heading toward the exit. I’d rather spend the rest of today in my cell. Hell, maybe I’ll even feel nostalgic about the old six-foot by eight-foot box after I leave it behind.
“Don’t bother,” the captain says, grabbing my arm. “Your walking papers are in.”
Although I’ve known I would hear those words today, it still feels surreal. Today is the day I leave prison. After five years of staring at gray walls, I’ll see blue sky again.
For as long as it lasts.
The captain leads me past the guard shack and to the clerk’s office where I retrieve the things I had in my possession when I landed here. A metal lighter engraved with a tiger. The keys to my bike. A leather wallet.
I pick up the wallet and flip it open. The ID and credit cards are there, but the pocket is empty. I had over two thousand dollars when I was brought behind the walls of Tabor Correctional Institution. Someone has lined their pockets compliments of me.
A few stone-faced prisoners are mopping the floors as I am escorted down the long hallway toward the exit. One watches me with eyes filled with some unnamed emotion. There’s a jagged scar running along one side of his face, still pink and raw.
I remember giving him that scar.
I have one that matches, along my upper arm.
The prisoner had been a lone wolf, brought inside three months ago and not claimed by any of the prison cliques. He’d watched me for days, and I’d ignored him, assuming he was just another fresh fish considering asking me for protection. He woul
dn’t be the first, and I’d give him the same answer I’d given anyone else who suggested teaming up.
Keep moving. I’m not interested.
But it turns out the fish hadn’t wanted to join Team Ax at all. Instead, he’d determined to stab me and watch me bleed out all over the commissary floor.
He’d been behind me in line as we waited to get through the door. One minute I’m considering which toothpaste to buy this time and do I really like the fake mint flavor of the last tube, the next I’m fighting for the shiv he’s got locked in his sweaty hand.
He managed to slice into my arm before I knocked him back into the wall and pinned him there. The blade came up between us, and I hammered at his hand, recommending that he drop it.
Instead, he made a last-ditch effort , bringing the shiv up higher. I countered, and he’d ended up raking the nasty blade over his own face before he dropped it.
He spent time in the infirmary, and then solitary confinement. They’d stopped sticking me in solitary, knowing that it had no effect on me. A box is a box, no matter how small or silent. When the fish got out, he’d avoided me, but his eyes still followed me, promising their revenge.
Get in line, asshole.
It isn’t long before the outside gate is opening in front of me and I talk a few short steps to freedom. It doesn’t feel any different once I’m on the other side.
A black town car is waiting for me. The driver hops out to grab my door when he sees me head in his direction. I nod, then slide into the air conditioning. The leather seats are smooth, the car purring gently. The driver shuts his door and looks in the rearview mirror expectantly.
“Do you have something for me?” I ask.
The driver tosses a heavy envelope onto the backseat.
“Cape Craven,” I tell him, and he bobs his head and puts the car into gear. As we roll away from Tabor Correctional, I remember the last words I’d said to the guard captain.
“Keep my cell warm for me.”
I rip open the envelope. A smartphone slips into my hand. I set it aside, pulling out the sheaf of papers. Clipped to the top is a stack of hundred dollar bills.
I fit the bills into my wallet and tuck it back away. Riffling through the papers, I realize I’m wearing a scowl. My brother’s face stares out at me from the stack, and I resist the urge to rip the fucker’s photo to pieces. Starting to read, I realize I’m fumbling through the same sentence over and over.
The memory of what happened is pushing its way to the forefront of my mind, making the words on the page an unreadable jumble. Five years behind bars is a long time, but I remember the last time I saw him as if it had just happened.
Brent’s face smirking at me across the courtroom as the bailiff led me away to begin my half-decade vacation in what the inmates called Southeast Hell. After he’d told one lie after another on the stand, each lie pushing the jury closer to a conviction.
My little brother had me thrown in jail and hadn’t even had the decency to tell me why.
It isn’t that I don’t have theories, the most logical being that he’d wanted me out of the way. I’d recently returned to Cape Craven, the prodigal son turned hero. I’d been patching things up with Dad, sorting out the pieces I’d left shattered when I’d run off to enlist straight out of high school.
That all ground to a halt when I’d been sentenced with extortion, assault, and armed robbery. The charges were ridiculous, the crime itself farcical. But that didn’t stop me from spending 1,825 days in prison.
Forcing myself to concentrate, I skim through the latest material I had my agent compile. Craven Industries seems to be lumbering along, confidence in leadership eroding of late. My brows shoot up as I see that dear old Dad wasn’t present at the last few board meetings, and that my darling brother led the most recent shareholder’s meeting himself.
The town isn’t faring well either, in the wake of declining profits. Our company is the largest employer in the county, and a dip in business for Craven Industries means lost jobs and tightened belts. It doesn’t take much for sentiment to turn in a town like Cape Craven, and I know I already have a black mark against me in the court of public opinion without the company going downhill.
Not like it matters what people think of me. Taking my revenge on Brent isn’t going to make me look like a saint. Or a hero.
Then I turn a page and see a picture of her. My heart freezes in my chest, and for a moment I can’t breathe. I flick my eyes away from the page and take a breath.
Sabrina Jacobs.
Her eyes remind me of the ocean pounding off the cape on a sunny day. Golden skin, dark blond hair, and an expression that is no less sweet than it had been on the day I first laid eyes on her, back in junior high.
I can’t help myself. My gaze returns to the picture, my mind working to memorize her features. As if she isn’t already burned into my memory permanently.
It’s been five long years in prison. Five years since I tasted her skin, since I felt her velvet wetness around me. Fuck. My cock is hard in a split second, remembering our time together.
She’s not alone in the picture. There are other women and a gaggle of children. The photo is labeled “Craven Foundation.” There is no other information.
Moving past Sabrina’s picture, I scan the rest of the pages. There are a few rumbles of dissatisfaction in Brent’s recent leadership. A few folks are not so impressed with the Ivy League Asshole, as I’ve taken to calling him in my head.
A savage sense of satisfaction washes over me. For a man the town thinks walks on water, his knees are starting to look a little wet. And once I show up, it won’t be long before his head sinks below the surface.
And I drown that motherfucker.
Chapter 2
Sabrina
The clouds that started rolling in shortly after dawn now cover the town, hiding the sun. I regret not bringing a sweater with me. I’m slowly chewing a turkey sandwich on my bench in the small park across from the aged courthouse.
Just another day in paradise.
I only have thirty minutes for lunch, and Ms. Birch is strict about time. She laid into me earlier in the week about “excessive lunches,” her pinched face resembling a belligerent bird. “I’ve made exceptions, Sabrina, exceptions that are unfair to your co-workers. I can’t make anymore.”
Never mind that the only co-workers I have are the night janitor that comes in once a week, and the parade of high school interns that stop in from time to time before they go away to their prestigious colleges. As the years pass, their young faces start to blur, just like the memories of my own time here as an intern.
Before I’d settled into permanent disappointment at my own choices career-wise.
In addition, none of these so-called co-workers are single mothers that are also caring for an aged mom who has more doctor’s appointments than bingo nights. Sometimes there just aren’t enough hours in the day.
And too many hours in the night.
Last night was like many others, so many I’ve lost count. Exhausted, I stared at the ceiling, a longing so acute ripping through me that it was physically painful. Hours passed, and I tossed and turned, imagining his hands on me again.
Such powerful hands, yet gentle.
I’ve told myself, again and again, to get over him. I’ve even replaced him in my fantasies with a man du jour. The cute cashier at the drug store. The well-dressed man I’ve seen at the bank. That celebrity with the muscled chest and cocky smile.
But he always finds a way to creep back in, to replace the man du jour until I’m wading into memories I’ve done my best to forget.
“Hey.”
Tonya drops onto the bench next to me, slightly out of breath. “Can I have half your sandwich?”
I nod, passing it to her. She takes a giant bite, barely chewing it before she swallows. “I saw your ma down by the gas station. I waved to her, but she didn’t see me.”
Tonya is always seeing my mom around town. Everyone is always
seeing everyone. There are less than four thousand people in Cape Craven, fewer if you don’t consider the farmers who live on the fringes and barely ever come into the town proper. And we all live knee-deep in each other’s business.
“You see the hullabaloo at The Office?”
I shake my head.
Tonya bounces in her seat. “There had to be like a dozen cop cars out front. Cops everywhere.”
Brow furrowing, I pull out my phone. Scrolling through my social media feed, I see a few other mentions of the ruckus at The Office, so I switch to the local “news” site, run by a very nosy old woman called Buzz. She loves gossip more than the slender cigarettes she chain-smokes. Having learned about the internet from her granddaughter, she found a wider audience for her “observations” online. If anyone knows what’s going on at The Office, it’s Buzz.
“Cops swarming Craven Industries’ main office,” is the headline on her blog. I skim her overblown prose, realizing that she has no idea what is happening at The Office. Which means it isn’t likely to be a violent crime.
For a moment, a numbness passes over me. The last time the police were teeming all over Craven Industries, they’d been arresting Ax. What if they’re there for a similar reason now?
What if Ax is back?
It’s bound to happen someday. Ax was sentenced to fifteen years, but inmates rarely serve out their entire sentences in North Carolina’s overcrowded prisons. Would he return to the alleged scene of the crime? And if so, how would Brent react?