In My Bed
Buried Treasure
Spider Monkeyâs POV
I-5 North out of Los Angeles
I let Chase deal with the traffic while I focused on keeping all of us out of jail for the rest of our lives.
Iâd had some time with Chase and his brother Sawyer while Carson was ferrying the men to the airport. I liked his big brother, he was calm in a crisis and didnât mess around. Our little liberation exercise was going exactly as planned until Vic was shot twice. We all were involved in a robbery that resulted in the deaths of seven men, and our car contained millions in cash. We went through everything that could tie us to the crime, one by one.
The first was the U-haul. Traffic cameras were the likely cause, so I hacked the system and froze the cameras during the times we drove from the staging area to the warehouse and back. We talked about extending the blackouts to when we returned the truck to the store. Sawyer thought that would just draw attention to what should have been a routine transaction; since I was the one picking it up, and I didnât look like I was knocking off a violent motorcycle gang, I should be all right.
âWill the clerk at the rental place remember you,â Sawyer asked.
âProbably, but only because of the stories I told when renting and returning,â I said. âIf they donât have the license plate number to tie to the robbery, it will seem innocent enough. If they look hard at me, my fake identity will crumble. All it would take would be a visit to my âapartmentâ that doesnât exist.â They agreed, and I put my alternate identity back into the hidden compartment in my bag.
All of the guys were wearing black clothes, gloves, and hoodies, so even if a camera saw them, they wouldnât be able to identify them.
That left the blood. âWith DNA, wonât they be able to identify Vic,â Iâd asked.
âDoubtful,â Sawyer said. âHeâs not in the databases because he has a clean record. We need to keep it that way. If he gets arrested and they take a sample, he is going to jail for a long time.â
âWhat about if they run the blood samples through other databases? I saw some true crime shows where they are using sites like 23&Me to solve cold cases by identifying relatives to people who they have DNA samples of.â I looked at both of them, and they looked at each other. âWhat about his family?â
âIâm pretty sure they arenât in the databases, but there isnât much we can do about it right now. When heâs recovered, he can warn them not to use those services,â Chase said. It didnât give me a warm fuzzy, but we couldnât go back and clean up his blood now.
The weapons they had used were packed and on the plane with them, and Sawyer promised he would take care of them. The full-auto weapons would result in a long spell in prison if seized, so they would end up in a very deep lake back home.
As we drove out of town, I took the Marikoâs credit cards back out. Transferring money from reloadable Visa cards, I paid off the balance and closed the accounts. I canceled the insurance on Marikoâs car, and donated it to a local charity. I sent a text to my friend with the apartment; the innocuous-sounding message told him to close out the mailbox and provide the key and title to the charity when they came. Before we hit Burbank, Mariko was a ghost again.
âHow long is he going to be out,â I asked Chase as I looked back at Vic lying in the back seat.
âA few more hours,â he said. âWeâll swap drivers and get gas and food when we get away from town a little. I need to check his chest tube and make sure his bleeding is stopped.â
âIf he was in a hospital, how long until he could go home?â
âAt least a week,â Chase said. âWeâll have to trade off monitoring him, and we still have things to do. We hit the Sons hard today, but we canât let our boot off their necks.â
âI have more ideas, but I donât want to use cell data out here. Iâll wait until I get home,â I said. âI have nothing going on, I could drive now if you want to read more of the files,â I said.
âItâs all right. Weâll have plenty of time for research as weâre holed up in your house. Can you take some vacation time, maybe call in sick?â
âI kind of did, I said my mother broke her hip and I was going to be out for a couple weeks,â I said. It was as good an excuse as any for my sudden disappearance.
He reached in his pocket and handed me a digital thermometer. âCan you take his temperature? I need to watch for signs of infection.â
âI bet, the back of a moving van isnât the most sterile surgical environment.â I took the thermometer and lowered my seat back before unbuckling my belt. We were on a fairly straight section of road, and traffic was finally letting up as we got to the edge of the metro area. I moved our bags behind my seat, then climbed back on top of the bags of money that filled the area between the back and front seats. I climbed between, then laid down on the bags in front of Vic. I wiggled around, moving some of the loose bundles underneath me to make it more comfortable. I felt a little like Huell in Breaking Bad, taking a rest on the money pile.
I looked over at the man who Iâd become close to in a very short time. He was such a big guy that his knees were poking the back of the passenger seat, while his head was tight to the door. I adjusted the blanket covering him, then put my hand on his face. He felt a little warm to the touch, and I turned the thermometer on and worked it under his tongue. While I waited, I pushed his salt-and-pepper hair off his temple, tracing the edge of his hair with my finger. I continued down, tracing the scars on his neck and down to his shoulders and chest. His body was scarred heavily, as Iâd found in my explorations while I waited for him to recover for the next rounds. When I asked him about it, he was evasive; he said he had fought in several wars, but he didnât want to talk about it.
I traced the four parallel lines that carved from his left shoulder onto his chest, the raised scar tissue covering his pectoral muscle. So much pain in his life, and now heâd been shot twice. I hoped to God that he would be able to stop all this and settle down now that we had liberated all this money. I wanted to take this beautiful man to a beach, making love in a cabana as the waves roll in. No, better⦠one of those bungalows built over the water, with a thatch roof and windows open on all sides to the ocean breezes. A big bed, making love on the deck as the sun sets, diving in the waters, yeah, thatâs more like it.
The beep of the thermometer broke me out of my daydream. I pulled it from under his tongue and looked at it. âOne hundred point four,â I told him.
âLow-grade fever, thatâs to be expected,â Chase said. âI need you to monitor his temperature for me. I gave him a dose of antibiotics, but if he spikes, Iâll have to try a different one.â
âDonât you know?â
âI canât exactly take him to the hospital, Spider. I have to deal with what I have in my bag for now.â
I hated the thought of it going bad. There was nothing I could do while driving, so I pulled back the blanket from him. âIâm going to lie down with him, that way if he has problems or spikes a fever, Iâll feel it,â I said.
âJust be careful of his chest wound,â he said as he looked in the mirror at me.
âPlease, Iâm just a tiny thing.â I skooched until I was lying on my back, my legs in front of his and clear of his thigh wound. I pulled the covers back over us as I rested my head on his bicep. I moved his other arm over my waist and relaxed into him.
I fell asleep to the sound of him breathing.
âSpider, wake up,â he said as he stopped the car. I opened my eyes; we were at a gas station. âGo use the restroom and buy some food and drinks for us. Iâll pump gas then switch when you return; I donât want him alone out here.â
âAll right,â I said. I sat up, turning to check Vicâs forehead with the back of my hand. He didnât feel feverish, but Iâd check when I came back. I moved back into the passenger seat, making sure Vic was covered up along with the bags, then got out and stretched. âWhere are we?â
âKettleman Station, we have another couple hours to your place,â he said. He put a reloadable Visa card in the pump and started to fill it up.
âThereâs an In-N-Out burger over there, we should just drive through. There are few things in life I trust less than a gas station burrito.â He laughed as started to clean the windshield. âIâll drive the rest of the way.â
He had picked a gas pump at the far end of the station, not wanting people around, and so I hit the bathroom and picked up some Starbucks and a bag of sunflower seeds. He was just finishing as I got back out, so I got in and adjusted the seat way forward so I could drive it up to the entrance to pick him up. He messed with the bags in back so he could even get in my side, then I drove through and got us some tasty burgers, fries, and he got a big shake.
The drive back was pretty good, traffic picking up as we got closer to home, but we beat the late rush hour. News radio was full of stories about the raids this morning. We were saddened by the loss of the officers, and shocked that the leaders weren't caught. âCan we pull into your garage,â Chase asked.
âIâll have to move my motorcycle,â she said. It was a double garage, and I parked in front of the door. I got out and unlocked the side door, then moved my Harley in front of my Ford Focus. I went out to his car and soon had it parked inside with the door down. âHow do you want to do this?â
âLeave the cash in the car for now; Iâll get it after Vic is resting again. If you can grab my medical bag and open up the doors, Iâll get him out of here.â
âYou canât carry him alone,â I said.
âHeâs waking up,â he said. I looked in, and his eyes were blinking open. âEasy, Vic. Youâre safe. Weâre back at Spider Monkeyâs place.â
He opened his eyes, searching for me, then smiling when he saw me. âBaby?â
âWelcome back, Vic. Donât get shot again, you scared the hell out of me.â
âSorry,â he said. It took a few minutes for Chase to carefully lift and pull him until he was standing naked on his good leg. I ran ahead, making sure the doors were open and the path was clear.
âWhere do you want him,â Chase asked.
âMy bedroom, of course,â I said. I ran ahead, turning down the sheets.
âOpen the bathroom, I need to change his bandages and check the wounds first,â Chase said.
âGood, because I have to piss like a racehorse on a flat rock,â he said. After he used the toilet, I spread a towel on the vanity for him to sit on, then went back and closed everything back up. When I returned, Vic was grimacing as Chase used alcohol and cotton balls from my medicine cabinet to clean the blood from the gunshot wounds. âDamn that stings,â he said.
âIt beats an infection,â Chase said. I handed him his doctorâs bag, and he soon had him bandaged up again with a pair of boxers and a T-shirt on. He gave him more antibiotic pills and painkillers, then we helped him to bed. He was asleep in moments. Chase went back out to get the rest of the bags from the car, while I took a quick shower.
He had them stacked in the spare bedroom when I came out, wearing a Steel Ladies T-shirt and cotton shorts. âFeel better?â
âMuch. Iâm beat, Iâm going to lay down with Vic for a bit, then Iâll start working on the next form of our water torture.â
âI think Iâll take a shower too. Iâll wake you up when itâs time for dinner, Iâll get something delivered.â
âYou need me to get you some cash for that,â I teased.
âFunny. No climbing his tree until heâs medically cleared,â he said as he closed the door.