The Chaos Crew: Killer Heart (Chaos Crew #3) – Chapter 23
The Chaos Crew: The Complete Series (Devil’s Dozen Box Sets Book 2)
âA SHOE?â Garrison said, leaning into the counter with an expression that told me he was thinking just as hard about the situation as I was. He looked down at the printed-out photos Iâd set between us, shaking his head. âThat is pretty weird. And the papers and symbols are just as bad.â
I grimaced. âI just wish I understood what all of this meansâif it means anything, you know?â
âDid you snap any pictures of the desk before you left?â Julius asked, scanning the photos of the bookshelves.
I shook my head. âI ran out of time. Maybe I can go back down there the next time I visit.â
Talonâs eyes shot up and captured mine. âYouâre not going back.â
I frowned at him. âI have to.â
He gestured to the photos. âNot until we know what all of this means. Itâs definitely disturbing, especially after what you found in the lock box. Weâre not sending you into a potentially deadly situation for information. Youâre not a spy.â
I narrowed my eyes in challenge. âNo, but they are my family. Itâs not like any of you could waltz in there and get access anywhere near as easily.â
âTalonâs right,â Julius said. âIt would be reckless to go back without more information. We wonât tell you where youâre allowed to go, but please, give us a chance to see what we can make of this first.â
âI wasnât planning on heading right back there today,â I said. âBut even if I did, I can take care of myself.â
Garrison nudged me with his elbow, his tone wryly affectionate. âSweetheart, nobody claimed that you couldnât. But you do have a bit of a blind spot for your family, and we wonât let them exploit thatâexploit you.â
I wanted to argue that I didnât have a blind spot, but it would be a lie, and all of them knew it. No matter how much evidence arose against the Maliks, a part of me still wanted to believe it wasnât possible. I couldnât help searching for ways to deny the facts that had been laid out before me.
Blaze pulled the photo of one of the coded documents toward him, running his finger below each of the numbers that looked like years. âIf these are dates, as the numbers suggest, itâs possible theyâll match up with some factor to do with the missing kids that Iâve found⦠Now that I have this, I might be able to break the rest of the code. Iâll see what I can do.â
He switched back and forth between the photos and his laptop, so immersed that he didnât even glance at the rest of us. A weird tremor formed in my stomach, both anticipating the answers Iâd worked so hard to get and dreading them at the same time.
âWas there anything else strange about the basement room outside of these pictures?â Julius asked.
âI took pictures of everything that seemed at all significant.â I lifted the photo that showed the image of the country home. âAny idea what this could be about when thereâs no record of them owning another home? Why would they keep a picture hanging on the wall of some random house?â
âIt could be one that used to belong to them and passed out of the family,â Talon suggested.
I hummed to myself. âI guess it could be that. Something they lost somehow and want to remember. No oneâs ever mentioned an old house that they miss to me, but obviously thereâs a lot they havenât revealed so far.â
âTheyâre definitely keeping a lot of secrets,â Garrison muttered.
But what did it all mean? We didnât know what the dates meant, just like we didnât know anything about the house or the odd items on the bookshelves. There wasnât nearly enough proof to draw any kind of conclusion. The only hope we had of finding evidence was Blaze, and he was currently frowning at his laptop with no sign of cracking the code yet.
âWhere do we go from here?â I asked when nobody else offered any insight. âWe have all of these clues, but we have nothing to connect them to. We donât even have a working theory.â
Julius leaned into the countertop and swiped his hand across his face. He didnât know either. Whatever the Maliks were hiding, they kept it hidden too well. What if Blaze couldnât figure out what the parchments meant? We still wouldnât have gotten anywhere.
Garrison straightened up and took on a brisk tone. âItâs no good standing around here brooding while the tech head does his work. Staring at the pictures isnât going to make them speak to us.â He tapped my arm. âWhy donât you and I go scope out the place where Malikâs wife works? You said she takes Fridays off, right? So she wonât be there to notice. I can chat up her colleagues and see what theyâll let slip about her, and you can pickpocket a few phones we can scan for texts and emails exchanged with her.â
My legs itched to move, to have something more to do, but I hesitated, biting my lip. âI donât know. Iris hardly talks about her job. It doesnât seem like sheâs that invested.â All I knew about it was that she worked in insurance.
Garrison shrugged. âWhatâs more likely to turn up somethingâstanding here doing nothing or trying out a little more scouting?â
I had to admit he had a point. And now that heâd proposed the idea, the thought of sitting around in the house made me want to explode.
I glanced at Julius, and he gave me a nod. âYouâll want to be careful about it, but you already know that. As does Garrison.â He shot the younger man a pointed look. âBe quick. We donât want anyone realizing why you were nosing around.â
I bounced on my feet, restless energy coursing through me. âAll right. Letâs see what we can find.â
âWe wonât do anything that you wouldnât do,â Garrison said to Julius with a wink, and headed with me to the doorway. Once itâd firmly closed behind us, he smiled wickedly down at me. âNow, Julius has done a lot of reckless things, so if you want to jump into something crazy before we go to the office, the option is still on the table.â
I let out a genuine laugh for the first time in what felt like forever and bumped shoulders with him. âI think we should wait until after if we want to do anything too wild.â
Garrison looked down at me as we started our walk, and when I met his eyes, I found unrestrained joy there. It was almost as if coming out here with me had cleared his mind, and now he gazed at me as if I were the most valuable thing heâd ever seen.
âAre we thinking skydiving, bungee jumping, maybe stealing a police car for a joyride?â he asked.
I threw a mock punch into his arm. âI donât think that Julius has ever stolen a cop car.â
Garrison shrugged. âI wouldnât put it past him under the right circumstances.â
âI donât think we have the right circumstances going for us right now,â I teased, and glanced toward the driveway. âDo you want to take the rental car? Or we could get an Uber if we donât want the license plate caught on street cams in the area. Itâd be a long walk.â I imagined itâd take at least an hour, although in my current state of frustration, I wasnât sure Iâd mind that much exercise.
Apparently, Garrison felt the same way. âIâm okay with walking a few miles if you are,â he said. âIâve barely gotten much chance to stretch my legs in the past few days.â
âOther than arranging phantom farmyards and fighting for your life.â
He shrugged and smirked at me. âYeah, other than those minor adventures.â
We turned the corner to walk past a couple of old industrial buildings, and the screech of tires made my head jerk around.
A van roared into view and skidded to a stop right next to the sidewalk. In the space of a heartbeat, three men in ski masks had leapt out, clamped their hands around Garrison, and hauled him into the back.
I leapt after him, my hand snagging on one guyâs shirt. The guy kicked back at me at the same time, and in my startled panic I didnât dodge quite well enough. The heel to my gut sent me staggering to the side.
As I threw myself forward again, the van was already peeling away from the curb and racing away, the back doors clanging shut with Garrison behind them.
My body reacted on pure instinct. Some part of me believed that if I just pushed my legs fast enough, Iâd be able to catch the van, even as the engine roared.
I sprinted after it faster than Iâd ever run in my life, my feet pounding on the asphalt. A yell of rage lodged in my throat, but I couldnât spare enough breath to let it out. My gaze darted over the few cars parked along the road, but if I stopped for long enough to break into one of them and hotwire it, Iâd lose sight of the van and have no way of chasing after it. The license plate was covered, so I couldnât even use that to believe Iâd be able to track it down later.
So I kept running, propelling my body forward with all the strength I had in me. My hands darted to my hips. I hadnât brought my gun for this excursion, but I did have my usual concealed knives. Iâd started carrying two in light of recent events.
I drew out one and then the other and hurled them at the tires of the van, praying that I could hit one well enough to deflate a tire and force the vehicle to slow. But the driver must have noticed in the rearview mirror that I was up to something. The van swerved left and right on the wide road, and my knives clattered uselessly against the pavement.
Swallowing a curse, I raced onward, searching the ground for anything else I could use to try to stall the van in its tracks. As I passed the places where my knives had fallen, I scooped them up without breaking my stride. Then I veered toward the curb and grabbed a chunk of concrete thatâd tumbled there.
In one last-ditch effort, I heaved the chunk at the vanâs window. The vehicle swerved again at the last second, and the concrete only dinged the bumper. The van roared around the corner.
I dashed after it, sweat trickling down my back from the exertion. My legs were starting to feel numb from how hard I was pushing my muscles. I sped around the buildings onto the cross-streetâ
And found the van was gone. The engine sounded somewhere beyond my view, but it was dwindling too fast for me to catch up.
âFuck!â I shouted at the sky, coasting to a stop.
I couldnât do this on my own. I needed the rest of the crewâBlaze would be able to check traffic camsâJulius had contacts in the city. Weâd figure this out.
Wouldnât we?
As I hurried back to the house, my stomach knotted. What had the men in the van wanted with Garrison? Who had they even been? I had no idea if they were related to the attackers weâd faced in the city before, or our various earlier opponents in the crewâs hometown, or maybe they were some totally new force we hadnât known about.
The look heâd given me a minute before the car pulled upâfull of happiness and prideâreverberated through my mind. I swiped my hand across my face, but the gesture couldnât shake my anguish.
They might be torturing him, even killing him, right now. While I loped along here unable to do anything about it. If Iâd grabbed at him just a little sooner, reacted just a little fasterâ
I pushed my legs harder again. Any extra second could help Blaze find the van before it disappeared forever. I didnât allow myself to consider the breathlessness or the exhaustion that wreaked havoc on my limbs. I just sprinted until the house came into sight.
I burst through the doorway, my breath so ragged it took me a few moments to gather myself enough to form words. âGarrison,â I gasped. âSome men grabbed him. Black van. Took a left on Meridian Street.â
âHey, hey,â Julius said, striding over with his arms reaching for me.
I shook my head and pushed him away. âThey took him! Donât worry about me. We have to find him.â
Blaze stared at me with wide eyes. Why wasnât he already pounding away at his laptopâs keyboard?
âWe know,â Talon said, his tone chilly with anger. âWe just got a text message from his phone.â
âWhat?â I sputtered. âWhat did it say?â
The men exchanged a look. They were calmâtoo calm. Iâd seen that measured stillness on their faces before missions. This was the calm before the storm. I braced myself for what they were about to tell me.
Julius cleared his throat. âIt said that unless we track him down in the next twenty-four hours, thereâs no chance weâll find him alive.â