Nave (Henchmen MC Next Generation #14) Read Online Jessica Gadziala

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, MC Tags Authors: Series: Henchmen MC Next Generation Series by Jessica Gadziala
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Total pages in book: 77
Estimated words: 75414 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 377(@200wpm)___ 302(@250wpm)___ 251(@300wpm)
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The place was packed. Men and women stood around, played pool and beer pong, threw darts, and did body shots on the bar.

I scanned the faces with my heart in a vice grip as each one came back unfamiliar.

Then, suddenly, there he was.

Sitting in a chair next to a coffee table that was piled with donut boxes.

I swallowed back the saliva that flooded my mouth, pulled my shoulders back, and forced myself to walk over toward him.

He looked like I remembered.

Better, actually.

Age had favored him in the way men were lucky enough to experience, his features chiseling deeper, the slight creases near his eyes only making his dark eyes look just a little softer. He had the same dark hair, the cleft chin, and the slight hint of freckles over the bridge of his nose.

What was different was the lowered shoulders, the unclenched jaw, the lack of cuts and bruises.

He seemed calmer, more relaxed.

Not up against the world.

I felt bad taking that from him, dragging him into my mess.

But I had no other choice.

I cleared my throat as I stepped closer.

“Nave?”

I saw him startle, saw the way his brows knitted, like he was trying to place the voice.

Then his head lifted.

His gaze landed with impact, knocking what was left of my breath from me.

“Lolly?”

All the moisture in my mouth dried up. My tongue felt chalky as I forced myself to speak.

“Um, I’m not sure if you, uh, remember. But you, erm, once said that if I ever needed anything, that I could come to you.”

“I remember,” he said, giving me a tight little nod. “I remember everything.”

CHAPTER FIVE

PAST

Nave

“What the fuck?” I said, standing just a few feet from the car we’d driven in, staring up at the glass-house mansion before me.

It was a lifted structure for…. absolutely no reason at all. We weren’t anywhere near water that would necessitate putting a fucking house on stilts. And yet.

“Ugly as shit, ain’t it?” my partner on this particular errand asked, making me turn to look at him. Tats, blondish hair, “crazy as fuck” practically stamped across his forehead.

I didn’t know shit about this Dezi guy, save for the fact that he was working for the people who just hired me for a job as well. And that he made me stop on the way over to grab a fucking carton of donut holes. That he promptly ate all by himself. All fifty of them.

And, of course, that he had bloody knuckles and a nasty-ass split lip since the last time I’d seen him.

“Guess the cars stay cool, though,” he said, nodding over toward where two cars were parked in the driveway beneath the house.

I wasn’t paying attention to the cars.

I was more concerned with the twenty-five cameras I counted pointed in our direction. Twenty-five. And those were only the ones I saw. Only the ones facing the driveway.

“The cameras don’t weird you out?”

To that, Dezi shrugged. “Guess you gotta protect your joint, man. Dunno. Never had one.”

A few cameras, sure.

But if what was true out front was true for the sides and back, that was, what, a hundred cameras? More?

That wasn’t protection. That was paranoia.

And if there was one thing I’d learned during my time on my own, working random jobs both legit and… less than, it was that paranoid fuckers were dangerous. They were always expecting to be stabbed in the back, so they were forever accusing you of being the one with the knife.

I probably should have asked more about the job before I’d taken it. But cash was running low. And I wasn’t anywhere near ready to head back home yet.

No matter how much my mom said she was worried. And how often my father asked what the hell I was trying to prove.

I had no answers for him.

I didn’t really know what the motivator was to up and leave my town, my family, my friends, my secure position in a well-paying job at the club.

I guess I just needed to figure out who the hell I was outside of the influence of all those people.

I wasn’t the only legacy who felt the same way. Valen had taken off. Ferryn up and left for ages, without hardly a word to anyone. And last I heard, Rune and Croft were headed down to Puerto Rico for an untold amount of time.

Maybe it boiled down to that word.

Legacy.

Our parents had the chance to make their own, had led these over-the-top, crazy, dangerous, interesting lives. Even before they joined the club.

But we next-gen kids, we got sheltered. Enough that the confines chafed, even if we understood why our parents wanted to protect us from the things they’d had to experience.

So we needed to bust down the walls, take off, see the world for ourselves. Good, bad, and ugly.

This was definitely looking ugly.

“You coming or what?” Dezi asked, glancing back at me.


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