Hard Rider (Bad Boy Bikers Book 1) (27 page)

BOOK: Hard Rider (Bad Boy Bikers Book 1)
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But somehow, she had hoped despite everything that her father was above such things, that he had turned down the requisitions. That maybe he cared more about keeping the image of Marlowe as a quaint, quiet city more than he did about some illusion of safety provided with ever bigger guns for foes that just didn’t exist.

Apparently not.

“What’s all this?” she asked. “Are you going to war?”

He smiled at her, and pointed for his men to go into the room. She noticed for the first time that Kyle was not among them—which meant this truly was serious. Colt was not proud of his son, and did not believe very much in his ability to handle himself in a fight.

Likely, Kyle would be crushed when he found out he was not involved, if he had not discovered it already.

They stepped away from the door, letting the officers through. The air was filled with the shuffling, clacking sounds of the several men slipping on their gear and arming up. She stood with her father in the hallway just outside.

From down the way, Paxton approached. He wore his uniform, his uneven form doing its honest best to make it look attractive, and failing completely in her mind.

“You know Paxton, honey.”

This again? Goddamn
.

“Yup.”

“Hey June,” said Paxton, leaning against the opposite wall, clearly looking a little embarrassed. “Nice to see you. You look great today.”

Could he actually say anything else? June had to wonder.

“Thanks,” she said, not meaning it, and looking entirely at her father. “Why is he here?”

Colt took a moment before answering, looking at Paxton and then June, smiling broadly, as if he had arranged the perfect match.

“I’ve been thinking,” said the sheriff, “your attachment to this motorcycle club. It’s wrong-headed thinking. It is my own mistake, I will admit. I must have somehow turned you off the righteous path at some point in your time at my house. But that is all right. You see, what is trained can be untrained. And I will untrain you. I will teach you the right way to act.”

Her father was acting eerily calm. This scared her more than any of his bluster, any of his anger.

“You’ll
teach
me?” June was tired of this already. “I’ve already learned enough from you, thanks.”

“No, not quite yet. You see, what’s going to happen is that my men are going to start arresting every member of the Wrecking Crew that we can find. We know where they live. We know where they hang out. We know where a majority of them are right now. We’ll expect they’ll be indignant when we find them and tell them we’re taking them in. We expect resistance. And even if they don’t resist, they will have resisted, and we’ll have to defend ourselves. We’ll have to put them down for the sake of us and the town. You starting to understand, honeybear?”

Murder. He was talking about murder—murdering every one of the Wrecking Crew.

“You can’t do that,” she said in disbelief. “There’s...witnesses. The news. There’ll be investigations.”

“Investigations run by the District Attorney’s office, yes. And they owe me quite a few favors. He needs my help every time he wants to stay in office. Don’t you know how this works by now? I thought you went to college.”

The corruption ran deep.

“I’ll expose you,” she said. It was the only weapon she had.

She had to be careful how she said it. The tapes were on her person now. She would have to be very careful about how she said this so as not to be searched—not to ruin her one chance of making a difference.

“Expose me?” He laughed. “I’ll expose you. You won’t be nothing to anybody but some slut trying to protect her loser criminal boyfriend. Unless, of course, you do what I say. Then you’ll be a respectable woman again.”

“What do you mean?”

As he spoke, his voice was soft, like he was chiding a five year-old for stealing a toy car from a store.

“I mean this here,” he pointed inside the door where the men were arming themselves. “This is just preparation. We’ve still got about a day before we can act in full. But, if you go to the courthouse with me this afternoon and get your marriage annulled and, let’s say, marry Paxton, we’ll pass over all of this. I’ll call it all off. You’ll have the husband you should have. I know,” he said, holding up a hand, “that you’ll need time to adjust. That you’re getting married straight without the courtship stage. But it’s what would have happened anyway, honey. I know best. We’re just speeding it along a bit.”

She couldn’t tell if he was mad, like
insane
mad, or just so buried in spite and resentments that nothing made sense to him anymore unless it was calculated to do the most damage possible.

“Uh, Sheriff?” said Paxton, his voice cracking. “I didn't know anything about...you're saying married? I mean I like June and all, but I mean, I can't just
marry
her—”

“You want  me on your  side or do you want to live the rest of your life with an unbroken arm, you miserable pussy?” Colt snapped.

Paxton opened his mouth, finger pointing up into the air like he was going to try and object. And then slowly, he put his hands back in his pockets and stared at the floor. June felt a wave of disgust and pity fill her for the idiot boy in man's clothing.

“That's what I thought,” said Colt.

This wouldn't do. None of this would do.

“I know about you,” she said, keeping her voice low, low enough so that not even Paxton could hear her across the hall. No reason to publicly out him—not yet. Going public was where her leverage was. “I know your dealings with the Black Flags. I know what you’ve put together. I know your hands are dirty. You need to back off.”

His lips curled up. It was a strange thing, watching his rage be swallowed. One eye twitched heavily. The gentleness left his voice quickly.

“Let’s pretend that’s true,” he said. Taking her under one arm, like a dragon unfolding its wings, he led her back out into the hallway and found a quiet spot down towards the bathrooms. “Let’s pretend you
have
caught wind of such a thing from your dickhead boyfriend and his gang. Are they, the news or the media whoever, gonna believe you or me? The sheriff or his slut daughter? And, let’s say they do believe you. You’ll ruin me. You’ll break the heart of your mother. Your brother won’t have a job, and god knows he’s too dumb to do anything except be babysat by me on the force. You’d really do that to your family, June? You’ll throw all them out just because of some outlaw biker? Is that what you’d want?”

“I’d do it because it’s right.”

“There’s all kinds of right in the world, June. All kinds. You’ll come around. Less’n you want a massacre, you’ll come around.”

Chapter 46

––––––––

C
ops were posted all around Ram's house, but none of them were actually inside of it. He'd been sneaking around cops his whole life, and so it wasn't too hard, even in the middle of the afternoon, to sneak in and grab what he wanted. He parked his bike far away in a small alley behind a dumpster. It wouldn't be safe there forever, but it was good enough for the hour or so he needed in his house.

There was only so much Ram could take with him, but what he hated the most to leave were all his tools and parts. Those were the lifeblood of any good bike. All he could really manage to take was a small standard toolkit, the sort that fit inside the duffel bag he would attach to the sissy bar. Two saddlebags swung over the back wheels, filled with some other clothes and supplies, but that was about as much as the old girl could carry without losing too much in gas mileage.

He left the tools and spare parts in his house with a note:

Ace,

Take these, use them however you want.

Sorry for how it all went down. If I can make it up to you, I will.

No one asked, but I think you’d make a pretty righteous Prez one day.

Your brother,

Ram

That was about as close to intimacy as the two could get.

Already he'd made a call to Beretta, outlining the general beats of his plan. Beretta would communicate it to Acero, who would communicate it to Colt—and there would be a meeting and a reckoning.

Was it a good plan? He had no idea. But it was the one he was gonna follow through with, no matter what.

There was nothing left but to say his goodbyes, and there was only one that really counted to him.

The Texas heat sweltered as he rode over to
Shovelhead’s
to speak with his father. Sweat layered heavy on his forehead, his neck and arms.

Ram found Howitzer in the back lot, standing over his bike with a heavy wrench and a can of oil. The old man knew how to work a bike, that was for certain. He had taught Ram most everything he knew in that regard.

He had taught Ram other things to. How to hold a grudge. How to clobber a man so he would stay down. How to make a hit for the sake of your brothers.

Howitzer looked up as Ram approached, clearly not impressed.

“I thought you were leaving town,” he said. “Now you're gonna bring the cops down around us?”

“I staked the place out for a while,” said Ram. “There was nobody waiting.”

Howitzer didn't seem to believe him, but he said, “If they were gonna swoop in and get you, I guess they would have done it by now. But you still oughta be leaving town.” His face scrunched up for a moment. “Funeral's in a couple of days. You can't come, of course. I'm sorry about that.”

He was talking about Mikhail. Ram nodded.

His brother's death still worked raw against his heart. He didn't know how to approach it yet. There was too much going on. Some day he would grieve, and grieve as hard as he could, like he did everything else he gave a shit about. But now wasn't the time.

“Say some words for me, will you?”

“Sure. Of course.”

“I am leaving,” said Ram. “I know I have to. I don't want to put the club out more than I already have. But, I wanted to say goodbye to you.”

“Well, now you’ve said it.” Howitzer let out a deep breath, hands slapping on his thighs for a minute to dust them off. He held out his hand. “Goodbye, kid. Take care of yourself. Prove me wrong and smarten up, huh?”

Ram shook his hand and nodded. “Thanks, Dad.”

For a moment, Ram stood there awkwardly, hoping for something more. That was as much as he’d ever gotten from his father in the past several years by way of affection. He was a tough man, a hardened man, but not an unfair one. Maybe Ram would have done better to realize that sooner.

“I love that girl, Dad. I really do.”

“You must,” he said, attaching a new socket to his ratchet. “She’s causing you enough trouble to make me run like hell if I was you. Hell, I'm not you and I wanna run like hell. Cops are getting more jacked up every day.”

“I think she’d kill me if I ran from her.”

“Then you know you got a keeper.” Howitzer let out a small grunt of effort as he knelt down in front of his bike. “Let me know where you end up. I’ll help her on her way there, huh?”

“Thanks, Dad,” Ram said again, for a second time. That was more than he’d said it in years—a lot of firsts came with goodbyes.

“Look,” said Ram, “there’s something you oughta know. The Black Flags, they’re in league with the Sheriff’s department.”

Howitzer stood back up again—quicker this time, with an agility that went well beyond his silvered age. “No shit? How do you know?”

“There’s these tapes in the Sheriff’s office,” said Ram. “June has them. There’s tons of them. He’s probably been working with them ever since they started pushing in on our territory.”

“That son of a bitch...” Howitzer said, stroking his beard. “
Those
sons of bitches. Bribing cops. That’s fucking low. God knows we’re criminals, but ain’t none of us are supposed to be just handing money over to those government sons of bitches. That’s fucking
low
. That must be...all that evidence on the Crew they put away. I
knew
it was planted. I'll make a few calls,” he said. “Put our lawyer on it, maybe, and—”

“I'll take care of it.”

“Take care of it? You?” Howitzer shook his head. “No way. This is enough to start a war with the cops, right here. We can't have those two colluding. If you think—”

“What I think is that I'm going to take care of it, Howitzer. So, you back off.”

His voice took a hardness that it never had with his father. It was the type of voice he used to use with Ace, calming him down in a bar, or with Mikhail, keeping him from stealing stupid shit in a grocery store or a park. It was a hardness that said
he
was in charge, not the man being spoken to. Surprising Ram—perhaps even surprising Howitzer—the old man did quiet down.

“I've got a plan,” said Ram. “A real plan.”


You
have a plan.”

It wasn't a question, not quite, but it was nearly one.

“Yeah,” said Ram. “I do. And I'm going to work it all out. The Wrecking Crew doesn't have to lift a finger. I started this whole mess and I'm going to end it.”

For a moment, Howitzer looked proud of his boy. Ram had never seen the look before up close. It took him a moment to process it completely.

“You know, if you talked like that more often, might be you'd have more back up right about now.”

“Maybe so,” said Ram. “But ain't nothing gets done in the present by living in the past, is there?”

“No, there isn't.” Howitzer clapped him on the shoulder. “We'll hunker down, get ready for whatever's coming. You don't fix it, find a way to let us know, yeah? We'll get the fuckers back. If not for the club, then for blood, okay?”

That was a deal Ram could live with.

Chapter 47

––––––––

T
here weren’t many safe places left in town to meet with Ram. Meeting at her home had been a childish indulgence on her part—a desire to somehow fight at her father, to do something that would eat away at him if he ever found out.

But the time for indulgences was done. There were guns on the streets. Local news coverage was already picking up the arming of the APCs in the department’s lot. Sheriff Colt had played it off like it was some kind of routine operation—a drill for emergencies in case of a terrorist attack or the like.

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