LOGINI was supposed to disappear. Slip into a forgettable little town, stitch myself back together, and never trust a man again. I had a plan, a fake name, and a bruised heart too raw to feel anything. Then Colt Mercer looked at me from across the bar, and every single plan I ever made went up in smoke. He is everything I should run from. Tattooed, dangerous, and commanding, Colt is the President of the Iron Vow Motorcycle Club and, by day, one of the most powerful billionaires in the country. He built his empire from nothing and buried anyone who tried to take it. He does not ask. He does not negotiate. He claims. And the moment I walked into his bar, he claimed me. But I am hiding a secret that could destroy us both, and the man who broke me in the first place has sent someone to bring me back dead or alive. Colt says he will burn the world before he lets anyone touch me. The problem is, I am starting to believe him. Because falling for an outlaw king was never supposed to feel this much like coming home.
View MoreThe truck broke down on a Tuesday, which felt exactly right.
Tuesday was the kind of day that never promised anything good. Tuesdays were when your landlord called about the rent. Tuesdays were when doctors delivered the kind of news that rearranged your whole understanding of your life. Tuesdays had never once done Sloane Vega any favors, and the engine giving one last asthmatic shudder before going completely silent on a mountain road outside a town she had chosen by closing her eyes and pointing at a map felt like Tuesday being Tuesday. She pulled the truck as far onto the gravel shoulder as it would coast, turned off the headlights, and sat in the dark for a moment with both hands still on the wheel. Outside, the Colorado sky was doing something almost aggressively beautiful. The last of the sunset was bleeding out across the peaks in shades of orange and deep pink that no painter would dare use together because no one would believe it was real. Pine trees crowded the road on both sides, big and dark and smelling of something clean, something that had nothing to do with Chicago or Garrett Hale or the particular kind of fear that had lived in her chest for the past eleven days. She breathed it in through the cracked window. Then she got out of the truck, looked at the engine like she knew what she was looking at, closed the hood, and picked up her bag. The town was about a quarter mile down the road. She had seen the sign: Crestone Falls, Population 3,847. A gas station. A church. What looked like a diner with the lights still on. And at the far end of the main strip, a bar with a neon sign in the window that said IRONSIDE in blue and red, the letters slightly uneven in the way of signs that have been up long enough to settle into themselves. She walked toward the light. * * * The bar was warm. That was the first thing she noticed, the kind of warmth that comes from a real fire and too many bodies in a space that was not designed to be elegant. It was a long room with dark wood and exposed beams and a bar that ran the full length of the left wall, every stool occupied by men who looked like they had been carved out of the same hard material as the mountains outside. Leather. Ink. The particular stillness of people who were not easily moved by anything. Sloane had grown up in the kind of neighborhoods where you learned quickly how to read a room. This room was saying: outsider. This room was saying: be careful. But underneath that, underneath the testosterone and the faint smell of motor oil and spilled whiskey, there was something else. A kind of order. Like everyone in this space knew exactly where they stood and no one was confused about the rules. She walked to the bar because that was what you did. You did not hover near the door. Hovering near the door meant you were either about to leave or about to cause a problem, and she was neither. She set her bag down on the empty stool at the far end, sat down beside it, and waited. The man behind the bar had his back to her. He was talking to someone at the other end, leaning on the counter with one forearm flat against the wood, and even from across the room she could see that he was built like someone who had never done anything halfway in his life. Wide shoulders. Dark hair cut close on the sides and left longer on top. Tattoos that covered both forearms and disappeared up under the rolled sleeves of a flannel shirt that had no right looking that good on a person. He turned around. Later, Sloane would spend a ridiculous amount of time trying to figure out exactly what happened in that moment and she would never quite be able to name it. It was not attraction, exactly, or not only that. It was more like recognition, the way your body sometimes knows something before your brain has caught up, some animal part of you that sees another creature and makes a decision that your more civilized self will spend weeks arguing with. His eyes were dark. Not black, not quite brown. The color of the pine forest outside at dusk, when the light is almost gone but not entirely. He looked at her the way people only look at things they intend to pay attention to. Then he walked over. "You lost?" he said. His voice was low and even, the kind of voice that did not need to be loud to be heard over a noisy room. The room, Sloane noticed, had gone several degrees quieter. "No," she said. "My truck is, but I know exactly where I am." Something shifted very slightly in his expression. Not a smile. More like the decision to be interested. "What do you need?" "A phone charger. And maybe the number for a mechanic who is willing to look at something tonight." He reached under the bar without looking away from her and set a charging cable on the counter. Then he said, "What's wrong with it?" "It stopped going." "That's descriptive." "It's accurate." He watched her for one more second and then picked up a phone from beside the register and made a call. One sentence. A location, a description of her truck, and then he hung up. "Tow truck will get it tonight. Mick's shop is two blocks over. He'll look at it in the morning." "I didn't ask you to do that." "No," he agreed. "You didn't." She stared at him. He stared back. Around them the bar had resumed its normal volume, as if whatever it had been paying attention to had been resolved. "I'll pay for it," she said. "Sure you will." "That's not a real answer." "It's the only one you're getting tonight." He set a glass in front of her. Whiskey, no ice. "You look like you've been driving for days." "What's your name?" she asked, because she needed to call him something in her head that was not the man with the eyes. A pause. Brief, deliberate, like he was choosing which answer to give. "Colt," he said. She picked up the glass. "Thanks, Colt." "You're welcome." He moved down the bar to another customer, and she watched him go and told herself firmly that she was not watching him go. She drank her whiskey. She plugged in her phone. And she tried very hard not to notice that every time she looked up, his eyes had already found her. When her phone finally powered on, there were fourteen missed calls from a number she did not recognize, and one text from Mira that read only: He knows you left. Get off the highway. Do NOT use your real name.Dutch had pulled a muscle. Nothing worse. The nurse and the former art therapist and the club president determined this together over the course of twenty minutes in the compound common room with Dutch providing a running commentary on the diagnosis that was unnecessary and mostly correct.Mira sent him to bed with ice and the specific authority of someone who was going to become this community's healthcare backbone whether it wanted her to or not. She was already looking at the clinic on the main street.The party went on without the four of them for a while and then they rejoined it and by midnight the Ironside was the thing she had loved it as from the first night: warm and earned and full of people who belonged somewhere.She stayed behind when the crowd thinned. She sat at the end of the bar with a coffee gone cold and looked at the room. Pearl was wiping down the counter. Rafe was turned sideways in his chair talking to Mira with his full attention, which was not something Rafe
Colt told the club on a Sunday.He did it the way he did everything that mattered: in person, at the Ironside, with everyone present who should be present. He had told her the night before what he was going to say, which she appreciated not because she needed to be prepared but because he had wanted her to know.She stood behind the bar with Pearl while he stood at the center of the room with Dutch beside him and the brothers arranged in the easy way of people who had been in rooms together long enough not to need to think about where they stood.He said: Dutch is stepping back from active oversight. He has held this club together for thirty years through things that would have ended most organizations. He has done it with more integrity than anyone had a right to expect and more patience than any of us deserved.He said: Iron Vow has come through something significant this past year. We have not just survived it. We have emerged with a federal case on record that protects our territo
Elena Hale pled guilty in April.The proceeding lasted four hours and involved a courtroom in Denver that was not open to the public and a judge who had been specifically selected for her record of handling cases involving national security implications. Three federal attorneys presented the terms of the cooperation agreement. Elena said the words the agreement required her to say, including a specific statement about Marco Vega.Sloane was not in the courtroom.She had been offered a seat, as a victim's family representative, and she had thought about it seriously for two days before deciding she did not need to be there. The cassette tape was there. The ledger was there. The letter was there. Her father was in the room in every way that mattered. She did not need to be present to witness it.She spent that April morning in the therapy room with a woman from Monte Vista who was learning for the first time what it felt like to put something on paper that had been inside her for years.
The hearing was on a Thursday.She dressed for it the way she dressed for things that mattered: carefully and without performance. She wore what made her feel like herself, which after six months in Crestone Falls was a different person's version of herself than the one who had driven into this town on a Tuesday evening.Colt drove her to Denver. Rafe rode separately. Cross met them at the federal building entrance with the focused energy of someone who had been working for two weeks without stopping and had also, somehow, pressed her suit.They went in.The judge was the Honorable Patricia Cane, the same judge who had taken her deposition on the night of the federal building lockdown. Judge Cane recognized her. She did not say anything but there was the briefest acknowledgment between them of a shared history in this case and then the judge put on her formal face and they began.Creel argued first. He was skilled, she noted. He had prepared thoroughly and he presented the procedural
She called her mother that night.This was not a simple thing. She had not spoken to her mother in six weeks, not since before everything escalated, and the calls before that had been careful and managed in the way their relationship had been for years. Her mother was a woman who had converted grie
The cassette tape took four days to analyze. The audio restoration work was done by a specialist in the Denver field office and the voices on it, once cleaned and amplified, belonged to seven people. Three of them were dead. Three were in federal custody. One was alive and currently in an elected p
Cross would not open the case on the ridge.She was correct not to. Sloane understood that even in the moment when she wanted nothing more than to see what was inside it. Evidence had rules and the rules existed for reasons and violating them would undermine everything the case had become.They dro
She asked Colt to come with her.She did not tell him what she was going to say until they were almost at Dutch's room. Then she stopped in the corridor and looked at him and said it in two sentences and watched him go very still.He said nothing for a moment.Then he said: he has been carrying thi












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