Chapter Ten
Kylo
This was fucking ridiculous.
All because of some coincidence.
There weren’t hundreds of assisted living places in the area. And Rue’s grandmother, Claudia, seemed to have finer tastes; of course she wanted to live in a nice, new facility if she could.
The problem was, now Caymen and Huck had suspicions and were in each other’s ears about it.
Which led to me decked out in all black in a borrowed nondescript black sedan belonging to one of the club’s old ladies, parked on Rue’s street, watching her house like a fucking stalker.
At first, Caymen said he was up for the job. But I’d pulled rank on him. Huck, surprisingly, trusted me enough to not let my feelings get the better of me.
So, yeah, I was the one tailing Rue. Someone who was already anxious enough and didn’t need to be worrying about seeing strange cars around everywhere she went. But if it had to be someone, I wanted it to be me. At least she wouldn’t be scared of me.
The thing was, I was right about Rue. I knew I was.
Three days of following her only seemed to prove that.
She went to work and went home. She occasionally went to pick up take-out or force her lazy dog on a walk (which usually just meant about five yards off of the driveway and back, and even then, she was practically dragging the dog back into the house), and the newest trip was to a large brick building complex.
The kind that winds around and immediately disorients you.
I didn’t know who the fuck built those kinds of places, but they needed to find new vocations.
Rue parked and got out at four different buildings to read the signs listing the offices before she finally found where she was going, parked, and buried her face in her hands for a few minutes, trying to pull it together before she went inside.
Once I was sure she was in, I went up to the sign, snapping a quick picture, then going back to my car.
I scanned the names, plugging them into a search engine until I was pretty sure I knew where she’d gone.
Dr. Alison Jones.
A psychiatrist.
Likely to fiddle with her meds since she was struggling.
In what world was this girl, who had one friend and one family member and debilitating anxiety, some sort of cold-blooded criminal mastermind?
And the theory that she’d inherited the gig from her grandmother was even more absurd.
Did old people sometimes run criminal empires? Sure. But it wasn’t a common thing. The underbelly of the world was a young person’s gig.
Even not accounting for her age, Claudia seemed like a fun, harmless, horny old woman—not someone who even knew how to hold a gun, let alone understand the intricacies that come with importing them from other countries.
I understood that as a president, Huck had to entertain even the most asinine ideas. In the same vein, Caymen was used to running shit for him and his brother, another position of power, with all the worries that come with that.
They were just being overly cautious.
If I did my part for a few days—no matter how scummy it made me feel—then maybe the part where everyone was suspicious of Rue would be over.
A flash of light had me looking up to see Rue already making her way out.
I guess this kind of shrink wasn’t the kind to sit and talk about your feelings; just whip out the prescription pad and give you what you needed to feel better.
I slid down low but was still able to watch Rue as she exhaled hard and looked helplessly out at the sky, her dark blue eyes sad enough to make me want to say Fuck it to the rules, hop out of the car, and pull her into my arms.
Before I could, her head ducked, and she got in her car, drove to the pharmacy, got a bag of chips, and ate the whole thing in her car as she waited for her meds to get filled.
Only after all that was done did she make her way to Vital Greens, where Traeger had clearly been holding down the fort while she took care of her appointments.
As she climbed out, she looked long and hard toward the ground behind the parking lot where two big grooves were worn into the grass.
Like from a truck pulling there over and over.
And I knew.
I knew down to my fucking bone marrow and the stem cells that made it up that this was something Rue was tangled up in, not something she orchestrated.
There was one good way to tell.
I had to be there for the next delivery of plants.
Judging by the time passed already and Rue’s mounting anxiety, it had to be soon. I just had to keep tailing her until then. Once I cleared her of involvement, well, that was when things got sticky, wasn’t it?
Because she wasn’t going to be able to just keep being in the dark.
Huck was going to want to talk to her, question her about the crew that was using her.
Sure, we had our crew on it. And we had a local hacker digging up anything else that we couldn’t.
But Rue had insider knowledge. She could tell us not only the hierarchy, but how they all interacted, if there were weak spots we could exploit, where exactly the supply was coming from, how much product there was, and what time the shipment hit the port, which port.
All the shit we would need to know to either cut their supply off at the knees, forcing them to either move or take up a new trade, or, yeah, in the extreme… take them out.
The call belonged to Huck and the OG members. They’d been around the block a lot more times than the rest of us.
From what I could tell, things had been rocky the first few years, but they kind of found a safe stride after linking up with our sister chapter in California.
They had guys who were willing to hit up all of the gun shows in the South, load up on untraceable shit, and bring the bulk back to us (for a cut).
Then, on their way back to California, they’d hit some more shows and sellers to have a supply to sell there.
We, in turn, sold what we had to Zayn—an international arms dealer. It allowed us to stop running around to try to find buyers, potentially getting ourselves into tricky situations during supply drops to them. It also afforded us a fuckton of free time.
Hence my boredom.
Objectively, it wasn’t that big of a deal for there to be a crew who was running small amounts of guns to other local organizations.
Or even if they had buyers further north.
Most gun trade was done in the South because of lower regulations and the ports.
From there, people ran guns up and through the country.
It didn’t seem like Huck was overly concerned if that was the case, if these guys just wanted to use the port for ease of access then take their actual business to other states.
The issue was if they were trying to destabilize the local trade, since we did still deal with some of the crews in the area—just at a smaller scale than Huck and his original crew did back in the day.
Or, of course, if they thought they were going to take over with Zayn for us.
That shit was not going to stand, that was for sure.
At this point, though, we had more questions than answers.
I could practically hear Huck’s voice in my head: Rue could get us answers.
The only thing worse than just questioning her would be trying to actually use her, force her to get more information than she already had.
There was one thing I knew. And that was the bait always ended up dead.
My stomach twisted hard at that thought.
It was fine.
I wasn’t going to let that happen.
She wasn’t going to get hurt on my watch.
—
I spent the next few days stuck in a hot car, guzzling electrolytes and eating shitty protein bars as I sat on Vital Greens and Rue’s house as well as followed her on any errands she ran.
They were few and far between, though.
And judging by how she seemed to be dragging her feet anywhere she went, I figured maybe the new meds were coming with an adjustment period that made her sluggish and tired.
To avoid any accusations from the club, I made no contact with her and kept a detailed notebook of all her movements. I fucking noted down when she went in and out of the greenhouses to water and when she let her dog out to pee at home, for fuck’s sake.
With watching her so closely, I could see things I might have otherwise missed about her, too.
Like how she seemed to get tighter and tenser with each passing day.
Like how she whipped around to look whenever she heard the chug of a large truck.
Like how she jumped at shadows and hugged her arms around herself.
Each day it grew worse and worse until, finally, one evening… an unmarked freight truck pulled into the empty lot of Vital Greens.
My back stiffened as I reached for the binoculars.
It was go time.