Games of the Heart (The 'Burg #4)(192)
Colt looked at Mike.
“I take it there’s no news,” he said quietly.
“Nope,” Mike replied immediately, his voice tight.
Colt nodded. He didn’t think that was good. It had been hours.
“Well, I got some,” he told Mike.
Mike held his eyes but said not a word. And Colt had to admit, he had to work at holding his friend’s gaze with what he read in it.
“We got Troy Piggott,” Colt said low and watched Mike’s body get tight.
“Yeah?” Mike asked, staring at him closely.
He knew there was more.
“Well, we got him but there’s a situation,” Colt told him.
“What situation?” Mike asked.
“We didn’t actually get him. Ryker and Cal did.”
Mike drew in a long, deep breath.
Then he let it out, muttering, “Fuck.”
“Ryker went f**kin’ apeshit,” Colt went on.
“Jesus, he’s met her once,” Mike stated.
“Tanner says he’s got a jacked sense of justice,” Colt explained.
“How bad is it?” Mike asked.
Colt hesitated before he answered carefully, “He’ll survive.”
Mike’s eyes flared and Colt knew why. Piggott would survive. Dusty, unknown.
Then he asked, “Ryker gonna catch it?”
“Piggott is a minor. His parents are at the Station. They’re freaked. The other two kids, Schultz and Wannamaker, laid Piggott out. They were separated when they made their statements but their stories match. They’re totally flipped out but they talked, they did it fast and they both said the same thing. Piggott went off on one. They had no clue he was gonna do it. They had a plan, jacking around, no one was supposed to get hurt and Piggott went maverick.”
Colt paused and Mike nodded so he continued.
“Don’t know if you know but Layla did a f**kin’ number on his arm. It’s mangled all to shit. This is likely why he dropped the gun and left it at the scene. It’s registered to his Dad and it’s covered in his prints. It’s also likely why Ryker could jack him up so bad. Ryker’s a monster but, his right arm useless, he wasn’t able to defend himself.”
That got another eye flare before Mike nodded and Colt went on.
“Tanner got to Cal and Piggott before the cops. Cal reported he got Ryker off Piggott and Cal subdued the kid with plastic restraints, though the kid wasn’t movin’ too much anyway. Before Tanner even got there, Ryker went to ground probably because Cal advised him to do so. Sully’s executing fancy footwork at the Station and I gotta say not a man or woman in that building is fired up to go out in search of Ryker. And, right now, Piggott’s parents gotta worry about finding an attorney because Sully informed them that an attack on teenagers and a cop’s woman by a kid his age with priors, it is highly likely he’ll be tried as an adult. So I’m not sure they’re thinkin’ too much about what’s gonna happen with Ryker. With time, though, they’ll turn their attention to it so we gotta figure somethin’ out.”
“He shot an unarmed woman who did not one thing to him at point blank range in the chest,” Mike reminded him, his voice blank, his eyes not even close to blank and Colt flinched.
“Yeah,” Colt agreed.
“She’s got friends, those friends are gonna react. No judge in this state, even with Ryker’s history, will look at this and go hard at Ryker.”
“Yeah,” Colt agreed.
“Someone needs to get word to him to turn himself in,” Mike advised.
“Tanner’s workin’ on it.”
Mike nodded and his eyes moved to the doors.
“Mike –” Colt started carefully and Mike’s eyes cut to him.
“Don’t,” he bit off. “I’ve known her twenty-five years, had her for five months and part of that time I pissed away. I get you wanna say the right thing but there is no right thing right now.”
“Right,” Colt whispered.
“It’s appreciated, just not right now, Colt.”
Colt nodded.
Then he lifted a hand, clapped it on Mike’s shoulder and squeezed while holding his eyes.
Then he let him go, scanned the room, locking eyes occasionally then turned and walked out of the room.
He had shit to do. They had a situation.
But his destination was Feb.
Feb and Jack.
Once he saw his woman, held her, took her mouth and laid eyes on his son…
Then he’d deal with the situation.
*
Mike was standing in the waiting room, everyone else still was in their seats.
His eyes were to the door.
But he didn’t see the door.
He saw Dusty in their bed with his dog that morning telling him she loved him.
Black day.
He saw it in those kids’ eyes. He knew it.
He missed it.
And it made for a black day.
She knew it was coming, he promised her he’d make it okay and he broke his promise.
A black f**king day.
Then his eyes focused, the room got tense and the man in scrubs approached the door.
He walked through, scanned the room and asked, “Dusty Holliday?”
Everyone moved forward.