It looked to be a pickup truck from what he could make out, the image of it becoming clearer as he eased up on the throttle. It wasn’t always easy to identify whether a car belonged to someone who wanted to kill him, or a civilian who chose to ignore speed limits.
Either way, Kyrnon couldn’t afford the risk since he was on his bike for a change with only his leather jacket and helmet.
Turning his gaze back to the road, Kyrnon slowed down enough to let the truck pass, but as quickly as he’d turned his attention away from the truck still speeding toward him, he was too late to notice the man standing in the middle of the street, dressed in black with a war vest across his chest.
And an AK-47 rifle in his hands.
“Shite.”
The first crack of a gunshot had him jerking the handlebars to the side, narrowly avoiding a bullet to the chest if he hadn’t swerved, but as quickly as the first came, more followed.
It only took a moment, a heartbeat, for him to lose control of his bike—for the wheels to go out from under him, catapulting him into the air.
In his thirty-odd years, Kyrnon had never crashed his bike—he’d never even come close.
But as he felt the wind beneath him as he flew through the air, he knew when he landed, it would hurt like fuck.
A whistling sound shot through his ears before the only thing he saw was asphalt racing up toward him the closer he came to the ground.
He landed with a harsh crunch, pain exploding where he landed wrong on his arm. His breath was knocked out of him as he bounced off the ground, but the force of his momentum didn’t stop him there. It dragged him farther down the highway until he finally rolled to an agonizing stop.
His glasses had fallen off somewhere along the way, pieces of them forming a haphazard line toward him. Almost a mile down the road, his bike was on its side, steam billowing from its engine.
Pain was an old friend, but it took every ounce of focus he had to roll over onto his back with the agony he was in. His arm was broken, in two places if he had to wager a guess, and his left leg was fucked too, but neither mattered.
Not when the man in the mask covering the lower half of his face was walking toward him.
Broken bones wouldn’t matter inside a dead body.
Kyrnon had never faced the Jackal himself, though he had heard plenty of stories about what the man was capable of.
They said he was a ghost, sweeping in and then back out again without ever leaving a trace of his presence. His victims never saw him coming until it was too late. And for the longest time, no one had actually been sure that the man truly existed.
But he, just as his other brothers-in-arms did, had learned the man did exist, and that he was just as formidable as the others claimed him to be.
Kyrnon also knew the man answered to Belladonna.
The same woman currently being held captive in the black site of the Kingmaker’s own creation. A location he could never give up, no matter how he was tortured for the information.
That was the choice he had made all those years ago—to put his life on the line for the safety and security of his handler.
Before Amber had ever smiled at him inside the crowded metro car. Before the life they had built together when he had learned to live for more than just bloodshed and violence.
Now, more than ever, he wanted to live.
He wanted to be free.
Even though he was better with his right, Kyrnon had no choice but to use his left to fumble for the gun holstered at his back, its position making it far too difficult to get out with ease.
Before he could do much of anything, the Jackal was there, his gloved hand already forming a fist before he ever cocked his arm back.
Kyrnon only saw the first hit before stars exploded behind his eyes as his head was knocked to the side.
The second came in quick succession.
A third.
A fourth.
Another.
And another.
And another.
And another.
But with each one, a pattern emerged—one that couldn’t possibly be what he thought it was. The Jackal hadn’t been there when he’d been just a lad forced to fight for profit. He would have remembered.
Just when he expected another hit, the blows stopped, and Kyrnon was able to take a proper breath or, rather, as much as he was capable of as he spat blood onto the road.
“If you’re gonna kill me,” Kyrnon said, gazing up at the man with all the defiance in the world, “you might as well see it done.”
The Jackal didn’t respond nor did he lift his fists or gun again. Instead, he reached into the inner pocket of his vest and pulled out a digital recorder. Once he clicked a button on the side of it, Belladonna’s voice rang out.
“Pain,” she said, loudly and clearly as if she was standing right in front of him, “is the greatest weapon a person can use against another. Pain makes a person listen. Once upon a time, I was in your position, broken and bleeding, and it was only then that I saw the truth staring back at me. Do you see it, Kyrnon? Do you see the truth?”
The tape cut off. The device tucked away again.
He didn’t see whatever the fuck she was talking about. He didn’t see anything other than the booted foot swinging toward him.
But the more he was beaten, the more blackness winked in and out of his vision, he did see.
He understood.
Soon, though, he was no longer sure of anything … except Amber.
Kyrnon saw her in the dark recesses of his mind, conjuring her face as much as his failing mind could manage.
He saw her smile. The way she always tried to tuck her unruly hair behind her ear when she grew shy around him.
How her face lit up when he asked her to marry him.
He had made her a promise that he would always come home to her. That this job would never stand in the way of their future.
As blackness and a truth he had never considered overtook him, Kyrnon knew he wouldn’t be able to keep that promise.
Chapter 36
He was drowning in blackness.
It was all around him—sinking into his skin, bleeding through his eyes. It was everywhere, and Synek’s already broken mind was in shambles. He thought he’d known what hell on earth was.
He’d lived it for years, yet this, this was worse.
Because he couldn’t escape it. It was impossible to escape his own thoughts.
As it always did over the course of the days—weeks?—he’d been trapped in this room, Synek’s mind went back to the past, conjuring images and feelings he thought he’d gotten past in the years since he had become a member of the Wraiths.
But it was there all around him. Suffocating. Debilitating.
He needed to get out.
The heavy metal door swung open, shattering the image in front of him as bright light poured in. Seeing his mother across from him, that same look of accusation in her eyes even as he’d known that the pain he inflicted on her was exactly what he’d suffered for years, made him snap.
He had nothing left.
Synek didn’t know who was standing on the other side of that door; he only cared that there was a motherfucker who put him in here, and he wanted to make them pay.
The first snap of bone as he launched his fist into the man’s face closest to him felt like nirvana. The resulting pain nearly made him smile, but the rampage inside him wasn’t culled just yet.
He wanted blood on his hands.
Synek didn’t care who came next. He didn’t heed the protests lobbied around him. Once he let it all out—the pain, the anger, the madness—he could never reel it back in.
He didn’t want to.
Someone made a wet, gurgling noise in the back of their throat, the sound jarring Synek back to the present and to the sight of a man who looked unconscious with one of Synek’s hands wrapped around his throat.
The rest of him was a bloody mess, especially his face, and from the l
ooks of it, he’d been beating the man’s face in.
Large hands clamped down on him, and before Synek even had a chance to register what was happening, those hands dragged him off his victim and shoved him against a wall. Even if he had wanted to resist, the bloke at his back was far too fucking big to go up against.
And with the look in his eye … there was a chance Synek wouldn’t win this one.
As much as he’d been consumed with fury, it was gone now.
The last Synek saw of the man before he was dragged down a hallway was one of the others slapping the man in the face, attempting to rouse him.
As he was shoved into another room, this one full of light and at least had a chair, Synek’s clarity came rushing back, and while he didn’t feel entirely guilty for what he had done to whoever had fallen into his path, the other side of him knew he’d fucked up.
The mercenary who had pulled him off left the room without a backward glance, but before long, Synek heard voices out in the hallway a moment before the door opened again and a familiar face stared back at him.
Grimm hardly blinked at the rough state of him. Instead, he asked, “They must have really fucked you up.”
They?
He didn’t know the half of it.
If he thought Synek’s problems began and ended with the Wraiths, he didn’t realize just how mentally fucked up he was.
“Don’t lock me in a fucking windowless box,” he returned, his tone just as flat.
He wouldn’t apologize for who he was, not when they knew what they were getting when they asked him to sign on.
Grimm’s expression shifted. Not in a way that suggested he was pissed with Synek, but rather like he understood his pain. “You’re gonna have to get over that shit if you want to survive in this place. No one gives a fuck about your issues. Trust me,” he said with a shrug, “we all got problems.”
Synek came awake with a start, the final dredges of the dream slipping away as awareness crept in. The ceiling fan spun lazily, momentarily distracting him—grounding him, rather—until he was able to take a breath with relative ease.
Iris was still asleep, her back to him, her hair fanning out over the pillows. He was glad his restless sleep hadn’t woken her.
He could still hear Grimm’s voice in his head as though the man was currently in the room with him. He could even recall the perpetual frown on the man’s face whenever he was called for something he deemed unimportant.
Those were the good days—the easy ones. Back when Synek was still training, Winter was in school in Arizona, and he hadn’t been juggling the kind of responsibility weighing on him now.
Killing was easy; it was what he was good at. But trying to navigate shit without using knives and weapons was hard. The hardest thing he’d ever had to face.
And it still wasn’t over just yet.
Synek thought of waking Iris as he slipped out of the bed, but one glance at the clock on the nightstand told him it would be better if he didn’t. She wouldn’t complain about the hour, he knew, but it was early as fuck—too early even for him—and if somebody was going to be awake to head in, it would have to be him.
It was what he signed up for, after all.
He walked into the bathroom, foregoing the light switch entirely to go for the shower, the moonlight bleeding in through the window enough to take the edge off. The cold water was enough to further wake him up, and by the time he was back out again and fully dressed, nearly half an hour had passed.
Iris was still asleep when he came around to her side of the bed, and for a moment, he watched her. Her eyes closed, her face soft. At least, when she dreamed, the ex-governor couldn’t touch her there.
Synek pressed his lips to her forehead before leaving as quietly as he could.
The sun hadn’t risen yet as he made his way to the Kingmaker’s prison, rolling the windows down to feel the cold air on his skin as he breathed the night in. While he wasn’t sure what his handler had on the agenda for the day, he only needed to concern himself with one thing, and that was the ex-governor.
It was important, he thought, to keep a level head because the last thing he needed was someone else to take his place. No one else would give a shit about the ex-governor or Iris or anything he had planned.
And he was wearing his favorite shirt. He didn’t want to get blood on it.
Once he arrived at the facility, he reached over and opened the glove compartment, finding the pack of smokes he’d left inside and flipping them open to pluck one out.
He gripped it with two fingers, letting the slight weight comfort him before he tucked it behind his ear.
It would be a long day.
The war room was empty save for Red. Tucked in the corner, he held his phone to his ear, wearing a pensive expression on his face. When Synek entered, he jerked his chin up in greeting, ending the call.
“You seen Celt?”
“I thought it was your job to keep up with the Irishman,” Synek said absently, walking over to the monitors. He knew fuck all about computers and the complicated system Winter had set up, but he was able to at least get the feeds going.
One for Belladonna and one for the ex-governor.
“Probably still apologizing,” Synek said as a joke, but while it eased some of Red’s worry, there was still dark contemplation in his gaze. “The sooner we get this job done, the sooner we can all get back to our lives, yeah?”
Red seemed to think over his words a moment before he nodded. “What’s happening now?”
“Now, I go in and pay the ex-governor a little visit. Are you coming?”
Red grimaced. “You’re on your own. You get a little too happy with a knife in your hands.”
Truer words had never been spoken.
Chapter 37
Red
Niklaus Volkov wasn’t used to quiet nights.
Even before he had ever ventured into the Den, back when he was just a teenager living in Florida trying to make it, something was always going on outside his bedroom window. He hadn’t lived in the best neighborhood, and if it wasn’t the sound of bottles breaking in the alleyway, it was screaming neighbors or yowling cats.
The past seven years had consisted of nothing but endless days and constant jobs, one after the other, not giving him nearly enough time to sleep, let alone try to sleep when it was peaceful. He slept when he was too exhausted to do anything more, and for a while, that had been enough. He’d grown to love keeping his thoughts occupied on something other than the pain he was living with every day.
But that was before Reagan. Before he had learned what it meant to breathe again. And now, he didn’t just have a wife. He also had two beautiful children.
He had a family.
Something he had long taken for granted until the moment it was ripped away from him.
Niklaus didn’t know, which was why no matter what happened or where he was, he made it a point to come home every night. He didn’t accept as many jobs as he once had. He didn’t want to risk not making it back in one piece or for something to happen to one of them.
He wouldn’t survive it.
Which was why he needed to get out.
It went beyond his dislike of the Kingmaker. It wasn’t personal, his feelings against the man, but he didn’t like the idea of someone who could pull his strings whenever he wanted. That fucking contract was the bane of his existence.
It had almost been three years ago now when he told the Kingmaker he wanted out. He wanted to step away from the Den. His contract was almost at its end anyway, and with his new relationship with his twin brother, he didn’t mind the idea of joining the family business so much.
But the contract stipulated that he work for no one else until its conclusion. And even after it was over and done, he would be free to leave.
In the three years since he’d made the request, however, he had still been called in on jobs that, if he didn’t have access to private jets and planes, he would not have accepted because th
ere was no chance of him getting home in time.
He didn’t mind so much, considering most of the requests weren’t for the Kingmaker himself, but rather his team and the people they loved. Niklaus understood all too well the sacrifices a person was willing to make for love, and it hadn’t been that long ago that this very same team of mercenaries had been there when he needed them most.
He couldn’t turn his back on that.
But things were different now.
The job—Belladonna—was something else.
Something he wasn’t sure he wanted to be a part of.
Niklaus had no doubt they were good at what they did, would even wager that they might be the best, but that didn’t mean Belladonna wouldn’t have her own team somewhere watching and waiting.
You didn’t go up against a man with an army unless you had a trump card.
And while the Jackal was a fucking ace card to have, him taking them all at once was unlikely.
That thought was enough to keep him up at all hours of the night, wondering what Belladonna had up her sleeve. She might be contained at the moment, but he doubted she would remain that way with the building tension in his handler.
The Kingmaker looked as if he was moments from blowing his top at all hours of the day.
Which was why Celt suddenly not showing up had him fucking nervous.
For the fifth time in as many hours, Niklaus pulled out his phone and called the Irishman, waiting for the other man to pick up, yet feeling disappointment once more when he didn’t answer. As the voicemail began to play, he hung up and tried Amber.
He hadn’t panicked too much in the beginning because if Celt hadn’t gone home, he was sure he would have heard from Amber at some point the night before. But now … he was starting to wonder if he was wrong.
Dragging a hand through his messy, too long hair, Niklaus climbed out of his ’67 Chevy and walked up the stairs to the front door of his brownstone. He might have grown up in a rough neighborhood and frequented shitty motels for years after that, but he had wanted something different for his wife and their children.
Den of Mercenaries: Volume Two Page 62