Devil Mine: Part 3 – Chapter 59
Devil Mine: A Dark Cartel Romance (London Underworld Book 1)
âIâm sorry I canât come to the phone right now, but if you leave me a messââ
Frowning, I hang up the phone without leaving a voicemail. Thatâs the fifth time Iâve tried calling Tess tonight with no response from her.
Iâm in the car on my way back to London. The new supplier I was supposed to meet with tonight never showed, the number I was given to reach him disconnected when I tried to call.
My lieutenants who are usually always by my side are both gone tonight â Marco had surgery to remove problematic scar tissue from an old bullet wound and Arturo was called unexpectedly away for an emergency with his daughter â so I canât ask them to look into the supplier.
It would be surprising not to talk to Tess even on a normal night, but something about the coincidence that I would be stood up on the same night that I canât reach her doesnât sit right with me. Years of experience have the back of my neck tingling, telling me that something isnât right here.
Instinct tells me I was lured away tonight. For what purpose, I canât tell. The more I canât get through to Tess, the antsier I get. The stronger the tingling in my neck gets, until itâs a full on buzzing.
When I try calling a sixth time and she doesnât answer, I consider lobbing my phone out of the window. Itâs only the fact that she would have no way to reach me that keeps me from doing so.
âHow far away are we?â I ask my driver.
âThirty minutes, jefe.â
Iâm going to turn the back of the Rolls into my personal rage room and destroy it in that time.
âDrive fucking faster,â I snarl.
I unlock my phone and call Dagny.
âWell, well, well,â she answers mockingly. âThis is a surprise. Dare I dream that youâre calling to generously offer to pay for my floor bill? Or is this some sort of courtesy call before you shoot me again?â
I cut straight to the point. âI canât reach Tess. Iâve tried calling six times.â
She sobers instantly, immediately understanding the serious tenor of my voice. âIâll see if I can get through and call you right back.â
My phone rings thirty seconds later and my stomach plummets.
âWell?â
âShe didnât answer.â
My jaw works back and forth silently. Maybe she doesnât have her phone on her. Or maybeâ¦
Dagny reads my mind. âShe didnât run.â
âHow do you know?â
âWell, apart from the fact that sheâs in loââ She starts coughing violently. âSorry, something in my throat.â She clears it once more, then starts again. âShe wouldnât leave you. You know she wouldnât.â
Sheâs right. I donât think Tess would leave me.
But her leaving me would be preferable to the only other option her silence could mean â that something happened to her.
âI spoke to her earlier tonight when she was cooking,â Dagny continues. I groan loudly and she laughs. âDonât worry, she was just making grilled cheese.â
âAnd she was fine?â
âYeah, sheâ¦â Her voice trails off suddenly.
My hand tightens around the phone. âWhat is it?â
âShe was looking into the embezzlement. We were talking about it and then she abruptly said she had to go. She sounded like she had an idea of where to look⦠Maybe she found something?â
âShe would have called me if she did.â
âNot ifâ¦â
Dagny doesnât finish her sentence. She doesnât need to.
Not if something happened to her.
That possibility chills the blood in my veins.
After I hang up, I find myself praying for the first time in years. Praying that she left her phone in the other room and that Iâm going to find her in her favorite spot on the living room couch, reading a book, lost to the outside world.
Praying that I didnât put her in danger by letting her help me while leaving her vulnerable tonight.
Praying that sheâs alright, that those big blue eyes will lift to mine and smile at me when I walk in.
But when I burst through the doors of our home, I already know that sheâs not here. I can feel it. The air is too still. The silence too quiet. The walls too stiff, like they witnessed something theyâre desperate to confess to.
âTess!â
I scream her name, going from room to room, searching for her, refusing to believe what I know deep in my core to be true. My desperation grows with every empty room I find until it feels like my heart is going to crawl out of my throat and fall lifelessly at my feet.
There are traces of her everywhere. An open laptop on the living room floor. A dirty pan in the sink. A half eaten grilled cheese on a plate.
Her phone on the counter.
Dread wraps its tentacled fingers around my lungs and squeezes. I pick up the phone and the screen comes to life, reflecting a picture of us back to me. Itâs a selfie we took last week; my forearm is wrapped around her shoulders, my lips pressed into her hair. Sheâs mid-laugh, giggling at something I said. I canât remember what it was.
Seven missed call notifications sit just above her face.
Rage flames to life in my belly.
Someone took her.
I have to fight my own body to get through the haze of fury and adrenaline that sweeps over my body, murdering the rational part of my brain.
Think.
If sheâs wearing her necklace, I can track her.
Sometimes she takes it off for bed. I send up prayers begging for her to still have it on.
I click the security app on my phone and the dot immediately beeps to life, bringing with it a small measure of relief.
Until I see where she is.
In the very same underground bomb shelter I took her to the night I killed Augusto Leone.
Thereâs no way she would have gone there by herself, not only because sheâd have no way of remembering exactly where it was, but also because she has no reason to go.
And the only people who know about it and are still alive to discuss it are cartel members.
Dagny was right, she must have found the mole.
My breathing is uneven, my heart arrhythmic.
I donât know how long sheâs been there, how long theyâve had her, if Iâm too lateâ
No, I canât let myself think that.
Sheâs okay, she has to be.
I run blindly for the car, desperate to get to her, but her laptop on the living room floor stops me. There are papers strewn every which way around it.
I tap the mousepad and the screen comes to life.
Thereâs a password, but I know it.
RockyRoad21
The day we first met in the kitchen for ice cream.
Multiple windows pop up, but the top one is a historical email from a batch of files I sent her. From what I can tell, itâs an approval for a wire transfer. The vendor is one I recognize â they were among those who told me they hadnât been paid.
But when I see who signs the email, who authorizes the payment, who Tess discovered had betrayed me, my blood goes from chilled to frozen.
Itâs a name I know well.
A betrayal that stabs a knife deep in my back.