“Slow down, Myron. I don’t have all the answers yet, and I don’t know when I’ll have ’em.” Mason’s lips spread in a thin smile that didn’t reach his eyes. “Decided about eight hours ago, and, no, I haven’t told anyone. Willa guessed, but she’s true, so she won’t whisper shit even to her girls. It’s just you two, and me.”
“When you know what you need, brother—” Hoss wasn’t ashamed of the emotion in his voice, because something this big, huge, needed to be acknowledged. It had taken steam out of the club when Mason stepped back. A hard thing to witness and wait through for the men who had for so long bound their fates to their brother. Men who had bled for him, bulling through some of the hardest shit in their lives alongside him, striding boot fall by boot fall in step with Mason.
It had been the right thing for the man, no matter how difficult it had been for him.
His woman, Willa, had been hurt badly by club business. His sister, too. Even his oldest, Chase, borne along a too-bloody stream from the time he’d been conceived, had scars that could be laid at the foot of the club. A lot for any man to shoulder, but for a man like Mason, knowing the ones he loved were hurt by the thing he’d built—it had been intolerable. “Anything I can give, I will. No ask too big, brother.” Hoss pounded his chest with a closed fist, each thud carrying the echo of a promise. “I’m a Rebel, and I’m yours. To me you’ve always been one and the same. You say it’s time, I’ll pick up whatever burden you need me to carry.”
Mason stared at him, eyes shining in the overhead lights. Myron cleared his throat and Hoss glanced over to see him angling his head away.
A device attached to the wall-mounted TV buzzed and Myron jolted. “That’s Estavez.Shit. Gimme a minute.” Quickly, he fitted the battery into the beat-up old computer chassis and booted it up, tapping in a lengthy sequence of characters to get past the loading screen. “’Nother minute, boss.” The device buzzed again. Myron muttered, “You were supposed to fucking wait, asshole.”
Hoss reached over and punched a button on the remote, turning on the screen. They watched the welcome message for a moment, then Myron keyed in another string of characters, and it came to life, showing them Raul Estavez in a room by himself. That alone was a shock, because if ever there was a club that supported their president, it was the Machos.
“Mason,” Raul’s accent was thick but familiar, and Hoss grunted a hello when his name was called next. “Hoss and Myron. As I requested. Thank you for agreeing to discuss this with me.”
“Estavez.” Mason nodded. “What exactly are we discussing?”
“Myron is the best tech in the business, no?” Hoss nodded, seeing Mason doing the same. “Have you caught wind of the latest unrest here in Mexico?” Hoss looked at Myron who shook his head. “That is…unfortunate.” Estavez sighed. “But not unexpected, because I assumed at first the Rebels would, of course, know, and when I heard nothing from your territories, I was surprised but felt certain you would be working a mission just without my help. Now, knowing that you are ignorant of the threat, I feel the fool for not raising my hand earlier to warn you.”
“Warn us of what, Raul?” Mason jerked a chair out from under the table and angled into it. Resting an elbow on the table, he made a gesture towards the camera. “I’m all ears, man.” Hoss nodded when he swept a gaze around the room. “Give it to us.”
“You remember Carlos?” Not a real question, but because he was an enemy forgotten so far in the past, Hoss gave Raul the benefit of the doubt.
“Yeah. Your blood brother who you bled and buried, keeping your family safe. Took the club from him.” He waited a beat, then continued to remind everyone of the ties Estavez and his family had to the Rebels. “He took your daughter, Carmela, rescued by Slate and Watcher. He let his cousin be sold as a slave, and Watcher also rescued her. Juanita became his old lady. Need me to go on?” Estavez nodded and Hoss shrugged. “Okay, his old lady Silverio tried to stage a coup in Chicago, but she died instead. That it?”
“Memories are tricky things, aren’t they? We learn so much as we go through life, and then forget blocks of time as unimportant, only to have to find those memories again when they bubble back up as need. Sylvia, Silverio’s sister, she hooked herself to a Rebel in Fort Wayne. My sister-in-law’s sister, with a Rebel. My daughter, with a Rebel, now patched into the Malcontents. And no matter what patch he wears, we all know Hurley will forever be a Rebel. Their children protected by three clubs, as was Mela.” Estavez paused and the lines in his face deepened, becoming more prominent as his jaw tightened and flexed. “Six months ago there were rumors of Diamante starting back up.”
Mason slapped his palm on the table and muttered, “No.”
“Yes. We watched what happened through the years. Things settled because without Deacon or Morgan, without Suches, without a leader to drive them forwards, they drifted and disbanded. Chapter by chapter, we all watched it happen, gloating and glorying in the destruction of that cursed club. But not all chapters followed suit.”
Myron spoke up for the first time. “Only three chapters remained, and they were so separate as to be different clubs, not forged from the same bylaws. Ocala, New Orleans, and one down in Mexico.”
“So you knew this?”
Myron shrugged. “Information is power and all that. Of course I watched and kept track. I also know the clubs the various chapter officers patched into after they dropped their Diamante center, and in some cases where the ones are who decided to go lone. A lot of men were put off by the life entirely, something I bet Deacon never counted on. Our world was lessened by his actions in ways that had a long reach. Men who had family and didn’t like what they saw happen on his orders. So, yeah, that much I knew. You said something about a threat and so far all we’ve gotten is a history lesson. Get to the point, Estavez.”
“You have grown a backbone, Myron. It looks good on you.”
“Blame my husband, asshole. Mouse needs me to wrestle him into line a lot.” Myron didn’t flinch from acknowledging his sexuality, something Hoss knew might have been unforgivable only a decade ago. He grinned because Myron wasn’t kidding. His husband, Mouse, was a handful and the older their daughter got, the more out of control Mouse seemed to go in response. “This isn’t you gettin’ to the point.”
“Yes.” Estavez blew out a hard breath. “There is word of a man who has joined the Diamante here in Mexico. All I have is a road name and can gain no traction to find more. Enzo. This man sounds much like Deacon did, as Shooter was.” Hoss watched as Mason’s fist clenched and then stretched wide, flattening on the table. Whatever Estavez was dancing around would be bad. “He is of an age with my Carmela, or your Samuel.” Estavez gestured towards the camera. “Your Chase.”
“So you’re sayin’ this is someone’s kid?” Mason scoffed. “Scared of a kid, Raul? That don’t sound right, brother.” Hoss breathed a little easier with that word out there, because the bond between them was a thread that had held together so many good men through the years. “Whose kid is this supposed to be?”
“That, I am not certain. There are rumors, of course. People cannot keep their tongues from wagging, as you know. I’ve wondered through the years since his death, why it was Carlos never had a family...if rumors are true this could be my nephew, Mason.” He shook his head and angled his eyes away from the camera for a moment. With a sigh, he asked, “Is there a chance for a face-to-face? Video is good, but I would refresh our bonds if I could.” Estavez ran his hand across his forehead and for the first time, Hoss saw how tired he looked. Tired, and old. “There is much I haven’t spoken of, Mason. Could we meet in the middle, perhaps?”
“Chase’s got a show in Longview.” Mason lifted one shoulder in a shrug. “I could be persuaded to come that far.”
“Longview, Texas?” Estavez blinked when Mason confirmed with a grunt, then nodded. “I have friends in the area.”
“As do I, which is why I’m willin’ to head there without argument.” Mason grinned, then chuckled. “Haven’t seen Blackie or Peaches in a while. Be good to get some time with them. The boy’s band is playing at the local rally, and it’s good to see them headline such a small event. Bethy’d be there regardless, because Occupy Yourself is still an Iron Indian client, but since Chase doesn’t like the big shows anymore, he only plays with ’em part-time. I wanna watch him do his thing where he can enjoy it, you know?” Estavez nodded. “Okay. I’ll get Myron to shoot you the details. Who you want me to bring?”
“In addition to your family?” It was Estavez’ turn to shrug. “Whomever you deem necessary, Mason. We’ll both be outside of our claims, so it is not my place to say who you can and cannot bring.”
“Yeah, but just like you knew who you wanted in this room today,” Mason swept his arm out to indicate Hoss and Myron, “I’m guaranteed that you’d have a preference in it.”
“Slate, Bones if he will, Chismoso, Hoss, Myron, Fury, Opie. Not a large crew.” Estavez offered a quick smile, this one finally reaching his eyes and making them shine. “Spider, because I think he would have something to say about what’s going on.” His smile flattened. “I will roll heavy, just so things are clear.” Hoss studied Estavez’ face. That one statement revealed more than the man knew. A force to be reckoned with in Mexico and the southwestern US states, including Texas, and yet the man felt threatened enough to reveal he would be willing to brave the border riding with weapons. “If Diamante decide they want to refresh the embers of war, I will meet them head-on.”