Ruthless Creatures: Epilogue
Ruthless Creatures (Queens & Monsters Book 1)
When I disembark at the private jet terminal at La Guardia, itâs dark, forty degrees outside, and drizzling. It might as well be eighty degrees and sunny for how happy I am.
I stand at the top of the airstairs of Kageâs swanky jet and throw my arms wide, shouting, âHellooo, Big Apple!â
The uniformed chauffer waiting with an umbrella at the bottom of the steps on the tarmac squints up at me like Iâm nuts, but I ignore him. Iâve never been to New York, and Iâm going to enjoy every second of it.
Maybe Iâll get lucky and bump into a random billionaire I can get to work on.
If not, thereâs always shopping. The Louis Vuitton boutique on Fifth Avenue has been calling my name all the way from Tahoe.
âCâmon, doggo. Time to go see mommy.â
Mojo lifts his head from where heâs been sleeping the entire flight, on the first cream-colored leather seat in the cabin near the door. He glances at the door, looking dubious, then back at me.
I smile at him. âMove your butt or Iâll make a rug out of you, shaggy.â
Moving at the speed of a slug, he pours himself off the seat and onto the floor, yawns, scratches his ear with a hind paw, then blinks at me.
Shaking my head, I snort. âThereâs no way you attacked anyone. It would take way too much energy.â
He yawns again, proving my point.
I head down the narrow metal airstairs, the dog following me. When I get to the bottom, the driver says solemnly, âWelcome to New York, miss. Iâm Sergey, your driver.â
Sergey is young, green-eyed, and big enough to lift the car over his head if he wanted to.
Major big-dick energy. I like him already.
âThank you, Sergey! Iâm so happy to be here.â
âIâll handle your luggage. Please, follow me.â
He gestures toward the sleek black Bentley parked on the tarmac a few yards away. I let him cover my head with the umbrella and follow him over to the car, feeling a slight twinge of guilt that thereâs only one of him to handle my luggage, because I didnât pack light.
Translation: I brought almost everything I own.
A girl canât be expected to know what sheâll want to wear days in advance. Itâs mood dependent.
Mojo and I get settled in the car while poor Sergey acts like my personal sherpa and loads all my bags into the trunk. When he finally gets into the driverâs seat and closes the door, heâs sweating.
âSorry about all the baggage, Sergey. Iâm terrible at making clothing decisions.â
He glances at me in the rear view mirror and shrugs. âYouâre a woman.â
I decide not to be insulted by the overt sexism and smile at him instead. âYou noticed! Was it my boobs that gave it away?â
His gaze drops briefly to my chest. Then he meets my eyes again. âYes.â
He puts the car into Drive and pulls off, ending the conversation.
Big-dick energy, zero sense of humor. Next.
We drive through the city as I ooh and ahh at all the bright lights and big buildings. Beside me on the seat, Mojo snores. We take a turn into the garage of a skyscraper and drive down a twist of empty floors until stopping next to a bank of elevators.
In front of the elevators stands a phalanx of burly dudes in black suits, glaring at the car like itâs about to explode.
Ah, Russian gangsters. Such a trusting group of fellows. I just want to pinch their cute rosy cheeks.
I wait for Sergey to open my door for me before exiting, because thereâs nothing better than making a regal entrance in front of a captive audience.
Especially when that audience is a bunch of strong, dangerous men.
I have a feeling this trip to New York is going to be epic.
Smiling, I step out of the car. I wonder if sending the army of gangsters a beauty queen wave would be too much.
Probably. These guys donât look like theyâd get the joke.
But suddenly, theyâre not looking at me. Their attention has been caught by the other car pulling up behind us.
Itâs a big black SUV with blacked-out windows, and it might as well have a neon sign on the roof screaming, âYouâre all going to die!â for the reaction it gets from the Russians.
In a coordinated move that would make any military general proud, all of them reach into their coats, pull out weapons, and point them at the windshield of the SUV. One of the men starts bellowing something in Russian like a crazy person.
Then, when five more SUVs screech to a stop behind the first one, the shouting guy completely loses his shit. He drops to a knee and starts firing.
Oh boy. This doesnât look good.
I shouldâve brought that .357 I stole from Stavros. It figures thatâs the only thing I didnât pack.
I dive back into the Bentley, almost crushing Mojo as I land on top of him on the back seat. He squirms out from underneath me and huddles on the floor. Gunfire erupts all around us, echoing painfully loud against the cement walls and ceilings of the parking garage.
I lie on the seat with my ears covered and my knees pulled up to my chest, just waiting until everyone runs out of ammo and whoeverâs left alive will commence the hand-to-hand combat phase until they all kill each other that way.
Iâll sneak away then. Once these guys start throwing punches, they donât notice anything else.
When I was in the Mediterranean with Stavros and his crew, fights would break out all the time. I couldâve strutted around naked for all theyâd notice. Theyâre like pit bulls once they get going.
My plan is shot when someone grabs my shoulders and drags me out of the car.
I land on my back with a thud that knocks all my breath out of me. My head cracks sharply against the cement.
Before I can recover, Iâm picked up and shoved into the back seat of one of the SUVs, so hard I fly all the way across the seat to the opposite side of the car. My head hits the window with an alarming splat, like a hard-boiled egg thrown against a wall.
I see stars.
The world slips sideways.
Guns are still firing.
I hear Mojo barking, but the sound grows fainter, drowned out by the engine gunning and the squeal of tires against the ground as the SUV rockets forward.
I try to sit up, but canât. Something isnât working right. My brain isnât communicating with my muscles.
A face materializes in my line of vision, swimming into focus.
A man leans over me. Heâs mid-thirties, with jet black hair, a hard jaw, and eyes the color of the Caribbean sea. Theyâre such a vivid blue, itâs breathtaking.
In a low voice lilting with an Irish accent, he says, âSo this is the woman who got my men killed.â
His gaze drifts over my face. It pauses on my mouth, where it lingers. âCanât say I see what all the fuss was about.â
Iâd punch him, but itâs impossible at the moment. Maybe later, when my brain isnât sloshing around inside my skull like a guppy in a gyrating fishbowl.
After some concentrated effort, I manage to form words. âWho are you? Where are you taking me?â
âIâm Declan. Iâm taking you to Boston to speak with my boss. As for what happens when we get thereâ¦thatâs not up to me, pet.â
The blue-eyed stranger pauses, leaning closer. His voice drops. âBut you did start a war, so Iâm guessing you wonât like it.â
Flying out of the parking garage, the car lands with a lurch so jarring my woozy head smacks against the door handle.
The last thing I see as the world fades to black are Declanâs piercing blue eyes gazing down with searing intensity into mine.
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