Read Jase Online

Authors: MariaLisa deMora

Jase (39 page)

BOOK: Jase
2.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Ruby laughed from where she stood next to Slate, tucking her face against his chest. He had
slipped
an arm around her before he answered, “I might, Prez. I might. But you ain’t gonna find out anything by calling me names. Hell, that shit cuts deep, man.” He was grinning widely as he spoke, and Mason glared at him for a moment, then turned back to watch.

On the stage, Bear stood near Chase, talking him through something, and then he turned to look across the room, catching Mason’s eye and giving him a chin lift. Returning the gesture, Mason’s gaze swept the room, noting Bear’s adopted daughter sitting near the stage. She was watching Benny, but Chase was
watching
her.
That could be a cluster
, he thought, shaking his head.
Triangles
suck ass; I should know. Might need to say something to Bear.

Within a couple of minutes, guitars in hand, the three people on the stage began playing, and Mason was startled at how good they sounded. Chase didn’t look comfortable at first, but both Ben and Bear appeared confident in his abilities, and as Mason watched, he slowly relaxed, settling into his playing.
They started out with one of Occupy Yourself’s songs,
Feeling You
, and even after they finished and moved on to the next song, all he could think about was Willa. The words from the last stanza of the chorus kept repeating in Mason’s head.
‘Loving you is possible, Giving you my heart.
Love, it bears repeating, Our lives together start.’

 

 

Rude awakening

Slate asked curtly, “Have you seen Birdy lately?”

Jase frowned at the odd question, pausing for a beat to sit down before responding. He had come in to tell Slate something, but the man had hit him with the question before he could even begin. “Before tonight?” He shrugged. “Until tonight? Not for a while, certainly not since Bear’s been back. What’s up, man?”

Slate sighed, reaching out to slap the door separating the office from the main room of the clubhouse closed. “Shit’s not right, man. You say you saw him tonight?”

Jase frowned at the closed door, nodded, and waited a minute for him to continue, and when he didn’t, asked, “What kind of shit?”

“Shit that doesn’t wash off, man. I’ve heard rumblings that he’s been
tucking
his boots under
Manzino
’s sister’s bed.” Jase sucked in a shocked breath.
Manzino
was a drug dealer the
club
had problems with off and on again for a couple years. If Birdy
were
sleeping with the man’s sister, that could be bad for him. “I was going to talk to Mason last night after church, but then Gunny gave him the Vincent, sidetracked me.”

“I thought the
dealer
had left town. Didn’t he go out west to try his luck there?” Jase hadn’t been part of the club when that all went down, but he heard about it
afterwards
as part of the story about how Slate’s brother had come to Fort Wayne. “What the hell is Birdy thinking?”

“Thinking with his dick, most likely,” Slate said, pulling at the back of his neck with a rough hand. “If he’s fucking her, he’s fucking himself. Brother has to know that.”

"What will you do if it's true, if he's tangled up in something like that?" Jase wasn’t sure what the reaction of the club would be, but he knew there had to be one. Birdy’s association with drug dealers would be breaking one of Mason’s key rules.

"If he's lucky, we'll cut his patches…drum him out of the club,
cut
his rockers." Slate ran
his
hand across his jaw, clenching his teeth so tightly Jase could hear them gritting together. "If he's lucky."

Hesitantly, Jase said, "I came here…I needed to talk to you anyway, Prez. I...uh...I saw him earlier tonight out back of Marie's. He was whaling on someone pretty good. I figured it’s not my business, so I got what I was after in my bags and headed back inside. But he looked up, saw me, and booked it." He looked up at Slate, taking the measure of his mood. "It made me wonder why he ran, so I walked over to see who he had been
smacking
on. Prez, it was one of DeeDee's girls, and she was high as a kite."

"Fuuuck," Slate ground out the word. "How long ago?"

"About thirty minutes," he said. "I tried calling, but when you didn't answer, I talked to Goose and DeeDee. They're taking care of her now. I took a chance you'd be here, came on over."

Slate stood still and silent for a long time, and Jase thought that this was more
nerve-racking
than the final two minutes of any game. He had to get everything out there, though. "There's more, Prez." Slate was moving towards the door, but Jase's words stopped him in his tracks. "Gunny was supposed to work at Slinky's, but he didn't show. He wasn’t picking up his phone either, so Hoss went to the house and found it buttoned up tight. He said the dogs didn't raise a ruckus, and you know how loud those dogs are when someone’s around, so he made his way inside. He found several bodies in the bedroom, all shot at close range. Brother…one was Elkins, Sharon's ex. It looks like Gunny and Shar are gone."

"Are you fucking kidding me?" Slate snarled, whirling and stalking back to the desk. He stood for another moment, and Jase could nearly hear the gears turning in his mind. "Lockdown. Get ahold of DeeDee; tell her to bring the girl here." He pulled out his phone at the same time Slate did, and as he called DeeDee, he heard him tell Ruby to bring the babies to the clubhouse.

Pulling the office door open, Slate yelled out into the room as he made another call, "Church, right the fuck now, brothers… Yeah, Mason," this was said into the phone, "got some kind of shit going down. I'm putting the Fort on
fucking
lockdown. Yeah, we’re going to need some trash taken out at Gunny's. I’m getting some brothers on that right now. Looks like Manzino's lifted his head, gonna find out... Yeah, he’s right here.” Slate looked at him as Mason spoke on the phone. “Yeah…I'll call. You too, Prez."

Turning to look at Jase, Slate’s gaze was considering, eyes narrowing in response to some emotion Jase didn’t recognize. “You’ve had an easy run, brother. Now’s when the grit hits the grindstone and we get to figure out what kind of men we are. Right now, you have one priority: find Birdy.”

He stood, already shaking his head. “No way, Prez. My baby sister—”

“That’s exactly why you aren’t gonna be the one looking for her and Gunny. I need you to be the planner and plotter I know you can be, not an emotional fuckup. Find Birdy and bring him in, but we assume the best until shit lands on his head. Need you to explain to the club what’s going down. Birdy, Gunny and Sharon, Gunny’s house—that’s three fucking fronts we have to clear, and
you’re point
on the Birdy/Manzino one.” He motioned to the door. “Let’s sit
for
church. Then
we’ll sort what’s needed.”

Yelling into the main room as he walked out of the office, Slate pulled the eyes of every man to him. “We got shit, motherfuckers. Captain has the floor.” Backing up a step, he nodded at Jase once, encouraging him.

Nodding back, he looked around the room at the faces of the men he had grown to know and trust. He knew every one of these men would have his back, would help him
through
anything…
would
die for him. This was what he had been looking for, this brotherhood. For them, he could do the captain’s speech, but it meant so much more here. Taking a deep breath, he began.

“Gunny’s in the wind. His old lady, my sister, is with him. He left
some bodies
behind.” At this announcement, there was a shifting in the room as the men turned and looked at each other, then back at him. “Right now,
we think
it’s not voluntary, that they’ve been taken. One of the bodies was Elkins.”

At this, the
prospect who'd been blindsided by the man
uttered a low, hate-filled, “Fucker.”

Jase nodded at Piebald. “Yeah, exactly. We don’t know much more than that.” The men’s voices rose as they talked among themselves, and he had to raise his voice to be heard over the swelling sound. “Hey. Listen up brothers, there’s more. Birdy’s in the wind too, but for a different reason. I caught him fucking up one of the girls from Slinky’s earlier tonight, and there’s rumor he’s been
bagging
Manzino’s sister. Our brother ran—that’s not good—and we need to find him and figure out what’s going down. Prez talked to Mason; he’s put the club on lockdown. Call your families and get them in here. There’s too much we don’t know, brothers. Let’s keep the folks we love safe.”

Turning to look at Slate, he said, “Manzino and Birdy detail is led by me. I’ll need four or five brothers who know Birdy well, know his hidey-holes. Slate, did you decide who you want to head over to Gunny’s and meet Hoss there?”

Nodding, Slate said, “Tequila, PBJ—you boys pick four more, we’ll do six plus Hoss. Take a cage; you’ll need to take the trash out while you’re there.”

Captain turned back to the room of men, nodding. “Get your families moving. Talk to me about Birdy. I want us off the lot in fifteen.”

***

Mason rubbed his forehead with the fingers of one hand, the other thumping out an irregular rhythm against the desktop. His cell rang and he picked it up immediately, answering with a flip of his thumb across the screen. “Talk to me.”

“Prez,” Slate said, “got you on speaker. Cap’n and Bear are here with me. We wanted to update you.” Grunting noncommittally, he waited for them to continue. “Gunny’s house is clean; we found the dogs locked in a crate in the basement, but still no sign of him or Sharon. None of his bikes are gone, and his truck is in the drive, so we’re pretty sure they didn’t go willingly.” There was exhaustion in Slate’s voice, and he hated how events like this
turned
the man deep inside himself. Shit like this was hard
for
everybody, but it seemed to hit brothers like Slate hardest.

“Myron can’t get a fix on either of their phones. He said it looked like they were being jammed, which might mean LEO…or might mean something else. We had better luck with Birdy’s phone, and Cap’n dispatched a cage. They picked him up about an hour ago. They’re on the way here now, with both him and Manzino’s sister. Fucker was sitting in her operation center, watching her toothless bitches cook that meth shit up. I can’t see my way past anything he did, Prez. I’ll hold my final word until I talk to the motherfucker, but as far as I can see right now, he’s done.” Slate took a deep breath before saying, “Not sure what we’ll do with the woman.”

Mason shook his head, knowing the men couldn’t see him.
Shit was hard
. He sighed and asked, “If it was Manzino, what would you do?”

“End him. He’s hung himself a dozen times over.” Slate spoke immediately, saying exactly what Mason had been thinking, but before he could respond, Captain’s voice filled the void.

“Slate…brother. There isn’t any way she’s innocent. She had to know coming into her brother’s old, outlawed territory and pulling this shit would
rile
the club. It was a calculated move on her part, possibly driven by Manzino in some way. I say talk to her, but we have to be willing to turn the same judgment on her that we would her brother.” He could tell saying this had a cost for Jase, but was pleased he didn’t have to be the one to state the obvious.

“Cap’n has the right of it, Slate. You know it.” Mason paused a minute before continuing. “Talk to Birdy; talk to the woman. I’m on my way down soon, brother. Wait for me if you need to, but Slate…” He paused again, waiting until an affirmative noise came through the phone. “You have full authority. Your voice is my voice.”

***

“Fuck you.” This was said in a voice thick with pain and filled with what had to be false bravado, because surely Birdy knew he was fucked six ways from Sunday. “I ain’t talking to you. Fucking prospect’s got no reason to ask me shit. Get a fucking officer in here. I might have a word or two to say.”

Jase blew out an angry breath, grinding his teeth. They had been hearing the same kind of statements off and on all afternoon, wavering between threats of death and pleading. This hadn’t been an easy interrogation to watch, knowing the
man as
he did. Harder still to take part in, but Slate had put him
in as lead
, so he had to step up.

He remembered the battered face of the dancer from last night and fury welled up inside him at the way Birdy had treated Mercy. Jase found himself enraged at the memory of how the man had left the unconscious woman vulnerable, running to save his own cowardly ass.
In his mind, Sharon’s face overlaid the woman’s, and in a rage, he leaned over to cuff Birdy hard on the side of the head, splattering fresh blood up and across Jase’s face and neck.

“Fucktard, if you don’t talk to me, you don’t get to talk, period. Don’t you get it? There aren’t any officers who care enough to try to make you see sense, man. I’m all you’ve got.” He reached up to wipe his face, and seeing the blood covering his swollen knuckles, thought better of the motion. “Last chance, Birdy. What ambition does Manzino have in the Fort? Why did he send his sister
in to
fuck with us?”

Shaking his head, Birdy snarled at him again, “Fuck you.”

Jase looked up at Hoss and Pinto as they stood leaning against the wall where they were out of sight from Birdy. He shook his head, acknowledging they wouldn’t get anything else out of the man, and they both nodded in agreement. He watched as Hoss reached over and pounded softly on the door, muttering to the member who opened it, sending him back out. Three standing and one tied to a chair, the four men in the room waited in silence, each isolated in their own thoughts.

The door opened and Slate strode in, his gaze sweeping the room and taking in the scene before him. He held his position and nodded curtly at the floor by the chair, watching as Jase leaned over to pick up the dark cloth bag he dropped there earlier. Jase
stared
Birdy in the eyes as he pulled it over the man’s head, holding his gaze until the blood-soaked material covered his face.

BOOK: Jase
2.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Four Week Fiance 2 by J. S. Cooper, Helen Cooper
Cinderella Has Cellulite by Donna Arp Weitzman
The Body Economic by Basu, Sanjay, Stuckler, David
Pony Express Courtship by Rhonda Gibson
Sugar in the Morning by Isobel Chace
The Heart of the Dales by Gervase Phinn
Must Love Dogs by Claire Cook, Carrington Macduffie