Kickflip
Page 21
I heard a whimper, and my gaze zoomed across the room. Chopper had been sleeping on the couch and was beginning to stir.
“Where are we?” I asked, squinting into the blinding light coming from the hallway.
“Somewhere safe,” Malachi said.
I peered around the room at the wood-paneled walls and floors to match. It seemed like some sort of cabin.
Chopper jumped on the bed, sniffed and licked my face, before sinking down by my feet. My hand groped for his collar, and I scratched him behind the ears. It felt good to have him there. A little piece of something that belonged to both Jude and me.
Then I remembered Ace and Patch. “My dogs.”
“Vaughn’s got it covered,” Smoke said.
Another recruit I’d sometimes seen with Smoke brought me a glass of water with some pills.
“Doc said you might have a concussion, which is why we’re keeping you here,” Smoke said. “He stitched you up and told us you needed to rest.”
That would account for the painkillers and the bandage I now felt on the back of my skull.
“My guys have been waking you up every few hours to check on you,” Malachi said.
Fuck. How long have I been out?
“Thanks,” I croaked out.
With some exertion, I sat up on my pillow and surveyed my surroundings. I noticed plaid curtains on the window and some kind of closet near the couch.
“Why did they take Jude?” I asked with some effort.
“Elias wants to make a deal,” Malachi said.
“Why now?”
“That kid at the skateboard competition? He verified for Elias that it was Jude,” Smoke said. “Either he’s still in contact with him, or Elias broke him down. Probably threatened the intel out of him.”
I shivered at the thought of what Elias might’ve done to intimidate someone. I couldn’t allow my brain to go there. Not while he was still holding the man I loved.
“Why do you want to make a deal with him?” I asked Mal. “What’s Jude to you except some guy you’ve been asked to protect?”
“Good question,” he said, leaning against the doorframe. “We want to keep a relationship with the feds. It’s a win-win. And this is settling up an old score.”
My face fell, because at the end of the day, Jude was only a pawn in all this.
“Elias is a filthy piece of shit and deserves a bullet through his skull,” Malachi added, as if he knew he somehow needed to redeem himself in front of me. “We’d love to do it ourselves, but then we’d have to deal with the aftermath. And we don’t need more blood on our hands. But maybe someday he’ll get what he deserves.”
He strode out the door, followed by a couple of other recruits who’d been listening from the hallway. Smoke started backing out of the room. “Stay put and rest. I’ll let you know when the deal goes down.”
“Smoke,” I said, my stomach churning. His hand stilled on the doorframe. “He said something to me one night. Jude did.”
Smoke nodded. “Go on.”
“Said he’d never allow himself to be hurt by Elias again,” I said, and the room began to spin. “I’m afraid he…he’ll do something drastic…if he thinks he has no chance to come out of this…”
Smoke stared me down. “I’ll do my best not to let that happen,” he said, his fist thumping once against his heart. “I promise.”
“Thanks,” I mumbled.
“And hey,” Smoke said sliding my cell toward me, which had been secured in Jude’s locker before we headed on the water. “If I were you, I’d send out a couple of texts to let people know you’ve got it bad—the flu or something.”
Fuck. I clicked on the home button, the light from the screen making my temples throb. I clicked to my texts, and scrolled for Jessie’s and my grandmother’s contact info.
Once that was done, painstakingly so, Smoke fished the phone from my fingers. I placed my head in my hands and groaned, my body descending to the sheets.
“Take care of him, Chopper,” Smoke said as the door closed and blotted out the light.
When I woke up next, I hauled myself out of bed, my head weighing about a thousand pounds. I opened the door and eased toward the voices down the hallway.
There was an enormous great room with a fireplace, couches, and a long wooden table. My gaze dragged across the window, and it looked like we were someplace outside the city, in the woods. Had this been under different circumstances, I might’ve enjoyed the view.
My hand gripped the doorframe as nausea washed over me.
“You look like shit,” Smoke said from the couch.
“Jude—”
“We’re figuring it out, Cory,” Malachi said. He was sitting at the head of the rectangular table, and I wondered if that was always his seat.
“I want to help.” I leaned my shoulder against the frame. “Please.”
“How?” This came from a new voice, and my eyes slid over to his. It was Alex, the federal marshal I’d now seen three times.
“He needs to get back in bed and let us make that happen,” Malachi said.
“No. I’m not going to sleep when everybody else is trying to get Jude—” I practically choked on the words.
“You have a head injury,” Smoke said.
“I’m sure you’ve had worse,” I bit out. “I’ll be fine.”
I shuffled toward the couch, and when I got there, I gripped the back of the cushion.
“Get him some coffee,” Malachi barked to one of the recruits. I sat down and held my head in my hands.
The same dude who brought me a glass of water last night now handed me a cup of liquid gold, and I sipped it gratefully as I surveyed the room. Sitting next to Alex was a man I’d seen but never interacted with before. Jonas, the vice president of the club. He was pointing at Alex’s laptop and speaking in a low drone.
“Is the deal going to happen?” I asked anybody who would listen. I also remembered one of them saying last night that it was club business, so I wondered why Alex was here at all. Did they need his help?
“We’re working on it,” Malachi said.
Alex’s eyes connected with mine, and I saw a spark of determination in them that immediately set me at ease. “Elias contacted Malachi a couple of hours ago with his demands. We’ve been hunting for Elias for years.”
I nodded, trying to process this information.
“We get Elias, we’re closer to taking down his whole operation.”
“Does Elias know that the club is working with the feds?” I asked, almost afraid of the answer.
“Doubtful,” Malachi said. “Besides, Elias’s bigger concern is payback from that other club, the Scorpions.”
“Because of the information you said you had on him?”
“Exactly,” Mal said. “He’s got problems with the feds, but he doesn’t want retaliation from the Scorpions MC.”
Just then Chopper bounded down the hallway from the bedroom and hopped up on the couch. I stretched my hand to scratch his head.
“So you’re going to destroy the information like Elias asked to get Jude back?”
Malachi looked pointedly at Alex, and my stomach pitched. There was more to it than that. But this was Jude’s life we were talking about. Fuck.
“We’re not focusing on the information Mal has,” Alex said. “Mal can make the deal free and clear. We’ve got plenty more to pin on Elias.”
“Then what?” My eyes pleaded with Alex’s. They were kind in comparison to Malachi’s.
“If we can figure out where Elias is holding Jude, we can finally get our man,” Alex said. “Jude running into Mateo actually helped our case because we were able to cross-reference intel. With all the government red tape, that just didn’t happen soon enough.”
Everything on my body felt so damned tight. My muscles, my stomach, my chest, my head. Like I couldn’t breathe. Like I wouldn’t breathe until I got Jude back.
“How can I help?” I asked for the second time. I was coiled so
taut, I had to do something or I would spontaneously combust.
Malachi leaned over to whisper something to Alex, and he nodded. Then Malachi looked at Jonas and Smoke as if they were communicating with their eyes. It made me realize how close this outlaw group was. Guess they had to be to deal with all this heavy, dangerous shit.
Smoke walked over to the couch. “Follow me.”
I stood on shaky legs as he led me down the hallway to another room, which looked like an office. Again, the Disciples of the Road crest hung on the wall. There was a television on the other side of the table, and Smoke reached for the remote.
“Have a seat, Cory,” Malachi said, moving into the room with Alex behind him. “We’re going to show you my video call with Elias.”
“You recorded it?”
Mal nodded. “Elias needed to prove he had the kid.”
35
I pushed a shaky hand through my hair, ignoring the throbbing in my forehead.
“He’s arranged the meeting time and place to make the transfer,” Alex said. “That will be handled by his men. If we can figure out his location before then, we can get Jude back and shut him down at the same time.”
I swallowed down the lump in my throat. “What do you need me to do?”
“I want you to tell us if you notice anything,” Alex said. “Anything at all. We suspect he might still be somewhere on the water. That’s new information for us, but it’s like finding a needle in a haystack.”
The memory of that speedboat came flashing back to me.
“More than likely he sent his men out to grab Jude and then drove him back to his hideout.”
Smoke hit Play, and the screen came into focus. I swallowed down the horror that threated to claw up my throat. Jude was sitting in a chair, his hands tied behind his back. His head faced downward, but I’d recognize him anywhere, even though he looked different. He had a bruised cheek, and his hair had been shorn off.
“What happened to him?” I croaked, wishing I could break through that screen and get to him.
“Elias chopped off his curls.” Smoke shrugged as if it were the most normal thing in the world. It probably was in their world. “It’s a show of dominance.”
Jude must have struggled, which would account for the injured face. Shit, what about the rest of his body?
Before I had time to process that, an imposing figure filled the monitor. It was unmistakably Elias. He was an attractive man with a commanding, almost regal presence, wiry black hair, and a large build. I shivered when he turned toward the screen and a thick, ugly scar that ran across his neck came into view. His eyes appeared black and hollow.
Then Elias spoke, and I watched Jude flinch at the sound of his voice.
“I need proof that you destroyed the evidence. That’s the only way we’ll return him to you,” Elias said. “Though I’m not clear why you’re so eager to get him back.”
“Not sure why he didn’t work out for you,” Malachi said in a clear voice on the recording. “No hard feelings. The boy’s been a strong recruit for us. You know as well as I do that good men are hard to find.”
Even though I knew what Malachi was saying was a lie, the idea of Jude being a Disciples recruit made my blood turn cold.
Elias stepped backward and grasped Jude by the neck so that he was forced to look at the camera. His eyes were lifeless jade stones, and my stomach bottomed out.
“Good men, sure,” Elias said as he leaned down to stare into Jude’s eyes. “But loyal men are even harder to find. Hope this one doesn’t disappoint you.”
“His reasons for leaving your organization are his own,” Malachi’s voice rumbled, and I flinched. “He’s never divulged any of your secrets. It was pure coincidence that he found us and we happened to have business dealings with you. As it turns out, running guns is a small world.”
Fuck, did Malachi sound convincing. Had Alex not been standing there, and had I not known the information Jude shared with me about Elias and the club, I would’ve believed him.
“Do you like what we did to your boy?” Elias asked, running his finger over Jude’s bruised cheekbone. “He likes to put up a fight. You mess up this deal, Malachi, and I’ll do worse things to this pretty face.”
“Fuck you,” Jude rasped out, and my eyes zeroed in on the screen. The hatred in Jude’s gaze made my skin tingle.
Elias’s whole countenance changed upon hearing Jude’s voice. Had this been the first time he’d spoken directly to him since his capture?
“You sound like her.” Elias grasped the back of his head firmly. “You even look like her. Mi cielo.”
My entire body stiffened at his words. The nickname that Jude told me Elias had used for his mother.
“You killed her,” Jude bit out.
“All your doing,” he said. “She’d still be alive if you hadn’t run from me. Straight into Malachi’s arms. His sins are probably bigger. Such a shame.”
I looked up at Malachi, who scowled in disgust.
“Motherfucker,” I bit out, and Smoke stared at me, mercy in his eyes.
Jude shook his head violently. “My mother started dying the moment she let you into her life. You were slowly killing her every single day, you fucking bastard.”
His words had definitely gotten to Elias because he slapped Jude across the face, and I leaped from my chair as if this was happening in real time.
“I’d love to kill you too,” Elias said, spittle flying in Jude’s face. “And maybe I’ll get the chance someday.”
“Whoa, hold the fuck on,” Malachi’s booming voice came from the screen. “Nobody’s touching one of ours. That boy’s already got enough scars on him to prove what you can do. We’re not into torturing our recruits. And we don’t plan on messing this deal up.”
A shiver raced across my shoulders as Elias sneered at the camera.
“Jude, now’s the time to calm the hell down,” Malachi said in a softer voice. “Everything is cool on our end. Everyone will be safe in a little while. You feel me? It’ll all be done and over with.”
Jude looked directly at the monitor as if he were staring straight into my eyes, and it hit me then that Malachi was sending him a veiled message. About me. The last time Jude had seen me, I had fallen off the paddleboard and landed in the lake. I didn’t know if he ever saw me emerge from the water after they’d gotten him onto the boat.
Jude nodded and shut his eyes, relief evident on his face.
Smoke froze the recording on that image, and I had to look away or my heart would slam straight through my chest.
Alex turned toward me. “We suspect he’s on a large cruiser somewhere out on the lake.”
I closed my eyes, unable to shake what I’d just witnessed.
“What’s to keep Elias from killing Jude?” I asked, swallowing.
“He does, he has bad blood with two clubs,” Smoke said. “He won’t want that.”
“We hope,” Jonas added, and Mal shot him a threatening look.
My stomach revolted as I clung to the edge of the desk.
“Did anything register for you?” Alex asked. “Have any clue at all where he might be holding him?”
I stared at the monitor and took in the room where Elias was keeping Jude captive. Paneled walls, rounded windows. I racked my brain for a couple of minutes before my shoulders slumped and I shook my head.
“Fuck,” I said, my face falling into my hands.
“It’s alright, Cory,” Alex said. “It was worth a shot.”
Smoke turned off the TV, and we headed out of the room. I noticed Chopper was outside, running along the back of the property, and I wondered if he was missing Jude as much as I was.
“You probably need to lie back down,” Smoke said. “The painkillers the doc prescribed are on the nightstand.”
I nodded numbly and walked down the hall, my head and spine throbbing with each step. No way was I going back to sleep, but I needed time alone to think.
After my head hit the pillow,
I stared at the ceiling and went over the recording step by painful step. The way Jude looked, how he responded when Elias was speaking to him. I wanted to nail that motherfucker to the wall as much as Alex did. Probably even more.
And then I shot straight up in bed and scrambled to anchor my feet on the ground.
When I stumbled back into the great room, all eyes shot to me.
My gaze landed on Alex as I hobbled toward him. “What is it, Cory?”
“It’s probably nothing—”
“We’ve got nothing at this point, so—”
“That phrase he used. Elias,” I said. “Mi cielo. Jude said he called his mother that all the time. That he was obsessed with her.”
“What does it mean?” Malachi asked.
“It means my heaven,” Alex replied, as he rubbed his fingers across his chin.
“I just thought…if he was so into her and she betrayed him by helping Jude escape…”
“Go on,” Alex said.
“Maybe there’s an in memoriam for her somewhere. A play on her name, initials, her nickname…that he uses or keeps or…God, I don’t know.”
Alex bolted out of his seat, grabbed his coat, and was already dialing his cell. “Like maybe on the side of a boat. I’m on it.”
Alex strode out the door, and Malachi stared after him, his eyebrows scrunched together. “Huh.”
Smoke clapped me on the back. “Might be worth something, Cory.”
I nodded and turned toward the hallway, this time the bed calling to me. I lay awake for some time, my eyes burning holes in the plaster, until exhaustion consumed me.
36
“Cory,” I heard a muffled voice in my ear. I squinted through one eye.
Smoke was leaning over me. “They got him.”
Both eyes sprang open. “What do you mean?”
“Your clue hit pay dirt,” he said. “The feds scoped out all the local marinas and eventually found a cruiser anchored a few miles off the coast. Name on the side of the boat was My Slice of Heaven.”
“No shit?”
“No shit,” he said, a smirk tugging at his lips.