Nix. (Den of Mercenaries Book 3) (27 page)

BOOK: Nix. (Den of Mercenaries Book 3)
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He was petrified.

It had been Kit that showed him the freedom in fire—in its purity.

From then on, Uilleam had made a bad habit of destroying things by fire when the mood suit him.

This was also why Kit had thought to burn the warehouse down.

The message was clear if one knew how to read it.

“So what have you come to say?” Uilleam asked, his voice only loud enough for Kit to hear. “I’m waiting.”

Kit licked his lips. “Who all knows?”

“I assume you would know the answer to that question, but by all means, share the answer with me. Because whoever thought it would be better to work with you and betray me, I owe them a present.”

“About you being behind the kidnapping,” Kit retorted. “Who all knows?”

“If you’re asking about my mercenaries, the answer is none. I made the deal with her Carmen and Luna’s father, only.”

Then he could contain this.

“You will not, under any circumstances, breathe a
word
of any of this to Luna. Are we clear?”

Uilleam pushed his hand away. “Why not? Afraid that she’ll grow to hate you?”

He didn’t think that.

He knew it.

He was responsible for everything that had happened to her.

“We need to go,” Kit said to Aidra, starting for the door, ignoring his uncle’s presence entirely.

“Give a man enough rope,” Uilleam called after him, “watch him hang himself.”

Kit was panicking despite his outward display of calm. His intentions had always been to bury what Uilleam had done, not wanting Luna to face the horrors of it all, but that was before he knew it was his fault.

Now, it wasn’t about burying the secrets.

He had to destroy them.

Removing his phone from his pocket, he dialed Fang. “I have a job for you.”

“Again? I’ll call—”

“No,
you
. Only you.”

Fang was quiet a moment. “What do you want done?”

“I’m going to send you information on three men, I want them dead within the next seventy-two hours. No witnesses.”

Fang whistled low. “Who pissed you off, boss?”

“Just see this done, and tell no one.”

“Right.”

“Nix?” Aidra called his name as he ended the call with Fang.

“What?” He was distracted, thinking of his next step.

Thinking of Luna and where she was.

Thinking of how he would sleep next to her this very night without breathing a word of what he knew.

“I have someone who wants to speak with you.”

He only just noticed that Aidra was on the phone, her mobile extended in his direction now. She looked a bit paler, but that was understandable considering what they had just learned.

“I’m not taking calls right now.”

“He insists—”

“What part of that did you not understand?” Kit snapped as he dropped into his seat and yanked on his seatbelt.

“He says he’s the one that’s responsible for what happened to Uilleam,” Aidra said in a rush, shoving the phone into his hand before he could say anymore.

“You must have a death wish,” Kit said the moment he had it to his ear.

“I’m afraid not,” the caller said, a smile in his voice. “My name is Elias Harrington and I was hoping to have a meeting with you for nine tomorrow morning.”

No, the man definitely had a death wish.

“I’ll send you my information. Oh, and please be on time, sometimes bullets fly when I’m being kept waiting.”

In the span of an hour, Kit’s entire world had become fucked.

* * *

T
he world was
full of killers—people willing to pick up a gun and end the life of someone that crossed them in some arbitrary way.

Then there was Kit.

He wasn’t just a killer, nor could he be compared to any other man that called himself that. There was no power exchange for him, no sexual pleasure elicited when he took someone’s life.

It was cold.

Methodical.

He did what the assignment asked for and nothing more.

But sometimes, that cool exterior cracked, revealing the darker monster that concealed itself beneath his skin. If there was one thing to be said about the man, he considered family sacred—no matter how much he often thought about hurting his brother.

No one crossed his family without answering to him.

So whoever this Elias Harrington was, he would soon learn that lesson the hard way.

Uilleam wasn’t like him. He had remained at home, learning the trade of their father as opposed to the teachings of their uncle. While Kit still had the knowledge to work as a fixer of sorts in the business, he was gifted when it came to executions.

Assassinations.

It was just as easy for him to make the killings look like accidents, as well as make sure the message of that person’s death reached the right people.

He was
good
at it.

His brother didn’t take revenge by simply taking a life, he made them suffer for years until he was tired of playing with his enemies’ lives, and only
then
would he put them out of their misery.

Kit was satisfied with a bullet to the head.

For the first time in a long time, as Kit dressed that morning, he didn’t select a suit for its visual appeal, he ventured to the back of his closet where custom threads hung in a special cabinet.

The seven suits inside had cost him a fortune, but he had willingly handed over the money because to him, they were worth it.

These wouldn’t show the lines of the bullet proof vest he strapped to his chest. They also were made to cover any weaponry he had on him.

On the outside, he appeared as any other businessman might in a city like Manhattan, but beneath the fine clothes lay an arsenal and a man that knew how to wield them well.

For his meeting with Elias, he’d opted to go alone, leaving Aidra with the Wild Bunch who he’d explicitly instructed to shadow Luna wherever she went. He couldn’t hold her captive in the safe house—she wouldn’t stand for it—and because he was relatively sure that it hadn’t been about her the day Uilleam was shot, he allowed her to resume her work.

Even if it didn’t sit well with him.

His desire to protect her, and her desire to be independent clashed. She liked to think he was overprotective, that he worried for nothing considering he had been the one to teach her everything she knew, but she didn’t see herself the way he did.

Luna wasn’t weak—he knew this. But he also knew that despite what she thought, her heart often led her actions.

Fortunately, this hadn’t been much of a problem over the years for them, but he knew with some certainty that it would eventually.

Stepping out of his car, Kit eyed the villa in the distance. Either Elias was incredibly brave, or incredibly stupid since Kit could only see three men standing outside of the home.

It only took a moment of sizing up to see that they were ill equipped and lacked the skills needed to truly act as security for someone.

Kit didn’t mind proving that point.

Before any of them could notice his approach, he withdrew his guns, one in each hand and fired off rounds, head shots for two, and one in the chest for the man closest to the door.

He was still breathing as Kit came near, rattling breaths leaving his chest as he clutched at the wound as though that may help keep the blood in his body.

Kit also noticed that it was the same man that Caesar had with him in the lounge.

“It’s not personal,” Kit said as he aimed at the man’s forehead, watching his eyes widen before the life left him once he fired.

Someone was shouting over the walkie-talkie the man carried, but Kit paid it no mind as he ventured inside, gaze seizing on the men that were rushing toward him, guns at the ready.

They had no idea who they were up against.

Eighteen seconds.

Eighteen seconds was all it took for Kit to cut through every man in the room, leaving a trail of bodies in his wake as he finally found the man, he assumed, was waiting for him.

Elias Harrington sat in a blue velvet wingback chair, a saucer and teacup in hand as he watched the brutality with a blank expression. He didn’t move, nor did he attempt to placate Kit with words as though they might help save his life.

He didn’t say anything at all.

Kit holstered his guns in favor of the knives he had strapped to his wrists. As he turned one over in his hands, he said, “Whatever you think to say next, let it be the reason why I shouldn’t cut you into fucking pieces.”

Elias blinked, bringing his tea to his lips before taking a sip. “And to think, I thought you were more reasonable than that brother of yours.”

“Wrong answer.”

“Still upset about Uilleam, are you?”

Not particularly. Especially not after everything he had learned the night before.

As the blade was about to fly from his hands—and Kit could already see it sinking into the man’s chest, and blood welling around the white of his shirt—Elias set his drink down, with his other hand raised high as though to say he was not a threat.

“I assure you that you will want to hear what I have to say next—your wife’s life depends on it.”

His words made Kit pause.

Elias smiled. “Don’t worry. I know how you Runehart brothers are with idle threats—which is why I thought it best if I
showed
you.”

He produced a tablet, very much like the one Aidra carried with her at all times, but this one played only a video—no, a visual feed from whomever wore the camera it was depicted from.

In it, he could see Luna, oblivious to whoever it was following her as she walked the streets of New York. She wasn’t distracted by a phone, or any of the sights—it was clear to him that she was observing her surroundings—which could only mean that the recorder didn’t appear to be a threat.

“But if that does not suffice, I also have a man on that lovely assistant of yours—Aidra, is it? And don’t worry, I’m assured that the fellows you have monitoring the pair of them are easily dispensable.”

There was a feed for each of them.

Luna.

Aidra.

Fang.

Thantos.

Invictus.

Tăcut.

If the Wild Bunch hadn’t noticed the threat, whoever Elias had on them were very good.

“There will also be a package delivered to the compound your brother has locked himself away in with enough C4 to level the block. So if you would,” he said, the first real trace of annoyance flaring in his gaze, “please have a seat so that we can discuss matters properly.”

“If it’s all the same to you,” Kit said tightly, “I think I’ll stand.”

“Very well. I understand that you’ve recently traveled to Santa Monica to meet with a man by the name of Caesar Rivera.”

Kit didn’t blink. If the man was able to track as well as he did, it wasn’t much of a surprise that he knew about Kit’s dealings. “Yes, the trafficker.”

“He proposed a deal, but you declined.”

“And you think to change my mind on this?”

Elias shrugged. “It is a viable business opportunity. I don’t want to see it wasted. Despite this,”—he waved his hand, searching for the right word— “
unpleasantness
, you are, as Caesar explained, very good at what you do.”

“How is trafficking with the cartels of any interest to you?”

Who
was
he?

Kit had done his homework, or at least attempted to, before he came to this meeting, but despite his expansive network, no one had been able to tell him a thing .

It was as though the man didn’t exist.

“That is merely another arrangement that’s paramount to what I’m trying to accomplish. You see, Caesar Rivera is of little interest to me. He offers his men,” this he said with a gesture to the bodies lying on the floor, “and in exchange, he receives my good will.”

“Then what is that you want?”

“Protection, of a sorts, for my client.”

Kit was growing frustrated, his temper flaring. “
Who
is your client?”

“Carmen Santiago.”

There were a dozen other names that Kit had expected, but not that one. Not Luna’s mother.

“I understand you went to see Juan shortly after the Kingmaker was shot,” Elias said with a slight smile. “I found it quite amusing, the secrets you and your brother keep. If you’d spend less time working against one another, perhaps you wouldn’t be here now.”

“Then regale me. Why am I here now?” Kit asked.

“Before his unfortunate accident, Uilleam had plans to expose Carmen—it was why he was sending your wife to California. Both she and Ariana were meant to be in attendance at the meeting, but I intercepted the intel of Uilleam finding out and had them removed. If he would have gotten his way, things would have gone very bad, very quickly. I couldn’t let that happen.”

“Go on.”

“In a sorts, while Carmen is a client of mine, I also utilize her services for a few private matters, and should she be exposed, that will come to an end.”

Elias spoke with an almost clinical air, as though he were reading from a manual or a textbook. If this were about anyone else, Kit may have been willing to do business with the man.

Elias reminded him of himself.

BOOK: Nix. (Den of Mercenaries Book 3)
2.46Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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