by Teagan Kade
It’s done.
Chapter 17
Max
They’re still trying to slap some sense into O’Neil when I step out of the cage. Good luck, I think. He’s not dead, but he’s certainly not getting up any time soon.
Still, I’ve taken a beating. Pops always called this being ‘bagged.’ All I know is that it fucking hurts. There’s a ringing in my ears I can’t seem to shake. My ribs feel like they’ve been sandblasted, and my left eye’s glued over. It will all heal, but none of it matters because Dawn is waiting there.
Someone hands me a towel. I wipe the blood from my face as best I can, hand the towel back like it’s a bloody Shroud of Turin.
Before Dawn can get to me, Bobby cuts in front of her, extending his hand. I take it. He’s flanked by the guy with the ponytail. “Well done, my friend. You had me going for a while there.”
“I figured I’d give everyone a show,” I reply.
He smiles, but something’s not right. “That you did. I’ll see you, and your friend, back at the casino.”
He leaves. Dawn comes forward to embrace me. I wince.
“Sorry,” she says, pulling back. “You look…”
“Like I’ve been wrestling a tank?”
“Something like that. I didn’t think you were going to… you know.”
“Win? I sure as hell wasn’t going to lose. We’ve come too far for that.”
I nod to Sam in the crowd. He gives a small salute in return before hobbling away.
Dawn turns, spots him. “Friend of yours?”
“You could say that.”
Dawn brushes off my shoulder. “I put a bet down on you.”
“A what?”
She acts sheepish. “A bet, at the Wild Horse. The guy said you were four-to-one. Is that good?”
I laugh. “If you’re asking if they’re good odds, then no, they’re not. If you’re asking how much you’ve won, it depends how much you put down. What was it? Ten, fifty dollars?”
She bites her lip, taking a receipt from her pocket. “Five-thousand.”
“Five-thousand?” I repeat, stunned. I lower my voice. “Where the hell did you get five grand from?”
“I’m a natural at the game with the cards and the twenty-one thing, what’s it called? Blackcrack or something?”
“Blackjack?”
“Yeah.”
I blow air out through pursed lips. “Jesus. I’m glad you didn’t tell me about this before the fight.”
She sees the look on my face. “Are you mad?”
“That you’ve won twenty-five grand?”
“How much?”
“You heard me.”
She lets go of my arms. “Whoa.”
“Yeah, ‘whoa’.”
“I guess you’ll get your dream after all, if we can get our hands on Rick, because this is far from over.”
She nods. “You’re right, but twenty-five thousand! I mean, dayum.”
“Keep your voice down. The last thing we need is news like that getting out. Do not lose that receipt.”
She pats her jeans pocket. “Safe and sound.”
“Let’s go.” It’s the guy with the ponytail again. “It’s time.”
I take hold of Dawn. “We’re almost there. You good?”
She nods.
We follow ponytail guy out to the limo. I just hope it’s not heading deeper into the desert.
We arrive back at the Wild Horse, both of us escorted down to the counting room where Bobby is waiting, sitting at one of the tables, stacks of bills before him like the first time we met.
The door closes when we’re through, but three goons wait inside with us, standing at the rear. It’s not a good sign.
I push Dawn behind me and step forward to Bobby. “I won, you give up Rick. That was the agreement.”
Bobby stands. “Relax, superstar. I’m a man of my word.”
I’m keen to get the fuck out of here. I’m exhausted, tired. I can barely stand. “So, you’ll do it?”
He looks up at the ceiling, his face screwing up. “Nah. I don’t think I will.”
I run forward, almost making it to him before I’m restrained by the goons. Normally I could fight them off, but the match has sapped all my strength. I’m weak and Bobby’s taking advantage of it. “Saul will hear about this, you fucker.”
“Will he?” says Bobby. “Because dead men don’t talk, my friend, and your time’s up.”
I struggle harder, but I can’t do it, my arms are pinned behind me, a foot driven into my back bringing me to my knees.
Bobby stalks closer, Dawn off to the side.
“I don’t care what happens to me, but leave her out of this,” I shout.
Bobby stops before her, looking her up and down. “Oh, I’ve got something in mind for her, don’t you worry.”
I summon all my strength, managing to get free but easily reined back in. “I’ll fucking kill you!”
Bobby stops, crouching in front of me, inspecting the floor. “Enough chit-chat.” He speaks to the goons. “Deal with it.”
I cannot fucking believe I didn’t see this coming. I’m pissed. “I fucking won, and you’re doing this? What do you think’s going to happen when Saul hears about this?”
“Let him come,” laughs Bobby. “He’s been biting on that Big Apple of his for too long.
Bobby walks forward until I can smell the nicotine on his breath, the filthy, grimy stink of it. “You were supposed to drop like a good boy, but no, you had to be the hero, didn’t you?”
What the fuck? “You wanted me to lose?”
“Out,” he tells the goons. “No evidence.”
I struggle again, but it’s useless.
“Max?” asks Dawn. She’s shaking against the wall. Bobby walks over and takes her by the arm. “Come on, green eyes. We’ve got business of our own.”
“Touch her and I’ll fucking kill you!” I scream, but the door closes. They’re gone.
I’m done.
She’s done.
It’s all gone to hell.
I’ve been out to the desert before. God knows how many bodies are out here, how many deals have gone down, lives broken.
I sit next to a goon in the back of a Hummer, another driving, the slick black of the road turning into a dusty trail and then no trail at all as we head deep into the hills.
I don’t speak. I don’t react. I try to think my way out of this, use my head, but I keep returning to Bobby, my mind conjuring up what Bobby’s going to do with Dawn. He won’t kill her. No, a pretty girl like that is too valuable, so there’s that, but the alternative might be worse. Whatever it is, it’s not going to be a cocktail party by the pool. I’ve got to get back to her, whatever it takes. That is my number-one priority.
You’re outnumbered, outgunned. You’re going to shout these pricks to death?
But I can’t give up.
I won’t.
By the time we arrive in a shallow depression, bordered on all sides by sand and rock, the sun’s low. The goons’ shadows are long as they pull me from the car. They wrench me down, gripping me by the cuffs keeping my hands locked behind my back.
The heat lingers out here, but it’s cooling fast. People have frozen to death in the desert.
“Where?” says one goon to the other.
The other wipes his brow. They’re both in suits. They haven’t bothered to take off their jackets, which probably means they don’t expect this to take very long. Goon Two points at a group of cacti. “There.”
“Isn’t that where he buried the last one?” Goon One asks.
“So fucking what?” says the other. He gestures down to the ground. “You want to put him here, with the others? We’re running out of fucking room. Over there, and let’s be quick about it. I’ve got a date tonight.”
“With your hand?” I suggest. “Or your mother?”
The punch connects right on the edge of my jaw, kicking me down onto one knee. I spit out a wad of blood. “I know little girls who hit ha
rder than that.”
I cop a boot in the side for that one, but it’s distraction enough.
You see, the benefit of being celled up with a contortionist for three months is the education. I grimace as I dislocate my thumb, keeping the cuffs out of sight, one cuff now dangling free. I grip the loose cuff, fist it up like a knuckle duster… and wait. The timing’s got to be perfect.
“On your fucking feet, pretty boy.”
I’m led across the depression to the grove of cacti. Arriving, I see the ground has recently been disturbed. How many bodies are here? Hundreds? Thousands? It’s a big area, and Bobby has a lot of enemies. They all do.
I’m not about to become part of the landscape.
Goon One gets out his gun, a Desert Eagle, funnily enough. He holds it up.
“What?” I ask. “You’re not going to make me get down on my knees?”
“What’s the fucking difference?” says Goon Two.
I shrug. “Thought you might like me to suck your cock. I know how you guys love that gay shit.”
The second goon looks at the first on the other side of me. “Can you believe this guy?”
It’s all the distraction I need.
I snap backwards, out of the line of fire, grabbing Goon One’s arm, wrapping my own around it and directing his gun to the second goon’s leg. I fire.
Goon Two goes down, his knee cap blown out. He reaches for his own weapon, but I fire again, half of his fingers gone.
He cries out as I use my cuffed hand to strike down on Goon One’s wrist, dislodging the Desert Eagle. It falls to the ground and I go to work on his face, metal meeting flesh. He goes down hard, a crosshatch of bloody cuts on his face.
I turn to the second goon, busy trying to use his only five-fingered hand to pull his gun free.
I stand over him, my shadow long. “Don’t fucking do it.”
He goes to pull the gun free, but he’s not quick enough. I punch him right in the face, the blow slamming him into the ground, knocking him unconscious.
I collect the guns, putting one down the back of my pants and taking hold of the other.
I fucking hate these things, but this has to be done.
Goon One’s groaning, hands over his broken nose. I fish through his pockets, finding the keys. He groans again as I take hold of the side of his face, pressing it into the ground. I place the muzzle of the gun against his knee cap. “One question. You answer it, you get to keep the use of your legs today. If not, you can wind up like your buddy over there. Where’s Bobby taking the girl?”
Nothing.
I lean down closer to his ear. “I didn’t hear that, sorry.”
“Fuck. You,” comes the weak reply.
I fire, a hellish scream following, the stench disgusting.
I move the muzzle to the other knee cap, forced to use my arm to pin him down.
“Oh, Christ,” he mutters. “Oh, Jesus.”
I shake my head. “Saint fucking Peter himself couldn’t help you now,” I tell him. “I’ve got six rounds left. I’ll use every one of them if I have to, leave you here to bleed, leave you to the coyotes.”
I press down harder with the muzzle.
He barks out a name.
I press down harder. “The address. What’s the fucking address?”
He gives it, breathing hard.
I keep the muzzle there. I should do it. This guy’s bad news, but I pull it away, separating the gun and mag and tossing each in opposite directions. I slip the other down the back of my jeans.
I find his cell in his pocket, crushing it under my boot. I take out my own cell and wallet from him, pocketing it and moving over to his friend. I hunt for his cell, smashing it the same way. The last thing I want is for them to raise the alarm and tip off Bobby to my sudden resurrection.
“It’s a long walk back to the road. Better get moving,” I announce, punching the address into my cell.
The conscious goon doesn’t say anything else as I run to the Hummer, throwing open the driver’s door. It’s going to take over an hour to get there—an hour where Bobby can do whatever he likes to the woman I love.
I turn the ignition and slam my foot down on the accelerator.
“Not today.”
Chapter 18
Dawn
I cannot even comprehend how we have been betrayed after working so hard, doing everything we could to get Rick’s whereabouts. Yet, here I am. There’s no Max. That’s the worst part of it all. He might be dead by now.
Don’t even think like that, but I can’t help it. I want to cry, to scream, but all I really feel is a strange detachment from reality. I pinch myself. I actually reach down and do it, pulling my skin together, and damn it, it hurts.
“Have fun.” That’s the last thing Bobby says to his men before there’s a sharp prick at my neck and the next thing I know I’m waking up groggy in the back of a car, two of Bobby’s men up front, one of them Ponytail from the cage fight.
The doors are locked. It’s the first thing I checked. Once more we’re headed away from the glitzy postcard version of Vegas to a neighborhood far less appealing. We could be back in Brooklyn.
“Where are we going?” I ask.
Dark eyes dart up into the rear-view.
“Please.”
Ponytail turns around from the passenger seat smiling. He looks over my outfit. “They don’t have nice clothes like that where you’re going, baby. In fact, they don’t wear much at all.”
The two goons smile at each other and the dread suddenly becomes overwhelming. It doesn’t help I’m still groggy from whatever they injected me with. I sink into the leather and breathe hard trying to calm myself. There’s a way out. There has to be, but no. This is real. This is happening, and it’s happening without Max.
We pull around the back of a building the color and texture of mud. There’s no signage.
I try to scream when they pull me out, but a grubby hand covers my mouth, pressing so hard it hurts my jaw.
I make them drag me. I don’t want this to be easy for them.
Inside, it becomes very clear where we are.
While the exterior of the building looks like it’s set for demolition, inside it’s red velvet and silk, plush and luxurious. A large, older woman stands at a desk, a brute of a man beside her with a pistol tucked down the front of his pants, but the real giveaway is the room beyond.
There sit maybe seven or eight girls wearing barely anything, all with the same void expression on their face—cattle waiting for the slaughter.
The two men push me down to my knees. The woman comes around the desk to stand before me. “Bobby said you were cute.”
I hesitate, but I say it anyway. “Go to hell.”
She smiles now. “My, such a dirty mouth for such a pretty girl. We’re going to have to do something about that attitude, aren’t we now?”
I look to the girls again, but they’re looking anywhere but at me. Some of them can’t be older than sixteen.
The Madam takes out a cell phone and holds it in front of my face. There’s a picture of Noel on it. “Friend of yours?” She swipes right. There’s a photo of my mother. It’s taken from outside the house, through the kitchen window. Oh, no. “And we wouldn’t want anything to happen to her now, would we? That’s why you are going to cooperate. That is why you are going to do everything I say or face the consequences, and trust me, I don’t think a tiny thing like you would live through it.”
The last thing I wanted was to drag my loved ones into this.
The Madam places the cell back in her pocket and speaks to the guy with the pistol. “Take her.”
The man comes forward and takes me under the arm, pulling me to my feet.
“Maybe I’ll see you later,” Ponytail calls. “See what a fine thing like you tastes like.”
Max.
I can’t shake it. He’s alive, I know it. He has to be, so why does everything seem so damn hopeless right now?
I’m unceremoniously pu
shed forward into a room, whatever drug they used to knock me out in the car causes the whole room to spin and tilt.
The man stands in the doorway. “Let’s make this simple. The customers come in, you service them. You give them whatever they want. You don’t fucking complain.” He gestures to the side of the room. There’s a rack there bulging with cheap lingerie. “There’s your new wardrobe, princess.” He points to a box sitting on the floor. “But Bobby wants you to wear that. Be quick about it.”
The door closes. I check it, but it’s locked from the outside.
I move over to the box and open it knowing full well what’s inside. It’s the white lingerie set I bought for my night with Max. Bobby probably had cameras in the penthouse, watching us. Watching us make love.
You don’t know that.
Still, the thought makes my skin crawl.
I hold the teddy in my hands and cry softly. I could refuse to wear it, but what then?
I put the set on in the corner behind a flimsy mirror, pulling the panties into place. I don’t look at myself. I can’t bear to do it.
The door swings open and the man with the gun is standing there. “Move it.”
I follow him out, back down the hall to the front of the brothel. I hear sounds as we pass other rooms—slapping, men laughing, cries of “please, don’t.” I start to shake involuntarily.
I’m directed to a seat next to a young Asian girl in the front room, instructed to wait until I’m called.
I turn to talk to her, but the guy with the gun kicks the wall beside me. “Eyes front, sweetheart. No talking.”
The front door opens and a man walks in.
“Senator!” the Madam beams, coming forward to greet him. “How nice to see you again.”
The client takes off his coat, handing it to the man with the gun. “And you.” He immediately walks into the room. He’s obese, probably the bad side of seventy. “Hello, girls.”
There’s no response.
I press myself against the wall, trying to hide in the small shadow cast by the lamp above as much as possible, trying to make myself invisible. When he looks my way, I avert my eyes.