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Dusty Rose
(The McCassey Brother's Trilogy: Book 3)
Prologue
Hagerstown,
Maryland, 1978
Chaos erupted the instant the front door crashed violently
against the living room wall.
"Dusty!"
Relieved to hear her
older sister's voice, eighteen-year-old Dusty Zamora came to her senses enough
to answer. "Jessie!" she yelled as loud as the hand over her mouth
allowed.
As her sister flew into the room, gun drawn, Dusty bit the
hand covering her mouth as hard as she could, forcing her enormous attacker to
release his hold. With barely enough time to roll out of the way, Dusty covered
her head just as the first of five consecutive, deafening blasts from Jessie's
.357 Magnum echoed through the room.
Just inches from Jessie's target,
Dusty jerked and stiffened as the warm blood of her attacker splattered her
face; her body heaving as she fought the urge to vomit.
When everything
was quiet, she looked up.
Followed by their two other sisters, Alex and
Benni, Jessie was the first one to reach her. "Dusty?"
"I'm okay," she
said as Jessie grasped her upper arm and pulled her to her feet.
Taking
in the bloody scene on the floor, Dusty could hardly believe her younger sister,
Courtney, was dead. Next to her, lay their mother's ex-boyfriend, Earl—the
bastard; the well-deserved victim of Jessie's perfect timing and flawless aim.
"What do we do now?" asked Benni.
"We get the hell out of here,"
Jessie told them, using an old T-shirt that had been lying on the sofa to wipe
some of Earl's blood from Dusty's face.
"What about Court?"
"She's
dead, Benni, there's nothing we can do."
"But—"
"But nothing!"
Jessie's temper exploded. We've got to get out of town before Sheriff Johnson
discovers what went on here! Earl was a friend of his, and if he catches us,
he'll find a way to charge us all with murder and make sure we spend the rest of
our lives in prison."
"I don't want to leave her, Jessie!"
Jessie
shoved Benni—who was as close to hysterics as Dusty had ever seen her—toward the
hallway. "You don't have a choice! I'm the oldest and we do what I say! Grab
a small bag and pack only what you can't do without. Go! You've got two
minutes; all of you."
With shaking hands, Dusty took the trash bag Alex
offered her and scrambled to toss in a few shirts, two pair of jeans, and some
clean underwear; she didn't own anything else worth holding onto.
When
the sisters had hastily packed what they could, one by one, they filtered out
the front door.
"Where are we going?" Dusty asked.
Jessie never
hesitated before replying. "To The Renegade's camp."
Dusty should've
known. A certain member of the Renegades was who Jessie always went to when she
needed something. "How will we get there?"
"Let's go to McCassey's
Garage. Blackie will get us out of town."
And get them out of town he
did. . .
CHAPTER
1
Hagerstown, Maryland, October, 1988
Dusty Zamora
rolled into town on an Indian summer afternoon hot enough to make the devil
fry.
Ironically, The Devil was one of the people she'd come to see.
Hopefully, he had the information she needed.
Slowing her
Harley Davidson Fat Boy down to the posted 30mph speed limit, Dusty cruised
through the center of town, taking in the scenery as she headed toward her
destination. Smiling in spite of herself, she was happy to discover that not
much about their hometown had changed in the ten years since she and her three
sisters had left.
Had she not been in such a hurry, Dusty would've
taken time to stop somewhere and clean up; wash the travel dirt from not only
her body, but her trademark long, silky and thick, blue-black hair as well.
Hanging just past her shoulders in two braids, she could almost feel the grit
that had embedded itself during her long trip. One quick touch to the top of
her head told her that the bandanna she'd tied there was filthy as
well.
Dusty also would've put on an outfit that made it look a little
less like she made her living working the street corner. Dressed completely in
black leather—including her motorcycle boots—the chaps covering her skintight
jeans fell almost to her ankles. More than anything, the matching top that
covered no more of her upper body than a bra, was going to make it difficult for
anyone to pay more attention to her words than her clothes.
But
she didn't have time to mess around with trivial things like her appearance.
She'd come to Hagerstown for one reason and one reason only; a shower and change
of clothes would have to wait.
When the red brick building with the
sign reading, McCASSEY'S GARAGE, finally came into view, Dusty smiled at the
scene before her: six men dressed in sleeveless, polyester, navy blue mechanics
coveralls were on the side of the building tossing around a football.
The McCassey brothers and their cousins.
Slowing the bike,
Dusty downshifted as she watched Rebel, the youngest of the three brothers,
catch a pass and sprint across the lot for a touchdown. Part-owner of the
garage since he was eighteen, Rebel had always been the go-to guy when one of
his family members was in trouble; finishing a hell of a lot more trouble than
he started.
From a distance, Rebel looked the same. Somewhere around
six foot three, his broad, muscular body had always been something fine to look
at.
Walking over to Rebel and offering him a high five was his older
brother, Judd. Happy to see that the ten months separating them was apparently
no longer a fuel for their raging sibling rivalry, Dusty was amazed by how much
the brothers now looked alike. Nearly the same height and weight, the only
thing—other than the softball-sized skull and crossbones tattoo on Rebel's left
bicep—that distinguished them as individuals was their hair; Rebel's had always
been shoulder length and jet black. Judd's had lightened a little over the
years, and his fluffy, little-too-long, loose curls were now dark
brown.
Completing the round of high five's was the boys' oldest
brother, Blackie. Six feet seven the last time she'd seen him, Blackie didn't
look like he'd gotten any taller, but his body was much more muscular. A
constant weightlifter since the age of ten—mostly so he could defend himself and
his brothers against their father—Blackie looked like he easily weighed three
hundred pounds.
Spending a combined total of almost thirteen years in
prison, she'd heard through mutual friends that Blackie was bigger and meaner
each time he'd been released. His long, thick hair, which was the same color as
Judd's, was down to the middle of his back now. Dusty wondered vaguely whether
he'd cut it even once since the last time they'd seen each other.
A
former member of The Renegades—the outlaw biker gang she and her sisters had
ridden with on and off for the past ten years—Blackie, with his dark fu man chu
mustache, still looked the part. He'd been given the nickname, The Devil, when
he joined the gang at the age of seventeen, and had not only lived up to, but
well surpassed his bad reputation.
Which is why he was the one she'd come
to see.
For now.
The other three men she recognized were the
boys' cousins, Brady and Kane, and their uncle, Jimmy. Most of the guys were
between seven and twelve years older than her, but they'd all grown up together,
and she'd gotten to know them very well through her sisters.
It was good
to see so many familiar faces.
It was good to be home.
Turning
into the front parking lot, Dusty pulled to the side, parking the bike next to a
black GMC tow truck— Rebel's, if she remembered correctly.
Shutting
off the engine, she put down the kickstand and stood, leaning the bike to the
left and turning the wheel just a hair, making sure the bike was balanced before
letting go of the handlebars.
Swinging her right leg over the bike,
Dusty raised her hands in the air and stretched her weary body. Traveling
through the night hadn't been easy, but had been necessary. The answers she
hoped Blackie could give her were a matter of life and death.
* * * * *
Judd McCassey caught
up to his cousin Brady and shoved him out of bounds, clearing the way for Rebel
to run past them and score a touchdown in the makeshift end zone.
While
heading over to high-five his brother, Judd caught sight of a small rider on a
very large, loud, Fat Boy pulling into the garage parking lot. The rider's
outfit more than gave away the fact that she was woman, and left little to the
imagination. "Hey, Blackie," he said when his oldest brother came over and
stood next to him, high-fiving Rebel, "she a friend of yours?"
"Ain't
no friend of mine, little brother," Blackie told him, "Angel would kick my
ass—better yet, shoot it—if I was hangin' around with girls who looked like that
while she was home takin' care of the twins. Maybe this woman's lookin' for the
only McCassey brother that ain't married yet."
Knowing Blackie was
right about at least one thing, Judd laughed. His sister-in-law, Angel, was as
tough as any man, and probably a much better shot. She and Blackie might be
twelve years apart, but they were a perfect match. Most importantly, they kept
one another in check, which meant they'd been doing a good job of keeping each
other out of trouble in the little over a year they'd been married. . .so
far.
As far as this girl looking for an unmarried McCassey brother, he
had his doubts.
"Let's check it out," Rebel said, as he used his upper
arms to wipe the sweat from one side of his forehead, then the
other.
Judd watched his younger brother run a hand through his
sweat-soaked hair, then, without bothering to check if anyone was behind him,
Rebel began walking to the front of the building.
Curious himself, Judd
followed. At thirty-five, Rebel might be one of the youngest of the core group
of McCassey's, but he was smart, and had always been the unofficial leader of
their large family. Judd knew without asking that most, if not all of their
uncles and cousins would follow Rebel into any situation, no questions asked.
His two young sons, four-year-old Raider, and three-year-old Chase were already
showing signs of being exactly like their father.
As they
rounded the building, Judd got a much better look at the woman. She'd parked
the bike and was sitting on the bed of Rebel's tow truck with her legs dangling
over the side, watching them, he was sure, through her dark sunglasses.
Her eyes may have been hidden, but the large, fading bruise on her left
cheek was out in the open for them all to see. As they got closer, Judd also
noticed her two very visible scars.
A small, jagged scar on her
neck—which looked as if someone had tried to cut her jugular and missed—sent
chills up his spine. The other one, a giant burn running the length of her
right arm, was just as bad. Surprisingly, she didn't seem to have any tattoos.
. .a well-known trademark of an outlaw biker.
This girl, whoever she
was, looked as though she'd been through something much worse than
hell.
His brothers and cousins had obviously noticed the same thing,
which is why none of them let loose with any whistles, cat-calls, or sexist
comments as they normally would've done when they came upon a female
acquaintance dressed the way this one was. Despite their horrid reputations,
none of them would ever harass a woman they didn't know.
"I never thought
I'd see the day when there'd be six speechless McCassey men standing in front of
me. Especially you two," she said, pointing to Brady and Kane. "What's the
matter? You all forget what a woman looks like?"
That voice. . .Judd
recognized it. The last time he'd seen the girl it belonged to, she was
eighteen years old and sneaking out of town in the middle of the night. . .and
she'd looked a hell of a lot different. It was her, though. Judd would've
known her anywhere. "Well, I'll be goddamned," he said in a surprised whisper,
"Dusty Zamora."
Turning in the direction of the voice, Dusty removed
her sunglasses—revealing the complete remnants of her black eye—and set them
next to her. Smiling, she slid off the tow truck. "Well, it's nice to know
that at least one of you recognized me."
Surprised when she extended her
arms toward him, Judd didn't hesitate to step forward and pull her close. Out
of all five Zamora sisters, Dusty had always been the one he liked best. She
was eight years younger, but their age difference had never mattered to him.
They'd hung out in a lot of the same places and around many of the same people
since they were young.
After swinging her around in a circle, Judd set
her on her feet and stepped back to take a better look at her. Dusty's beauty
had always fascinated him. Her high cheekbones and silky, straight, blue-black
hair might be the only features she'd inherited from her full-blood, Cherokee
Indian father, but they gave her a unique look. Dusty's dark hair was a sharp,
striking contrast to her cream-colored skin, and set off her blue eyes; so pale
that sometimes they looked white. "Damn, it's good to see you! Where the hell
have you been the last ten years?"
Dusty backed away a few steps and
reached for her sunglasses, replacing them. "You don't want to
know."
"Yeah," Blackie interrupted in a stone-cold voice, "we do.
Where've you been, Dusty, and where are your sisters? Jessie ain't never left
you alone. Never."
It wasn't until Blackie mentioned Dusty's oldest
sister that Judd remembered just how strong of a friendship Blackie and Jessie
had shared. Jessie had always been just as wild as Blackie, usually getting
away with a lot more because she was a girl.
"Christ, Blackie, aren't
you even going to say hi first?"
"Hi, Dusty. Now, where the hell are
your sisters? And what are you doin' ridin' in here on that thing?" he asked,
pointing to the bike. "A Fat Boy is a little big for you."
"Oh, that
doesn't belong to me."
Judd smiled inwardly when Blackie raised both
eyebrows. "Then who does it belong to?"
Dusty shrugged and said,
"The guy I stole it from," as casually as if she'd said, 'a
friend.'
"You're on the run?"
"Yeah," she said much more
seriously. "It's a long story, though. You boys have time?"
Blackie
nodded and motioned toward the three open bay doors leading to the inside of the
garage.
"I have to get something first; I'll be there in a
minute."
As the rest of the boys headed inside, Judd remained still,
watching as she strode to the motorcycle, reached inside one of the black
leather saddlebags, and pulled out a roll of bills. On her way back, she
stopped next to him. "It's really good to see you, Judd. You
married?"
"Nope."
"Seeing anyone special?"
He shook his
head. "No one to speak of."
Judd saw just a hint of the old Dusty when
she grinned, stood on her tip toes, looped her arm around his neck, and pulled
him down low enough to be able to touch his mouth with hers; giving him the
wildest kiss he'd had since the last time she'd done that—and more—to him. .
.ten years earlier.
When they parted, she let go, licked her lips, and
smiled. "Mmm. . .you haven't lost a thing."
Not quite sure what kind of
response she was looking for, he did nothing but offer her a smile in
return.
"Speechless twice in one day? Come on, Judd, you can do better
than that."
"I don't know what to say, Dusty. I'm still recovering from
the last time you did that to me."
"Well then," she said seductively,
"I'll take that as a compliment." With a wink, she brushed past him and walked
inside.
As he watched her go, Judd shook his head in an effort to clear
it. Just like the McCasseys, wherever the Zamora sisters were, trouble wasn't
far behind.
Following Dusty inside, Judd got the distinct feeling that
they were all headed down a dark, dangerous road. . .
Copyright
2007 Lauren N.Sharman. All rights reserved.