Little (Trenton Security Book 2)

Home > Literature > Little (Trenton Security Book 2) > Page 13
Little (Trenton Security Book 2) Page 13

by J. M. Dabney


  “What are they talking about?”

  “They’re looking at the best points of entry. I was able to get my hands on the blueprints, and I hacked into the records. Our client’s mother isn’t listed as a patient, but the names that were, are the who’s who of the infamous. There’s a few FBI’s most wanted inside. Carrington sure as fuck doesn’t want to draw attention.”

  “Wouldn’t it be stupid to use real names?”

  “They didn’t. I cross-referenced aliases and a few matched up. Some people have more money than brains. Peaches recognized a few names and said they wouldn’t be problems.”

  “How would she know?”

  “She’d have to kill you and me if I told you.”

  As Hunter laughed his ass off, he returned his attention to his laptop. Since he’d met Peaches, he’d noticed that the woman seemed to be in charge. Pissing her off was to be avoided at all costs, but when he’d seen her cry, it terrified him. The woman was too fucking strong to break down.

  “Poe,” Linus called his name, and then the man crouched down in front of him. “We’re setting up with body cams so that you can be there every step of the way. You’re going to see shit you don’t like, but you gotta keep it together for when we bring Little out. You got me?”

  “Yes. Is he going to be okay?”

  “If not, then we’re going to have bodies to answer for. We get you didn’t like leaving him behind. It wasn’t what we fucking wanted either, but safety is top priority. Especially when it comes to one of my team.”

  “I just want him home.”

  He was surprised when Linus took his hands and squeezed them.

  “Listen, we’re getting Little out no matter what we have to fucking do. You’ll be in the van about a mile from the facility. Horace and Freddie will be on you at all times.”

  He peeked around Linus at the two men in question. “Are they safe?” he whispered. Both men were burly, not overly tall, but Horace had a darkness in his eyes, and his heavily silver-streaked long hair hung to conceal the harsh angles of his face. Freddie was the same height but wider through the shoulders and chest. They both had ink covering their arms. Violent slashes of crimson and what looked like crushed skulls like a massacre. Horace had more skulls than Freddie and wondered if there was a reason for that, but he felt it wouldn’t be safe to ask.

  Linus snorted. “Safe, yes, sane, not so much.”

  He rolled his eyes and pushed against Linus’ chest. “You’re not being very comforting.”

  “I wouldn’t leave them with you if I thought they’d put you in danger or be a danger to you. Little trusts them. I didn’t think he’d mind them being around his man.”

  Linus’ voice was soft, almost caring. He was used to hearing the word fuck come out of Linus’ mouth about every other word. He also didn’t forget the blows Liv and Linus exchanged the other day while they were having a friendly match.

  When had his life become a SWAT reality show episode?

  He slumped into the chair and sighed as he rubbed his hands over his face.

  “You got Little’s kit ready?”

  “I got Lily’s present and his favorite energy drinks.”

  “He’s so fucking easy to please.”

  He smiled as he thought about Harmon. His man didn’t need much. Some affection. His own space. He loved that Harmon wasn’t like the men he’d met in the past. Harmon was unique and perfect. When he’d whispered that he loved Harmon, that wasn’t the way he’d wanted to tell Harmon, but he’d needed his man to know. The agony that twisted Harmon’s face had broken his heart. His man would never look that lost again.

  One a.m. found him sitting in the back of Harmon’s van in the ratty recliner he’d pulled up to the monitors mounted on the side. Each cam was assigned a screen, and the laptop let him zoom in, and he’d switched them to night vision. He listened to the chatter and whatever code they spoke was making his head hurt.

  “What are they talking about?”

  “They’ve breached the outer wall at the back of the facility. At this point, they don’t see any guards walking the perimeter. Alex has eyes on the guard at the gate, and he’ll take him out, then make an entrance at the front.” Horace pointed at the screens he spoke.

  It was a voice that sounded as if it wasn’t used often.

  “We’re hoping for a soft entry and exit.”

  “And—”

  He had the urge to elbow Freddie when the man grunted. “It means we’re hoping for a quick in and out, you know like a bad fuck.”

  “Y’all don’t get out very often, do you?”

  “We live in the woods by ourselves,” they answered in tandem.

  “I am in no way surprised.”

  “Little doesn’t spank you enough.”

  He couldn’t help his snort/laugh hybrid at Freddie’s disgusted tone. Harmon hadn’t even attempted to spank him, but Harmon loved to receive a spanking. In no way was he complaining about that. He didn’t care how open they were about sex; he wasn’t going to be one of them to talk easily about it.

  “Linus and Liv are at the back exit.”

  “Baby, is the system down.” Linus’ voice filled his earpiece.

  Hunter responded, “Give me…got it. I’ll lock it back down once you’re in.”

  He closely watched the monitors as the team seemed to move in a practiced choreography. Seamless. He remembered they were going in at an employee access door to the basement level. The place was dark, and the paint was peeling from the walls. It was like one of those scenes people would see in horror movies about abandoned asylums.

  “Alex, we good?”

  “No movement. This fucking place is a ghost town.”

  His eyes widened at Mr. Three Piece Suit popping out an F-bomb.

  “Don’t sound so disappointed,” Gage sounded amused.

  “Teams of two. Room by room search until we find our targets. Silence except for five-minute check-ins.”

  The targets were Harmon and the client’s mother.

  “Gentleman, you have an hour before rounds,” Hunter informed them.

  His legs bounced as his eyes darted to each monitor. It was getting harder to keep track of who was who even though names were on the screen. He wanted to ask questions. Make demands, but he bit his tongue and perched on the edge of the seat.

  “Their clearing all the rooms following a preplanned grid search.”

  He nodded at Horace’s explanation. He didn’t know why, but when they sat on the arms of the chair, and he felt their warmth, he found it strangely soothing. A few hours ago, he’d asked if it was safe to be trapped with them and there he was taking comfort in their presence.

  A momentary crackling preceded Raul’s voice. “Boss, we found our female target.”

  “Secure her. Any sighting of our second target?”

  The echoing of no almost made him collapse. Where was Harmon? They needed to get his man out now.

  Shock Treatments and So-Called Miracles

  An overwhelming repetition of voices blended into a horror-esque soundtrack—ominous and foreboding. Past and present stitched together in some macabre quilt that trapped him beneath its weight. The effects of the medicine were waning, but in no way eased his anxiety. His rough restraints dug into the abraded skin of his wrists and ankles. He’d come to the conclusion as he’d awakened to someone in a surgical mask wheeling him down a hallway that he wasn’t going to make it out.

  He counted the mesh-encased lights as he’d passed under them. Memorized the hard clunk of elevator doors and the whirr of an engine. He didn’t know if he ascended or went deeper into the bowels of his nightmare.

  Was any of it real?

  Did he imagine his man was there?

  Had Peaches cried over him?

  Had his Poe said I love you? The words he’d always longed for a person to tell him but it hadn’t been real. It was the poison they forced into his veins. He jerked his head in a sharp shake as if it would help clear out the res
idual effects of whatever they’d used to drug him.

  Gage had told him he needed to be ready to fight. The attempt to lift his head—his limbs—seemed to take everything he had. His muscles tensed to the point of pain. That was the only thing he’d remembered—the agony. Suffering was the only sensation the injections hadn’t numbed.

  A shockingly white room with bright lights caused him to squint.

  “Doctor, the subject is ready.” A professional voice bordering on sweet sounded above him.

  “Then let us begin.”

  Even in his haze, he recognized Carrington’s voice.

  How many others had the good doctor done this too? People not as physically strong as him, broken in unimaginable ways and only searching for salvation but only shattering further by the torture. Kids who only wished for a way out submitting to hollow promises.

  His mouth was forced open, and something hard and gauze covered slipped between his teeth. He rolled his head to the side and even though it was fruitless, he started to fight at the sight of the machine beside the table.

  Carrington started to speak again. Reciting the date and time. He’d been here ten days. He had lost so much time, and in his gut, he knew this was where it ended. No way was he getting out of this room alive.

  “Subject two-nine-seven has responded well to the medication. The subject has shown to be receptive to suggestion, but now we move to phase two of treatment.” Carrington announced the voltage.

  As he bowed his body up from the gurney, he pulled with what was left of his strength at the tethers which held him down. His body was forced flat onto the gurney, and a strap came across his forehead. Even if the gag in his mouth wasn’t keeping him from yelling and cursing, the thickness of his tongue and dryness of his throat choked him. Forced him into speechlessness, but he grunted. The sounds didn’t convey his anger and, yes, fear of what was to come.

  Icy gel was smeared onto his temples, and he held his breath, prepared for what was to come. Paddles pressed to his prepared skin and then it was like static shock times a thousand. His body lengthened and seized as the electricity coursed through him. His screams were muffled. His jaw clenched, and his teeth cut into the hard material between them.

  As fast as it hit, the torture ceased, and he collapsed as his breath rushed in a trembling rhythm in and out through his nose. Then the next announcement came, and as prepared as he was, there was nothing he could do. He felt his eyes roll upward so fast that his muscles pulled. His frame pulled to the breaking point as the jolt hit him again.

  Somewhere in the distance, he heard a crash and a woman yell. All he knew was the pain stopped, and he was thankful his mind could still formulate in a small way what was going on around him. A rough hand came across his face and anger took over.

  The gag was removed from his mouth, and he felt it pull at his teeth where they’d sunk into it.

  “Little, look at me, man.” Liv’s voice was too loud. “Open those eyes for me.”

  His eyelids felt like they were weighed down, but he forced them open as he listened to the shrill sound of Velcro giving.

  “Linus, we found him.”

  “Come on, Little,” Raul’s voice whispered in his ear.

  He was eased up and off the gurney, and his legs gave out under his weight.

  “We have ten minutes to get to the exit point. Let’s move.”

  He was too weak to make it. They should leave him behind.

  “We’re not leaving you behind. Poe is outside waiting for you. You going to leave your man to mourn your oversized ass?” Liv demanded.

  Poe was there. His weight was leaned too heavily into Raul, but thankfully the man was able to hold him up. His vision was blurry, and his head seemed to float high above his shoulders. He picked a point and focused on it. He instinctively knew Pure was at his six but the rest of the team were in formation in front of him.

  One second they were making their way down a corridor, and the next, he was on the floor. He turned his head as he heard the click of a weapon. To his left, his masked team stood there, teams of two, one knelt and the other standing. Weapons drawn. He forced his attention the other way and could only see through Raul’s legs as the man shielded him.

  He was useless. Gage had told him he’d need to fight, but he didn’t have the energy or will to do so.

  “You won’t make it out of here.”

  Carrington’s arrogance was clear as he stood there with the gun in his hand, but he noticed the slight shake. The man’s confidence wasn’t as strong as it appeared. Two guards had semi-automatic weapons aimed at them with the butts of the stock pushed into their shoulders. He wouldn’t fucking go out without a fight.

  He forced his arm upward until he removed Raul’s sidearm from the man’s thigh holster. His thumb flipped the safety off, and he took aim, he closed one eye and picked which version of Carrington to aim at.

  “I wouldn’t be so sure of that.” Linus’ voice held a dark, dangerous edge. “We have enough evidence to sink you and your torture chamber. Pure?”

  “On your command.”

  It all happened in that slow-motion cinema effect, Carrington lifted the gun higher.

  “Take them.”

  A quick, even bursts of gunfire filled the corridor, and the guards’ bodies fell. Carrington still stood and defiantly glared at them. His mind cleared as everything shrunk to a hazy frame around Carrington. Adrenaline made him come back to himself. The doctor raised his arm, prepared to fire. He exhaled as he squeezed the trigger and the scent of gunpowder filled his nose. Carrington’s arms flew out to the sides, and he collapsed. He didn’t feel any guilt at the explosion of crimson in the middle of the man’s forehead.

  “Movement at the end of the hall,” Gage announced and they spun as a single unit—the symbiotic relationship of a tight team.

  He was suddenly on his feet, and Raul once again carried him. It was organized chaos as they cleared rooms and he felt like dead weight as his legs refused to hold him. His team—his family—wouldn’t leave him behind. He wanted to get out. Needed to see his man again. His world would be back to normal as soon as his man was back in his arms.

  It seemed like hours later before he felt the cool night air on his face and they were running into the darkness. Shouts filled the night, and more gunfire filled the once silent night.

  The sharp sounds of shots came from somewhere in the distance, one, two, and then a third.”

  “Alex, meet at the extraction point,” Linus ordered, and he wondered who Alex was, but he didn’t have much time to contemplate. His left leg dragged, and pain traveled along his right. The adrenaline was waning too quickly.

  “Harmon,” Poe’s voice called out to him.

  He jerked his gaze around until he spotted his man running toward him and then Poe was on his other side helping Raul. His van came into view, and he found himself stashed inside. Too many bodies filled the cramped space, but it didn’t expand into claustrophobia as Poe placed kisses all over his face. His man’s soft hands moved over him as if searching for wounds.

  “Baby, talk to me, are you okay?” Poe frantically whispered against his mouth.

  He tried to get his tongue to work, but his body started to float away, and his brain wouldn’t form the words to soothe his man.

  “Harmon,” Poe cried his name. “We needed to get to a hospital.”

  Those were the last words he heard before everything shut down and he let the darkness take over.

  The steady beat of a heart monitor brought him back to the present. Once again, voices blended into an echo of one, but it didn’t possess the fear-inducing atmosphere of the facility. He inherently sensed he was free and he lay there with his eyes closed. He searched his memory, and they started to come back to him slowly. The operation. His team was rescuing him. Poe.

  “Kieran, why isn’t he awake yet?” Poe’s sweet voice sounded tired.

  “They did a drug test, but without access to Carrington’s files on H
armon’s treatment, we can’t be sure what they’ve injected him with. The doctor said his vitals are fine. Except for needing a few good meals and another bag of fluids, he’s physically fine. Mentally, unless I get to talk to him, I won’t know the extent of the damage done by what was essentially days of torture.”

  Then he remembered who Kieran was, Dr. Dahl was the local shrink. New guy in town. No one really knew much about him.

  “Here’s my card. When he’s ready to make an appointment just call and set one up. With the number of injection marks, he might not remember much about what happened.”

  He flexed his fingers and toes, took stock of himself and while his entire body ached deep down in his bones everything appeared to work.

  “But you can’t guarantee that.”

  “What he needs right now is a lot of TLC. Make sure he gets plenty of rest. With the information you’ve given me about his past, he’s going to have to process a lot. I’ll be back tomorrow and check in.”

  “Thanks.”

  “You’re welcome. Just take care of your man, and when it’s time, I’ll do my part.”

  He heard the sound of dress shoes on linoleum and then the soft whoosh of a door opening, then closing. The bed dipped beside his hip, and as the man laid his head on his chest, he absorbed Poe’s warmth.

  “Is this real?” His voice broke as he forced his heavy eyelids up.

  “Oh, baby, it’s real. You’re finally awake.”

  He relished the soft kisses that landed all over his face, then Poe’s mouth rested on his. As he tried to lift his arms to hold his man, they refused to move.

  “Relax, you’ve been asleep for days.”

  “What happened?”

  “Well, what do you remember?”

  As he tried to piece everything together, he couldn’t decide what was real or fantasy. Was this one of his happy place hallucinations?

  “Not much.”

  “Well, you don’t have to remember everything right now. The FBI came in to take over the investigation at Carrington. They rescued several kids. I tracked down Trevor from your contacts and had him come to the hospital to see if he could identify anyone. He knew them all.”

 

‹ Prev