The Brotherhood of the Wheel (7 page)

BOOK: The Brotherhood of the Wheel
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“Now,
that
sounds like Ale,” Heck said with a chuckle. “That would be some bitter-ass smoke.”

“Yes,” Elizabeth said softly, as she offered a pinch of her lover's ashes to the night wind. The wind carried them toward the water. “But I think it might surprise you how sweet it would be, too.”

The return trip through the dark tunnel was uneventful. The specters had all fled. When Elizabeth and Heck emerged back where the Jocks and the other MCs were waiting, cycle headlights burning to fill the edge of the tunnel with light, a raucous cheer went up, and Jim the piper began to play “The Warrior's Code,” by the Dropkick Murphys.

“I think if Ale was here right now,” Heck said, jumping up onto the sidecar of the Harley and shouting above the hoots, whistles, and music, “he'd say, ‘Let's go get shit-faced!'” The crowd erupted in howls that would have made Viking raiders piss themselves. The wake was on.

*   *   *

The Ashville chapter of the Blue Jocks hosted Ale's wake at the home of the chapter president, an affable fellow named Muskrat, who had done fifteen years for manslaughter. The party spilled out of the hundred-year-old farmhouse that Muskrat, his wife, and kids called home and onto the twenty acres of land that had been in his family for well over a century. The number of attendees swelled as word of the party got around, to more than two hundred MC members, prospects, ol' ladies and sweetbutts, hang-arounds, and supporters.

Bonfires and campfires littered the huge yard. The night air was full of the revving of motorcycle engines, laughter, deep-bass bellows, the murmuring river of mass conversations and music—everything from Johnny Cash to Cage the Elephant. The Eagles' “Desperado” played, and couples danced close, hands on hips or in pockets, while Heck nursed his third Budweiser, standing on the porch of the farmhouse. The porch was illuminated by strings of plastic Halloween skulls of every color. Heck sat against the rail and took a draw off his bottle.

He watched a skinny prospect from the Spartanburg chapter spin and flip flaming devil sticks for a crowd, leaving glowing trails in the wake of the booze-doused sticks. Near one of the ubiquitous keg stations, a brother was on hands and knees puking while several Jocks and their ol' ladies laughed uproariously at the spectacle. That very cute redhead in the corset, tutu, and knee-high boots walked by for the third time, glancing not so shyly at Heck and giving him an inviting smile. Somewhere, a guy was calling out for the immediate attention of someone apparently named Juanetta.

Roadkill walked up the steps, weaving a bit, and leaned on the rail to steady himself. “Well, ain't you a mopey bastard,” he said. “All this in front of you and you're gonna sit there … I don't know … having … thoughts, or something.”

“Just enjoying the show,” Heck said. “Had a few?” he asked, a smile tugging at the edges of his face.

Roadkill drained his blue plastic Solo cup and nodded. “Indeed, my good man,” he said. “There are some of the Ashville club's mamas here. I intend to drink until I look good to them. There's plenty of sweetbutts to go around, man. Don't want the mother chapter's future president pissing off the troops 'cause he doesn't like their stock of clubhouse girls.”

“Thanks, bro,” Heck said. “Not tonight. Not feeling it. 'Sides, I am not going to be the prez of the MC.”

“That remains to be seen,” Elizabeth said, walking up to her son and Roadkill. Heck was surprised to see her. She had been holding court since they arrived, talking and drinking with the presidents of the seven other Jock chapters here, as well as reminiscing with Glen and Reggie. “Walk with me, Hector.”

Roadkill slapped him on the back as he descended the porch stairs and fell in step beside his mother. The Eagles had been replaced with Led Zeppelin's “When the Levee Breaks.”

Elizabeth led him away from the party toward a dark, relatively quiet section of field. “We have a new problem,” she said.

“Who's ‘we'?” Heck said.

“The club,” Elizabeth said, “me, you—especially you.”

“What?” Heck asked.

“Do you know who Cherokee Mike is?” Elizabeth asked. Heck thought a moment and then nodded.

“Yeah,” Heck said. “Mike Locklear. He's a Nomad. Used to be with the Charlotte chapter. I seem to recall he was an asshole.”

“He is,” Elizabeth said. “The worst kind—a dangerous and smart asshole. It's not widely known, but he went Nomad to avoid getting kicked out of the MC entirely. He just got out of Central Prison, and he's looking to stake a claim to be president of the mother chapter. He wants Ale's job, Heck. He wants your job.”

“It's not my damn job, Mom!” Heck said, throwing his hands up in the air. “Regardless of what you and Ale wanted. Maybe Mike will do good by the MC.”

“He won't,” Elizabeth said. “He'll destroy it, Hector. Cherokee Mike wants to take the Blue Jocks into the meth trade. He was opposed to the club doing bounty hunting to pay the bills. He's always wanted the club to get into drugs. He wanted to make deals with the creatures out there we hunt. Not stop them from hurting people, not destroy them, use them to advance our position—his position. It was Ale that kept him in check. Now Ale's gone, and Mike figures it's his time.”

“Well, if he's such an asshole he won't get voted in,” Heck said. “He'd have to be accepted back by the mother chapter, by Wilmington, then he'd have to get enough support to—”

“You don't understand,” Elizabeth interrupted. “Mike is no outlaw; he's got no code, no honor. He doesn't care about traditions. He's a gangster, a thug, and he will wreck anything that gets between him and what he wants, and he wants the MC. You can stop him, but there's not much time.”

Heck shook his head. “Are you kidding me, Mom! Is this just some new bullshit way to drag me into Ale's chair? You want me to go fuck up Cherokee Mike and tell him to leave Wilmington alone, I will. But don't pull some mind-fuck on me, trying to get what you want.”

“He's already threatened Glen,” Elizabeth said softly. “Said something might happen to the garage and to Jethro if he doesn't get patched back in. Reggie, too. He's making moves, buying or scaring people. He will burn down everything your grandfather and Ale built. You try to go after him now, you will wind up dead, or in prison, which is exactly what Cherokee Mike wants.”

Heck looked up and let the air out of his lungs with a
whoosh
, running his hands through his tangled hair. The stars burned above with ancient, cold fire; each was a story already told and ended. He saw Ale's face, weathered and smiling—as much as Ale ever did smile. The memory, the mental snapshot, came from the moment he first knew this man was his father, sure and true—balls to bones. He had been three, and it was one of his first memories, one of his best. He turned back to his mother, his green eyes bright and cool. “Okay,” he said. “I'll do it. I'll be president.”

Elizabeth sighed. She hugged her son for as long as he would allow it. “Now,” she said, “you need to be initiated.”

“I am, Mom,” Heck said. “At sixteen, remember?”

“No,” she said. “This is different. A secret only the originals know. The Blue Jocks are part of something much older, much bigger than us. And it is an unspoken law that every president of the MC must be a member of both societies to lead.”

“Are you serious?” Heck said. “What, are we hooked up with the fucking Shriners or something, Mom? In case you forgot, the Blue Jocks hunt monsters, Mom …
real
fucking monsters. It can't be more secret or weird than that. If this shit with Cherokee Mike is so serious, I don't have the time or the inclination to go learn a bunch of fucking secret handshakes and how to drive a clown car.”

Heck felt his mother's full, angry regard. He stopped. Even as a grown man, having seen combat and worse, his mother's disapproving gaze held him and stilled him.

“I love you, Hector,” she said. “But you really do need to learn when to shut the hell up and listen. Unless we do this the right way, the traditional way, we will be just as guilty of destroying the Blue Jocks as Cherokee Mike. We have to be better. You have to be better. I know you can do it. I know, and Ale knew. It fell to him, as your father, to make you his squire. That's why he didn't want you to go. That's why he was so angry and disappointed. He wanted you to stay and learn from him.”

“Why didn't he say that, Mom? Jesus!” Heck said. “If he had only—”

“He tried,” she said. “You were too angry to hear him, and the old pigheaded bastard was too prideful to admit how much your rejection hurt him. He tried the best a man like him can. This was a secret, Hector. More so than the things the MC hunt when they aren't bounty hunting. The biggest secret you will ever discover in your lifetime, and a huge responsibility. It can't just be blurted out.”

Heck paced in a circle, shaking his head. He sighed and rubbed his hair. “What do I do?”

Elizabeth produced a sealed envelope from her jacket pocket. She handed it to Heck. “Do you remember Jimmie Aussapile?”

“The trucker?” Heck said. “Yeah. He used to come by when I was little. He and Ale were tight. I figured he'd be here today.”

“You used to call him Uncle Jimmie,” Elizabeth said. “Jimmie's on the road, otherwise he would have been. I need you to find him. Give him this. Offer yourself to him as a squire of the Brethren.”

“The what of the what?” Heck said.

“It's all I can tell you,” Elizabeth said. “Once you offer and he accepts you, then Jimmie can explain more.”

“How long does this take?” Heck asked. “You're making it sound like we don't have a ton of time before Mike makes a move.”

“Months, years sometimes,” Elizabeth said. “As long as it takes.”

“Years…” Heck repeated. “Great. What about—”

“I'll handle Mike,” Elizabeth said. “I'll stall him, slow him down. Don't you worry.”

“You told me this guy wants me dead,” Heck said. “He can't think too much of you, either, Mom.”

Elizabeth hugged her son again and kissed him on the cheek. “I'll be fine. I'm a cunning old bitch. Go. You got a long ride ahead of you. Reggie said he'll get me home.”

Heck started to walk toward Ale's hog.

Elizabeth's voice stopped him. “He was so proud of you,” she said. “Proud to bust. Proud you were a marine. Proud you were his son. Proud of the man you had become. I wanted you to hear it this time.”

Heck didn't look back; he started walking again.

 

THREE

“10-200”

Lovina Marcou parked her car a block away from the crime scene. She unzipped her leather carry bag and checked to make sure she had what she needed: her picks and pry bar, the compact UV wand, fingerprint lift tape, various powders and sprays to draw out prints from different surfaces, the Canon EOS 5D Mark III digital forensic camera. She always got nervous using the camera. It cost more than a month's pay, and, given what she was doing tonight, it would be hard to explain if anything happened to it.

She also had notebooks, measuring tape, a ruler, a pen-size Maglite flashlight, a voice recorder, and a box of latex gloves. Finally, she pushed aside her leather jacket, pulled her duty sidearm—a Glock 22—out of her shoulder rig, pulled back the slide to chamber a .40 round into the pipe, and replaced it in her holster. She exited the car, hefted her bag onto her shoulder, and looked around. It was a quiet, blue-collar neighborhood on a late Monday morning; the place was practically deserted. She locked the car and headed east toward Dewey Rears's apartment.

It was a short walk down Askew Street. Lovina walked past neat, well-trimmed lawns with fishing boats on trailers and unhitched campers waiting in wide, two-car driveways. It had warmed up and birds were chirping. The sun was warm on her face and arms. She turned left onto Beech Street and saw the apartments ahead on the left, just past a small building that looked as if it had once been a market or maybe a laundromat but announced that it was presently a barbershop.

Dewey Rears's apartment complex was two single-story brick buildings subdivided into five apartments each. There was a small island of cement next to each front door, a larger pad at the back. Large, gray HVAC units crouched like squat, ugly gargoyles next to each rear screen door, humming as they spewed out heat. The five units faced each other across a grass courtyard with two concrete sidewalks, one for each building. The grass hadn't been cut in a while and swayed slightly in the weak, humid wind.

Lovina knew this kind of complex very well. She saw the plastic kiddie pools, the aluminum chairs with nylon webbing, and the covered grills. By six tonight, the courtyard would be alive with kids playing and adults gossiping and getting drunk after a long day of backbreaking, soul-crushing work. She had grown up somewhere very much like this.

She also knew that at least a few little old ladies and disability dukes and duchesses were peeking through shades all day long, snooping. She didn't have the police report, and the address she had from the hit on the prints didn't include an apartment number. There were ten mailboxes mounted in two rows of five on aluminum posts at the edge of the virtually empty parking lot, but walking up to them would invite the attention of the apartment's invisible sentinels. There really wasn't a good way to do this. She had chosen late morning because she'd have the least exposure. Now it was time to just put up or shut up.

She pulled her badge lanyard out of her blouse, letting her CID badge and ID hang out around her neck, walked briskly into the courtyard, and saw the door marked with yellow crime-scene tape with a warrant taped up, third on the left side of the courtyard. She walked up to the door and set her leather bag down. Calmly, and as professionally as possible, she took out her small leather case and selected the proper pick and bar that she needed to open the deadbolt above the doorknob. She worked quickly as she could, blocking as much of what she was doing from view. The bolt was old and a little sticky, but Lovina had it open in less than twenty seconds.

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