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Authors: Karin Slaughter

Tags: #Fantasy, #Contemporary, #Fiction

Beyond Reach (11 page)

BOOK: Beyond Reach
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“Meth?” Jeffrey guessed. There wasn’t a town in America that wasn’t being slowly crippled by the scourge of methamphetamine. It was cheap to buy, cheaper to make, and almost impossible to quit. The drug ruined the life of anyone it touched, including some law enforcement officers who had unwittingly walked into booby-trapped labs.

“Meth,” Nick confirmed, finally finished with the sugar. He grabbed the creamer, saying, “Jake’s a little wet behind the ears, but he’s a good kid.”

“He didn’t look old enough to drive a car.”

“That’s true, but he’s willing to learn, which is more than you can say for most everybody you meet. I guarantee you, if he can hang on to the job long enough for his balls to drop, he’s gonna make a good sheriff.”

“He doesn’t seem to have much support from his deputies.”

“Maybe one or two will bug out on him, but only when the chips are down.” He added, “Don Cook’s not as powerful as he thinks he is.”

“What about Jake’s predecessor?”

“Al Pfeiffer. He was a good guy, but nothing says it’s time to retire like a firebomb thrown through your front window.”

Jeffrey was sure he’d heard wrong. “What?”

Nick nodded, pouring cream into the cup until the liquid touched the rim. “They firebombed his house. Wife and grandkid barely got out. The old man suffered third-degree burns on his face and arms. Lost one of his fingers. Never made a case because nobody would talk: no witnesses, no crime scene evidence, no nothing. Happened in broad daylight on a Sunday afternoon. Take that as a warning, Chief. These boys don’t fuck around. They’re making too much money.”

“Skinheads?” Jeffrey asked.

“Guessed it again, Chief.” Nick gave him a careful look. “Something tells me you’ve played this game before.”

Jeffrey knew it was his turn to share. “I saw this guy outside the Elawah hospital last night—tough-looking con. He had a big red swastika tattooed on his arm.”

“That old thing.” Nick waved his hand like an old lady fielding gossip. “It’s used by the Skin Brothers. Now, there’s an interesting bunch of Nazis. Started in the prisons back in the late fifties. Integration on the outside, segregation on the inside. All them white boys running the cell blocks didn’t like the black guys coming in and they made it known every way they could.” Nick leaned forward, kept his voice low. “In the 1950s, you had maybe sixty-five, seventy percent white in all the federal and state prisons, basically in line with the white population on the outside, right?”

“Right.”

“Now, it’s upside down. You got maybe a sixty-forty, eighty-twenty mix in some prisons. The whites are the minorities, the blacks and Hispanics are the majority.”

“So, in come the gangs.”

“Crips, Bloods, the Boyz, Tiny Raskals, MS-13, Nazi Low Riders.”

Jeffrey said, “Which brings us back to meth again.”

“That kind of quick money to be made, there’s always gonna be some kind of war going on, some asshole wanting to swing his dick around. Whites on whites, blacks on blacks, all that matters anymore is the green. You got the Aryans telling the Low Riders what to do, the Low Riders telling the Aryans to fuck off, the purists telling them both they’re selling out the white race…long story short, whoever’s in charge better be looking over his shoulder all the time.”

“Who uses the black swastika?”

“Just about all of ’em but the Skin Brothers.” He anticipated Jeffrey’s next question. “And never the twain shall meet. You put a Skin Brother in with, say, a Low Rider, they see their tats, you might as well put two tomcats in a cardboard box. Only one of ’em’s gonna come out alive.”

“You positive about that?”

“Their feud goes so far back nobody even remembers how it got started. Part of the oath they take when they jump in is to kill any motherfucker playing for the other team. Red or black, you get that tattoo, you better be damn sure it’s for life. You’ll see peace in the Middle East before those two get together.”

Jeffrey breathed a little easier. Whatever was going on in Reese, he could take Ethan Green out of the equation for the moment.

Nick leaned back, cupping his coffee in his hands. “You hear about that case with the Hells Angels out on the West Coast?”

Jeffrey shook his head.

“Let me tell you, them’re some violent motherfuckers. Been inside most of their adult lives, no hope of getting out, they’ll cut you just as soon as look at you. The feds are trying to go after them with the RICO statutes, saying they’re the same as organized crime. They had to bolt the bastards to the floor during the trial. One of ’em was already in for stabbing his lawyer with an ink pen. These guys got nothing to lose; just biding their time at the old SuperMax, waiting for their number to come up. They know they’re never gonna see the light of day without a set of bars casting a shadow through it and they don’t care how many bodies they leave in their wake.”

Jeffrey felt his blood turning cold in his veins. “Let’s go back to the Skin Brothers.”

“Technically, it’s the Brotherhood of the True White Skin, but that don’t flow off the tongue near as well.”

“Tell me more about them.”

“For the last five, maybe ten, years, it’s been run by two brothers, Carl and Jerry Fitzpatrick. Carl’s in prison and Jerry lives out on a zillion-dollar compound with the rest of the family. Thinks he’s some kind of preacher for the Way of Whitey.”

“True believer?”

“Sadistic true believer,” Nick amended. “You don’t cross Jerry. He takes care of the stray lambs himself—tracks them down and shatters their little legs so the rest of the flock knows they better keep on the path. You got grown men, mean-as-fuck skinheads with twenty kills under their belt, who piss their pants at the thought of Jerry coming after them.”

“He’s never been caught?”

“Oh, he’s been charged plenty, but nothing sticks. Witnesses tend to change their minds when their fingernails are pulled off and their children go missing.”

“Where’s the compound?”

“Up in a little town called Keene, New Hampshire.”

“Why is it always a relief when these guys are Yankees?”

Nick pretended surprise, clutching his hand to his chest. “Racists in the liberal North? How dare you, sir.”

“Shocking,” Jeffrey agreed, wondering not for the first time why the rest of America wanted to believe racism only happened south of the Mason-Dixon. It was as if Watts and Harlem, the cases of Rodney King and Abner Louima, were startling anomalies on their respective coasts.

Nick continued, “The FBI has the Fitzpatrick brothers on their watch list, but I’m not sure what kind of priority they’ve been given. All this anti-immigration shit that’s been stirring up has been like free PR for the neo-Nazi groups. Suddenly, saying we should close our borders and kick out the people with the funny-sounding names doesn’t sound like extremist rhetoric anymore.”

“Good thing we let the Fitzpatricks slip in first,” Jeffrey commented. “What’s the brother in prison for?”

“Shooting two cops.”

“New Hampshire have the death penalty?”

“Just for this very thing,” Nick said. “Only problem is, they’ve set their age limit at seventeen. Carl was two weeks shy of his seventeenth birthday when he pulled the trigger. Life in prison without the chance of parole. Smart boy, our Carl. He met the right people on the cell block, made some good contacts, worked his way up in the group, and—as these things happen—beat his boss to death with a dumbbell and took over the organization. Real upwardly mobile guy.”

Jeffrey tried not to think about the two cops that had been shot, how their families, their children, had coped with the loss all these years. “So, how do the Fitzpatricks pay their bills?”

“They’re real heavy into meth. Like, super-heavy, kill-your-mama heavy. The Fitzpatricks control everything going in and out of the southeast corridor, from Florida on up. Some of those boys are billionaires. Only catch is, they’re dead before they reach the age of thirty.”

Jeffrey already knew this. “And?”

Nick added more sugar to his coffee as he spoke. “They say they’ve got skin privilege, that being white means they’re better than everybody else, that they should be in control. They view it as a special ordination from God.” The waitress walked by and Nick gave her another wink. He turned back to Jeffrey, asking, “You like your history, right?”

“Well enough.”

“Then let me tell you this story,” Nick began. “The Skin Brothers got started by a World War II vet, an Army National Guardsman from out West by the name of Jeremiah Todd. Claimed he was with one of the infantry divisions that helped liberate Dachau.” Nick tried the coffee again, then started back with the cream. Jeffrey suppressed the urge to throw the cup across the room as Nick continued, “Todd gets back from Germany and starts telling everybody it’s all been overblown, that the press is just making a big deal out of nothing. He was there and saw it with his own eyes, and it was just a bunch of Jews stirring up trouble, trying to bring down America.”

Jeffrey felt disgust welling up into his gut. “He was a Holocaust denier?”

“Right.”

“Where does the red swastika come in?”

“Before Hitler came along—no shitting you—Todd’s National Guard unit had a red swastika on their badges.”

Jeffrey provided, “It was a Native American symbol for luck.”

“Yep,” Nick confirmed. “A lot of the southern and western divisions had Native American call signs. Of course, come the war, the Guard made them change it, but it was on Jeremiah Todd’s division uniforms up until the early thirties. You know how those military boys are. They don’t let go of tradition without a fight.”

“How did Todd end up in prison?”

“Liquor store, convenience store. Some kind of holdup with a gun or a knife or whatever. I don’t know the details. Suffice it to say, the fucker ended up inside the same stupid way they all do.”

“I take it he’s dead?”

“Shanked in the food hall over an extra bread roll about twenty years ago,” Nick supplied. “But obviously there were some believers left over. They passed on the gospel, all the way up to New Hampshire, it seems. Prisons are seeing a big-time resurgence of these gangs, especially the white pride assholes. First thing you have to do when you get inside is declare yourself, pick a side for protection so you don’t get shanked by the brothers or raped by the Aryans or beat by the brown-skins. And it don’t stop at the prison gate. Some gangbanger fucks them up on the inside, they reach out to the guy’s family on the outside. Like I said, most of ’em ain’t got nothing to lose. What’s the worst that can happen? They get another life sentence tacked on to the six they already have? The SuperMax only gives them an hour outside a week instead of two? They know they’re never getting out, so what does it matter?”

“And they’re running drugs on the outside, too?”

“Inside and out,” Nick said. “Somebody’s gotta pay for Armageddon, and these guys sure as shit ain’t gonna make the money digging ditches.” He sipped some more coffee before asking, “How does Lena tie into this?”

“I have no idea,” Jeffrey admitted.

“I would’ve like to’ve seen Jake’s face when he realized she’d run out on him.”

“He wasn’t smiling, I can tell you that.”

“You figure out why she legged it?”

Jeffrey shook his head. “You think after all these years I’ve figured out why the hell she does anything?”

Nick gave an appreciative chuckle. “She always was a pistol.”

Jeffrey wasn’t up for discussing Lena’s finer qualities. “How come you know so much about this group?”

“Remember Amanda Wagner?”

Jeffrey had met the hostage negotiator a few years ago when the GBI had been called into Grant to handle a situation gone bad. He asked, “What does this have to do with tactical?”

“Nothing. Wagner’s got some new team she’s put together to deal with violent crimes that cross county lines—some kind of quick response unit that’s supposed to cut through the red tape, ha-ha-ha. These guys, the Skin Brothers, they’ve been causing a lot of problems up north; Cherokee, Rabun, Whitfield. She had all the field reps come into Atlanta a few months ago to give us the lowdown, let us know the signs to watch out for.”

“What are the signs?”

“The red swastika, mostly. They run meth out of these small towns like it’s freaking IBM, straight up the drug corridor through Atlanta, New York, New England, and on up to Canada. We don’t even know how many people are in the organization. Estimates run from a couple hundred to a couple thousand.” He paused, shaking his head. “It’s the same old story: they go after the teenage boys who feel misunderstood and isolated and they give them a family to be a part of, a belief system to explain why the fact that they’re white hasn’t saved them from being poor. They pump them full of hate and put a gun in their hand. You’ve seen it for yourself, Chief. These kids go in and out of jail, in and out, until they get popped for something major, and then the next thing you know, they’re king of cell block nine, raking in money on the inside, giving orders to their soldiers on the outside. Hell, look at Carl Fitzpatrick. You think he’d have this much power on the outside?”

Jeffrey suddenly felt an overwhelming tiredness. He wasn’t even certain this was connected to Lena. All that he had was a gut feeling, and right now, his gut was telling him that no good would come of getting involved with this group. “Are you going to tell Amanda they’re operating in Elawah now?”

“Hell, she’s the one who told me,” he answered. “Thing is, you know as well as I do that the GBI can’t come onto an investigation until the locals directly ask for help.”

Jeffrey knew Nick was telling the truth, just like he knew the GBI sometimes made sure it was well-prepared in anticipation of a town asking them to step in. “Have you gathered any information on the group operating out of Elawah?”

“Not much,” Nick admitted. “Seems to be a tight structure. Some of these gangs, you know exactly who’s running the show because the bastard in charge wants you to know. They don’t become gangsters so they can hide behind their mamas’ skirts. They wanna be out in the open, playing the big man, seeing the fear in people’s eyes when they drive down the street.”

BOOK: Beyond Reach
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