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Bounty:Fury Riders MC(7)





"Yeah, I know, it's not a fun word. But that's what they would think. I won't let them think that."



"And you won't get in trouble for knowing?"



"How would I?"



She shrugged. "I don't know your life. It might affect you somehow."



"Just tell me." I already had a good idea what it was anyway. If he had  chased her and was ready to attack her, she had seen something she  shouldn't. That meant a very narrow range of things.



And I was right. "I heard him arguing with another man, so I watched  from the street. I was taking pictures, thinking they would be good to  show two men fighting. Real-life stuff, you know? And they were lit so  perfectly … "



"I get it." I waved a hand. "Keep moving."



"Oh, anyway, they were fighting, and I was shooting photos. And then the guy … the one who chased me … he stabbed the other guy."



My eyes widened, though I knew it had to be something like that. "You're sure?"



She nodded hard. "Oh yeah. I can see it front of me like it's happening  right now. He pulled a knife, and I saw it in the light. And then … it  disappeared into the other guy's stomach. He fell."



"Shit." Of all the times for her to come around.



"And I screamed. I couldn't help it." She looked panicked, probably  because the look on my face wasn't friendly. Of all the stupid things to  do, she went and screamed.



"And he came after you."



"Right."



I shook my head, amazed at the way it had played out.



"Did you know him?" she asked.



"Like, did I recognize him? No." It wasn't a lie. I had remembered his  face before I hit him, and I hadn't seen it before. He must have been a  newer member. He might have been just a nobody. Then I had a thought.  "Did you get a good look at the other guy?"



She shrugged. "Sort of. He was wearing a leather vest thingie, like you do."



I grimaced. Amateur. "It's called a kutte."



She shrugged like it didn't matter. I decided not to pick a fight over  words. "Anyway, that's what he wore," she said. "He was very tall, and  sort of skinny. He had dark hair."         

     



 



Well, that narrowed it down. "Did you see the back of the kutte? Did it have a patch that looked like the other guy? A wolf?"



She shook her head. "Sorry. He had his back to the wall."



I hoped against hope it was Alexander York, head of the Wolves. He was  tall and lanky with dark hair. I doubted that a member would kill the  group's president over a fight, but it had to be a big deal if the guy  was willing to chase Erica down for it.



No. It wasn't who he killed. It was the camera.



"He saw the camera, didn't he?" I asked.



She nodded. Her big eyes and the way she screwed her mouth up at the  corner reminded me of a kid who knows he did something wrong.



"I know he was going for it," she said. "Or he would have, had I not dropped it. He asked about it."



"You dropped it? Is it broken?"



She reached into the front pouch of the shirt to pull it out. The lens  was cracked, and some of the outer casing was crushed. "Shit. That looks  expensive."



"It was." She touched it gently like it was her baby. I guessed it was, if taking pictures was her job.



"I'm sorry that happened." I held out my hand, expecting her to give it to me.



"Uh, what do you want?" Her tone shifted. She held the camera away from me, sort of off to the side.



"The camera. I wanna see it."



"No way!"



"It's broken anyway, isn't it?



"So what? Why do you want it, then?"



I heaved a sigh. "Because! You caught a fucking murder on it. I want to see if I can see who was killed."



She smirked. "Yeah, right. Good luck with that. You wouldn't even know how to get the pictures off it now."



"And you do? What, is it something you learned in college, rich girl?"  She had gotten deep under my skin, and I couldn't hide it. I was sick as  hell of her tone, like she was so much better than me. And why? Because  I saved her ass? It didn't make sense. I hated the entitled way people  like her talked to people like me. She was no different than the rest.



"I didn't need to go to college to learn but, yeah, it was one of the things I studied."



"Some of us had more important things to do than go to college," I said.



"Really? I would have pegged you for the Ivy League." She smirked.



"Ouch. I guess I'm not supposed to know what that means."



Her eyes went narrow. "Do you?"



"I didn't skip college because I'm stupid, princess. And I'm gonna bet you didn't go to the Ivy League, either."



"Why's that?"



I had to crack a smile. "If you did, the name would be on your sweatshirt."



She looked stunned-then laughed. "You're probably right." The tension in  the air was broken. Sure, I got that from what I had seen on TV and in  movies. I'd never met an Ivy League student in my life, except maybe a  public defender or judge. But it must have been right if she laughed.



She wasn't happy about it, but she handed the camera to me. "Damn, this thing is heavy," I said, weighing it in my hand.



"Yeah, you get used to carrying it around." She shrugged.



I turned it over and over. The display on the back was cracked, too. Damn it. I tried turning it on, but nothing happened.



"Where's the memory card go?" I asked. I glanced up, and she was smiling.



"Sorry," she said. "I didn't expect you to know anything about it. I underestimated you. That was rude."



I shrugged it off. "Whatever. So where is it?"



"Along the bottom. But it's sort of crushed in. You see what I mean?"



I did, and I was so frustrated I was ready to throw the fucking thing  against a wall to break it open. There was a little spring-loaded plate  at the bottom that should have slid open when I pressed it with my  thumb. It wasn't moving.



"Wonderful." I put it on the desk. "I need to know who he stabbed."



"Why's it so important?"



"It just is." I wasn't ready to go into it with her, and besides, the  less she knew, the better. She was already in enough trouble. She didn't  even know it yet. Taking her away from there wasn't the end of her  night. I thought it over. "Do you think there's any way to get it out of  there?"



She shook her head. "I really don't know. I was planning to take it to a store to see if they could do it."



"No way." I shook my head. "We can't bring anyone else into this."



"We?" Her eyes bugged out. "Since when did this become a ‘we' thing?"



I closed my eyes, praying for strength before I tore her blonde head  off. I wasn't used to controlling my temper. "Since you took a picture  of one of my club's enemies killing another guy. I have to know who it  was."



"Why?"



"You don't need to know why!" My voice echoed throughout the room, and  her mouth clamped shut. Good. She needed to be scared. She was  overstepping her boundaries. It was time to remind her who was in  charge. I hardened myself against her. I was being too nice and passive.         

     



 



I stood, slamming my hands on the desk for effect. She jumped a little,  and I felt strangely good inside. "You're gonna get the memory card out  of there. And you're gonna get me those pictures."



She glanced at the broken display. "I need a computer for that," she whispered.



"I know you do. I'm not a fucking idiot. You'll get what you need." I  turned to walk away. I needed to get out of her presence for a while, or  else I was going to kill her. Or fuck her senseless. I wasn't sure  which one yet, but I didn't think she'd be a fan either way.



"Where are you going?" she asked, and I heard her stand.



"I'm getting a breath of air, maybe a drink. Maybe I'll play a few hands  of poker." I pointed at the chair. "I suggest you sit your ass down and  get comfortable because you're not going anywhere until I say so."



I watched her change from a scared little girl into a vicious wildcat.  Something inside me roared, loving it. "Who the hell do you think you  are? You can't tell me what to do!"



"Who do I think I am? I think I'm the man who saved your ass tonight. You're gonna do as I say, then I might let you go home."



"You might?" Her hands were on her hips, her jaw jutting out fiercely.



"Maybe. If I decide you're safe going home."



"Safe?" I saw uncertainty flicker behind her eyes, in her voice.



"You don't get it, do you?" I started at her, almost wanting to laugh.  "You're good as dead out there right now. I made the mistake of leaving  that asshole alive. If I had known he killed someone, I would have  killed him."