Detroit (Shady Valley Henchmen #5) Read Online Jessica Gadziala

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, MC Tags Authors: Series: Shady Valley Henchmen Series by Jessica Gadziala
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Total pages in book: 79
Estimated words: 76203 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 381(@200wpm)___ 305(@250wpm)___ 254(@300wpm)
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“Exactly,” I agreed, nodding.

“I don’t have the cash to pay him,” Colter said, looking like it killed his pride to admit that.

“We do,” I said. “And we will continue to pay it while you’re prospecting. Once you’re patched, if you’re still on parole, you can pay him yourself.”

“Sounds fair,” Colter agreed. “So what are the accommodations like?” he asked.

“Better than that,” Coach said, jerking his chin back toward the prison, looming large and intimidating from the hill. “Right now, we are using the spare room that would be yours for a house guest,” he added. “But once she is back to her life, it’s all yours. Until then, you can steal Rook, our other prospect’s room. He can’t be caught at our place.”

“Not having to share a room sounds like a fucking dream after all this time,” Colter admitted. “What kind of work am I expected to do?”

“Chores, mostly,” I said. “Shit the rest of us don’t want to do. But we are going to start working on transforming the top floor into more bed and bathrooms soon. So we’d expect you to work on that.”

“Well,” Colter said, exhaling hard through his nose. “Grew up with a handyman for a father,” he said. “Seems like it’s meant to be.”

And so his decision was made.

Not that it was a hard one.

He couldn’t go back into the military.

Other jobs would be hard if not impossible, to find. And the ones he might be able to, would be back-breaking for not nearly enough money. The kind of job that would age you prematurely.

Sure, agreeing to this life meant you would forever be on the wrong side of the law. But, honestly, once you were convicted of a crime, even after you did your time, society seemed to consider you on the wrong side for the rest of your life anyway. If that was how it was going to be, you might as well embrace it, make the most of it, and live a much easier life because of it.

“Where is this place?” Colter asked, letting Coach take his bag.

“Right there,” I said, waving toward the clubhouse.

“Looks like a factory,” he said, eyeing it.

“It was. Now it’s fifteen thousand square feet for us to live in,” Coach said.

“Fifteen thousand,” Colter repeated, sounding a bit awestruck.

“Rooms are huge,” Coach told him. “And you can do whatever you want to them,” he added. “Been working on mine since I got out.”

“Any rules I need to know about?” Colter asked as he walked toward the side of the SUV, but pausing, wanting the fine print before he got in.

“No hard drugs. Using or selling,” I said. “And we respect women,” he said.

“That’s it?” he asked.

“Pretty much. But you’ll have to talk to Slash, our president, if you want finer details,” I told him.

“Got it,” he agreed, nodding, and reaching for the door.

“You’re not from around here, right?” Coach asked.

“Fresno,” Colter said as we all got in and pulled away from the curb.

“Gonna be an adjustment,” Coach told him. “Shady Valley is a small-ass town.”

“With a thriving criminal underbelly, I hear,” he said.

“Yeah. We got us. Then the Murphy brothers. Irish mafia. An alley of ours. The Novikoff brothers. Russians. Then there’s Erion and Czar who seem to be working together these days. And, well, I guess Gav too,” he said, making my stomach tighten at the mention of him.

I knew I needed to be working on Everleigh’s case. It sounded sappy as fuck to admit it, but time working on that meant time away from Everleigh. And, as it turned out, it was getting harder and harder to leave her. Even just to run errands and shit. Having to go out for days on end to try to chase down leads? That was gonna be fucking torture. And she couldn’t come with me.

Coach drove down through the main area of town, pointing out the very few stores and restaurants we had, giving Colter the tour of the town, then pausing outside of Nyx’s place, where Rook rushed out of and hopped in the back with Colter.

“Rook,” he said, shaking Colter’s hand.

“Hiding from your P.O.?” Colter asked with a smirk.

“Lemme guess. You didn’t get her?” Rook asked, envy clear in his voice, then on his face when Colter confirmed that.

“She’ll be outta your life eventually,” Coach reminded Rook, who seemed to get more and more upset about the arrangement with each passing day. And when Nancy wasn’t letting him visit his ma in the psych facility, I guess I could understand why he was so worked up about it.

“Not soon enough,” Rook said, exhaling hard. “I saw Riff and Raff rolling through town,” he said after a second, trying to shake off his mood.

“Yep. They’ll be around for a few days,” I said.

“Sounds like we’re gonna party tonight,” Rook said, smirking. “You are overdue,” he said, nodding at Colter.


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