It's Just Business
Tommy had returned home the morning after the Battle Royal on Meltdown. After he had heard that his scheduled Fallout match against Caesar had been cancelled, Rocco pulled some strings to get him into the Meltdown main event. The two had talked at length and decided that since Tommy was riding such a wave of momentum, there was no reason that he couldn’t walk away from Meltdown with the FWA World Championship. Things didn’t work out the way the pair had hoped, as Tommy and XYZ had simultaneously eliminated one another from the match. Nothing could be done about it, so the pair immediately shifted their focus back to the F1 Climaxxx and Tommy’s next opponent, Gabrielle.
The insertion of Gabrielle into the tournament was just the next curveball that Tommy had faced since he earned a spot in FWA’s most prestigious tournament. In fact, there were some jokes in the locker room that Tommy’s path through the tourney had been “cursed.” He was slated to kick off the tournament against Danny Toner, only for Toner to relinquish his title and withdraw from the F1. Suddenly, with very little notice, Tommy wound up facing FWA newcomer, Vampyra. He struggled significantly against her but managed to keep his winning streak alive.
One of Tommy’s biggest struggles in his match with Vampyra involved the fact that he would have to get used to the idea of hitting a woman. There were a few things that Tommy had grown up believing, and one of those involved the fact that you just don’t hit women. After a lengthy conversation with Rocco, Tommy accepted the fact that he was going to have to push past his preconceived notions to get the job done. After all, it was just a job, right? He didn’t get to pick his opponents.
Within minutes of their match ending, Tommy received word that he would be facing Caesar. He and Rocco had talked at length about how Tommy had never faced anyone quite as unorthodox as Caesar before, and they had crafted a detailed plan about how The Cowboy could overthrow the ruler reincarnate. Unfortunately, just days before the match, Caesar also backed out of the tournament, leaving Tommy without an opponent, and costing him an opportunity to earn more points in the F1 standings.
While the powers that be worked to find a replacement for Caesar, Tommy and Rocco had discussed plenty of potential names. Gabrielle was on the short list, so they weren’t completely blindsided when the announcement came down that she would be his next opponent. Another woman, and another opportunity for Tommy to struggle internally with the idea of beating up a female.
He continued telling himself, “It’s just business.” Gabrielle had faced off against plenty of male members of the FWA roster, and she had been quite impressive against them. Hell, she was a former world champion. She had proven more than once that she was capable of holding her own in the ring with competitors of any size. Any trepidation Tommy had about being violent with a female would need to be put on the back burner if he was going to have a fighting chance against a former FWA World Champion.
After getting back into Sweetwater late Tuesday night, Tommy had made plans to meet Randi and her mother, Suzy at his Uncle Jimmy’s home. Jimmy hadn’t put together a will, but it’s not like he had much to leave to anyone. Tommy and Suzy had spoken briefly after the funeral and decided that they would go through his belongings, each of them would have an opportunity to hold onto any items that they wanted, and the rest would be donated to a local charity thrift store.
The process of going through the belongings of a deceased relative is a brutal one. Tommy, typically the strong, stoic type, had done a great job of holding things together until he found an old photo album in one of the drawers in Jimmy’s bedroom. Most of the pictures in it were of Tommy and Jimmy when they were much younger. There were a few shots of Tommy’s mother and Jimmy. The relationship between Tommy and his mother had never bounced back from his business dealings with Sammy, and he suspected that it never would.
Looking at the pictures in the photo album took Tommy back to a simpler time in his life. In one particular photo, Tommy, who was probably 12 or 13 at the time, stood beside a calf that he had just roped. Jimmy was proudly standing behind him, obviously thrilled that his countless hours of teaching had finally paid off.
Tommy didn’t want much out of Jimmy’s home. He didn’t need much. Sure, he was making good money working for FWA, but he also spent the majority of his time on the road. Outside of the photo album and a shoebox full of buckles that Jimmy had won in rodeos, Tommy told Suzy that she could have whatever she wanted.
As he was walking out to his truck, Randi followed him out.
“You doing anything this evening?”
“Nah. Gotta go over some Gabrielle matches that Rocco has sent me.”
“How bout I pick up dinner and come by?”
“That sounds good. 7:00 ok?”
“I’ll be there.”
Tommy was starting to care about Randi far more than he wanted to. Obviously, she was gorgeous. But his interest in her actually went well beyond that. She was caring, intelligent, and hilarious. He had spent most of his adult life picking up random women, spending a night or two with them, and then moving onto the next. His proclivity for promiscuity had only increased when he started touring the world with an international wrestling powerhouse. He was in his mid-30s, and still thought that he was too young to settle down, but Randi was causing him to second guess things.
“When you find a good woman, don’t let her go.”
Jimmy’s words echoed in Tommy’s mind every time he thought about what he should do about the relationship with Randi. He had spent one passion-filled night with her, but when he distanced himself a bit in the days that followed, she hadn’t pursued him like he thought she would. Instead, she had grown just as distant.
This wasn’t the best time to be thinking about a relationship and the future. He needed to remain laser-focused on the F1, and then, if things were still going well between them, he could revisit the topic.
Tommy was watching a tag team match when Randi arrived with dinner a few minutes after 7. It was from Meltdown 21, when Bad Reputation had beaten The Spirit Walkers. It was the fourth match he had watched since he got to his apartment, and he was perpetually mind blown by how quickly Gabrielle moved around the ring. He knew of her accomplishments, and he had seen several of her matches in the nearly 15 months since he had signed his FWA contract. However, he had never really sat down and observed how quickly she could strike with kicks, hurricanranas, and an impressive list of submission holds.
Tommy paused the video on his laptop as he yelled for Randi to let herself in. She arrived with barbecue and beer. God, what a woman.
The first time the two of them met, Tommy assumed that Randi was more a fan of his celebrity than she was of professional wrestling. Those thoughts were quickly debunked, as she continued to impress him with how plugged into the business she was.
“So, Gabrielle in the next round?”
“Yea. Just another curveball. You’d think I’d be used to those by now.”
“She’s a two-time World Champion, right?”
“She is. Which means I’ll probably be the underdog. I never made it past the Gauntlet Championship before the injury.”
“Didn’t you already beat a two-time World Champion since you came back though?”
Randi was referencing Tommy’s victory of Phillip A. Jackson shortly after his return to the FWA. But Tommy knew that this was different. Gabrielle wasn't just a former World Champion. She had also had multiple Tag Team title reigns, she had won the Women's Championship, and other titles. She was perhaps the most accomplished opponent that Tommy had ever faced one-on-one.
“Well, yea.”
“Speaking of him, what do you have to do to get a TV title shot? Like, I know that you beat him before he won the title. But then, you beat Vampyra who has the briefcase. So, they’re battling for a title, and you already beat both of them? How does that work?”
“Eh, it’s probably Russnow still trying to get back at me for bailing out at the height of the Deathswitch Initiative stuff. Rocco says that if the F1 stuff doesn’t work out the way we want it to, he will get me a match for the TV title.”
“Well, I doubt that’s gonna matter. I’m having dinner with the next FWA World Champion.”
Randi’s smile when she said that melted Tommy. Hell, most of what she said and did melted him. He knew he had to hold it together. The biggest opportunity of his career was in front of him, and “The Caramel Coated Goddess” was just the next steppingstone on his way to the top.
Once dinner was over, Randi convinced Tommy to watch a Hallmark Christmas movie. He never understood the point of those movies, but she was insistent, and very convincing. Everyone knows how they end. The girl comes back to her hometown and chooses the guy who wears the sweater over the guy who wears the suit. The movie went off around 11:00 PM and Randi announced that she needed to get going.
Tommy was hoping she would agree to spend another night with him, but he had picked up on the fact that there would be no more nights like that until he made more of a commitment to her. The two of them stood awkwardly at the door for a moment before Tommy leaned in and kissed her on the cheek. She smiled, winked, and made her way to her car.
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Tommy knew that Rocco would send him 30 questions about the Gabrielle matches that he had sent him the next morning, so he decided to finish off the tag match that he had started watching hours earlier.
Randi heard a familiar voice as she walked down the sidewalk to her car.
“So, I guess it’s true. You really are up there wrestling around with Sweetwater’s favorite son.”
It was Bobby Ray Gallimore. Randi and Bobby Ray had dated on and off all through high school and for a brief period after graduation. His homelife was certainly nothing to be proud of. His father was doing 20 years in a federal prison for being involved in a massive drug ring based in Mexico, and his mother had skipped town with a man she met online shortly after his sentencing. By the time Bobby Ray was 17, he was living in the family’s single wide trailer on his own.
“Go away, Bobby Ray.”
“What? You ain’t got time to catch up with the guy you ‘loved’ before you met this pretend tough guy?”
“I haven’t had time for you in years, Bobby Ray. Now go away.”
As Randi made her way to her car, Bobby Ray got between her and her car door. She tried to push past him, but he grabbed her by both arms.
“Let go of me, Bobby Ray!"
“Or what? Your big bad boyfriend gonna come out here and pin me?”
Randi struggled to free herself as Bobby leaned in for a kiss. She turned her head as his disgusting breath landed against her cheek and neck. Outraged, Bobby Ray drew back and backhanded Randi, knocking her to the ground. Her purse hit the street and its contents spread out. With no warning, Bobb Ray was hovered over her. He leaned in for another attempt at a kiss. Every time she would squirm, he would get angrier. He slapped her again, this time busting her mouth.
The struggle lasted for a couple minutes as Bobby Ray began to awkwardly fumble with the buttons on Randi’s shirt…
Rod Sterling was enthusiastically calling the action as Gabrielle pulled Reagan Cole out of the ring before slamming him into the ringside steps. As Gaby’s partner, Kayden Knox hit the Seven Seals on Reagan Cole, Sterling’s call blared through the laptop speakers.
That’s when Tommy heard it. Randi’s shrieking from the street was so loud that it drowned out the call of the match. He jumped up, ran out the door of his apartment, flew down the steps of his apartment, and bound into the street. Bobby Ray saw Tommy come out the door of the apartment building, leapt off Randi, and made a break for his truck.
By the time Tommy made it to Randi’s side, the 1993 Dodge was squealing its tires and flying the wrong way down the one-way street in front of Tommy’s home. Tommy ran over to Randi, whose eyes were already starting to swell, and picked her up in his arms.
“My purse…”
“It’ll be OK.”
Tommy kicked the purse and the contents that he could see under Randi’s car as he carried her into his apartment building. An older lady who lived on the first floor was standing at her door, obviously curious about what was going on. Tommy had helped her carry in her groceries a couple times.
“Ms. Hankins, would you do me a favor? Keep an eye on that car, and make sure no one messes with anything around it.”
“Absolutely. Is that poor girl OK? Do you want me to call the police?”
“No. Don’t call the police.”
Tommy carried Randi into his apartment and laid her down on the couch. The blood from her mouth had dripped onto her white blouse. Her eyes were bruised, and she had a considerable knot on the side of her head. The tears streaming down her cheeks transitioned Tommy from a place of fear to one of rage. He soaked a dishcloth in cold water and started wiping the blood from her face. When he was sure that Randi could do that on her own, he went and got a bag of frozen corn out of his freezer for her to put on her head.
Tommy went to his bedroom and grabbed one of his t-shirts and brought it to Randi.
“I’ll step into the bathroom so you can change.”
“Oh hell, I’m pretty sure I can change in front of you.”
Tommy was trying to follow the boundaries that Randi had been setting. He hadn't made any commitment to her, so he decided it was best to play things safe, especially after what she had been through. She struggled to unbutton the buttons, as her hands were still trembling. Eventually, she got the blouse off and slipped Tommy’s t-shirt on. It was far too large for her petite body.
“Who did this?”
“Bobby Ray Gallimore.”
“Who is he?”
“My high school sweetheart.”
“So he did this because you’re spending time with me?”
“No, he did it because he’s an asshole. We dated 12 years ago. He got on meth, got all messed up, and I ditched him. For a couple years, when he would ‘clean up,’ he would call me, we’d hang out, and then he’d get back on that shit. Last I heard he was out there cooking it and selling it. He’s gonna end up just like his daddy.”
“No, he’s not. He’s not gonna have the chance. Where does he live?”
“Tommy, no. Don’t go fight him.”
“Forget fighting him. I’m going to take care of this. Where does he live?”
“Out past the old Morrison Ranch. The dirt road that goes about behind it runs for about a mile. His family owns about three acres back there, but they were always too sorry to do anything with it. Last I heard, he’s still living in a little singlewide trailer out there.”
“Alright. I know where that is.”
Tommy’s words hung heavy in the air. He pulled out his cellphone. He scrolled through his contacts until he found the number he was looking for.
“Hey, Scotty. It’s Tommy. I’m gonna need a favor.”
Scotty and Tommy had grown up together. Scotty had a bit of a reputation, and Tommy’s mother had never really cared for the young man. At a young age, Scotty had become intrigued with explosives. He talked about joining the military when he got older, but some behavioral issues in high school, and his overall disdain for education made it nothing more than a pipedream.
There had been a few places around Sweetwater that had gone up in flames, not long after the owners had taken out insurance policies. They always had an alibi that put them somewhere else at the time of the fire, but the unspoken agreement around town was that Scotty had something to do with it. No one ever talked to Scotty about his pyromania, but everyone knew that if you needed something burnt down or blown up, Scotty was who you called.
“Hey man! Been a while. Sure, what can I do for ya?”
“Swing by my apartment and pick me up. We need to run down to Larry’s and grab a drink and have a quick talk. I need you to bring some stuff with you, you get me?”
“Alright man. I’ll head that way now. Toolbox is in the truck.”
Tommy hung up the phone, as the wheels in his head were turning. He would need an alibi. That would come from Larry. It was a Tuesday night, which meant there would be no one at the restaurant, especially at such a late hour. Fortunately, Larry prided himself on being the last bar open during the week, so Tommy would take Scotty there.
“Text your mom and tell her to come over. She needs to stay with you.”
“I’m fine, Tommy. Really. I'm gonna head back to my place.”
“No. You’re not leaving here. Listen, I’m gonna have somebody call you around 12:30 and tell you that you need to come and pick me up at Larry’s. Drive down to the parking lot, sit for two minutes, and promise me that you’ll come right back here.”
“Ok? Tommy, what are you doing? You’re kinda freaking me out.”
“Don’t worry about what I’m doing, please. Just answer your phone when Larry calls you from the bar, get your mom to drive you down there, two minutes, then come back here. He’s gonna hand you my credit card and my cellphone.”
Tommy was slightly concerned about how quickly his plan was coming to mind. He certainly never considered himself to be a criminal, but this plan was coming together far too easily for someone who had typically obeyed the law, at least the major ones.
Scotty pulled up outside in his old white Ford pickup with the toolbox in the back. Tommy locked the door and told Randi not to let anyone in but her mom.
As he climbed into Scotty’s truck, his mind was still racing.
“Good to see you, buddy! How’s the wrestling business treating you?”
“Going real well, Scotty. You know where the Morrison Ranch is, right?”
“Hell yea! I did some work for Mr. Morrison last summer. Built a barn he couldn’t really afford.”
“Listen, what I need you to do tonight has to stay between you and me. You just told me about a job for Mr. Morrison. What I’m asking you to do can never come up again. You got me?”
“Tommy, you know I’ve always thought of you as a brother. You can trust me, bub. What are you mad at the Morrisons for?”
“Not mad at the Morrisons. But there’s a singlewide trailer about a mile past their place, and I need to make it go away.”
Tommy was hesitant to tell Scotty that his plan to make the trailer go away involved there being a person inside it.
"You mean that little dump out there where Bobby Gallimore cooks his meth?”
“That’d be the one.”
“Why do you need to-“
“Do you really wanna know?”
“Only if you wanna tell me.”
“You know Randi? The girl I’ve been hanging around?”
“I know who she is. Won’t say that I really know her that well.”
“Apparently she used to date the Sweetwater Heisenberg. He roughed her up pretty good outside of my apartment tonight. So we’re gonna go pay him a visit after we go to Larry’s.”
“Say no more, brother. I already know how we’ll do it.”
The ride to Larry’s Longhorn Steakhouse, the place where Tommy used to work security, was a silent one. Tommy and Scotty walked in, the only two customers in the small, dimly lit restaurant. Larry was half asleep at the far end of the bar.
“Hey, Tommy Bedlam! Boy, good to see you! Can I get guys a drink? Dinner?”
“Larry, I need a favor.”
“You’ve got it. Whatever it is, you’ve got it. You need your job back?”
Tommy chuckled a bit.
“No, I’m not looking for a job. Listen, I need two beers. Every 15 or 20 minutes, I need you to charge my credit card for two more.”
Tommy put his Discover card on the bar top.
“Somewhere around 12:30 or so, after you’ve cleaned up or whatever, I need you to use my phone, call this number, and tell the girl who answers to come and get me.”
Tommy wrote Randi’s cellphone number down on a napkin and laid it beside his credit card. He motioned for Scotty to come over to where the conversation was taking place and motioned for him to pick up his beer.
“Most importantly, Larry, I need you to keep those two bottles at the top of the garbage can. I don’t think anybody is gonna ask any questions, but just to be safe, don’t take them out with all the trash.”
Tommy and Scotty both popped the tops off their beers, picked them up and killed them off in a few drinks. Tommy had concocted the perfect plan to leave their fingerprints and even their DNA along the tops of the bottles. He didn’t want to weigh Larry down with the burden of the details, but fortunately, the old man didn’t ask any questions.
“So, I call this number at 12:30, tell them to come and get you, and then what?”
“That’s about it. When she gets here, she’ll be with her mom. Walk out to their car, give them my phone and my credit card. That’s it.”
“Boy, I don’t know what in the blue hell you’re doing, but I always told you I’d do anything for you. You got it.”
Tommy and Scotty put their beer bottles down on the counter, walked back out to the Ford pickup, and pointed it towards Bobby Ray Gallimore’s trailer.
“Scotty, before we do this, I need to know something. Are you sure you’re OK with doing what I’m going to go do?”
“Buddy, it’s just business.”
“Speaking of business, how much you reckon I owe you for this whole thing?”
“Eh, you’re pretty much family. I’ll give you the friends and family discount.”
“What’s the friends and family discount?”
“You buy me a case of beer after this is over, and we’ll call it even. I’m not gonna be out anything but some fuse.”
“Alright. You’ve got a deal.”
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The two of them pulled past the Morrison Ranch and onto the dirt road that ran behind it. Tommy took note of the place where a large barn used to stand and silently admired his old friend’s work. They crept down the dirt road towards the trailer and Scotty turned off the headlights. They parked a thousand feet away and climbed out of the truck. Scotty reached into the toolbox in the back of the truck, pulled out a small spool of wire fuse, and the two of them walked in silence to the trailer.
“You want me to go in with you?”
“Nope. No need for you to see anymore than you need to see.”
“Gotcha.”
“You think we should wear gloves?”
“Buddy, with my work, there isn’t anything left for them to fingerprint. I know exactly how to make this place go up. Shit, this is fixin' to be the easiest job I've ever done."
Tommy walked up the wobbly cinderblock steps at the front of the trailer and banged on the door. Nothing. More banging, more nothing. Finally, he put his shoulder down and pushed through the door. Bobby Ray was lying there, nearly passed out on the couch. The smell of ammonia and any other number of chemicals filled the air. The living room floor was covered in needles, spoons, bathroom cleaner, and other ingredients.
“Well, I’ll be goddamned. If it isn’t Tommy Bennet. Oh, I’m sorry, Tommy Bedlam.”
Bobby Ray was obviously high.
“Get your ass up, Bobby Ray.”
“I ain’t getting up. I didn’t invite you in.”
Tommy reached down, grabbed Bobby Ray by the shirt, and pulled him off the couch. A sarcastic smirk came across Bobby Ray’s face.
“Hit me, Bobby Ray. Hit me just like you hit her.”
“Who? I didn’t hit anybody? Did you see me hit anybody?”
Tommy drew back a massive right hand and drilled Bobby Ray flush across the chin. One of the few remaining teeth that the young man had hit the living room floor.
“I gave you your chance, Bobby Ray.”
“You mother fucker.”
Bobby Ray tried to push himself off the floor, but as he did, Tommy buried a heavy right foot into his ribs, nearly causing him to flip all the way over.
“What, you’re not sure how to fight somebody other than a 125-pound woman? Get your ass up and fight me.”
Tommy took a step back to give Bobby Ray the chance to stand up. He wobbled to his feet, drew his arm back and took a wild swing. It missed by a solid 6 inches, allowing Tommy to grab him by the head as he pummeled Bobby Ray’s chest and stomach. Body blow after body blow landed, as Bobby Ray began to whimper.
Tommy walked over to the front door and picked up a baseball bat. He picked it up as he took a few steps back toward his fallen foe.
“What was this for, Bobby Ray? Protection? Don't look like it's protecting you from much."
Before Bobby Ray could formulate an answer, Tommy smacked him across the back with the bat. He threw it to the floor and started kicking Bobby Ray in the head and the face. Soon, blood began to pour from his head, his mouth, his nose, and virtually everywhere else.
While the one-sided fight was taking place in the trailer, Scotty was arranging everything on the outside. Bobby Ray had three propane tanks on the backside of the trailer that he used when cooking his product. Scotty took one of them, placed them under the trailer, and pulled a piece of hose out of his pocket. He attached one end of the hose to the tank and ran the other end through one of the vents in the trailer floor. He slightly released the nozzle, allowing propane to start flowing into the trailer.
Tommy cleared off a spot on the couch and sat down. Bobby Ray was bordering on unconsciousness, and Tommy wanted to make damn sure he was still awake.
“Listen, Tommy. I’m sorry. You can have her.”
“Oh, you’re sorry? Well, in that case I guess I’ll get going.”
“Really?”
"You really are a dumbass, aren't you?"
Bobby Ray pulled himself towards the table beside the couch. Tommy saw him eyeing a small handgun tucked between the corner of the table and the couch. Before Bobby Ray could get to the weapon, Tommy delivered a blow with the baseball bat across his arm that broke it. Bobby Ray let out a guttural scream. Scotty heard it from the outside of the trailer and chuckled.
“Bobby Ray, I appreciate the apology. I promise, I do. But it’s too late for all that shit. See, I’m gonna be catching a plane and flying to the other side of the world. I can’t really just do that, leave Randi here, and hope that you’re really sorry for what you did tonight. You understand?”
“Listen, man. I’m not gonna get anywhere near that bitch again. You can have her, I told you.”
“What the fuck did you just call her?”
Before Bobby Ray could answer, Tommy delivered another mighty kick across his face. Bobby Ray was clinging to consciousness, clinging to life, as he started crying, begging for mercy.
“For real. I swear to God, I won’t get anywhere near her. I swear on my grandma’s grave, I won’t get within 500 feet of her.”
“I don’t know your grandma. Don’t know if she’s dead. Hope she is, cause it'd be a shame for an old woman to have to wake up every day and know that she had a grandson like you."
“You know what I mean, man. Listen, this is the last time she’ll ever see me, you got me?”
“Oh, I’ve got you. Listen, Bobby Ray. I never met you before tonight. Now, I’ve broke into your house, beat the shit out of you, and you could get me in all sorts of trouble for that. Even if I believed that you were gonna stay away from Randi, I don’t think I can trust you to not report me.”
“Swear! Swear I won’t tell nobody!”
“If I thought your word was worth anything, I’d probably let that go. But I don’t.”
Tommy picked Bobby Ray up from the floor and threw him onto the couch.
“Listen, Bobby. I don’t know how else to say it, so I’m just gonna shoot straight with you. You’re gonna die tonight.”
“WHAT?! I’m gonna die?! No man, No I’m not."
Bobby Ray tried to pull himself up from the couch, but he was too beat up to move quickly. Tommy looked down and saw that Bobby Ray had pissed himself due to the fear he was experiencing.
"God have mercy. You pissed yourself. You went from being this big tough guy beating up a woman to crying and pissing on yourself? Holy shit, Bobby Ray. Now, one of the last things that you're gonna think about before you die is, 'Fuck. I pissed on myself.'"
Tommy shoved him back down. He picked up the baseball bat and began swinging wildly at the beaten man’s kneecaps. With every ping of the bat, Tommy could hear bones cracking over the sound of Bobby Ray’s futile screams. Once he was thoroughly convinced that Bobby Ray would not be able to walk, he threw the bat down. He could smell the gas making its way through the trailer.
“As I was saying, this is it for you. If you believe in God, Buddha, whoever, I’d suggest you try to get up with him real quick, because you’re gonna meet him in the next little bit.”
Tommy glanced at the clock on the wall. It was 12:35 AM. He knew that Randi and Suzy should be well on their way to the bar.
Bobby Ray’s sniveling was the only sound in the trailer. Tommy briefly considered using Bobby Ray’s own gun and putting a bullet in his head, but he just couldn’t get himself to do that. There was something about shooting someone else, especially an unarmed, cripple that he couldn’t wrap his mind around.
“Bobby Ray, I’m really not a bad guy, so I’m gonna do something for you.”
“See, I knew you weren’t that bad. You gonna let me live?”
“Oh, no. You’re gonna die. But I’m gonna let you be unconscious when it happens. If I remember correctly, when I came outside, you had Randi on the ground, and you were straddled over her. That's how you were sitting when you were beating her, wasn't it?"
Tommy dragged Bobby Ray off the couch and onto the floor. He mounted his knees on each side of his chest and started delivering brutal rights and lefts to Bobby Ray’s head, much like Bobby Ray had planned on doing to Randi. Punch after punch landed and within seconds, Bobby Ray Gallimore was completely unconscious. His breathing had slowed considerably when Tommy climbed off him.
Tommy walked to the outside of the trailer where he found Scotty standing 500 feet away. He walked over to him as Scotty pointed to the fuse that made its way through the grass towards the trailer.
“I’ve got a propane tank leaking gas into the house. The fuse goes straight into the same vent where the hose is at. There's another propane tank sitting on the back porch, and I found two more and stuck them under the trailer. When the flame gets there, I’ll blow this trailer clear to Dallas.”
“Give me the lighter.”
“What?”
“I’m not gonna have you be the one to light the fuse. I don’t know what you’ve done before, what you haven’t done, or what you can handle doing.”
“Listen Tommy, I told you. This is just business for me.”
"Have you ever killed a man, Scotty?"
"No. I don't reckon I have."
"Then give me the lighter."
"Have you ever killed somebody before?"
"Nope. Guess tonight's gonna be the first. But you're not gonna wake up tomorrow and know that you blew a man up. I'm going to."
Scotty handed Tommy the lighter as Tommy knelt down in the dew-soaked grass. He held the flame to the end of the fuse, saw it light, and as the fuse burnt closer to Bobby Ray’s trailer, Tommy and Scotty jogged back to the truck. They left the headlights off when they got in.
The silent Texas night was interrupted by a blast that shook the windows all the way out at the Morrison’s Ranch house. By the time Mrs. Morrison got her husband to wake up, Scotty’s white pickup truck was back out on the main road and headed back towards Tommy’s apartment.
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For a few moments, the gravity of what he had just done left Tommy silent. He looked at the homes that they drove by before Scotty broke the silence.
“So, you did all that because he beat up your girlfriend?”
“She’s not my girlfriend.”
“You just fucking killed a guy for hitting a woman that you’re not even fucking?!”
“It’s not about that, Scotty. You know that. You know how we were raised. You don’t hit women, right?”
“Yea, I guess that’s right.”
A few more moments of silence passed.
“So, I gotta ask you something.”
“Go ahead.”
“Don’t you have a match against a woman on your next show?”
“Yea. Gabrielle.”
“I mean, how are you gonna handle smacking some woman around if you just killed a guy for hitting a girl that you’re not even dating?”
Fuck. Sure, Tommy had struggled with the idea of fighting Vampyra, but he had gotten through it. That was before all of this. Could Tommy really handle the idea of doing what he had just murdered a man for doing?
“You know what, Scotty? It’s just business.”
Scotty’s truck pulled up outside of Tommy’s apartment building and Tommy climbed out. He reached into his pocket, pulled out his wallet, and threw a few $100 bills in the passenger seat.
“Whoa, now. I told you to buy me a case of beer.”
“I’ll buy you a few cases of beer. How bout that?”
“Whatever you say, buddy. For the record, tonight never happened. You and me had a few drinks at Larry’s, your girlfriend, sorry, Randi, came and picked us up, took me back home, and got you back here.”
“Thanks, buddy. That’s the story if anybody ever asks.”
“I don’t think it’ll happen. It just looks like Bobby Ray blew himself up. Hell, if it didn’t happen tonight, it probably would’ve happened soon anyway.”
“I’d say you’re right. Be careful. Let’s grab a drink next time I’m home.”
“We sure will.”
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Tommy made his way up the stairs to his apartment and unlocked the door. He stepped inside to see Randi sound asleep on the couch. Suzy had helped her clean up her face, but the damage was still very evident. Both eyes were black, her lips were swollen, and there was a golf ball-sized pump near the middle of her forehead.
Suzy was sipping on a glass of whiskey when Tommy got inside.
“Did you do what I think you did?”
“I don’t really wanna talk about it, Suzy. I mean that as respectfully as possible, but the less you know, the better.”
Suzy stood up and walked towards the kitchen counter where Tommy was pouring his own drink. His cellphone and credit card were laying there. She held her phone towards him. Mrs. Morrison had posted pictures of a group of firetrucks and ambulances driving up the dirt road past their ranch. The post was straight forward:
“Meth lab exploded just beyond our ranch tonight. That’s about all we know.”
“I don’t do meth, Suzy.”
“I know you don’t do meth, but that was the Gallimore place. Did you have anything to do with it?”
“Listen, Suzy. I’m not trying to be disrespectful. But I went and paid Bobby Ray a visit. I couldn’t get on a plane in two days, fly halfway around the world, and pay attention to what I need to pay attention to if I had to worry about him beating her up again, or worse.”
“So, you killed him?”
“He was alive when I left his trailer, Suzy. I swear to God, he was alive when I left his trailer.”
“You know this is gonna fuck you up for years, don’t you?”
Suzy, it’s just business. That’s all it was. Just business.”
Suzy made her way towards the door of Tommy's apartment.
"Think it'd be OK if she sleeps here tonight? She's resting pretty well and I hate to wake her up and make her go home."
"You know she's welcome here."
"Tommy. Thank you."
With that, Suzy made her way to the stairwell and out of Tommy's apartment building. He walked over to the window, took a long drink from his glass of whiskey, and watched her get into her car and drive away. He looked over at Randi, battered, but still beautiful, resting on his couch. He slinked over to the coffee table, careful not to wake her, and picked up his laptop. He put a massive dip of Skoal into his bottom lip, set the computer on the kitchen counter, and started watching the matches that Rocco had sent him again. So much had happened in the last few hours, he decided it was best to go back to the first match on the list, the Golden Opportunity Steel Routlette Match.
She was the first elimination in that match, but she lasted for nearly 20 minutes against some of the biggest names in the FWA. She had gone toe-to-toe with people that Tommy had never stood in the ring with. None of that mattered now. The only thing that mattered was that she was next on the list, and he had his sights set on winning the F1 Climaxxx Tournament.
Tommy knew he would never be the same after what had happened that night. As he watched the match, he couldn't help but think that perhaps he needed to stop being the same. If he was ever going to have a chance at winning this tournament, he would need to be able to do the unthinkable. After all, it's just business.