Three weeks until the wedding.
âIf Iâm not back out in twenty minutes, assume they cut my throat.â I frown at the nondescript building tucked in the back of an average office park. Thereâs nobody else around except for a bunch of average sedans parked nearby.
Tigran laughs softly, sitting up in the passenger seat of my BMW. Heâs got a pistol in his lap and a phone in his hand, casually leaning on his elbow.
âMantis is ruthless, but they arenât stupid. If they wanted you dead, theyâd just shoot you in the back of the head and be done with it.â
Heâs right, but Iâm still more than a little wary.
Up to this point, all my contact with Mantis and their operatives has been through secure email. At least until this morning, when they sent me a job offer and a location.
I wasnât sure Iâd accept until I mentioned it to Tigran. He gently reminded me that Iâm the one trying to keep a healthy working relationship with those vicious bastards.
Besides, the pay is very, very good. Double my normal rate for this sort of thing.
He didnât have to come as backup, but I appreciate the extra muscle.
âIf thereâs trouble, Iâll just start shooting.â I push open my door and step out. âIf you hear gunfire, come running.â
âGood luck.â He salutes me with his gun barrel, showing teeth.
Fatherhood slowed him down, but thereâs still a dark hunger in his eyes.
I walk over to the suite doors. Itâs for some company called Arcis Secure Tech. I do a quick search on my phone and get a few hits for AST from my personal LLM model. Turns out, theyâre a legit cybersecurity firm, or at least on the outside.
Nothing Mantis does is legit past the surface. No time to do any serious digging, though.
Itâs a Saturday, and the office looks empty. Thereâs a big man waiting at reception. Heâs leaning against the counter and reading a home decoration magazine with a bored frown. When I approach, he glances up and holds out a single hand.
âGun,â he says.
I hesitate, not happy about this, but Tigranâs words play through my head. If Mantis wanted me dead, they wouldnât have invited me to a meeting in some normie office park.
I hand over my weapon, and he waves me on. âFirst conference room on the left.â
So much for shooting if things get dicey.
I find a younger man waiting at a large table. Heâs sitting at the end and glaring down at his phone. Heâs got on a sleek suit and looks more like a salesman than a member of a notorious criminal organization. His frown doesnât change when I approach the table. I donât sit down.
âAre you Iron Head?â I ask, studying him. I expected someone big and tough based on the nickname he uses in messages. But this man is sleek and athletic and seems better suited to desk work.
âThatâs me,â he says, leaning back and crossing his arms. âAnd you must be the infamous Permafrost?â
I pull out a chair and sit down. I like that heâs using my hacker alias instead of my real name. For some reason, that puts me at ease. Iâm positive he knows exactly who I am, but itâs a sign of respect that heâs not saying it out loud.
âI understand that you have a missing object you need me to find.â I meet his hard gaze. âNormally, I donât take this kind of meeting in person, but given your statusââ I donât finish that sentence. He knows exactly what I mean.
Mantis is an organization that demands respect.
Iron Head slides a simple USB key across the table. âThis contains everything you need. The device was stolen one week ago, and so far, we havenât been able to track it down. We know itâs still in Baltimore based on our location data. We know it hasnât been activated. But beyond that, thereâs nothing.â
I frown at the key and raise it up. âWhat exactly am I looking for?â
âItâs a watch,â he says.
My eyebrows raise in surprise. âThatâs not really my expertise. If youâre missing some jewelryâ ââ
âBut itâs much more than just a watch.â His expression is pained as he folds his hands together in front of him. âI cannot tell you exact details or what is on the device. Suffice it to say that the object looks like an antique pocket watch, but it contains extremely sensitive data. Itâs rigged to ping location towers every hour on the hour; however, itâs currently not transmitting. The last few connections are detailed on that key. We are willing to pay you very, very handsomely to find the watch, return it to our organization, and hand over whoever stole it.â
I shift slightly in my seat. Hand over means Iron Head and Mantis are going to make a brutal example out of that poor bastard.
Not my problem, though.
Whoever did it must be fucking insane or very stupid if they stole from these people.
âIf you canât find it, why do you think that I can?â
âMy people are currently busy with more pressing matters. Besides, weâve been very impressed with your work for us to this point. Weâre curious to see what else youâre capable of.â
Itâs not just a job then.
This is a test.
For what, Iâm not really sure. Black Mantis is an international organization, but theyâre shadowy. Everyone knows theyâre not to be fucked with, but beyond that? I canât even guess the schemes theyâre pulling.
Getting their business would be huge for the Brotherhood.
Iâve done small jobs for them so far. Little hacks like with that pervy senator. Stuff they easily couldâve done themselves.
But they paid me to do it instead, which says theyâre curious about our operation.
âIâll do it,â I tell him and push back my chair. âHow long do I have?â
âAs long as you need, but we will get impatient after a month.â
I nod and turn toward the door. âIâll check in one week from today.â
âGood luck, Permafrost. This is very important to my organization. Please donât mess it up.â
I leave Iron Head and head back through the building, pausing only to collect my gun from the goon up front. Once Iâm outside, my head starts spinning as the implications start to press down on me.
âYouâre still alive,â Tigran says, sounding amused. âI honestly wasnât expecting much.â
I sink down into the driverâs seat and stare straight ahead. Iâm trying to wrap my head around the problem at hand and everything that might come after if I pull this off, but Iâm having trouble finding the right words.
Tigran leans closer, looking worried. âYou good, Alexan? Whatâs wrong?â
âI think Mantis wants to work with us.â I show him the USB key and briefly explain the job. âThis could be our chance, Tigran.â
His expression is grim. I can only imagine the calculus heâs doing right now.
Itâs the same math Iâve got rattling in my brain.
Allying with Mantis would mean growth and connections overseas. It would mean a way into the notoriously difficult but lucrative Asian marketplace. It would mean more contracts, better importers, and cheaper goods.
âWhat do you think happens if you canât make this happen?â he asks me very carefully.
Thatâs the other side of the equation.
Growth and opportunity come with risk. Mantis doesnât get involved with just anyone, and they expect perfection from their partners.
âIâve heard rumors. There was that crew out in Sacramento. They were raking it in until one of their guys got pinched, and when he flipped, Mantis left him dead and gutted in the prison yard. Then they hunted and murdered the rest of his people, even though they were innocent. Total scorched earth.â
âYou think theyâll do that to you if you fuck this up?â
âProbably,â I admit with a shrug. âBut it wonât blow back on you. Mantis is vicious, but they canât destroy the entire Brotherhood. Not with our allies at our backs.â
âAfter you marry that Irish girl, weâll be even stronger.â Tigran looks out the window, thoughtful now. âMaybe we donât even need Mantis.â
âThe McGraths are strong here in Baltimore, but thatâs still small time. Mantis can turn us from one of the most powerful players on the East Coast into the biggest organization in the entire United States.â
âIs that what you want?â
I shrug slightly, looking back down at the little USB key. âI donât know,â I admit. âBut either way, I have to find this watch, right? Then if this test is what I think it isâ ââ
âItâll be for me and Arsen to decide.â He gives me a hard look now. âYou know that, right? No matter what we say, thatâs the law.â
âI understand.â
I put the car into gear and pull out.