Mitch said on a sigh.
“Hank’ll take care of it,” Brock put in.
Tack stood, eyes to Brock. “He’s got a day.”
Mitch looked to the ceiling.
Brock leaned forward to reach for his phone, muttering, “Best call Lee to get his ass with his brother before half our team is incarcerated, awaiting trial for homicide.”
“I take it you just etched your name on the invitation list for our little coffee klatch,” Mitch noted, now looking at Sebring.
Knight grinned. “I’ll bring the pastries.”
“Fuck me,” Mitch muttered.
Hop smiled at Shy, who smiled back.
Joker did not smile.
Handshakes, gratitude, chin lifts, and nods were given and Chaos strolled out.
Joker waited until they were standing at their bikes before he repeated, “I want Monk.”
Tack, head bent as he pulled on his gloves, sliced his eyes to Joker.
“Monk no longer exists.”
Another chill slid down Joker’s spine as he stared into Tack’s eyes, seeing a look in them he’d never seen before on any man in his life.
Tack finished yanking on his gloves and swung his leg over his bike. Joker didn’t do the same because Hop reached out a hand and wrapped his fingers around Joker’s forearm for a beat before he let him go, this telling him to hold.
He held.
Tack roared off.
Joker looked to Hop.
“Hank’ll get Monk,” Hop said.
Joker opened his mouth to speak, but Hop kept going.
“And Monk will go down inside.”
Joker shut his mouth.
“You’ll be clean. Chaos will be clean. But we’ll be one marker lighter,” Hop finished.
“That gonna work for you?” Shy asked.
Joker’s head filled with Heidi dead in an alley. She’d been pretty. Marred by a little man with a small dick who’d been shamed by bikers and used her to make them pay.
She’d had a thing for Joker. He had no idea how she’d hung her hopes on him, but he knew she’d had a thing for him.
She had never made him laugh. She annoyed him more than anything, and it had never been cute.
Mostly, when he was with her, he felt nothing.
But she was someone’s daughter. She was going to give someone a child. And there was no telling who she could have been if she’d been allowed to keep breathing.
Now she was dead.
No, it didn’t work for him.
But he had a woman, a kid, a brotherhood, family.
So it had to.
He jerked up his chin.
Hop nodded.
Shy clapped him on the shoulder.
Then they got on their bikes and rode.
* * * * *
That night after dinner, Carissa, sitting next to him on the couch, started poking hard at the laptop on her lap with her finger, grunting “Unh! Unh! Unh!” with each poke.
She then tossed it on the coffee table, where it skidded, taking the little basket she put the remotes in with it.
The basket went down.
The laptop was still up but half of it was hanging off the table.
“It’s broken!” she cried.
“I hope so, or you poundin’ on it and tossin’ it around wouldn’t be all that smart,” Joker muttered, his eyes still on the TV.
He felt her turn to him.
She ignored his comment and asked, “Do you have a laptop I can use to put the furniture in storage on Craigslist?”
“I don’t have a storage unit, and you cleaned my room. Did you find a laptop?” he asked back.
“No,” she bit out, damned cute.
“So…no,” he answered.
“Ugh!” she grunted, also cute, so he looked her way and saw her drop her head to the back of the couch, which was again cute.
He twisted to her, wrapping an arm around her and leaning up to get in her face.
“I’ll buy you a laptop for your birthday.”
She lifted her head off the couch an inch. “That’s not going to help me sell the furniture now. Dad’s paying for that unit. He has two boxes in there. We can put the boxes in the garage and he can save that money.”
“An early birthday present.”
She rolled her eyes and dropped her head back.
He knew that wouldn’t go over.
Still.
“Butterfly, you made a date with Elvira to return eight thousand dollars’ worth of clothes and shoes and two of the outfits in that mix would look spectacular on you and cost nowhere near eight thousand dollars. You got money in the bank but you won’t splurge. Thank Christ you didn’t feel the same about the panties and bras. But none of that costs as much as a laptop and you still didn’t keep it. So with that, I gotta ask, when’re you gonna lay out the cake to buy a laptop that in this day and age you