Den of Mercenaries
Page 99
Tucking his hands into his pockets, Uilleam smirked. “It’s been a while, no? Since we worked together like this, I mean.”
Kit shook his head. “That’s because you actually enjoy making an enemy out of me.”
“That’s a bit of a stretch, brother.” He pushed off the wall, going over to the glass globe sitting on a shelf. With a swipe of his finger, he sent the sphere spinning. “I merely like to twist the coils and watch people dance.”
Kit shrugged on his jacket then looked at his brother. “Whatever you say.”
“My mercenaries—”
Stepping around him, Kit went out of the bedroom. “I’ve never had need of your mercs, I fail to see why I would need them now.”
“We’re walking into an unknown scenario. While I’m sure you have a mean swing, it’s likely that William Tremaine has enough security that even if you were able to cut them all down, he could possibly get away in the interim.”
“True,” Kit agreed, “but that’s why I have them.”
The Wild Bunch stood at the foot of the stairs, masks and gear in place.
Kit didn’t doubt that Uilleam’s mercenaries were fully capable of handling themselves, but he trusted the Wild Bunch more. He knew how they worked, the way they moved, and furthermore, in the unlikely chance that he couldn’t get the job done, he knew they would be able to.
“Let’s move.”
Uilleam was the last out of the house, his phone in hand as he slipped into the passenger seat of Kit’s car.
As Kit climbed in after him, a voice sounded over the speaker. “I have everything you asked for.”
“Then tell me why Elias needs the politician dead,” Uilleam said, buckling his seat belt as they pulled off.
“To be honest, there’s a lot I still don’t understand, but—”
“Then tell us what you do know,” Kit said.
“If you would stop acting like an insufferable toe and let me finish speaking, I’ll get to that.”
Kit arched a brow, surprised at her daring, but Uilleam merely looked amused.
“I’m starting to see why you’re in the doghouse.”
“Winter,” but Uilleam didn’t sound chiding in the slightest. “Tell us what you found.”
“As I was saying. Any connection between Elias and Tremaine is practically nonexistent, but they did have something in common. There’s a bank—Grayson Memorial—that they both have accounts with. Elias’ accounts are obviously buried under a lot of useless information, but I found it.” Winter couldn’t sound more proud if she tried. “Tremaine, on the other hand, his was much easier to find.”
“A moment, Winter,” Uilleam said before putting the call on hold. “Grayson Memorial, d’you know it?”
Kit nodded. “Privately owned and a number of my associates do business through that bank.”
And by associates, he meant the men and women who needed a skilled banker to move their money without detection.
No one knew Grayson’s secret, and how he managed to stay under the radar for so long, but so long as he was able to do his job, no one particularly cared.
Uilleam studied him a moment before saying, “Interesting,” then reconnected the call. “Go on, Winter.”
“’Cause long silences are totally normal … Most politicians have their vices, and Tremaine’s happens to be hookers—totally original. Interestingly enough, there’s been some chatter about him in my circles. Some think he doesn’t just like to get his rocks off with them—he also has a thing for strangulation.”
Whether a good man or not, the politician would still have to die this night, but it did make it easier knowing the man wasn’t an innocent.
“Send me everything you have on him. We’ll be arriving in fifteen minutes so have the security mainframe down.”
“Sure thing, boss.”
“What are you planning?” Kit asked once he was off the phone.
Uilleam tried to keep his expression neutral, but Kit had learned quite quickly how to read even the most minute of expressions. “What makes you think I’m planning anything?”
“There’s no need for you to know anything about William Tremaine. The mere fact that you’re asking about him tells me that you intend to try to use the man in some way.”
“It’s never wise to waste a potentially profitable opportunity. You do your job, and I’ll do what I do best.”
Turning into the community, Kit didn’t argue with his brother, knowing that the man would do what he wanted. Regardless of whatever information Uilleam hoped to glean from the man, Kit was stopping the man’s heart when it was time.
Killing the lights before they got too close to the residence, Kit parked about a block away.
The Wild Bunch didn’t wait for him, moving without instruction toward the mansion.
Uilleam redialed his hacker, waiting until she answered before saying, “Deactivate the alarm.”
“Perimeter is set,” Fang’s voice carried over the comm Kit had in his ear.
“Alarms are down,” Winter said next.
Kit nodded to himself. “Breach.”
“Stay on the line,” Uilleam told Winter. “Find everything you can with the information I give you.”
“Understood.”
Kit was the first out of his car while Uilleam followed at a slower pace. He was calculating, sifting through possible strategies until the moment they were inside the house and moving through the corridors until they reached the sitting room where the Wild Bunch had William Tremaine on his knees.
His eyes were as wide as saucers, but with two guns aimed at his head, he didn’t dare move.
And once they were in the room, Tremaine’s attention shifted to them, his gaze scanning over Kit, though there was no recognition in his gaze.
But when he looked at Uilleam …
Sweat beaded at the man’s brow as he looked between them, his Adam’s apple bobbing as he swallowed.
Uilleam helped himself to the chair the man must have been pulled from, regarding him with thinly veiled interest.
There was no doubt he had thought of every possible advantage he could gain by using the man—the question was just which option would benefit him the most.
“Good evening, Mr. Tremaine. I hope we’re not interrupting,” Uilleam said casually, even as Kit stood there with a gun to the man’s head.
“I-I’ve never crossed you,” the man sputtered out, his gaze shifting back to the gun. “I wouldn’t.”
Uilleam actually looked rather happy about that. “My reputation precedes me. I’m glad we won’t have to waste our time on pesky introductions. Now, you have approximately”—Uilleam made a show of looking at his watch—“seven minutes to tell me exactly what I want to know. If you do, I won’t kill you. If you don’t, I will show you in the worst of ways what happens if you displease me. Shall we begin?”
Tremaine nodded his head jerkily.
“Tell me everything you know about Grayson Memorial and Elias Harrington.”
Tremaine visibly paled, his mouth falling open as he seemed at a loss for words, but when Kit tapped a gloved finger to his bare wrist, the man got the message.
“I don’t—”
“Trust me, I couldn’t care less about your hookers and whatever fetish you’re into—I want to know how the money changes hands. Despite being me, very few are willing to share the information with me. They seem to think I’m after their money.” Uilleam rolled his eyes. “As if I don’t have my own …”
“I don’t know, but,” he quickly added when Uilleam shook his head, “it’s only because Grayson has never, and probably will never, mention the system he uses.”
“There’s not much I can do with that information, I’m afraid.” Uilleam gave a callous wave of his hand, as though giving permission for the man to die, but William didn’t give up.
“I’ve heard a rumor, though,” the man said quickly, “that he has someone who runs numbers for him. No one knows who it is, but it’s assumed
that whoever it is holds all of Grayson’s secrets.”
“A banker, then?” Uilleam asked, sounding curious. “A name, if you would.”
“Roger Fitzpatrick.”
Now, that was interesting. Uilleam had already been looking into the man and his connections to Ariana’s boutique, but since nothing useful had come of it, they hadn’t bothered to pursue him.
Now, they might need to take a second look.
“And Elias? Surely, a man of your position must have some dirt on the others who seek out the bank for its services.”
Also because Elias obviously wanted the man dead.
Uilleam might have been interested in the reason behind it—he rather enjoyed puzzles—but Kit was not.
“Three months ago, Elias came to the bank with an offer, but I don’t know what exactly. Grayson wasn’t particularly thrilled about it, but he eventually agreed to the deal because Elias made him an offer he couldn’t refuse.”
“And that offer was?” Kit interjected, mindful of the clock behind the man’s head that was slowly ticking down to his death.
“I only know that it involves Carmen Rivera.”
Of course, it did.
Because Kit’s life wasn’t already fucking difficult.
“Tell me, Mr. Tremaine, why would Elias send someone such as me to kill you?”
The man flinched at the word “kill.” He seemed to be racking his brain for an answer, but he didn’t wait too long before his gaze flickered back to the clock behind him and he was throwing out an answer.
“I have a friend whose son is running for office—I’ve been offering my assistance with getting his campaign off the ground.”
Kit could practically see Uilleam’s interest in this growing conundrum.
“And this friend’s name?”
Now, Tremaine looked unsure, as though he knew they had reached the end of the line without having to check the time.
This was the last chance he had to save himself.
Just beneath his breath, he offered the name—one Kit hadn’t heard in a long time, but whose very utterance made his brows shoot up in surprise.
Things had just gotten much more interesting.
“Thank you,” Uilleam said, “for your cooperation.”
“Then you’re not going to kill me?” Tremaine asked, hope flaring in his eyes.
“I’m a man of my word,” Uilleam said. “I won’t kill you this evening.”
The man took in a rattling breath, his head hanging on his shoulders as he sighed in relief.
“But I can’t save you from Nix, I’m afraid.”
William Tremaine didn’t have a chance to even look up before Kit aimed and fired, sending a round plugging into the man’s head.
Not even two minutes later, Kit’s phone rang.
“I see you’re very good at following directions,” Elias said once the call connected.
“The address,” Kit demanded, not having the patience to go back and forth with the man.
“It’s 4649 Lexington and Frankforth,” came Elias’ reply, and Kit was seconds from hanging up when the man spoke again, “and 3251 Adame Street for your lovely assistant. I’d hurry if I were you, Nix. They don’t have much time.”
His phone beeped as the call ended.
Kit gave Fang the address for Aidra. “Go, and don’t hesitate to cut through anyone in your way.”
They didn’t have to be told twice.
“I’ll take care of this,” Uilleam said, his phone back to his ear even as his gaze remained steady on Kit. “You go take care of that.”
Chapter 16
Inhale.
Luna ignored the strain she felt in her wrists, even as the chains rubbed the skin raw, trying to pull herself up by nothing more than sheer will and her desire to get revenge against the two assholes who had strung her up in the first place.
The initial panic of being taken had dulled, though there was still a bit of fear in the back of her mind that Kit wouldn’t make it to her in time.
The two men Elias had sent to take her were a little too anxious and a little too happy at the idea of making her suffer.
Besides a few hits to and their yelling in her face, they hadn’t tortured her much, venturing off somewhere, leaving her alone in the center of the warehouse, dangling from a hook in the ceiling.
She almost had a bit of leverage, her bound wrists sliding up just enough that she could almost slip it around the hook, but every time she got close, the pain in her arms grew to be too much.
Exhale.
Dropping her weight, a gust of air left her as she tried to think of another strategy, feeling the droplets of sweat sliding down her spine.
Elias’ men had only been gone for a few minutes at most, but they were coming back, and when they did, she didn’t want to be in such a vulnerable position.
Think, she needed to think.
She was raised just far enough off the floor that she couldn’t get any leverage with her feet, but maybe …
Pushing her legs back then swinging them forward, Luna built up momentum. If she could swing just the right way, she might be able to lift herself up to the point that her restraints would just slip off the hook.
It could work!
“No, there’ll be none of that.”
The sound of a door opening and Elias’ amused voice made her blood run cold, even as a frown tugged at her lips.
While he was behind all of this, she hadn’t expected for him to actually show his face, but she hadn’t considered the man’s arrogance. Of course, he would want to gloat, to show her that he was the one who wanted her dead.
But she wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of showing fear—Kit had taught her better than that.
“I once knew a girl who was horribly afraid of the dark,” Elias said as he crossed the floor, keeping his hands behind his back as he circled her. “She thought the shadows would consume her … or perhaps, she thought there was a monster in the dark—I never cared to find out which. I tried to explain what a ridiculous notion it was, but you can’t apply logic where there is none. You see, her fear defied logic—nothing I said would have made a difference.”
Luna didn’t speak, just watched his every move until he disappeared out of sight. Whatever he was saying didn’t matter—not when she knew what he was trying to do.
She’d seen so many others play the game—taunting their victims into submission to the point that they wouldn’t dare say anything other than pleas for mercy.
If there was one thing she wouldn’t do this night, it was beg.
“D’you know why I’m telling you this?” he asked, stopping in front of her once more.
“Because you like the sound of your own voice?” Luna retorted, eyeing him.
If he would come just a little bit closer, she could get her legs around his neck and free herself … or snap his neck—she wasn’t picky.
“You see, Luna, nothing you say will change what happens here. How does that feel—to know that you’re facing death and there’s nothing you can do about it?”
“Do you think you’re scaring me with this little talk?” Luna asked.
“Are you still hoping that Nix will come to your rescue? That he’ll save you from your impending death?”
Now, it was Luna’s turn to smile. “I’ve never needed him to save me, but I can assure you that if you’re still here by the time he does get here, you’re going to wish it was me saving you.”
There was a flicker of annoyance in Elias’ eyes, as though he didn’t understand why she wasn’t afraid, but she had lived through far worse than being tied up and forced to listen to someone harp on about their evil plans.
Lawrence Kendall had been able to spark fear in her from the moment she heard the sound of his expensive leather shoes on the tile floors.
Elias was only annoying her.
“I’d wondered,” Elias went on, ignoring her last quip. “What on earth so many see in you. There are plenty of pretty
girls, and even more deadlier than you are, yet so many seem rather taken with you.”
He stepped toward her, so close that she could smell the clean scent of his clothes and see the fine wrinkles beside his eyes. There was a blankness to his features that spoke of his careless actions.
The fact that he was here now, questioning her, goading her, meant he was losing his edge.
“They really made you into something, didn’t they?”
Luna didn’t have to wonder who he meant—Kit and Uilleam—and though she wanted to give a retort, he wasn’t wrong.
They had changed her.
Before, she would have been crying, begging to be set free, but that wasn’t who she was anymore. She wasn’t weak.
Uilleam had presented the opportunity, and Kit had shown her what to do with it.
This life of hers had been shaped and molded by a pair of brothers she hadn’t met until almost eight years ago.
“Your time is running out,” Luna told him, though she hadn’t the slightest idea how close or how far Kit was.
She only knew he would come for her, and God help any poor bastard who thought to stand in his way.
Elias didn’t rise to the bait. Instead, he chuckled. “Did you know she said you were off-limits?”
“Carmen?” Luna asked, the disbelief clear in her voice.
“Belladonna,” he answered.
Now, for the first time, he rendered her speechless.
“You’re amusing … as one might consider a pet, but I’ve never seen what interested her so much about you.”
“What the hell are you talking about?”
She hadn’t meant to ask the question, but her curiosity got the best of her before she could swallow the words back down.
“Surprising that you know nothing,” he said with the slightest shake of his head. “But it no longer matters because today, I’ll rid this world of you.”
Elias stepped away, shadows closing in, revealing the men who had been waiting in the wings. One held a baton, another palmed a machete, and the last … he just looked eager to get started.
“I would hurry, if I were you,” Elias told the men as he straightened his hat and glanced at Luna one last time. “She wasn’t wrong about Nix coming for her, and I doubt you want to be here when he does.”