The Chaos Crew: Killer Heart (Chaos Crew #3) – Chapter 24
The Chaos Crew: The Complete Series (Devil’s Dozen Box Sets Book 2)
âTHATâS IT?â I demanded as Juliusâs last words rang in my ears. âWhat do they want? Did they even say for sure that he will be alive for twenty-four hours?â
Blaze got up from his chair. âNo. They didnât say anything else. But itâs obvious they want us to try to find him.â
âAnd if we donât soon enough, theyâll definitely kill him,â Talon said flatly.
Nausea curdled in my stomach. âItâs a trap,â I said. âObviously, right? They wouldnât be sending us on a manhunt just for fun. They want to get us someplace vulnerable and take out the rest of us.â
Julius tipped his head in acknowledgment. âIt looks that way. Whoeverâs responsible, they must have realized weâre too strong all together for them to tackle us that way. So theyâve picked off one of us and are hoping itâll set the rest of us off-balance.â
I rubbed my face, the images of what Garrison might be facing at the hands of his attackers rising up again. âWe canât just abandon him. We have to find a way around their stupid trap and get him back.â
âOf course,â Julius said, so firmly a tiny bit of my distress subsided. âWeâre a family. We donât leave each other behind, no matter the consequences. But we have to do this carefully, or weâre all dead meat. Theyâve given us a timeline. Weâll figure out as much as we can so we can go into this trap prepared to destroy it.â
âThe first part is whoâs behind the operation in the first place,â Talon said, and paused.
My stomach sank. I already knew where that line of thinking was leading.
âThe Maliks,â I said. âThatâs where the evidence we found before pointed, even if it wasnât much. And now this happens right after I broke into their secret room? Maybe itâs a coincidence, or maybe they realized someone had gotten in there, and theyâre striking back.â
Blaze made a face. âUnfortunately, I have to agree. If I could just get this code worked out⦠Iâll see if I can track the vanâs route too.â He gave a small growl under his breath and went back to his computer.
Julius folded his arms over his chest. âAll right. Assuming Damien Malik is responsible, where can we think of that he might have taken Garrison to?â
âHe could just keep him in the van,â Talon said.
âPossible, but risky. If they keep driving around, theyâll need gas soon, potentially exposing them to bystanders. And they must suspect Blaze will be able to search for matching vehicles. I think theyâd want to stash him away somewhere more secure.â Julius glanced at me. âHow about that secret room? That seems like a reasonable place to hide away someone you donât want found.â
I thought back to the study-like space Iâd crept into and balked at the suggestion. âIt wasnât like a dungeon. It was too cozyâlike itâs used for family meetings and sitting around reading rather than their dirty business. I canât imagine them bringing him there. Besides, itâd be awfully risky having him right there in the known family home. Theyâve got to have other properties somewhere.â
Blaze shook his head without looking up from the computer. âI didnât find anything under any of the Maliksâ names except the houses theyâre currently living in. I guess they might have brought him to your grandparentsâ house or one of the aunts and unclesâ?â
I frowned. âThat still has the problem of being too easily tied to the familyâand I donât know if the other houses have secret rooms too.â That seemed like a bit much, although I couldnât dismiss the possibility entirely. But there was another option. âWhat about the house in the basement photograph? Have you run an image recognition search for it?â
Blaze sighed. âYes, but nothingâs popped up based on that picture. It obviously isnât in a high trafficked or photographed location. But that secluded location could be anywhere in the world for all we know right now.â
âDamn it,â Julius muttered, pacing the room in a rage that Iâd never have thought Iâd see from the controlled commander. Witnessing his unrestrained frustration made the situation feel more real. More terrifying.
Garrison was counting on us, but we had no solutions. No way to find him. No leads. I could tell from Blazeâs increasingly despondent expression that following the van wasnât getting him very far either.
But I had to do something.
Just as I thought that, my phone vibrated in my pocket. The guys went still and silent as I pulled it out, other than the clacking of Blazeâs fingers on the keyboard. I studied the text message that had appeared on the screen, gritting my teeth as I processed it.
âItâs from the Hunter,â I said, glaring at the phone.
âWhat does he want?â Talon loomed next to me, and I knew that if he faced any opponent right now, heâd come out victorious. Heâd kill anyone with his bare hands if it meant finding Garrison alive, and I couldnât say I didnât share the sentiment.
âHe wants to meet,â I said. âHeâs mentioned a place nearby that he wants me to go to.â
âGive me the spot, and Iâll give him a piece of my mind about how heâs put you through the wringer,â Julius grumbled, striding toward the door. I leapt forward and caught his arm, holding him back.
âHe said he only wants to speak to me. That heâll leave if anyoneâs with me.â My chest constricted.
âLike hell,â Blaze said. âWe canât send you out there alone to meet a guy whoâs essentially a stranger, especially not this Hunter who has been leading you in circles for weeks. We lost Garrison today, and weâre not losing you, too.â
âIâm going with you,â Talon insisted, walking to join Julius and me by the door.
I pushed both men back a step. âNone of you are thinking straight. Get off your high horses and consider what this means. Of all the times the Hunter could have sought me out, he chose the moment when I needed answers the mostâthe day that Garrison was taken. If I donât follow his demands, do you think heâll tell me anything? I canât risk losing whatever information heâs willing to share. It could make the difference between whether we find Garrison or not.â
Juliusâs muscles flexed, but his mouth pressed into a flat line rather than arguing. He understood the stakes just as well as I did. âWhat if heâs the one who took Garrison?â he said finally.
âThen heâll definitely know where to find him, wonât he?â I shot back, and let out a huff of frustration. âBut most likely, he noticed something about the Maliks with his surveillance that tipped him off to what theyâve done. Look, so far every time weâve been attacked here in DC, Iâve been ignored and even shoved out of the fray while they focus on you guys. Iâm the one whoâs the most safe out there. If I see anything remotely suspicious, Iâll leave. I wonât take any risks I donât have to.â
Talonâs jaw worked. He marched away and returned seconds later with a pistol in his hand. âYouâre not going out there unarmed,â he said, and I knew heâd accepted my plan.
I accepted the gun with a nod of thanks and tucked it into the back of my sweatpants. âI wouldnât dream of it.â
Julius exhaled roughly. âFor the record, I donât like this at all. But youâre right. Justâdonât get too close to him and keep an eye out for anyone else suspicious nearby. And if youâre not back in ten minutesâor if we hear shots firedâweâre coming after you.â
I let out a humorless chuckle. âIf he doesnât manage to say anything useful in ten minutes, then Iâll already be leaving. Maybe after shooting him for wasting my time all over again.â
Confident that my self-appointed bodyguards wouldnât stand in my way any longer, I tucked my knives back into their usual places and quickly donned a second gun in an under-shoulder holster that I hid beneath a lightweight hoodie. Plenty of options was always a good thing. And my bare hands were weapons all on their own. I couldnât get much better armed than this.
Looking at the men around me, I gathered my resolve. The message said to come alone, but I wasnât completely alone. They were with me in every way they could be.
The Hunter had probably known where I was staying from the moment Iâd given the address to the Uber driver heâd conscripted. Heâd asked me to come a few blocks down the street from the house to a parking lot beyond an old office building that was now boarded up.
As I approached, I heard the rumble of a motorcycleâs engine before I saw anything. Coming around the building, I found a tall, broad-shouldered man sitting on a thrumming chopper. A helmet covered his head, the visor reflecting the mid-morning sunlight back at me rather than revealing his face. I could only make out the vaguest shapes of his eyes and nose when a tuft of cloud briefly passed over the sun.
I walked closer, keeping my hands in easy reach of my weapons. There was no sign of any other figure around. It was just me and him.
When I was about ten feet away, he held up his hand. âThatâs close enough,â he said, and his voice confirmed my suspicions. Even slightly muffled by the helmet and the drone of the engine, I knew it immediately.
This was the Hunter himself.
I stopped, setting my hands on my hips. âYou called me out here, and now youâre acting like Iâm a threat?â
A hint of amusement came into his tone as he pitched his words over the engineâs rumbling. âI have to be careful, you understand. I donât know where your loyalties lie. You are a Malik, after all.â
I grimaced at him. âJust because I was born a Malik doesnât mean I am one.â
If Iâd expected him to lead with information about Garrison, he was just as disappointing as usual. âHave you done any more investigating to substantiate what I told you about them?â he asked.
Was that all this was again? Another excuse to badger me, at the worst possible time?
My teeth set on edge. âAre you here in person because that way I canât just hang up on your shit?â I demanded. âIâm done with this game.â
As I spun on my heel, his voice stopped me in my tracks. âThen you havenât found any concerning photographs?â
I froze, unable to decide whether I wanted to entertain this conversation after all. Whether I wanted to give away what I had found to this man.
But he must have already been able to guess. âYou did, didnât you? Youâre sharp enough to have gotten that far. Then you saw a little blond girl along with the others.â
The memory of the photo smacked me with enough horror to make me glance back at him. âWhat about her?â I said, the question coming out raspy.
Even though I could barely make out his face, I felt his stare boring into me through the helmetâs visor.
âThat was my daughter,â he said. He kept his voice even, but rage reverberated through it all the same. âThe Maliks stole her from me and killed her as brutally as you saw. Iâve never been able to prove it definitively, but I know it was them. Thatâs why Iâve been investigating them, and itâs why I was worried about you coming into the fold.â
My stomach roiled with the urge to puke. He was confirming my worst nightmares about my familyâbut I still didnât know for sure if I could trust him. It still didnât make any sense. But then, how could he have known about the photographs if his story wasnât true?
How could I focus on that right now when Garrisonâs life hung in the balance this very second?
My back straightened as I realized that there was one answer that would help me solve both problems. âDo you know where the killings might have been carried out? Where they took the kids?â Itâd have to be someplace they felt was secure. Someplace thatâd work just as well to hide a kidnapped hitman.
The Hunter paused. âI think the family must have a property nearbyâone under the radar and isolated. Iâve been searching, but I havenât found it yet.â
Before he could say anything else, his phone chimed loudly in his pocket. He glanced at it and revved the engine on his motorcycle. âIâve got to go,â he said, and tore out of the parking lot without giving me a chance to respond.
âWait!â I hollered after him. âI have more questions.â But he was already roaring down the street. I couldnât tell if heâd even heard me.
Heâd told me nothing at all about Garrison. He didnât have any more idea about where the Maliks might be hiding him than I did.
Actually, that wasnât totally true. I pushed down my hopelessness as everything heâd said sank in. We hadnât found any other properties the family owned, but the Hunter was sure they had another oneâone in the area. All I had to do was figure out where.
But the only people whoâd know were my birth family, and they hadnât mentioned anything about it so far. If it was where they murdered children and stashed kidnapping victims, it wasnât likely that theyâd tell me in a casual conversation.
They were my family, though. Theyâd been talking about bringing me into the legacy, about me being one of them. Was there some way I could use that?
As I hurried back to the house in the hill, my mind whirled, and my thoughts centered on Garrison in a different way. He was the one in the group who got information out of people rather than computers. I didnât have him to guide me, so I had to figure this out myself. How would he have convinced someone to cough up an address? Iâd watched him in action before.
Heâd get people talking. Heâd catch them off-guard and set them up to reveal more than they meant to before they even realized how much they were spilling. He might act like he knew all about what he was fishing for already to put them at ease with confirming or correcting his suggestions.
What if I could do the same? If I wanted to save Garrison, Iâd have to become him for one phone call.
I took out my phone and scanned through the limited numbers. Who would be the most likely to fall for this kind of gambit? Someone who didnât already have decades of experience pretending not to be a mass murderer, presumably. But someone who was familiar with the familyâs ârituals.â
After a momentâs debate, I tapped my brotherâs number and raised the phone to my ear.
Carter answered after just a couple of rings, nothing in his tone giving any indication that he knew I had a reason to be upset. âHey, Rachel. I wasnât expecting to hear from you.â He sounded mildly surprised but not concerned or shifty. Maybe he wasnât in on this particular part of our parentsâ plans. Or maybe he was a very good actor.
Iâd just have to be better.
âHey,â I said in a brisk but warm tone. âDad wanted me to meet him out at the country house so he could show me around. Iâm excited to find out more about everything the familyâs involved in, but I seem to have misplaced the address. Can you remind me where Iâm going?â
Calling Malik âdadâ sent shivers down my spine, but I held up the ruse through my whole spiel.
Carter answered automatically, just as I hoped. âItâs just off Eckleberry Lane, if youâve made it thatââ He caught himself, and his tone turned abruptly wary. âDad wanted you to meet him there? What did he say he wanted to show you?â
âDonât worry about that,â I said. âYouâve told me enough.â
I hung up the phone and dashed back to the crew with the street name on my lips.