The Chaos Crew: Bonus Epilogue
The Chaos Crew: The Complete Series (Devil’s Dozen Box Sets Book 2)
IâD ENJOY WATCHING these men cower on the asphalt at my feet more if their poses didnât remind me of the women I just finished rescuing from the assholes. The way the dozen skinny, bruised figures cringed and quivered when I first burst into the truck.
âWe didnât know,â one of the pricks crouched in front of me whines. âWe always used to be able to bring our shipments through thisââ
I interrupt in a voice as blunt as the pistol in my hand. âTheyâre not shipments. Theyâre people. This has been my turf for five years now, and I made it clear to everyone who does any kind of illegal business around here that I donât tolerate treating women like merchandise.â
âIt sounded like a temporary thing,â one of the other traffickers sputtered. âYou canât take away such a huge part ofââ
âYes, I fucking well can.â I glanced through the darkness of the vast parking lot toward Julius, who was striding over from one of the vans weâd arrived in. âTheyâre all secure?â
The massive leader of the Chaos Crew dipped his head in a nod. His expression was cool and collected as always, but I caught a feral gleam in his eyes that would have thrilled me under better circumstances. âNeed any help?â
âI can handle this myself.â I just didnât want the women whoâve been victimized so much to have to witness even more violence.
I flicked off the safety on my pistol and aimed it at the man in the middle of the trioâthe one Iâd heard barking orders at both the other two and the women as weâd approached. âYou didnât really think you were allowed. You just figured you could get away with it. This is the proof that you were wrong.â
With one squeeze of the trigger, a bang thundered through the night. The jerk slumped with blood pooling beneath his head.
I waved my pistol at the two lackeys, and they scrambled to their feet.
âGo back to whoever his boss is. Deliver my message for me. And if I see your faces around here again with any other âshipmentsâ like this, youâll be kissing the pavement too.â
I didnât need to tell them twice. The two gangsters dashed for the emptied truck like their feet were on fire.
As the engine roared and they tore out of the parking lot, Julius stopped beside me with a low chuckle. âYou put them in their place.â
âYouâd think so.â I grimaced at the corpse on the ground. âWeâll have to deal with that.â
Talon approached at my other side, the same ominously quiet presence as usual. âIâll take care of it.â
Blaze leaned in from behind me and slung a lean arm around my shoulders. âWhy do you sound upset, Dess? We wonâyou caught them before they got very far.â
âIt was still too far.â I sighed and turned back toward our vans. âI shouldnât still be having to put assholes like this in their places. Iâm the Blood Hunter. My word is supposed to be the lawâthatâs the whole reason I accepted the job.â
âOld habits die hard,â Julius said, running his hand over his short dark hair. âWeâre seeing a lot less of the human trafficking crap than there was under the old Blood Hunter.â
âAny amount is too much,â I muttered.
The bloodthirsty psychopath whose place Iâd taken had left quite the mess in his wake. Even after ending all the trafficking deals heâd personally had a hand in, other operations whoâd carried out their business within his territory kept popping up, thinking they could still get away with it.
As we reached the main van, Garrison was just hopping out through the back doors. He leaned inside to offer one final reassuring comment to the women weâd freed and eased the doors shut before turning to the rest of us.
âTheyâre about as comfortable as they can be,â he said with one of his wry smiles. âI told them weâd get everything sorted out, whether they want to stay here or go back home.â
âGood.â I exhaled in a rush, not really feeling like there was much good about the situation.
How ironic was it that the former Blood Hunterâs people had raised me to believe I was meant to stamp out the evil in the world⦠and itâd turned out an awful lot of that evil had been orchestrated or at least approved of by the man himself?
Garrison gave me an evaluating look and tipped his blond head toward the other van. âYou should get back to the hotel. You deserve some rest.â A sly glint came into his eyes. âWe have big things planned for tomorrow.â
I frowned. âBig things? We havenât talked aboutââ
Blaze tugged me toward the vehicle with a flash of a grin. âYou might be the boss most of the time, but weâre taking charge for a day. Itâs time for a little change of pace. You trust us, donât you?â He leaned in to peck a kiss to the side of my head.
It was hard not to melt a little when the hacker took on that sweet tone. And there really wasnât anything for me to do right now that would help anyone. The employees Iâd brought on since becoming the Blood Hunter knew how to set up new lives for these women better than I did.
I bumped my elbow against Blazeâs. âYou know I do. Fine. To the hotel it is.â
I woke up the next morning to a flurry of hushed but urgent conversation from the living room of the big suite weâd booked while we investigated the latest trafficking ring.
âDonât we have an umbrella? It was on the list!â
âI think we can rent one there. Nothing worth worrying about.â
âDid you seriously get me a Speedo?â
âHey, if you leave all the shopping to me, you get what you get.â
Hearing the Chaos Crew guys squabble in their usual companionable way was nothing new. But normally they were bickering about things like guns and entrance strategies, not⦠whatever it was they were talking about right now.
I squirmed out from under the covers and pushed open the door. âWhat are you four up to now?â
The men all paused with vaguely guilty expressions over an assortment of bulging canvas tote bags. Blaze broke from the tableau first.
âWeâre going to the beach!â he announced, bounding over to me with typical irrepressible energy and shoving a bundle of fabric into my hands. âGet dressed, and weâll head right over.â
The beach? I hadnât realized any of my men were hankering for fun in the sun, but I could humor them until I figured out what this âchange of paceâ was really about.
The bundle turned out to include a sporty maroon two-piece bathing suit and a gauzy cover-up that I imagined my pale skin would appreciate. I tucked my feet into the flip flops Blaze had also handed over and gamely followed the men out to the car.
While Iâd been getting changed, so had theyâinto tropical print polo shirts and matching shorts. Talon looked down at himself with an inscrutable expression as if he was considering burning the stuff right off his body, and Garrison kept fiddling with his collar, but Julius wore his comfortably enough. And Blaze had never looked happier.
âWeâre just a half hour from one of the best beaches in the country,â he informed me as he hopped into the driverâs seat. âSo it made sense to start with this little outing.â
âStart?â I repeated.
Garrison cracked a grin. âWeâre all getting our turns choosing todayâs activities.â He kicked the back of Blazeâs seat. âI think Blazey here just wanted to ogle women in bikinis.â
âHey, thereâs only one woman Iâm interested in looking at. And plenty of other things to enjoy at the beach.â
âWe look forward to you proving that,â Julius said dryly.
Blaze parked amid a crowd of cars, and we tramped over the sand through the other beach-goers under the mid-morning sun. A light breeze wisped over me, carrying a pleasant summer warmth, and the ocean lapped at the shore in low waves.
It turned out we could rent beach umbrellas. The men acquired two and set them up side by side before stretching out our towels underneath. Then Blaze started digging through the rest of the bags.
âWeâve got a frisbee, a beach ball, snorkeling gear⦠Everyone should put on sunscreen. I packed a cooler with cold drinks, but obviously we need to get a hot dog from the stand over there for lunch. I think itâs hot dogs that people usually eat at the beach?â
Talon raised an eyebrow. âArenât you supposed to know that already?â
Blaze clapped his hands together. âHot dogs. Definitely hot dogs. But itâs not time for that yet. What do you want to do first, Dess?â
I glanced around at the clusters of people around us. There were couples lounging together and groups of friends and families with kids of various ages dashing across the sand. It all felt weirdly normal⦠Weird because it wasnât at all where we would normally be.
But there was something both soothing and exhilarating about the hiss of the waves and the sprawl of the ocean. I pulled off my cover-up. âI think Iâd like to go in the water.â
âSounds good. Swim time!â Blaze tugged off his own shirt.
Talon hunkered down on one of the towels in a position that made me suspect he had a pistol tucked in the back of his shorts. âIâll keep an eye on our stuff.â
I quickly confirmed who had been grousing about the Speedo. Garrison chucked off both his shirt and his shorts and glanced down at the tiny, tight swim suit with an incredulous expression.
I laughed and tapped his chest lightly. âI like it. It gives me an excellent view.â
His lips curved into a smirk as he met my eyes. âI guess I like it too, then.â
Julius strode ahead of us down to the ocean, seeming to clear a path with his brawny form without making a single gesture or glower. As I plunged into the cool water, a gasp slipped from my throat. Then I was bobbing with the surf and paddling around between waves, grinning with the tang of salt in my mouth.
Iâd been down near more than one ocean plenty of times on missions, but Iâd never actually gone for a swim. It was both refreshing and soothing⦠Maybe we should add this to our regular habits.
Garrison and Blaze got into a minor battle of splashes, and Julius swept in to claim a kiss from me while they were otherwise occupied. When Iâd had enough of the water, we padded back over the sand, where I tossed the beach ball back and forth with Talon and Julius before accepting a game of frisbee with Blaze.
The hot dogs, when we finally grabbed them from the stand, were greasy and slathered in ketchup and relish, but I had to admit I couldnât think of a more fitting meal for our current environment.
âAll right,â Garrison said as I licked the lingering ketchup off my fingers. âWe did Blazeâs beach thing. Now itâs my turn. Come on. We can get changed on the jet.â
âChanged for what?â I asked.
He moved to start rolling up one of the towels, shooting me his smirk over his shoulder. âYouâll see.â
Two hours later, we were back in DC, stepping into a lobby that smelled like butter and salt.
I took a curious peek at Garrison. âYou had a craving to see a movie?â
âNot just any movie,â he insisted. âOne of the best movies ever made, in our own private theaterâso no annoying people talking through the good parts. Youâre about to experience Casablanca as most people currently alive never have.â
He glanced around, his gaze landing on the concessions counter. âWe should get popcorn, right? Regular people get popcorn.â
Was that the point of all this? To pretend we were regular people? I still hadnât quite figured out what was going on with my men today, but I was enjoying the ride enough not to complain.
A couple with two young kids in tow walked up to the counter as we watched and left it with four overflowing bags of popcorn. Talon nodded. âIt does look like popcorn is the thing to do.â
We gathered our own bags of buttery goodness, and Garrison led the way into the small screening room heâd booked just for us. We set ourselves up right in the middle of the rows of chairs, Julius stretching out with his feet resting against the seat ahead of him.
Garrison gave a little wave to whoever was in the projection booth, and the screen flickered to life. I tossed a handful of popcorn into my mouth and let the kernels melt on my tongue as the story began to play out before me.
By the end of the film, my heart was squeezed tight. A man who tried to convince himself he didnât care about the world around him but realized he did so very much? No wonder Garrison loved this movie.
I glanced over at him in the darkness as the credits started to roll and grasped his hand. âLucky you. You donât have to choose between saving the world and getting the girl.â
A flush spread across his cheeks. âIâm not sure what I do is on quite the same level.â
âSpeak for yourself,â Blaze declared, tossing a piece of popcorn at the other man.
Garrison rolled his eyes, but when his gaze came back to me, it hold mine intently. âYou enjoyed the show? You mentioned one time that youâve never really watched a movie in the theater. I figured it might be a good one after seeing how much you love that silly spy show.â
I hadnât ever sat down to watch a movie at a public venue, although I had once assassinated a target in a theater. It hadnât seemed wise to stick around after the fact.
âIt was great,â I said. âOther than obviously Ilsa should have figured out she could have both of them and then everyone could have been totally happy.â
Julius laughed and tugged me to my feet. âThat would make everyoneâs lives a lot easier, huh? I think Talon has something else in store for you not far from here.â
When I raised my eyebrows at the taciturn man, he offered one of his quiet smiles. âI came up with something a little different from the others.â
As we stepped into the squat gray building, a chorus of barks and grunts reached my ears. I hesitated, instinctively looking toward Talon again.
He nodded and gently rested his hand on the small of my back to usher me up to the reception roomâs front desk, where a harried-looking woman with a frizzy ponytail was tapping at a computer keyboard. The other men followed behind us.
The woman gave us a quick smile. âHow can I help you?â
Talonâs hand rose to squeeze my shoulder. âMy wife is going to adopt a pet. Weâd like to look at the animals you have available.â
The men referred to me as their âwifeâ from time to time when we felt the need to label our relationship to each other in public, even though weâd never formally gotten married. It still gave me a tingle to hear the word while my mind started spinning.
I didnât want to act confused in front of the animal shelter worker. So I kept my mouth shut as she ushered us into one of the rooms off the lobby. There, rows of cages stood along both walls, all the way down the narrow space and around a corner.
âDogs in this section, cats and other smaller animals around the corner,â the woman said. âDonât reach inside the cages. If you have any questions or want to take one out, Iâll be right here.â
She stayed by the door to give us space to consider the animals. My heart skipped a beat meeting all the dark, hopeful eyes behind the cage bars.
I waited until weâd walked halfway down the room before leaning closer to Talon to murmur to him. âYou figured I needed more company?â
âI thoughtâ¦â He paused, gathering those thoughts, which I knew he didnât always feel confident expressing. âItâd be your first pet, wouldnât it? I get the impression itâs nice to have an animal to come home to. And Steffi would like the company when weâre away.â
âA first pet is a rite of passage, for sure,â Blaze said, with a laugh rough enough that I turned to check his expression. My stomach twisted as I took in his tensed features, his gaze fixed on the dogs in the cages next to us.
Heâd had a pet of his own once. A dog his childhood bullies had killed. I didnât think heâd gotten another one since.
My throat tightened. None of the snuffling or yipping creatures around me felt quite right anyway.
I tucked my fingers around his elbow. âYou know, I think Iâm more of a cat person. It seems like theyâd get along better with our kind of lifestyle anyway.â
Garrison chuckled under his breath. âHeadstrong, independent, quick to defend itself. That does sound like someone we all know.â
I narrowed my eyes at him in a mock-glower and continued around the corner into the other section of the room.
Several mews rose up as the cats caught sight of us. There had to be at least thirty of them, a few scruffy kittens and others fully grown.
I walked along the rows, studying each in turn. Some cowered, and some rubbed their sides up against the bars. Some pretended not to care, giving themselves a tongue bath and acting as if they hadnât even noticed us.
Iâd always reached the end of the row when a slim orange tabby flung itself at the bars of its cage and clung there, peering out at me. It bobbed its head with a questioning meow.
When I stopped, it tilted its head the other way, like it was evaluating me as much as I was it. Then it reached its paw through the bars as if trying to invite me to play.
A smile I couldnât contain sprang to my lips. âThat one.â
Julius shook his head. âIt looks like troubleâbut it also looks like itâs already taken to you.â
Talon gave my hair a light tug. âWeâre fans of trouble, arenât we?â
When the woman unlocked the cage, the cat leapt right out into my arms. It stared up at me and tapped its paw to my chin, its claws retracted.
Tentatively, I stroked my hand down its back. It blinked and then started purring like a motor.
âYes,â I said, beaming down at it with a heart suddenly full in a way Iâd never experienced before. âThis one.â
It was only after we arrived at the Blood Hunterâs main mansion in the dimming evening light that I realized something was missing. I set down my new furry friend, who Iâd decided on the drive home Iâd call Jackâshort for Jack-o-lanternâin the foyer and turned to Julius.
Before I needed to ask, he lifted his chin toward the staircase. âChange into one of the dresses youâll find on your bed and then come right back down. Weâll set up everything for Jack and get ready ourselves. The dayâs not over yet.â
Dresses? Intrigued, I dashed up the stairs to see what else my men could possibly have in store for me.
Steffi must have brought the new purchases over while we were away. Four dresses lay across my bedâbut not the sleek evening gowns I typically wore for the kinds of missions we ended up on. These all had wide skirts, one twinkling with sparkles embedded in the fabric, another embroidered with a gold lace pattern along the neckline. Princess dresses, Iâd have called them.
I stared at them for a few minutes before stirring into action. Two I immediately dismissed as too poofy and cumbersome. I wavered between a strapless indigo gown with a skirt more flowy than billowy and a deep green gown with spaghetti straps and the sparkles, and decided Iâd rather look like a shadow than stars.
When I descended the stairs in the gown and a pair of black pumps that worked well with it, I found all four of my men waiting for me in the foyer, each in suits so smart I practically drooled. Julius stepped forward with a blue flower in his hand that he pinned to the bodice of my gown. âI thought you might pick this one. Come on outâour limo awaits.â
He wasnât kidding about the limoâa stretched black one was parked outside the gate. We all piled into the smooth leather seats at the back.
âAre you going to tell me where weâre going?â I asked, and Julius only offered a secretive smile.
The limo pulled up at a grand event hall, the old stone face glowing with amber light. Julius ushered me inside and into a reception room decorated with streamers and sparkly banners and evenâ
âA balloon arch?â Garrison asked, shooting a skeptical glance at Blaze.
The hacker raised his hands. âIt came up in a bunch of photos. I was going by my research.â
Music started to pipe through speakers through the roomâan energetic pop song. Julius grasped my hand.
âLetâs dance.â
I laughed and let him sweep me around the room, which apparently was just for the five of us. Blaze and Garrison and Talon all claimed my hand in turn, although Talon didnât do much more than bob with the rhythm. I didnât mindâI didnât know how to do much more than a two-step myself.
It was a crazy end to a crazy night, but I still couldnât totally make sense of it. Other than with every glance around the room, similar images from the movies and TV shows Iâd seen wavered up from my memory.
âIs this supposed to be a school dance?â I asked Julius when we all stopped at a table that held various snacks and a punch bowl to get a drink.
He dipped his head. âI guess we got some of the details right. I was thinking promâthe biggest school dance there is.â
I sipped the sweet punch and scanned the room again. âAnd why did you feel the need to set up a prom just for us? Why any of the things today? Not that I didnât enjoy myselfâI just donât understand.â
Blazeâs smile softened. âWe were thinking⦠You never had a normal childhood. Or teenage-hood. It seemed like it was about time you got to have some of those normal experiences from growing up.â
Garrison snorted. âExcept none of us exactly had normal childhoods either, so youâll have to forgive us if we messed it up a bit. We didnât have much direct experience to draw from.â
Julius motioned to the room around us. âWhen she was still her bubbly self, my sister always went on about how she couldnât wait for her first prom. It seems like itâs a big deal to a lot of people.â
And going to the beach and to the moviesâthose were things normal families did, like the ones Iâd seen. Having a petâso many kids who werenât raised by psychopaths had that opportunity.
My throat closed up. âThank you. Itâs been wonderful. And some of those things, Iâd like to do again. But⦠why today?â
The men exchanged a look.
âShe really doesnât remember,â Garrison said.
I frowned. âRemember what?â
âShe will.â Talon nudged Julius. âOnce she sees the last part.â
Julius nodded and raised his hand in a signal.
All at once the music fell away. A banner dropped from the ceiling with the words Happy birthday! as a mass of figures burst through a set of double doors at the far end of the room, shouting, âHappy birthday!â at the same time.
My jaw dropped. Oh, God. I hadnât even been paying attention to the dates. Iâd never known exactly what day I got to celebrate my birthday in a minor way in the household, and since leaving, Iâd never seen the point in bothering.
But I knew what day Rachel Malik had been born on. A day twenty-nine years ago as of today.
âI did forget,â I mumbled.
Blaze laughed and grabbed me in a sideways hug. âThatâs why weâre here to remember for you. Consider all of today our birthday present to you, to make up for all the proper birthdays you missed. And all these people wanted to celebrate with you.â
I recognized a few of the faces in the small crowd rushing over to join us. My younger brother Carter reached us first, and I grabbed him in a quick hug.
âHappy birthday, Dess,â he said. âIâd have done something before, but I didnât know the exact date, and you didnât seem to wantââ
âItâs okay,â I interrupted. âThis is great. This is perfect.â
I turned to greet Lou, the petite woman whoâd almost become the next Deadly Rose but now only killed it on the ice in her figure skating routines. Her eyes glinted happily as she gave my hand a quick squeeze. âIâm glad I could help do something good for you after all the ways you helped me.â
âIt was nothing,â I said. âI did what anyone should have.â
âBut most people wouldnât.â She waved her hand toward the refreshments table, where all of my surprise guests are setting down gift bags. An auburn-haired man I recognized as her skating partner raised his hand in return as he set their offering down. âWe all pitched in with our presentâand if you ever want great seats at a skating event, just let me know.â
âIâll keep that in mind.â
I glanced around in a bit of a daze and locked eyes with the one other member of the Deadly Dozen whoâd been willing to help Lou. The current Storm ambled over with a blond woman by his side, who I was willing to bet by the affectionate arm he had around her waist was the girlfriend Iâd helped him locate when one of our rival crime bosses had arranged her kidnapping.
âBlood Hunter,â the Storm said with a warm grin Iâd come to know he offered naturally. âHappy birthday. Itâs nice to get to see you outside of stuffy meetings and tense stand-offs. Iâd like you to meet Madelyn. If it wasnât for her, Iâm not sure Iâd have made it this far.â
Madelyn guffawed in disbelief and offered me a shy smile. âItâs good to meet you. Loganâs here tooâhe still tells the story about how you and Blaze tracked me down when things were⦠bad.â
I found myself smiling in return. âItâs great to see theyâve gotten better. Iâm glad you could make it.â
I really was. When had I ever had an actual party, rather than simply sneaking into one as an uninvited guest looking to murder someone or at best screw them over?
âHereâs an old friend,â Garrison said, coming up at my side. He gave a jaunty little wave to the redhead who was sauntering over.
Anthea Noble, the poisons expert who Iâd exchanged favors with back when Iâd first met my men, gave us a mock curtsey, but her smile was nearly as warm as the Stormâs. âQuite the gathering you have here. I feel like Iâm rubbing shoulders with the elite.â
I motioned awkwardly to my men around me. âThey set it up. I didnât even know this was happening.â
âAn actually surprising surprise party. Thatâs impressive in itself.â Anthea peered over her shoulder. âWith permission from your partners, I brought along my nephew and a couple of friends⦠They didnât have the easiest dealings with the Devilâs Dozen when a couple of your colleagues barged into our county, but Iâve only had good things to say about you.â
An athletic woman with her dark brown hair pulled back in a ponytail hustled over, flanked by two men, one well-built with ruddy brown hair close to Antheaâs scarlet shade and the other leaner and sandy-blond.
âHey,â the woman said, holding out her hand. âIâm Mercy Katz, from Paradise Bend, not that youâve probably ever heard of it. I hope you donât mind us crashing your party. Anthea said the more of us, the bigger the surprise.â
âBlame Blaze for that,â Julius muttered in a low but amused tone.
I laughed as I shook Mercyâs hand. âThereâs nothing to apologize for. If youâre a friend of Antheaâs, then youâre welcome here. And it is an awfully big room for all of us to fill.â
âWeâre not quite done yet,â Garrison said. âAh, Talonâs bringing them in now.â
I hadnât noticed the larger man leaving our little cluster. The lights glanced off his shaved head by a side door heâd just pushed open. He held it wide so one after another and another slightly awkward-looking woman could ease out into the decorated space.
My eyes widened. I recognize one of their facesâand another. And there was one of the girls Iâd gotten away from the former Blood Hunterâs operations years agoâ¦
âWe arranged to bring as many of them as we felt it was safe to ask and who were comfortable coming,â Blaze announced from behind me. âThey wouldnât have much of a life at all if it wasnât for you, you know. So they sure as hell want to celebrate your existence. More than forty of them showed up, but youâve gotten more than two hundred women free over the past five years, you know.â
I hadnât realized it was quite that many. And seeing the once-trafficked women under the colorful lights, shy but healthy and happy, my spirits lifted.
Yes, there were more women out there I needed to save. More wrongs I could still put right.
But Iâd done an awful lot right already.
I walked over to welcome the women whoâd once been slavesâor on the verge of it. âThank you so much for coming. I couldnât have asked for a better present than seeing you doing so well.â
One of the women at the front of the group hesitated and then flung her arms around me. I tensed in her embrace, but only for an instant before I returned the hug. My heart felt as if itâd swelled to twice its normal size.
As she stepped back, I raised my hand over my head and lifted my voice. âLetâs make this a night to remember!â
A cheer went up through the room, buoying my spirits even more.
One thing was for sureâI was never going to forget my birthday again.
The Novel will be updated first on this website. Come back and continue reading tomorrow, everyone!