Vulnerable (Barons of Sodom) (9 page)

BOOK: Vulnerable (Barons of Sodom)
4.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“T-Pain, dear. You seem distraught. Why don't you mosey on
home?”

 

No sooner had Penny confiscated Tuck's glass then there came
a series of noises from the parking lot—so quickly in succession that it was
hard to tell whether they indicated violence or joy. The slamming of a car
door, the sound of screams, a loud bang...after a collective beat of confusion,
the Barons rushed out into the stale Texas night. Tuck, wobbling, was the last
to rush after them.

“Oh my GOD!” Bridie screamed.

The first thing he saw was the young ward, huddled over a
fallen body. Athena stood over her, gripping her by the shoulders and squinting
around the lot.

“What happened? Who saw?” cried Spivey, his voice flinty and
commanding as was typical. A few club-members thought quickly and began to case
the perimeter of the parking lot, knives out. Tuck struggled for clarity behind
his whiskey haze. He thought he saw the shadowy shape of a figure running into
the dark field beyond the bar—but he couldn't be sure.

“Jesus, Tuck. Don't just stand there. Take her inside, won't
you?” called Athena, from where she still huddled over Bridie. The little one
seemed rooted to her spot over the victim, who Tuck saw now was either dead
already or mortally wounded. A lone ambulance cry rang out in the distance,
puncturing the night. He lurched toward the person on the ground, toward
Bridie.

“I don't recognize him,” Athena murmured for his benefit,
still rubbing Bridie's back with comforting strokes. “Bridie? Who is this man?”

It was hard to tell. A neat gunshot—looked like a sniper's
shot, in fact—had landed squarely in the center of the victim's forehead. His
eyes were open, stunned, blue but lightless. Sandy hair, freckles. A young man.
But skinny, practically gaunt. Bending low, Tuck noted a plodding path of
track-marks up and down his right arm.

“Bridie?” Athena asked again. “Who was he?”

“Looks like a no-good dope fiend to me,” piped Spivey, who
had appeared at the little gathering. “Probably owed someone money.”

“But he doesn't look tortured or nothing.”

The ambulance was getting closer. Tuck understood then that
time was of the essence. He bent low, and with fumbling hands rooted through
the dead man's pockets.

“What the fuck are you doing, Lieutenant? You want us all to
go to jail?!”

Finding a cardboard wallet, Tuck nimbly moved his fingers
through a crumpled folio of photobooth pictures—a baby, a Husky puppy, a woman
with braids in her hair and crooked teeth. He slid the picture gently from its
slot, then proceeded to wipe down the folio with the back of his handkerchief.

“Bridie,” Tuck asked then, holding the picture up so the
girl could see. “Is this your aunt? Your aunt who died?” Bridie fluttered her
eyelids, looking dazed. She reached for the picture, her hands grazing Tuck's
as she clasped it in her long, pretty fingers.

“Yeah,” she said, confused.

“Hey, geniuses? The fuzz'll be here any second! Don't you
think we better
scram
?” Yak yelled to the team over the purr of his Harley's
humming engine as he secured the chin-straps of his helmet with fumbling
fingers. The other Barons rallied at this cry, racing toward their own
motorcycles. It was an instinct bred deep in a man outside the law: avoid the
stiffs, at all costs. And especially avoid the police.

“We probably should go,” said Athena, her voice comforting
in its lucidity. She put her hand again on the small of Bridie's trembling
back. “Let's go, sugar.”

“Wait,” the little girl murmured. She was eyeing Tuck, who now
swayed on his feet. “He's drunk as a skunk, he can't drive.”

“Well we can't
all
ride mine.” Athena sounded
impatient. She, too, had a record she wasn't interested in rehashing with the
boys in blue.

“I'll wait, then. Till he sobers up.”

“That's stupid, Bry. He can make his own way, he's done it
before.”

“I don't mind,” Bridie said. “And I'm not afraid of the
police.”

The sirens were upon them now, screeching and furious. Red
and blue light danced over Dixie's facade.

Wavering one more moment, Athena looked from her best friend
to her new charge. Bridie couldn't sense what she was thinking, and Tuck's gaze
was nothing but opaque. But Athena was aware of the gravity in this exchange.
It felt like she was giving something up, leaving these two beautiful people
alone here,
together.
But she rallied, as she had to, as she always did.
She got on her bike and kicked off from the ground just as three cruisers drove
into the parking lot.

“What now?” Tuck managed, but Bridie was ahead of him. She
clasped his wrist and pulled him back towards the entrance of the bar.

“Well, now it's just you and me,” she said. “That gonna be a
problem?”

Chapter Eighteen

 

 

DET. RAMIREZ
: How did you like your sandwich?
Pastrami alright?

 

BRIDIE
: What're you, detective? A New Yorker?

 

DET. RAMIREZ
: My mother. Why?

 

BRIDIE
: Pastrami ain't too chic around these parts,
is all. It's nice. Like a peppery piece of ham.

 

DET. RAMIREZ
: Bridie, did the Lieutenant kill that
man in the parking lot? The night you first went to Dixie's?

 

BRIDIE
: Excuse me?!

 

DET. RAMIREZ
: Did Tucker LaRouche lay a hand on this
man? The one you recognized, from your first police interrogation? He was a
friend of your aunt's. He was one of Caroline's dealers. We need to know,
Bridie. Tucker was a violent man, you knew this all along. Did he hurt him, in
any way?

 

BRIDIE
: But why would Tuck have done a thing like
that? This all seems awfully out of left field, Detective Ramirez. One minute
it's rye bread, the next it's...listen. I'm not saying another word without a
lawyer present. I know I may look like a brainless floozie to you, but I know
my rights.

 

DET. RAMIREZ
: I didn't mean to offend you, Ms.
Calyer. It's an unsolved murder—we're just asking questions.

 

BRIDIE
: Let me ask you one then, mister. Where was Gil
Cannon that night? Y'all have him accounted for? Policing? Somewhere along his
“East Side”?

 

(Prolonged silence)

 

BRIDIE
: Ha, I thought so. Now you boys sit tight.
Gonna make me a phone call.

Chapter Nineteen

 

 

Back inside Dixie's, the bar was silent. In the hubbub, all
the other patrons had either left or resigned themselves to the grimy back
booths. There was no music. Penny had abandoned the bar to speak with a few
officers outside the door. She now made sweeping gestures back toward all the
people inside.

“Penny's a good woman. She'll account for all of us,” Tuck
murmured. Bridie'd finagled a cup of oily black coffee from the kitchen, and
Tuck now contemplated this ruefully. He much preferred to sleep off his
benders.

“How did you know?” Bridie asked, swishing a straw around
the rim of her own Coke. “To look for the picture like that. Why would you
think to do that?”

Tuck murmured something inaudible. Bridie jostled his arm,
not unkindly.

“Look sharp, Lieutenant. I know you can't be that drunk.”

“What do you know about drunk, little girl?” A part of him
felt the inkling to flirt, but Tuck couldn't shake the image of the dead man
out in the lot. The situation had changed, yet again. Tuck was suddenly aware
of a deep fatigue. He wanted nothing more now than the dark folds of his cot, a
space to think, to dream.

“You know I knew plenty. Did you know my aunt?” In that
moment, Tuck saw how hopeful Bridie's beautiful eyes were. How eager she was,
in her heart of hearts, to unravel the mystery. The Rider softened.

“It's the kind of thing that comes with the job,” he
conceded. “I read the newspaper today. There's a picture of your Aunt, looks
like you. You put two and two together.”

“But you clearly think all the murders are connected. Why?”

“Guy outside was one of your aunt's dealers, right? That's
why you recognized him, isn't it? Just like the guy she got killed with? Too
suspicious, for a sleepy town like this. We've got our finger on the pulse of
all the organized crime—there's not even a big drug culture. Too strange to be
a coincidence, I guess.”

Bridie took a thoughtful swallow. “I saw that man again, not
with my Aunt. They showed me his photo in the interrogation room. Said I
recognized him, then before I knew it they were shipping me off blindfolded to
your mountain.” She swiveled the whole of her petite little body so she was
facing him full-on. Her legs splayed slightly apart on the barstool, and Tuck
struggled not to look at the dark fold between them. The Rider now felt a
second or third wind coming on, the same way he felt his bike's engine hum to
life, sliding the keys into the ignition. There was just something about this
girl...

Penny chose this moment to mosey toward the pair, two
officers in tow. Bridie bent low, shielding her body away from the men. He
wondered if either of them recognized her from her recent time at the station.
Waco Police couldn't be that big.

“Either of you folks see or hear anything unusual in the
bar, preceding the incident outside? We're looking for statements.”

Tuck took the lead. “I ran outside when I heard the
commotion, but I told the missus to stay indoors.” He spoke in a thick
hillbilly drawl, taking pains to cover the Barons crest on his t-shirt as he
spoke. “Fraid I don't have nothing helpful to say. Just saw that poor man
there, dead as a knob on the ground.”

The questioning officer squinted in response, but his
companion put a guiding hand on his shoulder. He bent low to whisper something
into his partner's ear. Following this, both men straightened, tipped their
hats, and ambled away.

To his shock, when Tuck turned back to Bridie he saw that
the girl was struggling to contain a giggle. For the first time since they'd
been introduced, if one could call it that, she looked like a carefree girl.
Tuck cracked a goofy grin in response.

“Didn't know you were such a great actor, Lieutenant.”

“It comes and goes, ma'am,” he drawled. They burst into a
peal of giggles together—so loud that the officers turned back toward them and
peered over their aviators.

“And that's our cue, ward.” Tuck stood. The slimy coffee had
worked its magic—he wasn't exactly stone cold sober, but he felt he could
manage a straight line. Bridie hopped off the stool and followed his path.
“Back to the homestead.” As they moseyed out the cowboy doors—as innocently as
either could manage—Penny shot the pair a sly little wink, which Tuck pretended
to ignore.

“You ever been on a motorcycle?”

“Well I took one getting here, didn't I?”

“Smartass.”

Together they neatly side-stepped the patch of asphalt a few
other officers had cordoned off with police tape. The body had been moved, but
a rudimentary chalk outline remained in the dust. And a stain of blood, still
shiny.

“That man. He wasn't a friend of yours, was he?”

“Oh, Lieutenant.
Friends
has never been a word I use
lightly.”

Tuck slid the key into the ignition and offered Bridie his
riding helmet. The air was humid. When he reached up to adjust the straps
around her much smaller head, his fingers felt the fine gloss of sweat emerging
along her temples. Bridie smiled up at him while he felt below her chin. He
felt he could feel her leaning toward him then, her body arching in his
direction like a flower to sunlight.

“Athena doesn't drive like me,” Tuck said, his voice low. “I
just want you to be prepared.” He mounted the bike and closed his eyes as he
felt her little body clamor up behind him. Her warm, slightly sticky legs
clamped around his middle. The flat pan of her stomach and the swell of her
breasts burrowed into his back. Her slender, smooth arms reached low—lower than
he would have expected, really—and cradled his taut midsection, just a few
inches shy of the bulge in his pants that was fast growing larger. Then she
breathed a hot, still-whiskey-soaked breath into his waiting ear: “I'm
prepared, these days. I'm always, always prepared.”

It was hard to focus. The road blurred in front of and
behind him as he drove. All of Texas (time, space...) seemed concentrated on
the Honda, and the girl who gripped his waist while he rode it. Since he rarely
rode with a passenger, Tuck was suddenly aware of the new weight as they glided
across the flatlands. Together, they were heavy. The pair of them made gravity.

Tuck could hear nothing but the loud sputter of the engine,
but he imagined Bridie whispering things into his ear: sweet, sexy, dirty
nothings, more stuff of his fantasies. But then he reminded himself—this wasn't
a dream. She was really behind him, and this was her body, and something might
happen tonight. He felt like a fucking high school nerd—all worried about
getting the girl.

As they pulled into the camp Tuck took note of the
overwhelming silence once the engine had cooled. The gang had gone to bed, it
seemed—there were no windows lit in either the big house or the rooms above the
garage. Checking his watch, he realized they'd stayed out longer than intended.
It wouldn't be long before dawn crept over the earth.

They sat for a moment in the silence, waiting for the road
thrum in their ears to give way to cicadas and the nighttime songs of various
Texas critters. Bridie, Tuck realized, was panting and trembling behind him.
Still road-shocked.

“You are much faster than Athena,” the girl stuttered. Her
hands remained locked about his midriff. Unthinkingly, Tuck put his own palms over
her fingers. They sat like this a moment, in the summer night. He held on to
the quiver that now ran through his whole body, feeling her breathing on his
damp neck.

“It's late,” Bridie said finally, after what felt like ten
minutes, “and Athena might worry.”
Tucker still stayed quiet. He waited.
There was something about this girl...

When Bridie still made no move to dismount, Tuck gently took
her hand and placed it—lightly—over the throbbing erection in his jeans. He
leaned his head back then, shaking out his hair, aiming his gaze up at the
stars. He waited again.

He reminded himself that he could ostensibly make her do
anything, here in the quiet woods. No one was there to judge or see. He could
take her, as he'd planned to only yesterday. He could have his way with her,
and no one would be the wiser. The thought gave him both a thrill and a twist
in his stomach.

Bridie's hand was still on his jeans, but he became aware of
a pulse along his back, where her heart lay. She radiated heat from every pore.
And then, to Tuck's almost impossible pleasure, the ward moved her hand up and
across his pants, rubbing his member through the denim. He grew at her touch.

Tuck nearly cried out from the wave of pleasure, the
fervent, eager little movements her hand made along his crotch. He felt his tip
grow wet with precum. He gasped, and then began to buck and thrust against her
palm and fingers. “Please,” the Rider heard himself beg, “Oh please, Baby. Let
me get inside of you. Oh, Jesus.”

In response, Bridie took another hand and reached up to cup
Tuck's stubbly chin. She swiveled his face towards her own, so their eyes met
over his shoulder. Her body had seemed so nubile, nearly virginal, but her eyes
told a different story: Tuck knew immediately that this little woman knew
exactly what she was doing.

He kissed her then, reaching a powerful hand upward to
cradle her soft cheek. His muscular arms bulged with the effort to contain her.
Her mouth was warm and giving, all welcome. He sucked on the plump part of her
lower lip, before moving his own mouth down. He twisted on the bike to reach
her neck, his lips roving. He sought to tilt her head all the way backward, so
he could drink in as much of her body as possible.

Then, Bridie took the biker's hand and snaked it along her own
thigh, placing it finally on the rounded, damp patch of her pubis. She wasn't
wearing underwear, Tuck discovered with an electric thrill. And like her mouth,
her pussy was warm and improbably wet. He pressed one thick finger into the pad
of her clitoris, beginning to rub in quick, deep circles.

Like he had moments before, Bridie nearly cried out—but he
shut her pleading mouth with an ardent kiss. Tuck was now facing his woman
fully on the bike. His own straining cock rubbed along the naked expanse of her
thigh. He moved his hands down and gripped her supple cheeks, so hard that he
could imagine his fingers leaving marks.

“Lie down,” he commanded. “Lie down, and spread your legs.”
The girl did so. She flung her lovely body across the back of his bike's seat,
so her arms and head draped almost off the back of the bike. Tucker all but
tore the thin linen dress off her body, peeling the cloth up and over her head
so she lay there naked, body glinting pale and perfect in the moonlight.

Tuck took one reverent moment to drink her in, the contours,
the sweet hills and valleys of Bridie's frame. But the girl was already humping
his hand with abandon, nudging her pussy up and into his waiting palm. His
other hand still gripped her ass tight. She cooed and yelped at an increasing
pitch.

Tuck scooted himself farther back, so his own ass touched
the handlebars. Then he pushed one rough finger into her waiting folds,
relishing the feel of her juices as they snaked along his wrist. Bridie bucked
again, so hard this time that her head and arms flung back against the bike's
wheels. Tuck slid a second finger into her pussy. He watched her pert little
nipples stiffen with pleasure, her swollen mouth form the shape of a joyful,
'O' as she got close. For a few moments he slid his fingers in and out, up and
out, fast and hard along the rise of her G-spot.

“I want you to come for me, Baby. I want you to come so
fucking hard you forget your name.”

Bridie opened her eyes then, looking briefly startled. But
then she reached a hand down and grasped her lover's dripping wrist. Looking
straight into his eyes and drawing his fingers as deep inside her as they could
possibly go, she came with a shudder, flooding the seat of the Harley with a
warm burst of cum.

As her body lay shuddering, Tuck bent low to kiss her
still-throbbing clit. When she quivered at the contact, he moved his kisses
outward, brushing his lips against the quivering skin of her thighs, the
expanse of her bare stomach, the swells of her breasts. He sucked her left nipple
for a long time, positioning his body so he could cradle her in both hands.
Bridie contoured to him, wrapped her body around his. A coyote howled in the
distance like some sort of twisted finale fanfare.

Though he was still hard as a rock, Tuck fell spent over his
lover. He felt her heartbeat again, through the thin layer of his t-shirt.
Neither of them spoke for what felt like ten minutes. Bridie's eyes fluttered
with sleep. He kissed her earlobe lightly.

“Well,” Tuck said finally.

“Don't say anything,” Bridie whispered. She grasped him a
little tighter, though he felt a kink coming up in his neck from their awkward
situation on the bike. Sure enough, at the horizon Tuck could discern grey
morning rays coming up through the trees. Soon, it would be morning. Soon, the
camp would quicken with activity, and they'd have to explain...whatever this
was....to someone.

Other books

Midnight Ride by Cat Johnson
The Elder Origins by Bre Faucheux
Follow the Wind by Don Coldsmith
Those Who Favor Fire by Lauren Wolk
My Name Is Mina by Almond, David
Desperate Measures by Staincliffe, Cath
When the Walls Fell by Monique Martin
Chosen by West, Shay