Shelter From The Storm (The Bare Bones MC Book 6) (2 page)

Read Shelter From The Storm (The Bare Bones MC Book 6) Online

Authors: Layla Wolfe

Tags: #Motorcycle, #Romance

BOOK: Shelter From The Storm (The Bare Bones MC Book 6)
12.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I had a rental house off North Royal in Nogales, but I didn’t feel like going home. Someone was probably already waiting there for me. Jones wouldn’t see the finer points of how I’d buried the kid and those other brutes. He’d only see the fact that El Baño had gotten away—or, perhaps, been put down by a guy who looked like he should be singing “Tie A Yellow Ribbon” in South Lake Tahoe. I didn’t know which option was more humiliating.

I found myself hanging a north on the frontage road toward Tucson. Maybe I was going to my favorite watering hole, I don’t know. It wasn’t until I was almost to the bar that I realized I didn’t want to go in there, either. In case word had already spread—and it spread fast in these circles—I’d be the laughingstock of my favorite comfort place.

I kept going, eventually pulling over in the parking lot of Margie’s Corner Café, dark like a church at two in the morning. I wanted to look at my arm wound. I had no mirror, but I did have a flashlight. I took off my leather jacket and went under Margie’s security light to look at it. It was my first stroke of luck that the bullet had grazed the arm, cut a channel through the leather and flesh before continuing on its way.

But it was bleeding like a sonofabitch. It was a sign of my occupation that I kept a box of adhesive pads in my saddlebags. Tearing what remained of my T-shirt’s arm off, I stanched the flow of blood. I could barely keep up with it before I could slap the bandage down, ineffectively.
Clusterfuck.
I had to go home sooner or later and face the music. I just wished I could have a good snooze first.

This was really the first time I’d fucked up. All of the rest had been good, clean hits. The only other time I’d even remotely screwed up was when Ortelio Jones wanted the mark alive. That motherfucker had punched and kicked like he was being raped as I tried to cram him into the trunk of my Cadillac. I finally remembered they’d given me a stun gun, and I’d stunned the shit out of the guy before he went limp.

You have to understand, this wasn’t a job I willingly chose. It wasn’t like an eager-eyed, idealistic younger me ran around studying to be a
sicario
. I wasn’t in awe of the glamor, the fringe benefits, the sex on the side. In fact, quite the opposite. I’d been bound to defy my father, an Irishman who traded illegal arms for profit, and uphold the letter of the law. But if everyone waged war according to his own beliefs, there would be no war. So I was destined to wind up with Jones.

A Fiat was pulling into Margie’s parking lot. Santiago Slayer got out, buttoning his blazer and smoothing it down. As though he didn’t still have terra cotta dust on his shoulders. I was surprised he hadn’t brushed that away with a lint roller.

He nodded primly at me. “Señor.”

I nodded back. “Santiago Slayer,” I acknowledged. Then I realized I was being kind of an asshole, so I shook his hand. “Fox Isherwood.”

He warmly grasped my hand like we were just meeting at a cocktail party. This guy was a smooth operator, I had to hand him that. “I know. Your fame has traveled far and wide.”

“Then why have I never crossed paths with you?”

Slayer became serious. “I know how to stay off the grid. I am only called in for jobs that require the most stealthy, the most sneaky, the most crafty and catlike of skills. Oh, excuse me.” His features became mild and friendly again when he checked his phone. He chuckled at what he saw on the screen. “Oh, yes, yes,” he said to himself, as if recalling fond memories. He turned the phone to me briefly. “This girl that I met at a party last night has tagged me in this most awesome party photo.”

The Instagram photo showed Slayer liberally draped with scantily clad women barely in their twenties. Since Slayer was probably coming up on forty, that was slightly creepy. But the real creepy part was that he’d allowed photos to be taken of him at all.

“Instagram?” I queried, and went for my phone, too. But I didn’t have that app installed, of course, so all I could do was google “Santiago Slayer.” Aside from some gaming hits that were hopefully not him, this stealthy, crafty
sicario
was all over the fucking map. In addition to a thousand Instagram hits in which he’d allowed himself to be tagged using his real—or rather I should say his made-up, hitman name—he was similarly tagged in Facebook, and I could open those.

“You sure like to party.” I snorted cynically, swiping through photo after photo of the Ken doll handsome guy posing with drinks and chicks. “Your
jefe
doesn’t get up in your shit about this?”

Slayer frowned. “A kingpin, getting angry about partying?”

I realized that sounded stupid, so I clarified. “I mean about you being tagged all over the place. You’re not afraid your cover will be blown?”

Slayer wiped my existence away with his hand. “Pfft. This is partying. A completely separate reality from our jobs. As I always say, ‘work and fun do not mix.’”

That was an odd way to justify it. There was always bleed-through from one reality to the other. I lived my entire life like a
sicario
. It might’ve been easier for me to keep them separate because women and socializing weren’t part of my reality. “Yeah, but anyone trying to find you can just easily log onto Facebook or Instagram and figure out which party you’re at. They have geotags on these things, you know.”

Again, Slayer scoffed at me. “Pfft. Big deal if they see me at a party? Why would that make them instantly think I was coming to get them? Oh, excuse me.” Slayer chuckled at his screen. “Look. This girl sent me a sexy Snapchat. See how pouty her lips are.”

I waved away his phone. That sort of shit held no interest for me. I was all business, to the core. “Did you even
get
El Baño?”

Slayer’s face was blank, he was so entranced with the onscreen girl’s boobs. “What? Oh, El Baño? Let us just say he is happily diving with the dolphins.”

I frowned, trying to understand his slang. “You mean sleeping with the fishes?” If El Baño was dead, maybe I could convince Slayer not to report his success to his boss. That would keep me out of hot water.

Slayer finally blacked out his phone’s screen and put it in its holster. He was professional again. “Let us just say, El Baño will not live to flush another day.”

Sidling up to him, I became Slayer’s biggest confidante. “Hey. I wonder if I could talk you into taking joint credit for the hit. You know? Who is it you work for now?”

Slayer drew himself up proudly. “The Bare Bones motorcycle club, but that is no secret. Ford Illuminati would never tell me to curtail my social refreshments. I do not miss out on assignments. I am very punctual, and always report back promptly.”

“Yeah, speaking of that, have you reported in to Mr. Illuminati tonight?”

“Not yet. It is three in the morning. I would never be so rude.”

“Exactly. You strike me as a very polite, well-mannered man. According to the internet, your reputation that has soared far and wide rings in the streets.”

Slayer looked pleased and modest at the same time. “Well. I cannot deny it. I have been sometimes labeled with the moniker ‘The Kindly
Sicario
.’ I have a gentlemanly way of not strewing the body parts all over the place as some messy people do. Once I even pulled up some flowers nearby—”

“Wait. Hang on.”

Fuck me dry.
It was Ortelio Jones, already harassing me about the evening’s activities. I couldn’t very well pretend I was asleep and avoid the call, so I put my finger to my lips to tell Slayer to shut the fuck up, and answered.

“Isherwood here.”

“Fox,” said Jones grandly. Contrary to his name, Ortelio Jones was Mexican, with roots deeply intertwined with the Sinaloan drug trade. His compound was in Los Mochis. I could tell by his tone that it was too late to take credit for Slayer’s kill. “I have heard you had a little help tonight.”

“Well, yes. Ah, that is true.”

His tone didn’t stay grand for long. It only took a few seconds for it to rise to an irate level. “Just the idea you’d need the help of that clown, Santiago Slayer, is a stain on the Jones name!”

“Well, ah, just so you know, I didn’t exactly
ask
for his help. I didn’t even know he was in the area.”

It was as though Jones didn’t even hear me. “
Joder!
Now everyone knows it was that
cabrón
who buried El Baño, not us! You are going to have to get El Pozolero, his right hand man.”

“The Soup Maker.” El Pozolero was so named due to his penchant for dissolving the bodies of his rivals in big soup pots. “Just tell me when and where.”

Jones’ pause chilled me to the bone. “You will have to cross into New Mexico.”

I didn’t want to tell him no. Lord knows, I didn’t want to say no. I had just been called on the carpet for messing up. This was not something I was accustomed to. But
New Mexico
? Jones knew to set foot there spelled my doom. “Ah, you must have other guys who can go there. What about Armando Grillo, or El Ostión?” He was called “The Oyster” because he rarely talked.

Jones let up on me. “There is one way you can avoid New Mexico, my friend.”

My heart jumped. Anything, anything. Being a
sicario
was my entire world, my whole identity. It was the only possible occupation for me after being forced to flee Taos. Sure, I could’ve become a FedEx driver, a plumber, a waiter. Anything was possible in this world. But being a
sicario
was the only occupation that gave me the same salary and finesse as my old one.

“This will involve rubbing out a woman.”

“Fine, fine.” I shouldn’t have been surprised I could kill a woman with no compunction. Women had gotten me into this predicament to begin with. “Who, where?”

“Her name is Flavia Brooks. We’ve had word she’s living somewhere near Flagstaff working in a tuxedo rental store.”

That was oddly specific information for someone who had no known address. “Nothing more on her location, then?”

“Nothing. I will text you a photo shortly. I want you to go up there and look around tuxedo rental places.”

“Sure thing,
jefe
.”

I had a reprieve. After hanging up, I opened the photo of Flavia Brooks. Dear Lord, she was savage beautiful. Even a cold-hearted guy like myself had to admit that her caramel skin and bright electric blue eyes ringed in soot were straight out of a magazine’s pages.

Instantly I had second thoughts about burying this girl. What the fuck could she have done? Yet Jones didn’t make a name for himself randomly running around hitting people. Briefly, I wondered if she was a reporter. Then why was she working in a tux rental store? Like me, maybe she was under deep cover.

Then something occurred to me. “Hey. The Bare Bones MC—they’re up near Flagstaff, aren’t they?”

Slayer nodded. “Their mother charter is in Pure and Easy to the south, to be exact. But they have a Flagstaff chapter. They recently moved out of the Tucson area after their clubhouse blew up, so they no longer have a real presence down here.”

I thought fast. “Jones just told me to take a vacation. To get my mojo back. There are nice spots up there, aren’t there?”

His eyes shined with zeal. “Oh, the red rocks are simply
amazing
! These sandstone rocks that have been beaten down for centuries…”

Slayer’s voice sort of faded out as he continued raving about the geological strata of eons. A great horned owl had just glided soundlessly over our heads so close I could’ve swore I felt the beat of its wings, maybe twenty feet up. I dove for my bike’s saddlebags, pissed that my birding binoculars were stuffed way down at the bottom. I hadn’t used them in weeks, and by the time I fumbled with them and put them to my eyes, of course the owl was long gone.

CHAPTER TWO

PIPPA

“S
tart low, go slow, that’s the motto.”

I nodded. I was drinking in every word of Lytton Driving Hawk’s training session.

“These are some low-dose options for edibles. Here are some Thick Mints, sort of a takeoff on the Girl Scout theme. They taste the same, with a peppermint hit that goes straight up your nostrils. Of course I can’t let you taste, or you’d be on the ground in an hour tasting everything. You’ll taste everything eventually. Just trust me. Here, smell one.”

I inhaled deeply of the chocolate-covered cookie. Believe you me, you didn’t need to swallow it to get a hit of potent THC. Of course, I hadn’t smoked in six months, not since moving to Pure and Easy. I wasn’t allowed to. But Pippa Lofting was going to get herself a medical marijuana card, for sure.

I said, “Overtones of coffee and maple syrup.”

The darkly handsome budtender smiled, surprised. “Have you worked in a club before?”

“No. That’s wine tasting lingo.”

“Oh, okay. That should stand you in good stead. There are some vineyards on the way up to our plantation on Mormon Mountain. Have you tasted any of our local wine?”

I really hadn’t had any wine in six months either. Way too afraid. “No, but I’d like to go tasting.”

“Where’d you say you live?”

I pointed, as if Lytton could see my tiny apartment. “Right up Bargain Boulevard a few blocks, above the indoor archery range.”

Other books

Much Ado About Jessie Kaplan by Paula Marantz Cohen
Skeleton-in-Waiting by Peter Dickinson
Grown-up by Kim Fielding
Unmasking the Spy by Janet Kent