by Eureka
Torn by the Code
Eureka
www.urbanbooks.net
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Chapter 1 - My Son Is Missing
Chapter 2 - The Queen Is in the Building
Chapter 3 - House Built of Straw
Chapter 4 - Here What Lies in the Heart of Man?
Chapter 5 - The Real Her
Chapter 6 - Nothing Comes before We~Death before Dishonor~
Chapter 7 - Reality over Fiction
Chapter 8 - Light It Up
Chapter 9 - My Screw Face
Chapter 10 - Care to Explain
Chapter 11 - It Ain’t No Fun When the Rabbit Got the Gun
Chapter 12 - Back to the Beginning
Chapter 13 - The Real You
Chapter 14 - Hell Hath No Fury . . .
Chapter 15 - I Can’t Stop, We Won’t Stop
Chapter 16 - This Right Here Not What You Want
Chapter 17 - Ya Really Don’t Want to Test Me
Chapter 18 - No Stone Unturned
Chapter 19 - Next Stop, Destiny
Chapter 20 - All Hail the Queen
Chapter 21 - Cold Hard Facts
Chapter 22 - Time to Hit ’Em with the Switch Up
Chapter 23 - A Deadly Dick
Chapter 24 - Mother Is Getting under My Skin
Chapter 25 - The New Me
Chapter 26 - Flex Is Back
Chapter 27 - Death Is a Good Look on You
Chapter 28 - Mita’s Confession
Chapter 29 - Naheri, All Lies Tell Truths
Chapter 30 - Mona Red
Chapter 31 - Dutchtress Gonna Give You What You Want
Chapter 32 - All of the Queen’s Horsemen
Chapter 33 - Long Live the Queen
Chapter 34 - Kainmen
Chapter 35 - Naheri
Chapter 36 - No Boundaries only Blood Bond
Chapter 37 - Kainmen’s Law
Chapter 38 - Us against We, Death before Dishonor
Chapter 39 - Naheri
Chapter 40 - Reunited and It Feels Damn Good
Chapter 41 - Netta’s Song
Chapter 42 - Kainmen’s Cost to Be a Boss
Chapter 43 - None before We
Chapter 44 - A Knight’s Move
Chapter 45 - A Family Reunion
Chapter 46 - Kainmen’s Revenge
Chapter 47 - All or Nothing
Urban Books, LLC
300 Farmingdale Road, NY-Route 109
Farmingdale, NY 11735
Torn by the Code Copyright © 2018 Eureka
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without prior consent of the Publisher, except brief quotes used in reviews.
eISBN 13: 978-1-945855-03-0
eISBN 10: 1-945855-03-7
ISBN: 978-1-9458-5502-3
This is a work of fiction. Any references or similarities to actual events, real people, living or dead, or to real locales are intended to give the novel a sense of reality. Any similarity in other names, characters, places, and incidents is entirely coincidental.
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Chapter 1
My Son Is Missing
Sitting at the long table adorned with marble and smoke-colored granite, I had a million and one thoughts going through my mind. Thinking about my son being missing, then thinking about the ones who were claiming responsibility for it made me even more furious. I tapped my fresh and very expensive manicured nails against the table, trying to come up with my next move. Someone was going to pay—and pay dearly.
“Lady Dutchtress, where do you want the package?” one of my highly trained murder-team members nervously said as he walked into the room.
The one thing my team knew was that when I was furious, no one was safe. I would sacrifice the first person I saw if I wanted to, so they all knew to walk on eggshells. I looked up at him and leaned back in the chair I had positioned right at the head of the table. With an inquisitive expression on my face, I said, “Is this the evidence of the snitch?”
“Yeah. I mean, yes, it is. He is the very one who told them where they could find you and your family.”
“Good. Bring him to me, but before you do, assemble the cleanup crew. I want to prepare this place first. No one will cross me and live to tell about it! As a matter of fact, go and round up his entire family. I want everyone from his momma, daddy, and grandma down to his seeds. Leave no family member untouched. I want them all!” I said with venom dripping from every word.
He politely nodded his head and rushed back out the door.
I slowly stood up and walked over to the large bay window to take in the view. “Aaah! It’s days like this I wish for the simple things in life,” I said aloud as I took in a deep breath. I looked at the downtown area of Chicago from my office suite located on top of the Deloitte Towers on Wacker Drive near the lake. The view was simplistic yet breathtaking . . . high above the clouds where nothing mattered. During the days, I watched the hustle and bustle of the crowd below and the glimmering lights throughout the skyline. It was just as incredible to watch as it was to be there. The feeling of everyone moving around while they did not know who was watching . . . I watched as the busy crowd below went about their daily routine, unaware of the empire that was built right in their grand city.
Chapter 2
The Queen Is in the Building
I drove to the warehouse where all the suspects would be lined up. I have mixed feelings about this. First, my heart was overjoyed with the answers I would finally have to get my son back. Then my heart would sink because this may be a dead end like every other avenue I tried. But I knew my presence was needed, so I had to bury my feelings and boss up.
The warehouse served many purposes. The front of it looked like any other mechanic shop. Cars parked outside lined up for sale. Wrecked cars waiting to be fixed. The building had five floors. The lower two floors were strictly dedicated to the mechanic shop. The upper floors were only entered by members of my crew and me. The top floor was my destination. The top floor was set up with one large room in the middle of the floor, then other rooms surrounding it. The only way to enter those rooms was through the large room. At the back of the warehouse were two entrances. One entrance led to the mechanic shop which had a key lock. The entrance to the upper floors had keyless entry, and the pass code was changed daily.
I walked toward the back and punched in the code. The door popped open, and I walked toward what looked like a metal door, but it was actually the door of an elevator. I pressed the small panel on the side of the door, and the elevator opened. As I entered the elevator, my emotions were on overdrive as I pushed the button for the top floor. I closed my eyes as the chimes went off. When the final chime sounded, the doors opened. I took a few steps and rested my hand on the doorknob of the metal door. I took one final deep breath and put on my ice-cold face. I was taking no survivors. I turned the knob and saw my soldiers standing around.
The room was lit well and was set up like a conference room. There was a large table dead center in the room with filled seats all around it. There were different colored doors around the room and a few windows which were lined with mirror privacy film. Plastic lining covered the floor at the front of the table. I was ready to get answers . . . and nobody was gonna stop me.
“I see everyone is in attendance. Let’s start the show then,” I said as I walked into
the room. I took long strides with confidence, letting everyone know who the boss was as I reached the long table. I took my place at the head and looked every bit of the Queen Bee that I was. After folding my hands in front of me, I threw a menacing glare over toward the snitch, Polu. “So, what do you have to say for yourself?” I asked him, still studying his face for a reaction.
“I-I-I swear, Dutch, ma, it wasn’t me! I would never go against family, man. You fed me. Why would I. . . .” He trailed off nervously.
I smiled and didn’t say a word. I looked over at Flex, who was sitting on the other end of the long, regal-looking table.
“So what you sayin’ is that all the intel we have on you is lying? You didn’t tell the Nu-money organization the pickup time? And where li’l man would be? Nigga, who the hell you think you fuckin’ with?” Flex said as he stood up, getting ready to walk over and deliver a blow to his head.
I held my hand out to stop him in midstride. “No, Flex, this is my show. Let me run it,” I said sternly. I stood up and slowly walked over toward the weapons I had neatly laid out on a table to the side. “How long you been rocking with us? About a few years now, right?” I asked as I lifted the machete. I looked over and motioned for one of my team members to drag the chair where Polu was sitting to the middle of the floor. Then I slowly started circling his chair.
“Anthony—I mean, Polu,” I said with a sly smirk on my face, “I have a very reliable source that screamed your name. Look, if you tell me where they are holding my li’l man, I will spare your life and your family’s lives as well.”
I turned my glare over toward Polu’s mother, who was sitting and shaking in fear. His father and two sisters sat beside her, also trembling. I gave Flex a knowing nod. Two of the team members, Snook and Terrance, stood by one of the mirrored windows. I had Polu in the middle of the floor where the plastic lining was. His entire family sat around the long table. Their hands were tied to the chair, tears streaming their faces, but I didn’t care. My heart was cold and wasn’t gonna stop until I got the answers I came for. Even his grandmother was there. I didn’t want to leave any of his bloodlines. Everyone must pay.
I stopped in front of Polu and leaned closer to his face, staring deeply into his eyes as I spoke. “You have one of two choices: talk or I’ma cut this ear right here . . . off.” I lifted the machete toward his right ear, never taking my eyes off of him.
“Dutchtress, I swear to God, I haven’t betrayed you like this. All this so-called evidence you claim to have on me is all a setup,” Polu said, pleading.
“You right. It was.” I lifted my body upward and looked over at Flex again and gave him a nod.
Flex turned and walked over to a metal red door and opened it to walk into another room. He came back into the room with three blindfolded females, one of whom held a newborn in her arms.
I looked over toward Terrance and Snook. “Do these people look familiar? Hmm? Let’s see . . . Terrance Carter . . . T-baby is what you like to be called. Tell me this: Did you really think I wouldn’t find out? Muthafucka, you turned on the family! You are responsible for my son being taken!”
I had found out that Terrance—not Polu—was behind the setup. I pulled a remote control up and pressed it. Immediately, a large screen appeared from behind a wall panel behind the head of the table. It was a feature I specifically requested when building this warehouse. It was to include numerous rooms and one very large room where I could deal with perpetrators in the open. Terrance looked on in fear as Snook slowly moved away in the opposite direction from him. All eyes were on the screen. It was blank at first; then a picture, followed by some audio, came on the screen.
“Yeah, I got the little muthafucka. You got my money?” Terrance asked a man dressed in all-black. He roughly shoved my crying son on the ground. We all watched as Terrance punched the child in the face.
I flinched, then pressed the pause button. Seeing my son suffer was pushing my feelings to the surface again. I took a deep breath and looked up, secretly praying that my heart would not be broken for much longer. I shifted toward Polu’s family. “Untie them and take them to the other spot. I’ll call you with further instructions,” I said to Snook.
I didn’t even think when I had cameras installed that it would prove to be vital. It never crossed my mind that one of my soldiers was involved. Money clearly trumped loyalty. If Flex didn’t remind me of those cameras, I would have never looked at the footage since I’m the only one with the pass code.
After I made sure they were out of the room, I walked over to Polu and cut his ropes with the machete. “See, there is something that people underestimate me about. I leave no stone unturned and cross every T. The fact that this muthafucka was too eager to hang you out to dry drew my attention. He was more than ready to kill you and your entire family, and that started me thinking. Why would he be so eager to sell his boy out? I mean, you two were thick as thieves. So that had me wondering.”
When my son was taken, I was a mess. I couldn’t even think straight. I had everyone on my payroll turning over every stone, not caring who was killed, hurt, or came hunting for my crew or me. After a week, Terrance came to me and told me his suspicions, but my headspace was clouded and couldn’t see that it was just bullshit.
I inched my way over to a now-terrified Terrance. “Money talks, homie. I paid your own blood to tell me the low. That’s a shame when money will make a nigga kill they own mother. Oh, what’s the matter now? You not so big, are you? Hitting a defenseless child . . . You bitch-made-ass nigga! Uh-uh. I wouldn’t do that if I were you,” I warned him as he tried to reach for his gun. My soldier knocked his hand with a bat and took the gun away with an extra wooden slap to the face. “Bring his bitch and that little bastard of his over here to me!” I spat through gritted teeth. I stood directly in front of him. I couldn’t get the image out of my head of him punching my son in the face. It was fucking with me, and my heart was turning cold and hard.
Flex roughly shoved the girl and baby over to me. Polu stood off to the side and watched with a mean scowl on his face. I’m sure he would have killed Terrance with his bare hands if they were left alone.
The girl stood there crying and pleading. “Please, don’t; please, don’t kill my baby and me! I will do anything, please!” she pleaded.
“All right, bitch, what’s your name?” I asked with one eyebrow raised.
“My-my name is Nahena. Please, I will do anything. Don’t kill us,” she said as tears flowed down her face.
“Okay, I tell you what. During this weak-ass nigga’s pillow talk, did he ever mention anything about this to you?”
“No, I can’t remember offhand,” Nahena said hysterically.
I smiled at her and turned to look at him, then back at her. “I suggest you get to thinking because when I count to five, you better have something or I will be carving your little shorty up into pieces. One, two—”
In one quick motion, I swung the machete and sliced Terrance’s arm right off at the shoulder. Blood was spurting everywhere. I jumped back to avoid some the spraying blood. He screamed out in agony. Nahena looked on in fear, screaming.
“Shut up, bitch!” I spat. “Now, I ask you—and this will be the last time—did he tell you where my son is?” I said as I slapped her across the face.
Nahena looked over at Terrance with pleading eyes. He returned her stare. He mouthed to her, “Please don’t say a word.” He held his shoulder with his left hand, trying to stop the bleeding.
“I told you everything I know,” Nahena said in a pleading tone.
I quickly walked over to the table and picked up the same remote and pressed play once more. I watched Terrance stomp on my son as he lay crying on the ground. A female silhouette emerged from the side of them. I zoomed in closer. The female standing there motionless looking on as Terrance stomped my son unconscious was Nahena.
“So tell me again how you don’t know shit, bitch!” I spat.
“I’m g-g-g-” Nahen
a tried to say.
But she was unable to get a word out because, in one swift motion, I waved the machete and sliced her across the throat. Nahena fell to the floor, gasping for air. Blood spewed everywhere. It covered my shoes and my clothes. Thank goodness the floor was lined with plastic because this was a bloodbath.
I looked at Terrance. “Now, muthafucka, tell me where my son is, or I will slice this little muthafucka up!” I snatched the baby from Flex and held the newborn upside down by his legs. Immediately, the baby started to cry and struggle. I ignored those sounds and movements as if I were holding a doll baby.
Terrance watched in agony as his newborn son dangled in front of him with a machete pressed against his tiny abdomen. He was holding what was left of his shoulder trying his hardest to apply whatever pressure he could to slow the bleeding down. Tears were spilling from his eyes as he watched the bloody blade pressed against his seed. Fear and anger didn’t fit well on his face. He sure as hell knew I would do anything to get my son back and didn’t give two shits about his.
I felt nothing. My heart was dead. This motherfucker had answers, and I was going to get them no matter what. If it took me slicing his child bit by bit and spilling his blood to get my son back, so be it.
I took a moment to count in my mind in case he didn’t answer fast enough.
“Okay, okay, I’ll tell you!” he said, full of fear.
“I’m listening.” I pressed the machete deeper into the baby’s little stomach. “Okay, you got two seconds or this fucka is dead.” Small trickles of blood came flowing down the baby’s stomach as the baby’s screams became louder. I didn’t care about his seed. The only thing that mattered is my blood out there alone without me protecting him.
Terrance’s eyes widened in fear. “Please, don’t kill my shorty, man. They are holding your son on the East Side, in the stockyard right off Cottage Grove. I’m sorry! I needed the money,” he said, crying and pleading.