“Wow. That was fast,” he said, turning to look at me.
“What was fast?”
“I just called Mr. Vale. I figured we’d be standing here for another hour or two, twiddling our thumbs. Or talking to the cops without one of you.”
“The cops?” I croaked, heartbeat hammering against my ribcage. “What do you need cops for?”
“Well,” Gav said, looking oddly squirrelly. “The thing is, we had a delivery this morning. And, well, we’re not sure what happened, but… I guess the door wasn’t locked. And someone…”
“They jacked everything,” one of his guys supplied.
If they expected shock or outrage, I was the wrong boss to be speaking to. Not many people knew this neighborhood better than I did. There was always someone around who was willing to steal a bunch of shit—from high-end electronics to fucking stuffed animals—and resell everything.
Everyone had to have a hustle.
I didn’t even particularly begrudge someone for this one, since we didn’twantthe neighborhood knowing it was partially my club.
“Alright. What’d they get?” I asked, watching Gav’s brows knit.
“The flooring.”
“The… flooring?”
“Black marble tiles. Go for about fifteen per tile.”
“And how many tiles were there?”
“Seventeen hundred. That’s—”
“Twenty-five grand,” I supplied. “Marble tile, that’s heavy, right?”
“It would have been a project. Something like ten pounds per tile.”
“How long a gap was there between when the shipment got here and when you got here?”
“An hour,” Gav said. “Max.”
“Any chance the dumpster is missing?”
“The… dumpster?”
I moved past them, going down the alley beside the building toward the little opening behind where, the day before, there’d been a mini dumpster.
“What…”
“Work smarter,” I said, shrugging. “You said Soren is on his way over?” I asked.
“Yeah.”
Good.
He could deal with the cops.
I wasn’t going to get my ass chewed out by Renzo for getting my face on anyone’s radar.
“What?” I asked, catching Gav staring at me.
“Your hair is different.”