This is Chapter Five of a book. The characters and situations will be more understandable if the previous chapters have been read. Because it is a book, some of the chapters are more exciting than others, and some situations do not complete until the next chapter. I could have run this through my regular publisher and made a couple hundred dollars, but I am posting it instead because many more people read my posts than buy my books.
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WARNING! All of my writing is intended for adults over the age of 18 ONLY. Stories may contain strong or even extreme sexual content. All people and events depicted are fictional and any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental. Actions, situations, and responses are fictional ONLY and should not be attempted in real life.
All characters involved in sexual activity in this story are over the age of 18. If you are under the age or 18 or do not understand the difference between fantasy and reality or if you reside in any state, province, nation, or tribal territory that prohibits the reading of acts depicted in these stories, please stop reading immediately and move to somewhere that exists in the twenty-first century.
Archiving and reposting of this story is permitted, but only if acknowledgment of copyright and statement of limitation of use is included with the article. This story is copyright (c) 2019 by The Technician.
Individual readers may archive and/or print single copies of this story for personal, non-commercial use. Production of multiple copies of this story on paper, disk, or other fixed format is expressly forbidden.
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Chapter Five
Colonel Boogie's
Davenport, Iowa, was an eighteen-hour drive. A flight would have been faster, but getting the arsenal I was carrying through airport security would have been impossible. The guns were all legal and registered, but the paperwork necessary to allow me to take them aboard a plane, even in a secure container in the baggage compartment, would have been a longer delay than just getting in a car and driving the 1200 miles to Iowa and then the 1800 miles to Los Angeles. The other specialized equipment I was carrying would have taken a lot more than just a firearms waiver. I'm not sure all of it is legal, but the components that Boris put together are all openly available from Amazon.
Normally, I would have preferred to start with the older brother at LAX since that was where the hostages probably were, but since I was driving, and since Davenport was more or less between Shangri-la 3 and Los Angeles, we decided to take care of little brother first. I checked with Master Randolph through a secure link Boris had set up and he assured me that he could-- and would-- have a plane waiting for me at a small, private airport with proper personnel ready to fly Wyatt Monty to join his brothers.
I had to delay leaving while waiting for a couple of pieces of equipment to arrive. Amazon doesn't deliver to abandoned mine shacks, but they do deliver to a small house in a nearby town that I own and rent out to a very nice retried couple. They know me as their landlord and, in return for very reasonable rent and a local manager who responds to their occasional problems, have agreed to accept packages addressed to me. Actually, the packages are addressed to Mr. Arnold Bachman. Anything that comes in for that name is put in the "back garage" by the couple.
There is an alley that divides the block. The garage is an overly-long, double-wide garage which is attached to the house at the back corner so you can enter the kitchen-- or take a package into the garage-- without going outside. It is actually two garages, with one double-wide garage door facing the street, and two individual doors, facing the alley. The arrangement isn't all that unusual. Several of the garages in the area originally faced the alley and were modernized to face the street somewhere along the line. That modernization often meant just building another garage facing the street in front of the old one facing the alley. In this case, the front garage was an extension of the older garage rather than a separate building. There is an inside door between the front and back garages, so no one notices when packages are moved back there.
Even with expedited delivery, it took the packages two days to arrive. Boris and Natasha spent those two days scouring the web for more information on the Monty brothers. I spent them familiarizing myself with the layout of a seedy club by the name of Colonel Boogie's that was located on the north edge of Davenport. Colonel Boogie's advertized on the open web as a "gentlemen's club catering to exotic tastes." The website didn't say exactly what it meant by exotic tastes. It also didn't give an address. Instead it just said, "On the north side of the Quad Cities across from Daisy Dooks."
For reasons known only to bureaucrats and politicians, Interstate 80 splits as it reaches the western edge of Illinois and forms a giant box around what the locals refer to as the Quad Cities. The lower portion, which runs alongside the Rock River below the Illinois towns of Moline and Rock Island is officially I-280 until it turns northwest to cross the Mississippi River into Iowa and then north until it rejoins I-80. If you are westbound from Chicago, like I was, you have to exit and go north to remain on I-80 until it also turns northwest to cross the Mississippi and then continues west around the Iowa towns of Davenport and Bettendorf. I've been in-- or actually through-- Davenport several times and I always have a hard time getting my head around going north to cross the Mississippi River. Despite being a long north to south river on a map of the United States, the Mississippi actually runs from east to west in the Quad Cities as it curves around the bottom of that bump of Iowa which creates that distinctive shape at the top of the Illinois-Iowa border.
Up on the top of the square, about three-quarters around on the western edge, old US highway 130 exits off to the north. The entire area near there and especially the area just above the Interstate is primarily truck dealers, tire shops catering to semis, diesel repair shops, and two full-nudity strip clubs. Daisy Dooks-- which the ad for Colonel Boogie's used to give their location-- and Colonel Boogie's. Clubs like these skirt the edge of the laws in several states and stay legal by not serving alcohol or food. Food, and in some cases, alcohol vendors often operate next door or from a truck in the parking lot, but the clubs themselves are strictly Bring Your Own Everything, thus avoiding strict liquor laws and possible harassment through food service inspectors.
According to both clubs' websites, in addition to full frontal strip tease, the girls offer their services for private dances with a menu ranging from titillating to full nudity, depending on how much you are willing to pay. I was surprised at the notation of "one-way" and "two-way" lap dances. Normally, to avoid prostitution charges, regardless of the price, it is look only. No contact is permitted between the customers and the dancers. Fondling-- or at least hand contact of some sort-- was evidently legal in Iowa.
Using the street view of Google Maps, I almost couldn't find Daisy Dooks because it fit in so well with the general ambiance of the area. It was a non-descript brick building with a flat roof that could have been any sort of small industrial business. A small awning covered the simple opening on the front. Unless you had really good eyes, you probably have to already be in the parking lot to read the small sign next to the door which reads simply, "Daisy Dooks."
Colonel Boogie's, on the other hand, stood out like a sore thumb. It was a run-down pole barn style building that looked like it might have been a big rig repair shop at one time in its life. At least, there were two oversized garage doors on one end of the long building. A large, faded sign painted on one of its sheet metal sides showed a couple dancing. The girl's skirt was flipped high above her waist showing her barely-covered ass. Beneath the couple it said, "Colonel Boogie's Private Dance Club. Public Welcome." According to the tax records of Scott County, the club's owner was one Wyatt Monty.
I didn't want to go into the club blind, but I didn't have much time to reconnoiter. Besides, I didn't want to tip Wyatt off that I was in town. I got in around three in the morning and got a room at a Super Eight near the exit. I was driving one of those new bastardized Jeeps that look like someone welded a pickup bed on the back of a Wrangler. From the front... or even from the back at a distance... it looks like a regular Jeep so it blends in readily in a parking lot, but no one who saw me drive past would be able to remember my face. All they would remember was the weird-looking pickup I was driving. I chose a Jeep because I wanted a good four-wheel drive vehicle with adequate ground clearance in case I had to go off road to capture or avoid capture. I went with the pricey pickup style because I needed the open bed of a pickup truck for our plan to work.
I slept until noon and then drove out to get a look at Colonel Boogie's. There were no cars in the lot, so I pulled in and drove slowly past the front door. There was a hand-written sign taped on the front door that said, "Doors open 6:00 pm. Last dance at midnight." After what I had seen in Rio, I wondered if there were a special dance later... perhaps at 2:00 am. While I was driving, I went across the street and drove through the parking lot of Daisy Dooks. There were no hours posted, but the website had said that they opened at 5:00 and were open until 4:00 am. Not serving alcohol allowed them to set their own hours.
I followed the highway back across the interstate. The industrial-trucking area soon gave way to residential streets with restaurants and gas stations along the highway itself. I stopped at a place called The Machine Shed and had a very leisurely late lunch-- or perhaps an early dinner. In any case, the menu was typical Midwest comfort food. I ordered something called a Haybalers Top Sirloin that was surprisingly good and properly prepared. Then I went back to the motel to wait for the sun to go down.
While I was lazing around the motel room, I had an inspiration. Women in the same line of work often keep an eye on the competition. Perhaps one of the dancers at Dooks could tell me something about Boogie's. A little after five, I entered Daisy Dooks front door
The cover charge was very reasonable. BYOB meant that there was no two-drink minimum to sit at one of the tables and watch the dancers on the three-tiered stage. The man behind the counter asked if I had been there before. When I said, "No," he quickly rattled off the same menu that was printed on the wall behind him and added almost machine-like, "The restroom attendant expects a one-dollar tip each time you use the facility. The girls are dancers, not hookers, so do not bother asking for sex. Rough stuff or disrespecting the girls will get you kicked out."
"Can I select which girl I want for a private dance?" I asked when he was finished with his litany.
"If she's available," he replied with a shrug, "sure."
"I'm looking for a girl with dark brown eyes and light brown skin," I answered. I tried to not sound creepy as I added, "I really like brown eyes and dark brown nipples."