Sunrise Malice: Chapter 19
Sunrise Malice: An Arranged Marriage Mafia Romance
Jean meets me at the steps to the mansion. âTook you long enough. I called a dozen times.â
âI was busy.â I follow him up and into the building. The guards all look grim and nod as I walk past. Itâs nearly dawn and Iâm exhausted. âWhere is he?â
âThis way.â Jean takes me down a side passage and to a door that leads into the basement. The stairs donât make so much as a creak while we descend.
Cinderblock walls, a narrow hallway, a room at the far end. Everything soundproofed to the point where Metallica could play a stadium concert down here at full volume and nobody would hear it. Light shines from underneath the reinforced metal door. Jean unlocks it with a heavy-duty key and it opens on oiled hinges.
Inside is a man. Heâs duct-taped to a chair overtop of a drain in the middle of the bare concrete floor. A dull, naked bulb hangs above him. Off to the side, a series of knives, pliers, and other various tools sit on top of a plastic-covered table.
The man is only half conscious. His face is swollen from a vicious beating, but heâs still very much alive.
I guess heâs twenty-five, maybe as old as thirty, but itâs hard to tell with the wounds. Thinning dark hair, a black shirt and black jeans, both stained with blood. Big, hooked nose. Bad teeth.
âHow much did he tell you?â I ask, circling over to the tools.
âOnly a little so far. His name, who he works for, how many men were in the truck. I have a few trusted soldiers out catching the rest of them.â
âVery good.â I pick up a thin deboning knife. Flexible, deadly sharp, and terrifying. Good for getting under fingernails. I turn to my victim and study the blade. âYou made a mistake yesterday. You never should have gone near my wife.â
The man groans. He lifts his chin and stares at me defiantly. âDusan will make you pay for this, you swine, you unwashedâ ââ
Jean backhands him into silence. âWatch your mouth,â he snarls.
I nod at Jean and dismiss him before approaching my Serbian captive. A part of me wonders if this man is related to Dusan as well, but I push the thought away; Iâm far beyond stopping this fight now.
I had sympathy for Dusan. I never wanted this battle. Grandpère forced my hand and pushed me into a war I still donât believe will be profitable.
But my wife was nearly hurt, and I canât forgive that.
âHow long were you watching my apartment?â I ask, approaching slowly.
âI donât know. Hours.â
I press the edge of the knife against his shoulder and flick my wrist. A thin line appears in his skin and he sucks in a hissing breath.
âWere you trying to hit the girl with your truck?â
âFuck no. My idiot partnerâs gun jammed and I was distracted.â He hesitates, cocking his head. âShe dead?â
âLucky for you, she is not.â I give him another slice, just for fun. âTell me where my drugs are.â
âFuck you.â
âTry again.â Another slice. He groans, lips pulled back in a pained grimace.
âIâm dead either way. Youâre going to kill me if I donât talk, or Dusanâs going to kill me if I do. I might as well die with dignity.â
Heâs got an extremely good point. Most of my basement visitors donât reach that conclusion until itâs much too late.
âFrom where I stand, you have two options. Die here and now, or take the chance that Iâll let you go. Whatâs it matter if you give me what I want? It isnât like Dusanâs going to come save you.â
âFuck you,â he says, but thereâs a lot less force in his defiance now.
I grab one of his hands and shove the knife between his fingers.
I yank, slicing the sensitive skin, cutting open the webbing.
He screams and I do it again before I let him go and step back.
âOne more time. Where are the drugs?â
âIâll tell you, just please donât do that again,â he moans, and starts rattling off a location. I take out my phone and type the location into the notes app before pressing the blade of the knife against my captiveâs throat.
His eyes go wide with terror.
âYou should never have come anywhere near my wife,â I say very softly. âWho told you where I live?â
âI donât know. Please, you saidâ ââ
âWho?â I snarl at him. I feel my control slipping as I remember the deep mourning in Brianneâs eyes while she sat at the hospital next to Kimâs bed.
âPlease, nobody told me anything, I donâtâ ââ
I yank the blade across his neck, severing the arteries. He dies choking on his own blood. I kick the body over and leave it to drain into the floor. My men will deal with him later.
I put the knife back on the plastic and leave the basement. Weariness floods me, but at least I have a lead on the drugs. I send the location to Jean and tell him to scout it out.
âWere you busy down there?â
I flinch and look over. Grandpèreâs standing nearby, watching me. âJust handling some business.â
He smiles thinly, his dry lips pressed flat. âYou always were a vicious creature, Julien. You pretend that you have a heart, but I know the truth. I remember what you were like before I took you in.â
âI was a child living on the street.â
âYou were a ruthless, cunning little thing. Why do you think I picked you of all the orphans in Marseille?â
Thatâs a question Iâve asked myself a thousand times. Why me? What was it that drew Grandpère to me?
Iâd never heard of him until the day he cornered me in a crowded subway car. I was trying to pickpocket an old lady standing near the door and Grandpère only smiled and nodded his approval as I shoved the wallet into my jeans. I figure he was just some crazy, doddering old lunatic, but then he followed me, and chased me, and cornered me in an alley. Instead of calling the cops, he offered me a job.
My life changed after that day. I worked for Grandpère for six months before he officially took me into his house and gave me a purpose. I loved him like the trees love the sun, and I hated him just as much. He was always harsh, always bitter and demanding and cruel, but without him I wouldâve been nothing but a street rat.
He gave me everything.
âI do what I have to do,â I say finally and turn to leave. âBut I have business now.â
âSpeaking of business, Iâm pleased with the progress youâve made, although I hear Dusan has gotten the better of you so far. I have no doubt that youâll find your footing soon.â
Anger sparks in my chest. I turn on him and step close in the dim light of the back hall. Grandpère doesnât seem afraid; despite his age, heâs still a large man with a barrel chest and broad shoulders.
âI want you to understand something. I blame you for this. My wife was in danger because of a war you started, and I will never forget that. Do you understand?â
Grandpèreâs smirk drives me fucking crazy. âGood, youâre angry. Make sure you direct that anger into something productive, Julien. Donât lash out at me like a child.â
âI am not being a child. My wifeâs friend is in the hospital. If I hadnât been thereââ I canât even finish that sentence. Brianne would be lying in the morgue right now, her body cold and riddled with bullet holes.
âMaybe thatâs the wake-up call you needed. Maybe now youâll take this conflict seriously.â
That motherfucker. âIf you werenât the head of this organization, Iâd kill you here and now.â
âIâm sure youâd try, and maybe one day youâll have the balls to take a shot at me. I look forward to it. But donât forget who I am and where you come from.â
I turn away and leave Grandpère in the shadows of the hall.
I havenât forgotten anything. I canât forget the beatings, the insults, the derision and the pure acidic vitriol. I canât forget this man belittling me for half my life, and yet still wanting to make him proud.
I canât forget any of it.