by Paula Cox
Luckily, Leo takes over, “Thank you boys for coming. By now you all heard the recording I sent you…”
Bobby stands in the back of the room holding up his phone as he interrupts, “I got it, but I sure as shit don’t understand it. Any of you boys wanna tell me what the hell is going on and why the Senators are involved?”
Leo turns to me, his hands ushering me to the center of the room. Slowly I walk between the men as my voice booms, “We all know there have been changes lately in the Knights. Big ones. Some men have retired and other men, like me, have been demoted.”
“But weren’t you taken to task because you were sleeping with the boss’ daughter? That’s what I heard, at least.” George, an older, more traditional Knight glares at me from his seat just feet from me. He’s never been my biggest fan. He was one of the guys around when my mom got knocked up and birthed me. I was never going to be more than just a bastard to him.
Still, I had to make a choice here. Do I tell them that I’m involved with Tory or do I let that become my little secret to come out later down the road? A big part of me, that bastard child that was teased and tormented for years, wanted to protect both Tory and the baby by not saying a word about it and denying everything.
But there was something more bubbling at this surface -- the truth. These were not men that understood romance or wanting to be with someone you couldn’t have. In fact, only three or four of the faces I can make out over the smoky haze is actually married, and even that is a loose term for that arrangement. However, they had the right to know because what I am asking them to do was part for me, part for club, and part for Tory.
I look George in the eye as I answer as clear as possible, “Yeah. I am seeing Tory Walsh. We’ve been together for almost two months now, and, well, she’s having my baby.” I’m interrupted by the crowd mumbling back and forth to one another with their disapproval. The room’s turned from lukewarm to cold in just a few sentences.
“Listen! I know you think this is about some revenge against them for not letting me be with her. But I can promise you it is much, much more!” The voices die down so that I am only shouting over a few remaining people. “The Walsh boys don’t want me with Tory because they don’t want anyone but themselves at the top. And now I have proof of that. When they moved Leo to the accountant role, he discovered they’ve been cheating us all. We haven’t gotten our fair share of money in months. And it’s all because they’ve been working behind our backs with the Senator’s second-in-command at a double cross deal.”
“What!” George jumps to his feet, pointing his finger at me, “What you’re saying, boy, is treason against your club and its leaders.”
“It’s true!” Leo shouts back, coming to my defense. I have the spreadsheets and screenshots from the accounts if you want to see them. He fishes in his black backpack for a file of paper. He hands out the copies throughout the room as George studies the copy silently.
As they read, I continue, “What do you think that conversation between Arie and me was about? Arie is their road captain and he knows what goes in and out of their shipping place at Grand Canal. He placed the Walsh boys there, working with his men on a deal that should have netted us thousands of dollars each!” I turn back to George who has sat back down in his chair, his head sunk. “And I don’t know about you George, but I could certainly use that money.”
“What do you want us to do then? Rise up and revolt?” George’s voice has become weak and mild compared to the spew he was spitting out just seconds ago. This was a man who watched his king being cut down from his throne. And it was almost painful to watch it unfold.
“I don’t want the majority of you to do anything. At least not now. Stick to your jobs. Keep your heads down. And if you’re working with the Walsh boys or any of their loyalists, you don’t say a word to them. I’m waiting for the right moment to strike, and it’s coming soon.”
“But there is something they can do, Anton.” Leo touches my shoulder so he spins me around. I study him as he takes over at my spot in the middle of the room. “Today’s the day that Walsh goes up to Grand Canal to do their assignments. After he’s done, he has a couple of the Senators runners working for him do a money drop over in the desert by Mystic Street. If we could have our runners head out that way and cut them off, we could get our money back tonight.”
“Leo…” I say completely speechless. As much as Leo made an awesome runner and an even better accountant, he was never the one to really understand tactical issues. Hell, he hated the thought of even causing a little bloodshed, though it was a big part of his job when he rode beside me. But standing in front of me was not some nerd with a motorcycle. He was a general looking over his army.
“I know it’s crazy, but if we get our best runners and enforcers out there, it will work. If they leave now, they can catch them by surprise when they’re unguarded.”
George stands and raises his half empty beer mug towards Leo, “I say we go with this kids’ plan. I’m in.” A few other men stand up, volunteering themselves for Leo’s top secret mission. And I too raise my hand, sacrificing myself to this cause.
The rest of the men send up a shout as glasses clink around us. Leo continues to speak to the group, giving them future assignments, as I take over the planning with the crew heading out to the desert. They all listen closely as I describe the route, the guns and ammo to take, and the men to be looking out for.
I only get to discussing road conditions out in the desert when a bang comes from behind me. The bar’s locked door beats as someone bangs their fists into the wood and metal. “Anton! I need to speak to Anton!” I know that voice. I run through the table of men towards the girl standing just outside desperately crying out to anyone who could possibly hear her.
April looks exhausted. Her eyeliner is smudged and running down her face in pale streaks, and her puffy, red face makes it clear that she’s been crying recently. When she sees me, she runs into my arms and holds them out tightly. She struggles to talk through her sobs, “Anton! It’s… it’s… Tory… she…. Needs… you….”
“April,” I say, trying not to get too hysterical just yet, “What is going on? Why does Tory need me? What’s happened?”
“It’s her dad.” Her voice steadies as she realizes the importance of getting her message just right, “He’s going to kill her and your baby if you don’t get over there and save her. Please, Anton! You have to go now!”
I look down at her as she points towards the door, her hands attempting to guide me out and away from my group. I have no reason not to trust her. She’s been a pretty reliable middle-man for Tory and I since we started, but she was the daughter of Clay’s former second. There was something about that I couldn’t let go of.
I hold my ground as I ask her, “How do you know about Tory or the baby? How do you know Clay’s going to kill her? It’s his daughter and grandchild.” The rest of the men in my group have assembled around me, listening in to our conversation. I don’t blame them. The way April looks at me with her deep set, crazed filled eyes is enough to get attention alone.
“She called me from her mom’s cell phone. She said she didn’t have your number, and I had to get her the message. She told me about the baby and you guys meeting. She said that you told her to get ahold of you no matter what if she was in danger, and she’s in a hell of a lot of danger.”
“What do you mean? Did you hear something? What did she say?”
“Tory told me that Clay was going to beat her until she miscarried and then would probably kill her in the process. Her brother’s in on it too, but I don’t know if I understood her.”
“Damnit!” I scream as I spin towards an empty table next to me. The entire room goes quiet as they watch me lose myself over Tory and our baby. I suck in a few sips of air before turning back to April.
“There’s something else.” Her lips shake as she fiddles with her nails. “I heard something when she went to hang up. Someone came through the door, I
think Brandon. She started shouting and the phone went quiet. Then I heard something. It sounded like someone falling hard against the ground.”
As she continues, I grab my jacket and walk back to the door. April, Leo, and the rest of the men follow behind me. April cries out, “I don’t know if it was her, Anton!” It could have been her mom or a table or something.”
“Anton, what about the pick up…” Leo, lost in his own plan, adds to the commotion.
George pipes in too, “Anton, we can’t do this without you!”
I stop in my tracks, just feet from my bike as I turn slowly back towards the group assembled in front of me. My mind races as I give in, “I will ride out with you to the drop spot, but once we’re done, I go back for Tory. And no one, I mean no one, is going to stop me from saving her.”
Chapter 25: Knife’s Edge
“What the hell is going on here!” My dad’s voice travels through the house to my parent’s master bedroom. My mother and I are ducked on the side of the bed, the cell phone still pressed to my ear.
“April, I have to go.” I whisper as softly and urgently as possible. “Promise me you’ll find Anton and tell him what I told you. If you don’t, I don’t know what’s going to happen.”
April has been practically silent the entire phone call from when I first told her I was pregnant until I relayed back the story of my dad threatening to cause a miscarriage. I don’t know if she’s shocked or if this is a nightmare she too saw coming all along. Either way, I listen to her as she repeats herself, “I’ll find him. I’ll find him…. But what about the police, shouldn’t I call them. They can help you!”
The sound of two pairs of boots scuffing up the floors as they search the house is getting louder and closer as they make their way to the back where the bedrooms are. My mother tugs at my arm, trying to get me to put the phone down. I whisper back into the phone, “No, April. You know you can’t do that. My dad owns the police. They can’t do a thing for me. Anton is the only person that can help me. You and him. Please April. Please do this.”
“They’re here!” My mom cries out a muffled sob. “Tory, come on!” She points towards the door ominously as we hear the first bang of a fist on the locked wooden frame.
“Tory! What’s going on! Are they back? I thought they were gone?” April’s voice breaks as I place the phone down to the ground. I cuddle myself next to my mom as she holds on tighter to me. My body leans against the speckled white wall as if I pushed hard enough, I could float through it like a ghost.
“Get the fuck out here, Maureen! You can’t protect that little slut much longer!” My dad sounds even more high than he was when he left just a half hour ago. I wonder how he managed to get a hold of those drugs or drinks in such a short time. Though knowing him and the power he has over this community, anything’s possible.
My mom rises to her knees as she shouts over the side of the bed, “Clay, I will not stand for this. This is your daughter you’re talking about. She’s here with me, and she isn’t leaving this room. Now go do your business, and I’ll make sure she stays up here like you told her to.”
“Do you dare disobey me, woman! Do you know who I am!” He sounds as if he is throwing a childish tantrum as he stomps his boot into the floor. “I am Clay fucking Walsh and when I give you an order, I expect you to command!”
“And I am Maureen Walsh, and I am Tory’s mother. I have just as much say in her life as you do. Now kindly go back to work and leave us be. We’re not causing you any harm in here.”
Everything stops for a moment. All four of us go silent as we wait for the breaking point. My brother and father could turn around, be out the door, and let us rest. They could also continue coming after us with all the hellfire they can summon up. There were no choices for my mother and I. We were at the mercy of their twisted minds -- waiting like helpless children.
We didn’t have to wait long, however. It started with whispers too low for us to make out. My mom even peeked her head back around the side of the bed to get in better earshot. But instead what she heard was the pound of a body against the door. The wood caved a bit, and from my view, I could see the impression of where the person’s shoulder crashed into the other side. That door wouldn’t last long.
“Clay! Stop it! Stop it! Stop!” My mom cried out over the sounds of the body slamming even harder and faster into it. In between hits, the doorknob jiggled and twisted, the creaking sound of metal on metal echoing through the dark bedroom. Her cries were of no use. On the other side, my father began to cheer my brother on.
With only a few more hits before that door would surely bust open, my mom looked desperately towards the window. Standing quickly, she grabbed a sheet off of her bed and wrapped it around her hand and forearm. “Mom, no!” I sobbed nervously, my heart pounding with each rattle of the door behind us.
“Stand back Tory.” She commanded calmly as she positioned herself in the center of the window. I leaned even closer to the wall, ducked between the bed and a nightstand. She takes one deep breath before throwing her fist right at the glass. In a loud crash, a tiny million shards of glass break out. Her fist flies as she makes a large hole in the window. It’s wide enough that she can reach the lock my father had installed on the top so that she could never open it from the inside. When it’s free, she lifts the rest of the window above her head and motions for me.
I only have seconds to look at the damage the glass has done. The white sheet is tattered and torn -- it’s color a ruby red stain that continues to grow as it ties around my mom’s arm. “Go, Tory. Get out of here. Run as fast you can, and don’t you look back. Find Anton so he can take care of you and that baby.”
“Mom---” My voice chokes as I look back and forth between her tear filled eyes and the open window before me. “You ---”
“No, Tory. I can’t come with you. You have to do this yourself. I can hold them off. I promise you. Just get yourself down to my car. There’s a key in the glovebox. Drive yourself somewhere safe where no Desert Knight can get you. They’ll be looking for you soon.” My father and brother’s drunken laughs are practically drowning out my mom’s orders, but I hear her clearly.
I put my head out through the window, spotting the branch to the tree that Anton used to climb to my window. If I jump from the small ledge, I could make it, but if I fell, it would be a broken leg for sure. I had to try though. The imprint of my brother’s body had finally crashed through. And now mixed with the glittering glass shards were the unmistakable white wood chips.
Careful to avoid the large icicle like pieces of glass still hanging just above the bottom half of the window, I push my way through, clinging for the siding of the house. My feet hit the ledge and I slowly manage to stand up. My mom watches me as I scurry to the edge of the cement and brick passway. I count to three slowly… 1…. 2…. 3…. And then leap, my arms outstretched through the air for the branch. I feel the scrape of the skin first before I feel the trunk of the tree against my feet. I use the weight of it to push myself back onto the branch that leans just outside my bedroom window.
As I get ready to climb down, I spot something. In the wind, there blows a slight little bit of paper stuck between the crack of my window. My arm reaches out to get it, but I stop when I hear the final break through the door. While I can’t see anything, I can hear the shouts as clear as can be.
“Maureen! What the fuck did you do? You stupid woman!” Her body falls to the ground with a slam while my brother laughs loudly. “You think you own this house, don’t you? Don’t you!” There’s another cry as she is tousled around. I know I don’t have much time. They’ll soon realize I’m gone and there won’t be much time to escape them on their bikes. I grab the piece of paper, careful not to rip it, and scurry down the tree.
My feet hit the grass and I take off as fast as I can towards my mother’s car parked at the very end of the driveway. It’s thankfully unlocked, and the key is exactly where she said it would be. I start the old Cadillac, uncarin
g who can hear me. My mother’s favorite music -- old time country blares on the stereo. A on old woman singing about sticking with her man through good times and in bad croons over the sound of the tires squealing as I pull out quickly from the driveway.
As I go to turn, I see the figure of my mother in the window. The light is now on, my brother standing next to the lightswitch with a look of passive boredom on his face. My father points to Brandon as he walks out slowly down towards my bedroom, most likely still looking for me. When he’s gone, my father walks towards my mom, his steps completely unsteady as he wobbles towards the window. I watch in horror as he grabs her by her neck so that she pushes up against the wall.
I want to scream. I want to honk my horn. I don’t want to watch this, but I owe it to my mother. I don’t dare blink. And as I think she’s taking her last breathes, I spot the hand that is still wrapped up in the ruby red sheet. It lifts towards the air near my father’s chest. A gleam of light hits the edge of a long piece of glass before she uses the unbroken piece to slice into his chest like a butcher’s knife. He stumbles backwards as she runs, bolting out of the room with the glass still in her hand.