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Ain't Your Bitch (Interracial Urban Erotica)(180)

By:Asia Marquis


She did what she was told, followed where he directed.

He fished a key out of his pocket and pushed it into a keyhole until it  clicked home, and then unlocked the door. He grabbed her arm and pushed  her in hard enough that Jamelia nearly stumbled over her own feet.

"You should have stayed away," he growled.

"I'm sorry. I didn't know."

"No, you didn't. They raise you like this. Sluts and whores. They tell  you that it's fine to fuck around until you're in your thirties, and you  hear that for your entire life-you get to believing it. Well, not any  more. Not around my family."

Jamelia wasn't worried about dying any more. It was a strange sensation.  She wasn't ready. There were a thousand things that she had left to do,  people she needed to talk to, things she needed to correct.

None of those things were going to convince this guy that she should  live. None of them were going to change the fact that she was absolutely  going to die, and her mind seemed to decide that that meant there  wasn't much point in worrying after all.

Instead, she looked around. There was a large section cleared here, but  all around was glassware and folding tables. It didn't take a genius to  recognize a meth lab in the halfway light.

"Say your prayers. You can have sixty seconds to make your peace with God."

Jamelia shifted to sit up and closed her eyes, folded her hands. She  didn't have anything to say to God. It was God who took Mom away.  Jamelia hadn't been inside a church since the funeral, and she wasn't  planning on taking the practice back up.

She prayed anyways, if only to get the man to give her just one more  minute. Jamelia heard the noise of steps outside, and then everything  exploded all around.

A gunshot sounded, and an instant later she heard the door slam open. In  the time it took for her brain to register what she was hearing she  heard the noise of a grenade hitting the ground, heard the loud pop that  made it so she wouldn't be able to hear anything else for the better  part of half an hour.

Her eyes were closed, but even that couldn't keep out the bright white  flash of light that burned itself onto her retinas in spite of her  closed eyes. A trillion miles away, someone shouted something about  getting down. She didn't move. Arms scooped her up and set her on her  feet.

She opened her eyes, her vision swimming, on Roy Schafer. He was saying  something, but she couldn't hear him. She blinked, hoping that would  help her hearing, but it didn't.

She shouted as loud as she could that she couldn't hear him. It sounded a  little louder than a whisper over the sound of the ringing in her ears.

Roy pulled her in tight, held her there for what felt like an eternity,  but when he pulled back she wanted that eternity back. As soon as her  hearing came back, she would be back on her way to the hotel, and he  would be getting the hell out of town.

So the longer that her hearing stayed gone, the longer that they stood  there together in that stinking meth-lab warehouse, the better, because  as much as she didn't want to admit it to herself, she wasn't going to  get another chance at it.





Thirty-Eight



The ride back to her apartment was silent. Not the least of which  because she was alone. She could still see the absurdly large truck Roy  had somehow come into possession of, following at the somewhat discreet  distance of two cars back. As if she would have rebelled and started off  again if he were too close.

If anything she wanted to have his bumper pressed up against hers the  whole way. As if the closeness would be enough to make sure that she  never ran into trouble like this again. She let out an unsteady breath  as she pulled into the hotel parking lot.

Schafer's truck pulled in behind, found one of the dozens of empty spots  around her, and he got out. Jamelia couldn't find it in herself to get  out of the Jeep, but she at least managed to work up the energy to turn  the engine off.

She laid her head back and set her eyes on the sky, barely visible  through the row of trees that blocked out the side of the hotel parking  lot.

"Are you okay?"

"What happened?"

"What do you mean? You were there."

"How did you find me?"

"It was a bit of luck, to be honest."

"Figures."

"We didn't take long finding Hutchinson. He's not a hard man to find,  with his notoriety. We showed a few pictures around and found him with  plenty of time to spare. At which point we threw him in the back. He  starts the usual talk-you can't arrest me, you're making a mistake. I  didn't do it. The usual shit, right?"

"Sure."

"Well, then he says he needs to go find you. There's gonna be trouble. I  figured there was nothing to it. He's trying to bullshit me."

"But you decided to come check on me anyways?"

"He offers me a full confession to the Angels' various crimes-drug  trafficking and a couple of murders down the coast-if we can just drive  by and check on you. Just make sure you're okay. His club isn't any of  my business, but that's not the usual spiel any more. So we went to  check on you, and I see you driving with some guy in your passenger  seat." Roy's face split into that pretty-boy grin. "I got a little  jealous."

"How sweet of you."

"Are you hurt?"

Jamelia looked down at her body. She hurt where she'd been thrown to the  floor, a little scrape on her knee and a bruise on her hip. There was a  red stain where he'd cut her belly open, just a bit, but it was going  to be fine. Probably already closed.

"Not really."

"You want to go upstairs?"

"Calm down, boy," she teased. "I'm a little tired for that."

"I didn't mean-" he pursed his lips to stop his lips twisting into a sour smile. "Are you going to be alright?"

"I don't know."

He reached a hand through the open window and cupped the back of her head.

"You're going to be fine, babe. I know it. You're a tough cookie."

"You think so?"

"I know it."

"Thanks." She didn't feel tough, and she didn't particularly feel like  she was going to be fine. How long would it be before the nightmares  stopped? How long would it be before she could go to sleep without  triple-checking the locks? How long before-         

     



 

Jamelia stopped that line of thought.

"We're going to take a few days to question Craig. Get what he knows  about the situation out. We'll get everything we need to know from him."  He didn't add and then we're going to leave but she heard it anyways.

"Yeah?"

"I promise. We got the guy who did all of this, and we're going to put  together proof enough to convince anyone. Maybe even you."

"Good."

She was too tired to have any sort of feelings at all about it. The week  had worn her out. It would be days before she felt anything but tired,  she knew. If she could move on to the next case, maybe it would be a  knock out of the park. Maybe she'd be able to hammer one, and then the  next, and by the time she realized she wasn't ever going to feel right  again, she wouldn't care any more.

"Are you gonna be alright?"

"I'm going to be fine." She finally found the energy to push the door  open and stepped out onto an unsteady leg. "And I still don't need your  help getting into bed, Romeo."

"Look, I'm just saying, if you did, though-"

She cut him off with a smile and a laugh. "I know, you're more than willing. Maybe some other time."

She limped her way back to the elevator and hit her floor, unlocked her door with the keycard, and fell into bed.



The next few days passed slowly. Agonizingly slow. Roy kept her updated  on everything with his texts, but they were too busy pulling together  evidence. Officially, they were just wrapping up loose ends.

Back in '95, when Jamelia was first settling into her new west-coast  life, Papa Hutchinson had found Jesus in all the wrong places, but  apparently hadn't found out about the church's view on narcotics use.

In his drug haze, he'd been more than a little critical of his eldest  boy's dating habits. What started as cops getting called a few times  turned into beatings, turned into a girl getting stabbed. That diary  page came from Craig's father.

He was, himself, on his third wife at the time, so the hypocrisy wasn't  lost on any of them, but the eldest boy, Jared, had taken it hard. At  some point, for reasons nobody cared to speculate, he'd decided that his  girlfriend had absolutely deserved to get what she'd got.

Now that his brothers had spread around the country, he found out that  they were dating, and just like poor Chrissy, they were corrupting his  innocent brothers. Craig had been dealing by then, and by the time he  managed to find his brother, it was too late. He assured Craig that was  the end of it, until he found out about Becca, and then all bets were  off again.

He'd failed to kill Becca's twin sister, a couple of days later. He  didn't succeed in finding the right 'twin sister' until four days later.  In the mean-time, he managed to find out that one of the other brothers  had been hiding a relationship from him, as well, so his work was cut  out for him.