Vic
Buried Treasure
Chase Nygaardâs POV
Outside Sons LA Building
Everyone but Joe and Vic jumped in the back, and before the door was down, I had the U-Haul moving. As we made the first turn and headed away from the Clubhouse and all the cops, I stole a look at Spider Monkey. âAnything showing up on the cameras yet?â
âNo, none of the cops seem to have noticed. All streets clear.â
âI love it when a good plan comes together. Did you see all those bags the guys brought out? Holy freakinâ Hannah, there must be tens of millions, and we got in and out without a scratch!â I made another turn, making it to a 4-lane road. Our rally point was just a mile ahead.
Vic's mental send broke in. âChase, Iâm hit. Joeâs helping me to the car now. Someone came up behind us and put two into me.â
Oh FUCK! I knew I shouldnât have said anything to jinx us. âIâm coming for you.â
âNO, you need to get everyone away from here before the cops show up. Weâre almost there; weâll meet you at the rally point we were at before we came here.â
He was right; we needed separation from the Law Enforcement convention that was happening at the Sons clubhouse.
âOh shit,â Spider said. âVicâs injured!â She was watching the cameras on the screen; I stole a glance to see him being helped down the street towards their car. âWe have to go back.â
âWe canât. Joeâs with him, heâll bring him to our staging point. I need you to focus on watching for any signs the police know about us.â
âWeâre out of camera range,â she said with tears streaming down her face. âYou have to help him!â
âI will. As soon as we get to the rally point, Iâll go. Iâm a doctor, remember?â I wanted to run the red lights, but the last thing we needed was to get pulled over. Vic would have to apply pressure and hold on a few more minutes. âSawyer, Carson, Vic has been shot.â
Sawyer replied. âWe know, Joe is updating us. Theyâre a couple of blocks behind us. He has a through-and-through with arterial spray from his thigh, and he took one through the lungs. Joe said heâs coughing blood.â
Two major wounds; this wasnât good. âThereâs a drugstore about five blocks from the rally point. Pick a guy to walk back there and buy supplies. Rubbing alcohol, sterile pads and wrap, a shitload of paper towels, ammonia-based cleaner, blankets and garbage bags. Clear out a working space for me back there; Iâll operate on him out of sight.â
âOn it. We brought some plastic sheeting and garbage bags with; weâll put that down and make room.â
âGood. As soon as they pull in, get him into the back of the truck and on the plastic. I need my medical bag; itâs in the trunk of the rental car. Any guys with O-Negative blood?â
âThree,â he said after a few seconds.
âIâll need blood from each; Iâll run the line straight down to him. Iâll need an assistant, Carson, unless there is someone more qualified than you.â As a Beta trainee, Carson had taken Emergency Medical Technician training in the â80s.
âIâm it,â he said. I pulled into the lot and out of sight behind the buildings backing up to a concrete wall so no one could see in the back. âStay here and monitor police radio,â I told Spider Monkey as I got out.
âI want to help,â she said as she took her belt off.
âPlease stay here. Weâve got this.â She nodded as I got out and slammed the door. I went to the back, where the door was open and one of the guys was already jogging for the drugstore. Three more warriors were waiting for Joeâs car, which was just making the turn in. As soon as Joe stopped the car, the two picked up Vic from the passenger seat and carried him to the back. Carson and Sawyer pulled him in, placing him on the plastic sheeting where I was waiting. The belt wasnât holding enough pressure on the wound; as soon as my medical bag was next to me, I put on gloves and pulled out the surgical tray. Tearing off the cover exposed a bunch of hemostats, retractors, sponges, scissors, and a scalpel. I took out a bottle of Betadine and made sure plenty of gloves were on top.
âCarson, his femoral artery has been hit, thatâs first, or heâll bleed out in a few more minutes. I want you to put bandages over the entry and exit of the chest wound.â
âOn it.â The boys left in the truck trained their tactical flashlights on the wound as I removed the belt and cut away his jeans. I poured Betadine on his right thigh, then used the scalpel to extend the exit wound so I could get in there. Feeling inside, I found the artery and clamped above an below the tear with the hemostats. âGood news, itâs not ascended,â I said.
âGood. I saw that shit in Blackhawk Down; I donât want to lose my breakfast.â Carson was finishing up. âWhatâs next?â
âTransfusion kit is on the near side by the blood bags. Get lines going and start feeding him blood.â He pulled out the tubing and needles, and the first volunteer already had his arm out. I pulled out a stitch kit, pre-threaded, and a small retractor. Widening the wound so I could see, I cleaned the edges of the damaged artery, then stitched it back together.
Carson had a transfusion line going by the time I was ready to release the clamps. âHang an IV bag; heâs lost a lot of blood.â Carson pulled his gloves off and grabbed another bag, one of the men coming over to hold it. He moved to the other side, placing the needle in the back of his hand and taping it down. I released the downstream clamp, allowing the artery to backfill, then slowly released the clamp.
The stitches were holding.
âCarson, grab a stitch kit and close for me down here. Nothing fancy, just close up the wounds.â
âYou got it.â He moved down and grabbed another stitch pack while I moved up to the chest. Heâd been hit on the back right side of his chest with a pistol round, and there was no exit wound. âRoll him onto his stomach,â I said.
The guys picked him up and set him down again, and I cut his shirt away and doused it with Betadine. Cutting the skin and retracting the muscle, I could see his fifth rib shattered by the bullet. I reached in for a rib spreader, thankful that Pack doctors brought so many things needed for emergency surgeries. For us, you might not have a chance to go to a hospital if the patient was in wolf form. I placed it between the ribs and cranked it so I could see the chest cavity.
The bullet had flattened against the back rib, then ricocheted down and right until stopping by his ninth rib. Feeling around, I found and removed the bullet, then checked for fragments. I pulled out a few pieces of bone, but the 9mm round had stayed intact. I sewed up the lung and started the exit process just as Carson was changing to a third donor.
I left a chest tube in after reinflating his lung so I could catch any drainage as he healed. Once I had him stitched up, I sat back and relaxed a little. I cut off the rest of his clothing, then the guys carefully lifted him to a clean piece of plastic covered with paper towels. We cleaned the blood off him as best we could, then I taped six-by-six gauze pads to his chest and thigh. Finally, I wrapped his chest with gauze and his leg with an Ace bandage. A shot of a strong antibiotic, and I was done.
The guys had collected all the trash and bloodied items, rolling them up inside the plastic sheet before placing the whole thing in a garbage bag. I stood up, stretching my legs and back, and looked at my brothers. âWe need to talk,â I said.
âYeah,â Sawyer said. âBut first, you need to talk to Spider Monkey. Sheâs freaking out.â
That figured. I walked up to the cab, where she was listening to the police radio and surfing the internet for news. I smiled as I got in, and I could see the relief in her body as she knew Vic was all right. âHeâs going to make it,â she asked quietly.
âYes. Vicâs badly injured, but stable. He was hit twice; one bullet went through his right lung, the other hit his femoral artery in his right thigh. I got him patched up the best I could, now we wait.â I reached over and took her hand; she was shaking.
âI almost lost him,â she said as she cried.
I pulled her into my side and held her as her emotions released. A minute later, she was better. âSpider, any news on the place we hit?â
âThe news doesnât know anything, but the cops found a tunnel between the Clubhouse and the warehouse we hit. Frame, most of them escaped. The dead and the arrested are all low-level guys; the leadership used them to hold the cops off until they were in the tunnel.â
Fuck. The cats were the leaders, and they escaped? I had to let the guys know. âStay here; I need to talk to my brothers about what we do next.â She nodded and went back to her computer while I went out to our rental car. I told the guys about the tunnel and the missing leadership, and they were as pissed as I was. Whoever they sent first must have come out of the tunnel just after they left. âHow are we doing here?â
âCleanup is done. The guys got the blood out of your rental car. Thank Luna it had leather seats.â
The U-Haul had to be returned by Spider Monkey, and Vic had rented the car. I didnât want to drive a U-Haul back home, and we still needed to deal with the jet Sawyer had brought down. âWe need to get you guys out of here before the manhunt for the missing Sons takes off. Start shuttling your men to the airport; it will take three trips. Spider Monkey can drive you the last time and come back here.â
âThatâs reasonable,â Sawyer said. âMy pilot is Pack. He knows weâre coming and will have the jet ready. Heâs in a hangar, so we can drive in and transfer people and luggage out of sight.â
âHow much did we get from those bastards?â
âFourteen big bags, all filled with fat stacks of cash,â Carson said. âThey must have been preparing to ship it down to Mexico, and we caught them at a good time.â
I nodded. âI told Spider sheâd get a full share, so you guys split seven between your Packs, and Iâll do the same with her.â
Sawyer just shook his head no. âThatâs not fair. We flew down, hit a target, and left again. You, Spider and the Brotherhood did all the heavy lifting on this.â
Carson looked at me as they stood shoulder to shoulder. âWe already decided. Weâre each taking two bags for our Packs, and weâll take care of the men who are here out of our end. The rest is yours; you divvy it up as you see fit. Just don't go driving through the ghetto tossing stacks of cash like on Breaking Bad.â
I tried to talk them out of it, but they had already decided and were stubborn about it. âFine. Just be careful with how you let the cash out to your people. Itâs easy to attract attention, and you donât want to give the IRS a reason to look at your under a microscope.â
âWe will.â Carson drove off with the first group; it took about forty minutes for them to return. In the meantime, one of the guys walked to McDonaldâs and brought back breakfast for us. Carson took the second load, then finally it was just my brothers and Joe.
âLet me know how Vic is doing,â Joe asked. I could tell he felt guilty because he got hit while they were together.
âI will. Say hi to Mom for me,â I told Sawyer. Carson had it easy at our old Pack, while Sawyer was learning a new one. Our mother was shifting between the three Packs, making sure the new Lunas were getting up to speed quickly. She was spending another week at Sawyerâs before coming our way for Christmas; she didnât want to miss her three Grandchildren over the holidays. âTry to talk her into staying, you know itâs dangerous for our Pack right now.â
Sawyer gave me his best Vito Corleone impersonation. âThis I cannot do,â he said as I laughed. âYou know Mom. If I tell her the babies are in danger, sheâll insist on going to protect them, and sheâll rope us into coming with her. Itâs bad enough youâre taking six of my warriors to help out.â Carson just nodded, theyâd had this conversation without me as well.
He was right. âSafe travels, my brothers.â We hugged again, and Spider went behind the wheel to drive them to the Long Beach airport. I went back inside the U-Haul, keeping an eye on Vic. He was running a slight fever, but that was normal for his injuries. His blood pressure was good, and his breathing was close to normal again. I hated to move him, but I couldnât carry him into a hotel like this, and I needed to stay with him.
I heard Spider coming, and she parked next to the U-Haul then jumped out. âHow is he? What are we doing now?â
âWe need to move him into the backseat,â I said. âThen you drop off the U-haul, and I drive you home.â
âWhat about Vic?â
âHe needs a few weeks to recover. I hate to drive all the way back to your home, but I donât have a safe place any closer, and I want you out of the way. The shit is going to hit the fan after this raid.â I smiled at her as I opened the back door. âYou did real good, Spider. Iâll drop you off and weâll be out of your hair by sundown.â
âThe FUCK you will,â she said as she opened the other back door. âVic can heal up at my place; we can both watch over him.â
âI donât want you involved more than you are,â I said.
âToo bad I donât care what you want,â she retorted. âWhen we started this, I told you that I didnât want money, but I did want something. You said if I asked, it was mine.â
Oh shit. I should have seen this coming. âAnd what do you want?â
âI want Vic in my bed, of course. Now load the bags in the back, weâre wasting time.â She was right again. Only six bags of cash fit in the trunk, so the rest and our luggage I put on the floor in the back seat. I picked up Vic and walked down the loading ramp with him; Spider helped me get him situated laying down across the back seat. We covered him and the bags with fleece throw blankets the guys had bought at the drugstore.
I put the truckâs ramp up and closed the door, verifying we hadnât left anything incriminating behind. âIâll follow you as you drop it off.â
âWhat do I say about why Iâm bringing it back early? I told the woman I was moving to Madison with my boyfriend.â
âAs little as possible. If itâs the same woman, tell her you found your boyfriend in bed with your best friend, and the move is over just like your relationship.â
She gave me a big hug. âThank you for saving him,â she said.
âIâm glad I could help. Now letâs get going, morning traffic is a bitch around here.â She hopped in the truck, and I followed her back to the street. With luck, weâd be back at her place by dinnertime.
I drove more carefully than ever before; if I got pulled over, neither of us would ever get out of jail.