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Ain't Your Bitch (Interracial Urban Erotica)(168)

By:Asia Marquis


A few serial killers in their midst would eventually drop the law hammer  on them. So maybe that was it. She was the release valve for the guys  who were drawing too much heat. Well, if that was all it was-was that a  bad thing?

Why not just tell her straight out? Informants weren't unheard of. Even  the ones that just came in and said "hey, I'm part of such-and-such  gang."         

     



 

But instead they'd gone for the long game, some sort of big charade  where he pretended not to know anyone in a gang and slowly introduced  her to all these men. His brothers, he'd said. Then what was the speech  he'd given her the other day? A bunch of bullshit?

Craig Hutchinson seemed at all times like the kind of guy who would  bullshit her. Yet, in that moment, he'd seemed more serious than  anything. As if for the first time she was getting a look behind the  curtain.

He said he wouldn't let anything happen to his brothers, and she  believed him. Even after she'd heard him tell someone that she was there  specifically to bring his brothers in.

Which meant there was something more to it. Something that he was  leaving out, either with the others in that little club he'd been  talking to, or leaving something out with her.

She had heard them talked about before, and it wasn't unheard-of for  motorcycle gangs to call their other members brothers. They might be his  family, too, in that sense. But none of it made sense, not really. She  needed to get someone else's eyes on this.

Her fingers were shaking enough to make it hard to dial Roy's number. He answered quickly. "Is everything okay?"

"I'm fine," she said, holding the phone up in front of her face with the  speakerphone on. "But I've got some information for you."

"Shoot."

"Hutchinson. He knows who's been doing your murders. But I think there's something else going on."

"That's absurd, Jamelia. What could possibly be bigger than repeated serial murders?"

"For you? Probably nothing. Probably you'd be willing to overlook  whatever it is, once you get the killers. But he's definitely made me.  Made me from the beginning."

"Are you in danger?"

"Not sure."

"So what comes next?"

She paused a minute before answering. "Not sure. I don't like being used."

"I wouldn't either."

"If he thinks that I'm going to go in and just do whatever he says, then-"

"Then what?"

"Then I guess I'll let him."

"What?"

"It's my sister. I don't like being played. But if his play is to give  me my sister's killer on a silver platter, then I accept."

"You sure there's nothing else to it? No trap?"

"I don't know anything but what I told you. I met one of your guys. Hold  off until we get more info, but he was calling himself 'Ryan' this  time. I think he was the second guy, the one who did the Maine job."

"We have him down as a …  'Spencer Gold.'"

"Well, you always knew those names were fake, right?"

"Nothing else to call him until now. 'Ryan,' huh? Got a last name?"

"I couldn't push him any harder for it without being suspicious."

"Alright. I understand. I think you've earned yourself dinner tonight, know anyplace good?"

"Sure. I'll pick this time."

"Good choice."

Jamelia wasn't in any sort of mood for dinner. Not yet. It was early,  though, and a few hours would do a hell of a lot for her mood after the  morning she'd had. A few hours, a nap, and some idea of what the hell  was going on around her.

Ryan was one of the brothers that the guy had been talking about, right?  It was the only thing that made any sense. But why? He'd been real  defensive about his name, too. He was trying to keep a low profile, far  as she could tell, and tattoos had turned that all around.

The monkey on their back …

She pulled onto her street. Only a four-mile shot down the road now, and  she'd be able to go lay down and maybe try to sort this shit out.

There were too many questions to be sure what the right answers were. The important ones were all the most questionable.

Why her? There are a thousand cops in this city. Ten thousand maybe.  There's no reason to go straight to her, not when they could have gone  to any of them. Maybe Craig didn't get word that he was involved in the  murder plot until it was too late, and now he was using her to clean up  the mess because it was convenient.

But that didn't sit right. He had been pulling the strings since the  beginning. Waiting for her to message him, and he'd answered in minutes.  Like he knew it was going to come.

The threat of reprisal was very real, as well. It was all well and good  to sell your family up the river, but it didn't sit that well with them  after the fact. Maybe his whole plan was to get her to move, and then  get revenge right after he got what he wanted. It would tie the whole  package up nice and tidy, and he'd already demonstrated that he could  get into her place any time he liked.

She shut her eyes. That meant they were playing a dangerous game. She  needed to be more careful with her moves. Before, she'd thought that she  was the cat, and he was the mouse. Now it seemed more like they were  both playing games with the other. Now that she saw that it wasn't a  one-sided game, it changed things.

Was this how Craig had seen everything from the beginning? She  shuddered. That wasn't good. How much had he known would happen, and how  much was just rolling with the punches?

Jamelia forced herself not to ask too many questions like that. There  was no reason to do it, and it was just going to upset her. No reason to  get herself riled up just yet.

Not when she had plenty of time left to look into all those questions.  This wasn't about a race, and it wasn't about a finish line. Now she  understood it more like a dance. In the end, she was going to get what  she wanted. The only question was the state she got there in.

So she slipped into her bed and shut her eyes. It was easier to think  after she slept. It was a damn shame that she hadn't had enough time to  do much of it before. But now she needed to be at the top of her game,  because when he made his move, there wasn't going to be any backup.





Twenty-Three



Jamelia woke up to the sound of something at her door. A scratching  noise. Her hand reached automatically for the gun by her bedside. She  clicked the safety off as she stepped up. If she was someone's pawn,  then that meant that there was an opponent. As soon as they noticed what  was happening, they were going to come after her.

The door came open a little way before encountering the chain. Jamelia  crouched down in the little hall that the apartment tried to pass off as  a kitchen and trained her weapon on the door. When the chain shattered  under the weight of someone putting their shoulder into it, she waited  half an instant to see who it was before she fired.

The explosion in her hand was loud enough to make her head dance around  and her vision go wonky for half a second. Her ears rang. She took  another shot and the guy tripped over his own feet. Jamelia turned him  over. Poor Ryan, the guy never saw it coming. Jamelia didn't feel  particularly bad about it.

She pulled her phone out of her pocket and dialed Roy first.

"I've got a situation here."

"What's wrong?"

"There's a dead body in my kitchen."

"Are you okay?"

"Our friend Ryan tried to break in. I defended myself."

Roy paused on the other end of the line a minute before answering. "Okay, we can take care of this. You called 9-1-1 yet?"

"Not yet, no."

"Okay. I'll communicate it to your people."

"Good. Make sure you communicate that I'm going to leave my firearm on  the floor and move away. I'm going to be dis-armed and waiting for  them."

"Good. Will-do."

Roy showed up at the apartment flanked on both sides by L.A.P.D. They  all huffed over the body on her floor for a minute. She understood the  position that she was in. She could have killed someone. On the other  hand, it was still her right to defend herself from someone who meant to  harm her. That she was a cop also meant that certain things would be  understood, and one of them was that she knew what she was doing.

None of that made the body go away, or stopped the blood from staining her kitchen tile.

Roy spoke first. "Are you alright?"

"I'm fine. I heard him coming in. The chain latch was shut. He broke it getting in, and I took steps to defend myself."

"Good."

They turned the body over. There was a pistol in a shoulder-holster. She  didn't recognize either of the uniforms, but then again she rarely did.  They got on the radio and called in a medical team. The guy was sure as  hell dead, but that didn't mean they could leave him on the floor.

The two of them took their sweet time getting to her, which she didn't  mind. Jamelia's black skin was starting to crawl at the feeling of  having used her gun. They were as safe as anything, she knew. She'd used  them every week at the range. Shooting paper had taught her that they  didn't just go off willy-nilly.