Payable On Death: A Jax Rhodes Novel, Book One (The Jax Rhodes Series 1)

BOOK: Payable On Death: A Jax Rhodes Novel, Book One (The Jax Rhodes Series 1)
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, businesses, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locations, organizations, or person, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Any trademarks mentioned herein are not authorized by the trademark owners and do not in any way mean the work is sponsored by or associated with the trademark owners. Any trademarks used are specifically in a descriptive capacity.

No portion of this book may be reproduced in any form (electronic or print) without permission from the author. Please do not participate in piracy or violating the author’s rights.

 

Copyright © April 2016 by R. Rawlings

Printed in the United States of America

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

To my beloved husband and kids- thank you for believing in me, for never doubting my dream or crazy ideas. I’m nothing without you.

 

To Gladys, my best friend and Jax’s biggest supporter, thank you for believing in my new world and characters. Stephanie, thank you for reading along while I wrote, for your constant badgering for new words and most importantly your support! And L.M. Pruitt, thank you for making me a better writer and inspiring me with your work!

 

 

PAYABLE

ON

DEATH

FORWARD

Hell
.

Some people say there is a Hell

Where wicked souls are doomed to go.

But this, by others, is denied,

Who hold there is no Hell below.

I've often heard the place described

By certain preachers in my day,

And trembled like an aspen leaf,

As they its horrors did portray.

 

That such a place does not exist

I will not undertake to say;

Nor, from the knowledge I possess,

Can I assert the other way.

That there's a Hell, or that there's not,

Is more than mortal man can know;

And in the soul's eternal flight

There's none can say where it shall go.

 

Were I to say there is a Hell,

Can I, with proof, support the plea?

Did I allege there's no such place?

How can I prove it so to be?

J. H. Stevenson 1890

Have you ever
found yourself at a crossroads? You can't go forward, you can't go back. There's only bad and worse. Those were the options facing me the day I sold my soul to the Devil. Sure it seems like a bad decision now, at seventeen I thought it was my only salvation. I've spent every day since trying to earn my soul back and reserve my spot in Heaven because eternal damnation isn't all it's cracked up to be.

ONE

 

 

 

 

"
You're too young
to be so troubled. You haven't even seen a quarter century. You're just a babe." The man flicked his cigarette, a shower of little orange sparks erupting when it hit the pavement.

"I'm not your babe. Leave me alone." I pushed away from the railing on the pedestrian bridge crossing over I-95 and walked away.

He followed.

"Ah, poor choice of words. I was simply commenting on your age. You're no one's babe, Jacqui. How could you be? You're too afraid to let people get close, lest they see the bruises." He ran a hand along his hair, ensuring each piece in the slicked-back style remained in place.

"Who are you? How do you know my name?" I'd never seen him before in my life.

Someone that perfect left an impression. If we'd met before, I would've remembered.

"I can make things better for you. Take away your pain, ease your suffering. You hardly sleep, listening at your bedroom door for any sign of trouble. I can help with that." He was confident. He had to be, walking around Baltimore at night dressed in a three-piece suit, diamond cufflinks gleaming even with only the dim blue light from the police CCTV cameras to highlight them.

"I don't know what you
think
you know about me or what you've heard, I don't do drugs. So you can go peddle that shit somewhere else. I'm not buying." Despite having more reasons than I could count, I'd managed to avoid getting hooked on heroin - an impressive feat given the amount flooding the city.

"Mmm. I almost wish you were. It makes things so much easier when drugs are involved. Let me ask you a question. Do I look like some street thug, drug peddler to you?"

I took in the meticulous tailoring, expensive shoes. "You're definitely not from around here." I gestured to the boarded up row homes across the street.

Baltimore, formerly known as the City that Reads, became the City that Bleeds in a hail of bullets and gang activity. Tourism tried to put a new spin on things and came up with Charm City. Which of course became Harm City. The name Bodymore stuck when we became the heroin capital of the country, an infestation that led to our own version of the walking dead, the burning of witnesses willing to testify against the drug kingpins while they slept in their beds, and a level of violence and crime never seen before in the Free State.

Still, it was safer on the street than at home most nights.

"Home for me is a lot farther south of the Mason-Dixon line than Maryland, dear child. What are you doing up here? Shouldn't you be home? With your mother?"

"You don't know me, you don't know my mom. Get the fuck out of here before I call the cops." I held up my phone and pointed at the BPD security camera.

He clucked his tongue, wagging a finger at me. "Such a foul mouth for such a pretty face. I know a lot about your mom. The lie she told about going to a basket bingo with her friend Janice. Mom never made it out of the house by the way. She's very pretty, your mother, I see where you get your looks. Maybe if she hadn't fussed with her hair and makeup so much or if she'd chosen a different blouse..."

I'd heard those excuses from my mother so many times. If she hadn't done this or that, he wouldn't have beat her. Breathing seemed to be what set him off where I was concerned. I avoided going home as often as possible. For my mother's sake as much as mine. He seemed better when I wasn't around.

"It looks bad this time. The neighbors are out for the night. No one to call for help. And he's upset, very upset."

"The neighbors are out? If by ‘out’ you mean abandoned and boarded up, then yeah, they're out. He's always upset. I've begged her to leave, so many times. She won't. She said if she ever did, he'd kill her. Trust me if I go back now, it will only make things worse. He beats her more when I'm there, to punish me by hurting her."

"It's different this time, Jacqui girl." The same thing my mother said every time my stepfather came home with flowers and a box of wine to apologize. "He came home early, found the suitcase she packed to take with her to the shelter by the door. She's hurt. All alone in that house. With him."

I started to run, only making it a couple of steps before he grabbed me.

"You'll never make it in time. I can help you, Jacqui girl. I can put an end to all this. Don't you want to help her? Don't you want to save your mother? Save yourself? This isn't the life you deserve. No one should live like this. Forgotten by everyone, left to the drunken rages and violent fits of that monster you live with. Why is this happening? Why did he forget about you? He's supposed to love you. Doesn't he care what happens to you?" He pointed up toward the sky.

"What's in it for you? Why do you care what happens to us? If you know all that, you know I don't have any money and neither does my mom." I screamed for him to let me go, screamed for my mom.

"Money isn't the only form of payment," he whispered in my ear.

For a moment, I considered it, considered giving over my body in exchange for him following me home and killing my stepfather. In all the years of darkness and misery, I’d managed to stay straight, stay on the path. Faced with the brutal murder of my mother by someone who vowed to love her, was I willing to throw it all away? She was all I had.

I nodded my head.

"I know a place we can go, but not until you hold up your end of the bargain." My stomach heaved when I thought about what I'd agreed to do. I became everything I'd fought so hard not to be in one moment. I'd do it again for her. A lifetime of bad choices didn't make a person bad. I knew my mother loved me and no matter how horrible it turned out, every decision she made was with the best intentions.

"Oh you sweet, simple girl. You are so delicious. The soft unmarked skin of youth pulled tight over toned muscle." He licked his lips. "Yes, I am quite sure I would enjoy every moment. However, I don’t recall stating the terms."

"Do we have a deal or not? You said I was out of time." Panic gripped my heart.
Was she dead already?

Of all the different emotions I felt, fear, sadness, disappointment, disgust, not one of them was remorse. I'd thought about my stepfather's death more than once. Prayed for it, in fact. Prayers that went unanswered. And then I stopped praying.

"You're right, Jacqui girl. Time is running out. Have you put it together yet? Who I am? He didn't answer you. He never helped you. But I can."

Everything clicked. I should have ran. I should have said no. There were a million things I should have done.

"Can you save her? Can you put an end to this?"

The Devil smiled. "I believe we have an agreement."

TWO

 

 

 

 

My mother sat
across from me, her hands in her lap hidden beneath the stainless steel table. The room was empty apart from the two of us. Neither of us spoke. She looked away every time I made eye contact. She'd lost weight since my last visit. Dark circles and sallow cheeks. She wasn't taking care of herself. I worried every day she'd waste away to nothing, vanish. Maybe that was the point. I hoped it would be different, her blonde hair would have its luster, the smile in her eyes reserved solely for me would be back. Nothing changed. Except for the distance between us. That seemed to be the only thing she nourished.

"Visiting hours are almost up. Five minutes." The guard looked over at us, giving me a weak smile.

He felt sorry for me. I didn't want or need his pity. He saw a devoted daughter visiting her mother every Sunday, whether the woman wanted to see her or not. What he failed to see was a daughter who'd dammed her soul to Hell and her mother to ten years in one fell swoop.

"I'll see you next week, Mom." Without looking at her, I pushed my chair back from the table and prepared to leave.

"I really wish you wouldn't."

It was the first time she spoke during the entire visit, in several visits, actually. Her last words to me, prior to this, had been that she knew what I'd done. She blamed herself. Apparently, we'd moved past that and the blame laid squarely where it belonged.

With me.

Stunned, I simply waved goodbye and walked away. With a heavy heart, I went through each security gate wondering if the following Sunday my name would be struck from the list of approved visitors.

In keeping with tradition, I caught the bus back to Fells Point. I got off at the Broadway stop and walked until the unmistakable awning of The Blue Moon Cafe came into view. A stack of Sarah's famous Captain Crunch french toast and a cup of coffee brightened even the shittiest of days. Tucked in the back of the restaurant at my favorite table next to the old fireplace, I sidled up to a platter of carbs and drowned my sorrows in maple syrup.

Two bites in and I knew the sugary sweet breakfast wouldn't be able to beat back the bitterness I felt.
She didn't want to see me anymore?
I pushed the plate away and took a swig of my coffee. I tried to ignore the voices in my head. I'd had this argument with myself too many times. I'd made a mistake. A huge, epic, life-altering mistake.
I was still her daughter. Why didn't she understand? Why couldn't she forgive me?

I should have known better than to believe anything he said, but I wanted a way out, an end to the pain and misery my mother experienced every day. He delivered, just not in the way I'd imagined. I thought my mother and I would be free to live our lives in peace. Neither of us got peace and only one of us was free. At least from prison. I wore a different type of shackle.

And the Devil held the key.

My cup of coffee went cold as I contemplated the events of that fateful night I'd made a horrible decision that changed both our lives for the worse. He'd seemed pleased with his work and, despite my arguments to the contrary, assured me he'd kept his end of the bargain. The monster masquerading around as my mother's husband was gone. He'd never promised me a happily ever after.

I still heard his voice, the satisfied smirk and glint in his coal black eyes. "The devil is in the details my dear. You really should be more specific when bargaining something such as your soul."

The flashing lights from the police cars and ambulances lining the street in front of our row home cast eerie shadows on his face. We stood side by side watching my mother being dragged out of the house in handcuffs screaming that she didn't remember what happened.

I wondered if the Devil had a hand in her sentencing. The public defender had been confident my mother would receive a light sentence given the mitigating circumstances, but the hammer of justice fell hard and she received every day of the maximum sentence. I never missed visiting hours and tried more than once to tell her what happened, stopping every time I got to the part where I'd sold my soul. I couldn't bring myself to do that to her. I'd caused her enough pain as it was.

Three years in, she found peace and salvation and the answers to what happened. The pastor who came to worship with the prisoners took an interest in her case and, after several meetings with my mother, saw all the telltale signs of the Devil's hand in her life. In her daughter's life. She'd begged me to go to Saint Leo's and confess my sins. I'd been christened there. It was my first and last exposure to the church growing up.

Riddled with guilt, I'd tried to do as she asked but, the doors of the church wouldn't open to someone like me. My soul belonged to someone other than God. She stopped speaking to me when I told her I couldn't get into the church. And now it seemed she wanted nothing more to do with me. I was damned and she didn't believe I could be saved.

I refused to believe she was right. The Devil hadn't come for me yet. That had to mean something.

I swallowed the last of the ice cold black coffee and dropped a twenty on the table. I'd been coming here every Sunday after visiting my mother for the last five years, none of the regular staff worried I'd short the check. With a nod to my waitress on my way through to the door, I headed home.

"I can smell the brimstone on you from here. Why do you fight it? You belong to him."

"Fuck off, Lazarus." Damn demon followed me everywhere, lurking in the shadows.

Lazarus closed the distance between us, his forked tongue slipping between his lips. "It's only a matter of time before he calls in his marker."

"Oh yeah? Well, what's he waiting for anyway? It's been five years." I knew better than to antagonize him, I just couldn't help myself.
What was he waiting for?

"Yo, Jax, wassup? Who you talking to?"

I let out the breath I didn't know I was holding and felt my shoulders relax. "Nobody, Tommy. Nobody."

"Nobody, huh?" Tommy knew it was a lie, but he didn't call me on it. "Okay, Jax, okay. Hey, I'm going to Atomic today, wanna come with?"

I wanted desperately to tell Tommy, or anybody for that matter, what was going on. Who would believe me? Deals with the Devil, demons? They'd have me shipped off to Shepherd Pratt mental hospital and tossed in a padded cell. I grew up keeping people at a distance so they didn't see my bruises. Now I kept them at a distance so they didn't see my demons. Specifically, the ones that followed me around.

"Perusing the aisles of a comic store sounds amazing, Tommy, but I have to be at the shelter in a couple hours. It's my turn to cook. I want to hit the gym before I go."

"You're cooking? How is that helping the homeless?" The fifteen-year-old looked down at me, his bright blue eyes sparkling beneath his lashes.

He hadn't finished growing and already towered over my five-foot-five frame. Despite being a ball buster, he was a good kid and the closest thing I had to a friend. How sad was that? Tommy's mom worked a lot so I kept an eye on him for her.

"Ha. Ha. You're a real comedian. Come on, I'll walk you to the bus stop." I knew he'd refuse the escort. He always did..

"You wanna hold my hand while I cross the street, too?" He puffed himself up, trying hard to play the badass.

"Maybe I just wanted to spend a little more time with you. You ever think of that?" I smacked the brim of his baseball cap, forcing it further down and covering half his face.

Tommy pulled the hat off, his blond hair spilling out for a moment, before he smoothed it all back and tucked it inside the hat. It was a miracle he hadn't fallen prey to the streets. He spun his skateboard on its tail. As much trouble as that damn thing had gotten him into with the cops, it kept him out of even more.

"You're so full of it. I'll catch up with you later." Tommy waved me off.

"Swing by the shelter later. Keep me company in the kitchen." I stepped off the curb, headed toward the soup kitchen I'd been volunteering at for the last four months.

As part of my self-inflicted penance or whatever you want to call it, I volunteered at shelters, donated a third of my paycheck every week to different charities, helped little old ladies cross the street and kept my eye on Tommy. A voice in the back of my mind reminded me that I'd never buy my way into Heaven. No matter how many good deeds I did. I tried to shake off the dark thoughts creeping into my mind, to stop the anger and self-hatred from worming its way in.
Save it for the bag. Leave it all in the gym.

I looked over my shoulder, shouting back to Tommy. "Hey, if you see John Waters picking up his mail again, could you please get me an autograph this time?"

"Jax! Look out!" Tommy's warning stopped me dead in my tracks.

A cab whizzed by, inches from hitting me head on. The side mirror clipped my hip as it passed, horn blaring. Some of the people inside the cafe came out to make sure I was okay. I brushed it off before anyone made a fuss.

"I'm fine. I'm fine. Go back inside. Finish your breakfast." I waved to Sarah, the owner of Blue Moon, trying to reassure her that I wasn't hurt. Unconvinced, she ushered her patrons back inside.

"Damn, Jax. You are one lucky...."

"Watch your mouth, Tommy."

"I didn't even say nothing." He looked at me sideways. "You sure you alright?"

"I'm fine. If your mom's working late tonight, swing by the shelter. I'll fix you a plate."

"One near death experience a day is my limit."

I couldn't help laughing at my own expense. "Get the hell out of here. I'll see you later."

I headed toward the gym rubbing my hip, contemplating what Tommy said. People like me didn't have good luck. So what was with all the near misses? It wasn't the first time I'd come close to cashing out and paying my debt to the Devil. If I didn't know better, I'd think someone upstairs was looking out for me.

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