as if it were a high school cafeteria and choosing the right table would somehow brand her for life. None of the other Hoez were around, so she too, sat at an empty table and waited for some of the girls to come in. Even the claimed women tended to find a spot next to the Hoez, instead of taking a chance of sitting at a table next to a single man.

Someone bumped into her, making the spoon of scrambled eggs tumble back on her plate. Turning, she saw the dark figure of Onyx. “You big ox, watch where you’re going.”

“Sorry, I didn’t see you.” Onyx smiled, his lips full and eyes dark, but somehow glimmering. “It’s easier when you have a pole to catch my eye.”

“And now, I’m invisible,” she sneered, the words acidic in her throat even as they made their venomous way to her lips. “My pole on the other hand—”

“Your pole work, more than the actual object,” Onyx rebuffed.

“Look, it pissed her off,” Mountain said, one of the few men larger than Onyx with a thick beard and twice as thick arms. “Apologize.”

“First off, it was an accident,” Onyx said. “Second, this is an A B conversation, so see your prospect ass out of it.”

“Your patch doesn’t give you superiority.”

“In fact,” Onyx said pointing to the word ENFORCER, like he had when he had a badge on his chest. “It does.”

“Seriously, Onyx why do you do that?” Shark added.

“Do what?” He shrugged and filled up his plate of food.

She hated the fact that he looked exactly like her boyfriend from high school. Why couldn’t he grow a beard or get some nasty scar? Instead, he keeps his head shaven and jaw smooth. It really bothered her. Lord knows he sure didn’t act like Byron, at least he had that aspect of his existence to keep her at more than arm’s length.

“Well you need to watch what the hell you’re doing.” Topaz finished filling her plate, walked over to an empty table and sat down.

Onyx walked over and sat across from her. “I hope you don’t mind.”

“Oh, I actually have a choice? Thought that patch made you mother superior up in here,” she snipped.

“That was a dick move,” he admitted setting her back. “With Mountain, man’s good. I’ve been advocating to get him patched in, but then again, I don’t have the background ya’ll have with the Roadkillers.”

“You have?” she questioned, now thinking she should have said no. Would he move on if she told him to take a flying leap? More and more, she’d began questioning the whole ranking and societal issues in the club. She may have been the trailer park queen in New Bend, but that wasn’t where she wanted to stay. A few weeks before her life spun out of control, she’d been given a full academic ride to the University of Arkansas where Byron was being recruited. She wanted to study anthropology and he would lead them to the SEC championship.

“Yeah,” Onyx said after swallowing his food. “He was right, I needed to apologize for bumping into you. Only, I already had when I said sorry.”

“That you didn’t see me.” She glared at him.

“As compared to what?” he asked downing a pill with his morning OJ, then tucking the orange bottle back into the inner pocket of his leather coat. “Admitting I see you trying to deal with the what…a dark spot in your normally golden day.”

“What is that supposed to mean?”

“Don’t act like you’re afraid I’ll touch the spoon before you and contaminate it with some germ only us darkies carry.”

“I’ll have you know—”

“Some of your best friends, really? Not that Lil’ Mama and Cream want to dance, but your ‘girls’ are pretty damn pale.”

“I’ll pass that on to Free,” she snapped.

He didn’t know her or her damage. The last thing she feared was some germ. They weren’t exactly in a place where mixing was accepted. At least not from the white girl side of the mix. Cass and Bounty could swirl until their hearts were full, but she knew better. Life had shown her exactly what could happen if she followed her heart instead of her head.

“You’re right,” he chided. “You’re the queen of diversity.”

“So, I should just find a black woman to put up on the pole to hit a quota?” She knew the rhetoric. Her family spewed it and more to her over the years. There was no end to the vicious words, all with little to no purpose than to hurt and push him away. Far away. Only that wasn’t fair. He’d become part of the fabric of the Steels here and she was the frayed end that kept getting caught and causing damage.

“Don’t put yourself out,” he replied. “Trust me, I’m used to having my every move and action questioned because I dare to exist in your world. I’m not Hollywood, I was under no delusion that would stop when I came to one of the whitest states in the country.”

“Your choice,” she bit back. “They have consequences you know.”

“Speaking of which is the real reason you send drugs to Granny to help with the kid she’s raising for you?”

“Why would you think that?” She narrowed her eyes at him.

“Strippers have stereotypes too, and you’re not paying your way through school or coked out.” His eyes glared at her, cold and distant. “Sucks being stuck in a hole because one aspect of your life. Difference is Becky, you chose your box, you weren’t born that way.” He gathered the rest of his food and left.

Topaz’s belly ached. There were many roles she’d played over the years. Any stripper had. This one, the one who hates a man simply for being, hurt. It hurt because it was a lie. He was like Byron. Sneaking and putting in a good word for Mountain. That was Byron. He didn’t want the credit, but he wanted men to be acknowledged for what they contributed to the team. Even her stupid,

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