She rebuilt her business from nothing. Now a shakedown operation wants to destroy everything she's built. Addie Walsh spent three years turning a broken-down truck into the best tacos in Sturgis territory, built with YouTube tutorials and pure stubbornness. When she refused to pay "membership fees" to the Western Dakota Food Vendors Association, she thought she was standing up for herself. But Neil Branson has spent six years crushing vendors who tell him no, and the woman who went viral is about to discover what happens when a predator makes an example.
He came to the Black Hills looking for a place to belong. He found something worth fighting for. Tyler "Portland" Wilson earned his road name and outsider status the same way-by choosing the Black Hills instead of being born to them. When he walks up to a food truck looking for intel and finds a woman with fire in her eyes and bleach in her kitchen, everything changes. She's fierce. She's fighting alone.
And she's about to become his. Too bad Branson has no idea what he just started. What begins as protection becomes possession. But Branson has bureaucrats who pull permits, muscle who enjoys destruction, and a network that's destroyed six vendors before her. Addie's truck. Her freedom. Everything is leverage for a man who's never faced consequences. In the Black Hills, the club handles problems with violence, not paperwork.
And Portland is about to show a shakedown artist what happens when you threaten what belongs to him.
She rebuilt her business from nothing. Now a shakedown operation wants to destroy everything she's built. Addie Walsh spent three years turning a broken-down truck into the best tacos in Sturgis territory, built with YouTube tutorials and pure stubbornness. When she refused to pay "membership fees" to the Western Dakota Food Vendors Association, she thought she was standing up for herself. But Neil Branson has spent six years crushing vendors who tell him no, and the woman who went viral is about to discover what happens when a predator makes an example.
He came to the Black Hills looking for a place to belong. He found something worth fighting for. Tyler "Portland" Wilson earned his road name and outsider status the same way-by choosing the Black Hills instead of being born to them. When he walks up to a food truck looking for intel and finds a woman with fire in her eyes and bleach in her kitchen, everything changes. She's fierce. She's fighting alone.
And she's about to become his. Too bad Branson has no idea what he just started. What begins as protection becomes possession. But Branson has bureaucrats who pull permits, muscle who enjoys destruction, and a network that's destroyed six vendors before her. Addie's truck. Her freedom. Everything is leverage for a man who's never faced consequences. In the Black Hills, the club handles problems with violence, not paperwork.
And Portland is about to show a shakedown artist what happens when you threaten what belongs to him.