The Chaos Crew: Killer Reign (Chaos Crew #4) – Chapter 1
The Chaos Crew: The Complete Series (Devil’s Dozen Box Sets Book 2)
IF THERE WAS one thing Iâd learned in the past few weeks, it was that monsters rarely looked like horrific creatures of the night. No, they could lurk right in front of you within a politicianâs glossy smile or a motherâs desperate hug.
They could stare down at you from an impervious height, all craggy, chiseled face and sleek silver-blond hair, like the man who called himself the Hunter was doing to me right now.
The party carried on around us, music echoing through the nightclub alongside laughter and the clinking of champagne glasses. This celebration was for him, the guy who apparently was âbossâ to all these people. And the sick sensation in my gut came from my growing suspicion about exactly what they were celebrating.
Just a couple of hours ago, the men of the Chaos Crew and I had murdered most of my birth family. Itâd been for a good reason. The Maliks had been torturing and making bloody sacrifices of innocent children for generations. But the man in front of me had wanted to bring about the Maliksâ downfall. Heâd given me clues and nudged me toward the discoveries Iâd made. He somehow seemed to already know itâd happened.
How large a hand had he really had in pushing me toward this end?
But that wasnât even the biggest question looming in my mind. At least one woman in the club had the same bisected teardrop tattoo that I bore on the back of my neck, the one that connected me to the household where Iâd been held captive and trained as a deadly assassin for more than twenty years. The Hunterâs right-hand man appeared to be the same person whoâd hired the Chaos Crew to slaughter everyone else in the householdâwhoâd demanded they return me to him when I hadnât turned up in the mansion.
Too many pieces were colliding all at once, but I couldnât make them fit together into a picture I understood. My mind was spinning so fast it was dizzying me. What the hell was going on?
Moments ago, when Iâd accused the Hunter of arranging the massacre at the household, heâd acted as if it was Damien Malikâs fault instead. I knew that was bullshit, and I wasnât letting him get away with his non-answer.
I pushed a little closer, my muscles flexing with all the strength my combat training had given me, and glared up at him. His cool stare wasnât going to intimidate me.
âI know youâre behind the killings at the household,â I said. âHow were you connected to them? What did you have against them?â
Why did you want me? I thought but couldnât quite bring myself to say.
The Hunter simply shrugged his broad shoulders and started to turn away, as if my questions didnât even warrant his verbal acknowledgment. My teeth gritted. I snatched at his arm before he could dismiss me completely.
âWhy were you after the Maliks too? Did they even really kill your daughter, or did you make that up like everything else youâve apparently lied about?â
The Hunterâs attention snapped back to me with a brief flash of anger in his eyes. He wasnât totally impervious.
That fact lent truth to the words he said next. âIâd never lie about my daughter. We should both be happy with the outcome we got. Go have a drink and enjoy yourself now that youâre here. Tonight I intend to celebrate, not submit myself to an interrogation.â
He turned his back and strode to the bar. A few toughs who I guessed were bodyguards fell in to flank him in tight formation. They stopped when he did and turned to watch me as if sensing this clash wasnât finished yet.
It definitely wasnât. The Hunter hadnât bothered giving me a single answer. Typical.
I whirled around to face my men, frustration thrumming through me so violently they could probably see it in my stance. âThis isnât over,â I said to Julius, the leader of the crew.
His jaw was tight, his deep blue eyes coolly fierce. Having his substantial frame, which was even taller and brawnier than the Hunterâs, standing over me settled my nerves a little rather than rattling them, because I knew this man would do whatever he could for me with his power. He didnât argue, simply nodded and motioned for all of us to pull back to the far end of the bar.
We tucked ourselves into a booth in the back corner, away from the noisiest parts of the party. I kicked at the table legs, my fingers curling toward my palms. âThat fucking jackass,â I growled.
âDefinitely not the most pleasant guy Iâve met in my life,â Garrison remarked with typical snarkiness, swiping his hand through his rumpled blond hair. âWeâre not bowing out that easy, are we? This prickâs got to have every answer youâve been looking for since the day we found you.â
Julius snorted. âSheâs not planning on leaving.â He lifted his chin toward me. âWhat do you need us to do?â
The loyalty and dedication he showed in those seven words could have torn my heart into shreds. He didnât ask to hash out my strategy first or for me to explain my reasons. He didnât need to. He knew that this was my mission, and Iâd call the right shots. And he intended to be right there with me when I did.
All four of my men did. A sharp-edged smile crossed Garrisonâs lips, and Blaze shifted in his seat with typical restless eagerness. The hackerâs brown eyes gleamed bright beneath his shaggy red hair. Talon sat next to him as a still and solid presence, the amber lights gleaming off his shaved scalp, but I felt the weight of all his attention on me.
The Chaos Crew was ready for action, and right now I was the one directing them.
I was too tangled up about the situation to take much enjoyment out of my newfound authority. âWeâve got to get the Hunter away from his security,â I said. âAs long as he can use them as a shield, weâre not getting anything from him. If we can drag him out of here, we can interrogate him properly. Thatâs clearly the only way heâs going to open his mouth.â
Even then, I wasnât betting on cracking him open being an easy process.
Garrison glanced at the crowded room. âWith the atmosphere and the amount of drinking going on, weâve got more leeway than we might otherwise. Itâll still be tough to shake the muscle from their boss.â
Blaze grinned. âSounds like we need a distraction.â
I smiled back at him. âThatâs exactly what Iâm thinking. We need to get the Hunter out the back doorââI tipped my head toward the hallway weâd entered throughââand knock him out so we can haul him away without him making a fuss. Itâll probably take three of us to manage that. The other two will create a little chaos to catch the bodyguardsâ attention right when we want to strike. Weâll need him near the back hall to begin with so we donât have to drag him far, but if we can manage that⦠I think we can pull the rest off.â
âI know we can,â Julius said firmly. âBut letâs do this right. He might be getting on in years, but he can clearly pack a punch. Talon and I should stay with you for the hauling part. Distractions are more Garrisonâs area anyway, and Iâm sure Blaze can find his own special ways to be useful.â
Blaze had pulled out his phone and was tapping away on it. âAlready two steps ahead of you.â
While he made periodic interjections, the rest of us spent several more minutes going over the finer details of the plan. Then we got up. Garrison and Blaze melded into the crowd in opposite directions, off to handle a few separate tasks before their paths converged. Julius, Talon, and I slipped into the short hall that led past the restrooms to the back door.
We stood with our backs against the wall, just far enough into the shadows there that we could only see the figures who passed right by the entrance to the hall. Weâd know it was time to move when the Hunter entered our sphere of vision.
Talon rested his hand briefly on my shoulder. The man was rarely outright gentle, but there was a tenderness to his touch that brought a lump into my throat. He was saying without needing any words at all how much he supported me.
Iâd had to put down the family that should have been mine, but my real family, the one Iâd chosen, was right here all around me.
We knew something was happening because of the gradual shift in the sounds of the party. A particularly raucous round of laughter carried through the room. Then there was a chorus of little shrieks as if in dismay. Someone hollered at someone else, angry words that were mostly lost in the music. The celebratory air was starting to fragment.
My men did know how to sow their chaos well.
Right around now, Blaze would be dropping the digital bait and Garrison setting up the real-life evidence to draw the Hunterâs curiosity and then his actual self over to this end of the room. I could imagine him weaving through the crowd now, taking measured steps and skimming his gaze over his subjects.
His bodyguards would form a semi-circle around him, but their job was to protect him, after all. If they saw something that made them think there was a threat coming from a different direction, theyâd have to divert their focus to deal with that.
My heart thumped in my chest, counting out the seconds. A grunt and a thump reached my ears from closer by than the earlier sounds. âNow, now,â the Hunterâs voice said. âYouâd better get this all sorted out.â
âWhat about that?â someone demanded, and the man we were waiting for stepped into view.
Another shriek reverberated through the room at the same moment as someone shouted, âYahtzee!â That was our cue, our signal that the Hunterâs guards were temporarily diverted.
The three of us sprang forward together. I ducked low to sweep my leg against the Hunterâs ankles and knock him off his feet. Julius and Talon charged in on either side to yank him back into the hall the second he was off balance. One of them would hit him across the head hard enough to daze him, and thenâ
But we never got that far.
I swung out my leg, sure, and Julius and Talon lungedâbut just as my shin smacked into the Hunterâs calf, unexpected figures hurtled at us from both sides. Guns jammed against the menâs temples. Another guy tackled me to the floor.
The Hunter had even more bodyguards than weâd realized. This bunch must have been blending with the crowd, watching him from more of a distance so discreetly we hadnât realized they werenât merely more revelers. They were dressed in similar dressy but more relaxed clothes like the other partygoers rather than suits like the official guards.
I lashed out, catching my attacker with an elbow to the throat and a knee to the gut, but even as he flinched with a loosening of his grip, I knew our chance was gone. The Hunter had pulled away from us, the bodyguards weâd identified rushed back to his side. Weâd lost all element of surprise.
My attacker tried to pin me again, and I jabbed my fingers into his eyes. While he groaned, I managed to scramble up. Julius was just shoving his opponent backward into the crowd, Talon knocking the gun from the other guyâs hand, but the other bodyguards were pressing toward us now.
Shit. Weâd have to make a run for it.
My gut sinking, I reached for my men, about to tug them toward the hallway with me when the Hunter let out a low, rolling chuckle. The sound was dark enough to send a cold shiver down my spine.
My gaze jerked to meet his, and instead of the rage Iâd expected, I saw only amusement in his expression. And maybe even a gleam of⦠appreciation?
âLeave them,â he said in a commanding tone. His men backed up a step, braced for further orders. I paused, torn between wanting to run to relative safety and my need to see this confrontation out to the end, wherever that might lead me.
The Hunter considered me with his head cocked at a predatory angle that unnerved me even more than his chuckle. He shook his head, still with a small smile playing across his lips.
âInteresting,â he said. âYou got closer than Iâd have expected. Maybe even I underestimated your skills and determinationâand your choice in allies.â
âI wasnât looking for compliments,â I informed him. âI want answers, and Iâm going to get them one way or another.â
âHmm.â He looked me up and down and rubbed his jaw. âYou know, I think I can spare a few minutes to talk after all.â
Seriously? My spirits leapt. I motioned to Julius and Talon, not wanting to draw attention to the other two crew members wherever theyâd ended up in the crowd. âWeâre ready when you are.â
âOh, no,â the Hunter said. âThereâs no âweâ in this game. This is between you and me, Decima. Iâll talk to you and only you. Thatâs your offerâtake it or leave it.â