Cameron Haley

Mob Rules


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indefinitely. But I draw the line at using it for sexy dancing. As far as I’m concerned, that’s just cheating. Maybe it’s nothing more than a different brand of vanity, but whatever sexiness I’ve got is all-natural, baby. Mostly.

      In fairness to the weak-ass sorcerers who use the spell, club dancing does present a bit of a dilemma. If you really have no idea what you’re doing, you’ll look like an idiot. But if you try too hard, you’ll look like you’re trying too hard, and you’ll still look like an idiot. The key is to look like you have no idea what you’re doing, but sexy just comes naturally to you.

      Out on the floor, I did my best to still my body, mind and soul and settle into this Zenlike state of nondancing dancing sexiness. I probably looked like an idiot. Mostly, I just held on to Adan and hoped no one would notice me.

      As I moved against my boss’s son, I reviewed what I’d learned so far. First, the Goths in Adan’s posse were all normal humans, unremarkable but for their poor fashion sense. All except Fred, who was the genuine article. Judging by how much black juice was oozing from his undead hide, he had to be at least five hundred years old.

      Adan, of course, was the source of the magic I’d picked up from the bar. Not him, exactly, but his accessories. The small gold hoop in his left ear, the star pendant hanging from a slender chain around his neck, a ring, his Rolex—all of it radiated first-class juice, mostly protective magic, and I recognized it immediately as his father’s.

      As for Adan himself, well, the parts of his incredible body I could feel were lean, toned and hard, and I could feel most of them. Other than that, there wasn’t much to talk about. He had a little juice, about what you’d expect from a young man. He wasn’t a sorcerer.

      After about ten minutes of dancing, I dropped a sound-dampening spell around us. The music faded into the background. Adan’s eyes widened and he smiled. “Are you trying to impress me, Domino?”

      “Of course,” I said. “Adan, you know Fred is a vampire, right?”

      He nodded. “Yeah, I met him here at the club. He’s never tried to, you know, fang me or anything.”

      “How long have you known him?”

      “A few months. Really, he’s nothing to worry about. He’s a little weird, I guess, but you know, he’s just a guy at the club.”

      What did that mean? He’s just a guy at the club as in I don’t swing that way and he’s not any competition for you? Or, he likes me and promised not to drain my blood until my heart stops?

      “Okay,” I said finally. “You’re a big boy…I guess you can choose your own friends.”

      Adan laughed. Dimples were brandished disarmingly.

      “So you like this Goth, emo, industrial scene—whatever they’re calling it now?” I asked. “It doesn’t really seem like your style.”

      He shrugged. “It’s okay. I go to other clubs, too. I feel like a loser if I hang around Dad’s strip clubs too much.” Touché.

      “Adan, I heard one of our guys had started coming here, kid named Jamal. You ever see him?”

      Adan nodded. “He started coming in about a month ago. I hang out with him sometimes. Manfred doesn’t like him, but Manfred doesn’t really like anyone. Anyway, Jamal seems pretty cool.”

      “Who else did he hang out with? Did you ever see him with anyone that looked, I don’t know, out of place?”

      Adan’s brow furrowed. “He leaves with women sometimes, I guess. A lot of gangsters hang out here, so Jamal didn’t stick out as much as you’d think.”

      “Really? This is a gangster hangout?”

      “Yeah, mostly Papa Danwe’s guys. You know him?”

      This detective stuff was easy. “Yeah, I’ve heard of him.”

      “A lot of them hang out here. They all seem to know Manfred—at least the big guy does.”

      “The big guy? Do you know his name?”

      Adan shook his head. “I don’t know him, but I think he’s like a captain or whatever. Like you, I guess. He comes in here the most, sometimes by himself and sometimes with others. Anyway, he’s black and just a really big dude.”

      There was one gangster in Papa Danwe’s outfit who matched that description pretty well. Terrence Cole, one of Papa Danwe’s lieutenants. He was the kind of guy who made a lasting impression.

      “Did you ever see Jamal talking to this guy—or any of Papa Danwe’s boys?”

      “No, other than the girls and when he was hanging out with me, Jamal mostly kept to himself.”

      I guess that would have been too easy. “Okay. Thanks, Adan, this is really helpful.”

      “Why are you asking? Is Jamal in some kind of trouble?”

      I decided not to tell him, at least not yet. If his father wanted him to know about outfit business, he could tell Adan himself. He’d eventually hear about it anyway. I changed the subject.

      “Do you have a girlfriend?” I groaned inwardly. It had been the first thing that came to mind.

      “No. I did in college, but it didn’t work out. It’s hard to find someone, you know?”

      I nodded.

      “What about you?” Adan asked. “Boyfriend? Is there a Mr. Domino?”

      I smiled and shook my head. “The only guys I meet are gangsters. It’s hard to find someone to bring home to Momma.”

      He laughed, tilting his head back so the strobes danced in his liquid-brown eyes. “Does your mom know what you do?”

      “Yeah, she’s always known. She’s just glad I have a job.”

      “She probably worries about you. You’re her baby girl. This line of work, it’s gotta freak her out.”

      I shrugged. I didn’t tell him my mom was a fortune-teller, a good one. Mom probably knew more about my life and my future than I wanted to think. Then again, maybe not—the fortune-telling game is notoriously unreliable, even for Mom.

      I’d probably learned as much as I was going to, and really, that was more than I expected. I’d found a connection between Jamal and Papa Danwe’s outfit. Maybe Jamal was doing business with Papa Danwe. Maybe the kid had unknowingly picked up one of Terrence Cole’s girlfriends and tied her to the bondage rack in his apartment. I could see Jamal getting himself squeezed for something like that.

      And then there was the Vampire Fred. I couldn’t probe his mind as I could a normal human’s, probably because his brain was as dead as the rest of him. But I didn’t like him. I didn’t like him lurking around my boss’s son. I didn’t know exactly what Jamal had been up to in the club, but I didn’t like the apparent coincidence of an unaligned supernatural creature hanging out in the place—hanging out with Papa Danwe’s guys. I was itching to connect Fred to the murder in some way.

      Mostly, though, I didn’t want the undead piece of shit with Adan. Maybe it wasn’t any of my business, but I thought his father would want me to step up. Okay, maybe I had ulterior motives. Maybe it was some maternal, protective part of me screaming to get involved. Or maybe it was the romantically challenged part. I was sure it was what the maverick in the cop shows would do, so it had that going for it.

      “Do you think your friends would mind if we got out of here?” I asked. I’d planned to wait until the end of the song to make my move, but I think the same damn song had been playing since I walked into the club.

      Adan’s arms tightened around me and he breathed in my ear. “I don’t think I care what they think, Domino.”

      We left the club without returning to the table. Fred, of course, was leaning against my car when we got outside. My vintage 1965 Lincoln Continental convertible