by Evelyn Glass
She briefly considered running but to where? They were in the city’s outskirts. She wouldn’t have an easy way to get help. Even if she called the police, where would she tell them she was? Besides, she’d gone out to the mall to meet Jay and try to find out more about where Mia was and how to help. Giving up now would mean she’d put herself in danger without even trying to get what she needed. When the first thug gestured towards the office building, its windows coated in dust and its doors rusted and hanging at odd angles, she started walking. It was an idiotic thing to do, but compared to all the other plans she could come up with in that moment, there was nothing else to do.
Even though she’d been picked up by a nice SUV and men in suits, she still expected to be marched into yet another building full of tattooed men with shaved heads, sun-darkened skin, and mean looks in their eyes. Instead, the room — she was still marched, that didn’t change — was almost like a board room, if you ignored the plastic sheeting on the walls and concrete floors. There was a long, rectangular table, a bank of monitors that looked like it would operate as a projector, and a water cooler. There was even a table set up with one of those pod coffee machines and little servings of creamer and packets of sugar. She’d never been able to get the childcare center to set one of those up. They still used an ancient drip machine that no one ever washed properly.
There were four men around the table. They were all white, with hair that varied between shades of blond and brown, and differing amounts of gray threading. They were all older and wearing well-tailored suits in shades of dark blue. It was like staring into the face of white privilege in America.
They had clearly been waiting for her. They turned towards her as she entered the room, and offered her identical smiles that were as friendly as they were fake. There was one man seated at the head of the table who seemed slightly more powerful than the others, though she couldn’t exactly put her finger on why. It was just something about the set of his shoulders and the lift of his eyebrows. His suit was just as well-tailored, and his hair was sandy blond, threaded with a gray that would probably be called distinguished in a fashion magazine. He gave her one of those big smiles that men his age seemed to think of as reassuring, but that mostly felt paternalistic and annoying.
“Miss Mills,” he said, gesturing broadly in a way that made her wrinkle her nose with distaste. “We’re so pleased you could join us.”
There were two courses of action here. She could cross her arms and let her sassiness be a shield, or she could play the good girl, simper and be afraid, and hope that she’d get out of this that way. She wasn’t honestly sure that either one would work, but damn, she didn’t know what else to do. And the sass was a hell of a lot more natural for her, no matter what she wanted.
She crossed her arms, let her left hip pop just a little, and raised an eyebrow.
“I didn’t realize I had a choice,” she said, pleased that her voice didn’t shake. “Your goons definitely made it sound like attendance was compulsory. If choice is at play here? I’d like a ride back to where you found me.”
The man’s eyes narrowed just a little bit, his smile cooling down just a couple of degrees.
“I wish it were that simple, Miss Mills, I really do,” he said. “But unfortunately, with Mr. Jay deciding, yet again, to evade our conversations, we must speak to whoever we can find. That means you because Mr. Jay has made the unfortunate decision to continue to involve you in what was supposed to be a very simple conversation.”
“Jay hasn’t told me anything,” Emma said, and this time she couldn’t entirely control the fear in her voice. Dammit, sassy only worked if they believed you had no fear. She was too tired, too worn out. Too many shitty things had happened too fast.
“Sit down,” the man said, gesturing towards the chair closest to her. Emma wanted to give him the finger and stay standing, but it would be easier to hide the fact that her knees were knocking together if she just sat down. She stalked to the chair and flung herself into it. She wasn’t going to be ladylike about it, even if she was — for now — giving them what they wanted. It’s for Mia, she told herself. Stay focused.
“Cream and sugar in your coffee?” Back to business meeting etiquette, apparently.
“No, black, please.” She didn’t want black coffee but it was better than nothing, and it would keep her from thinking she was happy here.
The man nodded to one of the other men seated at the table. She noticed that the other man — younger, less gray — got a little bit tight around the mouth before he stood and went to the coffee pot. Interesting. All was not well in paradise, it seemed. Of course, paradise was an abandoned office building on the outskirts. Trouble was probably already implied.
Still, he got up and made the coffee for her. He carried a small mug over and set it down in front of her. The coffee smelled awful: sharp and bitter. She sipped it anyway. She needed something to do with her hands.
“Now, Miss Mills,” the man said, and Emma put up her hand.
“Ms, please, if you don’t mind. And I’d like to know your name. If we’re supposed to be equals here.”
His grin became positively shark-like. “Equals is an overstatement. Call me — oh, I don’t know. Mr. Black would be just fine.”
She resisted the urge to roll her eyes. She’d never heard a more cartoon villain name outside of an actual cartoon. “Absolutely, Mr. Black.” She didn’t spit. That was a victory. “What is it you need from me? People keep asking me questions I don’t know the answer to, and all I want is to help a little girl go home safely.”
“It’s more complicated than that, unfortunately,” said the man who’d gotten the coffee, earning himself a glare from Mr. Black. She liked him better immediately.
Black picked up a remote and pointed it at the bank of monitors. They lit up, and after a few moments, each one cycled to a different picture that looked like a security feed. Black and white, grainy, flickering. She studied them for a moment, and then her eyes locked on the picture in the upper right corner.
“You see, Ms. Mills,” Mr. Black said. “We know the girl is alive. We believe she has the information we need. But Mr. Jay has prevented us from being able to ask her some very necessary questions. All we want to do is ascertain whether or not the girl is any danger to us.”
“If she doesn’t know whatever it is you’re worried about, what happens then?”
“We apologize for the inconvenience, and send everyone on their way with our apologies and compliments.”
“And if you find out she does have information you need?”
Black’s smile got a little bit wider, animalistic. “Well, then things will get a little bit more complicated. Unfortunately. We’ll have to hope that we can all come to some sort of arrangement. I hope, for everyone’s sake, that it is possible.” The smile faded away like the sun as a cloud passed over it. “I’d hate to even think about what would happen if we couldn’t.”
Emma tried to hide the shiver that ran down her spine. “And what does Jay have to do with all of this? Surely if your intentions are as innocent as you say, then he should want to bring the girl to you.”
“If only Jay were as rational as you,” Black said, smiling that shark smile again. “Unfortunately, he seems to have his own opinions. He’s taken the girl somewhere else. I want you to get her back. I’ll ask my questions, and you’ll be on your way.”
Her mind spun as she tried to think of a way out or a way through it. There was nothing she could think of, other than sheer, blind obedience. At least for now.
“Okay,” she said, feigning frustration and acceptance. “Fine. I’ll do what you want. For Mia’s sake.”
“Good,” Black replied. “Excellent choice. I’m so glad that we’re going to be working together, Ms. Mills.”
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Dean
Dean was on the road again, the wind hard in his face. On his bike was where the world made the most sense, and where things were easiest to c
ope with. Especially hard things, like this—when the Scorpions had shown up at the clubhouse, spinning a tale about Emma being walked out of the mall by men in suits.
Connell had half a mind to dismiss it, but the Scorpion member had described the outfit Emma had been wearing to a T, and what reason did he have to lie? Dean had taken to the road with half the Titans at his back, and half the Scorpions on their way. The Scorpion had sent the location where the SUV had taken Emma to his club and led Dean and the Titans there personally.
Outside the old office building, he took just a moment to make sure that everyone was ready. And then they rushed the door.
Dean had been in more than a few firefights in his life, but he’d never enjoyed them. He’d never felt good about firing a gun, and he’d never been entirely sure if he’d killed another person. He didn’t want to know. He’d been sick enough over the various beatings he’d given. But this was his daughter, and the woman he— loved was an awfully strong word. But he cared about Emma. He cared about her a lot more than made any sense given the short time he’d known her. And if he had to kill someone because they meant her harm, well, then that was just what was necessary to keep her safe.
With his siblings at arms, he rushed through the door, through a confusing series of corridors and old cubicles, coated with dust where they weren’t draped in plastic sheeting. The building smelled like mouse shit and something else, darker, that he couldn’t quite place.
There were clear tracks through the dust to follow, and he followed them easily into the dark maze of the building. He could hear voices, and after a few turns, saw lights. He held up a hand before he and the rest of the club members rushed the room, spending a moment getting an idea of what was happening.
He could see a long conference table. Several men in suits around the table. They looked lazy, soft. One at the head of the table looked like a hell of a snake, but not the kind who would be a threat in a fight. More of a threat you wouldn’t want against you at a table like this one. There were guys in suits all around the table, the kind who wore dark sunglasses inside and had their fancy suits cut so that they wouldn’t betray the shoulder harness worn underneath them. And at the end of the table was Emma. He recognized her from her dark, curly hair in a ponytail, and the set of her shoulders. She was nervous, but not as much as she could’ve been. He waited until the others with him were close by, guns out. His heart throbbed in his ears as he took a deep breath, let it halfway out, and then nodded.
They boiled into the room in a rapid wave. He couldn’t track each moment as it happened. He reacted on instinct and movement, rather than consideration. There were shouts around him, of “Don’t move,” “On the ground,” and “Listen up scum.” He saw one of the standing suits go for a gun and saw him fall backward, clutching at his shoulder. Another moved, close to Dean, and he brought back the gun before bringing it down hard across the man’s temple, crumpling him to the floor like a sack of potatoes. It felt like ages, but it was just a few moments before the men were surrounded, put in their places, hands up in the air or down on the ground. Connell seemed to have the situation contained, and when he shared a quick nod with Dean, Dean let himself go to Emma.
She all but flung herself up out of the chair, wrapping her arms around his neck and throwing her weight so hard against him that he wavered slightly on his feet.
“Hey,” he let himself murmur into her neck, looking up at the ceiling so that the stinging in his eyes wouldn’t turn into something embarrassing. “Hey. You’re okay. You’re okay.”
“Damn right I am,” she whispered back, and he could hear choked wetness in her voice as well. “But I’m getting really tired of this damsel in distress routine. Real tired.”
“Well, tell you what,” he said. “Next time, you can rescue me. Deal?”
“Yeah. That sounds good.”
He pulled back enough to see her face and give her the shit-eating grin he knew she loved. “So how did a pretty girl like you end up in a—” He looked around, considering. “Crappy broken down office building like this?”
Instead of laughing, though, the joy on her face stilled down into something between fear and worry.
“They have Mia,” she said. “Or they know who does. But they don’t know where she is. And Dean… we have to get to her first.”
Dean forced himself to loosen his grip on Emma, but before he let go, she squeezed his hand. He moved to Connell, who had his gun on the man who had been sitting opposite Emma, at the other end of the table.
“This is Damian Roth,” Connell said, his voice calm and level. “Runs a few banks downtown, but more importantly, keeps money clean for any number of dirty interests in the area.” He gestured with his chin at one of the Scorpions, a tall and burly man with curly black hair and dark brown skin. “Carl ID’d him. Says the Scorpions used to use his services, but that the company went dark a few years back, then resurfaced with a shiny new client list, and old friends were no longer welcome.”
Dean nodded. He put his hip up on the table, trying to look conversational and “Good Cop.”
“I suppose you’ve already tried tracing the feed back to that camera?” He pointed at the screen without letting himself look at it. He didn’t want to see his little girl’s face, twisted with stress and worry.
Roth didn’t look up and didn’t say a thing. So much for “Good Cop.” There was no way Dean was going to be able to control himself in the face of a pissant in a business suit who thought he didn’t need to speak to a man who had a question. Connell was just going to need to be “Good Cop” for a change.
Dean shifted his balance so that his foot rested on the edge of the chair, the steel toe of his motorcycle boot resting right on top of Roth’s junk.
“I’m not a patient man,” he said, keeping his voice as calm and level as he could. Which wasn’t very calm or level at this point. “I’m going to ask again. And if you don’t answer me, I’m going to squash your fucking pencil dick into paste. We clear?”
He saw Roth’s jaw clench, but the man didn’t look up. He glanced at Connell, who nodded and gestured at one of the women who’d come along with them. She went to the bank of monitors and started tracing wires. As soon as she found the main computer bank, she pulled something out of a small knapsack, and he could hear the clicking of keyboard keys.
“We’re going to track down whatever you have going on here,” Dean said, still striving to make his voice conversational. “I just want you to answer now. I don’t give a shit about what you think, what you want, what you think is most important. Who you think you might be protecting. Did you try and trace the signal yourself already?”
Roth was clearly gritting his teeth, expecting the pain. It seemed only right to give it to him.
It was a while before he screamed, but by then, Dean had found out everything he needed to know.
Chapter Thirty
Emma
Emma had to turn away when Dean started doing whatever he was doing that made Roth, the man who’d introduced himself to her as Black, scream. She knew why it was happening, and she couldn’t bring herself to disagree that it was necessary. But at the same time, this was the life she had sworn she would never be a part of.
The way he’d rushed in and saved her, hugged her and held her tightly — and then he’d done something so incredibly cruel she’d had to close her eyes and refuse to see it. Without a second thought. A man who would fight so hard for his daughter, who would fight so hard for her — that had to be a good thing. An honorable thing. Didn’t it?
The man didn’t scream for long. He gasped out whatever it was that Dean wanted to know, and Dean stopped the pain. He stepped back and away, and Emma could breathe again. He came to her quickly, but he didn’t try to turn her around or push her to look at him. She watched the bikers around her start to take the various suits out of the room, and she wondered for just a moment what would happen to them next. After a moment’s thought, however, she found that she did not car
e at all. They’d kidnapped a child, kidnapped her, kidnapped Abbey, and had so casually spoken about killing all of them. As if it would never take more than a second thought.
Dean’s hands ran up and down her arms, and she was suddenly filled with such intense need, such an insatiable and desperate drive to prove that she was alive, safe. She turned against him and kissed him, hard and tight, molding her body to his again.
“Take me somewhere,” she murmured against his mouth. “I don’t care where.”
“Fuck, Emma,” he murmured back, his hands tight on the flesh of her hips. “I don’t know where the hell we even are.”
She could feel him, full and hard against her belly, and she didn’t care that she wasn’t sure either. “I’m sure there’s a wall. A cot. A room with a door that closes. A room. I need you, Dean.” She put as much stress into the word need as she could. He got the message. He tightened his grip on her hand and pulled her out of the room.