Biker romance book bundl.., p.347

Biker Romance Book Bundle: 17 Full Length Novels, page 347

 

Biker Romance Book Bundle: 17 Full Length Novels
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  I found it amusing that Baker’s opinion on matters changed drastically after talking to me about the situation with the dead cop. In the past, I’d been referred to as skittish, scared, and over-the-top when it came to precautionary measures.

  My caffeine intake was typically to blame, at least according to Baker. He claimed my all-day consumption of coffee left me “on edge” and jittery, which, in turn, caused me to believe everyone was after me.

  I didn’t believe “everyone” was after me. Only the ones that were clearly after everyone, me included. I was informed. At times, I wish I wasn’t. If the general public knew what I knew about the government’s listening and watching abilities, it would make them skittish, too.

  “Reno’s idea wasn’t terrible,” Tito said. “But the existence of DNA remains, albeit diminished, when a body is decomposed through the use of acid. The acid must be disposed of somewhere, and wherever that somewhere is, the soil could be sampled, any DNA would be present. Dumping acid in the Mojave Desert isn’t a great idea.”

  Cash grinned from ear to ear. “What if the acid was dumped in the ocean? That shit would be diluted in a fuckin’ minute.”

  “Only problem with that is gettin’ the acid on a boat,” Reno retorted. “It’d have to be a 55-gallon drum. Loading something that big on a boat will raise a lot of eyebrows. ‘Round here, they’ll think your either smugglin’ a body, or smugglin’ dope. Either way, Coast Guard would be on you like shit on a wheel before you got that shit dumped.”

  Reno was right. A vessel large enough to house all the body parts would be huge. Loading it on a boat wouldn’t go unnoticed. Secondly, we didn’t own a boat.

  “A 55-gallon drum filled with fluid would weight five hundred pounds,” Tito declared. “It would be impossible to dolly it down the boardwalk and get it loaded without being noticed. Half of San Diego bay would be calling 9-1-1 before the boat left the dock.”

  “And, you’d have to wear one of those suits to keep that shit from splatterin’ on ya,” Reno added. “All the whale huggers would call the EPA if nothing else.”

  “I know you all think I’m overly cautious, but I can only come up with two plans I like. One is cremating the body. We don’t have access to a crematorium, so that’s pretty much out. The second is loading the concrete blocks onto a boat, taking the boat twenty miles out, and tossing them. We could carry the body parts onto the boat in beer coolers. Act like we’re taking a fishing expedition. The water’s two and a half miles deep out there. The only problem is we’d have to buy a boat.”

  “I like it,” Baker said. “Why don’t we rent a boat?”

  “Any rental boat would have a GPS on it,” I said. “They could use that data to take them right to the location where we dumped it. If we bought one, it wouldn’t have to be fitted with anything. As long as we don’t take our cell phones on the trip, they’d never know where we dumped the shit.”

  “As vast as the Pacific Ocean is,” Tito added. “The odds of anything being found would be in the trillions to one. Actually, taking depth into consideration, it would be incalculable. That’s the best idea, so far.”

  Baker looked at each of us. “Anybody have a connection at a mortuary?”

  “Crematory,” Tito said, correcting him. “A mortuary may organize the cremation service, but the crematory does the act.”

  “Okay,” Baker sighed. “Crematory.” He glanced from man to man. “Anyone?”

  “Can’t the ashes be checked for DNA?” Cash asked.

  Tito shook his head. “The eighteen-hundred degree temperature destroys any DNA evidence.”

  “That sounds like our best bet,” I said. “What about building an oven?”

  “Our welder is no longer with us, Goose,” Baker said. “We don’t have anyone that can fabricate steel.”

  Remembering that Ghost was gone wasn’t an easy thing to do. I hadn’t gone two or three days without seeing him since the day I met him in elementary school. The five of us had truly been inseparable. His absence was something I needed to continually remind myself of.

  I glanced at my watch. It was damned near five o’clock. I had somewhere I needed to be at six. Being late wasn’t an option.

  “The longer we bump our gums on this deal, the greater our odds are of getting caught,” I said. “Let’s make a goddamned decision. All we’ve done so far is waste precious time.”

  “What’s it matter?” Baker asked. “We’ve got all night.”

  “You might. I don’t. I’ve got something in the works.”

  His eyes narrowed. “What?”

  It was damned near as important as disposing of the dead body, but it was none of his business.

  “I’ll let you know as it gets closer to fruition,” I lied.

  “I’ve got one guy up north I can go talk to,” Baker said. “Might be able to do some good on a crematory.”

  “Up north as in San Clemente, or up north as in Seattle?” I asked. “It needs to be a visit that’s done in person, not on a phone. If you’re riding to fucking Seattle, we’ll still be dicking around with this in a month.”

  “Up north as in Oceanside,” he replied. “There’s a club up there that had a similar issue a while back. I’ll go talk their president.”

  “Outside the club? Fuck that.” I raised a brow. “How do we know he can he be trusted?”

  “He’s a former Navy SEAL, and he hates the government. I wouldn’t be talking to him if he couldn’t be trusted.”

  Cash looked at Baker. “Crip?”

  Baker nodded.

  I alternated glances between Cash and Baker. “Who the fuck’s Crip?”

  “President of the Filthy Fuckers MC,” Baker said.

  I chuckled. “That doesn’t mean shit to me. Sounds like a rag-tag bunch of turds.”

  “You wouldn’t say that if you met ‘em,” Baker said. “Brother Reno introduced me to him.”

  “Well lah-tee-dah,” I said mockingly. “I say we reach a decision in our next meeting or before.”

  “Motion?” Baker asked.

  I rolled my eyes. “I make a motion we reach a decision by this time next week, if not sooner. I make another motion we declare this meeting dead.”

  “Second,” Tito said. “This is making me nervous.”

  “If no one’s opposed,” Baker said. “We’ll reach a decision on or before next Wednesday’s meeting.”

  Baker pounded his fist against the coffee table. “This meeting’s adjourned.”

  I stood. “Let’s hope this Crip fucker knows someone or something.”

  Reno chuckled. “If anyone knows how to get rid of a dead body, it’ll be him. He’s left a pretty long trail of ‘em over the last few years.”

  I had no idea who “Crip” was, but my experience told me if he’d talked about it to others, he was full of shit.

  I glanced at what was left of my brotherhood and hoped, for once, that I was wrong.

  131

  Ally

  Bridgeport, Connecticut wasn’t brimming with options for a mate. The city of 150,000 was filled with construction workers, fishermen, and factory workers. The average income of the area was twenty grand a year, which fell well below the national average.

  Sifting through the population to find someone that was open-minded enough to accept me wasn’t as easy as one might think. The latter years of my adult life was spent with my dying father. What little time I had left I consumed by looking for a mate, but demographics and my taste in men prevented me from finding anyone suitable.

  I was left spending my weekend nights searching in the city’s outskirts. Clinging to the hope that my dick donors wouldn’t encounter me during the normal course of a day, I bounced from one remote seedy bar to another—and from man to man—satisfying my sexual urges, but never landing a single relationship.

  I knew Bridgeport, nor its inhabitants, were for me. When my father passed, I moved to where the men—and the money—were aplenty.

  Now, my life was much different. My days—and nights—were spent thinking about one man. It seemed my only concern was when I was going to see him again. Organizing those meetings through a dry erase board was nothing short of awesome.

  “It doesn’t frustrate you that you can’t just call him?” George asked.

  Holding my chilidog mere inches from my mouth, I paused. “Not at all.”

  He sat down across from me. “Is there a good reason you don’t have a phone? Before you say you can’t afford it, remember, you spend six hundred a month in here alone.”

  “The main reason?” I bit one-third of the hotdog off and ate it. “I think they get in the way of people living life. Everyone’s so concerned with them that they don’t pay attention to each other. It takes away from our ability to be human.”

  He seemed satisfied. After a moment of thought, he lifted his chin slightly. “You said main reason. Do you have other reasons?”

  I was so hungry I felt faint. I’d been up nearly all night looking at random stuff in the dark with my night vision goggles. “The police can track your movement through you cell phone’s GPS system. I don’t like that.”

  I took another bite. And another.

  “Why would something like that bother you?”

  Still clenching the remnants of the chilidog, I stared at him as if he was nuts. Chili oozed along the backside of my hand, and onto my arm. “That serial killer they caught a few weeks ago? Through DNA? They hoped to prove he was at two or three locations on certain dates, so they could charge him with two recent murders. So, they downloaded his phone data from the satellite. It provided a trail of everywhere he’d been. A highlighted line on a map. They found out he was right where they hoped he’d been on the dates in question. If he didn’t have a phone, they wouldn’t have known where he was. He could have denied it. I don’t like the thought of anyone being able to trace today’s steps six months from now.”

  He rubbed his chin. “What have you got to hide?”

  I finished my chilidog and contemplated my response. I couldn’t tell him the real reason. The reality of my concern, however, remained the same regardless.

  “My life,” I responded. “Everything about it. It’s nobody’s business but mine, and whoever I choose to let in. It’s definitely not the business of the police.”

  “I suppose not.”

  I wiped the chili from my arm with a napkin. “I wish I was born in 1920 or 1930. Things were so much different then.”

  “Life was easy back then,” he agreed.

  The chilidog I’d eaten was the same basic chilidog my father ate when he was a boy. His father—my grandfather—loved chilidogs, too. My grandfather’s love for the concoction was passed on to him through his father, who loved them even more. For roughly a hundred years, the chilidog remained unchanged.

  My chilidog proved that a century-old way of doing things was adequate, even today.

  “All those old movies I watch? I want life to be just like that. No cell phone, no computers. Just people living life. Can you imagine Breakfast at Tiffany’s if Holly Golightly was on her phone all the time, texting or updating her Facebook? If she was Instagramming pictures of her outfits, or her food? Posing for and posting selfies?”

  He laughed. “People take pictures of their food in here all the time.”

  “In some respects, I guess that’s good,” I said. “I mean, it’s good for your business. People see that crap on Instagram, or whatever, and they come in here. I just think it’s sad that that’s what our world has evolved into.”

  He stood. “It’s sad, but it’s true.”

  It was true. The world had evolved into a much less meaningful place. I wanted human interaction. To be touched by hands, not by a .GIF or a meme.

  As he walked away, I looked at the message board.

  Ally,

  A wise man once told me, “See with your heart, not your eyes.”

  I closed my eyes this morning.

  You appeared.

  I’ll be back at six o’clock.

  Goose.

  His words filled me with warmth.

  I wondered if he truly saw me when he closed his eyes.

  Or.

  If he knew my secrets. If that knowledge was drawing him closer. If his feelings were a ploy. If he was trying to protect what he believed was rightfully his.

  Time, I guessed, would tell.

  132

  Goose

  My motivation the see Ally was driven by my instinct to survive. In her absence, my heart ached. Being in her presence temporarily fixed what was broken. Having experienced both ends of what the spectrum offered, seeing her on a more frequent basis seemed to be the logical answer. I’d deal with the repercussions of my decision when and if they came.

  “Why are you single?” she asked.

  I pulled out my wallet and put a fifty-dollar bill under the salt shaker. “Where’d that come from?”

  She glanced at the money and then offered me a smile. “Thank you.”

  “You’re welcome,” I said.

  “It was just a question,” she explained. “You’re nice looking, have a pretty good personality, and you’ve got a nice dick. I want to make sure I didn’t make a grave mistake by riding your dick in the car the other night. Why are you single?”

  “Pretty good personality? Pretty good?” I chuckled. “Really?”

  “Yeah.” She nodded. “It’s pretty good. You’re a little stand-offish and you’ve got a bit of a temper.”

  “What member of the male species doesn’t?”

  “I don’t have a lot of experience with your species, personally. I can’t answer that accurately.”

  “Why don’t you have much experience? You’re nice looking, have a pretty good personality, and you’ve got a nice pussy,” I said mockingly.

  She laughed. “Answering a question with a question is a sign you’re hiding something, Goose. Why don’t you want to answer me?”

  I put my wallet in my pocket. “I’ll answer you.” I gave my response some thought, but not much. “I’m single by choice.”

  I didn’t know what else to say. It was true, I was single by choice. It certainly wasn’t by design. I was a marketable man and had been presented many opportunities to be in a relationship, most of which were declined. I’d only taken advantage of one of them, and it ended poorly.

  “Okay. You’re single by choice. Why do you choose to be single?” she asked. “We’re naturally drawn to the opposite sex. We have an engrained desire to breed, have offspring, and feel wanted. Needed. If these feelings are natural, why don’t you possess them?”

  I gestured toward the door. “Maybe I do.”

  A look of disappointment formed. “Where are we going?”

  “To my place.”

  “Oh. You’re going to take me home and stick your pretty dick in my mouth, so I’ll stop asking questions?”

  “No. My plan was to take you home, sit on the roof, and watch the sun set.”

  She reached for her purse. “I still want answers.”

  “I’ll give them,” I assured her.

  “We’re taking the bike?”

  “You’re following me. I’m not far from here.”

  “I thought you were in La Mesa. Mars, basically.”

  I chill ran the length of my spine. I was a private person. I hadn’t told her where I lived. The fact she knew made me a little nervous.

  More than a little.

  My eyes thinned. “Who told you I was in La Mesa?”

  “I don’t know. Somebody. You?”

  I hadn’t told her where I lived. I was sure of it. “I didn’t mention it.”

  She lifted her purse over her shoulder. “Someone did. I thought it was you.”

  “It wasn’t.”

  She shrugged. “Maybe it was Porter.”

  It made sense. He could have easily slipped and mentioned coming to my house for a barbeque. “Maybe it was.” I brushed it off as immaterial. “But, that’s not where we’re going. We’re going about ten minutes from here.”

  “Okay. I’ll follow you.”

  Ten minutes later, we were at the beach house. As we walked toward the steps that led to the roof, she gestured toward the rear entrance, which was on the other side of the house.

  “This is awesome,” she said. “Are you going to take me on a tour?”

  “Maybe later,” I lied. The development of trust took time. Although I was drawn to Ally, I hadn’t known her long enough to trust her. I was working on it, though. “We’re going to sit on the roof.”

  She seemed indifferent. “Okay.”

  I led the way up the stairs. She followed me onto the roof, pausing as soon as she reached it.

  She took a wide-eyed view of the deck. The westerly wind pinned her thin dress to her hips, giving a detailed outline of her perfect little pussy.

  My cock twitched in favor of the sight.

  “Did you do this?” she asked.

  “Huh?” I shifted my eyes away from her twat. “Do what?”

  Slack-jawed, she stared. “All the flowers and stuff?”

  I gazed at my accomplishment. A newly-constructed wooden deck gave the once flat roof various levels of depth. Other than a seating area and a walk path, the entire roof was taken up by a potted array of reds, oranges, blues, and yellows.

  A sense of pride filled me. “I sure did.”

  She looked around. “This is obviously a hobby of yours. One you truly enjoy.”

  I carefully grazed one of the California Poppies with my palm. “Not really. It’s more like therapy. It calms me. Keeps my head right.”

  The occupants of the roof deck, in their entirety, were reliant upon me for survival. In my absence, they would wither and die. With my care, they would flourish and thrive, providing years of pleasure in return.

  Caring for them—from seed to maturity—was therapeutic. In the end, they were an oblation for my sins.

  Seeing someone else enjoy my work provided a rare sense of accomplishment.

  I gestured to a concrete bench that overlooked the beach. “Have a seat. There’s beer, a bottle of wine, and a few other things in the coolers.”

 

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