Hiding Out (Hawks MC: Caroline Springs Charter, #2) (16 page)

BOOK: Hiding Out (Hawks MC: Caroline Springs Charter, #2)
7.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

There was a knock at the door. "That'll be the pizza," Josie said and started for the door until Billy grabbed her arm and shook his head. Instead, he went to the door.

Once he'd paid and gave the...heck,
five
boxes to Josie, he said, "I'll be back soon." He spun, walked out the door and closed it behind him.

"Where's he going?" I asked as I helped Josie place the boxes on the big coffee table.

"Going to get the others for dinner."

I was bent over, looking in the boxes to see what toppings they'd got, when I paused and looked up at Josie. "And by others, you mean Pick, right?"

She wouldn't meet my gaze. She shrugged then mumbled, "And Dodge and the kids."

Standing quickly, I faked a yawn and said, "Wow, I'm so tired. I think I might just go to bed."

Why would Dodge write me a note when he knew he was coming over in the first place? Was it to piss me off before he got there? What was his game? I didn't understand it, and I didn't have to stick around to find out.

I moved. Josie got in front of me. I side-stepped. She was there.

"What are you doing?" I hissed. "I thought you were my girl?" I snapped with my hands on my hips.

"I am. But I'd love for you to meet the kids with me."

I raised a brow at her. "And?"

She sighed. "It's got to happen sooner or later, you two in a room together, so why not let it happen when other people are around? At least you'll have a buffer then and be able to dodge Dodge." She giggled. It
was
actually funny and I would have laughed with her or smiled at least, but my stomach was all of a sudden wrapped up tight in a ball of nerves, annoyance sliding around, as well.

My eyes widened when I heard the rattle of the doorknob.

Chapter Seventeen

D
odge

They hated me.

Maybe I was exaggerating. Romania seemed to warm to me straight away, but the boy, he couldn't stand me and I couldn't blame him. We didn't know each other and even in the two weeks we'd spent together, he'd said hardly a word to me. So we still knew nothing about each other. I'd tried. I asked him questions, but he'd ignore me. I'd left him alone, thinkin' he'd soon come around. However, he hadn't.

The kids were still dealing with losing their mother. Not that it was much of a loss, which I found out the first night with them. Still, it'd be something to deal with, thrust outta one situation and into another. Knowing it was hard for them, I didn't push anything on them.

Romania was a cute, smart kid. One who went with the flow on things. Her, I could deal with. The boy and his attitude, not so much. Still, I had to give him time to adjust.

As soon as I'd walked into my sister's house, I knew I was gonna have trouble with Texas. Jennifer introduced me to them as they sat together on the couch. Romania jumped up with a smile and flung her tiny arms around my waist to hug me. Texas took one look, turned up his nose at me and walked outta the room. Romania, who told me I could call her Rommy, skipped out of the room after her brother. I learned then that they also had no father; he'd died five years earlier, and it wasn't like he was even in their life before that, either.

Fuck. The kids had no one.

Except me.

It was then I decided I'd try my best to be there for them.

Having no one sucked, and I knew how they felt because I'd felt it after my shit, until I was welcomed into Hawks. Now, I had a huge-arse family and I couldn't be happier.

A vision of Willow smiling at me as we sat on the couch slipped through my mind.

Yeah, I needed to make things right when I got back.

God, I was such an arse.

The two weeks with the kids had been the hardest in my life. Kids and me? I had no fuckin' clue what I was doing. So after Jennifer left that first night, I sat on the couch and stared at nothing. My mind couldn't think on what to do next.

Did I have to feed them?

Was I supposed to make sure they washed?

Fuck. Was I supposed to tuck them into bed and read them a story? That thought actually scared the crap outta me.

Rommy came out hours later and sat next to me. I blinked down at her as she placed her tiny fuckin' hand on my arm and said, "It'll be okay."

I nodded, not knowing what else I was supposed to do.
Shouldn't I be the one reassuring her?

"Ah, you hungry, kid?" I asked.

"Yes." She smiled.

"Got the number to a pizza joint?"

"On the fridge." She beamed and skipped off to get it.

"You a biker?" was asked from behind me. I turned to find Texas standing just in the mouth of the hall where the bedrooms lay.

"Yep."

"You moving us with you?"

"Yeah, you'll like Melbourne."

"I won't. I'll hate it."

"Don't know that for sure, kid."

"My mother hated you, but she hated us more, which is why she left us to you in her will, so we'd suffer more."

My body tensed.
What in the fuck?

"You don't know
that
, kid."

"I do. She told me. She hated us because our father didn't like us and he left because she kept us around. If she had gotten rid of us, then she'd still have had him."

Jesus fuck. Jesus. Fuck.

I'd thought she'd got rid of him.

My sister. Always the bitch.

Those were the first and last words he'd spoken to me while we were in Sydney. His replies took to grunts and head shakes, or he'd confide in his sister and she'd mention something to me instead of him coming to me.

The pain of loss I'd felt for my sister was wiped away that night from her son's words.

Instead, I wished she were alive. Then I'd harm her myself for letting her kids believe she'd hated them, and for
making
them believe they weren't worth being born.

Rommy came back in with the pizza list. After ordering, we sat in front of the TV she'd turned on. Out the corner of my eyes, I'd looked down at her. She'd chosen to sit next to me, as close as she could get while she sang along with some theme song for some kid show.

The pizza arrived, and I opted to sit at the kitchen table. While I set out the pizza on the bench and found some plates, I asked Rommy to go get her brother. He walked in with his head hanging low, loaded up the pizza for him and his sister and then sat at the opposite end from where I did. Rommy sat next to me.

"Uncle Trey?"

Fuck. Hearing her say it in her sweet little girly voice was something special.

"Yeah, darlin'?"

She giggled. "Do you work?"

"Sure do, I'm a mechanic."

"What's that?"

"I work on cars and bikes in a garage with a heap of other guys."

"Cool." She smiled and took a big bite of her slice.

"Uncle Trey?"

Smirking, I said, "Yeah, darlin'?"

She giggled. "What's the school like?"

Shit. I had no clue. I wasn't even sure there was one near me. I'd have to ring Josie to look into the best one around our area. I guessed Texas would be going to a high school. Kinda wished they were closer in age; I knew I'd prefer Texas with his sister to protect her.

Christ. What if she got bullied? What if he did? I couldn't beat the shit outta some kids. How in the hell was I supposed to deal with stuff like that?

I'd have to call Talon and ask him.

"Ah, not sure just yet. We'll both take a look when we get to Melbourne."

"Yay." She grinned. "Uncle Trey?"

"Babe, I'm right here. You don't need to say my name every time you wanna ask a question. Just ask it, 'kay?"

She bit her bottom lip. "But." She stopped and looked to her brother, who was silently eating his pizza and watching the table. Rommy shrugged and then blew me the fuck away. "I like saying your name. I haven't been able to say it, and now that you're here, I like to say it because...because it...it means you came here to help us and, and you're like family and, well, because you came, it must mean you care about us." She looked up to me with hope shining in her light blue eyes. "Am I right?"

Fuck me.

Even though they both looked like their mum, with blond hair and blue eyes, they acted nothing like her. Rommy was pure heart. Texas, even when he sat at the end of the table all tense and shit, I could see he was holding his breath, waiting on my answer. The kids cared. Nothing like my cold-hearted sister at all.

"Yeah, darlin', I'm here because I care."

Texas scooted back his chair quickly and left the room. When I felt a small hand over mine, I looked down at Rommy. "He gets cranky, but I'm sure he likes that you care."

I wasn't sure she was only seven.

*  *  *  *

T
he funeral sucked. No one turned up. It was me and the kids and that was fuckin' all. It was obvious she'd made no friends and from the way she treated her kids, I understood why.

I sat on the end of the bench as the reverend talked up front about a sister I didn't really know. About how loving and great she was. It was all full of fuckin' shit, and I would have stormed outta the place if it wasn't for the kids. When Rommy started crying, I curled my arm around her and brought her in close to my side. I looked down at Texas sitting next to Rommy. He watched his sister in my arms with tears in his eyes, but they never fell. I stayed sitting there listening to the crap for those kids. It was their chance to say goodbye to the woman who birthed them and, from the way Texas fought with his emotions and won by not crying, I swear it was his way to stick it up to my cunt of a sister. It was his way to show he didn't care she'd left the world.

I was fuckin' proud of him because I would have done the same.

The rest of the week was spent packing up shit and getting stuff sent to Melbourne, so it'd be there when we arrived. Pick had rang me. They'd offered to set up the kids' rooms. It meant I'd have to get rid of my home gym so the kids didn't have to share a room, but at that stage, I didn't care.

All I wanted was to give them the best chance they could, something that became obvious they'd never had. They'd had a shit life with my sister. Hell, they'd cringed when I'd shouted at the TV over some game and would cower if I moved suddenly.

She must've yelled at them a lot, and I was worried she'd hit them, as well. All the signs were pointing in that direction. After just a few days, I'd wished she were alive so I could fuck her up for it.

They were good kids. At least Rommy was. Texas, with time, I'd know more about, but he was still gettin' around like a robot. Least he did what I asked. Rommy was a ray of sunshine. She actually made me laugh when she asked stupid shit. I'd see her brother roll his eyes at his sister, but every time, I didn't miss the small smile playing at the corners of his mouth.

I was nervous about getting them back to Melbourne and into my house. It meant it was final. It meant I was permanently in charge of two young kids. They'd be under my roof until I saw fit they could move out on their own. Would be a long fuckin' time coming. They'd have to find the safest place to live and the right people to be around.

Holy motherfuckin' shit.

My chest got tight.

They'd eventually want to date.

I'd kill anyone who fucked with them.

Kill them slowly and painfully.

Jesus. That was if all of it didn't kill me first.

It was the last night in their house when Rommy came into the spare room where I slept. I was sittin' up in bed talking to Pick on the phone, finding out they'd still had crap-all on Baxter when Rommy walked in like a bloody zombie, rubbing her eyes, hair all crazy. I quickly told Pick I had to go and asked Rommy what was wrong.

She shook her head, climbed onto the bed and shocked me when she proceeded to sit on my lap, her head resting against my tee-covered chest.

"Rommy, darlin', what's up?"

Tiredly, she asked, "Do you think Mummy is happy now?"

I turned to stone. Shit like that I was no good at. I didn't know what to say, and I knew I'd fuck it up in some way.

Still, I had to give it a go. She was feeling the loss. Even if her mum was a shit mum, I still knew Rommy loved her. Pure heart of gold, that kid.

"Yeah, babe. I reckon your mum is happy, even though she'll miss you. I mean, who wouldn't? You're a great kid to be around. Same with your brother. Even when he's being a moody shit...hell, I mean..."
Ah, crap! Don't swear in front of kids.
I felt Rommy's body shake. She was laughing. "Rom, the answer is, yeah, your mum would be happy."

She sighed a content little sigh. "Are you, Uncle Trey?"

"‘Course, darlin'. Only a fool would not be happy if they got to have you and your brother in their life."

"'Kay." She shifted on my lap to wrap her arms around my neck. "Love you, Uncle Trey. So, so, so, so, so happy you came to get us."

My eyes closed. It felt like I was punched in the gut at the same time my heart grew double its size.

I'd kill any fucker who fucked with them.

*  *  *  *

T
he flight home was uneventful. Both kids behaved themselves, both on the plane and off. Rommy was a ball of excitement, loved everything she saw, and regularly pointed shit out that I'd seen a million times over. Texas sat in the front of the car looking out the window, saying nothing except for when his sister said something to him. At least he wasn't freezing her outta his life like he was me.

Give him time.

How much time did a kid need when it was a sure thing to say he didn't like his mother?

As soon as they were settled in, I'd be havin' a word with Texas, and he'd better listen if we're to live under the same roof.

We weren't long home before the kids were in their rooms checking out their new things. Rommy loved her girly room, no doubt thanks to Josie. She squealed and pounded on her new junk. All
I
saw was pink crap everywhere. Texas was even surprised about his room. It held posters of skateboarding people, motocross guys, a desk, a new bed and some other stuff scattered around. What I liked the best was the smile I saw. Only, he quickly wiped it away with the back of his hand. When I asked if he liked it, his answer was a shrug.

Other books

Skyfall by Catherine Asaro
Secrets My Mother Kept by Hardy, Kath
Rule of the Bone by Russell Banks
A Wicked Way to Burn by Margaret Miles
Bailén by Benito Pérez Galdós
Angelica by Sharon Shinn
Sabrina Fludde by Pauline Fisk