BENT AT THE ALTAR

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BENT AT THE ALTAR Page 68

by Claire St. Rose


  Chapter 29 NOAH

  “Opal! Opal!” I turn my head towards the group of men sitting at the table next to me, “What the hell just happened! Someone tell me what happened to my daughter!”

  “We don’t know, Noah. Sit down, and we’ll figure it out.” Trigger stands up, grabbing on to my shoulders and forcing me back in my chair. The group of five Disciple loyalists stares at me with pity in their dark eyes. I want to rip each of their heads off, but I can’t. These men have been sitting with me for hours since Big Tusk came back with the phone number to one of Zane Oaks’s main henchmen.

  “You have to be crazy if you think I’m going to just sit here and wait for the next sign to go. Did you hear that noise? That was a fucking gunshot. And my daughter! She was screaming. Did you not fucking hear that?” I was losing all sense of cool I may have had just a few minutes ago. But could you blame me? I didn’t know if my daughter, who I just spent nearly ten minutes reassuring she’d be safe, was alive or dead and if my phone call was the cause of it.

  “Just focus, Noah. I get what you’re saying, but we need to figure this out first.” Big Tusk turns back to the man across the table still sitting with his large headphones over his ears. He’s our techie nerd. We’d never let a guy like him into a motorcycle club, but his skills at hacking and tracking have come in handy. “Bates, was that long enough? Were you able to track their location?”

  He’s typing away furiously on a silver keypad, his tongue sticking slightly out as he concentrates. He holds up a finger towards Big Tusk, but I stand, instantly grabbing it to twist his entire hand back to the table. “Don’t you dare tell me to wait. I’m the second in command here!”

  “And I’m the first.” A loud, edgy voice startles me back into my chair. Griz walks slowly towards us from the door in the living to our spot at the kitchen table. I watch as his boots skid on the dirty tile before he scuffs them up against one of the empty chair legs, swinging it around for him to take a seat. He looks at me, concerned and slightly annoyed, “I know you want to find Opal, but you’re not starting any infighting in this club. Do you hear me, Noah?”

  I feel like a dog that’s been kicked. Griz has never admonished me before, especially not in front of my inferiors. I bow my head, looking at my fingers and palms for answers. “I hear you, Griz. I hear you.” My hand knots into a tight ball, which I slam down hard on the wood table top, “But I can’t just sit here and wait. That’s my daughter!”

  He reaches over and places a hand on my shoulder, trying to ease me back down. “Bates, do you know where they are keeping her or not?”

  Bates’s stringy, high-pitched voice fills the deep stillness of the room, “Well, Noah managed to talk to Opal for around eight minutes and two seconds. I needed him to go for at least nine to get an accurate location—"

  “DAMMIT! DAMMIT! DAMMIT!” I am on my feet again pacing. This is not the news I expected.

  “But! I do have an area to target. And luckily, part of that area is covered by a highway.” He turns the screen my way, and a map pops up. He has drawn a large red circle over the area, and, as he said, most of the area inside the boundaries is a stretch of highway I’m very familiar with.

  I lean in closer, noting all of the street names and the mile markers. In my head, I’m piecing together bits of my regular rides as if it will help me spot where the Bonebreakers would have taken her. “I know that part of the highway. I used to ride it to get to Brandon’ repair shop to do inventory and check-ins. That is, until I burnt it down a few days ago with Leo.”

  “That has to be where she is, Noah.” Trigger stands next to me, pointing towards where the repair shop is located on the map. “Opal said something about it being smoky. Maybe she meant it smelled like smoke or the air was still smoky. If they are holding her at a part of the repair shop that wasn’t destroyed, it will still reek of the burn. And most repair shops have those underground areas to do oil changes. That could explain why there isn’t any windows.”

  I look at him, totally deadpan, before I burst out at him, “You’re right! You’re motherfucking right. They have to have her there. There’s nowhere else on this map that would fit that description.” A million thoughts are racing through my head as I rummage through my jacket for my keys.

  I’m nearly out the door before I turn around. No one has moved or begun to follow me. They are all still sitting there waiting for Griz to make the call. I stand by the door pleading with them, “What are we waiting for? What are we doing?”

  “We can’t just go in there. That’s what they are expecting. They’ll execute them before we can get through the front door. We need a plan.” Griz turns back to his men. His hands rest upon his head as he leans back lazily. “What do you have, guys.”

  There’s silence as everyone hunches down a bit lower. Finally, Big Tusk clears his throat. “If we can’t charge in, we have to go in bit by bit. We’re in a war right now, there’s no doubt about it. This is our chance to lay it out all on the line, our chance to say no more. I say we go in for a three pronged attack.”

  He pulls the computer out of Bates’s hands and types in a web address. A map again pops up, but this one has three points designated. I walk towards the table to see what he has in mind.

  “First, we send our main crew, the young guns, and some of the newer enforcers out to attack their clubhouse again. The attack lasts two hours. After the first half hour, enough time for them to inform the other Bonebreakers what’s going on, we send the seconds and main enforcers to head out towards the warehouse where they do the main distributions. It won’t be guarded, but as soon as we make our move, their seconds and top teams will respond leaving Brandon’ repair shop open. That’s when we go in – the Alpha Squad. We go in quickly, quietly, and we take down Zane Oaks and the Rock from there.”

  Griz looks at him long and hard before leaning forward in his chair and reaching out his hand. “That’s brilliant, Tusk. They won’t see us organizing and hitting three at once.” He begins writing down a list of names and placing them in columns. A large map of the city is pulled out from his supplies in his basement office. He circles spots, drawing lines. It’s as if we are a football team getting our plays right rather than motorcycle club members on the attack.

  He uses sticky notes to place men at each of the spots. Big Tusk and Trigger stand next to him arguing who goes where and the vantage points to be used. But I stay in the background. I’m too emotional to make this my mission. This needs men who have their head in the game, not men who are transfixed on the idea that the two people he cared for most were getting slaughtered in the down time.

  There’s another part of me, though, that is longing to jump in. That part of me aches knowing those names and the people they belong to won’t be making it out of the places we are sending them to. I feel like I should be the one putting their name down in that black ink, the one condemning them to being shot at, to being taken, to being killed. I’m signing their funeral receipts. I’m the one issuing them to say goodbye to their own daughters and women. But the ultimate sacrifice is worth it for this club. And these are the decisions that have to be made. So I keep my head down, my mouth shut.

  When Griz is done, he stands and holds the paper up with the three columns. Each of us, his main crew, gets one final look at it, and we nod our approval solemnly. No one is going to argue about any of it now that Griz has set it in stone. This is Griz’s call, and questioning this death list would be like questioning George Washington as he sends his troops to battle.

  When we all confer, he hands the list to Bates, who begins the phone, email, and text message chain. Road captains slowly file into the clubhouse as Big Tusk runs through the plan over and over and over again, making sure everyone is clear on what is supposed to be happening when and where they are going to be positioned at. There are lookouts, guards for our clubhouse, men to drive the ammo cars. Even some of the more fierce women of the club are recruited to take part by helping back at the clubhou
se with the wounded who are brought in. Three of them even offer to take over if the shit gets too hot.

  But when everything's said and done, within two hours time, everyone has been alerted. Everyone knows their station. We’re ready to ride. Big Tusk, Trigger, and I, the members of the recovery team positioned at the repair shop, set our watches to synchronize. At one o’clock, we ride out to rescue my daughter. At one o'clock, we save my girls.

  I walk silently towards my motorcycle parked near the rear. The clubhouse has gone quiet in anticipation; the windows are, again, boarded up in case of another attack. The only souls left outside are my team. Before I rev up my engine, I place my hands on the bars and grip tightly. I look up towards the sky and ask that whatever higher power that’s up there is listening to me now. This is my chance to do what I said I would do. If it takes my own life to bring Opal and Faye back home to me alive, so be it. I just hope that sacrifice is enough in the end.

  Chapter 30 FAYE

  It’s back to pitch black. No sights. No light. No bit of hope for any of the three of us down here. Outside, I can hear the men screaming at one another, each of them shouting louder than the next. There are a couple more shots of the gun, each one of them sending shivers down my spine and shaking me to my core. I cover my head with my hands, trying to drown out the noise with my sweaty palm, but they still come, unpredictable and chaotic.

  And then there’s Opal. She’s hysterical now, crying out for her dad as if her saying it loud enough will make it come true. Her sobs are heavy and full of tears I can practically hear as they fall down her face in the dark.

  She still hasn’t moved from the spot they dropped her at as far as I can tell. But I can’t seem to make myself to find her. I am too afraid that if any of us make a sudden movement, the men upstairs will hear us and have reason to put us next on their hit list. Though, realistically, I already know we are.

  I can hear a man standing above where I am sitting. It’s the same man from before, the one who walked in on Opal taking that phone call. His voice echoes off of the plank and through the broken pipes loud enough so it even catches Opal’s attention. “What the fuck do you mean they’re at the clubhouse? Who is there? Who is guarding it?”

  I sit up straighter as he goes on raging. “If those fuckers think they can mess with us in our own turf, they have another thing coming from them.” He pauses as he plots his counterattack. “Tell the boys at the house to hold it down until I can get ahold of some reinforcements. Send Oscar and Masher their way to flank them in the alleyway. Then call in DeVry and his boys to take care of them from the back. They’ll never know what is coming for them!”

  He laughs long and hard, the floor shaking as he beats his foot into the ground. The idea of laughing over a war is beyond me, let alone gleefully sending in troops of friends and family to do the dirty work. But the man above me isn’t just a regular guy; he isn’t even like Noah. The invitation of death is like a calling for him, and I can tell how eager he is to get out there and join them just from the dripping tone of his voice. But he’s disappointed. He’s got to pull rank here to guard over us. After that phone call, I doubt he can trust any of his men to obey his orders completely, especially when it comes to an innocent little girl like Opal.

  I, on the other hand, should be excited, even thrilled. The attackers going after the clubhouse with such force have to be Noah and the Disciples. But my heart is sitting at the bottom of my stomach as I think of the men dying for absolutely nothing. They’re at the wrong place, probably at least five miles away from us! While they are attacking the empty clubhouse, we’re probably closer to death than ever. And what will happen when Noah finds he comes up empty handed? I shake my head, trying to erase the thoughts of him seeing us lifeless and long cold.

  “Faye? Miss Harvey?” Opal is whispering low. I turn my attention back to her and crawl slowly towards her voice. “Where are you? I can’t see you.”

  I shh her, like the practiced teacher I am. She can’t be heard right now. It’s more dangerous than ever for us to get any bit of attention. I quickly find my way through the dark to where she is laying, her head facing the ceiling and her arms clasped tightly around her waist. I sit up next to her, finding a support beam to rest my back on. I grab her arms and lay her head on my lap as I say, “We can’t talk loudly down here. If we can hear them, they can hear us. And we don’t want to make any noise. Do you understand me?”

  She nods her head yes and rolls towards my stomach, talking as low as possible in my shirt so even I have to bend lower to hear her. “Did you hear what that guy said? He said someone was attacking the clubhouse. Do you think it’s my dad?”

  I hesitate. Should I tell her her dad is headed towards a horrific death and that he’s not anywhere near us or should I save her hopes? I go with the best answer I can muster. “I don’t know for sure, Opal. But whoever is attacking the clubhouse is making them very nervous and mad.”

  A flicker of light from the window dances near us as I get a quick sparkle of her tear filled eyes. “It has to be them. The Disciples wouldn’t just leave me here. Right?”

  “I am sure your dad is doing whatever he can to get you and Sherri out of here as fast as possible.” My voice cracks as I try to get the last words out, “We just have to be patient.”

  Opal scoffs, “Patient? My dad would never be patient. We should be attacking them…you know, kicking them in the butt and stealing their guns and stuff. My dad wouldn’t let them do any of the shit – oh, um, sorry, crap – that they’re doing to us.”

  I try to hold back a little laugh. But she’s right in theory. With Noah miles away from us and distracted by the war he just started, it’s up to us to save ourselves. No more damsels in distress. I think back to what I saw the moment the men dropped Opal back down in the basement. There was a glitter, a glimmer, something shiny that caught my eye. My hands run through her hair, almost immediately finding it.

  I yank the hairpin out, her curls going flying. She lets out a small yelp as her hands shoot to the knots I accidentally pulled. “What are you doing, Faye? That’s my hair!”

  I hold my hands over her mouth. This little object is our biggest weapon, and if we were going to use it, we were going to need the art of surprise on our side. No giveaway, nothing. I find Opal’s hands in the dark and hold them up towards my face. I place the hairpin in and begin rocking it back and forth, twisting it side to side, just as I had seen in all those movies. Nothing. No clicks, no movement, no loosening.

  Opal pulls her hands away and sits up next to me. She takes the pin out of my hand and I can practically make out the corners of her lips shooting up into a smile. “Miss Harvey!” I shh her again as she excitedly whispers into my ear, “You’re amazing! Big Tusk taught me how to pick locks when I was three years old! I can do this.”

  I’m frozen as she takes the pin and places it into her own lock. She fidgets around with it, even placing the cold metal to her ears. Her eyes squint as she concentrates on finding just the right spot…and click. The cuffs fall to her lap as both of us look at one another, dumbstruck by how easily it worked. She pauses before wrapping her arms around me tightly, pulling me into one of the most important hugs of my life.

  After a few beats, she lets go of me and places the pin in my lock. But I shake her off. “Not me. Not yet, at least. We need to get Sherri out of her ASAP, and we can’t do that easily if we don’t have her cuffs off. Can you do hers, too?”

  Opal nods as she crawls to where Sherri still lies still, just feet from us. I take her discarded cuffs with me just in case we need them and then follow her stealthy moves. This time, she talks me through her lock picking. “Big Tusk always said to start by using the big part of the lock to bend the pin back, then take zigzag part of the pin and bend it in half there so the zigzag faces the inside. Like a real key! Then you just need to figure out how to line the zigzag part up with the pins and stuff inside…” She looks down at Sherri’s wrists as she twists and turns it rep
eatedly. “...and then it comes off!”

  Opal holds Sherri’s cuffs above her head, high enough for me to see them. I grab them out of her hand and place them back on Sherri’s wrists, being careful not to click them into place. I give Opal hers back as well and explain that she has to keep them on her in case a guard came down. “They can’t know about this, or we are in big trouble. Just keep one of them on like a bracelet.”

  She nods as she holds on tight to her pair. She then sits down across from me and pulls my arms towards her. “Your turn!” she says almost brimming with excitement.

  But I stop her. Something has changed. The man upstairs is yelling again. This time, he isn’t as joyful as the last time we could make him out. “So what you’re fucking saying to me is that the Disciples managed to not only attack the clubhouse but also the warehouse? Who the fuck let this happen? Where are DeVry and his guys? What do you mean they’re at the clubhouse? Who the hell is guarding the warehouse?” He pauses, listening to answers we cannot hear. “Well, then you better have a damn good plan, because if even an ounce of product gets messed with, I am going to kill each and every one of you peon amateurs! Do you hear me?”

 

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