Chapter Eight #2
around putting on her street clothes.
“What’s going on?” she asked as the door clicked behind him.
He locked it without looking at it. If a girl needed in,
she’d just have to knock.
Lottie’s face was pale.
“He’s here.”
“Ohmigod,” she breathed. “How do you know?”
“I know.”
“Are they—?”
“Just do your thing, Lottie. Let’s get you home.”
“But, are they—?”
He lifted both hands and framed her face.
Her eyelids went hooded and her body swayed to him.
Fuck.
Fuck.
She was so fucking his.
Mo fought how badly he needed to claim that and repeated his
order of, “Just do your thing, baby.”
It took her a beat.
But then she whispered, “Okay, Mo.”
That was his girl.
He pressed in lightly and let her go.
It was slow, he could tell she was concentrating on her
movements, but she walked back to her mirror.
Mo stood by the door, put his back to the wall and aimed his
eyes at the floor.
“You okay?” she called.
“Don’t think about me.”
“That’s impossible.”
Of course it was.
God, he needed to fuck her.
“Just focus,” he ordered.
“Right.”
“And not on me,” he added.
“Mm-hmm,” she mumbled loudly.
She was totally gonna focus on
him, just be quiet about it.
He kept his gaze to the floor.
Her voice broke the silence.
“You can’t tear him apart when you get to him, Mo. I’m not
visiting my man in the pokey and I hear conjugal visits are hard to arrange.”
His neck still bent, he turned his head her way.
“Lottie, shut up.”
“You got it,” she whispered.
He looked back to the floor.
Lottie went back to being Lottie.
She took off her makeup. Brushed out her hair.
Saw to business.
Including the business of giving him room to do what he had
to do.
Soon.
Fuck.
Soon.
Thank Christ.
Now all he had to do was stop himself from committing murder
between now and getting her on her back in her bed.
With what he’d been through since meeting Charlotte
McAlister…
Piece of cake.
He’d been wrong.
It was not a piece of cake.
What he had not been wrong about was that this was their
guy.
Threat neutralized, Lottie was home, asleep, had no idea he
was not there, and Axl was sitting in her living room just in case she woke up
and found out he was not there, Axl could tell her what was going down and
she’d continue to feel safe, not all of a sudden without a bodyguard.
Mo was in the guy’s house with Hawk and Smithie.
The man had been identified by Smithie and his bouncers as
an irregular regular. He didn’t come often, but they’d all seen him, more than
a few times. Too innocuous to be red flagged, they’d never have called it.
Until Mo had.
In his house, there was no sick-fuck shrine to Lottie.
What they found after Jaylen asked the man for a word, he
tried to bolt, Axl locked him down, they detained him in Smithie’s office and
got his wallet off him, then sent a team to his house, a team that included
Hawk, were a number of very disturbing journals.
And a basement that was being equipped to do all the things
to Lottie he’d written that he intended to do.
Yes. He was building his confidence and preparing to follow
through.
That was part of his visit to the club that night. Keep an
eye on his mark, or now his marks, build his hate and assess the lay of the
land.
The man was still in Smithie’s office.
This huddle was about next moves.
“Any involvement of law enforcement at this juncture that
has any hope of sticking would include perjuring ourselves repeatedly,” Hawk
noted.
“I’m down with that,” Smithie said.
Mo said nothing.
He was still trying to get out of his head how much plastic
sheeting had been put up in the basement.
And the neatly aligned instruments laid out on a table.
But Hawk knew Mo would never perjure himself to the cops.
Unless ordered to do so for the good of the mission.
Or to protect someone who meant something to him.
So he didn’t have to answer.
“Second option is I contact a man I know who’s adept at
disappearing people,” Hawk went on.
Mo focused more fully on his boss.
“I’m down with that too,” Smithie declared heatedly.
He was still seeing plastic sheeting as well.
Not to mention that table of instruments.
“I’m not talking a hit, Smithie. I’m talking forced
relocation where the chance of return is nil. This includes check-ins to make
sure that nil stays nil. For an added cost, it includes permanent
incapacitation,” Hawk explained.
“I’m down for that too, even if I don’t know what permanent
incapacitation means if it doesn’t include this sick fucking fuck
being very fucking dead.”
Right.
Smithie was holding on by a thread.
Mo knew the feeling.
“No fingers. No tongue. No eyes. A combination. Or in
extreme circumstances, no legs or paralysis,” Hawk told him.
“And again I’m feelin’ like I hit
the lottery because none of these choices sound bad to me,” Smithie returned.
“Smithie, you would have to live with that,” Hawk pointed
out.
“And you think this’ll be a problem?” Smithie demanded to
know.
“I think right now you’re pissed as fuck and freaked as hell
and all that is on top of you being worried, with that increasing with every
day this guy went uncaptured and every letter you got. So I’m not sure you’re
thinking straight,” Hawk retorted.
“Tell me, Hawk, you perform some magic with Mitch or Slim
and they find cause to search this house legally and find what we found, what
happens to this guy?” Smithie asked, calling up Hawk’s buds, Mitch Lawson and
Brock “Slim” Lucas, two DPD cops, two good men and the first ones Hawk went to
if he needed law.
“I don’t have the power of clairvoyance, Smithie,” Hawk told
him.
“Me either. But I’ll tell you this, a sick fucking fuck like
this guy has to do something sick fucking fucked up to be fucking
locked away forever, where he needs to be,” Smithie shot back. “And seein’ as that’s not gonna
fuckin’ happen, not this time, he gets caught, he maybe does some time, and
that’s a big maybe, since, so far, he hasn’t really committed a crime.”
“Those letters are threats, he used the postal service to
send them, and that’s definitely a crime,” Hawk pointed out.
“That’s thin and we all know it,” Smithie spat.
They did, so Hawk nor Mo said anything.
Smithie kept going.
“But say he does some time. He gets out, fixates back on Mac
or some other girl, and manages to get his shit together before someone finds
out. And then some girl, if she’s found before she’s made dead, has a lifetime
of having to deal with something that she didn’t get a say in, like I got a say
in having a lifetime of living with what we decide for this guy tonight.”
Smithie shook his head. “I’ll take my demons. I won’t have some woman facing
hers.”
“Smithie—” Hawk tried.
Smithie cut him off. “Or he gets off on the insanity plea,
because there’s no arguing the guy is fucked right the fuck up, and he’s sent
to a looney bin. Gets medicated. Gets therapy. Gets ‘cured.’ And that same end
scenario happens, just after he goes off his government-funded meds and
remembers he’s a whackjob.”
“So your vote is he disappears,” Hawk deduced.
“My vote is the only vote that counts, motherfucker, seein’ as I’m payin’ for this
shit,” Smithie retorted.
“And Mo and me will know and we’ll have to keep our mouths
shut and live with those demons for your choice too, Smithie,” Hawk returned
fire.
At this juncture, Smithie glanced at Mo before he looked
back at Hawk. “Can you share why your man is in on this discussion?”
“He has a say,” Hawk replied.
“I get that, seein’ as he’s here,”
Smithie said. “I’m askin’ why.”
“Because I called him in,” Hawk answered.
Smithie looked back at Mo.
Mo just stared at him.
“Shit, you fell for her,” Smithie muttered.
Mo said nothing.
Smithie looked him up and down and his brows drew together.
“And she fell for you?”
Mo remained quiet.
“Of course she did,” Smithie muttered. “You’re you. Before I
even saw you, coulda drawn a picture a’ you, someone
asked me to conjure up Mac’s dream man.”
Well…
Hell.
Something occurred to Smithie, his eyes went to the ceiling
before coming back to Mo and his hands went to his hips.
“Do not get any thoughts in your head, motherfucker. She’s
got talent. She’s a headliner. She was born for the stage.” He took a hand from
his hip, pointed it at Mo, and declared, “You are not tellin’ her she can’t dance.”
Mo felt his lips thin.
“There!” Smithie jerked his finger at Mo, not missing Mo’s
slight movement. “You’re one of those guys! Christ!” He threw up both hands. “I
thought I was done with those guys. Jack didn’t mind his woman stripping.”
Mo had no clue who “Jack” was. He didn’t remember Lottie
telling him about one of the women who had a man named Jack.
He still said nothing.
“And what about you?” Smithie asked Hawk. “Not real
professional, one of your boys tags the woman he’s guarding.”
“It’s been platonic,” Hawk ground out.
“Right,” Smithie said.
Mo was done.
With a number of things.
What they were discussing right then the least of them.
“I’ve touched her, that way, once. Tonight. When I needed
her to focus and I put my hands on her face. Once,” Mo growled.
“Lottie wanted a new bodyguard so we could start things up, but no one could be
on her, but me. We held off. Now we need to make a decision about this guy
because it’s done and that means my job is done which means I can claim my
woman, so I’m done with this chat.” He turned to Hawk. “What do you want to
do?”
“What do you want to do?” Hawk asked calmly.
“I want him dead.”
Hawk didn’t even blink.
“But I’m pissed as fuck and I’m tweaked as hell right now
which means I can’t fully get behind that,” Mo continued. “So I want you to
call Lawson and Lucas and get his ass in jail. We really got no choice but to
let justice take its course, not that I can’t live with the other option, or
Smithie can’t, or you can’t, but because I’ll probably have to explain it to
Lottie and she won’t be able to.”
“Shit, fuck, you just had to bring Mac into it,” Smithie