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Bad & Bold - A 7 Book Bad Boy Romance Collection!
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Bad & Bold – A Bad Boy Romance Collection
Copyright 2016
Table of Contents
Sons of Flame MC: Redemption by Ashley Rhodes
Alexei by R. E. Saxton
Feral Gaze by Athena Wright
Lust for the Open Road by Nicola Nichols
Ransomed MC by Vivian Cove
Trust by Terry Towers
Ridden Rough by Mona Bliss
Sons of Flame MC - Redemption
By Ashley Rhodes
Copyright 2015 Ashley Rhodes
All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
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Ashley
Tess Bailey will never forget the day that Eli Flint burst into her life. He's a hard man, tempered by a life lived on the edge - but Tess sees something in his intense blue eyes; something that grabs her and just won't let go.
Eli's an ex-con; he served three years for selling guns as a member of the notorious Sons of Flame MC. Now he's out, and he wants to put his past behind him and move on.
But it's not that easy. It's never that easy.
Tess is Eli's probation officer. Young and idealistic, she's determined not to become as jaded as her coworkers. She deals with some of the most difficult and dangerous men - men who have always lived a life of crime, men for whom that life is all they know, and ever will know.
But Eli's different.
Underneath his tough, spiky exterior, Tess senses a man who wants to improve himself, who wants something better from life.
However, when Tex, the cruel and bitter leader of the Sons of Flame, blackmails Eli into working for him once more, Eli is forced back into the life he's trying to leave behind. And Tess, the woman Eli is falling for, is unwittingly drawn into this dangerous world with him...
Redemption is a standalone romance novel, with a HEA ending, some scenes of violence and swearing, and some steamy scenes too!
Prologue
The Mojave Desert sun beat down relentlessly, searing any exposed skin. It seemed to radiate from the ground too, in waves of enervating heat. The landscape was flat for miles around - sand, cacti, and scrubby grass was all there was as far as the eye could see. The mountains on the horizon shimmered, making them seem almost unreal.
The air was hot and dry, and each breath that Eli took seemed to burn his lungs and suck the moisture from his mouth. He was desperate to take a drink from the flask full of water at his hip, but he couldn’t. Not yet. The situation was tense, as these things always seemed to be.
He risked a glance either side of him, to see how everyone else was holding up. Tex stood to his right, almost shoulder to shoulder. The gang leader’s eyes were hidden behind his shades, as ever, but he stood straight and inscrutable. If he was feeling the heat as much as Eli was, he was doing a damn good job of hiding it.
Shank stood on the other side of Tex. The older man’s thinning, wispy hair blew in the hot gusts of desert air, and his raptor eyes were narrowed in suspicion and distrust. Not that this was anything new with Shank. That was how he always looked, and his natural demeanour was probably a big part of what had let him survive so long in this line of work. Letting your guard down, even for a second, was something that Eli had learned never to do.
Eli swallowed, his saliva thick and hot and gritty. This damn sand got everywhere. He’d be washing it out of his hair for days once this was over.
He saw movement out of the corner of his eye, and turned his attention back to the reason they were in this godforsaken hellhole in the first place.
Four guys, standing opposite them in a line. Their faces were red and they were all sweating profusely. They looked as uncomfortable as Eli felt, in sharp contrast to Tex and Shank who looked as if they were just out for a Sunday stroll.
“Can we get this done?” said the guy in the middle, who Eli took to be their leader. “I’m fucking roasting alive out here.” Eli didn’t know any of their names. Safer that way, as Tex always said.
“What’s the matter?” Tex wheezed, looking amused (or at least, as amused as Tex ever got) at the other guy’s discomfort. “‘Ain’t you never been out in a little sun before?”
The guy’s lips thinned, his eyes narrowed.
“Listen, jerkoff. I ain’t here for a fuckin’ picnic, you hear? Let’s make the trade and go our separate ways.”
Tex stared the guy down, before spitting loudly onto the ground. Eli felt a rivulet of sweat roll down between his shoulder blades.
Why did it always have to be like this? Why was it always so tense, as if violence could explode at any moment? It just seemed to make things more difficult than they needed to be. But Tex and Shank always seemed to revel in these sorts of situations. They lived for shit like this. Eli, on the other hand, would probably rather have been anywhere else than out there in the middle of the goddamn desert. There was just one reason he was here.
“You got the money?” Tex drawled.
A nod from the other guy. He gestured to one of his crew, who produced a suitcase.
“Show me.”
Tex’s voice was tight with excitement. This was one of the biggest jobs that the Sons of Flame had ever landed, and Tex stood to make a whole lot of cash if things went smoothly. Hell, they all did, even Eli. Enough that he was considering getting out of this game once it was all done with.
“Show us the goods first.”
Tex glanced sideways at Shank, who, after a moment, nodded once sharply. Tex fixed the other guys with a stare that would have wilted even the cacti that somehow thrived in this place.
“OK, we’ll meet in the middle there. Nice and slow, no sudden movements. Hands where I can see ‘em.”
A nod from their leader.
“Deal. Same for you.”
Tex bent down and hefted the bag that was lying at his feet. It was heavy, and Eli could see the wiry muscles of Tex’s arm bunch with the effort of lifting it.
“Stay close to me, and keep your eyes peeled young’un.”
These words were spoken to Eli from the side of Tex’s mouth.
“If they try anything, you better be ready to act. I don’t want you letting me down, you hear?”
Eli swallowed, his nerves jangling, and then just nodded once. He didn’t know if Tex saw, but it didn’t matter anyway. The leader of the Sons of Flame took a step forward at the same moment the buyers did, and Eli and Shank kept pace with him.
Eli’s heart was pounding and his knees felt shaky and weak. Adrenaline surged through his veins. He just hoped that nobody would notice. Tex and Shank looked calm and inscrutable. They’d done this so many times before, and they’d always come out one way or another, so Eli trusted in their experience.
A few more steps and they were face to face with the other guys. Up close, Eli could see the tension written on their fac
es too. Both sets of men came to a halt and Eli could sense that Tex was sizing them up.
“OK, gentlemen. This is how this is gonna go down. One of you steps forward with the money, and I step forward with the goods. We open each at the same moment. No funny business, no jerking around. Let’s get this done quick and clean. Got it?”
Their leader gestured to his man, who handed over the suitcase.
Tex nodded, and took a step forward at the same moment the other guy did. They met in the middle.
“Ready?” Tex said.
“Ready.”
Tex set the bag down at his feet and put his hand on the zipper.
“On the count of three.”
The buyer followed Tex’s lead.
“One. Two. Three.”
Time seemed to slow for Eli. This was it. This was the most dangerous, the most tense moment. This was where everything could go wrong in an instant.
Tex unzipped the bag, revealing the contents to everyone present. Even though Eli knew what was in there, he was still in awe of the sheer amount of hardware contained in that bag.
Guns. It was full of guns. Rifles, handguns, even grenades. Some it ex-military, some of it smuggled up from Mexico.
But where Tex had opened his bag, the buyer’s suitcase remained closed. Tex’s eyes narrowed in suspicion.
“Don’t play games with me. Open the fucking bag. The hardware is all here.”
The buyer swallowed, looking unsure and nervous for the first time since they’d turned up. He looked around at the guys either side of him, as if he didn’t know what to do.
Eli’s throat constricted. Something didn’t seem right. The way these guys were acting all of a sudden...it was giving him a bad feeling.
“Are you deaf?” Tex snarled. “Show me the goddamn money. Now.”
The buyer held up his hand.
“Okay, okay.”
He set the suitcase down on the ground and knelt in front of it, before hesitating once more. By now Eli knew something was up.
The buyer, painfully slowly, popped open the clasp on the suitcase. Tex leaned forward eagerly, his greed overshadowing his usual natural caution. As he did so, Eli caught a movement in his peripheral vision.
One of the buyer’s hands was moving to his waist, slowly, trying not to attract any attention.
Despite the heat, Eli’s blood turned to ice in his veins. He could see the gun, tucked into the guy’s waistband.
“Tex!” he screamed. “It’s a setup! He’s got a gun!”
From that moment on, it was as if everything moved in slow motion - but Eli, even years later, could recall every last little detail.
How Tex’s head had snapped up, his eyes narrowing. How he’d lifted the suitcase and flung it with all his strength at the guy going for his gun. How that guy had been struck in the face, blood spraying from his mouth as he crumpled to the floor.
Tex and Shank had turned and run immediately, preferring to escape with their hides intact than worry about the guns or the money. Eli had reacted a split second later than the two more experienced men, and ended up eating their dust as the three of them raced back toward their bikes, parked in the shade of a nearby Joshua tree.
Then the fateful words that confirmed everything, ringing out from behind them.
“Stop! This is the police! Do not try to evade capture. Raise your hands above your head or we WILL fire on you!”
Tex and Shank hadn’t even spared a glance backwards, but Eli couldn’t resist. The men who were still standing all had handguns raised, aimed at the three of them. Somehow Eli wanted to stop, to turn around and explain how it was all just a mix-up, a misunderstanding.
But he couldn’t do that.
So he kept on running, legs pumping, heart pounding, breath ragged in the searing heat. The three bikes were getting closer and closer - if he could just reach his, he could get away. He could hide, lay low for a while, wait for this all to blow over and then get out of this game, find something less risky to do with his life.
Eli could have sworn that he felt the first bullet whizz past his head; he certainly heard the crack of the shot as the undercover police opened fire. A moment afterwards three more shots rang out - *crack* *crack* *crack*.
Puffs of sand were thrown up where the bullets just narrowly missed and hit the ground either side of him. All Eli could focus on were the bikes, so close now, so close.
Tex and Shank reached theirs first, throwing themselves onto the big machines. Eli was just a few yards away now - he was going to make it, he was going to get away!
And then it happened.
Eli was running so fast, and so focused on the bikes and his salvation, that he didn’t see the rock that tripped him. Searing pain exploded from his ankle and shot up his leg. It was pure agony.
At the same moment, Tex shouted in shock as a bullet hit his bike, tearing a ragged rent in the gleaming metallic body. Fuel began to leak from the hole, pouring down the bike and dripping into the sand. Tex saw what had happened, and looked up to meet Eli’s eyes.
The shouts from the police were getting closer and closer as they gave chase. They were gaining fast, and there were only moments to spare now.
Tex jumped off his bike and clambered onto Eli’s.
Eli was doing his best to struggle to his feet, but he was too slow. The pain was immense.
“Tex!” Eli screamed. “Help me up! There’s still time!”
His leader’s eyes narrowed as he judged the distance of the men behind them. He shrugged nonchalantly.
“Sorry kid. C’ya around.”
He turned the key and Eli’s bike roared to life with a throaty growl. Tex didn’t even spare another glance at his young protégé as he tore off into the desert after Shank, the powerful bike speeding away easily and quickly.
Eli was speechless. How could Tex just leave him here like that? He’d always known that the Sons of Flame leader was ruthless and cold, but he always talked about brotherhood and solidarity. About how you never leave a brother behind.
That was Eli’s last thought as he slipped into unconsciousness, the pain of his shattered ankle finally overcoming the adrenaline coursing through his veins.
Tex and the Sons of Flame had betrayed him, abandoned him.
*****
Chapter One
Tess
“New case here for you Tess.”
A heavy slap as the manila folder landed on her desk. Tess looked up from the paperwork she was doing, a frown on her face.
“A new case? Melody, I’m swamped as it is. Look at all this.”
She gestured to the stacks of paper scattered haphazardly on her desk.
“I’m already weeks behind on everything, and you want to give me more?”
Melody just shrugged.
“Hon, we’re all swamped. Welcome to the California justice system.”
And with that she left Tess to it.
With a deep sigh, Tess lifted the folder and laid it on top of the papers she’d been trying to struggle through. She’d been working for the California Department of Corrections for a couple months now as a parole officer, and it wasn’t going as she’d envisaged.
She’d taken the job because she wanted to help people - wanted to see them reintegrate into society and change their ways.
But, so far, she felt overwhelmed by the enormity of the task in front of her. It seemed like every week she’d take on a new case. Right now, she had 63 parolees in her charge. Almost all men, most of them gang members, drug dealers, thieves.
Where she had envisioned working with these guys to help them, they were, on the whole, almost wholly resistant to any efforts on her part. They did the absolute bare minimum to meet the terms of their parole, and not a single thing more.
Tess knew that most of these guys were simply going to slip back into their old ways, just go back to whatever it was that they’d been incarcerated for in the first place. It was all they knew. And it broke her heart.
 
; Tess swigged a mouthful of coffee, grimacing at the cheap bitterness of it, and flipped open the new folder.
She spent the next half hour acquainting herself with her newest ‘client’.
Eli Flint, twenty-nine years old. Arrested for intent to distribute illegal weapons. Links to The Sons of Flame, a notorious biker gang operating out of Joshuaville in the Mojave. Just released after three years inside, half of his original sentence. His only family was his elderly grandmother, Grace Flint, also of Joshuaville. He’d been offered a job as a motorbike mechanic.
Tess ran her fingers through her hair and checked her watch. Flint was due to report in for his first probation meeting with her that same afternoon according to the file. If she was quick she’d have just enough time to grab a sandwich before that appointment.
She downed the last of her coffee, grimacing again and noting that she needed to start buying some better stuff from outside. This machine coffee was rancid, but it kept her going at least. With one last despairing glance at the mounds of paperwork, she strode out of the office.
*****
Eli Flint was a half hour late for his appointment, and Tess was about to record him as a no-show when he nonchalantly wandered into the little interview room she used for her appointments with the parolees.
Tess was immediately struck by his good looks - strong jaw, short dark cropped hair, intense blue eyes that sized her up immediately upon seeing her. Tess had often noticed this about the guys she worked with. It wasn’t always a sexual thing (although that did happen), but they would take stock of her the moment they met. She’d asked Melody about it once, shortly after she started the job.
“It’s a prison thing, hon,” her boss had said. “To survive in there, you gotta know where you stand. You gotta know who you can mess with, and who you can’t. It becomes an instinct with these guys.”