by Karina Halle
I parked the car right outside the front doors and looked over at Luisa, sitting serenely in the passenger seat. She seemed to glow.
“This is your home now, you know,” I told her.
She smiled. “I know.”
“It’s your castle.”
She leaned over and quickly kissed me. “And it will be a golden one.”
We got out of the car just as the front door swung open to Este staring at us, completely dumbfounded. I relished the faint strain of disappointment in his brow. It served him right for me to prove him wrong.
“I don’t fucking believe it,” he said in quiet awe.
I raised my arms. “The ghost of narcos’ past has returned to fuck you up the ass.”
He grinned. “Lucky for me, I haven’t had time to screw anything up. How the hell did you pull this off, Javi?” He continued to look between the two of us in amazement.
I shrugged. “What can’t I pull off?”
I put my hand on the small of Luisa’s back and guided her up the stairs. We paused in the doorway, looking Este over. “Esteban Mendoza,” I said to him. “Meet your ruler, Luisa Chavez.” I leaned into her ear. “You know, he’s your employee now. How does that make you feel?”
She grinned at Este before she stared up at me. “Makes me feel like I should keep a Taser gun on me at all times. You know, just in case he misbehaves.” She then winked at him and went inside the house.
I laughed at the look of fear in his eyes. I patted him on the shoulder. “She’s not kidding either. She killed a man back there. I think she’s gotten a taste for it.”
We left the bewildered Este out on the steps, and I quickly led her straight up to our bedroom, where I would bring her fire and she would bring me peace, that beautiful peace.
I was her king.
She was my queen.
And we had a fucking empire to rule.
After we were done fucking, of course.
After all, I was still Javier Bernal.
THE END
This isn’t the last you’ll see of Javier, Luisa, or even Esteban. But though the threesome do make an appearance of sorts in Dirty Deeds, the book can be read as a standalone and primarily focuses on Alana Bernal (Javier’s sister) and Derek Conway. For an excerpt of the book (due in Fall 2014), please read on:
Dirty Deeds
An Excerpt
The call came at 6:30 a.m. from a voice I recognized but couldn’t place. The fact that it sounded familiar was surprising, though. The turnover rate for these guys was exceedingly high. They were shuffled around to different sicarios like a game of musical chairs. Sometimes I wondered if the ones giving me the orders – the narcos just underneath the bosses – ever lasted more than a few weeks. Did they go on to have long careers doing the dirty work of the patrons? Or were they so good at getting the job done, that they were held on to for a long time, even promoted, just like any assistant manager at McDonalds?
It didn’t really matter. I took these calls, I carried out the orders, and I got paid. I was at the bottom of their food chain but as long as I wasn’t tied to just one cartel, then I didn’t have to worry about long-term security. You didn’t want long-term security when working for the narcos. You wanted to stay as distant – freelance – as possible. You wanted a way out, in case you ever had a change of heart.
That was unlikely for me. But I was still a bit of a commitment-phobe. Freedom meant everything, and in this game, freedom meant safety.
The girl next to me in bed moaned at the early intrusion, pulling the pillow over her head. She looked ridiculous considering she was completely naked on top of the sheets. Was it Sarah? Kara? I couldn’t recall. She was so drunk last night I was amazed she even made it to my hotel room. Then again, that’s why I was in Cancun. I could pretend to be like everyone else, just another dumb tourist on the beach.
I took the phone into the bathroom and closed the door.
“Yes,” I answered, keeping my voice low.
“I have a job for you,” the man on the other line said. His English was pretty much perfect but relaxed, almost jovial. Sometimes they gave me orders in Spanish, sometimes in English. I felt like this man was trying to extend a courtesy.
“I assume I’ve worked for you before,” I said.
“For me?” the man asked. “No. For my boss? Yes. Many times. But this has nothing to do with him. Let’s just say this is coming from a whole new place.”
None of that concerned me. “Tell me about payment.”
He chuckled. “Don’t you want to hear the job?”
“It doesn’t matter. The price does.”
“One hundred thousand dollars, US, all cash. Fifty now, fifty upon completion.”
That made me pause. My heart kicked up. “That’s a lot of money.”
“It’s an important job,” the man said simply.
“And what is the job?”
“It’s a woman,” he said. “In Puerto Vallarta. She should be very easy to find for someone like you.”
“I need a name and I need her photo,” I told him. Though the price was quite higher than normal, the man was ignoring the basics. It made me wonder if he had ever done this before. It made me wonder a lot of things.
“I have the first, not the second. As I said, she should be easy to find. You might even be able to Facebook her.”
I waited for him to go on.
He cleared his throat. “Her name is Alana Bernal. Twenty-six. Flight Attendant for Aeromexico. I want a bullet in her head and I want it front page news.”
It was a common name, which is probably why it sounded familiar. I had wondered what she had done, if anything. Usually when I was sent to kill women, it was because they had been involved with a narco and had overstayed their welcome. They knew too much. They had loose lips in more ways than one.
I was never really given time to think about it. You weren’t with these types of things. There were a few minor alarm bells going off in my head – the high price for someone minor, the greenness in the man’s voice – but the price won out in the end. That amount of money could get me away from this business for a long time again. I saw a lengthy hiatus on my horizon, one that didn’t include fucking drunk chicks on spring break just because I was horny, a hiatus that didn’t include bouncing my way from hotel room to hotel room across Mexico, waiting for the next call.
I told the man I agreed to his terms and worked out the payment plan. I wouldn’t get the other half until she made the news. Considering how rare shootings were in Puerto Vallarta, I had no doubt it would happen. And I would be long gone.
I hung up the phone, feeling almost elated. The promise of a new life buried that worm of uneasiness. One more job and then I’d be freer than ever.
I came out of the bathroom to see the chick sitting up in bed and looking extremely nauseous. Once she saw me though, her eyes managed to light up.
“Wow,” she said. “You’re fucking hot.”
I tried to smile, hoping she didn’t find me enticing enough to stay. “Thank you.”
“Did we have sex last night?”
I stood beside the bed and folded my arms across my chest. Her mouth opened a bit at my muscles. I still had the same physique I had back in the military and it still got the same reactions from the women. They never knew the real me – knew Derek Conway – but at least, with the way I looked, they thought they did. Just another built, tough American boy, a modern G.I. Joe.
They had no idea what I did.
They had no idea who I was.
“No,” I told her, “we didn’t have sex. You stripped and then you passed out.”
She looked surprised. “We still didn’t…”
I gave her a dry look. “Sex is only fun when you’re awake, babe.” I stretched my arms above my head and she stared openly at my stomach, from my boxer waistband to my chest. Okay, now it was time for her to go.
I told her I had stuff to do in the morning and needed her to move along. I could tel
l she wanted to at least take a shower, but I wasn’t about to budge.
I had a plane to catch.
Alana Bernal was extremely easy to find.
At least, for me. She had a Facebook page under Alana B. Her privacy settings were high but I was still able to see her profile picture, one of her in her Aeromexico uniform. She had a sweet yet beautiful face. Her eyes were light hazel, almost amber, both stunning and familiar at the same time. They glowed against her golden skin, as did her pearly white teeth. She looked like a lot of fun and I could imagine all the unwanted attention she’d get from unruly passengers in the air. She looked like she could handle them with a lot of sass.
Once again I found myself wondering what she had done.
And once again I realized I couldn’t care.
That wasn’t my business.
Killing her was my business.
I drove to the airport and for the next two days, began to stalk the employee parking lot, using a different rental car each day. Most of the flight crew I saw looked a bit like her but lacked that certain vitality that she had. So I waited in mounting frustration, just wanting this job to be over with.
On day three, just as I was driving past for the forty-second time that morning, I spotted her getting out of a silver Honda and wrestling with her overnight bag. I quickly pulled the car around again and parked at the side of the road, plumes of dust rising up around me. There was nothing but a chain-link fence between us as she began the long walk toward the waiting airport shuttle. Her modest high heels echoed across the lot and she tugged at the hem of her skirt with every other step. Not only was she beautiful, but there was something adorably awkward about her.
What had she done?
No, I couldn’t care.
I looked down at the bag in the passenger seat and took out the silencer, quickly screwing it on the gun I was holding between my legs.
She only had a few seconds of life left before I put the bullet in her heart.
Acknowledgements
Some books are easy to write, others are hard. Dirty Angels has the distinction of being an incredibly easy book to write considering the very hard circumstances I found myself in while writing it.
First of all, I actually came up with the concept of Javier’s book back in February of 2013, when I had just finished writing On Every Street. Though I knew he wasn’t the man for Ellie at that point, I also knew that I wanted to explore his story later. The man utterly fascinated me—and I knew I wasn’t the only one under his spell.
Second of all, I started writing a big chunk of the book back in December of 2013, though the book had to be put on hold for various reasons. Starting and stopping with a book can be extremely difficult, though I was later grateful for this because when I did sit down to finally start writing again…
…I was planning a wedding. Yes, I wrote this book while I planned my wedding and finished it less than a week before the ceremony. I will be editing on my honeymoon. It’s just the way things go when you’re an author. But had it not been for Javier Fucking Bernal and my love for that crazy sexy psycho, I wouldn’t have been able to do it. Somehow, despite all the outside stress, I wasn’t stressed at all when writing it. It was easy, it was fun, and I had a blast.
But of course that’s not to say that I didn’t have help. From my best friend, Kelly St-Laurent, to my parents, Tuuli and Sven, to my husband, Scott MacKenzie, and all my friends who rallied behind me and this book (Sandra Cortez, Kayla Veres, Stephanie Brown, Shawna Vitale, K.A. Tucker, Barbie Bohrman, Ali Hymer, Lucia Valovcikova, Nina Decker, Laura Moore, Chelcie Holguin, Kara Malinczak, Chastity Jenkins at Rock Star PR), I had a LOAD of help in all directions, and with them this book could not have been possible.
Thank you!