by J. R. Ward
Jim glanced up and back. The corridor was a good forty feet long and about ten feet wide, and aside from a door marked office, which was way far down by the exit, the locker room was the only shot she had at losing them.
And the bouncers were already busy with some kind of disturbance.
Jim planted his feet and got ready to intervene…when from out of nowhere, Vin appeared in the archway at the club end of things, looking like he'd come to the same this-ain't-right conclusion. Striding down, Vin closed the distance fast, but the drama reached Jim first. “I said no,” the woman snapped over her shoulder.
“Your kind of female doesn't get to say no.”
Okay, so the wrong thing to say, right there. Jim stepped into the path of the guys and spoke to the woman over his shoulder. “You all right?”
As she turned to him, it was clear by her hard face and her terrified eyes that she was keeping it together by force of will only. “Yup. Just taking a break.”
“Why? Is your mouth tired already?”
Jim faced off at the guy who'd spoken. “Why don't you back the fuck off.”
“Who are you? Another one of her pimps?” The SOB reached around and grabbed her wrist. “Why don't you let her do—”
Vin diPietro, who had closed the distance, moved like the street was still in his blood. Before Jim took action, he was on the unwelcome contact, catching the biceps of that arm and breaking the guy's hold on the woman by snapping the kid around. He didn't say a thing. Didn't have to. He was ready to pop the motherfucker, gray eyes no longer cool, but volcanic.
“Let go of my goddamn arm!” the punk yelled.
“Make. Me.”
Jim glanced at the woman. “My buddy and I are gonna handle this. Why don't you grab a cup of coffee and tell those other two girls to hang with you. I'll give you a shout when the attitude adjustment is finished.”
Her eyes drifted over to Vin. It was clear she didn't like accepting the help, but she wasn't stupid. Given the buzz in the college kids' eyes, there wasn't just booze fueling them, but some coke or meth, too. Which meant the chances of things going downhill fast were high.
"I'll call for a bouncer,” she muttered as she opened the locker room door.
“Do me a favor,” Vin said, still vapor-locked on his boy. “Don't call anyone.”
She shook her head a little and ducked out of the hall.
And that was when the knife appeared in the quiet kid's hand.
Leaving Vin to deal with the chatty Cathy of the pair, Jim stepped forward and anticipated which direction the lunge with the blade was going to come from. Ah, yes, fidiot with the sharpie was going to cruise in from the right because he was right handed, so it was just a case of waiting—
Jim grabbed the guy in midcharge, snagging his wrist, whipping him around, and applying pressure to the joint until the weapon dropped to the floor. And just as he introduced the bastard's face to the wall, Vin broke into a fistfight, ducking a wide punch, then coming up with his bare knuckles like a boxer. His impact was a cracking stunner…but the trouble with illicit stimulants was that they carried, in addition to the possibility of felony and addiction, the certainty of anesthetic properties.
So the kid with the ugly, and now bloody, mouth didn't seem to feel a thing. He slammed a return hook into Vin's face and it was on. The pair of them went hog wild, turning the hallway into an MMA octagon—and check that shit out: Vin was both the aggressor and the punisher of the pair.
To give him plenty of room for the beat-down he was delivering, Jim dragged his deadweight out of the way, prepared to keep things civil as long as his load of crap kept the trouble and the opinions to a minimum.
Fucker had to open his mouth, though. Just had to: “Why do you give a shit what some whore does? She's just a heartbeat and a hole, for fuck's sake.”
Jim's vision flickered on and off, but he got a hold of himself and glanced up at the ceiling. Sure enough there were pods at regular intervals—which meant this was all being recorded. Then again…he and Vin had been smart enough to let their opponents throw the first punch and take out the weapon, so legally they could argue self-defense.
But more to the point, two college-aged fuck-twits who'd been doing illegal drugs weren't going to want to report shit to the police.
So no reason not to finish this.
Jim tightened his hold on that wrist, secured another grabber on the upper arm, and yanked the kid back so he could whisper in his ear. “I want you to take a deep breath. Come on, now…concentrate. Calm down and take a deep breath for me. That's it…”
Jim squeezed and squeezed some more until pain cut off any struggle. And when there was plenty of compliance with the even breathing, he dislocated that arm right from its shoulder socket with a quick twist. The resulting scream was loud, but the music from the dance floor drowned out the echo. Which was why, all things considered, clubs were not a bad place for throw-downs.
As the kid sagged onto the floor, Jim knelt in front of him. “I hate hospitals. Just out of one myself. You know what they're going to do to someone with your kind of injury? They're going to put the arm back where it belongs. Here, let me show you.”
Jim took the flopping limb and didn't bother telling the guy to breathe deep. He just applied the appropriate pressure so that the bone popped back into its home. No screaming this time—the SOB just passed out cold.
In the wake of his stab at being an ortho doc, Jim glanced up to see how things were going with the other half of the altercations—and got an eyeball full of Vin working his opponent's liver like it was bread dough. College Boy was wilting badly and looking royally licked, his hands up not to throw punches, but to ward them off…and his knees knocking together like his balance was going fast.
Which would have been great except for the fact they had trouble.
At the end of the hall, they were attracting attention, a clubgoer peering down the corridor. The lights were dim, but not that dim. They had to clear the fuck out. “Vin, we got to go,” Jim hissed.
The newsflash didn't register, and that wasn't a surprise, given the brutal focus Vin was bringing to his fight. Shit, screw the peanut gallery; if he was allowed to keep this up, he was going to kill the guy. Or at least turn the fool into a linebacker-size vegetable.
Jim stood up, prepared to intervene with more than words.
Chapter 13
Vin was having a fucking ball.
It had been years since he'd thrown punches at more than a bag of sand in the gym, and he'd forgotten how good it felt to physically express his opinion of an asshole—directly in the guy's face. Man, it all came back, the stance, the power, the focus.
He still had it. He could still fight.
The trouble was, like all good things, the party had to come to an end and it turned out not to be of the knocked-out-opponent variety—although given the way the college kid's pins were wobbling, if Vin had just a little longer…
But no, Jim broke up the fun, locking a heavy hand on Vin's shoulder and yanking him out of range. “We've got an audience.”
Panting like an fin bull, Vin glanced up the hallway. Sure enough, a guy with glasses and a mustache was staring at them all, his expression like he'd been witness to a car accident.
Before anyone could react, however, the back door to the club swung open and an African-American man came striding down toward the melee, looking like he was capable of tearing the front fender off a car. With his teeth.
“What the hell is going on in my house?”
Vin's dark-haired woman stepped out from the locker room. “Trez, the two in the skull shirts are the problem.”
Vin blinked like a dummy at the beautiful sound of her voice, but then he refocused and muscled his kid face-first into the wall. “Feel free to finish what I started here,” he said to the club's owner.
Jim pulled his loose bundle of frat boy off the floor. “This one had the knife.”
The Trez guy looked the kids over. “Where's t
he weapon?” Jim kicked the thing over and the owner bent down and picked it up. “Police been called?”
Everyone glanced at the woman, and as she shook her head, Vin found himself unable to look away. From across the club she'd made his heart pound; up close she made the thing stop dead: Her eyes were so blue they reminded him of a summer sky.
“I think these boys are done,” Trez said with approval. “Nice work.”
“Where do you want them?” Jim asked.
“Let's take 'em out back.”
Look at me, Vin thought at the woman. Look at me again. Please. “Roger that,” Jim said, and began hauling his load down the hall.
After a moment, Vin followed the example, pushing his guy along. When they came to the door, Trez opened the way like a perfect gentleman and stepped to the side. “Anywhere you like,” the owner said.
Jim 'liked' the brick wall to the left, whereas Vin preferred the opposite side— Just as he dropped the kid on his ass, he froze.
The security lights around the door shone down over the heads of the boys, casting a solid blanket of illumination all the way to their feet. So their shadows should have been on the asphalt. They weren't. Both of them had dark halos on the brick behind their heads, a twin pair of smoky gray crowns that weaved ever so slightly.
“Oh…Christ,” Vin whispered.
The one he'd been beating on glanced up with eyes that were more tired than hostile. “Why are you looking at us like that.”
Because you're going to die tonight, he thought.
Jim's voice registered from a distance: “Vin? What's up?”
Vin shook himself, and prayed those damn shadows disappeared. No luck. He tried to rub his eyes in hopes of wiping them away—and found that his face hurt too much from the punches it took to handle that kind of attention.
And the shadows prevailed.
Trez nodded over his shoulder to the club. “If you two can head in, I'm going to have a word with this pair of shit-heads. Just so that they're perfectly clear on where things stand.”
“Yeah. Cool.” Vin forced himself to get moving, but as he came up to the door, he glanced over at the kids. “Be careful…watch yourselves.”
“Fuck you,” was what came back at him. Which meant they were taking it not as advice, but a threat.
“No, I mean—”
“Come on,” Jim said, muscling him back into the building. “Let's go.”
God, maybe he was wrong. Maybe he just needed to get his eyes checked. Maybe he was going to get a migraine in another twenty minutes. But whatever the explanation, he couldn't go back to where he'd been with this shit. He just couldn't handle that.
In the hallway, Jim took his arm. “You get knocked in the head bad?”
“Nope.” Although, given how much his face was flaring up, that wasn't entirely true. “I'm fine.”
“Whatever. Let's give the owner a minute out back and when he comes in again, I'll take you to my truck.”
“I'm not leaving until I see that—” Woman. There by the locker room door.
Vin headed for her, shutting all of his paranoid, wingnut head spins down and concentrating on her. “Are you okay?”
She'd put a fleece on over her revealing getup, and the thing fell to her thighs, making her seem like the kind of woman you wanted to take into your arms and hold through the whole night. “Are you all right?” he repeated when she didn't answer.
Her eyes, those stunning blue eyes of hers, finally swung over to his face…and he felt it again, that high-bore charge barreling through him, enlivening him.
Her lips lifted in a small smile. “The question is more…are you?” As Vin frowned, she made a motion around his face. “You're bleeding.”
“It doesn't hurt.”
“I think it's going to—”
Two other women bubbled out of the locker room like a pair of yappy dogs, talking a mile a minute, hands waving like tails, the gold chains around their waists bouncing and chiming like tags on a collar. Fortunately, they were all over Jim, but then again, they could have popped skirt and mooned Vin and he wouldn't have noticed.
“I'm sorry about those guys,” he said to the dark-haired woman.
“It's okay.”
God, her voice was lovely. “What's your name?”
The rear door to the club opened and the Trez guy strode over. “Thanks again for taking care of things.”
Conversation sprang up, but Vin wasn't interested in anyone but the female in front of him. He was waiting for her to answer him. Hoping she would. “Please,” he said softly, “tell me your name.”
After a moment, the dark-haired woman turned to the owner. “Mind if I clean him up in the locker room?”
“Go right ahead.”
Vin glanced back at his comrade in harm. “You okay to hang out, Jim?”
The guy nodded. “Especially if it means you won't bleed all over my truck.”
“I won't take long with him,” the woman said.
Not a problem, Vin thought. As far as he was concerned, she could take forever—he stopped himself. Devina might have stormed off, but she was in his house, in his bed at this very moment. He owed her more than the way he was going on about this other female.
At least, you think you know where Devina is, his inner voice pointed out.
“Come on,” the woman said to him as she opened the locker room door.
Vin looked back at Jim for some reason—and the expression he met was all about the watch-yourself-my-man.
Vin opened his mouth, prepared to be reasonable and get a grip.
“I'll be right back, Jim,” was all that came out.
* * *
Slut. Whore. Prostitute.
He couldn't believe it. She was whoring herself out. Selling her body to men who used her for sex. The reality was incomprehensible.
At first, he hadn't been able to fathom what appeared to be going on. Bad enough if she'd been a bartender or a waitress or, God forbid, a caged dancer in a club like this—but then he'd seen her walking around with her breasts on display and her thighs bared to the eyes of other men.
And she got what she deserved for doing what she did: Those two young guys had tracked her like prey, treating her exactly as men treated women like her.
He'd followed along as the pair had trailed her into the hallway, and watched as that fight had erupted. He'd been unable to move, so great was his shock. Of all the things he had pictured her doing, of all the assumptions he had made about what her life here in Caldwell was like, this was not it.
This was not happening.
As the harassers got pounded in the corridor, he backtracked through the crowd and tore out of the front of the club in an urgent haze, having no idea what he was doing or where he was going. The chilly night air didn't clear his head or his confusion, and he went around to the parking lot with no plan whatsoever. When he got into his nondescript car, he shut himself in and breathed hard.
That was when the anger hit. Great waves of fury poured through his body, making him sweat and shake.
He knew his temper had gotten him in trouble before. He knew this boiling rage was a problem, and he remembered what he'd been taught in prison. Count to ten. Try to calm down. Call to mind the safety image—
Movement by the back of the club brought his head around.
A door opened and the two kids who'd been stalking her were dropped like bags of garbage onto the pavement by the ones who'd come to her rescue. A black man stayed out in the cold and spoke to both of the offenders for a moment and then returned into the club.
From behind the wheel, he stared hard at the young guys.
The lightning strike hit him as it always did, wiping everything out of the way: His rage condensed and then crystallized, locking on the pair by the back door, all the anger and the sense of betrayal and the fury and the confusion that woman had created getting trained on those two.
Moving in a daze, he double-checked that the false mustache and the gla
sses were where they were supposed to be. Chances were very good there were security cameras on the back of the club, and having been caught by the likes of them before, even in his rage he knew enough not to do this in front of prying lenses even with a disguise.
So he waited.
Eventually, the college kids got stiffly to their feet, one of them spitting out blood, the other holding his arm as if he were afraid it was going to drop off his torso. Facing each other, they argued, whatever harsh words they shared nothing but mute theatrics because he was too far away to hear what they were saying. But the fight didn't last long. They fell silent fairly quickly, as if they'd lost their collective will, and after some looking around, they lurched into the parking lot like drunks.
Probably because their heads were spinning from the beatings they'd taken.
When they passed by his car, he got a good look at them. Fair skinned, light eyed, both had an earring or two. Their faces were the kind you'd see in the newspaper, not in the criminal section, but under the header College Sports.
Healthy, young, with a lot of life ahead of them.
There was no conscious thought at all as he reached under the seat and then got out from behind the wheel. He shut the car door quietly and fell in behind the young men. As he moved silently, he was action and nothing more.
The pair went to the last row in the parking lot and took a right…going into a tight alley. With no windows.
If he had asked them to find some privacy, they couldn't have possibly been more accommodating.
He tracked them until they were halfway down the buildings, right in the middle of the double block. With smooth control, he leveled the muzzle at the strong, young back in front of him and paused with his finger on the trigger.
They were up ahead a good ten yards, their sloppy strides cutting through the slush, their shifting torsos presenting moving targets.
Closer would be better, but he didn't want to wait or risk spooking them.