The Skeleton King (Dartmoor Book 3)

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The Skeleton King (Dartmoor Book 3) Page 31

by Gilley, Lauren


  Merc didn’t hesitate, but kept going, momentum propelling him forward into the apartment, the rest of them crowding in behind him, guns raised. It was a tactic that shocked and terrified, and it always worked.

  When whoever they were trying to shock and terrify was alive.

  “Oh, Jesus!”

  “Damn!”

  “Shit!”

  “What the fuck?!”

  They tripped and staggered over Brett Richards’ sightless corpse where it lay sprawled just inside the entryway. Mercy executed a leap that got him clear, but he tracked blood onto the cheap cream carpet. Aidan slipped in the stuff and almost went down, grabbing at the back of Tango’s shirt, the wall.

  “Merc, clear the rooms,” Walsh barked, and leaned over to inspect the body.

  He’d been shot in the head, nice and clean in the forehead, a bloody buggering mess in the back, where bone and brain matter had blasted the wall in a sick collage.

  A fleeting hope touched his mind. Had this been Emmie? Had she shot him and escaped? The girl was a great shot –

  “Walsh!” Mercy bellowed from deeper in the apartment. “It’s Grey! He went down the fire escape and he’s going for his car. He’s got a woman with him!”

  “Come on,” Walsh told the others, and he heard them follow him, feet pounding as they left the apartment, went down the hall, the stairs, hit the emergency exit.

  Mercy was already there, sprinting across the lot when they reached it; he’d taken the fire escape, same as Grey. But they were all too late, the black SUV turning out onto the street with a sharp squeal of tires.

  Walsh pitched forward at the waist, braced his hands on his knees and tried to draw in a deep breath. “Was it Em?” he asked, gulping air. “The woman he had, was it her?”

  “No.” Mercy was slightly less winded, but not by much. He rubbed at his bum knee with a grimace. “It was a brunette.”

  Walsh’s neck went limp; he let his head hang. “Brett’s mother, then. Amy Richards.”

  “Jesus, what the hell’s going on?” Aidan muttered.

  The wail of sirens began as a low sound, and swelled.

  “Someone called the cops when they heard Brett get shot,” Tango said. “We need to move.”

  ~*~

  Vince knew the security cameras clocked him approaching the Lean Dogs’ clubhouse, so he was prepared to walk into one of them the moment he crossed the threshold. Ghost met him in the foyer, blocking the way with his body. Voices echoed around in the common room behind him, the energy urgent and restless in the clipped tones and muffled murmurs of the conversation.

  The president’s face was harsh with impatience, and he lacked all his normal cop-bothering swagger. “What?”

  “Brett Richards is dead.” Vince didn’t feel like playing attitude games either. Then again, he never did. “Murdered. He spray paints the front of your barn, he turns up dead. That brings me here.”

  “If you know who killed him, we’d love to know, because whoever it is has Emmie Walsh and is holding her for ransom.”

  Okay, he hadn’t been expecting that. “How – how do you know? They made contact?”

  “No shit.” Ghost snorted. “They want Walsh to meet them at three. The boys went by Brett’s place and saw Harlan Grey fleeing the scene, Amy Richards with him.”

  “She’s an accomplice?” His blood pressure was sky rocketing and he rubbed at the back of his neck, unable to ease the sharp prickling of unease.

  “Or a hostage.”

  “Damn,” he murmured.

  “Where would Grey take someone?”

  “I have no idea. I’ve never dealt with anyone like him.”

  “No psychotic asshole pricks in your life?”

  “Only you.”

  Ghost twitched a humorless smirk. “This is bigger than you and me and our bullshit right now.”

  “Yeah.” Vince nodded. “I can put an APB out on Grey, but it’s a long shot. Hold on.”

  He unclipped the radio from his lapel and put the order in with dispatch, while Ghost watched and rolled his eyes.

  When he was done, he frowned and said, “What about Emmie? What can you tell me about her kidnappers?”

  “We’ve got nothing, which means our meetup has to go well, which means we don’t need your boys crashing the party and scaring these guys off.”

  “I need to listen to the voicemail, read the text, whatever. I need a statement from Walsh. I have to go through the proper channels, so it’s above board,” he said stubbornly. If he was going to bust someone for a kidnapping, he wanted the charges to stick, not be thrown out because of shoddy detective work.

  “No,” Ghost said. “You do things your way, we’ll do things ours.”

  “Ghost, I can help you find her.”

  “And do what with the people who have her? Arrest them?” he sneered. “Nah. We’re good.”

  Vince opened his mouth to argue further-

  His radio squawked to life. “Sergeant Fielding, I’ve got reports of a vehicle matching your description and plate number, traveling south on 129, doing eighty-five. Officers in pursuit. Do you read? Over.”

  Ghost perked up.

  “Tell them to follow, but hold back,” Vince said. “I’m on the way. Over.”

  “I’m coming with you,” Ghost said.

  “Like hell…”

  “My VP doesn’t have time to wait on the wheels of justice,” Ghost barked. “That asshole knows where Emmie is, and I’m getting the intel out of him, one way or another.”

  ~*~

  Vince kept in contact with his officers as he drove to rendezvous with them. About a half mile from their last given position, they radioed to tell him they’d run up on a massive accident, six cars piled up, one vehicle aflame. They had to stop, clear the road, radio in for fire rescue, control traffic.

  “I’ll pursue,” he said, “and radio in if I need backup. You take care of that accident. Over.”

  “Understood.”

  At the next red light, he caught up to Grey, picking the guy’s black Explorer out of the lineup of other vehicles, subtly pulling in two cars behind him and following.

  All the while, Ghost stayed within sight in the rearview mirror. The bastard.

  Grey went nearly five miles, turning again and again, getting into a rural part of town, finally turning onto a hard-to-spot gravel drive and disappearing behind a screen of trees.

  Vince gave the guy a head start, then put the cruiser in gear again, heading up the driveway. The way was narrow, oak and maple branches slapping at his windshield. One nearly took off his radio antennae.

  Tension coiled tighter and tighter in Vince’s gut, until he was breathless when the drive dumped him onto a gravel parking pad outside a ramshackle clapboard house. The black Explorer was parked in front of it.

  When he killed the engine and popped his door open, the drone of bees filled his ears, and a sense of finality washed over him. Something was happening in this moment. Something big. But something he couldn’t walk away from.

  The Harley hadn’t arrived yet, and he wasn’t going to wait for it, instead drew his weapon and crept up to the sagging porch, tip-toed up the steps and peeked in the windows.

  Amy Richards sat, unbound, in a chair in the center of a room walled in rough-hewn planks, surrounded by hunting trophies and cracked leather furniture. Grey paced behind her chair, talking into his cellphone, rubbing at his forehead like it pained him.

  Vince tested the doorknob and found it unlocked. Slipped inside, gun raised.

  Grey spun to face him, startled. He dropped the phone to the floor – it clattered on the boards – and made a reach for his hip, toward the gun he must have at his waistband.

  “No,” Vince said firmly, gliding deeper into the room, gun leveled on the man’s chest. “Harlan, just no. Take a step back and think about where you are, what you’re doing. You don’t want to shoot me.”

  Grey’s fingers twitched and he stared at Vince a long moment. His f
ace was slack with exhaustion, deeply grooved with stress, eyes glassy and feverish. His expression alone indicated that he’d gone off the deep end…and cracked against the bottom of the pool. Vince had seen suspects like this before: running on fumes, possessed of a hair trigger. One wrong move, one thoughtless word, and the powder keg would blow.

  “I just want to talk,” Vince said calmly. “Okay?” Just you and me.”

  “Now?” Grey sneered. “Now you wanna talk?”

  “I talked to you before, didn’t I? I listened to you, looked at your photos. But you know there was nothing I could do with them. You weren’t on the case, and I can’t take ill-gotten evidence and get a warrant with that.”

  Grey made a face and began to pace again, behind Amy’s chair. His hands stayed loose at his sides, though, gun forgotten for the moment.

  Amy lifted pleading eyes to Vince, and he pressed his finger to his lips, told her to keep quiet.

  “Like you’re so squeaky clean,” Grey said, pivoting and pacing the other direction. “You know you let stuff slide with those Dogs. Don’t deny it.” A sharp glance dared him to. “So what’s wrong with sliding back the other direction a little? Turning the screws on them.”

  “Because that’s not how I operate.”

  “Bullshit. That’s how everyone operates. If we all did everything by the book – if we all had some sort of…personal code…we’d never lock anyone up. You’re dealing with career criminals, sergeant,” he said, coming to a halt and glaring full-on at Vince. “Lock them the fuck up, for God’s sakes, in any way you can.”

  “Even if that involves kidnapping innocent women?”

  “I didn’t kid–”

  “What do you call this?” Vince asked, gesturing to Amy. The woman quivered head to toe, her face streaked with mascara and shiny trails where her tears had cut through her makeup.

  “I call it leverage,” Grey snapped. “That thing you won’t utilize.”

  “Where’s Emmie Walsh?”

  “She’s wherever biker sluts go. Somewhere you’ll never find her,” he said with a snort.

  “Someone’s trying to ransom her from the Dogs. Who’s helping you?”

  “Him helping me? Ha! That’s rich. I just invited him on board, and he took the wheel. This is his show now, not mine.”

  “Whose?” Vince insisted. “Who’s stupid and ballsy enough to try and manipulate the Dogs?”

  “Someone way above your paygrade,” Grey said smugly.

  Vince clenched his jaw tight, teeth gritting together…and then an idea struck. It had always been an ego game with this man. What better way to get him talking than to belittle his influence, and appeal to his crazy.

  “You think? Because what I think is that you’re running this whole little game by yourself, because you don’t have a friend in the world.”

  Grey’s satisfied smile froze. Slipped.

  “I think you stashed Emmie somewhere, and you invented some powerful boogeyman just to spook the Dogs. Because you know that you yourself couldn’t spook a kitten.”

  Grey snarled, actually snarled like an angry canine. “You stupid son of a bitch! You think I don’t have contacts? You think I can’t get shit done? It’s Ellison. Don Ellison, that’s who has the little bitch.”

  Don Ellison. He filed it away. And since it was the only bit of info he needed, it was time to wrap this party up.

  “I believe you,” he said. “I do. Why don’t you come back to the precinct with me and you can tell me all about him. You can be the hero in this one, Harlan. You can help us get Emmie back, and who knows, maybe the Bureau will–”

  A floorboard creaked, back behind Grey, in the hall that led to the bedrooms.

  Ghost materialized from the shadows, giving credence to his club name, the dark breaking over him and falling away, revealing him standing with gun in hand, gaze dark, flat, and shark-like where it rested on the disgraced agent.

  Grey spun toward him, and the breath exploded out of his lungs in a sound that was both gasp and growl. “Him!” he yelled. He turned back to Vince, face flushing crimson. “You’re here with him? You asshole!”

  “Harlan, Harlan, calm down,” Vince said, making a staying motion with one hand, gun trained with the other. “I’m not here with anyone. He just followed me here.” He shot Ghost a pleading look.

  Which the Lean Dogs president blatantly ignored. “He gave you a name?”

  Vince sighed. “Yeah.”

  Grey started pacing again, movements jerky, breath sawing erratically through his open mouth. “All your shit about the rules,” he raved, “and you’re in that bastard’s pocket! You’re not righteous, you’re in the MC’s corner!”

  Amy Richards cringed, curling in on herself, covering her ears with her hands as Grey’s shouting grew louder.

  “I’m in nobody’s pocket!” Vince shouted back. “Look, just calm down–”

  Grey let out an animal roar, and reached for his waist, for his gun.

  Ghost took three aggressive steps into the room.

  Amy screamed and jumped to her feet, fleeing.

  Vince tuned all of it out, and his training took over. Grey’s gun was out, and it was turning toward him.

  It was all a blur, this fast tangle of movement and sound in the dim cabin, floor cartwheeling with dancing leaf shadows from beyond the windows.

  Vince fired, and two bodies went down, instead of one.

  Amy Richards fell facedown, boneless, unable to catch herself as she hit the floor with a sick thud.

  Grey went down backward, yelling, blood blooming on his shirt down low, too low, not a direct kill.

  Vince dropped to his knees and grabbed Amy by the shoulders, turned her over. “Amy. Shit, Amy, can you hear me?”

  Her eyes darted across his face; her lips worked, blood spilling from the corners of her mouth, trailing across her tear-stained face. She gasped, and she tried to speak, but it was only a wheezing, whining sound. A hiss of air.

  “Amy…oh, shit, oh shit, oh shit…

  Pulse thrumming in his ears, skin electric with dread and shock, he reached for his radio –

  But she was gone, already slipping, slipping…silent.

  Her eyes froze, pinned to his face, wild and sightless.

  Dead.

  Vince couldn’t move, couldn’t speak, couldn’t think, couldn’t breathe.

  Another gunshot sounded. CRACK.

  Vince jumped, gasping, air raking his throat as it funneled down to his lungs.

  Ghost stood over Grey, who was now very still, gun trained on the man’s chest. With total calm, utter control, Ghost looked at him and said, “Do you have backup on the way?”

  “B-b-backup?”

  “Yeah, backup. Are there other officers on the way? Did you call for help?”

  Had he? Had he… “No,” he mumbled. He sucked in another breath. “Oh Jesus, I killed her.”

  “Yeah, you did.” Ghost stowed his gun away. “And unless you want to lose your badge for it, you’re going to do exactly what I tell you to.”

  He was too stunned to do anything but nod.

  “You’re going to come back to the clubhouse with me, and I’m going to get a cleanup crew in here.”

  Another nod.

  “Come on. I got you.”

  And with nothing else to do, he let the man pull him up to his feet.

  Thirty-Seven

  “This has to be a first,” Walsh said.

  Sergeant Fielding accepted a mug of coffee from Dublin, but didn’t acknowledge the man, or the beverage, holding it in both hands and staring off into space.

  “For us, and for poor old Vinnie,” Ghost said, taking a swig of his own heavily-liquored coffee. As they heard the door of the clubhouse open, he lifted his brows and said, “And he’s about to have another first.”

  Shaman entered with graceful, superior drama, shoulders back, head lifted proudly, wearing yet another bespoke suit and designer shoes. His muscle, Bruce, came hulking in behind, a wa
ll of beat-your-ass trailing his boss.

  “Gentlemen,” he greeted, grinning wickedly. “So nice to see you again so soon. I came as quickly as I could. Always happy to ride to the rescue.”

  “Just…can it, alright?” Ghost said. “I ain’t got time for you to gloat, Mary Poppins.”

  Undeterred, the Englishman glided toward them. “Oh, but I want to, my friend. It’s not every day I can claim I’ve handed out a favor to the surpassingly capable Ghost Teague.”

  Ghost sighed and rubbed at his eyes, pinched the bridge of his nose. “Shit. This is a bad idea.”

  “It’s our only idea,” Walsh reminded. And there was a clock inside his chest, tick-tick-ticking away, counting the time that Emmie had, fretting away the minutes that they couldn’t find her.

  Shaman drew up to the bar and braced an elbow against it, struck a model pose with hair tossed behind his shoulders. “This is the favor, I’m assuming.” He looked between the two of them. “Yes?”

  Ghost nodded. “Yeah. We need to know everything you can tell us about Don Ellison. Where he’d keep a hostage, for instance.”

  Shaman’s brows went all the way up his high, aristocratic forehead. “Hostage?”

  “He has my wife,” Walsh said, and it was hard to swallow afterward.

  “Ah.” He nodded gravely. “I see.” He inclined his head toward the sofa where Fielding was still doing a killer impression of a mannequin. “And we’re talking about this in front of our friend in blue?”

  “He’s got his own shit to worry about,” Ghost said.

  “Very well. Bring me a cuppa and I’ll tell you all I know.” He gestured to Bruce and pulled out a chair at one of the tables, sat. The bodyguard moved in behind the chair and planted himself there.

  Dublin went for the coffee and Walsh went to sit beside his countryman, as always struck by the stark differences between them. Shaman, whoever he’d been before he’d become Tennessee’s premiere outlaw, had been born in Mayfair, or thereabouts. One of the wealthy districts, where parents bought their children braces, knee socks, short pants and new Jags.

 

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