The White Knight & Black Valentine Series (Book 4): Kill Them All
Page 1
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Epilogue
Note from the Author
Fight Crime! (A Love Story)
Copyright © 2018 Kristen Brand
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without the express written consent of the publisher, excepting brief quotations used in reviews.
Editing Services by Holloway House
Cover by AgnstyG
Chapter 1
I was twenty minutes late, exactly as planned. Five minutes were barely noticeable, and ten was excusable. At fifteen, he must have worried, but it was still possible I’d just gotten stuck in traffic. Twenty, however, was the magic number, and right now, he was probably wondering if I’d show up at all.
It would be better for him if I didn’t.
I pulled into the strip club’s parking lot, looking for a tree. Shade was more important than proximity when parking in South Florida during the height of summer. Unfortunately, the closest thing to a tree in this lot was the scraggly grass creeping up through the cracks in the asphalt. I settled on an empty space close to the entrance: a glass door covered in smudges and oversized bright-red kiss decals. Daylight wasn’t kind to the building. It needed darkness to cover the cracks in its black paint, rust stains on the sidewalk, and litter on the ground, leaving only the neon outlines of female figures visible in the night.
I scanned the building telepathically to make sure no one was planning to shoot me the moment I walked in the door. No one was, but you could never be too careful. I strode in, taking off my sunglasses and slipping them into my purse. The lights inside were dim and pink-tinged, focused mainly on the stage. A badly remixed pop song played too loudly over the speakers, the current dancer doing her routine in front of what few patrons were here this early. Opposite the stage were a small bar and half a dozen round tables, but only one man sat there. He smiled when he saw me, though he couldn’t cover the sweat that had formed on his face from worry that I wasn’t coming. I paid the doorman and walked over.
“Valentina Belmonte,” he greeted, not standing.
I picked his own name from his mind. “Lance Holden.”
His smile faltered, but he recovered it quickly. He was pretty much what I expected: white, middle-aged, average build (for an overweight American, at least), and bland features. His teeth were the only thing noteworthy about him; they were perfectly straight and bleached so white I almost reached for my sunglasses again.
“Can I get you a drink?” he asked as I sat down. “Beer? Wine?”
“Wine.”
He waved over a waitress. His wristwatch looked expensive, shiny silver clashing with the gold of his wedding ring.
“Show it to me,” I said.
He reached into his suit jacket. There was enough room to smuggle a newborn in there; he should really fire his tailor. I took the white envelope he handed me, opened it, and removed the photographs from inside. I had to suppress a sigh. The photos were grainy and hardly professional, but they showed me sitting at a table outside of a restaurant, an umbrella overhead and a fountain in the background. Across the table, on the other side of two cocktails and seafood dishes, sat a handsome man with a goatee and a fedora. I supposed I should be grateful the pictures were genuine. The only thing worse than being blackmailed was getting tricked by a fake.
Lance pointed a thick finger at my image. “That’s you.”
As if the gorgeous woman could be anyone else. My long black hair hung loose in the picture, and my mouth curved upward in amusement at something I couldn’t remember, my lipstick a fierce shade of red. I had a figure to die for—and not just because I always carried a concealed weapon somewhere on it. And though I was looking away from the photographer, the distinctive burn scar on the side of my face was clearly visible.
He pointed to my dinner date. “And that, unless I’m mistaken, is Xanthos, a supervillain and wanted felon.”
“Is he?” I asked blandly. “Last I heard, no one really knows what Xanthos looks like without the mask.”
“That guy matches the sketch artist renderings and digital simulations. I’d say he’s the real deal.”
The frenzied beat of the music pounded against my skull, threatening a headache. I should have insisted Xanthos meet me somewhere more private. That kind of sloppiness was inexcusable. But I’d needed information from him, not the other way around, so he’d gotten to pick the venue.
I put the photos back in their envelope as the waitress came by with our wine. It was too dark to see the liquid’s color well, so I swirled it and sniffed. Ugh. No. I put down the glass. What had I been expecting at a place like this? That made two serious lapses in judgment.
“You wouldn’t want the authorities to see this, would you?” Lance’s whitened smile had turned into a leer. “Or your husband, for that matter.”
The dancer on the main stage finished her performance, and the awful pop remix stopped. Finally, I could hear myself think.
“How much?” I asked.
“Half a million. Cash.”
“Hm.” I pulled out the photographs for a second look to kill time. The music started up again, but this time, it was soft piano followed by a surge of violins. The next dancer came onstage, and unlike the dead-eyed woman before her, she had a genuine smile and a bounce in her step. She started with a twisted grip handspring then took off, twirling gracefully in the air. She barely seemed to be attached to the pole, her movements precise but to all appearances effortless. She looked as if she was flying.
Something squirmed into my mind, annoyed I wasn’t paying attention and wanting to know the cause. Well, well. Lance Holden was a telepath, too. That explained why he was so confident. How adorable. I pretended not to notice and kept watching the dancer, who was upside-down in a spin. I used to be able to do that. Well, not that, exactly; I’d never been that good, but pole dancing had been a fun way to exercise when I was younger. I wasn’t young anymore.
“You look good for your age,” Lance said.
“No, really,” I said in a flat voice. “I’d love to hear your unsolicited comments about my appearance. Do go on.”
“You’re the Black Valentine. You must know how many fans you have.” His blinding smile made another appearance. “And you’ve got them all fooled.”
He waited for me to respond. I didn’t.
“They all think you’re retired now, that you’re a law-abiding citizen,” he went on. “Even your husband must think so. White Knight would never marry an active supervillain, would he? But I know the truth. You haven’t changed. People like us—we can’t.”
“People like us?” I leaned back and crossed my legs. “Oh, Lance, you’re a treat. You’re like a little chihuahua barking at a Rottweiler. We’re not in the same league. Not even close.”
“You’re thinking of mind-controlling me. You won’t be able to.” He tapped his right temple with his forefinger. “I have powers, too.”
“You’re thir
sty,” I said.
His too-white teeth vanished along with his smile. He stared at his wine glass, eyes bulging, and swallowed. He tried to resist it, but his mouth was dry, his throat cracked and scratchy. A piercing pain had formed behind his eyes, and if he didn’t get some liquid soon, he was going to die. He dove for the wine and downed it like a football player chugging Gatorade after a game. Panting, he put the glass down, and it finally occurred to him that he should run.
His leg muscles tightened as I froze them. Then I used his body like a puppet, making him flag down the waitress again and order a whole bottle of cheap wine. And I left him aware of what was happening.
“Lucky for you, I really am retired,” I said. “Otherwise, I’d kill you.”
He tried with all his might to move, but his body wouldn’t obey. Sweat trickled down the sides of his face, and through the telepathic link, I felt it almost as if it were my own.
“I’ll have to settle for a tamer punishment. Something poetic, perhaps?” I drummed my manicured fingernails against the table. “You’re a blackmailer. Tell me, what wouldn’t you want other people to know?”
He tried not to think about it, but it sprung to his mind, anyway: silky bedsheets in an upscale hotel; a bleached blonde barely twenty years old, a glittering gem in the center of her pierced navel.
“An affair? That’s trite, Lance. I’m disappointed.”
His cheeks burned.
“It’s humiliating, I know. But don’t worry. You won’t remember it.”
His panic spiked, but I erased it as I dove in deeper. This was the delicate part, harder than just taking over his body or convincing his brain he was dying of thirst. I rewrote his memories. His meeting with Valentina Belmonte had gone smoothly. She’d handed him a briefcase full of cash, so as soon as he got home, he was going to delete all the files of the photograph he had. But for now, it was time to celebrate. He worked on the wine bottle while watching the dancer finish her performance. And wouldn’t it be a good idea to talk to his mistress? They could go out this weekend, start spending some of that money he’d just made. He typed up an invite on his phone, accidentally sending a group text instead of a private message. Oops.
Next, he called a cab, drunkenly forgetting his briefcase as he stumbled to the door. He would think he’d already deposited the money into his account, and that memory rewrite should last at least until after he’d deleted the photos. Although computer files could be recovered. Hm…
I gave him the urge to visit a porn site when he got home, one that would give him a nasty virus and crash his desktop while the USB drive he’d used as a backup was inserted. Would that be enough? I scanned his mind for any other backups he’d made, any people he’d told. Nothing. I let him go.
Another bland pop song started playing as the next dancer took to the stage. Time for me to go. The brilliant dancer from before was walking around the floor now, soliciting tips. The amount of practice and sheer muscle strength it must have taken to do that routine certainly deserved one, but I doubted the patrons here appreciated it.
I handed her a hundred and walked out.
• • •
When I got home, my husband was pulling his boat up to the car. By hand.
It was a 12,000-pound cruiser yacht.
Dave.
I sent my voice into his head with enough force to make him flinch. He turned, looking bemused as I parked the car and got out.
My husband had the build you’d expect of a former superhero: six-foot-four, broad-shouldered, and muscled all over. He had a strong, square jaw, and his nose was ever so slightly crooked from having been broken, but it just added to his rugged appeal. His skin was a warm tan, and his hair had turned a dignified gray over the past few years, but his brown eyes were as sharp and intense as ever. The sight of those eyes glaring from behind his mask used to knock the breath from my lungs when he caught me in the middle of a crime. I’d shoot him the instant I could inhale, of course, but I was always secretly happy to see him.
He’d been pulling the boat trailer with his right hand. His left held a cane, his knee injured years ago when he’d rescued our daughter from a madman. I was wealthy—ridiculously, nauseatingly, immorally wealthy—but there were some things I couldn’t buy, like surgeons who could operate on a super-strong man with invulnerable skin.
“Hi, hon.”
He leaned in for a kiss. I put a hand on his chest and pushed him back. I wasn’t anywhere near strong enough for the push to be effective, but he relented, anyway.
“What do you think you’re doing?” I asked.
His eyebrows lifted. “Getting a kiss from my wife. Am I not allowed to do that anymore?”
“I mean with the boat.”
“I’m hooking it up to the car.”
“You can back the car up to it, you know. You shouldn’t be pulling it when you’re barely a month out of the hospital.”
I’d honestly lost track of how many times the two of us had been hospitalized. About a month ago, one of Dave’s old enemies, Bloodbath, had taken over an entire theme park and held the tourists hostage until White Knight came to face him. Even if our daughter hadn’t been inside the park at the time, Dave would have gone to save the rest of the hostages. He’d beaten the bastard, of course, but not without sustaining a lot of injuries in the process.
That was why I’d visited Xanthos. He was an information broker, and I’d needed his help to find someone who could break down the barriers keeping Dave and Elisa trapped in the park. Nothing villainous about it—cross my heart. Though if the DSA found out I’d had contact with a wanted criminal, they’d charge me with aiding and abetting faster than you can say “superspeed.”
“I’m fine,” Dave said. “It’s not that heavy.”
I pulled my cell phone from my purse and held it out. “I have your physical therapist on speed dial. Do I need to make the call?”
Ah, there was that glare I loved, though it wasn’t serious. “That’s a dirty, malicious threat.”
“Well, I’m a dirty, malicious woman.”
“I know,” he murmured. “What am I going to do with you?”
I didn’t push him away this time. The kiss started out slow and easy, but in moments, I was pinned to the side of the boat, the fiberglass hard against my back—and that wasn’t the only thing that was hard. My, my, someone was feeling frisky this afternoon. I was gasping by the time I disentangled myself.
“At this rate, we’ll never leave,” I said, breathless.
“I might be okay with that.”
“I have to change and finish packing.” I started for the door, feeling his disappointment. “Just think of the hotel,” I added with a wink, “King-sized bed, oceanfront view, champagne and chocolate-covered strawberries. The sooner we leave, the sooner we’ll get there.”
He treated me to a brief mental fantasy of that, leaving a wicked smile on my face as I entered the house. The air-conditioning was a welcome relief from the heat, though I couldn’t completely blame the weather for that. A quick scan of the house found Elisa in her room and Eddy and Irma in the kitchen. I stopped by the kitchen first.
On my payroll, Eddy was listed as a cook and Irma a maid, but they were a lot more than that. Both in their seventies, they’d worked for my family for as long as I could remember. Eddy was a big man with a beer gut, but he had a good deal of muscle, and you wouldn’t want to brawl with him. Irma, by contrast, had grown even gaunter with age and looked like how a child might picture a witch. Eddy had been a sniper, gunman, and all-around gangster, while Irma had served as an assassin whose weapon of choice was a knife. They were currently preparing little plastic containers of healthy snacks for us to eat in the car.
“How was your meeting?” Irma asked, slicing cubes of cheddar cheese.
“No surprises.” I handed her the envelope of Lance’s pictures. “Burn these for me, would you?”
She opened the envelope, and Eddy leaned over for a look. “They’re good pictures, at
least,” she said. “You look nice in that hat.”
“I always do.”
“Need us to tie up any loose ends?” Eddy asked.
“No, I took care of it. All I want is for you two to enjoy your week off while we’re gone.”
“Irma will.” Eddy waggled his eyebrows. “She’s got a date.”
“Oh, really?” I gave the older woman a salacious grin. “Do tell.”
“Nonsense.” She gave Eddy a disdainful snort as she continued her work with the kitchen knife. “Corpse-Maker called and wanted to meet for dinner. He wouldn’t discuss the reason over the phone, but I assume it’s perfectly professional.”
Perfectly professional meaning “illegal as hell” in our world.
“Well, tell him I say hi,” I said. “I haven’t seen him since Dad’s funeral.”
I stole a grape from one of the containers and popped it into my mouth as I walked up the stairs. Time to see if Elisa was ready to go. I’d told her to clean her room before leaving but wasn’t feeling particularly optimistic as I knocked. The muffled music coming from inside stopped, and a moment later, the lock clicked as she opened the door.
Elisa didn’t look much like me. Taller by a couple of inches, she had a gymnast’s body rather than my ampler curves. Her hair was a medium brown to my black, and she had her father’s eyes. I used to worry when she was little, back before Dave and I had married, and her father’s identity was a well-kept secret, that some other supervillain would take one look at her and say, “That’s White Knight’s daughter,” but they never did. I guess they didn’t spend as much time staring into his eyes as I did. Go figure.
“What’s the damage?” I asked.
She stepped aside to let me in. The floor was clean, yes, but she’d just piled everything on her bed and dresser instead. I gave her a look.
“I’m not done yet,” she said quickly.
“You’d better hurry, then. I want to leave in thirty minutes.”
“Right.” She moved to her bed, barely visible beneath her strewn clothing, notebooks, and open suitcase.
“By the way,” I added. “I was packing this morning, and my coconut milk body lotion had mysteriously vanished. You wouldn’t happen to know anything about that, would you?”