Sons of Anarchy: Bratva

Sons of Anarchy: Bratva Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: Sons of Anarchy: Bratva Read Online Free PDF
Author: Christopher Golden
Tags: Fiction, Suspense, Media Tie-In, Thrillers, Action & Adventure
if this is gun-trade business, could be our friends in Belfast heard something.”
    Chibs had been born in Scotland but grown up in Belfast and had done stints with the British Army and the RIRA before some ugliness forced him to leave Belfast. He still had enemies in Ireland, but the old connections remained in place—unpleasant as they could be.
    “I’ll reach out to Connor Malone,” Chibs said. “See what he knows.”
    “We should talk to Lin, too,” Bobby said, that perpetually worried look on his face. “If the Russians are making a new play, could be Lin and his crew already know.”
    “I’ll give Lin a call,” Jax said, nodding.
    “Do it,” Clay instructed. “Report back.”
    He glanced around the room. The Chapel was sacrosanct, everything discussed at the table considered private unless it was voted otherwise.
    “These assholes may be nothing to worry about,” he said. “A bunch of Bratva dogs fighting over table scraps, hoping their masters in Moscow notice and carve them off a bigger piece. They keep shooting each other, that oughta distract them from worrying about who put Putlova in the ground. Just the same, keep your eyes open, watch each other’s backs until we figure out who’s giving the orders on either side.”
    Clay scanned their faces again, making sure nobody else felt the need to weigh in.
    “All right, then,” he said, banging the gavel. “Adjourned.”
    *   *   *
    Jax left the others in the clubhouse and went outside, swinging the heavy door shut behind him. The air grew close when they were in church, jammed in that meeting room. There were a lot of guys, now, and that was good—it made the club strong.
    As he strode to his bike, he dug into his pocket and tugged out his cell phone. Calling Lin might be a waste of time—the Russians wouldn’t have asked permission from the Chinese before they started their civil war—but it was possible Lin had heard something. If the Russians killed each other off, that was all for the better, but Jax worried about collateral damage.
    He reached out to Lin.
    Footfalls scuffed the parking lot behind him and Jax turned, still skittish from the attack that morning. He must have looked ready to fight, because Chucky held up his hands—what was left of them—in immediate surrender, just to make sure Jax knew he wasn’t a threat.
    As if Chucky Marstein could ever have been a threat.
    “Whoa, Jax. It’s just Chucky.”
    “You think I wouldn’t recognize you?”
    Always nervous, the bald, goateed little guy seemed more agitated than usual. “No, no. I thought maybe you’d gone, ya know, rabid or something.”
    Jax cupped the phone in his hand. “You came out here for a reason.”
    “Sorry, yeah.” Chucky rolled his eyes at his forgetfulness. “You’ve got a call in the office. Lady sounds pretty upset. Urgent-like.”
    A frown creased Jax’s brow as he started walking toward the office. “You get a name?”
    “No,” Chucky said, catching up to him, “but if it helps, she’s got some kinda accent. English, I think. Maybe Irish.”
    Jax slid his phone into the inside pocket of his cut, Chucky completely forgotten. He stepped into the shade of the office and saw the phone on the desk, old-fashioned corkscrew cord all tangled. His mother, Gemma, had inherited his father’s share of Teller-Morrow, and most days she could be found in the office. Jax was grateful she wasn’t there now or she would have been the one to answer the phone. During his time in Belfast many years past, JT had gotten involved with a woman named Maureen Ashby. Jax had a half-sister whose existence he’d only discovered when he’d made his own trip to Belfast. Any woman with an Irish accent calling the office of Teller-Morrow and getting Gemma on the phone would not be well received.
    Jax picked up the phone. “Hello?”
    “Can you talk, Jax? I didn’t know who else to call.”
    Maureen was a woman with sharp edges, but he’d gotten along with her
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

The Stone Boy

Sophie Loubière

Becoming a Dragon

Andy Holland

Down These Strange Streets

George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois

SHUDDERVILLE TWO

Mia Zabrisky

Mother's Day

Lynne Constantine

Alibi in High Heels

Gemma Halliday

The Healer

Daniel P. Mannix

Beautiful Death

Fiona McIntosh