Heaven Hill Series - Complete Series
Page 92
“No, I really think that’s him.”
Rooster took note of the time and handed the piece of paper to Jagger. “Tell Travis to hack into the security cameras and give him this time. Then tell him to run facial recognition on him. That will be the easiest way we can figure out who he is, and if anybody can do it—it’s Travis. He’s fuckin’ smart.”
Jagger took the piece of paper and walked out of the jail, keeping his head straight forward. He could feel the eyes of the man in the suit on him and breathed a sigh of relief when he exited the brick building. There in front were Tyler and Layne. He’d never been so glad to see them in his life, especially when he greeted them, looked around, and saw the suited man walking behind him. It was when he spotted the other two members and watched as Jagger put his cut back on that he went back into the jail.
Chapter Nineteen
Jagger had the decency to wait until the next morning to approach Travis about running the facial recognition. If he were being completely honest, he was nervous. He hadn’t meant to attack Travis that way, it was the last thing he had wanted to do. Purposely, he had stayed away until late morning. When he entered the clubhouse, he spotted Tyler.
“You know where Travis is?”
Tyler grimaced. “He and his much shorter hair are in the cave.”
“Shorter hair?”
“Yeah, dude. It was kinda short to begin with, but they had to buzz him to put some staples in his head where you busted it wide open. I’m not sure you’re the person he wants to see today, if you get what I mean.”
Now Jagger felt really bad. His temper had gotten the better of him—that and the shock. “Has Liam said anything?” Things like that could have more than one potential consequence. It normally was not kosher to fight in the clubhouse.
“Nah, I think he gets it. Hell, we all get it, but the rest of us are far enough away from the situation to understand that he was doing what he thought was right. At the same time, we all understand just how pissed you are. Nobody here was right, but it’s not clear if anyone was wrong either.”
This was a no-win situation. Both Jagger and Christine were products of people who should never have been parents to begin with. They were caught in the middle of something that wasn’t even of their own making. Now they had to figure out how they were going to live their own lives. It was up to them to determine if they wanted to continue the cycle of abuse or make a different choice. Jagger knew what he wanted to do, but that would include fixing things with both Travis and Christine. He had flown off the handle first and asked questions later, something that he had previously been working on. “I know, I’m gonna go talk to him. I need him to run a facial recognition on someone anyway.”
“Good luck, dude. He may not be ready to see you,” Tyler smiled over his skull mug. “You wanna rub the mug for luck?”
“Fuck you,” Jagger chuckled.
Travis’ head hurt like a bitch, but Ashley, the club’s doctor, had assured him the concussion wasn’t bad, but it was going to be painful. He reached up and ran his hand over the buzz cut he now had and frowned. He’d never been one of the guys that cared to have long hair, but he’d liked to have enough that he could brush. This was just short of being bald, and he wasn’t sure how he felt about it. At twenty-four, was it unusual to wonder if it would come back? Sighing, he went back to checking his bank of cameras. This was where he felt the best, in front of his electronics. It had been too long since he had sat here and done this. He knew that if he wanted to stop feeling off-kilter, he was going to have to do it more often. Just as he was getting involved in the things he needed to do, there was a knock on the doorframe. He looked up, expecting to see Liam or Tyler. When he saw Jagger there, he immediately stuck up a middle finger.
“What the fuck are you doing here?
Jagger took offense, and even though he knew it wasn’t the best thing, to be an ass, he answered. “Same as what you’re doing here. I wear the same patch on my back, fucker.”
“I understand that you’re pissed at me, but right now I’m fuckin’ pissed at you. They cut my hair, I had to get staples, I have a concussion, and my head is killing me. If you could tell me what you want and then leave me the hell alone, I think we would both be better off.” Travis was usually the quietest in the club, but sometimes he had to let his feelings be known, and this was one of those times.
Jagger inhaled deeply. “I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have said that.”
Travis didn’t know if he could accept the apology. It wasn’t in him to forgive easily because it took him a long time to get to the point that he was that pissed at someone. “You shouldn’t have.”
“But you shouldn’t have kept my sister from me either.”
That flat-out pissed Travis off. “You act like I’m the man who held her against her will. I hate to break it to you, Jagger, but I didn’t keep her from you. She kept herself from you. She didn’t want you to know, she didn’t want to see you. I’ve done the best I can with her, trying to convince her that she needed to tell you that she was alive, tell you what happened in her life, but she wouldn’t or couldn’t. I felt like a bastard every time I left here to go see her, and then when I came back—every time, I wanted to tell you where I had been. She didn’t want that. The relationship I had with her was so shaky—fuck, she was so shaky—I was afraid to break her confidence. It was obvious that so many people had already done that and that she would not hesitate to run. I don’t have to fuckin’ explain myself to you, asshole.”
“She didn’t want to see me?”
Maybe that blow had been a little harsh. “She didn’t want to see anybody,” he amended. “I still don’t know everything that happened to her, Jagger, but I think she was treated like a human slave. I think she blamed, or blames, you in a way. That’s something the two of you are going to have to work out, and I refuse to be stuck in the middle of it. I did what I thought was best. If you don’t agree with that, then get the fuck over it. What do you want?”
Jagger had to accept that Travis needed some more time before he was ready to forgive and move on. “There was a man at the jail last night. Both Rooster and I think it was Clinton. I have a time that you need to hack into the security cameras at the jail. Rooster said to run facial recognition on him.”
“Glad I’m taking orders from Rooster now,” he mumbled under his breath.
“I know you’re pissed at me, just like I’m pissed at you, but we both want the same thing. To help Christine put this behind her. Can we at least work together?”
That made Travis feel like shit. They were both working towards the same goal, and they needed to do that by being mature adults. Travis sighed. “We can, because more than anything I want her to be free, and with that freedom, I want her to choose to stay here. Believe me, there’s something in me that wonders if she’s staying here just because I saved her. If she’s given the option of going anywhere she wants, there’s a part of me that thinks she’s going to leave.”
“Neither one of us want that.”
“No, we don’t, so we have to figure this all out and then hope she doesn’t get sick of us and leave in the middle of the night.”
They both sat there in silence as Travis started doing what he did best. Jagger wouldn’t even know where to begin, but with a few clicks on a computer screen and a keyboard, Travis was into the mainframe of the sheriff’s office. Jagger watched as Travis reached over and grabbed a sucker out of his candy stash. It was such a habit for him; he didn’t even look as he unwrapped the sucker, threw away the packaging in the trash, and then stuck the candy in his mouth. Jagger shook his head, a grin on his face.
“What time did Rooster want me to look at?”
Jagger looked down at the piece of paper that he held in his hands, giving him the time. He watched as Jagger pulled up another program, imported something into it, and then clicked a button. After he clicked the button, he sat back.
“Now we just gotta wait. It shouldn’t take long though
. I already did a little research on this guy myself, but something about him never sat right with me.”
“What’s that?” Jagger asked, sitting in the seat, his chin propped on his hand. This was the most boring shit in the world to him.
“How did he come into contact with young women? Christine told me that there were a few more when she first came to live there. They disappeared towards the end, but they started out there. What did he do, where did he come into contact with them?”
Jagger flashed back to his own childhood, the church camp where he’d almost been violated. The summer that had changed his life forever. “You’d be surprised. They have camps, and if you have zealot parents, like we did, they will send you anywhere to help save your soul.”
“I just don’t understand this whole arranged marriage thing. What did your parents hope to get by doing it?”
And that was it, it was hard to explain to someone who hadn’t grown up the way they had. Until they had become a certain age, neither one of them had really understood just how weird their lives were, but by then they were used to it and there was no turning back.
“Because, when all your parents care about is being the perfect church members, they will do anything. I’m sure this man came to my parents, told them that he could make them look better in the eyes of the church, probably offered them some money, and they signed on the dotted line. When all you want to do is look good for other people, it doesn’t seem to matter what you do to accomplish that. Our parents alienated two children, and neither one of us know what’s actually happened to them, but I have a bad feeling that they learned just how shitty it can be to care that much what others think of you.” He didn’t want to add that it had possibly all been put in motion because he’d refused to let himself be touched as a teenager, not unless he had to.
The whole thing was crazy to Travis. He wasn’t close to his mom, his parents had never been married, and he didn’t have a relationship with his father to speak of, but he knew that if he ever needed anything he could call his mom. She wouldn’t come running, but she would be there. She knew what he did, who he was, and why he had chosen this path in his life. She didn’t necessarily agree with it, but she had never turned her back on him and she had never tried to sabotage his life.
“I can’t imagine living in that house.”
Jagger blew out a deep breath. “It wasn’t easy. Our dad wasn’t the type of man to yell. He was the type of man to beat first and talk later. That’s why I feel awful about your head,” Jagger apologized. “I was just like him in that moment, even though I promised myself I never would be. I told myself my whole life that I would find out the situation before reacting, and it took two minutes for me to revert to the way he was. Throw fists first and ask questions later. I’m really ashamed of that Travis, and I’m sorry that you were on the receiving end of that.”
“Dude, my head hurts, and I’m still pissed, but I can tell you right now, you are not one damn ounce like your daddy. It came from a good place, not an evil place. If I had a sister, I would have done the same thing. I understand it, and I don’t hold it against you. I just gotta get over the fact that my head hurts,” Travis grinned.
Jagger opened his mouth to say something else, but right then the computer dinged that it had a match. When the two of them turned their eyes back to the screen, Jagger’s blood ran cold. He knew this man.
Chapter Twenty
“How do you know him?” Travis asked as he started to pull up all the pertinent information that he needed. Some of it was in his original report on the man, but now that he had the facial recognition, it looked like he went by at least two other aliases as well.
The laugh that came was dry and hollow. “He approached me as a teenager, tried to get into my pants.”
“What?”
He hated telling other people about this. Even though he knew that it wasn’t his fault, he still felt shame. He knew that he shouldn’t, but even after months of talking to Doc Jones about it, it still gave him a little anxiety. “Yeah, he was an elder and a pastor in the sector of our church. He got a young girl pregnant, and then he tried to get into my pants. It’s what made me turn my back on religion. I didn’t know him as Clinton Herrington though, so obviously he used one of those aliases with us.”
Travis pushed a few more keys. “So we’ve got a guy with a serial pattern, who liked to prey on young kids?”
“Exactly.”
It was all beginning to click in his mind and his fingers flew on the keyboard. “And after some of the stuff that Christy told me, I’m thinking he’s got a graveyard on that property.”
Jagger’s mind was working a million miles a minute. “You think we can get in there?”
“I think we can get in.” Travis nodded as he pulled up some images on his screen and made notes on a piece of paper. “The problem is gonna be finding anything. We need our hands on the kind of equipment that we normally can’t get our hands on, but I know somebody who can. It will also depend on how long he’s been doing this, and how well he is at covering his tracks.”
“Who?”
Travis sighed. “Rooster.”
“You’re his family, you call him.”
It was hard to explain to people who weren’t his blood family the relationship there. It had never been what one would call loving, but they had for the most part gotten along until Travis decided to go outlaw and Rooster decided to be the law. Travis, however, could see things changing with his cousin. In the past two years, he’d loosened the grip he held on himself, started helping the club a lot more than any of them cared to admit, and he no longer walked like he had a stick up his ass. “I’ll ask him, but it might be better if we get Liam to ask him.”
“No, this has gotta come from you. I think it’ll mean more if it comes from you. I think he wants that relationship with you again.”
“Fine.” He jerked his cell phone off the table where it sat beside him and dialed the number. He firmly expected it to go to voicemail, but Rooster picked up on the first ring.
“Yeah, is everything alright?” Worry was evident in his voice, but Travis had to admit, it’d been a long time since he’d called him out of the blue.
“Everything’s fine. I have a favor.”
“I’ll do what I can to help,” he offered.
Travis went on to explain their situation and their suspicions. When he was done, Rooster whistled through his teeth. “Goddamn, this could be big.”
“It could be, but we need that equipment to see what’s there, and we need an open window. We don’t need other law enforcement to be out there. I’ve looked at everything I can online. He’s got a fortress out there, almost like he expects the ATF to come knockin’ on his door one day.”
Rooster was walking as he talked. “Sorry, I was around some people I didn’t want to hear this conversation. I can get you the equipment that you need tonight, and I can try to keep people away, but there’s this new asshole here.”
“The guy that’s been breaking up the drag races and who chased us the other day?”
“Yeah, he’s got a hard-on for anything illegal in this town.”
Travis couldn’t help it. “Just like you used to.”
“Worse,” Rooster laughed. “I can get you what you need, but you gotta be quick. I need it back by tomorrow morning, and you’re gonna need to clean it for me. I don’t know how, it has internal hard drives and all that bullshit.”
“I’ll take care of it, you get us what we need.”
Later on that night, Travis was suiting up, wearing what he normally wore when they did break-ins, and he’d been careful not to mention anything to Christine. He didn’t want to explain what was happening because he didn’t want to bring up bad memories for her. At least not until they knew exactly what they were working with. He slipped a bulletproof vest over his shirt.
“Why are you wearing that?” she asked, her eyes wide.
“For protection,” he answered casually.
“Protection from what?” This was the first time she’d been around when he had been doing something for the club, and she wasn’t used to this, but if she was going to stay here, she was going to have to get used to it.
“Your first rule as a woman here. Don’t ask questions about where we go at night wearing bulletproof vests. We can’t answer that, for your protection and ours. Sometimes what we do could get you in trouble, and if someone was to ask you where I was going and you say you don’t know, I want that to be the damn truth.”
The words that came out of his mouth pissed her off, but then she saw him reach into a cabinet and pull out a handgun. “You think you’re gonna need that?” she asked quietly.
“You never know. When we go on jobs, it can sometimes get dicey. It’s either kill or be killed; we have to protect ourselves,” he answered truthfully. “Is this scaring you?”
“No.” She shook her head. “I’ve never seen this side of you, and it’s different.”
“It’s all a part of who I am,” he reminded her, putting on his boots and slipping a KBAR inside. “I’ve never hidden from you what I do, but I’ve never exactly told you about it either.”
“I’m not an idiot or deaf,” she deadpanned. “I hear things all the time in this town, and I even hear you talk. I just chose not to ask questions, and if you don’t want me to ask those questions, I won’t. I understand that sometimes you can’t talk about what you do.”
Well that was a lot easier than he assumed it would be. “I’ll be back in a little while. Don’t wait up in case we’re late, this could take a while.”
She nodded before walking over to him and slipping her arms around his neck, pulling him closer to her. “Be careful.” She kissed him on the cheek. “When you’re done, text me at least, in case I’m still awake.”