The Chaos Crew: Killer Reign (Chaos Crew #4) – Chapter 8
The Chaos Crew: The Complete Series (Devil’s Dozen Box Sets Book 2)
THE RENTAL CAR rumbled as we drove deeper into the town a couple of hours from our usual home base near DC. Only a few lights still beamed into the night from windows on the buildings we passed.
Blaze pointed to a street up ahead. âTurn left there. Then three streets down, take another left on Elm.â
Julius followed his directions without complaint, like he had since Blaze had first started us on this quest. Garrison stretched out his legs where he was sitting next to me in the back seat.
âAre you planning on finally telling us exactly where weâre going?â he asked in his usual snarky tone.
âWeâre almost there,â Blaze said.
Garrison took a deep breath in a rare show of self-control. Iâd seen how frequently he and the hacker fell into squabbling, especially during extended trips like this one. âAnd where is there? What are we looking at in this place?â
Blaze tore his gaze away from the map on his phone, looking first at Julius. âYouâll see an old theatre in about a mile. Park across the street.â Then he glanced back at Garrison. âA theatre,â he repeated slowly, as if Garrison wouldnât have understood him when he said it to Julius.
Garrison narrowed his eyes. âNo shit, Sherlock. Why are we going to a theatre? Iâm assuming itâs not to watch a show.â
Blaze smirked at Garrison. âFinally, you figured out the important question.â
âFinally, youâre getting your head out of your ass long enough to tell your crew what youâve been working on for four days straight.â
Julius let out a huff and laid down the law in a firm tone. âWhat did you find, Blaze? We should know what weâre getting into.â
âOf course,â Blaze said, a little chagrinned now that the boss had stepped in. âI just figured itâd be easier to explain when we can see the place.â He motioned vaguely to the windshield. âThis theater is the site of a top-secret event tonight, one Iâm convinced is connected to the Blood Hunterâs shady business activities. He might even be there.â
I sat up straighter between Garrison and Talon, whoâd been sitting silently, taking the conversation in. âHow did you find it? I thought you hadnât been able to dig up any leads.â
Blaze grinned. âI realized I was looking at the problem from the wrong angle. I was focused on the Blood Hunter himself and the people he works with, but thatâs exactly what heâd expectâwhere heâll have taken the most steps to cover up any evidence. He doesnât give his victims quite the same consideration.â
Talon frowned. âWhat victims?â
âWell, I donât know for sure. I was just guessing based on Dessâs experience. The Blood Hunter tattooed her with his emblem to claim her as his property when he had her kidnapped. There were other women at the party who had the same tattoo. So Iâm assuming at least most of them didnât come into his clutches by choice.â
My eyebrows jumped up. âYou were able to trace some of them?â
âYep.â He waggled his phone. âI told you I managed to take some pictures of the party while we were there. I ran my image recognition search on several of the women. Most of them didnât turn up anything, which is suspicious in itself because regular people would be out on social media and so on. But it doesnât help us. What does help is the two I did find matches for, both of them on the dark web. Both appearing in connection to an event I determined takes place at this theater once a month.â
âThey work at the event?â I asked, puzzled.
Blaze rubbed his mouth. âI donât think itâs quite like that. I couldnât dig up much in the way of details, but I got the impression they were more like⦠incentives. I donât know exactly what goes on at these get-togethers, but it doesnât seem good. The eventâs definitely not listed anywhere official. As far as the general public knows, that theater has been shut down for years.â
Incentives. My stomach turned. The Blood Hunter obviously had no qualms about stealing people away and using them as he saw fitâlook what heâd done to me. But the women at the party hadnât looked like theyâd been trained to fight.
No, their purpose had appeared to be much more risqué than that.
Julius parked down the street from the theater, and I peered through the window at the dark building that loomed on the corner ahead of us. No lights at all gleamed in its windows, and only a few cars were parked on the street closer by. But as we watched, a sleek sedan cruised by and stopped just long enough for a thin man in a fitted suit to step out and disappear around back. Then the car drove on. I supposed itâd circle back around to pick him up when the event was over.
I wet my lips. âWhen we first met, when I was trying to figure out what happened at the household, you told me that they were involved in human trafficking. Was that a way to get under my skin, or did you actually have evidence?â
âThat was legit,â Julius said. âI also told you we always research our targets before we agree to go through with a job.â
Blaze nodded. âThe Blood Hunterâs people working out of that mansion had been up to a lot of scummy stuff.â
A shudder ran down my spine. I wasnât sure I wanted to find out what this building had in store for us, but we couldnât ignore the situation either. I dragged in a breath. âOkay. How are we getting in there to spy on this meeting?â
Blaze pointed toward the roof. âI looked up the blueprints. Thereâs an attic where they used to stash old equipment, enough room for a person to move around up there but not spacious enough that itâd be used to host a gathering. You should be able to get access from there without anyone seeing you. Of course, first you have to get up thereâ¦â
I gave a heave to pull myself up to the atticâs small window, which Talon had already reached and unlocked. As he helped me in, Julius hefted himself after me. I stretched my arms, working the aches of the climb out of them.
âMaybe we shouldnât let Blaze come up with plans like âscale a three-story building with nothing but your bare handsâ when he gets to sit around in the car in the meantime,â I muttered.
âHe had a point that grappling hooks might have made enough noise to draw attention,â Talon said.
Julius grunted as he eased into the room, setting his feet carefully on the floor so as not to make a sound. âNot the most fun Iâve ever had in my life, necessary as it might be.â He tapped his headset. âWeâre in.â
Blaze and Garrison had stayed behind to stand guard in their various ways, Blaze monitoring nearby street cams with his computer and Garrison keeping watch with his eyes, ready to create a diversion if need be. The hacker also hoped to tap into the internet and cellular networks in the area to grab data from the devices of the eventsâ participants. Who knew what he might be able to find out from these people?
Still, I couldnât help envying his cushy seat in the car while we crept through the dark, dusty attic that smelled like mothballs.
Faint music and periodic warbles of a voice filtered through the floor, too muted for me to make out any words. At least itâd have drowned out any small noises weâd made during our climb.
âLetâs see,â Julius murmured. He prowled through the space, avoiding the stacks of film reels and projection equipment. When he reached a trap door in the floor, he knelt and cautiously eased it up.
The voice got louder. âI hear thirty thousand. Can I get a thirty-five? Thirty-five K, anyone? There, thirty-five thousand. How about forty?â
It was an auction, I realized. But what were they auctioning?
Julius motioned Talon and me over. We slunk down the worn ladder beneath the trap door onto the theaterâs small balcony.
No one was seated up here. It didnât look like anyone had made use of the three rows of seats around us in ages. The velvet cushions were covered with a thick coat of dust.
Below us, maybe two dozen figures were clustered in the seats at the front of the theater, right by the screen. An image was projected there, smaller than a typical movie, only taking up about a quarter of the space. But I could still make it out just fine from here, and what I saw made my gut knot.
The video playing showed a young woman sitting on a chair, surrounded by concrete walls. She looked uninjured, but her eyes were wide with terror, her limbs posed stiffly around her lingerie-clad frame. Her gaze darted over her surroundings, only occasionally glancing at the camera.
And if weâd had any doubts about the Blood Hunterâs involvement in this production, his emblem showed like a logo in one corner of the recording.
Someone in the crowd raised a small sign. âWe have forty thousand!â the voice said with a slight crackle of static. It was being projected over speakersâI couldnât see the man who was talking. He must be staying out of view while he carried out this auction.
This auction for the woman in the video. The figures below us were bidding for the right to own her. The Blood Hunter was offering her up as merchandise.
I swallowed thickly, more nausea bubbling up inside me. The bidding ended at forty thousand, and the projector screen went briefly blank as someone cued up the next offering. I peered over the railing, but I couldnât see any sign that the women were actually here.
There was nothing we could do to save them, not right now. My hands itched to strangle every rich asshole in the gathering below, but that wouldnât help their victims. We needed to find out more so we could protect the women from their intended fates.
Was the Blood Hunter here? In the darkness, I couldnât see anything other than the vague shapes of the people below. The voice didnât sound like his. Itâd probably make more sense if he kept his distance from the most horrendous crimes he orchestrated. Just like he had when heâd sent me after the Maliks.
Julius gripped the railing next to me. His voice came out raw. âThis is sick. Fucking disgusting.â
And it got even more horrifying. Another video flashed onto the screen, and this one brought bile to the back of my throat.
It was a child. A literal child, no more than thirteen, her immature curves clothed in lingerie just like the woman before her. Her face was frozen in a rigid mask of fright. She clutched the edges of the stool she was perched on, looking ready to faint.
âThe bidding on this fine specimen, guaranteed virginal and fully obedient, starts at twenty thousand,â the announcer said. âDo I have twenty?â
Oh, God. My jaw clenched so tight my cheeks started to ache. If I got my hands on the prick listing off her selling qualities and price, Iâd tear him to pieces. Julius looked as if he was considering the same thing.
âWe canât let this happen,â I hissed under my breath.
Talon grasped my shoulder. âWe canât do anything yet.â
Julius nodded, though his expression was taut with anger. âIf we charge in there, all weâll do is temporarily break up the show. The Blood Hunter will find other buyers, and heâll know weâre on to him. We find out everything we can and let Blaze do his thing too, and then we crush the bastards like the roaches they are.â
My fingers curled into my palms, but I knew he was right. Still, as the bidding raced up to seventy-five thousand before the auction finished, the need to take action quivered through every muscle.
The people seated below me were the worst, most vile parts of humanity. Lord only knew what horrible things theyâd put these girls and women through. And the Blood Hunter held these âeventsâ every month. How many victims had he sold over the years?
The Maliks had done sickening things. I would never think of them as anything other than monsters. But watching this show, a sense of certainty gripped me like never before.
What Iâd thought when Iâd confronted the Blood Hunter face to face for the first time was true. He was an even bigger monster than those Iâd already taken down, and we still didnât know how to topple him.