Jax (Redline Kings MC #5) Read Online Fiona Davenport

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, MC, Virgin Tags Authors: Series: Redline Kings MC Series by Fiona Davenport
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Total pages in book: 45
Estimated words: 41664 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 208(@200wpm)___ 167(@250wpm)___ 139(@300wpm)
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Her testimony had already put their CEO behind bars, locked away so tight he wouldn’t breathe free air again. But the report was clear—not all of his partners had gone down with him. Some were still out there, and if they had even a whisper that the girl who’d pulled the rug out from under them was hiding in Florida, they’d hunt her until they finished the job.

I dragged a hand through my hair, my ball cap shifting back, but I caught it before it fell off while my glasses slid lower on my nose. The part of me that had created new lives and erased ghosts fisted my hands on the desk with a precise kind of anger.

Finally, I scrolled through to check for threat pings next. Anyone sniffing around her name inside the same system. Recent activity logs were quiet. Which meant either blessed luck, she was new enough that the wolves hadn’t scented the trail yet, or the wolves had another way in.

But every instinct in me sharpened into a single truth—one slipup, one careless whisper in the wrong ear, and Lark’s life would end before she even realized it was threatened.

“Okay,” I murmured under my breath.

I pulled a fresh legal pad from the drawer and started a list. Not in code. Not on the network.

Old-school.

Steps I’d need to take if we kept her. Locks I’d need to harden. Holes I’d have to patch that weren’t mine but would become mine the second I told Kane because there was no if. I was keeping her.

Front-facing work history: deepen three points. Scatter secondary references that’ll confirm if called.

Lease cover: adjust payment timings to human inconsistency.

Utilities: introduce one late fee three months back, reconciled the next cycle.

Medical: create a routine clinic visit stub; flu shot record in a public health database (uncontroversial, low risk).

Social footprint: —

Unfortunately, there wasn’t much I could do about that. WITSEC didn’t allow social media accounts. But there were some small things I could fabricate to make the lack of social media more plausible.

Phone: rotate the carrier under the same number but keep the SIM quiet.

Email: plant junk mail in the right places to make her inbox look lived-in.

It was the kind of list I hadn’t written for a while. My hand remembered the rhythm anyway.

I stared at it for a long moment, then capped the pen and set it down.

I needed to tell Kane.

I never kept shit from my prez, not when it touched the club. But the fewer ears hearing WITSEC, the fewer chances a wrong word traveled where it shouldn’t. Telling the table wasn’t an option. Telling the old ladies wasn’t even a thought. This was a two-man conversation until it needed to be more.

The clock on my second monitor told me I’d been at this longer than I thought. It was after seven. The race would have just ended, but an underground race was being prepped now. Since Lark wouldn’t be involved in that, she was probably at home, no longer buried in credentials, wristbands, radio checkouts, and corralling volunteers who didn’t know a paddock from a pit box.

An image sparked in my head from after she bumped into me. She’d looked up at me like she’d been bracing for me to snap. Instead, I had muttered, “You’re fine,” and walked away before my mouth made trouble.

I hadn’t been fine. I’d been a live wire in a human shape.

Two years. She’d been carrying this weight for two years, hoping they would catch the other criminals so she could leave this life. And some pencil pusher had slapped together a sloppy backstory and shoved her into a place like Crossbend, where the only safety net was hoping nobody looked too close. My hand curled tight on the mouse. One mistake in the paperwork, one random hit from the wrong search string, and her entire cover would burn. And now she wasn’t just some file in a government system. She was here. In our world. In my world.

I wanted—no, needed—to see her. To look her in the eyes and know she was breathing, moving, alive. To assure myself that whoever had botched her file hadn’t already signed her death warrant.

The possessive burn in my gut deepened. She was under our roof now, working in our world. And whether she knew it yet, Lark had been claimed the second Kane put that file in my hands.

I stood, pocketed my keys, and shut down the sensitive windows. Not because I was done, but because the next step wasn’t on a screen.

Outside, the hallway was quiet. The clubhouse had a certain lull on race nights. A lot of the boys were out at the track or busy in the garage. Someone had started a pot of coffee that smelled like it could strip paint. I ignored it and kept moving.



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