Ruthless Creatures: Chapter 31
Ruthless Creatures (Queens & Monsters Book 1)
When the text comes through, Iâm standing in the middle of a frigid warehouse in the Lower East Side, surrounded by nineteen armed and dangerous Russians.
I hope itâs my girl. I need something good tonight.
Ignoring the chiming from the inside pocket of my overcoat, I continue.
âShut down everything immediately. Nothing gets through unless itâs ours. The ports, the borders, incoming flights and scheduled shipments from everywhere to everywhere. I want them to feel the pressure. Make it impossible for them to do business. When the money dries up, theyâll be more amenable to another meeting. Then weâll let the hammer drop. Get the word out to all your captains and soldiers that weâre at war. Peacetime rules are suspended.â
I look at each man in the circle in turn. All of them lethal. All of them loyal. Every one of them ready to kill or die, depending on the word from me.
Though the orders are issued from Max, Iâm the one who dispenses them. The kingâs hands and mouth, I rule in his absence.
And I rule with an iron fist.
âWhat happened on Christmas Eve is a wake-up call. Our partnerships with the other families have been going too smoothly. Itâs made them bold. Itâs time to remind them who we are, and why weâre in charge.â
I direct my attention to one of the men standing across from me. Heâs burly, with a shaved head and a scar that runs from his left eyebrow down to his jaw. The head of the Chicago Bratva, heâs unfailingly loyal. And as vicious as they come.
âPavel, thereâs a big shipment of Asifâs livestock headed your way. Make sure it doesnât arrive.â
He nods, not needing to be told that the cows heâll be hijacking have up to a hundred pounds each of Asifâs cocaine carefully packed in their intestines.
I turn to another member of the circle, an older man with a long beard, crazy eyes, and discolored teeth. His real name is Oleg, but everyone calls him the Cannibal due to his fondness for carving open the chest of every man he kills and taking a bite of his bloody heart.
They donât call him that to his face, of course.
No one is that stupid.
âOleg, Zhouâs containers arrive at the docks in Miami tomorrow evening. The police should get there first.â
âIâd like to keep one of the girls.â
The men around the circle exchange looks, but I donât take my gaze from Olegâs leering face.
âNo. We donât touch the merchandise.â
âPavel gets to keep the cocaine! What do I get?â
âTo keep breathing. Disobey me on this, and you wonât.â
He bares his teeth, hissing. But I know he wants to stay head of the Miami family more than he wants one of the kidnapped container girls, so we wonât have a problem. I move on.
âIvan, Rodriguez has a dozen body packers on a flight into LAX from Mexico City. Iâll get you the details. Pick them up as soon as they clear customs.â
âAnd after we extract the product?â
He wants to know what to do with the bodies. âMake sure Rodriguez sees his dead drug mules on the evening news.â
Everyone chuckles. Not only do they enjoy the idea of pissing off the arrogant head of the Sinaloa cartel, they canât wait to see what grotesque display Ivan will make with the bodies.
Heâs got a reputation for creativity in that respect.
âAleksander.â
âYes, Pakhan?â
I pause, caught off guard by the honorific.
Everyone else is surprised, too, shifting their weight from foot to foot and glancing at each other, waiting to see how Iâll respond.
There isnât a choice, however. As long as Max is alive, Iâm not Pakhan, the âbig boss.â He is.
Iâll be sending a clear message that Iâm disloyal to our leader and intend to take the throne for myself if I accept Aleksanderâs mistake.
Unless it wasnât a mistake.
Maybe it was a test.
And maybe the test originated from someone much smarter than Aleksander.
My stare freezing and my tone deadly soft, I say, âOn your knees.â
He doesnât hesitate.
In a five-thousand-dollar silk suit, handmade shoes, and an overcoat spun from the wool of baby Tibetan antelopes, he silently sinks to his knees on the cold cement floor of the warehouse.
Then he waits, along with everyone else. Clouds of steam from his breath turn white in the frigid night air.
âEmpty your pockets.â
He swallows. Digging into his overcoat pockets, he produces a cell phone and a folded wad of hundred-dollar bills. He tosses them to the floor, then reaches inside his suit jacket. Soon, a handgun, a folding knife, a ballpoint pen, and a small comb follow the money and phone to the floor.
The last thing he takes out is a pair of pliers.
Heâs about to toss that onto the pile, too, but I say, âWait.â
He freezes. His gaze flashes up to mine.
I see fear in his eyes, but also resignation.
He already knows what Iâm going to ask him to do.
âOne of the front ones. And donât get it fixed. I want your disrespect to Maxim to be visible to everyone.â
He exhales. He looks at the pliers in his hand.
Then he clamps the metal prongs around one of his bicuspids and tears it out.
Itâs a prolonged, bloody process. The other men watch with varying degrees of boredom and interest. Pavel checks his watch. Oleg licks his lips. When itâs over, Aleksander is panting and the breast of his suit is soaked in blood.
I gesture for him to stand.
He does, spitting blood onto the floor.
âAs I was saying. Our Armenian friend, Mr. Kurdian, has a freighter packed with AKs and ammo arriving into the Port of Houston in two days. The arms will go onto a train headed for Boise. Derail the train. The bigger the explosion, the better.â
He nods. His face is pale and heâs sweating, but he wonât make a peep of pain or show disobedience in any way.
Normally, that would please me. Right now, it just makes me tired.
After spending a week in Natalieâs arms, this life I lead tastes sour.
I give the rest of the men their instructions. When thatâs done, I dismiss them. They vanish into the shadows of the warehouse, headed back to their families and territories, spread out all across the US.
Except one that I keep aside.
Mikhail is the youngest member of the Bratva leadership, and also one of the most aggressive and ambitious. He was the underboss for Bostonâs family leader, but was promoted last year when his boss was assassinated.
Resting a hand on Mikhailâs shoulder, I say, âIâd like your help.â
I see the surprise in his eyes. Itâs quickly followed by pride.
âThank you. Anything.â
âI discovered an unsanctioned online gaming operation based in Lake Tahoe. Theyâre one of ours, but havenât been tithing.â
âWhat do you need me to do?â
I wave Stavros forward from where heâs been standing, waiting, near the door. He comes hesitantly, wringing his hands.
âGet an accounting of total revenue going as far back as theyâve been operational. They owe half to Maxim. Have them send it to me no later than Monday next week. Then put them on a monthly schedule of twenty percent going forward.â
âAnd if they canât come up with the money?â
I hesitate. This would be so much easier if Stavros wasnât involved with Natalieâs friend.
If that were the case and he couldnât produce the money, Iâd cut off one of his fingers and toes for each day of delay until he did.
And if it went past ten days, Iâd start cutting off other stuff.
âDonât worry about that now. Just make sure he understands what the consequences will be if he fucks up again.â
Itâs not like he doesnât already know, but it never hurts to underline these things.
I send Mikhail off to meet Stavros. Then I head out of the warehouse to the car waiting for me outside. As soon as Iâm inside the Bentley, I reach for my cell phone.
Miss you already. XOXO
My wish was granted: the text is from Natalie.
An image of her smiling face flashes through my mind. Then another image surfaces, a memory of her naked and flushed underneath me with her eyes closed and her lips parted, a bruise from my greedy mouth darkening a spot on her slender neck.
A steel band winches itself around my heart. Exhaling a heavy breath, I murmur, âMiss you too, baby.â
As my driver steers the car out of the deserted parking lot and onto the main street, I dial her number, waiting impatiently for her to pick up.
On the third ring, she does.
âHi!â
She sounds happy to hear from me. The winch tightens.
âI hear you miss me.â
âItâs strangely dull around here without a bossy Russian barking orders at me. Go figure.â
âYou like it when I bark orders at you.â
âOnly when weâre in bed.â
I picture her blindfolded and restrained, sucking my dick and rocking her hips as I slide the vibrator in and out of her soaked pussy, and almost groan out loud with want.
My voice drops. âIâm ready to give you a few orders right now. Get into bed.â
She laughs breathlessly. âI would, but Sloaneâs here. That could be awkward.â
âSheâs back from her trip.â
âYeah. She broke it off with Stavrosâ¦but you probably already know that.â
I didnât, but Iâm glad I do now. Makes things less complicated if he doesnât come up with the money for Max. âYouâre having a girlsâ night?â
âWe ordered pizza. Opened a bottle or two of wine. So yes, I guess that means weâre having a girlsâ night. What are you up to tonight?â
I drag a hand through my hair, lean my head back against the headrest, and close my eyes. My voice soft, I say, âWishing I had my face buried between your sweet thighs.â
She must hear the longing in my tone, all the longing and desperate need, because her voice grows worried. âAre you okay?â
I answer truthfully. âNo.â
Her voice rises. âWhatâs wrong?â
âI left something in California.â
âWhat?â
âMy heart, baby. My cold, dead, worthless heart, which didnât even beat before I met you.â
Thereâs a period of silence, then she whispers, âIâm in love with you.â
Now I do groan out loud.
She just shot an arrow through my chest. Iâm fucking dead.
âI didnât say it when you were here becauseâ¦well, mostly because you were telling me to. Demanding, actually. You know how you getââ
âSay it again.â
Her laugh is soft and warm. âSee? Demanding.â
âPlease. Please, say it again.â
She must hear the pain in my voice, because all the laughter and teasing is gone when she speaks next. Her voice is solemn and quiet.
âIâm in love with you, Kage. I love you. Hopelessly. I thought I knew what it meant to be in love before, but it was never like this. Itâs like the lights go out when you walk out of the house. Like my lungs only work when youâre with me. Iâmâ¦kind of lost, actually. I donât know how to handle it. All I want is to be with you all the timeââ
After a short pause, she comes back on the line, sounding contrite. âIâm sorry. Itâs the wine. I swear I didnât mean for that to be soâ¦soâ¦â
âPerfect,â I growl, my throat as tight as my chest.
This is never going to work.
I canât be away from her. I canât concentrate. My head is full of nothing but her, when itâs supposed to be focused on everything else. Iâm leading my men into war, and I hardly care what happens.
Nothing means anything anymore.
Except her.
The woman whoâd pay with her life if our two worlds ever collided.
The woman whose sweet love would turn to burning hate if she discovered my duplicity.
The woman I canât live with, but I also canât live without.
Weâre quiet for a moment, until she says softly, âItâll be here, waiting for you. Your heart, that is. Iâll take care of it while youâre gone. But you need to do me a favor.â
âName it.â
âYou have to take care of mine, because you took it with you when you left.â
After I recover, I murmur, âIâll be there as soon as I can. Tell me you love me again.â
I hear the smile in her voice when she answers. âI love you, bossy man. Youâre my life now. Come back to me soon.â
I have to disconnect without answering.
I canât.
Because for the first time since I was a boy, Iâm fighting back tears.