Savage Hearts: Chapter 24
Savage Hearts (Queens & Monsters Book 3)
âI have something.â
The sound of Kazimirâs voice on the other end of the phone is both a relief and an instant aggravation. âItâs been over a week!â
âYouâre lucky I found anything at all.â He pauses meaningfully. âYour FBI contact come through for you?â
âYou bloody well know he didnât,â I say through gritted teeth.
âYes. And I had to kill three men to get this information. So a little appreciation is in order.â
âJust get to the fucking point already!â
âSince you asked me so nicely, I will.â
His voice oozes sarcasm and self-congratulations. I mutter to myself, âThis bloody minger will be the death of me.â
âWith any luck. Do you want to hear this or not?â
He seems satisfied that my silent seething is a yes and continues.
I immediately wish he hadnât.
âSheâs in Russia.â
After I regroup from that shock, I say, âHow? We had eyes on the whole country. Airports, bus terminals, ports, everything.â
âHeâs a slippery motherfucker, thatâs how. And the Canadian border is notoriously porous.â
Canada. He went north. Fuck. âGo on.â
âHe stole a truck, changed the plates, and smuggled her though the border near Niagara Falls. Smart move, considering the amount of daily tourist traffic they get. The truck was found abandoned near a small airfield in Hamilton, Ontario. They flew out from there.â
âThe final destination?â
âMalekâs hometown. Moscow.â
Moscow. The sixth largest city in the world, with over twelve million people.
And not a single one of them willing to help us find Riley.
âSo she was alive when they left the States.â
âYes. Though from what Iâm told, barely.â
This just keeps getting better and better. âAnd now?â
âNo idea. His trail is dark. Nobody knows exactly where he lives, and nobody in Moscow was willing to talk to me.â
I snap, âYou shouldâve offered them money!â
He chuckles. âOligarchs arenât interested in bribes.â
âWhat are they interested in, then? What can we offer them to get them to help us?â
After a pause, Kazimir says, âI agreed to help you in return for a valuable favor. A personal favor. That doesnât extend to the rest of the Bratva. If you want to make a deal with Moscow, contact them yourself.â
This smug prick. Infuriated, I snap, âIâll tell them about Maxim Mogdonovich.â
âAnd Iâll tell the Mob about your extra-curricular activities as a spy. Checkmate.â
âItâs not checkmate, you dryshite. Itâs stalemate at best.â
âAgree to disagree. The point is, I got you the information you were looking for. Now you owe me a marker. Youâll hear from me when I need to cash it in.â
He disconnects, leaving me shaking in rage.
Rileyâs in Moscow.
How the bloody hell am I supposed to tell that to Sloane?
âWhere did he take her?â
I turn at the sound of Spiderâs voice. He stands on the other side of the desk in the office in the safe house, staring at me with haunted, feverish eyes.
He arrived in New York from Boston two days ago. Since then, he hasnât slept, showered, or eaten, as far as I can tell. He merely paces the length of whatever room heâs in, then turns back and paces the other way, grinding his teeth the entire time.
He looks like seven shades of shite. The two inches of stitches crawling down his temple from where Malek bludgeoned him donât help.
I tuck the cell phone back into my shirt pocket, fold my arms over my chest, and look him up and down. âYou need to get some rest.â
He insists, âWhere did he take her?â
Iâve known him long enough to know that heâll keep badgering me with that question until he gets an answer. So I give him one, though Iâm not confident his reaction will make me glad I did.
âMoscow.â
He stands stock still for a moment, processing it, then says gruffly, âHow is she?â
âBarely alive, from what Kazimir said.â
He swallows hard, looks at the floor, then glances back up at me and says vehemently, âWhat time do I fly out?â
âYou donât.â
He steps forward, eyes flashing, a muscle jumping in his jaw. âIâm going. Like it or not, Iâm going to Moscow. Itâs my fault. This is my responsibility. Iâm going to find her.â
Keeping my voice even, I say, âYouâll go where I tell you to go. Right now, we need you here.â
He shakes his head in frustration. âIâm useless here, and you know it. I canât focus. I canât sleep. I can barely fucking think!â
âLower your voice. Take a breath. Pull yourself together.â
He closes his eyes, drags his hands through his hair, and exhales heavily. âIâm sorry. Fuck.â He drops his hands to his sides and looks out the window. His voice lowers an octave. âI have to find her. I have to. Iâm going bloody mad.â
Something in his tone makes me look at him sharply.
I know heâs drowning in guilt over what happened. He blames himself more than Sloane or I do. His misery is palpable. He walks around under a black cloud of suffering so thick, it has its own atmosphere.
Maybe thereâs a reason for that beyond the obvious.
Watching him carefully, I say, âIâll need you to look after Sloane while Iâm gone. Iâll get a crew together, keep you informed of our progress once we get there.â
âIâm going!â he roars, pounding a fist on my desk. âIâm not asking permission!â
I donât react. I simply stand and gaze at him until he realizes heâs given himself away.
He would never speak to me with such disrespect unless his heart was involved.
He sinks into the chair beside him, drops his head into his hands, and groans.
After a moment, I say quietly, âShe doesnât seem like your type.â
He exhales. âIâve never met a woman who could make me blush before.â
Jesus Christ. Anger makes my tone harder than it should be. âDo I know everything I need to know about this situation?â
He jerks his head up and stares at me beseechingly. âI never laid a finger on her. I swear on my motherâs grave. Nothing happened. She doesnât even know.â
âYouâre saying itâs one-sided?â
âAye.â
I know heâs telling the truth. Spider doesnât have the kind of face that can hide lies.
I turn to the window and look out, thinking. What a bloody mess.
From behind me, Spider speaks in a low, urgent voice. âMalek will be expecting you to come. Heâll be waiting. Watching. Nobody will expect me.â
âHeâs seen your face. He knows you.â
âHe knows you better. Everyone does. You walk down a street in Moscow, and within an hour, every Bratva in the country will know youâre there.â
He pauses to let that sink in. âAnd you know you canât go and leave Sloane here. Even if you tried, she wouldnât let you. Do you really want her following you to Russia? Because we both know she would. One way or another, she would.â
I say crossly, âIâm aware.â
âSo send me. I can fly under the radar in a way you canât.â
Sighing, I turn from the window and sit across from him. âMoscow is huge. It could take you ten years to search. We donât even have a starting point. It would be like looking for a single grain of sand on a beach.â
âAye,â says Spider, nodding. âSo the sooner we start, the better.â
I donât like the look in his eyes. Thereâs an uncharacteristic defiance there. A hint of mutiny.
I hold his rebellious gaze and say firmly, âThe answer is no. Iâm not sending you. It would be a death sentence. Iâll arrange something else.â
Breathing shallowly, Spider stares at me. I can tell heâs struggling to control his emotions and carefully choose words that will change my mind.
Finally, he gives up. He stands and walks to the door.
Before walking out, he turns back to me. Holding my gaze, he says softly, âIâll not stand idly by while that Russian son of a bitch does whatever he likes to the lass, Declan. Iâll not stand idly by.â
He leaves, closing the door softly behind him.
Two hours later, he texts me from LaGuardia.
My flight is about to take off. Iâll call you when I have her.
âYou barmy son of a bitch,â I say aloud to the empty room, astonished. âYouâll get yourself murdered.â
Then I pick up the phone and call the only person in the world who can help me now. A man who knows everyone and everything, even though he died more than a year ago.
Killian Black.