The Chaos Crew: Killer Reign (Chaos Crew #4) – Chapter 2
The Chaos Crew: The Complete Series (Devil’s Dozen Box Sets Book 2)
HE KNEW MY NAME.
In the first instant after the Hunter had spoken, that thought blotted out everything else in my mind. No one knew the name I currently went by, the name the household had given me, except the members of the household, who were all dead, and the Chaos Crew. And this man.
My questions were multiplying by the second.
I knew this was his one and only offer to talk. The Hunter wouldnât reconsider, and if I turned it down, I had a feeling heâd simply kick us out of the club and call it a day.
But the thought of going off with him alone on his own turf made my skin itch with apprehension.
âYouâre not taking her alone,â Julius said, whoâd flanked me. âWhat makes you think weâll trust you not to kill her the moment you two are alone?â
The Hunter gave him a blandly bored look. âWhat makes you think I couldnât have had her killed a dozen times over before now if thatâs what I really wanted?â He shifted his attention back to me. âUnless you donât actually want answers as badly as it appeared. Make your decision. Iâd rather not waste more of my time waiting on you.â
I felt Talon tense beside me, but I spoke up before either of my men could argue further. In the end, it was my call. âIâll do it. Where do you want to talk?â
Julius adjusted his weight restlessly but kept his opinions to himself. I knew he and the rest of the crew would be watching over me as well as they could from a distance. I didnât think I had to worry about my life in this situation, though. The Hunter had invested a lot of time and energy in developing a connection with me. I might have hated how much heâd manipulated me, but I didnât think heâd have bothered with all that just to off me on a whim.
A small smile crossed the Hunterâs lips, chilly rather than warm. âI knew youâd make the right choice. Step into my office.â
He made a casual motion with his hand and led me around the bar to a discreet door. Two of his bodyguards followed us into the room on the other side, which did appear to be a pretty typical office. A big wooden desk took up a substantial portion of the space, with a heavy leather chair behind it, a bookcase on one wall and a liquor cabinet with a small private bar area on the other.
The bodyguards stopped by the door as it closed behind us. I couldnât tell whether they were watching to make sure that I didnât escape through it or that no one barged in after us. Maybe both.
The Hunter moved to the bar with the assured air that seemed to come naturally to him. He flicked his hand over his slicked-back hair and started pouring himself a glass of scotch.
âCan I get you anything to drink?â he asked smoothly, as if we were about to broker some high-class business deal rather than discuss his dirty underworld dealings. âYou look like you need a shot or two.â
I folded my arms over my chest. âI donât drink when Iâm working.â I sure as hell wasnât going to give him even more of an opportunity to mess with my head.
âIs that what weâre doing?â He carried his glass over to his desk and sat behind it. âI thought we were simply going to have a quick chat. The ability to unwind can be just as useful as any other skill.â
âThe only thing I want to unwind is your role in my life,â I said, fighting to keep an impatient edge out of my voice as I stood across from him. âWhy were you pushing me to look into the Maliksâ history? Whatâs your connection to the group that called themselves âthe householdâ? How do you know my name?â
The Hunter tsked at me. âPatience, patience. Another important skill.â He took a slow sip and smiled with evident satisfaction. Then he set the glass on the desk by his left hand and retrieved a pistol from a drawer at his right. He laid that on the desk too, pointed off to the side but in easy reach. âJust so weâre clear that Iâm quite capable of defending myself even without my guards, if you had any aspirations.â
âI just want answers,â I snapped. âDid you plan on giving me any or not? It seems like youâre the one wasting my time, yet again.â
âOh, I donât think any of the time Iâve spent on you has been a waste,â the Hunter said with an amused glint in his eyes that made me want to poke them right through his skull.
âThen you shouldnât have any trouble explaining it to me.â
He leaned back in his chair with a subtle sigh, folding his hands in his lap. I noticed he didnât have any other seating in the roomâI guessed that for whatever meetings he normally conducted in here, he purposefully kept the other parties standing to stop them from feeling fully comfortable in his presence. An interesting tactic for a man teasing me about not being able to relax.
Taking another sip, he studied me over the glass of scotch. âYou want to know how Iâm involved in your life. And whether Iâve lied to you.â
âThatâd be a good start.â
âWell, as Iâve already told you, my daughter was killed by the Maliks, almost thirty years ago. Thatâs what started us down the path weâre essentially at the end of. They set those events in motion. I merely paid back what they deserved.â
The Hunter had kept up his disinterested cool through the entire conversation so far, but with those words, I caught a ripple of grief and rage in his voice. I didnât think he was lying. He had one sore spot in the death of his child, one small point of weakness, as awful as itâd be to make use of that kind of loss for my own ends.
âShe was the blond girl in the picture,â I said, and paused. âDid you leave those photos for me to find? You set up that box in my grandmotherâs name figuring Iâd find it?â
He lifted his shoulder in the slightest of shrugs. âEverything I showed you about your family was true. I didnât need to invent any horrors when theyâd already committed plenty of perfectly real ones. Yes, I put some of the pieces together for you and pointed you in the right direction to get you to the truth sooner, but I wonât apologize for that.â
I wasnât sure I could demand that he did. I was glad that Iâd found out the truth about my birth family before Iâd gotten any more enmeshed in their lives. Before Iâd cared even more about my place with them and losing what Iâd only just regained. I couldnât challenge the Hunterâs claimsâthe Maliks had admitted to their child-torturing cult when Iâd confronted them. My dad had been so delusional he honestly believed that killing kids would somehow create supernatural energies to stop other crimesâ¦
It made me queasy just remembering his determined expression. The way heâd talked to me about bringing me into the fold. So convinced of his righteousness despite the horrible things heâd done.
But there were other answers I needed.
âWhy wait so long?â I asked. âYou said your daughter was killed almost thirty years ago. Youâve obviously got resources. Why were you only trying to get vengeance nowâwhy did you have me do it? Wouldnât it have been more satisfying to take your revenge with your own hands?â
A different sort of gleam came into the Hunterâs eyes, this one predatory enough to make the hairs on the back of my neck stand on end. âOh, no, there couldnât have been a more perfect vengeance than the one I crafted so carefully. He stole my daughter from me, so I stole his from him. I sculpted herâyouâinto the perfect killing machine to cut him down, so heâd not only know what itâs like to lose a child but to meet his end at her hands.â
The nausea in my gut coiled tighter. Heâd just added one more piece to the puzzle I was still struggling to fit together. âYou stole me from him? Butâit was the household that took me and trained me. You had them slaughtered.â
Another of those barely perceptible shrugs. âThey were mine to do with as I pleased. They carried out the task I gave themâto raise you so that you could deliver the most poetic justice possibleâand then they sacrificed themselves to point you in the right direction.â His gaze hardened for a second. âIt was unfortunate that a break in protocol meant you were left to your own devices for some time. But allâs well that ends well.â
I stared at him. They âsacrificedâ themselves? It definitely hadnât looked to me like the people of the household had given themselves up to the slaughter willingly. Anna clearly hadnât had any idea that the attack was part of some master plan in which Iâd be spared. Sheâd let me out of my rooms in an attempt to protect me.
That was the break in protocol he was talking about so coldly, wasnât it? The only act of real caring Iâd gotten in my entire time under theirâor his?ârule.
I reached to the back of my neck, to the spot Iâd seen using a mirror where Iâd been tattooed with a shape like a teardrop with a line slicing diagonally through it. âThe mark on my neckâthere was a woman out there in the club with the same one. She belonged to the household too?â
The Hunter chuckled. âYou all belong to me. I sometimes mark my property to ensure it canât be stolen from me.â
I bristled automatically. âI donât belong to anyone.â
âI made you who you are, Decima. If it wasnât for me, youâd have been one of those duplicitous Maliks, spoiled and rotten to the core. You should thank me for making you mine.â
My teeth gritted, but I held back any cutting remarks about gratitude while there was so much I still didnât understand.
âSo youâre saying that the household worked for you. You ordered them to kidnap me and train me. And then you hired hitmen to murder all of themâwell, almost all of them.â Noelle had survived, who knew for what purpose other than possibly to control me as sheâd tried to in vain. âWhy would you kill your own people?â
The Hunter spread his hands in front of him. âThere were a lot of factors that went into that decision.â
I glowered at him. âHow about you lay them out for me?â
âMy reasons are hardly relevant to our current situation.â
âThen why are you hiding them from me?â I demanded. âOr are you ashamed of the choices you made? I thought you were so pleased with your whole plan, and now you donât want to tell me about it?â
One of the guards stirred on his feet at the jab, but the Hunter made a brief gesture that stilled the other man. My pointed remarks seemed to have gotten through to him.
âYour path toward your father and the rest of your family was meant to be much straighter and smoother,â he said evenly. âYour main handler was to have released you from your rooms later that night after we were sure the mercenaries were no longer observing, and with her, youâd have discovered evidence pointing to Malik as the instigator of the massacre. Youâd have gone after him and destroyed him simply for that.â
At the matter-of-factness of his tone, my stomach flipped right over. âYou killed dozens of your employees so that Iâd believe a lie?â
âYou needed the right motivation,â the Hunter said. âItâd have been easier if youâd come to it directly. All of my people are willing to die for me if required. I choose my employees carefully. They rarely know when that moment might come.â
But I doubted they ever expected it to come from their bossâs hand, not while they were seeing through his orders with all the loyalty they could offer. My fingernails dug into my palms. All those people had diedâAnna had diedâso this monster could play his little game.
âIt didnât work,â I had to point out. âThey all died, and you never got to put on your little charade of framing my father.â
The Hunter rubbed his jaw. âA miscalculation, Iâll admit. Your escape threw everything out of order, and I had to think on my feet to reach my goals. But we got there in the end, and I think in an even more satisfying way than I originally conceived.â
Killing dozens of peopleâpeople whoâd devoted their lives to carrying out his workâwas nothing more than a miscalculation to him? I restrained a shudder.
âNone of that matters now,â the Hunter went on, as if oblivious to my revulsion. âRevenge has been served, and we can get down to other business.â
I arched my eyebrows at him. âOther business?â What made him think Iâd want anything else to do with him after this?
He inclined his head. âThanks to me and my resources, youâve been trained exceptionally well. I donât think Iâd be overstretching to say you may be the best solo assassin in the world. Iâll give you as much credit for that as I give myself.â
Oh, he would, would he? Somehow he got half the credit when Iâd done all the training? âThank you so very much,â I said with a heap of sarcasm.
The Hunter ignored my tone. âNow that Iâve seen the results of my efforts in action, Iâm quite pleased with what youâve become. Iâd like you to come onto my payroll officially.â
My jaw nearly dropped right off my face. âYou⦠want me to come work for you?â
âWas some part of my wording unclear? I can offer you anything you could possibly want or need so long as you contract yourself to me and only me. Iâm powerfulâmore powerful than you may realize, Decima. Nothing is beyond my reach. I have extensive connections all around the world. You would never want for another thing again as long as you carry out your work as well as you always have.â
I closed my mouth, but my thoughts kept spinning. Even if the Hunter could offer everything he said, Iâd just heard straight from his lips how little consideration he had for his employees. He saw no issue with having them killed if it happened to serve his purposes at any given moment. I doubted heâd see me as any less expendable. One wrong word, one wrong moveâor even just happening to make a convenient scapegoatâand Iâd be at the wrong end of his gun.
Besides, there was nothing he could give me that I wanted. I had everything I wanted: the family Iâd made with the men of the Chaos Crew, my freedom, the knowledge of who I was and how Iâd come to be that person.
It didnât seem wise to throw the offer back in this manâs face so blatantly, though, especially when he had a pistol a few inches from his hand right now and two armed men between me and my escape route.
âI donât even know who you really are,â I said, hedging. âObviously your real name isnât âthe Hunter.ââ
âItâs close enough,â the Hunter said. âPeople at my level donât give out their real names to anyone but family. To everyone else that matters, Iâm known as the Blood Hunter.â
He flicked a business card across the desk at me, and I found myself staring down at a symbol that was far too familiar. A blood-red droplet sliced through diagonally by an arrow.
The back of my neck itched. That was the image tattooed on me. Not a teardrop but a drop of blood; not simply a line but an arrow. The Blood Hunter.
Heâd all but written his name onto my body. I wanted to scratch the ink right off my flesh.
âThatâs my mark,â he said, as if I hadnât figured that out. âThere are only twelve others as powerful as me in the world, and together we form the Devilâs Dozen. We control more than you could imagineâevery significant criminal endeavor on this planet. Take me up on my offer, and youâll be an essential player in manipulating global events. Youâll be more than you ever thought possible.â
This game wasnât about making me happy or giving me what I wanted, though. He wanted to control me. But Iâd already decided I was never going to be a pawn in anyoneâs game ever again.
I raised my eyes to meet his gaze steadily. âI appreciate the offer, but Iâm not interested. I like the freedom Iâve gained since I left the household, and I plan to keep it.â
It was a polite enough refusal to his offer, but I could see the frustration in his eyes. âI donât know if you understand what youâre turning down here.â
âIâm perfectly capable of making my own decisions. Even if you havenât generally given me much of a chance to.â
The Blood Hunter stood up, shaking his head. âYouâre going to regret that decision.â He flipped over the card to show a phone number printed on the back and pushed it the rest of the way to my end of the desk. âIâll give you two days to fully think it over. If you change your mind, use that number to contact me. And Decima?â
âYes?â I said with trepidation, knowing Iâd already done all the thinking I needed to.
His cool gaze pierced into me. His voice came out as smooth as ever, but somehow it sounded like a threat all the same.
âMake your final decision wisely.â