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Authors: Jeff Shelby

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BOOK: Wicked Break
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Forty-three

Linc and I drove away from the house in silence. There wasn't much for either of us to say and he seemed to have lost the fight I'd seen in him earlier.

I called Wellton, told him I was bringing Linc Pluto in and that I'd explain when we got there. He didn't seem pleased, but I hung up before he could suggest anything else.

When we arrived at the station, Linc got out without protesting. Wellton met us as we came through the doors.

He looked Linc up and down, then turned to me. “This was the kid you couldn't find?”

“Sneaky. Kids are sneaky.”

Linc stared at his shoes.

Wellton waved an officer over. He nodded at Linc and the officer moved Linc's hands behind him and cuffed him.

“Can you just put him in holding for now?” I said.

Wellton lifted his chin at the cop and he escorted Linc down the hallway.

I followed Wellton up to his office.

“This is the kid with the guns, right?” Wellton asked, sliding into the chair behind his desk.

“The guns belonged to his father,” I said, sitting down in the metal chair opposite the desk, trying to buy Linc a little leeway. “Maybe he didn't know they were there.”

“They were where his underwear should've been.”

“He's had a rough time of it. He'd be a huge sympathy case if you charged him.”

Wellton shook his head. “Fine. Wanna tell me why I'm holding this kid, then?”

I explained about Dana finding the house in OB, my conversation with Linc, and our surprise visitors.

“You're telling me Wizard Matellion saved your ass?” Wellton said when I'd finished.

“Not on the record, I'm not. Off the record, yeah, I guess he did.”

“We go on the record, I'd have something solid on Matellion,” Wellton said quietly. “Finally.”

“Matellion didn't pull the trigger and I'll never repeat what I just told you.”

The room went quiet. Wellton couldn't make me talk, but he could make my life difficult. But I wasn't sure he could make it more difficult than Wizard Matellion if I went back on my word.

“Just because he didn't let Moreno kill you doesn't make him a good guy,” Wellton said.

“I know that.”

Wellton stared hard at me for a while. It didn't change my mind.

“What do you want me to do with this kid?” he finally asked.

“Can you hold him for a little bit?” I asked. “Let me see if I can fix the rest of this.”

“What does
fix
mean?”

I shrugged.

“You'll have to be more specific,” Wellton said. “I don't understand white-guy nonchalance.”

“There are still some loose ends,” I said. “He's safer here for a little while.”

“What loose ends?”

“Just a few things, couple of people I need to talk to.”

We stared at each other, him trying to read me, me attempting to keep him from seeing anything.

“What about our skinhead friends?” Wellton asked.

“That's why I want Linc here. They still want him.”

“You gonna go talk to them, too?” he asked, a tiny smile mocking me.

“Something like that.”

The smile disintegrated and he pointed a stubby finger at me. “As soon as we—and by we, I mean those of us that are cops—find them, we've got them on assault for you and two murders. That's enough to make me forget about the weapons charge against Pluto. And that's plenty enough reason for them to stay alive.”

“If you find them.”

“We will find them,” he growled.

I sat motionless. I thought back to my first conversation with Professor Famazio, when he indicated that sometimes the skinheads benefited from friends in higher places. Sometimes even the law wasn't enough.

“Neither of them is worth it,” Wellton said quietly, his eyes staring intently at me over the desk. “Neither of them.”

“I know that.”

“I know that you
know
that, Braddock. What I want to make sure of is that you don't do something in spite of it.”

The silence sat heavy in the room between us for a few minutes.

“What happened to you sucked,” he finally said. “No doubt about it. But if you take them out, if you do exactly what you say you're trying to prevent from happening to the Pluto kid, then you haven't helped anyone and you've completely fucked yourself up.”

I didn't disagree with anything Wellton was saying. All of his words made sense. But there were other things that made sense to me, too, and I wasn't sure which of them was more right.

“I'm talking to a brick wall,” Wellton said, disgusted at my refusal to engage in the conversation. He shook his head and rolled his eyes. “Shouldn't even try.” He paused. “I'll hold the kid for forty-eight hours.”

“That's it?” I said.

“That's it,” Wellton said. “Do whatever you're gonna do. Make it right.” His eyes narrowed. “For Pluto. Not for you.”

I was pretty sure he knew his words were going to be in vain. I could see it in his eyes, hear it in his tone.

Or maybe he just knew I didn't care what he said.

Forty-four

I drove back to Mission Beach and found Carter and Dana sitting in my living room, a plate of enchiladas on the coffee table as they watched the Padres game.

“We're up five-zip,” he said, pointing at the television. “Bottom of the eighth.”

“Good.”

Dana twisted in my direction. “Where's Linc?”

I nodded at Carter. “You tell him what happened?”

“Yeah, right up to the point where you kicked me out of the house,” she said, still annoyed. “I was so pissed, I just got in the car and left. He finally returned my message from this morning and told me to come over here.”

“Yeah, well, thanks for that. Because if you'd stuck around you might've been able to warn me that Deacon fuckin' Moreno found Linc, too.”

Her eyes widened.

Carter picked up the plate of enchiladas and stuck a fork in one of them. “Tell us.”

I told them about all the fun in OB.

“Wesley said that?” Carter said when I was done, placing the now-empty plate on the table. “That he really wanted another shot at me?”

“Yep.”

Carter chuckled. “I'll remember that. So now Pluto's in jail?”

“Yeah.”

“Why did you take him to jail?” Dana asked. “Won't they arrest him because of the guns?”

“It'll be fine,” I said, trusting Wellton.

“As much as I hate anything to do with the law, jail for him is probably the safest place at the moment,” Carter said.

“Also keeps him out of the way.”

Carter raised an eyebrow. “You make it sound like we're about to do some exciting things.”

Dana slid closer to him on the sofa. “Hey. You told me we were going to be the ones doing the exciting things later.”

“And I always keep my promises,” he said, flashing a grin at her.

“You better.”

“Christ,” I said. “Keep your clothes on. I'm still here.”

Carter looked at me. “Anyway, exciting things.”

“Depends on how you define ‘exciting.'”

“A Padres victory. Waves that are overhead. Thongs on blonds.”

“Then, no. You misinterpreted what I said.”

Dana cleared her throat.

“I meant thongs on you,” Carter said to her. “Really.”

“Thank you,” she said, turning back to the TV.

I pointed to the glass slider and Carter nodded.

“We'll be right back,” he told her, standing up.

She watched us head for the door. “At some point, I'll start to take this personally.”

Carter stood in front of me in the doorway. “I'll make it up to you. In every way.”

She smiled. “Fantastic.”

I shoved him out the door and closed it behind us.

The ocean air hit me hard and I took a deep breath, letting it fill my lungs.

Carter straddled one of the patio chairs, his arms crossed over the back of it. “Why'd you lie to Matellion when he asked if you knew who killed Malia?”

I wondered if he'd picked up on that. Should've known.

“Didn't see the point of sending him after them,” I said.

“Why'd you just lie to me?”

I laughed, but didn't say anything.

“Don't get me wrong,” he said. “I'm happy. Means we get to go get them ourselves.”

“Figured if we go get them there's a better chance they actually end up in jail,” I said.

“If a little worse for the wear.”

“You better believe it.”

“When do we go find them, then?” he asked.

“Tomorrow, I think.” I paused, watching the lines form in the water. “Look, I'm not sure what's gonna happen when we find them. But it's probably gonna get ugly. You cool with that?”

“Cool with that? Are you serious?”

“Just putting it out there.”

“Dude, I am down with whatever happens. As far as I'm concerned, with what they did to you, if we're the last ones to ever see them,” he said, his eyes narrowing, “good for the rest of the world.”

I couldn't have agreed more.

Forty-five

Carter and Dana left to go do their exciting things and I tried not to think about it.

I changed into a pair of board shorts and grabbed my board and trudged down to the sand in the hazy, early evening sunshine.

The tension and soreness that had riddled my body for most of the day emptied itself out into the ocean. The waves weren't great—three-footers that were a little mushy—but they were enough to give me what I needed. Lots of little maneuvers that took concentration and forced me to think only about what I was doing in the water. The water was never deceiving. What you see is what you get and I would always appreciate that.

An hour and a half later, I was showered and sitting in front of a sandwich and a Red Trolley when I dialed Wellton's number.

“How's Pluto holding up?” I asked after we exchanged greetings.

“He's fine,” Wellton said. “Pissed, but he's fine. You make any progress?”

“Come on,” I said. “I just left you a couple of hours ago.”

“I'm not kidding, Braddock. Unless you want me to charge him—and I'm still not promising I won't—I can't hold him for more than two days.”

“I'll give you a call when I know something,” I said.

“I'll hold my breath.”

“Don't do that. Guy your size can't have that big of a lung capacity.”

“No, but my dick's bigger than anything you've ever seen.”

“Let's compare next time,” I said, trying not to laugh. “Hey. Is Liz around?”

“She speaking to you?”

“Sort of.”

“Probably like that for most people.” I could almost hear him smiling. “Hang on.”

I'd thought about Liz a lot while I was on the water. It was time for me to do something more than think about her.

“Noah?” she said, her voice filling the line.

“Yeah, it's me. Catching you at a bad time?”

“No. It's fine. What's going on? John said he's got the Pluto kid here.”

“Yeah, he does, and he's helping me out by keeping him,” I said. “I'll owe him. But he can fill you in on that.”

She paused. “Okay.”

“You wanna get out of town this weekend?” I said before I chickened out. “With me? I was thinking of heading up to Santa Barbara. Maybe I could give you those surfing lessons.”

My words sounded rushed, awkward, and lame to me as I played them back in my head waiting for her response.

“For how long?” she said finally.

“I was thinking Friday until Monday, but we can go whenever. We could leave Saturday morning or come back Sunday night. If you want to go.”

“No, Friday to Monday is good,” she said. “Yeah. I'll go.”

I'm not sure what I was expecting, but it wasn't a quick agreement. “You sure?”

“Don't make me rethink it, Noah,” she said. “You asked and I said yes.”

“Right,” I said. “I'll pick you up around eight, then, on Friday morning. We'll stop and get breakfast somewhere.”

“That sounds nice.”

All of it did sound nice. I was glad I'd screwed up the courage to ask her.

“Okay. I'll see you then.”

“I'll be ready,” she said, and hung up.

It was Monday. Friday seemed a long way off. I needed to get through the rest of the week first.

And then, maybe, I'd finally be ready for Liz.

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