Free Read Novels Online Home

The Hunt by Chloe Neill (14)

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

“Cinda’s dead,” Malachi said again. “Along with another. Two more are sick.”

“‘I’m sorry’ seems like a totally insufficient thing to say,” Darby said. “But that’s all I’ve got.”

“The words are insufficient,” Malachi agreed. “I gave mine to Anh and the others, and they felt insufficient, too.”

“The same illness?” I asked.

He nodded. “The illness seems the same—starts as fatigue. Then chills, fever. Rapid heartbeat, rapid breathing. Confusion. Red dots across the skin.”

“Hmm,” Darby said. “I’m not a diagnostician, but that doesn’t sound like your run-of-the-mill infection.”

Malachi nodded. “We presume it’s contagious, since they live, work, and eat together. And we aren’t aware of any other vector.”

Darby frowned. “Strangers on the property? New food or water source? Environmental changes?”

“Other than leaving Devil’s Isle, no. Anh has lived on the property for five years. She hasn’t been ill with anything like this, and she wasn’t aware of anything on the property that would cause an exposure problem.”

“Did Gunnar get a Containment unit out there?”

Malachi nodded. “Volunteer. The Zone equivalent of Doctors Without Borders. But without hospitalization, there are limits to what they can do in the field.” He pulled from his pocket two small vials of crimson liquid, offered them to Darby.

“Blood test?” she asked. She swirled one of the vials, held it up to the light.

“Please.”

“Your wish is my command,” she said, giving a jaunty head bob. At our blank stares, she asked, “I Dream of Jeannie?” Then she waved her hand. “Never mind.”

It seemed science wasn’t the only thing we didn’t know much about.

“How else can I help you?” Darby asked, frowning as she looked up at Malachi. “I’m a lab person, not the doctor you need, but maybe I can find someone to help with diagnosis?”

Malachi shook his head. “I need to talk to Lizzie, but I can’t get close to Devil’s Isle.” He looked at me.

“Yes,” I said. “Of course. I’ll go tonight, after dark.”

“Today of all days,” Liam said in a tight voice. “After what happened earlier today, you’re going to try to sneak into Devil’s Isle? You were in a shoot-out with Containment.”

Put like that, it didn’t sound very smart. But what choice did we have?

“Delta is as Delta does,” I said. “And we’ve got our delivery procedure, remember? I can handle myself.”

That was a lesson I’d been learning. That I could handle myself. I liked learning that.

“I’ll go with you.”

The concern that furrowed his brow was clear.

“No, you won’t. I’ll be quieter, faster, less noticeable on my own. This isn’t my first rodeo.”

“Liam,” Gavin said quietly, “this is the package Gunnar talked about. She’s been doing this for five weeks.”

She’s been doing this since you’ve been gone, he meant. Which was the absolute truth. But it wasn’t a truth that Liam wanted to face, given the pained look on his face.

“I hate to bring this up during this non-tender moment,” Gavin said, “but there’s an illness spreading among Paranormals at the same time Containment’s running some kind of secret project involving a biological thingamajig.”

“Synthesis,” Darby offered.

“That,” Gavin said. “Coincidence?”

“There’s a biological synthesis?” Malachi asked, and we gave him the brief rundown about our visit to Broussard and Caval, and Darby’s preliminary findings.

“I don’t think ‘science’ is a strong enough link between the illness and Icarus,” Liam concluded. “There’s no evidence the Paras are sick because of anything Containment’s done, and we don’t know Containment is working on anything that could make anyone ill. They could be trying to create a new product for skin grafts or something.” He glanced at Darby. “Right?”

“You got it.”

Liam looked at Moses. “You get anything from that file?”

“Oh, are we remembering I’m in the room now?” His voice was the perfect mix of egotistical and long-suffering. That was pretty much Moses to a T.

“Please proceed,” Liam said.

He turned to his computer, began typing. “Did more digging on the Icarus file. As we know, Broussard accessed it not long before he died. But that wasn’t the first time he’d looked at it. He’d opened it fourteen times over the last two weeks.”

“Fourteen times for the same file?” Liam asked with a frown. “That’s a lot of views for a file he didn’t create.”

“Obsessed,” Gavin said. “Which squares with what we know about him. He was obsessed with Liam, too.”

“He fixated,” Liam agreed.

“And there’s this.” Moses punched a key, had paper spitting out from an old-fashioned dot matrix printer on a shelf beneath his keyboard. He reached down, ripped off the paper, handed it to Liam. “Once again, the idiots who tried to delete the file didn’t think about the metadata. Can’t get everything out of the file, but I can tell you the address where it was created.”

“I want to tear off the perforations,” Gavin said, but Liam swatted his hand away.

“Well, what do you know?” He passed the paper to Gavin, glanced at me. “Same address as ADZ Logistics on the Henderson invoice.”

“And there’s a link in the chain,” Gavin said, ripping off the paper’s edges with a satisfying zip. “Somewhere in Gentilly, looks like.”

Gentilly was a neighborhood on the lake side of Devil’s Isle.

“We need to surveil the building,” Liam said.

Gavin nodded. “Tomorrow morning. It will be getting dark soon, and the building’s going to empty out. They won’t work at night; the power goes out too often.”

“And after what happened today,” I said, “if this building matters to Containment, they’re going to put extra staff outside it.”

Gavin nodded at me. “She’s right. We can get out at dawn, get spots, and be in position when the doors open. We’ll see who comes and goes, and that will tell us what’s happening in there.”

“All right,” Liam said. “We’ll meet in the morning, go take a look.”

“Someone needs to get a message to Gunnar tonight,” I said. “Tell him about Caval. Killer or not, he needs to be found. His body dealt with.”

“And the DNA tested,” Darby said. “If that’s Broussard’s blood on his hands, it will pretty much exonerate Liam from the murder. And then we can just deal with Icarus, and whatever Containment’s trying to hide.”

“I’ll do that,” Gavin said, and gave his brother a look. “If only we knew how the goddamn knife got there.”

“I’m working on it,” Liam said.

“Work harder, please, so we can exonerate your ass.”

“You know what we need?” Darby asked. “We need a break.” She walked to Moses, looked over the piles. “You got a DVD player in this mess? Or a VCR?”

“Yeah. Why? You gonna put one back together?”

“No, I want to watch it. I’ve got a stack of movies in the UV.”

“You’ve got a utility vehicle?” Gavin hoofed it to the window, glanced outside. “Darby, that’s a golf cart. With an old Coke cooler welded onto the back.” He mostly sounded confused.

“Friend of mine at the lab did that,” she said with a grin. “We’re calling it Rogue Lab.”

“Good name,” Liam said with a smile. “And very creative welding job.”

The cooler was red, probably from the fifties, and had rounded corners and pretty white script. It also had a lot of rust, which made me feel better about the fact that someone had bolted it to a golf cart.

“Keeps the rain off,” she said. “And Containment doesn’t even look twice. Chick in glasses on a golf cart apparently doesn’t inspire a lot of concern. Anyway, there’s movies in the box.” She looked around at the group. “See if Moses can get a player up and running. It’ll be getting dark soon, anyway.”

The chatting and plotting began. What would they watch, what would they eat, who got the limited couch real estate in Moses’s living room.

They were all eager for company, for normalcy. I understood the urge, and usually I would have been up for it. But not tonight. It was still early, but I was wiped out, emotionally and physically. Murders, battles, and confessions from Liam had left me completely drained—not to mention the hangover from Liam’s unexpected magic. That was going to need some time of its own.

I had a lot to think about, and I needed time and space and quiet to do it.

I could feel his gaze on me, the hope in it. But he was going to have to let that simmer a bit. God knew he’d made me do some simmering.

“Rain check,” I said. “I’m going to see Lizzie, remember?”

Moses looked back at me, his brow furrowed with disappointment. “Damn it. It’s family movie night.”

I smiled, but shook my head. “Things to do, people to see.”

Moses wrinkled his nose, like I’d mentioned taking out the garbage. “Spoilsport.”

“I am,” I agreed. I looked at Gavin, Liam. “We surveil at dawn?”

“Fine by me,” Gavin said.

“Same,” Liam said.

“Why don’t I drive you back?” Darby said to me, gesturing toward the window and the UV that sat at the curb. “I could zip you wherever you need to be.”

“Actually,” Liam said, glancing at me, “I’ve got some business to attend to, and I think you might be interested in it. You game?”

The spark in his eyes piqued my interest. “Depends. What’s the business?”

“We need to see a girl about a knife.”

•   •   •

We escaped from the house after Moses gave Liam his own portion of crap about skipping family movie night, then stood on the curb, looking at Darby’s UV.

We’d carried the VCR tapes inside; in exchange she’d given us the key. But we hadn’t yet climbed in.

“It would be a walk.”

“How long?”

He considered. “About a mile.”

I did the math, thinking about the three miles I’d need to walk round-trip tonight to get to Devil’s Isle, the walking I’d already done today. “I can’t ride in this thing. Let’s walk.”

“Agreed.” Liam got the key back to Darby, and then we started walking.

“Where are we going, exactly?”

“To see Blythe.”

Blythe was a bounty hunter, a striking woman with dark, choppy hair and sharp cheekbones, generous lips, and plenty of silver tattoos. Very gorgeous and, if I had to take a guess, very impulsive.

She was also Liam’s ex-girlfriend.

“You gave her the knife.”

“Yeah.” Liam ran a hand through his hair, looked a little sheepish. I figured that was the correct response. “All due respect to my brother, I hated that knife. Handle was awkward, blade wasn’t balanced, and you couldn’t hide it worth a damn.”

“So you gave it to your then-girlfriend?”

“Technically, I think she stole it.”

“Of course she did.” I didn’t know much about Blythe, but that seemed to fit. “And why am I along for this particular ride?”

He kept his eyes on the road ahead of us. “You wanted me to trust you, to trust myself. This seems as good a first step as any.”

•   •   •

In a city of gorgeous, empty houses, from the historic to the glamorous, Blythe lived in a third-floor apartment in the middle of an otherwise abandoned complex. There was no architecture to speak of, the swimming pool was empty but for a rusting Chevy Suburban, and the courtyard was overrun with weeds.

“Why here?” I asked.

“Anonymity,” Liam said. “She’s in the middle of the complex, on the top floor. Gives her visibility, but keeps her from standing out.”

In any other place and time, I might have said she was paranoid. But not in the Zone. Not in New Orleans.

We took the stairs to the third floor and the outdoor hallway populated with front doors. Liam stopped in front of one—number 313—that didn’t look any different from the others. Double anonymity.

He knocked on the door. There was a thump, then shuffling, the jangling of a lock.

The woman who opened the door had tousled hair and wore a tank top over a hot pink bra and mid-calf silver leggings. Her feet were bare, her eyes lined with kohl. A silver snake covered her right biceps, and a silver dragon wound around her left.

“Well, I declare,” she said, in an exaggerated accent that was more ’Bama than bayou. “Look who’s here. Liam Quinn, the prodigal son returned.” She slid her gaze to me. “And little Saint Claire, who I understand isn’t so saintly anymore.”

I smiled. “Would you like to see an example of my work?”

She smiled back. “Not unless you want to see how my cuffs work. I’m still on the job.”

Liam ignored the bait. “Can we come in, Blythe?”

“Why?”

“Broussard. We need information.”

She looked at him for a moment. “Were you followed?”

“Are you under the impression I forgot how to do my job?”

“Just checking,” she said. “A girl’s gotta be careful these days.” She waved us in and gave the hallway a second look before closing and relocking the door.

The entry opened into a narrow hallway that led to a small living room. There was a small kitchen on the other side of the entry, and a hallway that ran to the left, which I assumed led to a bed and bath.

The architecture was Generic Apartment. On the basis of what I knew about her so far, the décor seemed to be completely Blythe: Southern, rock ’n’ roll, postwar, and a little bit trashy.

There was a motorcycle in the living room, squeezed in beside a worn love seat and a bergère chair covered in rose velvet. The walls bore enormous paintings of fancy men and women at a garden party, all completely naked from the waist down. Ironically, Blythe’s clothes—shirts, undergarments, dresses, and pants—were scattered across everything in the room.

“Sorry about the mess,” she said, and walked around the bike to perch on the love seat’s rolled arm. “Until very recently, I was entertaining company.” She winked bawdily, and I wasn’t sure how much of the persona was an act and how much was just her vibrant personality. “You want a drink?”

“We’re good,” Liam said.

“You kill Broussard?”

“I did not.”

“I didn’t figure you for that. Wasn’t really your style. What information you want?”

“I need to know what happened to my knife.”

Her face went completely blank. “What knife?”

“Antler handle. The one my brother gave me. Curiously, it was missing one morning after you visited.”

“That must mean it was a good visit.” She pushed off the love seat, walked into the kitchen. She emptied out a glass, poured a finger of rye whiskey into it, and gulped it.

“Damn,” she said with a wince. “Not nearly late enough for rye.”

“The knife,” Liam prompted.

She held up her hands. “I’m not saying I took it. But if I did, I don’t have it anymore. Had a sweetheart, gave it away.” She put the glass down, looked at Liam. “It wasn’t a very good blade.”

“I’m aware.”

“Who were you dating?” I asked.

“A very delicious agent named Lorenzo.” She patted the kitchen countertop. “We had some very good times.”

“Don’t need the play-by-play,” Liam said. “Last name?”

“Caval. Lorenzo Caval.”

Bingo.

“I don’t suppose he has a brother named Javier?” I asked.

“Matter of fact, that’s Lorenzo’s younger brother.” She frowned. “Why do you ask?”

“Javier’s dead.”

Liam’s voice was plenty serious, but Blythe didn’t get it. “Quit fucking around.”

When Liam stayed quiet, her smile fell away, and so did some of the cockiness, the faux accent. “You’re serious.”

“We are,” Liam said. “Found him dead in a Containment safe house. By the look of things, he took out Broussard, and someone took him out.”

“Jesus,” Blythe said, and turned around, leaned back against the cabinet, crossed her arms. “I knew they were involved in something, but not something that would get them killed.”

“What kind of something?” Liam asked.

“No idea,” she said, and shook her head when Liam gave her a dangerous stare.

Blythe groaned, turned back to the counter, and poured another finger of whiskey into the glass. “I don’t know. My job is to stay on Containment’s good side. Not the other way around. I take legit bounties, and I don’t get in anyone’s way.”

“They had something going with Containment,” I said.

“They’re agents. Of course they had something going with Containment.” Blythe knocked back the whiskey like it was bad medicine, slammed the glass down hard enough to make it ring. Then she sighed. “Like I said, I don’t have details. They were both impulsive. Lorenzo more so than Javier. Lorenzo figured he was some kind of Special Ops badass.” She looked back at us, eyes narrowed. “Was he?”

“It’s possible they were involved in a Containment research project. We don’t have all the details, either.”

“I know Lorenzo doesn’t like Paras,” she said. “Their mom was a single parent, and she was killed in the war. Lorenzo idolized her, from what I could tell. Took her death hard.”

“You know how or when he got involved with the project?”

Blythe shook her head. “That was before my time. But I had the sense it had been a while, that he was pretty enmeshed in whatever it was. He was what I’d call a ‘soldier’s soldier.’ Liked fighting, liked battle, liked having enemies. And then there was the money.”

“Money?” Liam asked. “From Containment?”

“Don’t know where it came from. Just that he had plenty of it. I do remember him and Javier fighting about it one night. We were hanging, having some drinks, and Javier said something about the money, how good it was.” She frowned, crossed her arms, concentrated on the floor as she replayed the memory. “Lorenzo freaked out, started saying how it wasn’t about the money but the principle. Started throwing shit around. Not my kind of scene.”

“Violent?”

“I’d say Lorenzo liked violence, if that’s a different thing.”

Liam nodded, considered.

“Did you talk about Broussard to Lorenzo?” I asked, and her gaze shot to mine. There was an expression of amused puzzlement on her face, like she was trying to figure out the joke.

She shrugged. “Probably. We’re colleagues, after all.”

She didn’t get the meaning behind my question. But Liam did. “Someone wrote ‘For Gracie’ on the wall above Broussard’s body and planted the knife to make me look guilty. Which means he understood I had a beef with Broussard and what I cared about.”

Blythe’s gaze dropped, moved nervously around the room. “Damn it,” she murmured. “I don’t know. Probably?” She looked up at Liam pleadingly. “Maybe I blew off steam. I don’t know. People talk.”

I took that as a yes, and watched Liam’s face harden into stern lines.

“Have you seen him lately?”

She shook her head. “It’s been five or six months.” She shrugged. “I lost interest, ghosted him. He was a very serious guy, and I am not a very serious girl.”

“Address?”

Blythe rolled her eyes toward the ceiling, then relented. “He’s in the barracks in the Quarter.”

“The former Marriott?” Liam asked.

She nodded.

“All right,” Liam said. “Thank you for the information, Blythe. We appreciate it.”

“I don’t want it coming back on me.”

“It won’t,” Liam said. “We’re breaking it all down.”

•   •   •

“She’s got issues,” I said. Thunder rumbled ominously above us as we headed back toward Moses’s house. “Partying hard-ass layered over someone who’s more broken than she wants to admit.”

Liam glanced down at me. “How’d you get that in a twenty-minute conversation?”

I shrugged. “A lot of agents came into Royal Mercantile. They all dealt with the pressure, with the stress, differently. Some were quiet. Some, like her, were loud. But most had the same gooey centers.”

“The Caval brothers do not have gooey centers.”

I held up a hand for a high five. “That’s an award-winning segue.”

Liam slapped my palm. “It was good. But serious. Both Caval brothers were involved in this. And getting paid for it.”

“Javier Caval is dead. Lorenzo Caval had your knife.” I grimaced. “Javier Caval kills Broussard, Lorenzo Caval kills Javier? That’s pretty dark.”

“Yeah, if that’s how it went down, it is dark. But Lorenzo apparently wasn’t above knocking his brother around because of his imagined moral high ground.”

“The war created lots of monsters.”

“Yeah,” Liam said. “And sometimes it just gave monsters an excuse.”

“We can’t go to the barracks.”

“Finally, a place in New Orleans you won’t go.”

“There are lots of places in New Orleans I won’t go. But, yeah, I’m not stupid. We pass this information along to Gunnar, and we let him handle it.”

“That’s very wise, Saint Claire.”

“Don’t push it, Quinn.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Mia Madison, Flora Ferrari, Lexy Timms, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Madison Faye, Frankie Love, Jenika Snow, C.M. Steele, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Jordan Silver, Mia Ford, Delilah Devlin, Bella Forrest, Zoey Parker, Penny Wylder, Piper Davenport, Eve Langlais,

Random Novels

The Family We Make: An Mpreg Romance (Helion Club Book 1) by Aiden Bates

After I Do by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Henry & Me by Sasha Clinton

A Whisper Of Solace by K. J. Coakley

Sinfully Sweet Wolf (Shadowpeak Wolves Book 2) by Sadie Carter

Trailer Trash (Neely Kate Mystery Book 1) by Denise Grover Swank

Single Dad’s Mistake by Destiny, Sam

Escape with a Hot SEAL by Cat Johnson

Missing Piece by Emma Snow

Preservation (In the Time of Ruin Book 1) by LA Kirk

The Right Ranger (The Men of at Ease Ranch) by Donna Michaels

Reach for the Stars by Kathy Jay

Fate Loves (Twist of Fate Book 3) by Tina Saxon

Where We Began (Where We Began Duet Book 1) by Nora Flite

The Roommate's Baby by Penny Wylder

Citrine (Date-A-Dragon Book 4) by Terry Bolryder

SEAL's Second Chance (A Navy SEAL Brotherhood Romance) by Ivy Jordan

Fire in the Stars (Steel Souls MC Book 2) by Nikki Groom

Special Forces: Operation Alpha: The SEAL’s Surprise Baby (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Rachel McNeely

Handfasted to You: Timeswept Soulmates (Timeless Brides Book 2) by Ginny Sterling