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"Thank you."

It wasn't until I hung up that I realized what I'd done. Promised to call Ricky Gallagher. Shit.

The bigger shit was that I wanted to call him. Which was a problem when I was supposed to be attempting a reconciliation with my ex.

Ricky was Don Gallagher's son. Yes, Don "leader of the Satan's Saints" Gallagher. Ricky was taking his MBA part-time at the University of Chicago. Which sounds as if he's trying to break out of the family business. He's not. He just figures an M

BA might help him run it.

A biker MBA student. The "biker" part should have had me running. Except I liked Ricky, and it wasn't because he was charming and, yes, very easy on the eyes. There'd been something between us, that click that says, "This is someone I want to know better."

When Gabriel had noticed that spark, he'd stomped on it. Clearly a case of a good girl looking for a little bad in her life and exercising very poor judgment. At the time, part of me had wondered if he'd had a more personal reason. Now I knew he'd done it for James.

I had to call Ricky, meaning I had to tell him personally that I didn't want to go out with him. In other words, I had to lie.

SOFT SELL

Ricky finished proofing his term paper for management strategy. As he added his name to the first page, he paused before typing Richard. No one called him that. Outside of school, no one even called him Rick.

He had gone through a stage in high school where he'd insisted on Rick. It was the same stage where he'd cut his hair short, worn preppy clothes, garaged his bike, and bought a used car. When you grew up in a gang, that was teenaged rebellion. It lasted less than a school term before he realized that he was only rebelling for the sake of rebelling. He liked being Ricky Gallagher, with everything that entailed.

Someone rapped on the clubhouse office door.

"Come in."

It was Wallace, his father's sergeant at arms. Wallace did not go by Wally. A new recruit tried calling him that once. The result had required plastic surgery.

Wallace looked around for Don. Not long ago, that look would have been followed by, "Boss in?" But now it was just a visual check before he turned to Ricky.

"Got a lead on Tucker," Wallace said. "Bastard's holed up across the border in Wisconsin. Gonna go pay him a visit. You wanna ride along?"

"Sure. Give me five. Just finishing a term paper."

Wallace's gaze flicked to the laptop screen. No sign of derision crossed his face. This, too, meant Ricky was making headway. He'd grown up like the favorite nephew in a huge clan of uncles. Growing out of that role proved difficult. Going to college hadn't helped. His father fully approved, but to the gang it was a sign that maybe their boy was a little too intellectual, too mainstream . . . too soft. Dropping out wouldn't earn their respect, though. No more than insisting on being called Rick. He would earn his place, and he would do it as Ricky Gallagher, MBA.

After Wallace left, Ricky's cell phone rang. Call display showed a number he didn't recognize. He hesitated before answering.

"It's Olivia," a contralto voice said. "Olivia Jones. Lydia said you were trying to get in touch with me."

"I was."

The tightness in her voice told him this wasn't a call she'd wanted to make. She might have flirted with him at the clubhouse, but after that business at Desiree Barbosa's apartment, she'd clearly decided he was not someone she cared to know better. Damn Gabriel.

He made small talk for a few minutes, but her voice stayed tight, wary, and finally there was nothing more he could do but take his shot, on the very slim chance he was mistaken.

"Are you free for dinner tonight?"

"No, I'm sorry. I--"

"Tomorrow night? The night after that?"

A sudden laugh, as if in spite of herself.

"Yep, I am persistent," he said. "And flexible. Name the time. Name the place. French cuisine next Saturday night or a hot dog stand for lunch tomorrow."

"I can't."

"Sure you can. Where are you right now? I'll bring a picnic."


Tags: Kelley Armstrong Cainsville Fantasy