You’d think I would have calmed down a bit by the time we reached the Space, where Phoenix was being held.
I hadn’t.
I wanted to shoot something—anything.
If a squirrel were to cross paths with me, it wouldn’t end well for it. Hell, if a spider looked at me funny I was going to end it with a bullet.
“Wow, nice setup.” This from Mil as we let her into the room and flipped on the lights.
Phoenix was sitting in the chair as if he’d been waiting for us.
He looked good. Why the hell would he look so good? Hadn’t Nixon been torturing him? And why did his clothes look clean? And why in the hell was he smiling at me?
Before I could process the ramifications of my actions, I stalked toward him and punched him so hard across the jaw that he fell over in his chair.
“Shit,” Tex grumbled behind me. “We’re supposed to help him, not give him a concussion.”
Mil walked up beside me. “He probably deserved it.”
“And more.” I reached down and yanked up Phoenix’s chair, setting it to rights with him still in it. Grunting from how heavy it was, I was already beginning to sweat when his eyes met mine, with a burning question.
“You’re either still pissed about me and Trace, or you have rage problems.”
“I’d bet on both.” Mil smiled at Phoenix. “Hey, brother.”
“Mil.” His eyes narrowed. “You look old.”
“Thanks. You look like hell.” She reached down and squeezed his chin between her fingers, examining his face. When she was done she jerked her hand away, pulled a gun out of her back pocket and shot at his feet.
“What the hell, Mil!” Phoenix yelled.
“Just checking to see how your reflexes are.” She winked.
Tex chuckled next to me. “Is it wrong to be turned on right now?”
I rolled my eyes.
“So.” Phoenix licked his lips. “Who’s gonna do the honors? And where the hell is Nixon?”
“Nixon isn’t your concern.” Voice hoarse, I cleared my throat. “Not anymore, at least. And although I’d love to do the honors and shoot you in the head multiple times, this one over here”—I pointed to Mil—“apparently has information that can save you. Only, by my count she has about ten seconds to spill it before I kill both of you.” I turned to Mil. “So. Talk.”
Mil rolled her eyes. “Chase. Always so dramatic.”
Phoenix exhaled and looked at Mil. “Nothing you know can save me.”
“Watch and learn, big brother, watch and learn.” She pulled out her cell phone and dialed and then said, “We’re ready.”
Within seconds a knock came at the door. What the hell? Nixon always had cameras locked on the place. Any time anyone as much as breathed near the building it would send us a text alert. The electricity was still on, so why weren’t the cameras working? Or the alarm system? Did Mil know about the security?
“What the hell?” I grabbed her arm. “If you’ve double-crossed us, I will kill you, no hesitation.”
She jerked free. “Nixon said to trust me, so you either listen to him or you betray your word.”
Shit. Did she have to use the word “betray”?
I nodded and crossed my arms as she went to the door and opened it.
Nothing could have prepared me for what I was about to see.
Frank Alfero walked in with Luca in tow.
“Are you freaking kidding me?” I yelled, about one minute away from charging the man responsible for my cousin’s death.
“Mr. Winter, please control the level of your voice.” Frank patted me on the back and approached Phoenix. “You will still pay for what you did, for what you tried with Trace.”
“I know,” he whispered.
“You will help us… hunt.”
Phoenix’s head snapped up. “What are we hunting?”
“A rat.” This from Luca.
I couldn’t look at him. If I did, I would shoot him and that would just make everything worse. Why the hell was he even still here? It pissed me off that in our world, killing was as normal as eating breakfast. I was supposed to be calm. It was how everything worked. I knew the rules, but damn if I wasn’t itching to end Luca’s life. He’d taken my mom and now my cousin. But what hurt the most was that he’d ruined Trace’s life. I would never forgive him for that.
Maybe he sensed my irritation or just felt the anger I had toward him. He turned to face me. “A life for a life, Mr. Winter. You are lucky that your friend took the fall for the lies told.”
“You son of a bitch!” I charged him but Tex wrapped his arms around me as my muscles flexed in protest, and held me back.
Luca laughed. “Is that how you treat someone who is helping you? Name-calling and empty threats will get you nowhere, Mr. Winter. We work together or we leave you to pick up the pieces of your broken family.”
“Together.” Frank was already taking the cuffs off of Phoenix’s wrists. “We work together, and expose what should have been exposed long ago.”
Luca’s eyes saddened. He approached Mr. Alfero and put his arm around his shoulder. “For what it is worth, I am sorry.”
“So was she,” Frank mumbled. “So was she.”
“Holy shit!” Tex dropped his gun to the floor with a loud clatter. “Holy shit!”
“What?” I hit him. “What’s wrong with you?”
“You guys are…” He pointed at Mr. Alfero and Luca. “You guys are—”
“Brothers,” Phoenix grumbled. “They’re brothers.”
I looked at the two of them. How had I not seen the resemblance before? It was uncanny. Obviously Frank was older by a good fifteen years, and they both had the dark hair, though Frank’s was sprinkled with gray. They had the same blue eyes, nose, chin. Really, it was strange to see.
“But…” My mind was unable to work that fast. “Phoenix, how did you know that?”
“Phoenix made his money as an excellent spy. Didn’t you, son?” Luca spat. “Going through Trace’s things, reading the personal journals. Then, in an instant of trying to discover everyone’s dirty little secrets, you saw something. Something you were not supposed to see. And that’s the problem with spying. Eventually you will be caught.”
Wordless, Phoenix hung his head.
“And your father paid the price with his very life.”
Phoenix shook his head. “It wasn’t supposed to go that far. I thought I was helping. I thought that if I exposed him, or at least caused unrest with the families that day, it would buy me time, that they would see that there were so many lies and it was never about my family. And… I was scared, all right? We owed money to him, and my father wasn’t doing anything about it and then when I discovered we weren’t to blame I freaked. I wanted him out of the equation. He was ruining everything.”
“What do you mean? This isn’t about your family?” I asked.
“No.” Phoenix looked like he was shaking. “It’s about yours.”
“Well, shit.” Tex rubbed the back of his neck. “So what do we do now?”
“We’ll be in touch,” Frank said.
Phoenix winced as Frank slapped him hard on the back. “The less you know, the better it will be for everyone.”
Mil stood silently in the corner. Nothing was adding up.
“So, what do we do?” I pleaded. “There has to be a way we can help.”
“Kiss your girlfriend.” Luca winked. “Pretend everything is fantastic, because I promise you, in a few days, we’ll be nothing but a horrible dream.”
“People don’t die in dreams.”
Frank hung his head and muttered a prayer. Luca grabbed his gun and held it to Phoenix’s side.
“ ’Til we meet again.” Luca nodded and stood on the other side of Phoenix as he and Frank walked him out of the room.
“Mil?” Tex asked. “Any other fun secrets you aren’t telling us about?”
She shrugged and then shook her head.
I pulled out my gun and pushed her against the cement wall. She winced in pain and closed her eyes as I pushed her hair back with my gun. “Talk.”
“Not much for talking,” she said through clenched teeth.
“Let me refresh your memory,” I seethed. “My best friend dies a day after he meets you and now you’re letting your stepbrother run off with the guy who killed him? Who just so happens to be holding Trace’s grandfather captive like a damn prisoner.”
I pressed the gun further into her neck, causing her throat to convulse against the metal. “Nixon said to protect me at all costs,” she said.
“And that”—I released her with a jerk and tucked my gun in the back of my jeans—“is the only reason you’re still breathing. If I suspect anything, if you sneak out to meet someone, if you suddenly disappear,” I swore, “Mil, I will hunt you down, I will torture you until you beg me to kill you and you know what I’ll say?”
“What?” She rubbed her throat, tears pooled in her eyes.
“No.” I smirked. “I’ll say hell no and I’ll just keep torturing. I’m protecting you as a promise to my very dead best friend—don’t make me regret it.”
“Anything else?” she croaked, a smug smile tugging the corners of her mouth. Damn, I wanted to strangle her.
“No.”
“Then let’s go home.” She pushed past me, shoving my body to the side as if she had enough strength to take me down. I watched her the entire walk to the car, I watched and waited for a misstep. Nothing added up—she had to be the answer.