Motorcycle Man Page 28
It was an unbelievably cool tattoo.
I hadn’t recovered from it by the time he had his boots off and stood. It was then I snapped to, opened my mouth to suggest we talk in the living room prior to his leaving for the night and then his jeans were gone.
My breath caught and my eyes glazed over and before I knew it, Tack swept the covers down, climbed into bed, grabbed my hand, pulled me forward so I went up on my knees then toppled down on him. Finally, he swept the covers over us both.
I lifted my head and chest and stared down at him.
“Uh…” I mumbled.
“Elliott Belova is in some serious bad shit and I say that knowin’ he was in serious bad shit before. The shit he’s actually in is serious,” Tack started the conversation and I snapped my mouth shut.
Then I opened it to ask, “So, he chatted?”
“Man wouldn’t shut up,” Tack answered.
Suddenly all ears, I dropped my chest to his to get closer and whispered, “Tell me.”
To that, for some reason he asked, “Your girl in there, this wedding, it big?”
“Um… yeah. She’s spending ten thousand dollars on flowers alone.”
“Jesus,” Tack muttered.
“Her dress cost more than my car,” I informed him.
“Fuckin’ hell.” Tack was still muttering.
“And you already know about the fourteen thousand dollar engagement ring. I won’t get into the catering,” I finished.
“Christ, that explains that,” Tack said.
“What?” I asked.
“Babe, her man loves her. Blinded by that shit. Wants to hand her the world.”
“And?” I prompted when he didn’t go on.
“And, Red, he can’t afford fourteen thousand dollar engagement rings and ten grand on flowers and whatever the f**k on catering. That guy is in so deep he drowned about six months ago. He’s dead man walking.”
I felt my eyes get wide. “Really?”
“Really,” Tack affirmed.
“I thought he made good money, she made good money. I thought –”
“They might make good money, darlin’, but I’m guessin’, the way they live added to that f**kin’ wedding…” He shook his head. “He couldn’t swing it. He also couldn’t say no. He had some money, made what he called a ‘bad investment’ but what he means is, he got ripped off. Promised two hundred percent return in two months turned into a loss of one hundred and fifty K in the blink of an eye. The guy he gave the money to disappeared. Belova scrambled. Tried to find a way out usin’ family ties but found himself hooked to some serious men who wanted to use his super brain to do some super serious illegal shit. They paid him and these guys pay you, they own you. Now, they own him. He can’t get out from under it. I just called a cop I know and it’s worse. He’s not only on the grid, he’s on radar. These men won’t cut him loose and Lawson at DPD didn’t say it flat out but I get the sense the cops know what he’s doin’. Belova’s done, he wants out and he wants out bad. Your friend talked to him about me, this guy’s got an idea about bikers, he came over here to talk to you to get to me but he got me. He made another stupid play, thinkin’ I do that shit. Now he’s owned by the Russian Mob, he’s on cop radar and he’s not my favorite person, making assumptions like that about me. One way or the other, this guy is f**ked. Far as I can see, he’s got two options, jail or dead. But even if the cops get to him before the mob, he goes inside, he’s dead. He even thinks of talkin’ to the cops, he’s dead. So, my guess is, he’s dead.”
I stared down at him and felt my nose start to sting as I thought of sweet, generous, totally in love with my best friend Elliott.
Then I whispered, “Damn, I don’t think I’m better anymore.”
Then I dropped my head and did a face plant in Tack’s chest.
I felt his hand glide into my hair and cup the back of my head as I heard and felt him mutter, “Baby.”
I turned my head, pressed my cheek to his chest and Tack’s hand slid to under my ear but his thumb moved to stroke my cheek as I deep breathed to fight back my tears.
Then I said softly, “Don’t be mad at him, Tack. It wasn’t cool, him asking you to do that. It was messed up. But it sounds like he’s desperate and I always knew he’d do anything for Lanie. He’s got enough to worry about. He doesn’t need to worry about pissing off scary biker dude.”
“Babe, he’s still at the Compound which, right now, is maybe the safest place in Denver he could be.”
I lifted my head and slid my hand up his chest to rest my chin on it as my eyes went to his.
“You’re protecting him?”
“For now, until I decide what to do with him, but, Red, that don’t mean I’m not still pissed at him. Comin’ to your house, talkin’ to me on your deck, with you and my kids in the house and asking me somethin’ that f**ked up?” He shook his head. “No.”
I nodded because he was right. What Elliott did was a big no.
Therefore, to change the subject, I asked, “What did he do for the mob?”
“Better question, what didn’t he do? Hacks. Creative accounting. Creative banking. Wire taps. Camera feeds. Drops. Pickups. Messenger. It’s lucky this guy works from home and I’ll lay cake down on the fact he got zero real work done in the last six months, he’s been so visible doing shit for Lescheva.”
“Lescheva?”
“Grigori Lescheva, top guy in the Russian mob and distant relative of your boy Elliott.”
“Oh,” I whispered, my eyes slid to the side and I murmured, “All so Lanie could have peonies in August.”
Tack’s fingers still in my hair tensed against my scalp and my eyes slid back to him. “No. That woman in there with her mountain of Kleenex would be happy without peonies in August, Red. This is about him growin’ a pair, mannin’ up and tellin’ her he can’t hand her the world. She didn’t want the world. She wanted him. He didn’t have enough confidence in himself to believe that a woman like her would want a man like him and in the end, he took away the only thing she really ever wanted.”
Um… wow. I liked that Tack knew that and I also liked how he said it.
I didn’t tell him that. Instead, I whispered, “This is true.”