Authors note: - This is a follow on to the previous episode of Becca XXX. Spring Tide. Please read it before reading this or you will not understand the plot or characters
.
Becca XXX. Spring Tide. Ch 07.
The Crow.
Just saying her name out loud filled me with dread. This woman hadn't exactly been my best friend during my incarceration at Bronzefield women's prison. The tattooed psycho bitch had been nothing but trouble until we'd discovered a common goal.
I'd helped her to escape just before she burnt the place to the ground, killing seventy convicted rapists in the process. Somehow, I'd won her respect and her parting words to me had been:
'If you ever need to find me on the outside, go to The Worlds End pub in Bristol and ask for me. I could use someone with your skill set.'
To say that she had issues was an understatement, but I wouldn't have got out of prison without her. Her life had been one of crime and deception and she had a severe hatred for rapists. Before she'd killed all the perverts in the basement of Bronzefield, she'd killed fifteen rapists by luring them in on dating apps. She would make a point of telling the men that she didn't want sex and then get herself into a vulnerable position so that they would rape her. That was all the evidence she ever needed and burning them alive was her method of justice. Her methods were crude and brutal, but it certainly got the job done.
She had run The Sisterhood inside Bronze; a group of like-minded women who'd die for her if they had to. I knew that The Sisterhood stretched outside the prison and that they'd be defending her and keeping her hidden from the police.
Driving up from Penzance to Bristol had taken just under four hours and I was full of apprehension about seeking her out. I had no idea how this was going to go down, but at least I had Natalie by my side.
We'd left our surfboards with Reef back at The Surfiety's camp. Reef had asked a lot of questions about why we were going to Bristol when we were supposed to be chilling out and enjoying Sennen Cove. He never sounded like he was prying into our lives, it was more like he was worried about us and the protection of his camp. Our absence for the last two nights hadn't gone unnoticed and I hoped he wasn't becoming suspicious.
To keep his mind at rest, we'd made up a story that we were going to visit an old friend and that we'd be back in a couple of days at the most. We knew that the large swell was due soon and we obviously didn't want to miss it, but the assignment always came first.
The journey had been long and boring and it felt weird to be leaving the Russians back in Penzance unchecked. We needed the video of the kidnapped girl from Valentin's laptop and this was the only way of getting it within a decent time frame.
Lexa had checked in to tell us that they'd tracked Yuri's smart watch. She had confirmed the same location as Arrow and it matched our own theory about where Valentin's place was. We told her that we had a lead on a safe cracker, but we didn't give her the details. She probably wouldn't approve, but as long as we got the job done, she wouldn't be bothered who'd helped us. There was nothing else to report from either side so she left us to it.
To break up the road trip we'd had the radio on and it had been full of the war between Russia and the Ukraine. It hadn't been the walk over that the Russians thought it was going to be. Ukraine was putting up stiff resistance thanks to UK and US backing. Some of it was overt, like the supply of weapons, but I knew we'd also have special forces on the ground as military advisors. The news was talking about US drones which the Ukrainian troops had been trained to use. I found it hard to believe that they'd be able to operate such a sophisticated piece of military hardware in such a short space of time.
It was more likely that the Americans were flying the drones for them from their military bases back in the US. The internet was actually being used for something useful for a change. Drone pilots could fly their planes from the comfort of their own home these days without setting foot in a foreign country. Because of that, Russia and Ukraine were now locked in a bloody stale mate. Russia was bombing the hell out of the country and massing its troops on the borders, waiting for an opening to send in a full ground offensive. If it wasn't for the drones keeping them at bay, the Russians would have probably won the war by now and taken over the entire country.
Territory was changing hands almost hourly as the two countries fought for land, advancing and retreating as the odds changed in each other's favour. I wondered if Tony was out there somewhere, dressed in local garb and training the Ukrainians in guerrilla warfare. Stuff like that was right up his street.
I missed him and hadn't seen him since our sexual encounter on the boat Serenity at the end of my dangerous cargo mission. Since then, I'd been to prison, then on a desert island in the Bahamas. My feet hadn't touched the ground and I'd been thrown straight into this deployment. I just hoped he was safe and doing what he loved most.
"We're nearly there," said Natalie. "How do you think it's going to go with your psychopathic girlfriend?"
"She's not my girlfriend," I replied. "She's a fucking nutcase so there's no way of knowing. I just hope Arrow's right about all this. If she can't crack a safe, we'll have to go back to the noisy option and interrogate Valentin. I'd rather do it quietly if The Crow is willing to help."
"We're going to have to tell her who we are," she said. "Do you think she'll believe us?"
"I don't see why not. She knew there was more to me than I was letting on in Bronze. I took out half of her Sisterhood single-handedly and helped her escape from a maximum-security prison. A normal civilian wouldn't be capable of that. I just hope she remembers all that when we meet again."
"Are we going in armed?" Nat quizzed.
"Fuck no," I gasped. "We need to go in nice and friendly at first. It's not worth provoking her. I'm sure she'll be well protected."
We were driving along Clouds Hill Road towards the Worlds End pub. This area was to the east of the city and was known as St George. It was a nice area of Bristol, but the pub was a den of iniquity. We'd pulled up police files on the pub and it didn't make for good reading. It was renowned for harbouring criminals, selling drugs and there was frequent fighting. Even the police gave it a wide birth and most outsiders who'd been there, never went back for a second drink.
"Do a drive by first," I said. "We've seen it on Google Street view, but it always looks different on the ground. Let's get the lay of the land before we park up."
"It's coming up on the left," she nodded. "It's the white building on the corner."
I glanced left as though I was just taking in the scenery rather than casing the joint. The Crow would most likely have lookouts just like she did in prison to make sure no one approached her territory without her knowing about it.
The pub was run down and in need of a lick of paint. It was once painted white, but now it looked grey and dirty. Years of neglect had resulted in peeling paint on the black window frames and even the sign on the curved corner of the building was faded. It had once been a magnificent art-deco streamline-modern building, but now it looked like it should be demolished. It was on the main A420 coming out of Bristol, with a few shops and housing estates all around it. The pub didn't have a car park, but people could park on the road outside.
"Looks like the lunch time rush has missed this place out," laughed Natalie as we drove past. "Are you sure it's even open?"
"You know how these places are, Nat. They appear quiet on the outside, but we have no idea what's going on behind closed doors. It definitely looks like somewhere The Crow would hideout."
"What makes you say that?"
"I don't know, it looks sinister... like her. Turn around and drive back again in the opposite direction then park up so we can watch for a while."