DEADLY GAMES Jaycee Clark 1

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by james


  looked up. A whistle drew her attention to the bouncer. He raised a brow and jerked his

  head to the front door. She looked down the queue, then behind her. Finally, feigning

  innocence, she studied the bouncer. “Me?” she asked.

  He grinned, a flash of crooked white teeth and dimples. He carried a firearm, the

  DEADLY GAMES Jaycee Clark 21

  bulge under his jacket gave him away. She smiled back and walked up to him.

  He lifted the rope and let her in. “First time at Nero’s?”

  “First time in Prague. Is this bloody marvelous or what?”

  He laughed, his eyes appreciating her.

  Men. With a forced giggle, she muttered thanks and walked passed him, blocking

  out the mutters and curses of the people directly in front who she’d just cut. Life was

  rarely fair, chickies.

  DEADLY GAMES Jaycee Clark 22

  CHAPTER THREE

  October 30; 9:00 PM

  Dimtri sipped the wine and observed the nightlife of Prague. Headlights and

  taillights winked, like teasing young co-eds. He took another sip, the glass not much more

  empty than when he poured it over half an hour ago. He was to meet Viktor this evening

  and it looked like he just might be late.

  There was a time, he wouldn’t have dared to insult Viktor Hellinski, but those

  days were long past. He glanced around the expensively furnished loft with its sleek,

  modern and very empty lines. There was nothing of him here.

  Or perhaps that was all there was of him anymore…. Nothing.

  The only mirror in the entire apartment was in the bathroom. To look in the mirror

  was to see one’s self and all he saw anymore was a lie. Someone who didn’t know who

  they were anymore than the people he was acting to deceive.

  He set the wine aside and rubbed a hand over his face, scratching the stubble he

  kept short along his jaw and lip.

  How the hell did he get to this point?

  The bullets and blades would head his way if any knew The Reaper was a farce.…

  A complete farce … well, not entirely It wasn’t like he’d never killed anyone, but his

  marks had usually deserved it and those he was ordered to kill he simply didn’t think

  about. The target was an order to be followed. Period.

  The end was coming for his tour and he’d be that decided when he finished. He’d

  be damned if he turned into one of those rogues that had to be put down like a rabid dog.

  Shaking off the anxiety and fatigue, he stood, rubbed his hands over his face

  again.

  The triple chirp from his cell had him reaching for the little silver piece of

  technology. The LCD screen showed him who it was.

  “What do you want?” he asked without preamble. He patted his pocket for a

  cigarette.

  “This phone still secure?” John asked, his British accent clipping the words.

  “As secure as I can make it. Why?” Damn it, he was out of cigarettes. He took a

  deep breath and wondered how he’d missed that one.

  “We’ve picked up chatter.”

  “What would the intelligence communities do without chatter?” he muttered.

  For a moment the man on the other end was silent. Then, “Something happen?”

  “No, why do you ask?” Dimitri rummaged through one of the kitchen drawers

  where he also kept an extra pack, relieved to see he hadn’t even opened that one yet. One

  thing about Europe, they weren’t as health crazed as Americans.

  He ripped the package open and shook a cigarette out, reached into his pocket and

  pulled out his silver lighter. The click echoed over the line.

  “You were supposed to quit that disgusting habit.”

  DEADLY GAMES Jaycee Clark 23

  “If you called to tell me the important chatter is the fact I’m still smoking, then I

  do believe your boys need some updated equipment.” The nicotine hit his system on his

  first deep drag. “Or perhaps you need new boys.”

  “You’re even more caustic tonight than normal. What happened? Did you kill a

  defenseless animal?”

  Dimitri ignored the remark from one of the few men he honestly considered a

  friend and trusted with not only his life, but that of his family.

  “What do you want Johnno?” he asked, using the nickname John Brasher hated.

  “What the hell is going on?”

  “Why”

  “Who are you about to take out?”

  Dimitri frowned, took another drag and studied the cigarette as the paper slowly

  disintegrated from the burning tip. On a deep breath, he asked, “Who says I’m marking

  anyone?”

  “Sources.”

  “And those would be?”

  John’s chuckle grated on his nerves. “Look, our bosses both want to know who

  the mark is and….”

  “And?”

  “And we believe the Raven has been sent after you.”

  That was news. The Raven. Dimirti smiled. He was marked? Wasn’t that

  refreshing? And he knew ahead of time.

  “Well….”

  “The powers that be are not pleased. One they hear you’re marking someone and

  then that you’ve been marked. Now, me--I don’t think you’ve marked yourself.”

  “Yes, that’s always a concern isn’t it?” Idiots.

  “Who’s your mark?” John asked.

  “We don’t discuss that, you know.”

  “Yes, but some are worried.”

  He leaned up and stabbed the cigarette out in the ashtray on his glass coffee table.

  Dimitri sighed and leaned back, closing his eyes and pinching the bridge of his nose.

  “Johnno, I have no idea who my damn mark is. Hellinski hasn’t told me yet. I’m to meet

  the man tonight to find out.”

  Neither man said a word for a bit.

  John cleared his throat. “Any ideas?”

  “Yeah, Elianya.”

  This time John’s silence was filled with more than quiet. Dimitri knew what the

  man wanted, and had vowed to give it to him.

  “When?” Rage snapped the word over the phone.

  He sighed. “I don’t know. I don’t know for a fact that it’s her, Johnno, and…”

  “You swore to me, Ian. You swore and if you take this from me --”

  “Do you honest to God think I’d do that?” Anger sharpened his own words. He

  knew Elianya’s name sent his friend into a black rage, the fact John had used his real

  name, Ian, was evidence of just how far the woman still pushed Mr. Brasher.

  He could hear John grinding his teeth. “She’s mine.”

  DEADLY GAMES Jaycee Clark 24

  “You don’t need to remind me.”

  Something on the other end crashed.

  He patiently waited. “Look, Johnno, it’s only a feeling I have. When I know for

  certain, I’ll let you know.”

  “She’s mine.”

  Again, he pinched the bridge of his nose. “I will never dispute that fact.”

  “But some things are out of your control, aren’t they?” John asked, tired.

  He stood and walked to the window. “If, and that’s a damn big if, Johnno. Then

  she’s yours. Somehow she’ll escape or….” God he was so fucking tired. “I don’t know,

  we’ll come up with something.”

  “I should have just killed the bitch years ago,” John snarled.

  “Yes, but then you’d be behind bars. Sanctioned marks are one thing. Vendettas

  are equivalent to murder, my friend.”

  “Bullocks, that.
And you bloody well know it. As if you’ve kept the lines

  separate.”

  True. He twisted his wrist, pushed the sleeve of his shirt up to check the time.

  “I’m late, Johnno, and since you’ve informed me that I’m marked, I’d rather get my

  meeting with Hellinski over with, if it’s all the same to you.”

  Again the silence stretched. “I’m in Prague at the safe house. When we heard you

  were marked, I was sent down here. I think they’re going to take you out soon.”

  “Cheery fucking thought, eh?”

  The line went dead.

  * * * *

  10:30 p.m.

  Dimitri realized how rattled John had been to use his real name. No one called

  him Ian anymore. No one but Johnno, Pete and his brothers--when he actually saw them.

  Which, was rare, though more so in the last couple of years than in the dozen since he left

  the family. Last he knew everyone was faring well. But then he hadn’t checked in the last

  couple of months. Things had been too hectic and dangerous here and he wanted no one,

  no one connecting Dimitri Petrolov, the Reaper, to anyone remotely connected to Ian

  Kinncaid.

  He’d taken chances when the needs called for and there were more of those than

  he’d cared to feel comfortable with. He’d had to use Johnno twice. Once to help him out

  in Colorado and again last year when a bastard Congressman had been after Brayden’s

  wife, Christian. Only his brothers had ever realized who he was and that he was helping

  and even then, he’d been in disguise.

  His sleek BMW cut through the late night traffic as he made his way to Nero’s

  The noises from outside muffled through his car. He rarely listened to music, music lulled

  and he could never afford to be lulled.

  Constant watch. Constant guard. If he was a civilian, he’d be neurotic. But as it

  were, this was all part of the job. Focused attention, a gun in his shoulder holster, an extra

  9mm under his seat and a couple of cans of tear gas in the console.

  He was thirty-six years old, trusted very few men and knew he’d probably die as

  alone as he’d been forced to live for the last few years.

  He vaguely wondered if the Raven was successful and blew his head off, if

  DEADLY GAMES Jaycee Clark 25

  anyone would notify his family. On that realistic, but macabre thought, he picked his

  phone back up and redialed Johnno who answered on the first ring.

  “What?”

  “If Raven’s successful, I need you to do something for me.”

  “She won’t be.”

  “She’s good or she wouldn’t have been hired and you know it.”

  “What is going on with you?”

  Dimitri sighed. How to explain that he’d lived so long playing this game, had

  taken so many out that he knew his time was up? “Just listen. If she succeeds, I need you

  to notify.…” He trailed off. Last time he checked, his car was bug free, but then he hadn’t

  checked in a couple of days.

  “I understand. You concentrate on your end and I’ll look for her.”

  He hung up and pulled into his parking space in front of the club. Alighting

  quickly, he ignored the swarm of people out front and cut through them heading for the

  door. He narrowed his gaze at Ivan. “Problems tonight?”

  Ivan smirked, but the smile slipped and he looked away as Dimtri continued to

  stare at him...

  “Problems?” Dimitri repeated.

  Ivan shook his head. “No, Mr. Petrolov. No problems.”

  Dimitri watched him and leaned close. “How many pretties have you let in

  tonight, Ivan?”

  The man actually blushed. Would wonders never cease. “Three. No, four. Wait.”

  His eyes got big. “Five. It was five, no?”

  Dimitri slapped him on the shoulder and walked inside. One of the men at the

  front of the line muttered about cutting and going to the end of the line.

  From under his brows, Dimitri merely stared at the brash, rude college kid. The

  kid, blond, blue eyed and maybe twenty-one, gulped and stumbled back a step.

  Knowing he sufficiently put fear into the brat, he turned to Ivan and said loudly

  enough, “Ivan, have this person removed from the premises. I find he offends me.”

  Ivan nodded and moved to do his bidding. “Y--Yes, sir, Mr. Petrolov.”

  The air from the club hit him as it always did, thick and sweet with pumping

  music and fogging smoke from too many cigarettes and enough recreational drugs that a

  patron could get high simply standing in the doorway.

  Dimitri made his way through the throng of bodies.

  “Hey, sweet thing,” one of the regular girls said to him.

  “Olga.”

  “When you going to ask for a massage that will take you to Heaven?”

  He flashed her a smile. “Not tonight. I have a meeting with the boss man.”

  “Pity.”

  “Isn’t it though.”

  As he wove through the people dancing, laughing and talking, to the band

  screeching on the stage, a tingle prickled up the back of his neck.

  Slowly, he put his right hand on the butt of his SIG and made it to the staircase.

  She wouldn’t hit him here in the middle of a club. Too crowded, though if memory

  served, Raven preferred crowds, was it crowded streets or parties? He’d have to look her

  DEADLY GAMES Jaycee Clark 26

  up as soon as he returned home. Walking up the stairs he scanned the crowd. A woman.

  She never disguised herself as a man. Rumor had it she was beautiful.

  And with her profession, she wouldn’t be drinking or getting high. At least not

  staking out a mark.

  Damn it.

  There were four women watching him. A blonde with another guy over in the

  corner. From her glazed eyes, she probably wasn’t it, and unless he was mistaken, the

  man was giving her a nice little present under the cover of the table Give them a couple

  more hours and people would be fucking against the wall.

  Two red heads were candidates, but red hair was memorable. And they were too

  … something. Too flighty, happy. Not his image of the elusive Raven.

  Maybe that one. Over at the bar, trying to ignore the man beside her. She had

  short, scalp length, black hair and skin the color of a frothy café mocha. From here, he

  could see the muscles of her shoulder as the sweater dipped off one. Looking down he

  noticed she was wearing boots. Not lace up to the thigh boots, like many in here, not even

  platform boots. No, unless he was mistaken, the woman was wearing very practical boots.

  He ran his gaze back up her, watched as she crossed those long legs and wondered what

  her calves and thighs looked like. Her eyes did surprise him. With her coloring, he’d

  assumed they’d be brown, but even from here he could see they were light. A blue? Or

  grey maybe? Green. Interesting Soft jawline, straight nose, arched brows. Rather

  beautiful actually.

  He narrowed his eyes and smiled at her.

  Something in him clicked and he knew, knew the woman at the bar was Raven.

  Perhaps it was the awareness that tingled like a quick jolt of electricity through him.

  Whatever it was, he would almost bet, she was his assassin. Almost.

  If she was, he wanted to know who the hell had hired her. And if she wasn’t….

  He grinned wider as he walked up the rest of the stairs. Time to see who Viktor

&
nbsp; wanted him to kill.

  * * * *

  Raven watched the man walk up the stairs and had to admit he was even more

  handsome in person than he was in his photographs. Must be that shadowed beard. Or the

  eyes.

  And in that one quick assessment he’d given her, she’d gotten the feeling he knew

  who she was and why she was here.

  Which was bloody stupid, but there it was. She still hadn’t accepted the job, but

  she decided she would. Probably.

  Whether or not she would kill him would depend upon him and what he was

  really doing. If she was right and he was something other than he appeared, then she’d

  cross that bridge when she got there, but….

  But if he was only The Reaper, a cold blooded assassin who worked for one of the

  most brutal crime bosses in Europe, then she’d happily take him out without a second

  thought.T

  hen again, he might not be so easy to take out…. She had the distinct impression

  she might have finally met her match.

  Just her luck, the last assignment she accepted would kill her. Maybe she waited

  DEADLY GAMES Jaycee Clark 27

  too long to get out. Probably. Maybe she never should have started on this career path,

  but that was beside the bloody point and freaking pointless.

  “Come dance with me,” the man beside her asked yet again.

  Raising a brow, she only looked down at the hand he’d placed on top of hers.

  “Luv, you really want to move your hand.”

  He quickly snatched his hand back. “You don’t have to get testy. A dance isn’t a

  reason to be rude.”

  She stood, grabbed her drink and walked away. She found a quiet place--as quiet

  as she could in a raving club and watched the wall of mirrors above the stairs.

  Just who was Mr. Dimitri Petrolov?

  She should just kill him and be done with it, take the money and retire. But

  something stayed her and if she’d learned anything at all, she knew to follow her

  instincts. And where they were concerned, she wondered if she’d kill the man at all.

  * * * *

  Dimitri stood at the wall of mirrors and looked out onto the club below. Again it

  was packed, bodies so close together that Hellinski would have even the bribed police all

  over them if a fire ever broke out. But Hellinski was never one to worry about such

  things. He scanned the crowd again and saw the woman had moved from her perch on the

 

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