Not Jeremy
Mack put on his new-car-salesman smile before he even finished the handshake. âIâm Mack,â he said, voice varnished smooth. âThis wasnât easy to pull. But Iâm confident we got what youâre looking for.â
Linda didnât smile back. She had two men with herâreal muscle, not the discount kind. Carl wore flat black cargo pants and a sleeveless muscle T-shirt, the kind that didnât brag, it just told the truth.
Carl didnât posture. He didnât need to. You donât posture with arms built from lifting things that fought back.
âCarl,â Linda said.
Carl moved like a switch had been thrownâno wasted steps, no flexing for the crowd. His hand closed around the back of Mackâs neck, big and unhurried, and Mack stiffened like a dog feeling the chain tighten. He didnât even finish the little âhey nowâ rising in his throat before Carl pivoted him toward the door.
The sound of their boots faded down the concrete bay. Then came a short, meaty thud and the soft thunk of a trunk closingâquick, efficient, final. The noise hung in the air, faintly metallic, like it knew exactly what it meant.
Silkyâs breath hitched like a misfired engine. She moved between Linda and the boys without thinking, a jittering wall of fear and nerve. Her hands were slick, knees locked. A stale breeze drifted through the half-open bay door carrying the burnt-oil tang of the shop floor. Somewhere behind her, one kid cracked open a Happy Meal toy and it made a sharp little pop like a starter pistol.
âYouâre the one who called me,â Linda said.
âBut not the one who wanted to do this,â Silky mouthed, voice barely making it past her teeth.
Linda scanned the room once, fast and exact. None of these boys had Jeremyâs face. Too short. Too dark. Wrong eyes. Not him.
âHow many kids?â
âSeventeen.â
âI see fifteen.â
âTwo in the bathroom.â
The fluorescent lights above them hummed softlyâan insect-wing drone that made the silence louder.
âWhose idea were the Happy Meals?â
âMine,â Silky said. âCost thirty-seven bucks.â
Linda fished a couple of twenties from her pocket and laid them down on a bench like she was tipping a deserving barmaid. The bills made a dry papery whisper on the cold metal.
âMack? Was that his name?â
Silky nodded, noticing the redhead had already slipped into past tense.
âA guy like Mack always keeps a rainy-day fund. A smart girl might know where.â
âShe might,â Silky said. Her voice trembled in the middle like a frayed wire.
âAnd what would a smart girl do with money like that?â
Silky swallowed. âGet her ass out of Dodge.â
âHeâd probably have some pills or candy mixed in with the cash,â Linda added.
âHe would,â Silky whispered.
âLeave the candy. Take the cash.â
Linda turned slightly toward her other man. âGive me fifteen minutes to get clear. Then get clear yourself and drop a dime. It wonât take the cops more than three minutes to get here, and I doubt these boys get in any trouble in that window.â
A plastic cup tipped over near the bench with a hollow clack that made Silky flinch. One of the boys laughed softly, grease on his fingers, sauce on his chinâcompletely unaware that the air in the room had just shifted from bad to dangerous.
Linda walked toward the door, boots whispering on the concrete. She didnât look at the kids. She didnât need to. Her eyes brushed across Silky insteadâa quick, measuring glance, cold as a razorâs edge. A test, and a promise.
Then she was gone.

















