Read Under Locke Online

Authors: Mariana Zapata

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction

Under Locke (31 page)

 

Dex choked. "What?"

 

"
I said it
." My tone was husky, almost a growl in frustration. I shouldn't be calling him an asshole. I told myself that I wouldn't but he'd gotten Sonny hurt. I could forgive the old man for a lot of things, ignore a lot of things but this had crossed the line. "He's so stupid."

 

Stupid for messing around with a group he had to know would only bring trouble. And so friggin' stupid for the dozens of other mistakes he'd committed along the way. I don't know how long I sat there, breathing in through my nose and out through my mouth to calm down but when I managed to, I caught Dex looking at me with an amused tilt to his mouth.

 

"I don't like feeling this angry," I admitted to him, feeling incredibly vulnerable.

 

Like all things Dex, his response was so simple I wanted to laugh. "Then don't."

 

~ * ~ *

 

We pulled into the parking lot
opposite
from
Mayhem
about twenty minutes later, parking the solid black motorcycle into the closest open spot next to another Harley. Hoofing it across the street, I spotted the same guy that had come into Pins a few weeks ago standing by the door. The one who had gotten into an argument with Dex my first night in Austin
, I finally realized.

 

"Dex." The man tipped his chin up before looking over in my direction, a smug grin crawling over his lips. "
Sweetie
."

 

I smiled at him weakly. “Hi.”

 

“How you doin’?” His thick eyebrows went up.

 

“I’ve been better, and you?” Crap, what was his name again? I couldn’t remember.

 

That smug grin grew wider. “My day just got a whole lot better, sweetie.”

 

Dex’s presence, broader and slightly taller than the other man, maneuvered its way between us like a barrier. His eyes burned a hole in his direction. “Don't you have shit to do?” he asked brusquely.

 

The man shrugged, that pleased smile still plastered on his dark pink mouth. "Yeah."

 

"You don't get paid to stand around scratchin' your balls," The Dick, who had apparently come out to play, bit off before pulling the bar's door open and pushing me through a little more roughly than he needed to.

 

I looked at him over my shoulder, frowning. "Watch it, would you?"

 

He looked at me out of the corner of his eye and waved me forward. "My bad, babe."

 

With a flick of fingers, Dex led the way through Mayhem. The place was empty and dark as we crossed the hardwood floor to the stairs that were on the far end of the floor. On the second floor, he turned and pushed open the door that closed off the stairwell from the rest of the building, holding it for me. I got a chance to look and see that the stairs went up another floor.

 

I'm not sure what exactly I was expecting to see inside, but it wasn't the short bar directly off to the right with neon signs mounted on the wall around it. A pool table and a separate foosball table took up an open space to the left with beer brand lamps mounted on it. It looked like a replica of downstairs except on a smaller scale.

 

“Babe, take a seat and hang out for a bit, yeah?” Dex asked me.

 

I nodded.

 

“Grab a pop or whatever you want from the fridge behind the counter,” he offered. A second later he'd disappeared down a halfway off the end of the bar. Like a siren’s song, a couch pressed against the far side of the wall called me to it.

 

I really didn’t mean to fall asleep but with the four hours I’d gotten the night before, it was inevitable. Except all I did was dream of my mom.

 

~ * ~ *

 

“We’ll get your car tomorrow,” Dex said as we got off his bike that night after closing up Pins.

 

I’d been surprised that he even came back to the parlor af
t
er he’d dropped me off with Blue that afternoon. He’d left me sleeping at the b
ar
for four hours. Four hours of sleeping on the couch with my neck twisted, my drool a little river from the corner of my mouth down my chin.

 

The only reason why I'd gotten up was because I felt something dabbing at my face.  That "something" was a napkin Dex was holding while looking like he was trying his best not to smile.

 

Not cool, and when I told him just that, he threw his head back and laughed.

 

His laugh still unsettled me.

 

Work had been steady like usual until Dex showed up around nine, cool as a cucumber to tattoo his nighttime appointments. The only sign he’d given me that this day was different from every other one before spending the night at his house and spilling his guts about his family back in Austin, was when he stood behind me after tattooing a client and wrapped his fingers around the back of my neck while I typed in a follow-up appointment for him.

 

I tried my best not to react to his touch but this was Dex. Hot Dex. Hot Dex that screamed at scary, mean men for me. Hot Dex with a piercing in his thing. Supposedly.

 

God, guessing where that piercing was located was a game I had no business playing.

 

“What do you wanna eat for dinner?” he asked as
he
held a hand out to help me off his bike.

 

“Anything really.”

 

“You know how to cook?” He watched
as I
pulled off his helmet.

 

“Yeah. Do you have groceries?”

 

He nodded. “I have shit in the freezer.”

 

“I have shit in the freezer,” I repeated his words back to him, walking into the house. So eloquent. “Well, I can probably figure out something. No promises it’ll be good though.”

 

He shrugged, still facing forward before detouring to head in the direction of his bedroom. “Go
nna
shower. Make whatever you want, babe. I’m not picky.”

 

The stuff in his freezer wasn’t exactly shit, but compared to Sonny’s house, it was like this guy visited the grocery store once a month instead of weekly. I found cans of diced tomatoes, pasta, and dried herbs in the pantry that I set out, while a big pot of water boiled—after spending ten minutes trying to find pots that were scattered in random cabinets throughout the kitchen. For as organized as Dex made sure we kept Pins, he didn’t have the same standards at home.

 

“What are you makin’?” Dex asked from just a few feet behind me.

 

I turned to look at him over my shoulder. “Spaghetti." I gave him a little smile, taking in the worn white undershirt he'd put
on.
"If
you want to take out some of that chicken you have in the freezer, I'll cook it."

 

He hummed. “Sounds good.
I’ll pop the chicken in the microwave, babe. No big deal
."

 

I smiled at him from over my shoulder. “Well, it probably won't be that good since there wasn't much to choose from in the pantry but...hopefully it won't taste like crap.”

 

Dumping the box of noodles that were in his cupboard into the big pot of water, I saw him pull out the freezer bag with precooked grilled chicken and set two breasts onto a plate. "I'm sure it'll be better than anythin' I can cook," he chuckled, putting the plate into the microwave and setting the timer.

 


You better
hope so." I
made a face
, stirring the pot.

 

He snickered.

 

The silence felt pretty awkward while I dealt with the food cooking. Trying to kill the tense silence, I tried to think about something to talk about. “
So you’ve known Sonny for a long time
?”

 

Dex was sitting there next to the bar with both elbows resting on the counter, hunched over it. “
Ever since your pa used to drop him off with my ma
durin’ club meetings.”

 

“You didn’t go to school together?”

 

He shook his head. “Nah. We lived in different hoods. Him and Trip went to school together.” For a brief moment, he got this far off look in his eye that made me wonder what kind of crap he was remembering. Probably nothing good.

 

“Oh. I don’t know why I got the impression you two were pretty close.”

 

Dex pushed away whatever had caught his attention on memory lane. “Close enough. I didn’t even know he still kept in contact with you ‘til a few years ago. He used to take off and not say shit to anyone about where he was goin’.”

 

Yeah...that sounded like Sonny. I lifted up a shoulder at him.

 

“Thought you were too good to come see him.”

 

And that had me narrowing my eyes over in his direction. It was a fact. A statement, and if I took the time to absorb what he was saying, I’d understand his point. So I saved my smart ass comment and went for a scowl. “I didn’t have money or time.”

 

He gave me a long look before nodding. “Yeah, I get that now.”

 

When he didn’t say anything else, I tried to think of what else to talk to him about. The distance between us wasn’t so painful at Pins, but at his house? It was. Oh lord, it was. I was grateful to him for letting me stay and sitting there quietly, well, awkwardly quietly, seemed wrong.

 

“I like your house,” I blurted out the first thought that came to mind.

 

He glanced up and looked around his kitchen, tipping his chin down. Dex’s mouth formed a serious straight line. “Me too.”

 

“Have you lived here long?”

 

“Almost a year in November,” he answered.

 

Why was he making this so difficult? I glanced at the bare walls and clean counters, listened to the cicadas outsides, thinking of the fact he lived out of the city limits. “I’m a little surprised you have a house out here and not an apartment like Trip’s.” A little shudder curled through my spine when I thought of the state his toilet seat had been in.

 

In typical Dex fashion he picked up on the last thing I would expect. “You been to Trip’s place?”

 

Did his tone sound off or was I imagining it? One look at the straight line of his jaw had me deciding I’d imagined it. “Once.”

 

“Huh,” he huffed. Those dark blue orbs narrowed for a split second. His fingers tapped against the counter before he started talking again. “I used to live in the same complex before I bought this place. Fuckin’ hated it there.”

 

“Really?”

 

Dex lifted up a shoulder. “Made me feel like I was livin’ in a beehive. Kinda reminded me too much of bein’ all cramped up in a double-wide as a kid, too.” When he went to start scratching at his throat, I understood how awkward and uncomfortable the memories of living in a trailer made him feel.

 

Then I remembered everything he’d said about growing up with his drunk of a dad. That kind of man in such a small place? Oh hell. With two sisters? Where the hell would he have even slept?

 

Acid built up in my chest and throat so quickly it caught me off guard. I was suddenly the one that felt uncomfortable. “I had to share a room with my little brother—bunk beds—until I was nineteen.”
Yia-yia
’s house had been so small, but it’d been home. I swallowed hard at the memory of sleeping on the couch at the apartment we’d moved into after selling the second home I’d ever known. “So I get it.”

 

And then, nothing. Silence.

 

O-kay. I could let that topic go.

 

I
fumbled
my way through making sauce for the pasta, hoping it wouldn’t taste completely bland since I didn’t have the right ingredients. In the mean time, Dex watched quietly, only getting up to grab a beer from the fridge and asking if I wanted a drink.

 

We sat on opposite sides of the kitchen bar, Dex drinking a beer and me with a bottle of water he’d pulled out from somewhere in the fridge I hadn’t seen. Considering the absence of necessary condiments and herbs, I thought the food came out pretty good. Dex’s murmurs of enjoyment told me he was either a great liar or it wasn’t too bad.

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