Issue 8 april 2018 featu.., p.13

  Issue 8, April 2018: Featuring Brenda Novak, p.13

Issue 8, April 2018: Featuring Brenda Novak
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  “Laurel, for one,” Mose said. “And I’m pretty sure I saw Rex leaving her place. I followed a guy I think was him to a bar but I was afraid he’d see me, so I couldn’t get a good look at his face.”

  “What about Virgil?”

  “Here in DC, too. I got a better view of him than Rex. They were together. I tried to follow Virgil home, see where he lives, but he was on a motorcycle. I couldn’t keep up.”

  The Crew’s contact in the Federal Bureau of Prisons had taken a while to deliver the information Horse wanted, but apparently she’d slept with the right U.S. Marshal, one who didn’t want the pictures of their time together going home to his wife and kids.

  “Virgil, Laurel, Rex. All three of them,” Horse mused. “That’s good.”

  “Should I kill the woman tonight?”

  “Hell, no! If you do you’ll never find Virgil and Rex.”

  “I just told you, man. They’re here in DC.”

  “But you don’t know exactly where they live. Not yet. You hurt Laurel, they’ll pop you and disappear.”

  “They won’t pop me. When I come after them, they won’t know what hit ’em.”

  Tough talk but Horse wasn’t taking any chances. Virgil and Rex were the biggest bad asses he’d ever known. “Don’t give me that bullshit,” he said. “We have to play this smart.”

  “Which means what?”

  He could hear the frustration in Mose’s voice. “It means you grab Laurel, since you know where she lives, and use her as bait to bring the men to you.”

  There was a brief silence as Mose considered his instructions. “You think they’ll come?”

  “They’ll do anything for her.”

  “What if they call the cops instead?”

  “They won’t, because they know you’ll kill her if they do. As soon as they arrive, shoot ’em all and get the hell out of DC,” he said and hung up.

  Was that man following her?

  Laurel Hodges stopped in the snack aisle to see if the heavily muscled man she’d spotted two or three times since entering the grocery store would simply walk past.

  He didn’t. He moved into the same aisle but paused a few feet away and picked up a bag of chocolate chips as if he wanted to study the nutritional information.

  “Mommy, what’s wrong?”

  Laurel forced a smile. Mia was too big for the grocery cart child’s seat, so she was riding in the basket while Jake grabbed one item after another and begged Laurel to buy it.

  “Can we get this?”

  “No.” Laurel didn’t even look at his latest find. Lowering her head as though taking stock of the contents of her cart, she peeked at the man with the shaved head and the tattoos covering his forearms and tried once again to call Rex on her cell.

  She got his voice mail. Damn it. He was really mad at her this time. She couldn’t think of any other reason he wouldn’t pick up.

  She didn’t leave a message. If the man was a member of The Crew this would all be over before Rex could do a thing about it. Virgil wouldn’t be able to help her, either—not that she’d call him. He had Peyton and his new baby to worry about.

  Should she contact the police? They could probably respond faster than her WITSEC handler. But what would she tell the emergency operator? She could imagine the call….

  Nine-one-one, what is the nature of your emergency?

  There’s a man where I’m shopping who reminds me of some violent gang members who once tried to kill me.

  Reminds you of some violent gang members?

  Yes…

  Has he actually done anything to threaten or harm you?

  Not yet.

  God, would the police even come?

  She dialed her WITSEC handler instead, but he didn’t pick up, either.

  “Who are you trying to call, Mommy?” Mia had been playing with the cans in the cart but tuned in long enough to notice Laurel pressing the End Call button. “The restaurant? Do you have to go to work today?”

  Laurel slipped the phone back into her purse. If she had to make a dash for it, she wanted her hands free so she’d be able to hang on to her kids. “No, not today.”

  “Who will wait on the people?”

  “The other servers.”

  “Oh.” Mia went back to playing as Laurel, hands slick with sweat, propelled the shopping cart forward.

  The man who’d been making her so uncomfortable didn’t follow, but she was afraid he would once she turned the corner. It’d happened twice already. She’d left him in two different aisles only to bump into him a second and a third time.

  Unwilling to abandon the treat section quite so soon, Jake slowed their cart to pick up a bottle of soda. “Mom, can we—”

  Completely preoccupied with the stranger, and how much he resembled the type of men who belonged to The Crew, she didn’t let Jake finish. “No, that has too much sugar.”

  “Please?” he persisted. “Come on! Other kids drink soda. Look, it’s your favorite kind.”

  “I said no or…okay.” Taking it away from him, she added it to the cart and grasped his hand so he had no choice except to keep up with them.

  “Mommy?”

  It was Mia again. “What honey?”

  “Are you upset?”

  She’d had a hard lump in her stomach ever since Rex left, and this wasn’t helping. “I’m just thinking.”

  “What about these?” Jake scooped a bag of cheese puffs from the closest display. “Can we have these?”

  Laurel managed a tremulous smile as they passed another shopper. “No. We have to go.”

  “But we just got here!”

  She kept moving, so fast he dropped the bag of cheese puffs, and she didn’t even stop to pick it up.

  “Mom!” He almost tripped as she dragged him along.

  “Just do as I say,” she snapped, and risked another glance behind them. The man was nowhere to be seen. Was she freaking out for nothing?

  Maybe. As busy as the store was, she’d seen several other shoppers more than once. None of them stood out like this guy did, but maybe the argument she’d had with Rex was making her feel extra-vulnerable, making her imagine the stranger was keeping a closer watch on her than he was.

  Regardless, she didn’t feel safe here and wanted to leave.

  Choosing the shortest checkout line, she wheeled her cart into place. The tattooed guy didn’t come out of the snack aisle, as she’d expected, but that didn’t matter. She was already too worked up to talk herself out of her fear. Suddenly, she couldn’t even wait the few minutes it would take to buy the groceries she’d selected. She had to get out of the store.

  “Come on.” She lifted Mia from the cart.

  “Where are we going?” her daughter asked in surprise.

  “Home.”

  “Without our soda?” Jake complained.

  “I’ll get you an ice cream cone later, I promise. Both of you.” Just cooperate, she prayed and hurried them out and into the crowded parking lot.

  Jake wasn’t happy about abandoning their purchases, but he didn’t say another word as he climbed into the backseat of her old Volvo and put on his seatbelt. He’d read her anxiety; it was so intense she could no longer hide it. The only other time he’d seen her like this was in Colorado, when she’d made him take his sister and climb out a bedroom window to escape what was about to happen in the house. She’d told both her children that what they’d witnessed that night had been playacting, but she often wondered if Jake, at least, knew better.

  Her hands shook as she buckled Mia in. The painful memories were coming in a torrent now, memories of finding the U.S. Marshal assigned to protect them in a puddle of blood on the floor, his throat slit. Memories of Ink, the Crew member who’d survived. Ink, with the devilish tattoos covering his face, breaking into her bedroom, his hands reaching for her, his nails clawing her legs apart. The deafening blast of the gun. The acrid smell of gunpowder....

  They’d all almost died. If not for Rex, they would have.

  “Not again,” she whispered. “Please, not again.”

  She was coming around the car to get behind the wheel when someone called her name. Fear and adrenaline shot through her, and she stiffened, but then she recognized the voice. It was Rex. He was here. Somehow he was here.

  Turning, she saw him coming toward her and nearly crumpled to the blacktop in relief.

  “There you are!” As soon as he was close enough, she threw herself into his arms. “What made you come back?”

  He stumbled, surprised by her enthusiastic welcome, but caught himself before he could fall, caught them both. “I left my phone at your house, but you have the place locked up so tight I couldn’t get in, and I didn’t want to scare you by breaking in, so I’ve been checking all your regular places. You mentioned needing groceries this morning, so...fortunately, I spotted your car.”

  “That’s why you wouldn’t answer your phone. You didn’t have it. I’m sorry about earlier, Rex. I’m so sorry.”

  When he hesitated, she feared he wouldn’t accept her apology, that he’d continue to be mad. But then his hand went to the back of her head and his body adjusted to hers. “It’s okay. I shouldn’t have pressured you. We...we were good until I ruined it.”

  “Last night was special,” she admitted. “I’ve never felt so close to anyone.” It wasn’t until he’d asked her to marry him that everything had fallen apart. After what she’d been through, she wasn’t ready to make that commitment. She’d told him that before. “So don’t give up on me,” she whispered. “Not yet.”

  Chin resting on top of her head, he squeezed her tighter. “We’ll work it out, huh? Somehow we’ll work it out. Don’t cry.”

  She hadn’t even realized she was crying. The man in the store had frightened her, but that wasn’t the worst of it. She’d been afraid that this time Rex wouldn’t come back, that they were really over, and that had sent her reeling.

  “You okay?” He pulled back to see her face.

  Should she tell him about the panic attack she’d had in the store?

  No, she felt silly about that now. The guy who’d spooked her was probably just some biker who liked tattoos and chocolate chips and hadn’t meant her any harm. How would The Crew ever find them here? They were in WITSEC, had brand-new identities. No one knew where they were. “Yeah, I’m fine. Let’s go home.” She didn’t even want to go back for her groceries.

  But the second he released her, the man she’d seen in the store stepped out from behind the van beside her car.

  And this time she knew he was dangerous because he shoved the muzzle of a gun into her back.

  It took a second for Rex to realize what was going on. He’d been so caught up in his emotional exchange with Laurel, he’d allowed The Crew to get the drop on them. After the uneasy feeling he’d experienced at the bar, he considered this an inexcusable mistake. But he hadn’t really believed The Crew could find them, not after everything they’d done to escape. Prison gangs weren’t usually that sophisticated, and The Crew was no exception. But they were determined and deadly and somehow they’d managed to follow them to DC.

  He had no doubt this man would shoot Laurel if he didn’t do something. And what about the kids?

  “Let her go.” He raised his hands to show he was compliant. “I’m the one you want. I’m Rex McCready, Pretty Boy. Horse wants me, not her.”

  The guy—Mose, according to one tattoo—was six foot, about two hundred pounds and solidly built. His dark eyes focused on Rex, but he had a grip on Laurel. One shot at such close range would almost certainly kill her. “He wants you both. Virgil, too. That’s my assignment and I’m gonna fulfill it.”

  Rex wished he had his own gun. Since he was an ex-con, carrying a firearm or any other weapon violated his parole, but he’d picked up a 9mm on the black market. It was currently stashed under the seat of his truck, which he’d parked along the perimeter of the lot. He’d thought that was close and handy—until this moment, when it might as well be in another state. “You’d be stupid to get greedy. Take me and leave her to her children. She has no part in this, and neither do they.”

  “Shut up and get in the car.” He jerked his head toward Laurel’s Volvo.

  The kids stared out at them as if they couldn’t understand what was wrong. Rex hoped they wouldn’t figure it out. They’d already been through more than any kids should have to face.

  “Look, you’re in over your head here,” he said to Mose. “Let her take the kids and go, and I’ll do whatever the fuck you tell me to.”

  “Sorry, not good enough.”

  Another Hanley’s Grocery customer passed by, the wheels of her cart rattling against the pavement. Rex prayed she’d glance up, see the gun and scream or cause some other type of diversion so he could wrest the weapon away. But she was too focused on the baby she had in a carrier. She walked right past them without noticing a thing. That was when the real panic set in, when Rex had to accept that he wasn’t sure how to save them, not this time.

  “Get in.” The guy with the gun indicated Laurel’s car again. “Or I’ll pop her right here.”

  Shit! If he resisted, Laurel would be shot. They’d all be shot, along with other innocent people. But if he complied, they’d be abandoning the relative safety of this public parking lot, giving their enemy even more power over them, which didn’t seem like the best idea....

  In the end, Rex had no choice. He’d do anything to stop Laurel from getting hurt, even if that meant merely delaying it until he could find a better opportunity to save them.

  Heart slamming against his chest, he opened the back door, slid Jake to the middle and got in. He hoped Laurel would be able to make a break for safety the second the guy left her side, but she wasn’t taking any chances. Mose trained the gun on the kids as he moved around the car—first one, then the other—and Rex knew she wouldn’t do anything that might cause him to fire. He couldn’t blame her.

  “Where are we going?” she asked, once they were all in.

  The guy kept his gun low so the people around them couldn’t see it. Rex couldn’t see it, either, but he had no doubt it was aimed at Laurel because her eyes kept flicking toward it.

  “Let’s head to Virgil’s.” Mose tossed a grin over his shoulder for Rex’s benefit. “I think it’ll be fun to surprise him, don’t you?”

  Laurel had no intention of leading this man to her brother. Virgil had a wife and a new baby at home. He was finally happy, and she planned to do everything possible to keep it that way. He’d do the same for her if their roles were reversed. She only hoped The Crew didn’t already know where he lived, that the man holding the gun wouldn’t realize she’d led him to Rex’s house instead.

  Would Jake or Mia pipe up? It would be so like them, so like any child, to declare that she’d gotten it wrong. They certainly knew one house from the other, but they seemed subdued. They hadn’t said a word the entire ride. She wondered if they, too, were reliving what had happened in Colorado....

  “Not bad,” Mose said, admiring Rex’s home as they came to a stop at the curb. “Ratting out your friends must pay well.”

  Virgil had received nothing from the government for the information he’d provided, except a promise of protection for him and those he loved. He’d been given nearly $700,000 for wrongful imprisonment, however, which he’d insisted on sharing. That money had provided them each with a down payment on a house, but they worked to cover the mortgages. Laurel suspected Rex had bought this house hoping she and the kids would move in with him. Even she’d believed she would live here someday.

  She’d never dreamed she’d die here instead.

  “Virgil didn’t rat anybody out until you tried to kill me,” she said. “All he wanted was his life back.”

  “He swore an oath and then he broke it. That means he pays the price.”

  “But he should never have gone to prison in the first place!”

  “That’s his problem. We’re not gonna sit back while he lives in some fancy-ass house like this. A house he bought with blood money!”

  She wasn’t going to convince him so she quit trying. She knew what these men were like. “Let my kids go, at least,” she said. “Let them walk over to the neighbor’s, where they’ll be safe.” She hoped to win their freedom before he became aware that she’d led him to the wrong house. After that, anything could happen.

  Jake whimpered. He was catching on—or what they were saying had confirmed what he’d feared since they left the store.

  “Mommy? I want to go home,” Mia said and began to cry.

  Laurel felt as if she was on fire, burning from the inside out. She’d never experienced such a sensation before—such a mixture of fury, righteous indignation, determination and fear. It was different from the last time she’d faced The Crew because there was a certain amount of resignation involved, too. She’d been expecting this for so long. “You’re going to be fine,” she said even though it was probably a lie.

  The man with the gun twisted around to face them. “Mommy’s right—if she and your friend here cooperate.”

  But she wasn’t cooperating. She was doing whatever she could to protect Virgil, Peyton and baby Brady. It didn’t make sense to put them at risk, too, but the fact that she was endangering her own children in the process made her clammy with sweat. What would this asshole do when he realized? Shoot them all and go after Virgil on his own?

  Even if he did, at least Virgil would have a chance to get away....

 
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