Jackson: Chapter 18
Jackson (Mercy Ring Book 1)
Jackson remained light on his toes, dancing around Erik, watching him closely. Heâd already taken a few hard hits, but heâd given them back, too.
He was on edge. Someone had infiltrated Riverâs home last night. And he hadnât stopped the asshole. The guy hadnât had a gun, but heâd had a knife.
What had he planned to do with it? Threaten her? Hurt her? Worse? Heâd caught a glimpse of the guyâs face but didnât recognize him as anyone heâd seen at the club.
Erik swung at Jacksonâs head. He ducked before throwing a body shot Erikâs way, landing it on his ribs. The man barely reacted, dancing back a step.
Jackson swung the next two punches, letting the frustration fuel him. Drive him to hit harder. Fiercer.
It was just training, but it also wasnât. It was a way for him to release the anger. What if he hadnât been there last night? What if River had been alone?
Nothing had been disturbed in Rykerâs room. It could mean that heâd been there for River. Or heâd planned to hurt her before going through Rykerâs things. Either way, Jackson and his guys had gone through Rykerâs room that morning and found nothing that stuck out to them.
Jackson dove forward, driving the next hit at Erikâs head, then his body. The first was blocked. The second wasnât.
Erik grunted a second before Declanâs voice stopped them both in their tracks.
âTime.â
Jackson stepped back, deep breaths rushing in and out of his chest.
Erik frowned, panting. âYou sure you need my help? You fight like a demon.â
He moved to the rope, grabbed his towel, and wiped the sweat from his face. âIâll take all the help I can get before my next fight.â
Theyâd been at it for most of the afternoon. And before Erik arrived, Declan had been inside the ring with him, drawing on the extensive combat training heâd received from the military.
Cole was shadowing River right now, otherwise, he no doubt would have stepped into the ring, too. No way was Jackson leaving her unprotected. Not after last night.
Erik nodded. âFine with me. Iâm always up for a round.â
Declan pushed off the rope, crossing his arms as he looked at Erik. âHow did you get involved in that place?â
He lifted a shoulder. âI heard whispers. People in the boxing community talk. I live in the area, and even though I stopped boxing professionally, I still like to get in a ring or a cage whenever I can.â
Jackson hunched under the rope, stepped out, and grabbed two bottles of water from the cooler. He tossed one Erikâs way.
Theyâd cleaned the place up but hadnât bought a fridge. They probably wouldnât, not when they werenât sure how long theyâd be using the space. âDo you know much about Mickey?â
Erik scoffed. âOther than the fact the guyâs a jerk? No. I go in there, keep my head down, win my fight, and leave. Iâm not interested in anything else that might be going on.â
Jackson paused, bottle midway to his mouth. âAnything else that might be going on?â
Erik unscrewed the cap of his bottle. âThereâs always other shit going on in places like that. I stay out of it.â
âDo you know where the stairs at the end of the hall lead to?â
âThe parking lot. Mickey only uses it for deliveries. Itâs usually locked.â
Declan nodded. âWhat kind of deliveries?â
âAlcohol, I think.â
Jackson and Declan shared a look. Alcohol. That meant kegs, didnât it?
Before either of them could ask, Erik was walking toward his bag. âSo why did you take Rykerâs spot? Iâm guessing you knew the guy?â
Jackson only just stopped the flinch. Knew. Damn, that sounded wrong.
âWe were in the military together.â Jackson didnât add that theyâd also grown up together. That they were in the same team. That they were as close to brothers as you could get without actually being related.
He didnât know Erik enough to trust him that much, so sticking to the truth while also being brief was smart.
Erik nodded. âFigured. You all fight like soldiers.â
Declan laughed. âHow does a soldier fight?â
âTactically. And youâre good at keeping the dominant position.â One side of his mouth lifted. âIâd know. I was a Marine.â
Jackson nodded, not surprised. You could generally tell when someone had been in the military by the way they held themselves. The way they watched their back, always aware of their surroundings.
âAll right, Iâm gonna head out.â Erik lifted his bag from the floor. âCall me the next time you want to train.â
The second the door closed, Jackson headed toward the changing room for a shower. He stopped at the sound of the door opening again.
When he turned back, his fists clenched, fury heating his breath.
His father studied the place before turning his gaze to Jackson. âWord around town said that youâd come back here.â
Jackson didnât move a muscle. âYou here to tell me what the fuck you were doing at Mickeyâs club Friday night?â
Declan remained where he was, but Jackson could see his friendâs muscles bunching.
Brianâs eyes narrowed. âIâm here to tell you that if youâre smart, youâll stay the hell away from that basement.â
Jackson could have laughed. âSince when do you care about whether Iâm smart or not?â
His fatherâs jaw visibly clenched, but he remained silent.
Jackson took a slow step forward, his muscles vibrating. âWhat were you doing there?â
âThe same thing as everyone else. Placing bets.â His father shoved his hands into his pockets. âAnd now Iâm doing my fatherly duty. Iâve told you to stay away. Any trouble you get yourself into is now on you.â
Jackson was across the room before his father could turn, grabbing him by the shirt and shoving him against the wall. âWhy were you taking a group of people into that office?â
âI told you,â he said quietly. âWe were placing bets.â
âBullshit.â
Brian tried to shove Jackson off, but he didnât let the guy move an inch. âWho were those men talking to Mickey?â
Brian scowled. âThey were men you want nothing to do with.â
âDo you?â
The smile that stretched Brianâs mouth had Jacksonâs stomach turning. âYou know I like a bit of danger in my life.â
Jacksonâs fingers tightened, and he pulled his father away from the wall before shoving him against it again, harder. âWhat the hell happened to Ryker?â
His fatherâs eyes steeled. âHe got too close to something he had no business getting close to. And if you wanna stay out of the ground, youâll do as I said and stay the fuck out of this.â
River wasnât happy. Jackson had planted Cole on her without telling her. She knew why. Someone had broken into her house last night. Someone with a goddamn knife. But Jackson could have told her what heâd done. Even a text would have been nice. Because the sudden appearance of Cole at her side had put a serious dent in her plan to talk to Angel.
She stepped into the boxing gym, searching the large space. Seconds later, the door to the locker room opened, and Jackson stepped out. He was fully clothed, but his hair was wet and feet bare.
His gaze went straight to her, his eyes darkening as they ran over her body.
No. She would not let the man distract her. She pushed down the rising desire. âWhy didnât you tell me Cole was watching me today?â
His gaze skirted behind her to Cole before skittering back. âIt slipped my mind.â
She almost rolled her eyes. âNothing ever slips your mind.â
He frowned. âHow did you see him?â
Cole cleared his throat behind her. âIâll leave you guys to it.â
There was the sound of the door closing behind her, thenâ¦silence.
Jackson took measured steps forward. âColeâs good at trailing people. You wouldâve only seen him if he wanted you to. Soâ¦why did he want you to see him?â
She crossed her arms. âDonât you try to change the subject. Why didnât you tell me you were having me watched?â
His features remained completely clear. âI see it more as protected than watched.â
âYeah, well, it felt a bit more like six and a half feet of surprise surveillance. You should have told me. Not only is that the normal thing to do, but you and I are dating, or bed buddies, or something in that vicinity, so telling me youâve got me âprotectedâ is the minimum I expect.â
His brows lifted. âBed buddies?â
âJacksonââ
When he reached her, his hands went to her waist, his face pushing into her hair. Her belly quivered. âMm, you smell good.â
When his lips touched her neck, she wrenched free, stepping back. âDonât try and distract me.â
One side of his mouth lifted. That look was dangerous. It could easily have her dropping all her defenses, and he knew it.
He took a step toward her, but then his phone beeped from his pocket. He lifted it, frowning when he read the screen.
Oh, crap. If that was Cole ratting her outâ¦
When his eyes turned back to her, they werenât angry, but they were definitely suspicious. âHow exactly did you work out Cole was trailing you again?â
So Cole hadnât told him what happenedâ¦but heâd hinted at something. âWhat exactly did he just text?â
âHe asked me to let him know if I need any more details.â
Snitch.
Jacksonâs hand returned to her waist, and this time she was almost certain he was holding her in place in case she ran. âRiverââ
âI went to speak to Angel.â
All hints of playfulness left his features. âYou what?â
Sheâd expected him to yell. For some reason, his quiet words were worse. âI didnât even get inside the building. The second I got out of my car, Cole was in front of me, asking what I was doing, then he said I had to check with you first.â As if Jackson was her keeper or something. Cole had been one big annoying wall, blocking her way and refusing to let her pass.
âSo if he hadnât been there, youâd have just waltzed on in by yourself and asked if she knew who killed your brother?â
She crossed her arms. âNo. I would have asked what was in the kegs.â
Finally, he reacted the way sheâd expected him to. âAre you crazy? The woman could be involved in whateverâs going on at that club! Hell, she could have had Mickey or one of his guys in there with her.â
He was right. Hell, the whole thing could be a setup, for all she knew. But her brother was worth the risk. If the situations were reversed, Ryker wouldnât be leaving a single stone unturned to find her.
Her jaw set. âI need to talk to her.â
Not the right answer. Not if the tensing of Jacksonâs muscles and the way he towered over her was anything to go by.
She hadnât asked him to go with her because, one, it would have taken a hundred and one years for her to convince the man to say yes. And two, he would have wanted to go himself. Alone. And that wasnât the deal sheâd made with Angel. It needed to be her. Preferably by herself.
âHow did you even get the womanâs address?â he asked through gritted teeth.
âShe texted it to me.â She tried to turn, but this time he grabbed her with both hands, pulling her back.
âRiverââ
âThis is why I didnât tell you, Jackson. Because I knew you wouldnât like it.â
âDamn straight!â
Again, she attempted to pull away, but his hold was like steel. âIâm going, Jackson.â
Was it possible the man just got even bigger in his fury? âNo, youâre not.â
âYes, I am!â
âYou arenât, River. Itâs not safe, and I wonât allow it.â
Oh, she was getting pretty sick of this guy telling her no. Especially when Angel could be the breakthrough she needed to find her brother.
For a moment, her eyes shuttered. She took a moment to calm her frazzled mind, allowing the frustration to bleed away and the rational side of her brain to take over. Jackson cared. Thatâs why he was stopping her. She had to appeal to that part of him.
Her eyes opened, and she touched his chest, her voice softening. âPlease, Jackson. I begged Angel to talk to me, and she finally agreed. To talk to me. One time.â The next part was hard to say, but she forced the words out. âCome with me. Bring a gun, be my bodyguard, have your guys on standby. Whatever you need. But I need to be there.â She leaned forward. âThis could be it. This could be where we find the answers we need to help Ryker.â
This time, it was his eyes that shuttered.
Her voice lowered. âPlease, Jackson.â
There was a deep intake of breath, and then he was looking at her again. âFine.â
The air rushed out of her chest.
âBut you follow my lead the entire time, and if I say weâre leaving, we leave.â
It wasnât ideal. But right now, her options seemed to be that or nothing. âThank you.â