Chasing Claire (Hells Saints Motorcycle Club) (26 page)

BOOK: Chasing Claire (Hells Saints Motorcycle Club)
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Gianni extended his hand first.

Prosper returned the handshake. Gianni proceeded with introductions.

“This is a friend of ours, Dr. Vincent Abrino. He is here to offer his services.”

“What makes you think we need
services
?” Prosper kept his eyes on Gianni.

“Me. I brought him here,” Dolly moved to Gianni’s side. She wrung her hands again and her eyes leaked. A high-pitched frantic tone of pleading desperation took over her voice. “Reno needs him, Prosper. He might need something . . . he might need blood . . . he lost a lot of blood . . . I didn’t know . . . I don’t know . . . I don’t know if Jules . . . I don’t know how to help him . . .”

I knew exactly how she felt.

Because I felt it too.

I felt sick with that same desperation.

I went to stand beside her. Pinky and Glory, who were heading toward us from the kitchen house, had heard Dolly’s plea. Now they stood beside us as well. Flanking the doctor now on all sides, we stood and waited.

Prosper looked at the women. His women. Then his eyes met Gianni’s. Gianni brought his shoulders up to his ears and stretched out his arms with the palms up in mock surrender.

The gesture was so classically clichéd that it was almost comical. But the situation was too dire, too critical, and too desperate to be humorous.

We all looked back at Prosper, waiting and wondering what he was gonna do.

Prosper narrowed his eyes, rubbed his hand over his chin, and sighed.

Then he looked at the doctor.

“What’s in the cooler?”

“Type A negative plasma,” the doctor answered as if he were used to being questioned.

Prosper nodded. “Open it and the bag.”

The doctor turned to Gianni. Prosper saw that hesitation and didn’t like it. He addressed Gianni, with a hard challenge written all over his face.

“You got a problem with that?” Prosper punched out the words.

Gianni stood for a minute and looked Prosper in the eye. I felt a deep fear flood me. I was afraid that Prosper was not gonna play nice, and that Gianni was going to take his ball and go home.

“I got no problem, but be careful, my friend. I understand this is your family that we are talking about, and I understand family. But I am here on request, to offer my services. I didn’t come knocking
on anyone’s closed door. If these services are no longer required, we can just as easily leave,” Gianni spoke with deadly calm.

Dolly made a strangled cry next to me. Prosper’s gaze fell on her. Then he looked straight at me.

“Please, Prosper,” I whispered.

Prosper hesitated a moment longer, then he turned to Gianni.

“I understand why you’re here, and who brought you here. And I’ll be dealing with that shit later on.” He paused then and looked straight at Dolly. “Right now, though, I’m man enough to admit that we can probably use the help that your doctor, here, can provide. But, one of my own just got jumped in the goddamn cemetery with his mother at his side, and until he can tell me exactly what the hell happened, I am going to do what I need to do to keep this club and the rest of my family safe. So invited or not, doctor or not,
friend
or not, I’m still going to look in those fucking bags before I let you anywhere near Reno.”

Gianni gave a barely perceptible nod. “I understand.” Then he turned to his doctor. “Open them.”

Prosper quickly inspected the bags, then nodded to the clinic.

“Come with me. I got my boy, Jules, working on Reno now. Not sure how he’s going to handle interference.”

Gianni nodded and the three of them headed toward the door of the clinic while Dolly led the way.

I turned to Pinky and Glory and noticed for the first time that they had a fresh pot of coffee and a tray of sandwiches in their hands. The thought of eating made me sick, but I knew I was going to need the coffee.

“He’s alive,” I said. My throat felt jagged and raw from the pressure of holding in screams of despair and fear.

“And he’s gonna stay that way, honey.” My friend wrapped her arms around me.

Then the three of us followed the men into the building.

CHAPTER 41

W
e had been waiting in the front room of the clinic for what seemed liked days, but really it was just a few hours.

And a few hours was long enough.

Dolly and I sat together on the hard metal chairs. Throughout the afternoon, the brothers drifted in and out in a show of support. Someone was making sure that the coffee was kept fresh, and at one point a pack of cigarettes and a bottle of whiskey had been added to the tray. A constant stream of tobacco smoke and muffled voices drifted in through the open windows.

The Hells Saints and their families were holding a vigil for one of their own.

Pinky fussed around Dolly and me like a mother hen. She brought Dolly some clean clothes, but Dolly refused to change.

“I’ll change when my boy is out of danger,” Dolly had whispered without looking at her.

I understood her unwillingness to leave for even a moment, but I wished she would go and clean up.

I really did.

The sight and smell of Reno’s blood and God-knew-whatever-else all over Dolly like that made me feel ill. I leaned my head against the wall, sighed deeply, and almost gagged on the thick smell of dried gore.

Gianni had left us intermittently to go do whatever a mob boss
did in situations like this, but for the most part, he had endured the hard metal chairs and the loud incessant ticking of the clock, right alongside Dolly and me. His suit jacket was off and the stark white cuffs of his sleeves were rolled up to reveal strong dark forearms. His tie hung from his back pocket and the first two buttons of his shirt were opened.

I felt Gianni’s eyes on me and turned to look at him. His expression of deep sympathy and understanding touched me. I got up and began to pace the room, back and forth, back and forth. While I kept my eyes fixed mostly on the loudly ticking clock, I also watched the exchanges between Gianni and Dolly.

Dolly seemed to be barely aware of his presence, but Gianni watched her closely and anticipated her every need. He knew how she took her coffee and made her nibble from the food tray. Once, when Dolly shivered, Gianni got up to close the window. Then when he saw her fan herself, he opened it again. He remained solicitous and kind. There were several times over the course of those hours when Prosper arrived at the clinic door. He had checked in on us, then he had nodded to Gianni, and they left together. Each time the two men came back, there was a new hardness in their eyes and a grim set to their mouths.

Now the front boss got up and stood in front of Dolly while Prosper waited at the door.

“Come, Dolly. Your boy is going to be all right. Between that hulking Viking in there and my doctor, nothing is going to happen to him. Let’s go and get you cleaned up.”

Silence.

“Dolly?
Andiamo, cara mia
. Let’s go.”

Dolly looked confusedly at Gianni, as if she could not believe that he would dare suggest that she should leave her son.

Even to wipe the grim evidence of arterial blood off her skin.

Please. Please, listen to him.
The thought pounded through my brain.

Then Gianni nodded his head gently toward me. Dolly, more than a little annoyed with him, followed his gaze. When I felt her look at me, I turned to her and tried to smile in reassurance. But I just couldn’t manage to pull it off. Instead, I just stared dumbly at Dolly, my eyes taking in the horror of her blood-soaked countenance.

Dolly’s eyes trailed the length of me, assessing. Then she looked down at herself, perhaps seeing for the first time what the rest of us had been looking at for hours.

Her blood-spotted hands fluttered in her lap like birds. Then they reached for me.

“Claire, forgive me.”

I felt immediately contrite.

In her place, I would have done the same thing. I knew that Dolly was afraid that cleaning off Reno’s blood would be like washing away the man himself. Like tempting fate. She wanted to do nothing to turn the tide against him. I knew she was afraid that the dried crimson stain might be the last thing she would ever have of her only child.

It was crazy thinking.

Her thoughts were morbid and gruesome, and filled with faulty reasoning.

And they made perfect sense to me.

“I am going to change, honey. I’ll be right back.” When Dolly moved to get up, Gianni was immediately at her side. Prosper had returned once again and stood at the doorway.

When Reno’s mother walked past me, I reached for her hand. Dolly took both of my hands and covered them tightly with her own. The two of us, the two women who loved Reno with all of their hearts, held on to each other for dear life. We drew what strength
and hope we had left, pooled it together and sent that energy out to whatever God was listening. When Dolly bent her head to say the Our Father, I was shocked to hear the strong voices of Gianni and Prosper join ours.

A strong and sudden sense of doom and panicked guilt struck me.

“Stay, Dolly. You don’t have to wash up for me,” I whispered to her.

“No, honey. Gianni’s right. I want to be fresh and clean when I go in to see my boy. I’m just going to go freshen up a bit. Don’t let him die while I’m gone, honey. Promise me.”

I squeezed her hands tight.

“I promise.” My eyes shone bright with tears.

Then I watched Dolly and Gianni close the door behind them.

“Willow?” I turned to Prosper.

“She’s fine. Glory has her. She gave her a bath and put her to bed,” Prosper said softly. “You okay, honey?”

Three little words.

I fell apart, just for a moment. I sputtered and heaved and clutched at his shirt. I laid my head on his chest, drinking in the comforting familiar scent of him. While I felt his hands rub my back in small circular motions, I cried a minute’s worth of tears.

Then I righted myself and looked into his eyes.

“Is he going to make it, Prosper?” I sniffled.

“Hell, yeah, he is. No doubt in my mind, honey. No doubt. What’s that saying? Only the good die young? Sons of bitches like Reno, they are too damn mean to die.”

Prosper tried to smile at me.

But I didn’t even try to smile back.

Prosper cleared the deep rasp from his voice before he continued.

“That boy in there is tough, honey. He’s a fighter. You know that Jules knows his shit. All that time he spent in the field as a medic and all the brothers he’s patched up around here. Reno’s in
good hands, honey. And that doc that Gianni brought in, he works on his crew all the time. Best there is. Between the two of them, they’ve got every damn thing they need and more. Besides, Raine is in there helping too. You think for a minute that your sister is going let anything happen to your man? Reno’s going to pull through this.”

“It’s been a long time; he’s been in there a long time.” I could feel the adrenaline of anxiety shoot through my system and I began to shake.

Prosper pushed me away from him, but still held me tight and looked into my eyes. Then he said, “That’s a good thing, Claire. In this case, time is on our side.”

“I don’t understand.” My chest felt like it was going to burst from the fear that I had been keeping at bay.

“Means he’s fighting. Means he ain’t dead yet.”

Means he’s fighting. Means he ain’t dead yet.

I looked at the clock.

It had been four hours.

Four hours.

Four hours and four million years.

I didn’t know how to feel about time any more.

CHAPTER 42

L
eaning against the inside of the car door, Reno had watched through dull eyes as his mother fought back the panic. He wanted to call out to her and reassure her that things would be okay. But he didn’t have the strength for it. And really, Reno didn’t know if he was going to make it, he only knew that he wasn’t dead.

Yet.

But he also knew that he had lost a lot of blood and that he had been slipping in and out of consciousness. Pain and nausea radiated like hot jagged streaks of white lightning through his body. He fought to stay awake, but as soon as his eyes began to focus, they would close again. Thank God, his mother had somehow managed to take over the steering wheel. As he leaned against the passenger door, Reno had strained to listen for the sound of sirens, or the report of gunshots, or metal meeting metal, or anything at all that would signal danger, but all seemed clear.

He heaved a sigh of relief before he passed out again.

Now Reno’s eyes began to focus slowly. His consciousness was a slippery thing that he still could not get a firm hold on. The pain and loss of blood made it impossible for him to tell the difference between reality and fantasy. Reno teetered on the edge of darkness. When he momentarily broke through, he saw two faces hovering over him. Their distorted and disembodied features made him feel like he was looking through a fun house mirror. He tried to lift a
hand to reach up to them, but when he did, he felt a sharp burst of pain radiate from his shoulder.

Then the darkness came again.

Eventually, sounds began to break through the haze. The distant rumble of pipes, the hum of machinery, the soft cadence of voices weaving in and out of his dulled senses. The colorless ceiling above him faded to black and then came back again. The rectangular lighting directly overhead gave off an eerie yellow glow. He moved his head slightly and experienced an explosion of pain that snaked down his left side. When he inhaled, a fresh burst of something fresh and cool seemed to sharpen his dull senses.

Shit.

He was hooked up to an oxygen tank.

He hoped that he was not in a goddamn hospital.

A moment of panic surged through his body and he lifted both his wrists. Once he found them free of handcuffs, he relaxed.

His mother must have listened to him and driven him back to the compound.

Yeah, he must be in the clinic.

Thank God
, he thought, before he passed out again.

It was a fight to stay awake, but Reno had been shot before and he knew the drill.

BOOK: Chasing Claire (Hells Saints Motorcycle Club)
8.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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