Harm's Way: Riot MC Biloxi Karen Renee (top non fiction books of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Karen Renee
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Romanâs teeth gleamed against his bronze complexion. âDonât know, Prez. I donât follow news outside the great state of Mississippi. But, meth is damn dangerous stuff.â
Har opened his mouth to tell them they needed to hold church, but the front door opened and a police detective, Travis Dennizen, stood in the doorway. Dennizen stood around five-foot-eight, but had the build of a tank. Rumor had it, his shirts had to be custom made for the width of his biceps, as well as the girth of his chest. His brown eyes were set wide on his face, while his cheeks were angular, giving his face a hard look. He kept his hair so short, Har wondered if he went to his barber every week.
Today he wore a slate-gray dress shirt with charcoal slacks, his badge well displayed on his black belt. While the Biloxi police force had many detectives, only three of them were black âDennizen being one of the threeâ and two were Hispanic.
Of all the detectives who could visit the Riot MC, Dennizen was the last one Har wanted to see because he was most likely the best detective on the Biloxi PD.
All three menâs bodies went tight, but they hid their reaction from the visitor.
âCan we help you, officer?â Block asked, turning on his good olâ boy charm.
Dennizen let the door close behind him, keeping his eyes on them. âLooking for two of your members. Furman Pollard, you know him as âMassiveâ or âMass,â and Norris Strickland, better known as âWreck.â They in their rooms?â
Har stepped forward, shaking his head.
âNo, sir. Iâll open their rooms for you to peek in, but they havenât been around the past two days.â
Dennizenâs lips shifted as he took in Har. After a moment, he shook his head.
âNo, I think I believe you on that. In fact, I get the feeling you donât know where they are.â
He kept eye contact with the detective and intended to remain silent, but thought better of it at the last minute.
âYouâre very intuitive, Detective Dennizen. Wreck and Massive have missed two meetings now, and we dropped by their places looking for them last night.â
Dennizen nodded, but said nothing.
Har tucked his hands in his pockets. âThere a reason youâre looking for them?â
The detective half-way mimicked Harâs stance, putting one hand in his pocket and stroking his chin with the other. âHow about Layla Gauthier? She around, by chance?â
Something in the detectiveâs tone shifted and he thought the man was fishing for information, but Har didnât show he picked up on it. âNo, sir. Last time I saw Layla was Sunday night.â
He was pushing it with the lie, since they had let Layla go home Monday before noon, but he wasnât about to give the detective more information than necessary.
Dennizen gave him a long look, then looked behind him to Roman and Block. âAny other members around this morning?â
Roman sidled up next to Har. âSorry, Detective, just the three of us. Not many brothers spend the night here during the work week.â
A small smile tipped up the detectiveâs lips. âGlad you brought that up. Har, why are you here, first thing in the morning? Youâve got your own house and word on the street is that you stay there nearly every night unless itâs the weekend.â
Har smiled. âIâm having some work done, sir.â
The detective raised an eyebrow. âWhat type of work?â
He dipped his chin as his smile dimmed. âExtermination and A.C. work. Seems a rat got into my place. It ate a hole in my duct work, crawled inside and died. The stench is awful, and my electric bill was triple since I was cooling my attic.â
âDonât envy that, but youâre not using âratâ as a euphemism for Layla Gauthier, are you?â
Har furrowed his brows. âWhy would I do that?â
Dennizen looked to Roman and Block. âLaylaâs body was found this morning by her sister.â
Har let his facial expression fly, and he suspected his brothers did, too. âYou mean, Laylaâs dead?â
Dennizen nodded.
âWas it an accident?â Block asked, his good olâ boy attitude still in place but far more somber.
The detective gave him a hard look. âIf it was an accident, I wouldnât be wasting taxpayer dollars talking to you three.â
From the corner of his eye, Har saw Block hang his head before he murmured. âSorry, sir.â
Dennizen focused on Har. âEither of those two men show up here, call me. I might be spittinâ in the wind sayinâ that, but a womanâs dead. The least you and your club can do is let the law handle it.â
Har dipped his chin. âYou have a card, Detective? Iâm not sure youâre in my phone.â
Dennizen gave all three of them his business card and left.
Har let out a sigh. âFuck.â
âWant me to round everyone up?â Block asked.
âYeah,â he said staring at the front door. âRo, were you serious? Weâre the only brothers here?â
Roman chuckled. âFuck, no. Glad to hear Iâm convincing. Tiny stayed last night, Cynicâs here, so are Mensa and Gamble. Hell, I think the only brothers who left last night were Brute and Two-Times.â
Har snorted. Two-Times got his name because of his actual name, Samuel Samuels. It wasnât just the double names but also because Brute was already a member, and his given name was Samuel Vaillant. Two-Times hardly ever spent the night at the clubhouse. If he got soused during a patch-in, he called for a ride. It puzzled the hell out of all the brothers because most of them lived to be on their bikes, but Two-Times was all about being with the brothers. He had his bike, but having it as his primary mode of transport wasnât required. He was as close to an enigma as the chapter allowed and Har wondered why the hell he wanted anything to do with them. Yet, the man could not only take care of himself in a fight, but he
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