Jesus Correria's POV
Near US-Mexico Border, East of Nogales
The Chapter Presidents had been trickling into the parking area of the National Forest that we used as our meeting place all day. I sat on a picnic table, eating a burrito I picked up before leaving Nogales, as Manuel tore into his bag of fish tacos. The Denver President was last to arrive, Pedro driving into the lot in a Prius. "Really? A fucking Prius," I yelled as he got out.
"Nobody is going to look for a biker club President in a Prius," he said. "Plus it gets fifty miles a gallon."
"You smell like a hipster," my father said. "You getting a man-bun and a murse next?"
Some of the others laughed. "Very funny, let's spend more time figuring out how to end this shitshow instead of busting on my ride."
"We found the mole," Alejandro said; he was President of the Bay Area chapter, and had the most to lose with this visit with the Cartel. It was his Chapter that lost the shipment. "My Vice President gave us up; the warrant names him as their informant, and the DEA let him go after the raid. We picked him up as he was trying to run with his family. He's been moved to a quiet place until I get back."
"Why would they let him go," I said. "It's too easy. If they have a cooperating witness, he and his family would be in protective custody. They had to know we'd kill him."
Manuel spoke up. "Unless they want us to take him. They know we won't kill him until we know everything."
"FUCK," Alejandro said. "They know they didn't capture the leadership, so they're using him as bait! I've got to warn them."
"We'll get word to your Master at Arms in a few minutes," I said. "The Brotherhood is as much of a problem as the Feds. You heard on the news that they found the tunnel from my Clubhouse to the building two blocks away?" Heads nodded. "What they didn't say is that they found anything but dead bodies there. That was our money drop, a shipment was supposed to go out this morning. If the Feds had it, they would be posing with the money on the news right now. No, the Steel Brotherhood is behind this. They worked with the Feds to set up the raids, then took the money for themselves."
"Bastards," one of the men said. "Do we know who?"
"Manilo met a Nomad member at the memorial service, a guy named Chase Nygaard and his wife, Rori King. He asked for background checks because they are both werewolves."
"Wait, the Brotherhood has Packs working with them?" The Houston President looked shocked; we had no werewolf Packs in our territories, except the ones in the Rocky Mountains.
"At least one. I don't know what Manilo found out before he died, but we had four panthers disappear after going up to Minnesota to find Harleigh Ryder. Manilo was convinced the Pack had taken her up there, we don't know why. I sent a dozen men up there; he's got a young wife and infant children. If they don't kill them all, they'll take his family, and we'll use that to get Harleigh and the money."
"A dozen isn't much against a Pack," the Denver President said.
"It's what I had to send, and I couldn't risk calling you guys."
"We all have people hiding out, they may as well go to Minnesota and help out," the Dallas President said. "It's a twenty-plus hour drive for us, but we're closer. The boys could use a diversion."
"Well said, we'll get the word to all the Chapters," Manuel said as everyone gathered around. They figured out a place to meet, a hotel in Duluth, and a contact number. "Let me get Oracle on the line." Our Club had emergency procedures in case the cops tried what they did this morning. Every Club officer had an escape plan, including an identity, transportation, and housing. We knew the Cops could hit the Clubhouses, so they were kept clean or able to be sanitized quickly. For my chapter, we had laptops and the tunnels. The cops could search all day and not find anything that could hurt us.
All of us had left our Chapters after the Oakland raid, and were on the road when the Clubhouse raids went public. I'd listened to the news as I drove through the desert; I was angry at the number of dead, but no senior people were listed. The Attorney General's press conference told us they were using RICO statutes to go after my Club. The attacks in Florida and the drug smuggling were the two crimes they needed to invoke the charges.
The humans in the club were expendable; they always had been. They were the muscle we needed. The heart of the Club was around me, all Panthers, all family.
Manuel finished dialing the Oracle. No one knew who she was or where she was; each Chapter was given one phone number to use in an emergency, and only called it from a phone not traceable to the Club. You would call in with your status and needs, and a number you could be reached. The Oracle was the link between the people, gathering the information and passing it back when directed. It was slow, but secure. A woman picked up. "Identification code?"
"Jaguar One Five Two Delta."
"Voice match. How may I help you, sir?"
"Summary status."
"All units have checked in from alternate locations. Primary locations are all under hostile control."
"Rat status?"
"They brought in outside teams, and the locals we owned are compromised. Frank Grimes was the source and ran the Oakland and Los Angeles raids. Raids on the Chapters were due to bank transfers linking them to the operation."
"Anything else?"
"No." He gave her a message to pass to the chapters about helping up in Minnesota, and warn the Bay Area chapter, then gave her a contact number for another phone. When he hung up, he crushed the phone in his hand and tossed it in the trash can. "BY THE GODDESS I WILL HAVE THEIR BLOOD IN MY TEETH," Manuel yelled to the darkening sky.