Fielding
buzzed the window down, and a man-shaped shadow detached from the gate and
drifted over to lean down to their level.
The dash
lights illuminated the square face of a strongly-built young man with
close-shaved dark hair and a prominent, but straight nose. “Chief,” he greeted.
His gaze flicked across the car, and his eyes blew wide when he spotted Alex.
“Shit, is that–”
“Dr. Bonfils,
yeah,” Fielding said. “He’s here to help.”
The kid shook
his head, half-bewildered, half-refusing. “I dunno…he’s…shit, he’s a…” He
dropped his voice to a whisper. “Fed.”
Alex bit back
a sigh. He understood the hesitance – the fear, even – just as he understood
that none of them were going to believe a word he said, and he hadn’t the
faintest idea how to go about proving himself, or setting any of them at ease.
He said, “I don’t have my gun, and I’m not wearing a wire. You can search me,
if it makes you feel better.”
The Lean Dog
made a face, mouth scrunched to the side.
“We need to
talk to Ratchet,” Fielding pressed. “Who’s running things inside? Walsh? Radio
in and ask if he’ll see us.”
The Dog made
an unhappy noise, but straightened. Alex heard the squawk and crackle of a radio,
a blurred voice from the other side, then the Dog leaned down and waved them
on. “Go straight in the front door. We’ll search him.”
Alex couldn’t
say he blamed them, but he’d hoped they wouldn’t take him up on the offer.
“Right,”
Fielding said. “Thanks, Boom.” He rolled up the window and pulled forward.
Parking was
scarce. Alex recognized Ava’s black Expedition.
Fielding
killed the engine, placed both hands on the wheel, and turned to him.
“Right,” Alex
said, and didn’t bother swallowing his sigh this time. “Last warning?”
“Don’t be a
smartass,” Fielding said, seriously, and Alex sobered. “I don’t know what
you’re expecting – what you’ve read about, or seen in movies, or think you
know. These people in here” – he pointed through the windshield, where two guys
were going in the front door – “aren’t half as uncivilized as you’re thinking.
And they’re twice as dangerous as they’ll let you see.”
Something
about his expression, the way it was haunted at the edges, and resolved in the
center, told Alex he wasn’t speaking lightly, and wasn’t merely trying to
intimidate him. He’d not felt it before, at first, or on the ride over, but
suddenly, it seemed that he and Fielding were in the same boat, struggling with
the same internal war.
He nodded.
“Okay.”
“Watch
yourself,” Fielding cautioned, and popped his door.
better the devil you know than the devil you don't
ReplyDeleteAlthough Fielding became tied to the Dogs in a way he can never get out of, I’m certain the phrase above is exactly how he sees the relationship he has with the club.
“Internal war” indeed. Fielding is an interesting character.
ReplyDeleteYou're teasing and teasing, and we are all salivating. Can't wait!
ReplyDeleteGetting sooo good
ReplyDelete