Warscared
Well-Known Member
- Jan 26, 2021
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The bikes rolled into the gravel lot one after another, chrome catching the late afternoon light. Dust swirled behind them as WS killed the engine and let the silence of the engines give way to muffled music coming from the clubhouse.
A battered neon sign hummed above the door, and as soon as they stepped inside, a rush of cool air hit them. The smell of leather, old beer, and cigarettes mixed with the thump of a jukebox. Daughtry’s “Heavy Is The Crown” echoed off the wooden walls like a hymn.
The Nomad sergeant-at-arms—one of WS’s—lit up as soon as he walked in, dropping the outlaw scowl for a split second to hug his brothers. Big arms, tattooed hands slapping backs, rough laughter.
The music didn’t stop, but the mood shifted when the sergeant tossed a saddlebag on the bar. It hit the wood with a heavy thud. Zippers came down—guns glinted under the dim light. Pistols, shotguns, a couple of ARs. The bartender gave a low whistle and started carrying them toward the back storage room without a word.
WS followed, slow and deliberate, then dropped one of his own saddlebags next to it. Same sound, same weight. Enough firepower to remind everyone in the room why Sacramento sent twenty grand a month to keep this place running smooth.
The eyes of the room shifted then—toward the kid. Still young, still green, his arm bandaged thick from the dog bite that nearly took it. He stood there silent, trying not to show pain, but his presence said everything: this wasn’t just about business. It was about loyalty, scars, and blood.
A couple of old hands clapped him on the shoulder. Someone shoved a cold beer into his good hand. He raised it awkwardly, and the men gave a short cheer.
From the corner booth, a tall, wiry prospect spoke up.
“Chief ain’t here. He’s still on shift—janitorin’ at the high school.”
Laughter rippled across the room, low and genuine. One of the older brothers shook his head.
“Kid sweeps puke and piss by day, runs this place by night. Whole fuckin’ town don’t even know.”
WS smirked. He liked it that way—power disguised as ordinary. A king in coveralls, invisible to the sheep.
He tipped his bottle back, letting the music and the brotherhood wash over him, just for a moment. Because tomorrow, the war outside would call again.
Williamson, the Sergeant-at-Arms of the local chapter and WS’s shadow for the night, finished his beer and stood.
“I’ll drive down to the school, let Chief know you’re here,” he said.
Before he could move, the Chief’s son was already pulling on his kutte. WS’s blue eyes followed the motion, then he pushed himself off the barstool.
“No. I’ll meet him myself.”
His voice was flat, final. He didn’t raise it—but nobody in the room mistook it for a suggestion.
He jabbed a finger toward two Nomads leaning against the wall, both of them carrying warrants like chains.
“You two—stay put. You’re ghosts tonight. The rest, saddle up.”
The other three didn’t hesitate. They were already on their feet, strapping on helmets, tightening gloves. By the time the doors swung open and the bikes roared back to life, the atmosphere in the clubhouse had shifted—quiet, heavy.
Outside, onlookers from the hang-around crowd nudged each other, eyes following the pack as it rolled out. It wasn’t the Sergeant-at-Arms at the front. It wasn’t the Chief’s son. It was Warscared. And those Nomads—his Nomads—slotted in tight behind him without a word.
One of the patched locals growled at the hang-arounds.
“Don’t say shit. You didn’t see nothin’. They ain’t even here.”
Engines growled as they thundered across town. The convoy hit the high school lot like a storm cloud dropping from nowhere. Chrome and exhaust fumes cut across the schoolyard, drawing every eye. Teachers at the windows froze mid-sentence. Kids’ faces pressed to glass, wide-eyed.
At the front gate, a guard leaned back in his folding chair, smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. A cigarette dangled from his lips as he gave the group a lazy salute.
“Johnson’ll be done in about an hour,” he said. “You boys know the rules—no harassing the girls, or you’ll answer to the janitor.”
The words weren’t a joke. Everyone here knew Johnson’s reputation. He might mop floors and sweep up chalk dust by day, but when the kutte went on, he was Chief. The kind of man who could make hard men sit down and shut up.
And strangely, the school liked him that way. With a hardcore biker walking the halls, nobody touched the kids. Nobody dared sell dope in the bathrooms or start fights behind the gym. Even the students behaved better—fear had a way of keeping order.
WS pulled off his shades, scanning the yard like he owned it. For the next hour, this was his kingdom
WS glanced at his crew, that crooked grin flashing.
“Guess I’m the only one old enough to be here legally,” he said, drawing a few chuckles.
He peeled off on his own, walking the school corridors like a ghost in unfamiliar territory. His memories of classrooms were short bursts—sitting exams with people staring, while Nojiko stood nearby like a guard dog, keeping the world at bay. He wondered, not for the first time, if he might’ve turned out different had he ever been just… a student.
The halls were alive with chatter. Most faces were Black, though WS figured maybe the white kids clustered elsewhere. That’s when a girl, maybe seventeen or eighteen, stopped in front of him.
“I’m Wendy. Wendy Johnson.”
She had a grin bright enough to punch through the school’s fluorescent gloom. WS returned it smoothly.
“Pleasure. Now—just so we’re clear—I was specifically instructed not to harass the girls.” He leaned in, lowering his voice just enough for her friends to hear. “But I don’t recall any rule against being harassed by one—with a smile like that.”
Her friends howled. Teasing followed fast: “Always hunting for the big white shark, Wendy!”
Wendy just laughed and grabbed his hand. “C’mon. I’ll give you the tour.”
For a moment, he let himself play along. It reminded him of Sarasota months back, when a girl had dragged him through a mall the same way—an odd, almost innocent interlude in the chaos of his life. He wasn’t about to repeat that here, not with schoolgirls, but for once he let himself enjoy the role of being sixteen.
“This is Chemistry… over there’s Woodshop…”
Laughter cut through as they turned a corner. A huge man, pale as chalk, was smacking a skinny Black kid with a broom handle. The boy tried to shield himself, stumbling back.
WS’s voice dropped cold. “Hey, old man. You think it’s fair for a grown man to beat on a student? A janitor hitting some poor kid?”
The big man turned, rage flashing in his eyes.
“I ain’t the janitor. I’m the pro janitor!”
WS blinked, thrown for once. “…The what?”
“The progenitor of this dumbass!” The man jabbed a finger at the kid, who was already snickering behind his arms.
That’s when the giant’s gaze fell to WS’s hand still loosely held by Wendy. His face went scarlet.
“You filthy biker piece of shit! Get your dirty hands off my daughter!”
The broom whistled through the air, this time swinging at WS himself. Wendy was laughing now, not at WS but at the absurdity, running to help her brother out of the line of fire.
WS tilted his head, smirk tugging at the edge of his lips even as he sidestepped the blow. The chaos of school life suddenly felt a lot like the chaos of the street—family, pride, fists flying, everyone watching.
so this was johnson — the father of the white biker outside waiting for him. but he had 2 black siblings? ws didn’t ask, just grabbed a broom and helped the old man clean the school. chicago muscle memory kicked in, the moves automatic.
the old man squints. “you done this before? look too damn good at it.”
ws shrugs. says his japanese mom taught him to clean after himself.
johnson barks out a laugh. “figures. maybe your pecker’s japanese too. must be nice, every time you sleep with the same girl, it’s like taking her virginity again.”
the twins nearly fall over laughing. ws stiffens. nobody ever slung smut at him like that — not in chicago, not in sacramento, not in the mother house. back there, people kept their words tucked behind their teeth when he was around. he thought it was respect. maybe fear. but watching these two kids laugh at him, listening to their father talk to him like just another biker… it hit different.
ws tilts his head. “what’s your story then?”
johnson leans on the mop, grinning like he’s got all day. “back from that shit in central america… loud music, college, phd in mathematics. made good money. married a gold digger, got four kids. thought I was winning. then I miss a promotion, she hands me divorce papers. I was pulling six hundred grand a year, so I quit, walked away, became a janitor here. twenty-two k a year, child support, bitch never saw that coming. best revenge I ever had.”
he waves toward the twins. “met their mom here, she’s a teacher. knocked her up, married her. difference is, this time I’m around. not working myself to death. I’m here, I’m present.”
as the day wound down, old johnson slung his mop back into the closet and called out for his kids. johnson junior and wendy fell in step with him, the family moving as one. outside, the chief hugged the sergeant at arms, while the white son of the house leaned down to trade words with his younger siblings.
the chief raised his voice one last time, lobbing another jab at the japanese kid. the air tightened.
ws moved before anyone else could. he hopped onto a bench right there in front of the school gates, towering above the gathering. his voice cut sharp through the noise.
“yeah,” he said, “i made mistakes. a lot of them. including daring to be born to a japanese woman. but still—i owe you thanks.”
his words pulled every set of eyes onto him. the bikers, the school kids, even a few teachers peeking from the doorway. he just stood there, waiting, daring the chief to take the bait.
the chief squinted, suspicious, but his pride pulled the words out of him anyway. “and what the hell are you thanking me for, boy?”
ws’s grin was pure blade. “for teaching me never to name my own son after my dick.” his voice rose, carrying across the courtyard. “seriously—who calls his son johnson junior? no wonder the kid’s a dickhead.”
for a split second the silence was absolute. stunned faces all around, jaws hanging. then one of ws’s three bikers broke—choking laughter bursting out of him. it spread like wildfire, first to the kids, then the teachers, and finally even a few of the bikers who couldn’t hold it in anymore. the whole front of the school shook with it.
and ws just stayed on the bench, arms folded, grin still cutting.
that night the clubhouse roared louder than the jukebox. bottles clinked, smoke curled, and every corner was alive with men doubled over retelling the same story again and again.
“i swear to god,” one of the nomads cackled, slapping his knee, “he climbed that bench like he was about to run for president—voice booming, hands up like a preacher—and then, dead serious, outta nowhere: ‘who calls his son johnson junior? no wonder the kid’s a dickhead!’”
the room exploded again, brothers wiping tears from their eyes, pounding the table so hard the bottles rattled.
even the ones who hadn’t been there were laughing like they had seen it, every retelling growing bigger, louder, more animated. it was the kind of moment that spread through a club like wildfire—turning from a single spark into a legend overnight.
in the middle of it, the chief just sat back in his chair, grin splitting across his face. he shook his head slowly, half proud, half still stung, muttering over the noise:
“fucking smart asians… kid damn near killed me with just a small dick joke.”
and the laughter came all over again.
WS slept like a rock that night, even though the common room was packed shoulder-to-shoulder. His nomads sprawled out on couches and floor mats, and five patched locals filled the rest of the space. Three were divorced with nowhere else to go, two had just drunk themselves into unconsciousness and decided the clubhouse was closer than home. Snoring, coughing, the occasional bark of laughter in their sleep—it was chaos, but WS didn’t mind. He was too worn out and, for once, content.
By morning, the whole place smelled of stale beer and burnt coffee. They gathered in the meeting room, 37 patched members sitting tall in their cuts. With WS and his six nomads added to the mix, the number rose to 44—a heavy, serious crowd.
The Chief leaned on the table, voice steady but carrying the kind of weight that came from years of keeping men alive.
“Three chapters here,” he started. “Each split by race—white, black, hispanic. But as you can see…” He swept his hand over the room, at the patched backs and crossed arms. “…we all ride together. Always have.”
The rundown came quick and clinical. Alliance with the Bloods kept the Crips off their streets since the crack wars in the ‘80s. Two local Hispanic gangs ran the neighborhoods, kept things tight, clean, and paid their dues for defense. The machine worked. Nobody got greedy, and nobody tried to flip the table.
“Peace has held because everybody’s got skin in it,” the Chief said. “The pay’s not huge, but it’s steady. And steady means kids get to grow up without hearing gunfire every damn night. That’s worth more than flash money.”
WS let the words soak in. It wasn’t the war cries he was used to, not the puffed-up speeches about dominance and territory. This was different. This was… balanced.
When he asked about MS, the Chief answered blunt: “No riders here, so no MS here. Closest chapter’s L.A.—eighty miles. And yeah, that’s a short ride. But we’ve kept this turf tight. The numbers we’ve got—three chapters acting as one—they count more than headcount. It’s the unity that keeps outsiders cautious.”
Heads nodded around the room. Even WS could feel it—the quiet pride in a system that worked.
The only wrinkle came with the mountains.
Non-local Hispanics had shown up months back, buying supplies, moving quietly, setting up in the hills. Too disciplined for neighborhood punks. The Hispanic Chief laid it out: “We tried tailing ‘em. These guys aren’t street. Military types. Maybe former federales.”
WS tapped the table with one knuckle. “Cartels. Setting up a farm.”
The Chief didn’t deny it. Just gave a grim shrug.
“Maybe. But no bodies, no missing kids, no broken deals. They want to hide up there and grow, that’s their business. We’d rather not poke the hornet’s nest if they’re leaving town alone. This is our home. Our families.”
That word stuck with WS. Families.
Not just business. Not just money.
For the first time in a long time, he realized these men weren’t just surviving—they were protecting something he’d never thought to protect himself.
WS smiled, scanning the three chiefs. “You three… you’re great chiefs. This is how it’s supposed to be.” He let the words hang for a moment. “I know Ray would be proud.”
The name made a few heads turn. Nine months earlier, Ray had asked if anyone had found a tall blond kid to send him back. His six towering nomads however: he’s untouchable. The jarheads had his back. And now, after the news out of L.A.—the attacks on MS drug dens—the innocent-looking kid had probably been behind it all. The Angels’ fingerprints were clear, but the Riders had taken the blame. Everyday scuffles in prisons and on the streets confirmed the rumor: the Angels were moving, quietly and decisively.
WS turned to the chiefs. “Is there anything my group—or me—can do for you?”
The Black Chief shook his head slowly. “The guns you’ve provided… that help enough. But you can never have too many. Half our hangarounds only have small calibers or handguns. They can’t respond in emergencies properly.”
WS glanced at his nomads. They’d saved the best guns from the hits, mostly AR-15s or Kalashnikovs seized during attacks on drug dens. Rarely did they get bigger scores, but they had stuck mainly to drug dens—they were safer, more predictable. They had their own weapons, sure, but sharing was always the group’s choice.
The nomads’ eyes flicked to WS, waiting for a hint.
He leaned back. “Do you normally ride to maintain stability in other counties?”
Williamson, the sergeant-at-arms, nodded. “Of course. Buffer counties are part of our strategy.”
WS gave the go-ahead to share the stash. The chapter had saved up and, with the Angels’ support, provided seventy thousand dollars —half the value of the arsenal, but all they could afford. The bullets alone weren’t cheap. Brotherhood demanded sacrifices, and both sides understood that.
The Black Chief smiled faintly. “Generosity noted. We’ll put these guns to good use.”
WS let the moment settle, letting the silent acknowledgment of respect and shared strategy hang in the room. In this world, trust and readiness outweighed money, influence, or glory. And right now, the Angels—and his six nomads—were proving it every day.
This chapter was centrally located, making it perfect as a base of operations. From here, WS and his crew cleaned up seven drug dens and two MS safehouses. The money was flowing again—though the haul wasn’t on L.A. levels, tell me a man who can make sixty thousand in a week and call it unworthy.
The only other spot to pull in real money was San Francisco, and they were slowly closing in. His promise to Sacramento—to weaken the MS and restore balance in California—was taking shape. Still, the cartels remained the wild card, the joker in the deck.
WS poured over the documents again, trying to find a thread. Then something clicked. Every one to two months, certain bullets were ordered—specialty-made, like a signature. Ten dollars a bullet. Extremely expensive. No street thug, even elite ones, would waste that kind of money. This had to be a cartel order. Someone specific. Someone with enough pull to have their own style.
He picked up the phone and called Sacramento. “Check the dates—two days before, one day after—every delivery. See which name landed in LAX around those dates.”
WS leaned back, eyes narrowing at the screen. “I think… I might have just found a thread to pull on. Maybe.”
A battered neon sign hummed above the door, and as soon as they stepped inside, a rush of cool air hit them. The smell of leather, old beer, and cigarettes mixed with the thump of a jukebox. Daughtry’s “Heavy Is The Crown” echoed off the wooden walls like a hymn.
The Nomad sergeant-at-arms—one of WS’s—lit up as soon as he walked in, dropping the outlaw scowl for a split second to hug his brothers. Big arms, tattooed hands slapping backs, rough laughter.
The music didn’t stop, but the mood shifted when the sergeant tossed a saddlebag on the bar. It hit the wood with a heavy thud. Zippers came down—guns glinted under the dim light. Pistols, shotguns, a couple of ARs. The bartender gave a low whistle and started carrying them toward the back storage room without a word.
WS followed, slow and deliberate, then dropped one of his own saddlebags next to it. Same sound, same weight. Enough firepower to remind everyone in the room why Sacramento sent twenty grand a month to keep this place running smooth.
The eyes of the room shifted then—toward the kid. Still young, still green, his arm bandaged thick from the dog bite that nearly took it. He stood there silent, trying not to show pain, but his presence said everything: this wasn’t just about business. It was about loyalty, scars, and blood.
A couple of old hands clapped him on the shoulder. Someone shoved a cold beer into his good hand. He raised it awkwardly, and the men gave a short cheer.
From the corner booth, a tall, wiry prospect spoke up.
“Chief ain’t here. He’s still on shift—janitorin’ at the high school.”
Laughter rippled across the room, low and genuine. One of the older brothers shook his head.
“Kid sweeps puke and piss by day, runs this place by night. Whole fuckin’ town don’t even know.”
WS smirked. He liked it that way—power disguised as ordinary. A king in coveralls, invisible to the sheep.
He tipped his bottle back, letting the music and the brotherhood wash over him, just for a moment. Because tomorrow, the war outside would call again.
Williamson, the Sergeant-at-Arms of the local chapter and WS’s shadow for the night, finished his beer and stood.
“I’ll drive down to the school, let Chief know you’re here,” he said.
Before he could move, the Chief’s son was already pulling on his kutte. WS’s blue eyes followed the motion, then he pushed himself off the barstool.
“No. I’ll meet him myself.”
His voice was flat, final. He didn’t raise it—but nobody in the room mistook it for a suggestion.
He jabbed a finger toward two Nomads leaning against the wall, both of them carrying warrants like chains.
“You two—stay put. You’re ghosts tonight. The rest, saddle up.”
The other three didn’t hesitate. They were already on their feet, strapping on helmets, tightening gloves. By the time the doors swung open and the bikes roared back to life, the atmosphere in the clubhouse had shifted—quiet, heavy.
Outside, onlookers from the hang-around crowd nudged each other, eyes following the pack as it rolled out. It wasn’t the Sergeant-at-Arms at the front. It wasn’t the Chief’s son. It was Warscared. And those Nomads—his Nomads—slotted in tight behind him without a word.
One of the patched locals growled at the hang-arounds.
“Don’t say shit. You didn’t see nothin’. They ain’t even here.”
Engines growled as they thundered across town. The convoy hit the high school lot like a storm cloud dropping from nowhere. Chrome and exhaust fumes cut across the schoolyard, drawing every eye. Teachers at the windows froze mid-sentence. Kids’ faces pressed to glass, wide-eyed.
At the front gate, a guard leaned back in his folding chair, smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. A cigarette dangled from his lips as he gave the group a lazy salute.
“Johnson’ll be done in about an hour,” he said. “You boys know the rules—no harassing the girls, or you’ll answer to the janitor.”
The words weren’t a joke. Everyone here knew Johnson’s reputation. He might mop floors and sweep up chalk dust by day, but when the kutte went on, he was Chief. The kind of man who could make hard men sit down and shut up.
And strangely, the school liked him that way. With a hardcore biker walking the halls, nobody touched the kids. Nobody dared sell dope in the bathrooms or start fights behind the gym. Even the students behaved better—fear had a way of keeping order.
WS pulled off his shades, scanning the yard like he owned it. For the next hour, this was his kingdom
WS glanced at his crew, that crooked grin flashing.
“Guess I’m the only one old enough to be here legally,” he said, drawing a few chuckles.
He peeled off on his own, walking the school corridors like a ghost in unfamiliar territory. His memories of classrooms were short bursts—sitting exams with people staring, while Nojiko stood nearby like a guard dog, keeping the world at bay. He wondered, not for the first time, if he might’ve turned out different had he ever been just… a student.
The halls were alive with chatter. Most faces were Black, though WS figured maybe the white kids clustered elsewhere. That’s when a girl, maybe seventeen or eighteen, stopped in front of him.
“I’m Wendy. Wendy Johnson.”
She had a grin bright enough to punch through the school’s fluorescent gloom. WS returned it smoothly.
“Pleasure. Now—just so we’re clear—I was specifically instructed not to harass the girls.” He leaned in, lowering his voice just enough for her friends to hear. “But I don’t recall any rule against being harassed by one—with a smile like that.”
Her friends howled. Teasing followed fast: “Always hunting for the big white shark, Wendy!”
Wendy just laughed and grabbed his hand. “C’mon. I’ll give you the tour.”
For a moment, he let himself play along. It reminded him of Sarasota months back, when a girl had dragged him through a mall the same way—an odd, almost innocent interlude in the chaos of his life. He wasn’t about to repeat that here, not with schoolgirls, but for once he let himself enjoy the role of being sixteen.
“This is Chemistry… over there’s Woodshop…”
Laughter cut through as they turned a corner. A huge man, pale as chalk, was smacking a skinny Black kid with a broom handle. The boy tried to shield himself, stumbling back.
WS’s voice dropped cold. “Hey, old man. You think it’s fair for a grown man to beat on a student? A janitor hitting some poor kid?”
The big man turned, rage flashing in his eyes.
“I ain’t the janitor. I’m the pro janitor!”
WS blinked, thrown for once. “…The what?”
“The progenitor of this dumbass!” The man jabbed a finger at the kid, who was already snickering behind his arms.
That’s when the giant’s gaze fell to WS’s hand still loosely held by Wendy. His face went scarlet.
“You filthy biker piece of shit! Get your dirty hands off my daughter!”
The broom whistled through the air, this time swinging at WS himself. Wendy was laughing now, not at WS but at the absurdity, running to help her brother out of the line of fire.
WS tilted his head, smirk tugging at the edge of his lips even as he sidestepped the blow. The chaos of school life suddenly felt a lot like the chaos of the street—family, pride, fists flying, everyone watching.
so this was johnson — the father of the white biker outside waiting for him. but he had 2 black siblings? ws didn’t ask, just grabbed a broom and helped the old man clean the school. chicago muscle memory kicked in, the moves automatic.
the old man squints. “you done this before? look too damn good at it.”
ws shrugs. says his japanese mom taught him to clean after himself.
johnson barks out a laugh. “figures. maybe your pecker’s japanese too. must be nice, every time you sleep with the same girl, it’s like taking her virginity again.”
the twins nearly fall over laughing. ws stiffens. nobody ever slung smut at him like that — not in chicago, not in sacramento, not in the mother house. back there, people kept their words tucked behind their teeth when he was around. he thought it was respect. maybe fear. but watching these two kids laugh at him, listening to their father talk to him like just another biker… it hit different.
ws tilts his head. “what’s your story then?”
johnson leans on the mop, grinning like he’s got all day. “back from that shit in central america… loud music, college, phd in mathematics. made good money. married a gold digger, got four kids. thought I was winning. then I miss a promotion, she hands me divorce papers. I was pulling six hundred grand a year, so I quit, walked away, became a janitor here. twenty-two k a year, child support, bitch never saw that coming. best revenge I ever had.”
he waves toward the twins. “met their mom here, she’s a teacher. knocked her up, married her. difference is, this time I’m around. not working myself to death. I’m here, I’m present.”
as the day wound down, old johnson slung his mop back into the closet and called out for his kids. johnson junior and wendy fell in step with him, the family moving as one. outside, the chief hugged the sergeant at arms, while the white son of the house leaned down to trade words with his younger siblings.
the chief raised his voice one last time, lobbing another jab at the japanese kid. the air tightened.
ws moved before anyone else could. he hopped onto a bench right there in front of the school gates, towering above the gathering. his voice cut sharp through the noise.
“yeah,” he said, “i made mistakes. a lot of them. including daring to be born to a japanese woman. but still—i owe you thanks.”
his words pulled every set of eyes onto him. the bikers, the school kids, even a few teachers peeking from the doorway. he just stood there, waiting, daring the chief to take the bait.
the chief squinted, suspicious, but his pride pulled the words out of him anyway. “and what the hell are you thanking me for, boy?”
ws’s grin was pure blade. “for teaching me never to name my own son after my dick.” his voice rose, carrying across the courtyard. “seriously—who calls his son johnson junior? no wonder the kid’s a dickhead.”
for a split second the silence was absolute. stunned faces all around, jaws hanging. then one of ws’s three bikers broke—choking laughter bursting out of him. it spread like wildfire, first to the kids, then the teachers, and finally even a few of the bikers who couldn’t hold it in anymore. the whole front of the school shook with it.
and ws just stayed on the bench, arms folded, grin still cutting.
that night the clubhouse roared louder than the jukebox. bottles clinked, smoke curled, and every corner was alive with men doubled over retelling the same story again and again.
“i swear to god,” one of the nomads cackled, slapping his knee, “he climbed that bench like he was about to run for president—voice booming, hands up like a preacher—and then, dead serious, outta nowhere: ‘who calls his son johnson junior? no wonder the kid’s a dickhead!’”
the room exploded again, brothers wiping tears from their eyes, pounding the table so hard the bottles rattled.
even the ones who hadn’t been there were laughing like they had seen it, every retelling growing bigger, louder, more animated. it was the kind of moment that spread through a club like wildfire—turning from a single spark into a legend overnight.
in the middle of it, the chief just sat back in his chair, grin splitting across his face. he shook his head slowly, half proud, half still stung, muttering over the noise:
“fucking smart asians… kid damn near killed me with just a small dick joke.”
and the laughter came all over again.
WS slept like a rock that night, even though the common room was packed shoulder-to-shoulder. His nomads sprawled out on couches and floor mats, and five patched locals filled the rest of the space. Three were divorced with nowhere else to go, two had just drunk themselves into unconsciousness and decided the clubhouse was closer than home. Snoring, coughing, the occasional bark of laughter in their sleep—it was chaos, but WS didn’t mind. He was too worn out and, for once, content.
By morning, the whole place smelled of stale beer and burnt coffee. They gathered in the meeting room, 37 patched members sitting tall in their cuts. With WS and his six nomads added to the mix, the number rose to 44—a heavy, serious crowd.
The Chief leaned on the table, voice steady but carrying the kind of weight that came from years of keeping men alive.
“Three chapters here,” he started. “Each split by race—white, black, hispanic. But as you can see…” He swept his hand over the room, at the patched backs and crossed arms. “…we all ride together. Always have.”
The rundown came quick and clinical. Alliance with the Bloods kept the Crips off their streets since the crack wars in the ‘80s. Two local Hispanic gangs ran the neighborhoods, kept things tight, clean, and paid their dues for defense. The machine worked. Nobody got greedy, and nobody tried to flip the table.
“Peace has held because everybody’s got skin in it,” the Chief said. “The pay’s not huge, but it’s steady. And steady means kids get to grow up without hearing gunfire every damn night. That’s worth more than flash money.”
WS let the words soak in. It wasn’t the war cries he was used to, not the puffed-up speeches about dominance and territory. This was different. This was… balanced.
When he asked about MS, the Chief answered blunt: “No riders here, so no MS here. Closest chapter’s L.A.—eighty miles. And yeah, that’s a short ride. But we’ve kept this turf tight. The numbers we’ve got—three chapters acting as one—they count more than headcount. It’s the unity that keeps outsiders cautious.”
Heads nodded around the room. Even WS could feel it—the quiet pride in a system that worked.
The only wrinkle came with the mountains.
Non-local Hispanics had shown up months back, buying supplies, moving quietly, setting up in the hills. Too disciplined for neighborhood punks. The Hispanic Chief laid it out: “We tried tailing ‘em. These guys aren’t street. Military types. Maybe former federales.”
WS tapped the table with one knuckle. “Cartels. Setting up a farm.”
The Chief didn’t deny it. Just gave a grim shrug.
“Maybe. But no bodies, no missing kids, no broken deals. They want to hide up there and grow, that’s their business. We’d rather not poke the hornet’s nest if they’re leaving town alone. This is our home. Our families.”
That word stuck with WS. Families.
Not just business. Not just money.
For the first time in a long time, he realized these men weren’t just surviving—they were protecting something he’d never thought to protect himself.
WS smiled, scanning the three chiefs. “You three… you’re great chiefs. This is how it’s supposed to be.” He let the words hang for a moment. “I know Ray would be proud.”
The name made a few heads turn. Nine months earlier, Ray had asked if anyone had found a tall blond kid to send him back. His six towering nomads however: he’s untouchable. The jarheads had his back. And now, after the news out of L.A.—the attacks on MS drug dens—the innocent-looking kid had probably been behind it all. The Angels’ fingerprints were clear, but the Riders had taken the blame. Everyday scuffles in prisons and on the streets confirmed the rumor: the Angels were moving, quietly and decisively.
WS turned to the chiefs. “Is there anything my group—or me—can do for you?”
The Black Chief shook his head slowly. “The guns you’ve provided… that help enough. But you can never have too many. Half our hangarounds only have small calibers or handguns. They can’t respond in emergencies properly.”
WS glanced at his nomads. They’d saved the best guns from the hits, mostly AR-15s or Kalashnikovs seized during attacks on drug dens. Rarely did they get bigger scores, but they had stuck mainly to drug dens—they were safer, more predictable. They had their own weapons, sure, but sharing was always the group’s choice.
The nomads’ eyes flicked to WS, waiting for a hint.
He leaned back. “Do you normally ride to maintain stability in other counties?”
Williamson, the sergeant-at-arms, nodded. “Of course. Buffer counties are part of our strategy.”
WS gave the go-ahead to share the stash. The chapter had saved up and, with the Angels’ support, provided seventy thousand dollars —half the value of the arsenal, but all they could afford. The bullets alone weren’t cheap. Brotherhood demanded sacrifices, and both sides understood that.
The Black Chief smiled faintly. “Generosity noted. We’ll put these guns to good use.”
WS let the moment settle, letting the silent acknowledgment of respect and shared strategy hang in the room. In this world, trust and readiness outweighed money, influence, or glory. And right now, the Angels—and his six nomads—were proving it every day.
This chapter was centrally located, making it perfect as a base of operations. From here, WS and his crew cleaned up seven drug dens and two MS safehouses. The money was flowing again—though the haul wasn’t on L.A. levels, tell me a man who can make sixty thousand in a week and call it unworthy.
The only other spot to pull in real money was San Francisco, and they were slowly closing in. His promise to Sacramento—to weaken the MS and restore balance in California—was taking shape. Still, the cartels remained the wild card, the joker in the deck.
WS poured over the documents again, trying to find a thread. Then something clicked. Every one to two months, certain bullets were ordered—specialty-made, like a signature. Ten dollars a bullet. Extremely expensive. No street thug, even elite ones, would waste that kind of money. This had to be a cartel order. Someone specific. Someone with enough pull to have their own style.
He picked up the phone and called Sacramento. “Check the dates—two days before, one day after—every delivery. See which name landed in LAX around those dates.”
WS leaned back, eyes narrowing at the screen. “I think… I might have just found a thread to pull on. Maybe.”
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