by Evelyn Glass
Royal nodded. “Goon or Hammer has the first shift in the morning. The rest of us should be there about nine. I want to try to get his done early so we can get back to Charleston tomorrow.”
Blade began to strip out of his clothes. “That’s fine with me. The sooner we get this done, the more money we make.”
Royal nodded in agreement as he began to strip down to his shorts as well as he prepared for bed. He was still keyed up, and morning to was going to arrive early.
CHAPTER TWENTY
“Hammer, you copy?”
“Copy, Royal.”
“Status?”
“The mom and dad left. Nobody else around.”
“Okay. Goon and Blade have the back. I want you to pull back out of sight.”
“Got it.”
Royal was sitting at the Hardees while his team got into position. He was going to make a straight forward play for Wayne, but if he rabbited, he needed the extra boots on the ground to run him down. He waited twenty minutes to let things settle around the Bass home, then stepped out of the Suburban. They didn’t know for sure Wayne was in his parents’ home, but even if they did, they couldn’t break the door down. There were rules about these sorts of things, and failure to follow them could cost him his license. He needed him to open the door.
Royal stepped around to the back of the SUV and flipped through his collection of magnetic stickers, pulling out two that had a picture of a high-tension power line tower and the words Electric Company around the outside of the shield. It looked very official, if you didn’t look too closely.
He took the two shields and stuck them on the front doors of the white truck, then pinned a badge to his collar that identified him as Terrence Walton, Inspector. Dressed in a light blue polo, sand-colored pants and brown loafers, he looked professional and businesslike, the same reason he sported no tattoos or facial hair, and kept his hair cut stylishly short.
He drove up the Bass home and parked in the drive like he belonged there, stepping out of the SUV with a clipboard and strode to the front door. He rapped on the door solidly, then looked around as if he didn’t have a care in world. When nobody answered, he rapped again.
“Go away!” a voice called from inside.
“Mr. Bass? Mr. Charles Bass?”
“He’s not here.”
Royal paused as if he were thinking. “Are you a resident here?”
“Yes.”
“I’m with the power company. I need to speak to you about your meter.”
“What about it?”
“Can you open the door?”
“What do you want?”
Royal sighed in mock exasperation. “Your meter appeared to be faulty. Our records show you have used approximately six times the power this month that you used in the previous month, and is far above your average. I’m here to inspect the meter.”
“Go ahead.”
“I need you sign the waiver first.”
“What waiver?”
“I have to turn the power off to the house before I can inspect the meter. I need you sign the waiver before I can do that.”
“You’ll have to come back.”
Royal shrugged. “Okay, but I’m obligated to tell you that you will be responsible for all charges until the meter has been inspected.” He flipped papers. “That’s currently $638.90.” He began scribbling on his clipboard, then stuck a piece of paper in the door. “That’s notification that I spoke with someone at the residence and you declined to have the meter inspected. You can call the number on the paper to schedule an appointment.” He turned to go.
“Wait a minute,” the voice said as the door opened slightly. “If I sign the waiver you can do whatever you need to do?”
Royal turned back to the door. “Yes, sir. The power should only be off about ten minutes.”
The door opened and Wayne Alan Bass stood in the door wearing only a pair of pants riding low over his hips. Royal smiled at the husky, tattooed man with long greasy hair and beard. He could probably take him right here and get away with it, but if Wayne signed the “waiver” he was signing a document that acknowledged Royal had the right to enter the premises with the purpose of taking him into custody.
Royal handed the man the clipboard. “If you’ll just sign at the bottom.” Nobody ever reads things before they sign and Wayne was no different. Wayne signed and handed the clipboard back. “Thank you, Mr. Bass,” Royal said taking the clipboard. “Almost done,” he said with a smile. He tossed the clipboard to the floor to free his hands, then reached behind him for his weapon. “Wayne Alan—” he began.
Wayne, having been in and out of prison for years, realized what was going down, and tried to slam the door. Royal crashed into the into the door with his shoulder to prevent Wayne from shutting it, knocking Wayne backwards, then charged through the door while trying to draw his weapon.
Wayne recovered and hurtled himself at Royal, driving him backwards and out onto the porch. They hit the planking of the porch floor hard, Wayne driving Royal down. He threw a hard punch Royal was only partially able to block, before scrambling to his feet and charged back into the house.
“Rabbit! Rabbit! Rabbit!” Royal yelled as he scrambled to his feet to give chase. If Wayne got his hands on a weapon they were in deep shit.
Royal caught Wayne as he grabbed a pistol from a side table. He never slowed, driving right through him, turning over the table and chair as his momentum carried them over the furniture and to the floor. Wayne fought with frenzied desperation, his eyes bulging and spittle flying as the two men battled. Royal tried to get Wayne into a joint lock, but Wayne was like a wild man, screaming and cursing as they tumbled over each other.
Wayne broke free and tried to run, but Royal sprang to his feet and hauled him down again as they crashed into kitchen table, turning it over and spilling plates and utensils into the floor. Wayne grabbed a knife from the floor and lunged at Royal. It was only a butter knife, but even a butter knife could kill, and Royal caught his wrist to stop it from plunging into his chest.
Wayne was leaning into the knife, his eyes crazed, muscles bulging, as he tried to bury it in Royal’s heart. Royal gasped, putting everything he had into holding it off. He twisted Wayne’s hand and the knife crashed into the floor just by his ear. He forced Wayne over onto his back, but Wayne continued the roll, coming up on top again and once again tried to drive the knife into Royal’s chest as Royal strained to prevent it.
Hammer skidded to a stop and wrapped a beefy arm around Wayne’s neck and hauled him off of Royal. A moment later, Goon and Blade arrived and slid to a stop.
Royal scrambled to his feet. “Hold him!” he panted.
Hammer had him, but Wayne wasn’t giving up easily. Royal forced one hand down and slapped the cuffs over his wrist, then he and Blade together twisted Wayne’s other arm down and back as he shrieked in pain and rage until Royal could secure his wrists behind his back.
Wayne spat in Royal’s face and it was all he could do not to punch that asshole’s lights out. “Put him out!” Royal ordered as he wiped his face. They waited while Hammer tightened his grip until Wayne went limp, then lowered him gently to the ground. “Get the leg irons,” Royal ordered.
“What took you so long?” Royal asked, grimacing and trying to work the soreness out of his shoulders and back. He never got his weapon drawn. With all the rolling around his gun had dug painfully into his back, and he felt like he may have strained something trying to prevent Wayne from plunging the knife into his chest.
“Took us so long? Hell, we were here in less than thirty seconds. We came running as soon as you said his name. Just because he was kicking your ass, don’t blame it on us!” Hammer laughed and slapped Royal on the shoulder. “You’re the one who wanted the glamour job of being the runner.”
“Yeah. It’s really glamourous having a knife sticking out of your chest.”
Hammer chuckled as Wayne began to stir. Royal got up and put a knee in Wayne’s back, holdin
g him down as Blade returned with the leg irons.
“I’m going to fucking kill you! I’m going to skull fuck all of you!” Wayne raged as Hammer, Blade and Goon pinned his legs while they put him in irons.
“Shut the fuck up,” Royal growled, then looked at his team. “Ready?”
Goon nodded. Royal released one wrist and, as expected, Wayne began to flail, fighting them, twisting and straining to break free as he continued to curse them and promising vile retribution. Royal wrestled him into a hold while his brothers got his wrists bound in front of him, then attached to his leg shackles.
Royal hauled Wayne to his feet. “We can do this one of two ways.”
“Fuck you!”
“Hard it is,” Royal growled. Wayne wouldn’t cooperate so they four men muscled him out and slammed him into the SUV, not taking much care if they hurt him, and attached his cuffs to rings in the floor so he couldn’t move.
As Wayne sat in the SUV, Royal left a copy of Wayne’s arrest warrant, along with a copy of his signed waiver allowing entrance into the residence, stuck under a magnet on the refrigerator. They made a quick stop at the police station to present their paperwork for the apprehension of Wayne Alan Bass, to keep things all nice and legal, then turned for home.
They had checked out of the hotel that morning, so with only one night’s expenses, the club was going to make good money off this capture. The club got fifty percent of the take and covered expenses. From Royal’s half, he paid Hammer, Goon and Blade a hundred dollars a day, or a thousand dollars minimum. From today’s job he made a quick twenty-five grand, less three for his brothers. The club did even better, netting a touch under twenty-four grand. Not bad for a day’s work.
They’d just entered Georgia when his phone rang.
“Royal.”
“Royal! We’ve got a problem,” Doc’s voice came over the blue-tooth in the Chevy.
“What problem? We’ve got the perp.”
“The safe! The whole fucking safe is gone!”
“What?” Royal cried.
“You heard me? I’m at the clubhouse and the whole goddamn safe is gone!”
“How the fuck did that happen?”
“I don’t know. The place was locked up tight, but Tony isn’t here and he’s not answering his phone.”
“You think he did it?”
“You tell me.”
“That fucking son-of-a-bitch!” Royal snarled. Tony had a key to the clubhouse so he could work without someone having to be there to babysit all the time. If there was no sign of break-in, it made sense. And now that he’d gone missing?
“Yeah. We’re going to need you on this, pronto.”
“Have you told Charleston?”
“No, I’m not going to, and you’re not either. If we can get the safe, and the cash, back, there is no reason for them to know.”
“Why the fuck would he do that?”
“I don’t know, but we’re going to find out. How fast can you turn on this?”
Royal thought a moment. “I can probably be back late tonight, so I can start on this in the morning.”
He could hear the relief in Doc’s voice. “That’s what I wanted to hear. We’re depending on you, Royal. I do not want to have to admit to Charleston we lost the cash they loaned us.”
Royal nodded to himself. He’d been officer of the club for less than two weeks and already $85,000 had gone missing. It wasn’t his fault, but he felt sick over it just the same. “I’ll find him and, when I do, I’m going to cut his nuts off.”
“That’s what I want to hear. The club is behind you on this. Whatever you need, you’ve got.”
“I’ll let the brothers know when we stop for gas. There isn’t anything I can do until I drop this fuck in Charleston, but I’ll try to turn and burn as fast as I can.”
“Make it happen, Royal. You’re our only hope of getting out of this pile of shit.”
He nodded, pursing his lips in determination. “I’m on it.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Royal was hauling ass on I-26 toward Greenfield when his phone rang. It was almost one, he’d been up for almost twenty hours already, and he was sick with worry over the loss of the safe, but seeing the name on his phone made him smile.
“Royal.”
“Gabriel?” Stella’s voice came over the speakers in the SUV.
“Sorry, yeah, it’s me.”
“Am I interrupting?”
“No. Sorry I didn’t call, but it’s been a little crazy today.”
“Are you okay? You sound a little down.”
“It’s been a long day, that’s all.”
“And it’s not over yet?”
“No, not yet. I’m still an hour outside of Greenfield.”
“That’s too bad. I was hoping you could stop by.”
That made him smile. “I would like to, but I have another job first thing in the morning.”
He heard her sigh. “Okay. I called to tell you I have been thinking about us.”
“And?”
“And I’d like to talk to you.”
“Uh-oh,” he teased then became more serious. “I would like that, but I can’t. Not now.”
“Tomorrow night?”
“I doubt it. I’m really under the gun on this.”
There was a long pause. “You’re not upset with me, and you’re not just saying that are you?”
“What?”
“That you have to work.”
“No!” he cried in frustration. Now she wants to talk! “I wish I could stop by and talk to you about this right now, but I can’t.”
“And you can’t tomorrow?”
“I don’t know. Maybe, but I doubt it.”
“Okay,” she said softly.
“Don’t give up on me, Stella,” he said firmly. “I’m not stringing you along.”
“Can you at least tell me what’s so important? You were available every day and I couldn’t get rid of you, then just like that, you’re not available anymore, even when you’re in town. It’s like you got out of your system whatever was bugging you, and that scares me. I know I’ve been a mess the last couple of days, but you said you could give me time while I figured it out.”
He sighed. “I know, babe, and I’m sorry. Will it make you feel better if I stop by on my way home?”
“You don’t have to do that,” she said softly.
“I know, but I want to. I want to be there with you and Katrina, but work. You should understand that.”
She sighed. “Yeah, I know. I’m sorry. I’m just feeling vulnerable right now.”
“I’m sorry. I really am. Just hang in there, okay? We’ll get through this.”
He heard her smile in her voice. “I know. I’m just tired, I guess.”
He chuckled. “I know the feeling. Didn’t you sleep good last night? I did my best.”
“I did,” she said with a soft giggle. “Now that I’ve turned in my notice, it’s hard to stay enthusiastic about working at the diner.”
“So leave.”
“I can’t do that to them. I gave my notice, and they’re looking to hire someone else. They were good to me, and gave me a chance when I needed it, so I don’t want to leave them in a bind if I can help it.”
“You just have to make it until Friday,” he said. “I should have this problem sorted by then.”
“What problem?”
“Someone robbed the club last night. I’m going to track him down and make him wish he’d never heard of the Iron Kings.”
She was quiet for a long time. “What are you going to do?”
“Me? Nothing. Just track him down. After that? That’s up to the muscle side of the club. We won’t kill him, if that’s what you’re worried about. We need him to tell us were the safe is, and murder is a bad rap. But we will express our extreme displeasure with him, that much is certain.”
“You know who it is?”
“Pretty good idea. We think it’s a guy name Antonio Daniels. He was
doing some contract work for us, getting the clubhouse—”
“Tony Daniels?” she squawked, cutting him off.
“Yeah. Do you know him?”
She was quiet for a long time. “We need to talk. Tonight. Call me when you get in the parking lot and I’ll unlock the door.”