: Chapter 43
Things We Left Behind
The Takedown
Lucian
No one leaves here until we have a game plan,â I announced.
Sloane sat contentedly in my home office, dressed in pajamas, eating the burger and fries Iâd had delivered. Sheâd tamed her âsex hairâ into a long, loose braid that she wore draped over one shoulder. With her legs tossed over the arm of the chair and her bare feet wiggling, she was the picture of relaxed.
Meanwhile, behind my desk, I was a roiling cauldron of rage.
The team Iâd assembled wasnât helping my mood.
âThisâll be fun,â Nolan said, plowing into a platter of chicken fingers.
âSpeak for yourself,â Lina complained. âMy fiancé had just invited me to join him in the shower when I got the summons.â
âSo what kind of dirt are we looking for?â Nallana the private investigator demanded, shoveling two pieces of pizza onto her plate. She was dressed in a cocktail dress and leather jacket. I realized I had no idea if this was her off-Âthe-Âclock look or another undercover getup.
âYeah. It would help to know what weâre looking for,â the only member of the cybersecurity team whoâd bothered answering her phone asked around the mouthful of Twizzlers sheâd just shoved into her face. She had platinum hair worn long on top and shaved on the sides. Her name was something like Pasture or Great Plains.
âAnything that will force the FBI to move on Hugo now. Not a month from now or a week from now or even forty-Âeight hours from now. I want him in custody by noon tomorrow.â
Nallana let out a low whistle. âThatâs a tall order. Prairieâs right. We need some kind of direction.â
Prairie. So close.
âYour âdirectionâ is to do whatever it takes to get me something we can use. I donât care if you get arrested in the process. Find me something,â I said on a near snarl.
The doorbell rang.
âWant me to get that?â Sloane asked tentatively.
I shook my head. âGrace will get it.â
I wasnât letting Sloane out of my sight until Anthony Hugo and his entire organization were nothing but rubble. And then I was going to force her down the aisle. The woman had defended me not just to a crime boss who threatened our lives but to my own mother. And when this was all over, I was going to show her exactly what that had meant to me.
The door to my office opened, and in walked Maureen Fitzgerald, still in her dress from earlier. âWell, this looks like an interesting party,â she observed.
âIs thatâ¦â Prairie began.
âThe most successful, notorious madam in Washington, DC?â Lina filled in. âYep. I like your shoes.â
âThank you,â Maureen said with a feline smile. âHereâs a little party favor for your team.â She dropped a two-Âinch-Âthick folder on top of the pizza box. Nolan reached for it, but Maureen laid a manicured hand on top of the folder. âI trust I can count on your discretion.â
âOh yes, maâam. Absolutely nothing but discreet around here,â Nolan promised.
âGood,â she said, removing her hand and sliding her arms free of her wool coat. âAre there any chicken fingers left?â
âSo weâve got three more shell corporations nailed down thanks to Maureenâs girlsâ intel,â Nolan summarized, stifling a yawn. âFirst two have about $2 million apiece scattered in offshore accounts. Prairie is digging into the third now.â
âKeep digging.â A few million dollars wasnât enough to have the FBI knocking on Hugoâs door in the morning.
Lina joined us. âUpdate time?â
âWhat have you got?â I asked her.
âSecurity has informed everyone the offices are closed for the next two days. Petula is rescheduling all in-Âperson meetings and shifting what she can to virtual. Grace beefed up security everywhere, including your motherâs and Sloaneâs momâs. Nash and the Knockemout PD are on high alert and keeping an eye on things back home. Nallana called. Sheâs squeezing a few street-Âlevel sources, looking for intel. Rumor has it heâs got a big shipment due in from South America by the weekend.â
âThatâs too far out,â I reminded her.
âMaybe Hugo was just yanking your chain about the forty-Âeight hours?â Nolan suggested, yawning again.
âIs this crisis interrupting your beauty sleep?â I asked dryly.
âA, itâs four in the fucking morning. And B, the wife got me up for a 6:00 a.m. yoga class today⦠Yesterday. Not all of us run on no sleep and the tears of frightened children,â he pointed out.
âYou got up before dawn because your wife asked you to. Hugo said I had forty-Âeight hours to deliver everything the feds had on him or heâd start with Sloane.â
âStart with as inâ¦â Lina trailed off, and we all turned to look at the little librarian who was sitting on the floor frowning over fanned-Âout paperwork.
âIâm not letting that happen,â I said.
âDoes Blondie believe youâre in it for the long haul yet?â Nolan asked as Sloane shoved her glasses up her nose.
âNot yet. But if it takes killing a man in cold blood to prove it, Iâll do it.â
âLetâs keep that as option B,â Lina said. âI hear theyâre not as lenient with conjugal visits anymore, and judging from Sloaneâs sex hair, you two have a lot of ground to make up.â
I left them and crossed the room to her.
She looked up at me as I crouched down. âYou have that line between your eyebrows you get when youâre concentrating,â I observed, running my finger over the spot in question. âYou should get some sleep.â
âAnd miss all the fun?â
âWhen this is over, Iâm taking you to a private island where we can drink piña coladas naked on a beach so I can teach you what fun is,â I decided.
Sloane grinned at me. âSince when is Lucian Rollins an expert on fun?â
âSince he almost came in your mouth when you were on your knees.â
âVery flattering. But I need you to put away your party hat for a second and get out your broody-Âmaster-Âof-Âthe-Âbusiness-Âand-Âpolitical-Âuniverse beret for a second, Lucifer.â
âWhat do you need?â
She wet her lips and glanced down at the papers in front of her. âSomething Hugo said tonight has been bothering me.â
âEverything the asshole said should have bothered you.â
She shook her head. âThe thing about the fire. About me not learning my lesson from the arson. At first I thought it was just him letting us know heâd been watching me. But I started thinking what if he was connected somehow?â
I sat next to her and helped myself to a swig of her lukewarm root beer. âConnected in what way?â
âWe think the fire was retaliation for me working on Mary Louiseâs case, right? I was threatened by Cinnamon Man, who specifically mentioned her name on the same day Mary Louise was attacked. Mary Louise dropped it, but I kept pushing. You got her moved to a new facility where sheâd be safer and got Allen protection. I kept digging. So someone decided to let us know they werenât happy by setting fire to the library while I was in it.â
Her recap of the situation was raising my already dangerously high blood pressure. âWhatâs the connection? Why would a sociopath crime boss in DC care about a wrongfully convicted female prisoner?â
Sloane bit her lip. âWhat if itâs the prison?â She handed me a sheet of paper. âFraus Correctional Center is a private prison owned by a corporation called Civic Group, which is owned by two other corporations. Which then made me think about all your sneaky underhandedness hiding grants and donations in entities named after cherry trees. And while I was thinking about your sneakiness, this one caught my eye.â She tapped the page above the words Rex Management. âRex is Latin for king,â she explained.
âWhich Hugo fancies himself to be,â I mused, following her drift.
âExactly,â Sloane said, beaming at me. âSo I did a search for other private prisons in Virginia, Maryland, and North Carolina and found three more facilities owned by Civic Group. All rundown. All with overcrowding and understaffing complaints. But all providing profits to Civic Group and its owners. I canât tell what kind of profit weâre talking, but each place has a contract with the government providing them money for each inmate housed. The more people in the facility, the higher the profits.â
âWhen I threatened to have Duncan Hugo moved to another facility, he panicked,â I recalled, scanning Sloaneâs research. âHe said he wouldnât be safe.â
âWas it one of these three?â she asked, rising to her knees in excitement.
I pointed to Lucrum. âThatâs the one.â
Sloane threw her arms around my neck. âI knew it! I did good, didnât I? Two-Âtime convicted felon Anthony Freaking Hugo is part owner of four private correctional facilities. Thatâs got to be seriously illegal.â
âNot to mention the fact that he can have anyone in one of those prisons eliminated if necessary,â I pointed out.
Sloane pulled back, looking horrified. âHoly shit.â
âThis is good, Pix. Really good,â I said, giving her a squeeze.
She cupped my face in her hands. âTake him down, big guy.â
I gave her a hard kiss on the mouth and deposited her on top of her research. âPasture!â I snapped at the hacker.
She looked up and pointed at herself. âMe?â
Sloane leaned in. âI think you mean Prairie.â
âRight. Prairie. Thatâs what I said. Stop what youâre doing, and give me everything you can on Rex Management and Civic Group.â
I gave Sloaneâs shoulder a squeeze as I dialed Special Agent Idler.
âItâs 4:00 a.m. This better be fucking good,â she rasped.
âHow soon can you put a team together to drag Hugo into the nearest cell?â
I hadnât slept or showered in thirty-Âsix hours, but Anthony Hugo looked worse than I did, I thought smugly as I took the chair across from him.
Gone were the slick suit and the diamond pinkie ring, and in their place, he wore a baggy orange jumpsuit that only made him look more sallow.
âYou come here to gloat?â he demanded as the guard cuffed him to the table with a satisfying snap. âBecause Iâll be out of here within a day. They canât keep me.â
âAh, but they can,â I said, leaning back on the metal chair. âI just came from Special Agent Idlerâs office.â
âThat bitch will be the first to go.â He sneered cagily. âWell, maybe the second after your little blond girlfriend.â
âHereâs the thing about that, Anthony. These are just the beginning of your charges. The other officers in your little Rex Management have all been arrested. Coincidentally, theyâre also most of your inner circle. And theyâre singing like their lives depend on it. The feds have already talked to a dozen of your crew serving sentences in your facilities, and theyâve confessed to an astonishing number of crimes, including assaults and murder. Most of them werenât afraid of pointing the finger at who gave the orders now that youâre behind bars, especially after they were promised deals and sentence reductions.â
Anthony went even paler.
âYou listen to me, you son of a fucking bitchâÂâ
âNo,â I said stonily. âItâs your turn to listen. In less than two days, Iâve dismantled every piece of your business. Everything you worked for your entire life. Itâs all gone. Your assets are frozen. Your men are sitting in interrogation rooms around the city. Including the ones you had dump Felix Metzer in the Potomac. You have nothing left. Do you know why that is?â
âFuck you.â
âWrong answer. I took everything from you because you tried to take from me. You threatened my family. No one walks away from that.â
âIâll get to you. And when I do, Iâll finish the job I started with that list your police chief friend was on. Iâll take out every single one of the people you love, and then Iâll make you bleed.â
I smirked. âGood luck with that.â
âYou think seeinâ your friend pumped full of lead and that library fire were bad? Iâm just getting started. Iâll come for you personally. I got guys watching you and that FBI bitch. One call from me and youâre both dead like Metzer. No one crosses me.â
I stood up and buttoned my suit jacket. âI wouldnât be so sure of that. That FBI bitch had your âguysâ arrested yesterday. Third strike for quite a few of them, which made them surprisingly cooperative. Now, if youâll excuse me, I have someplace I need to be.â
I strolled out of the room and left his snarled threats behind me.
âTell me everything!â Sloane pounced the second I opened my front door. âDoes he know heâs cooked? Did he threaten you? Did you laugh in his face? Is there surveillance footage of him freaking out that I could watch?â
She was wearing pajama pants with palm fronds on them and a tight black tank top. Her hair was damp from a shower, and her eyes were sparkling.
Something warm and bright expanded in my chest. It felt like Iâd swallowed the sun.
I gripped her wrist, bent at the waist, and tossed her neatly over my shoulder.
âYou two are free to go,â I said to Lina and Grace, who had been on Sloane guard duty for the last twenty-Âfour hours.
âWoo-Âhoo!â Grace said.
âHave fun, kids,â Lina called as I carried Sloane down the hall to the bedroom.
I tossed her on the bed, making her laugh. âYouâre awfully frisky for a man who hasnât slept in two days.â
âRuining the life of a bad guy does that to me,â I teased, stripping off my jacket and tie.
âMy hero.â
The words from her did strange things to my insides. And I knew Iâd treasure them just like every âattaboyâ Iâd earned from her father.
Sloane crawled higher up the bed and propped herself on the new mound of pillows Iâd had delivered. She patted the spot next to her. âCome tell me all about it, big guy, and then weâll get naked and do naughty things to each other.â
I made it a quarter of my way through my retelling of Hugoâs arrest before I passed out with Sloane in my arms and proceeded to sleep the sleep of a hero for the next ten hours.