Total pages in book: 108
Estimated words: 104594 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 523(@200wpm)___ 418(@250wpm)___ 349(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 104594 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 523(@200wpm)___ 418(@250wpm)___ 349(@300wpm)
Jackal aimed his Glock at the door, watching Rider open the door. The men running into the room didn’t know what hit them. They made it past the entryway before they started being gunned down, the sound of gunfire deafening.
A few turned back toward the door, but men coming in blocked their path. Others tried to run into the dining room, and the sounds coming from there showed they had met the same end.
Viper kicked the bodies to the side, opening the way to let men inside. Blood blossomed on Viper’s leg then, showing he had been hit.
Holding his position, Jackal shot the man as he was lifting his gun to shoot Viper again.
Jackal then moved from behind the bar, kicking more bodies out of the way, positioning himself next to Viper. “Get behind the bar.”
Viper didn’t move, shooting at more coming in through the door. Then Jackal and Viper moved backward as the bodies fell.
One man came in, terrified, and tried to grab Rider. As they struggled, Tate put a bullet in his skull.
When those outside stopped trying to get inside, the Porters, Rider, and Viper moved toward the door, going to them.
Jackal waited inside with the rest of The Last Riders, checking to make sure those littering the floor were dead. Those who were still living had their guns removed and were lined against the wall, moaning in pain.
Viper came back inside, limping. “That’s the last of them. The DEA is here. Train, call Shade; tell him it’s over. We won’t let the women up until we have the mess cleared.” Viper had moved the women into the basement last night. “Anyone who doesn’t want to have their guns checked for ballistics, give them to Drake. He’ll stash them until the DEA leaves.”
Jackal handed Drake his weapon, and several others gave theirs. Then Drake went to the kitchen, coming back with an armful of guns before going up the steps.
“Show me where you’re putting them. You have your hands full.” Tate took his brothers’ shotguns, following Drake.
“You need to go to the hospital to get that leg checked out.” Jackal gave Viper a bar towel to stem the blood soaking his leg.
“Train will patch me up. I’m not leaving.”
“Suit yourself.” Jackal shrugged, raising his hands in the air as the DEA agents came in with raised guns.
It took four hours before Viper let the women come upstairs.
Jackal went behind the bar, taking a bottle of whiskey out of the cabinet under the bar. He was surprised it wasn’t broken with the amount of bullets that had hit the bar from the front.
Train went to the kitchen, coming out with paper cups. Jackal poured all the men a drink.
“Fuck, the television has a crack on it,” Rider complained.
“None of the liquor was broken, but your TV is fucked.” Jackal took a drink of his whiskey before pouring one for Ice.
“That’s because Viper had a sheet of steel running through it.” Rider took several bottles of beer out of the cooler behind the bar, placing them on the bar for the men to reach.
Jackal and Ice stared at the men, taking the whisky bottle and passing it around, instead.
“I told you that you had to step up your game. That’s a five-hundred-dollar bottle of whiskey,” Jackal chided Ice.
“How many bottles does Viper have under there?”
Jackal poured himself a cupful. “I saw three or four.”
“Slip them out here and put them in my saddlebags. As soon as the shit clears, we’re out of here.”
“If you’re going to steal from a man, at least wait until I can’t hear what you’ll be taking.”
Ice took the whiskey back, pouring some in Viper’s cup. “Call it a parting gift. I was going to take the TV.”
33
“You sure you don’t want me to stay?” Alec asked, coming back into the room after he had checked out her upstairs.
Penni placed her makeup case on the small, round table in the area off the living room. “No thanks. I’m just going to bed and sleeping for a week.”
Penni locked the door after Alec left before going to the pantry and pulling out a bag of duck feed, shoving three scoops into a large baggie.
Going outside, she walked through the small neighborhood. It was only a short walk to the lake that faced the back of her condo. She could have easily climbed over the wall, but she had no desire to get stung if there were any stray bees that had been missed by the college when they had come to remove the hive. She would wait to check out her backyard when she wasn’t so tired.
She would feed the ducks first. Then she promised herself the sleeping marathon she had told Alec about.
There were several people around the mini-lake. It was barely ten in the morning, and the lake was secluded, but many in the community liked to sit there and eat their lunch.