The Chaos Crew: Killer Beauty (Chaos Crew #1) – Chapter 20
The Chaos Crew: The Complete Series (Devil’s Dozen Box Sets Book 2)
I STRODE to the locked door that led to the stairs, typed in the code, and let it swing open, already feeling rejuvenated by the mere idea of meditation. I was just stepping out into the first waft of fresh air when Dessâs voice followed me.
âWhere are you going?â
When I glanced back, she was leaning over the side of the sofa where she sat beside Talon. Sheâd been watching the way Talon knitted so attentively that I hadnât thought she would notice me leaving.
The casual way she spoke to me gave me a weird sense of relief despite the way sheâd reacted to me the one time Iâd gotten particularly close to her. She hadnât shown a single particle of violence toward any of us since then, and obviously I hadnât damaged her trust in me irreparably. She seemed to have brushed that moment aside as if itâd never happened, and I was happy to let her do that.
I tipped my head toward the stairs. âIâm going up to the rooftop deck. You havenât seen that yet, have you?â I paused and then decided it was safe to ask as long as I remembered to keep my hands to myself, which I didnât think was going to be a problem after the lesson sheâd taught me the first time. âWant to come?â
She sprang to her feet with the effortless yet practiced grace I couldnât help admiring. âGet out of this place for a bit? Hell, yes.â
I opened the door wider for Dess as she approached, and she gave me a quick smile as she passed me before studying the stairwell on the other side. âThese stairs lead to the roof?â
I pointed upward with a nod. âYouâve got to have some kind of outdoor space, or itâs not much of a home, as far as Iâm concerned. I try to get up there every day, at least for my ten minutes of meditation.â
Dess had already started up the steps. She glanced back at me over her shoulder with an arch of her eyebrows. âYou donât strike me as the meditation type. But then, I wouldnât have pegged Talon as a knitter either.â
âI aim to surprise,â I said in an automatically teasing tone, and caught myself just before I flashed her a flirty smile. I was too much in the habit of turning on the charm, and she made way too appealing a target for it. But sheâd made her interestâor lack thereofâvery clear.
âJulius taught me,â I added in a more subdued tone as we tramped up the stairs, Dess in front of me. âHe has a whole yoga routine he does, actually. He showed me all the moves, but the meditation part was the only thing that stuck. It helps me keep my focus for the rest of the day.â
Dess hummed to herself but didnât ask anything else. Her focus was fixed on the door at the top of the stairs.
That one wasnât locked. There was no point, since no one could get up here anywayâweâd made sure of that.
As we stepped out into the warm summer sunlight, I made a quick scan of our security measures. The entire space was as big as the common room downstairs. The seamless wooden wall that surrounded it stood ten feet tall, and no structure nearby rose high enough to give a view inside. The outer walls of the apartment building itself were sheer and designed to avoid offering enough ledges or footholds for a person to climb up. The only way anyone was getting a peek or a toe onto our deck was by helicopter.
That was also the only way anyone was going to get off it, other than by going back down the stairs. Dess might have had amazing skills, but she couldnât scramble down a fifteen-story building that offered nothing to hold on to. And I didnât think she was going to be summoning any helicopters.
The space was safe both from intruders and from her making another escape attempt.
I rolled my shoulders back, relaxing with the mental confirmation of what Iâd already known, and dragged in a deep breath of the warm air. Being up here was way better than the stuffy greenhouse-style yard at the safe house weâd left behind.
Dess took in the space with the same calm alertness she seemed to approach almost every situation. She ambled across the patio tiles and sank onto the wicker sofa near the door. After a moment, she tipped her head to the sky with a small smile.
The look suited her. In the full sunlight, she glowed with artless beauty. The light shone across her silky black hair, the faint breeze stirring the waves against her shoulders. Her smooth skin seemed to soak up every ounce of the sunâs rays. Had any of the other guys seen her in this light, or was I the only one privileged enough?
It was a privilege.
I forced myself to look away, moving toward the center of the sun-warmed deck where I most enjoyed sitting. I settled there with my legs crossed and got started on my meditation.
With each deep breath, I let go of more and more of the thoughts in their constant whirl in my head. Vaguely, I sensed Dess stand up and move around the roof, but I didnât let her draw too much of my attention. A certainty filled me that even if she did pull off an impossible escape, Iâd find her. I had before, and I would again.
Even knowing this, she had too much presence for me to completely ignore her, so I allowed my awareness of her to take a fundamental role in my meditation. Stillness had always been my enemyâsomething I couldnât quite captureâbut the movement of the world around me gave my mind an outlet for its frenetic energy. A car honking below, the occasional shouts from the street, Dessâs slow circuit of the deck. All of it centered me in a way I couldnât anywhere else.
Keeping myself still yet in tune with the motion around me despite the chaos in my life gave me a sense of calming reassurance. I could process and release all the input, and it grew sharper with each moment I breathed through the meditative exercise. When my mind latched onto a thought, I released it and allowed it to flow back out of me.
Iâd missed my sessions here while we were staked out at the safe house, and now that I was back, I already felt more capable of tackling the world. I felt invincible.
I concluded with a few final deep breaths, adjusting to the shift in my thoughts and my sense of my body, no longer quite so restlessâfor now. Then I opened my eyes.
Dess was leaning against the wall near Garrisonâs telescope, watching me with her brow knit. I didnât acknowledge her expression as I stood and stretched, releasing the last dregs of tension that remained in my body. With a great sigh, I finally met her gaze fully. âThatâs better.â
She gave me a smile that looked a little puzzled, and her gaze shifted to the telescope. She stepped closer, cocking her head. Garrison would have thrown a fit seeing her running a finger down the sleek black surface of his prized possession.
âAre you a stargazer too?â she asked.
I shook my head. âThatâs Garrisonâs department.â
âReally?â She studied the telescope a little longer and then dropped onto one of the nearby deck chairs.
I followed suit, picking up a Rubix cube Iâd left up here one day or another. My fingers fell into place around its surface, twisting one row and then another. It drove Garrison crazy that I didnât care that I never actually âsolvedâ one of these. I just liked seeing the different arrays of colors that ended up appearing.
âHave you ever used one?â I asked, indicating the telescope.
Dess shook her head and looked up at the sky, exposing the sleek line of her throat. âIâve never spent much time outside,â she admitted. âAnd Iâve never even seen one of these in person. You can really make out that many more stars than just with your eyes?â
âYep,â I said. âAnd planets and moons and that sort of thing too. Iâve got to admit, I donât really know what Garrison gets out of it. I can find prettier pictures of space on the internet in two seconds flat.â
Dess let out a soft laugh. âOf course you can.â She turned back to me, watching the swift but aimless flicks of my fingers over the Rubix cube. âSo, what is it you like about meditation? It looks pretty boring from the outside.â
I had to let out a laugh of my own. Her bluntness was as refreshing as the air up here. I could tell she wasnât trying to be insulting, only making an honest observation.
âIâd bet it does,â I said. âHave you ever tried meditating?â
âNo to that as well. Apparently Iâve missed out on a lot of things.â
I thought about how to best explain it. I could have given her the response that Julius would have usedâthe one that claimed that yoga and meditation relaxed the body and improved potential. It allowed for cleaner fighting and a clearer mind.
But I didnât use meditation for those reasons.
I set the cube down on my lap. âWell, the idea is that itâs supposed to ground you. It stills the world around you, and it allows you to simply exist without being affected by thoughts of the past or the future.â
She made a sound of acknowledgment, picking up on my framing. âBut for you itâs different?â
âYeah. I canât be still, not really. Iâve never been able to completely slow down. When I meditate, I can focus on the moving world around me, and it feels like it brings a sort of balance inside me. Recognizing that Iâm surrounded by as much energy outside as I have inside me helps to still me in a way, I guess.â
Dess nodded, giving me a thoughtful look. âYou do seem to move around an awful lot.â
I glanced down at my foot, which had begun to tap against the tiles, and grinned. âMy mom always said I was full of beans. The doctor said I probably had ADHD, but my parents never really pursued that. They figured I should get it under control through self-discipline or whatever. Which is a lot easier to say than do. I pissed off a lot of the other kids at school, always running around, talking their ears off. We wonât get into how many times they kicked my ass.â
And worse things that I didnât want to think about. Iâd moved on from all that.
âThatâs awful,â Dess said, sounding offended enough on my behalf to gratify me.
I shrugged. âKids being kids. Grown-ups refusing to do their jobs and rein them in. I figured out some things, made use of the skills I developed to put a few people in their places, and now Iâve put all that behind me. People can judge me as much as they want, but I am who I am. Take it or leave it.â
âSo, you justâ¦donât care what people think about you?â
âWell, I care about the people who matter, like the guys I work with, in whatever areas are relevant. But otherwise, no. It doesnât matter what anyone thinks. I lived too long trying to be who people wanted me to be and beating myself up for not fitting their preferences. It was miserableâI wonât go back to that. Now, Iâm happy with myself. I live my life to the fullest and enjoy every twist and turn along the way.â
Dessâs gray eyes darkened. âBut youâre a copâyouâve got to be chasing down criminals and figuring out murders and the rest all the time. How can you enjoy life like that?â
The question sounded genuine, and it tugged at my heart. âThereâs more to life than work. Iâm sitting here chatting with you right now, arenât I? And I chose this career because I get a thrill out of a lot of it tooâtracking people down, figuring out what theyâre up to.â Weâd just avoid the subject of what the crew really did with that information.
Dess nodded, but her expression stayed bemused. The idea seemed foreign to her, almost like a fantasy novel full of fictional characters that could never exist in reality.
Did she really have no concept of how to enjoy herself? God, what a number that prick of an ex-boyfriend had done on her.
âIâm sure you can enjoy your life too, Dess,â I had to say. âI donât know the details of what you went through before you ended up with us, but after this case is over, you can go do whatever you want. Itâll be your choice now.â
Assuming the client didnât decide she was a loose end we had to deal with.
Dess smiled, but a trace of sadness lingered in it. What had she endured that made her believe that life wasnât worth taking pleasure in?
I knew so little about her. Sheâd mentioned a bad relationship, and weâd killed her friend during Viperâs job, but that was it. I knew nothing about her past, and I had no idea what could make things better for her.
I examined her stormy eyes and found a restlessness and⦠something else I couldnât identify.
âI guess Iâve always been focused on satisfying other peopleâs expectations,â she said slowly. âDoing what they asked me to do as well as I could. And sometimes I liked that. But Iâve never really had a chance to make all that many decisions on my own.â
I could hear the honesty in her voice, and it brought an ache into my chest, bittersweet. No one should have a life like that, but sheâd trusted me enough to open up to me.
I leaned toward her, intending to grab her hand but stopping myself. She didnât like being touched, so I wouldnât touch her. But I could still help.
âWell, whatâs something that makes you happy?â I asked. âJust for you, not because you know someone else will be happy about it too.â
âJust for meâ¦â She trailed off, and I could see the wheels turning in her mind. Again, unwavering sadness washed through me as she struggled to come up with a single thing that made her happy for its own sake.
âI like chocolate,â she declared, a smile springing to her face that looked almost triumphant, as if it was a victory for her to land on that one thing. Maybe it was.
I remembered the hot chocolate that Garrison had made and shared with her. She had looked shocked and utterly delighted when heâd given her some. That was an easy thing for me to offer, whether Garrison liked me dipping into his collection or not, and I had every intention of making sure she had plenty for as long as she stayed with us.
âWhat else?â I prodded.
She answered a little more quickly this time. âExercising makes me happy. The adrenaline rush and feeling how much I can do with my body. Sparring and coming out on top.â
Which Iâd bet she did most of the time. I wished sheâd pummeled that boyfriend of hers good before sheâd taken off on him.
âWhat about entertainment?â I asked. âLikeâmovies, music, TV, books?â
She brightened up so fast my pulse skipped a beat. âOh! There was this TV show I saw once⦠Years ago, and I think it was already kind of old. I just happened across it one day when I didnât have anything else to do at that moment, and then I got sucked in and couldnât help watching the whole thing. It was about a spy and her husband solving crimes.â A crease formed in her forehead. âI missed the title sequence, though, and I never could find it again.â
But itâd stuck with her all this time. I stood up, abruptly energized. This was something I could do for her, something no one else in the penthouse could, at least nowhere near as easily. And itâd be so worth it to give her a little more of the happiness sheâd obviously been sorely lacking.
I beckoned for her to follow me. âCome on. Weâre going to find your spy show.â
Dess leapt to her feet, her eyes widening. âJust like that? Howââ
I grinned at her. âYouâll see.â
I marched back to the penthouse with Dess at my heels. Talon had moved to the kitchen where he was making himself a cup of coffee. He didnât comment when I grabbed my laptop and stole his spot on the sofa.
Dess sank down next to me. âDo you really think you can find it?â
There was something almost childlike about her hesitant excitement, something that contrasted sharply with the lethal fighter Iâd witnessed in the safe-house attack. Yet again, I found myself wondering just how this woman had become who she was⦠whoever that was exactly.
âI know I can,â I told her with total confidence, flexing my fingers over the keys. âAll I need are a few details about the showâthe plotline in the episode you saw, the characters, the settingâas specific as possible. We already know it had a woman who was a spy and her husband⦠was he a spy too?â
Dess frowned, tapping her lips. Somehow she got even more gorgeous when her expression went distant with thought, still lit with hope, the black waves of her hair tumbling around her face.
âI think he might have been a doctor?â she said hesitantly. âThere was one part where she got shot and her arm was bleeding, and he had to give her stitches. He had some kind of medical experience, anyway.â An amused gleam came into her eyes. âMaybe he picked it up in the army like Julius.â
âCould be.â I added that note to my first search string. âDid you recognize any of the actors? That would help narrow it down too.â
She shook her head with a sheepish grimace. âIâm not very up on celebrities and that sort of thing. I remember she was blond, and he had dark hair. Both slim and fit. I thinkâ¦â Her eyebrows drew together with concentration. âHis name was RonâRonald. He hated it when she called him by his full name, so she did it to tease him sometimes. I canât remember what her name was⦠It might have started with H?â
Now we were getting somewhere. My fingers flew over the keyboard, typing in all that information, tweaking a word here and there as the search results spilled out across the screen, narrowing by date because sheâd said the show had looked olderâah ha!
I clicked on an image of the DVD cover to enlarge it and turned the laptop toward Dess. It was a campy â60s show thatâd only run two seasons, with a blond spy named Helen and her husband, a dark-haired paramedic named Ronald. They were posed in the image back-to-back beneath the title, Spy Time, her with her fingers held up in front of her in the shape of a gun and him looking shocked.
It wouldnât have struck me as the kind of show Iâd expect Dess to be into, but her mouth dropped open immediately. âWow. Thatâs it. You justâit only took you a couple of minutes.â
I waggled my fingers, flushing with pleasure. âThe magic of the internet and a healthy respect for search algorithms. Now that weâve found it, howâd you like to watch an episode?â
A small laugh tumbled out of her. âCan we really?â
âOf course. Your wish is my command. Just give me another minute or soâ¦â
I sent my computer scanning through the hordes of legit andâbeing honestâmostly illegitimate media sites out there and found one that was streaming Spy Time. It was so simple I grabbed the TV remote and clicked it on at the same time. Dess scooted forward on the sofa, glancing between me and the TV. A couple more clicks, andâ¦
The first episode started playing in front of us. Peppy â60s music spilled out of the speakers as the characters romped from one crazy scenario to another in the opening sequence.
Dessâs lips parted. She gazed at the screen with an expression that could only be described as rapturous. Then she shot me a quick glance, her eyes shining. âThank you. I really do appreciate it.â
Her obvious delight sent a flutter through my chest. Iâd done something good today.
âI was happy to,â I said honestly. âNow watch!â
She smiled again, with a softness I wouldnât have expected to ever see from her either, and relaxed back into the corner of the sofa. She pulled up her knees in her usual closed-off way, but this time, she didnât seem like she was guarding herself, only getting comfortable. As she watched the show play out, the saddened expression that came from a life of hardshipsâI had to assumeâtransformed into perfect contentment.
What a sight.
One of the main characters cracked a joke on-screen, and Dess laughed loudly, covering her mouth as if even she was startled by the sound. The smile didnât quite fade from her eyes.
She could watch her show all she liked. I couldnât stop watching her. I didnât know when Iâd see that joy again, and while it lasted, I couldnât look away.
Iâd embrace every last second of it, and I already knew Iâd do whatever I could to make it happen again.