Leaning against the railing at the bottom of the stairs, I keep hearing her say the lie.
He doesnât love me.
Itâs a lie to me, but maybe she truly believes it.
âShe certainly has a way about her,â Eli mutters as he pinches the bridge of his nose and slowly sits at the bottom of the stairs.
âThatâs one way to put it.â My expression is unmoving, and I canât control the scowl. Swallowing the knot in my throat is painful.
âIâm fucking tired,â he mutters, and I tell him to go to bed then.
âYou staying here?â he asks and I nod. I canât fucking move after hearing her say that. Addisonâs scream woke me up, but she was faster than I was. I couldnât hear everything, but I got the gist of it: Addison wants to go back, and Aria doesnât.
My heart feels like itâs been stomped on, driven over by a tank, and then left for scraps in the dirty gutter.
âI donât know what to do with her,â I speak out loud, not liking where my thoughts are going. I want her back in the cell. The core of my soul is screaming at me to put her there. Sheâll be safe, and sheâll forgive me with time. She has to.
âYou donât trust her?â he asks and peers up at me and waits for my response.
âI trust that I know what sheâll do at this point.â I focus on keeping my breathing steady as I listen to Addison upstairs, turning on the faucet in the kitchen. Our voices wonât carry well, but if she wanted to, she could hear us.
Eli sighs as he nods his head and runs a hand over his knee.
I hated her father when I was a kid. I hated him for what he did to me. I hated him for letting me go alive. I hated him for what he did to my home and what he tried to do to my brothers.
But Iâve never hated him more now. Knowing when I put a bullet in his skull, it will kill her. I can already see how sheâll look at me. I can feel her nails dig into my skin as she claws at me. I can hear her screaming.
I can already feel his death tearing her away from me. Weâre hanging on by a single thread and itâs because of him. My jaw clenches and I breathe out low and steady, gazing at the molding that lines the stairwell even though I feel Eliâs eyes on me.
The silence stretches until I ask him, âWhat do you think of her?â
âOf Aria?â
With a single nod, I appraise his expression, his body language, his tone. Everything. I canât explain how whenever one of my men is by her or mentions her or her name, I canât explain how anxiety races through me. Sheâs my weakness and I want her to receive nothing but respect for her. Respect and fear.
But given everything thatâs happened, I donât think anyone knows what to think of her, or what to think of us.
âI think she has the heart of a lover and the temper of a fighter.â
âYou sound like a true Irishman,â I tell him as I huff a response to his answer.
With his asymmetric smirk, he adds, âI wouldnât want to be her enemy and I think the two of you⦠together, is something that will be feared.â
âI wouldnât want to be her enemy either,â I say flatly as my stomach knots and my throat gets tighter. But I am. And I always will be.
Itâs not her that makes it impossible to be together.
Itâs not me either.
We never had a chance. My gaze falls as I control the numbness that pricks along my skin. I wanted her so badly, I didnât dare look past the desire for her and see the challenges rooted in our very souls.
She may try to love me, but she will always hate me.
âYou think you know what sheâll do after tomorrow? When theyâre all dead?â he whispers his question and I nod, feeling the unbearable knot twist even tighter. With the media in an uproar, the cops arenât holding off for much longer. We promised them tomorrow would be the last day we needed them to stay on the west side while we invade from the east. A single bullet to Talveryâs head and his factions will fall.
Tomorrow, Iâm going to murder her father.
âI think sheâll kill me. And I think sheâll hate herself for it but feel it was what she needed to do.â Eliâs gaze falls and my stomach sinks with it. My fingers are so numb I have to clench and relax my hand repeatedly, but it doesnât work to bring life back to it.
âThatâs ⦠aâ¦â he fails to respond.
âIâm choosing to be her enemy and to take everything from her. It doesnât matter if she thinks she loves me.â The coldness spreads through my chest like ice crackling. âHate is stronger.â Iâm surprised by how strong and unforgiving my words are. âSheâll want revenge for what Iâm going to do. I would want it too.â
Eli looks over his shoulder and down the hall, toward Ariaâs bedroom. âIs that why you havenât gone to her?â
Not trusting myself to speak, I only nod. I canât look her in the eyes and confess how much she means to me, knowing how badly Iâm going to hurt her tomorrow.
I wonât do that to her. Iâm not that cruel.
Bang, bang, bang, bang!
Adrenaline spikes from my toes straight up through my core, freezing my body, then heating it all at once at the sound of guns going off in the distance. My grip on the railing is white-knuckled as Eli stands and speaks clearly into the device on his wrist.
âWhereâd they come from?â he asks, and I bring up the surveillance on my phone, all the while listening. It sounded like it came from blocks away and within seconds I can see two cars blocking the road and men leaning out of the windows.
âEast,â Eli answers but I already know. My heart pumps harder and the blood is fueled by the need to react. To grip the hard metal of a gun in my hand and feel the recoil again my palm after Iâve pulled the trigger.
I can hear the men screaming from down the street and the bullets firing as my blood heats. Three blocks at most.
A sick smirk begs to pull at my lips. I should have known Talvery would respond recklessly. Sending whatâs left of his men to their funerals.
The voices ring clear from Eliâs earpiece:
Shots fired on Main Street.
Four men on Abbey Road.
Two cars coming up Dorset.
âBlock off Fourth Street; make them come in on foot and donât hold back fire.â I give Eli the command and he repeats what I said word for word.
The guns sound off like fireworks and Addisonâs hard paces carry through the hall. Sheâs soon pounding on Ariaâs door.
Taking the stairs two by two, I grip the railing and get to her as quickly as I can. My lungs heave as I get to her door. âStay in there and lock the door. Donât open it for anyone but Eli.â All the words stumble out in a single breath and she looks at me for a moment, breathless and hesitant before nodding.
My heart pounds so hard, harder than it has in a long time. It takes me a moment to realize itâs due to fear. The very real fear of losing Aria.
âI wonât let anything happen to either of you,â I say and stare into Addisonâs eyes and wish they were Ariaâs. Sheâs just behind the door and Iâm drawn to her. My body aches knowing sheâs so close, but I refuse to go in there.
If I do, I donât know how Iâll leave her.
âStay in her room.â I barely get the command out, but Addison hears me. For a moment, I wonder if Aria heard me from behind the door. My songbird. The spiked ball grows in my throat as Addison opens the door before retreating behind it. She didnât say a word to me.
Not a single word.
Every muscle in my body is tight and at odds with what I need to do.
The muted sounds of a man screaming, and the continued gunfire is accompanied by Eli yelling out demands on the floor below us.
I try to calm myself and summon the ruthless side of me that will end this as quickly as it started.
The bullets ring out clearly. Automatic weapons that tear through the brick of houses and metal cars. Windows shatter and men yell out.
So, I move.
Quickly and with determination down the stairs.
My stomach clenches and itâs the first time I can remember where so much was at stake. Where my thoughts are torn between tactics and emotion.
Between fighting to steal the woman I love and running as fast as I can.
âBring up all the cars and block off every street,â I command Eli while bringing out my phone to text Daniel and tell him where Addison is. The last I heard from him, he was trying to get in touch with Marcus and find out anything he can about the fucker he killed back in Iron Heart.
My heart pounds, and my muscles coil as I listen closely to every word that comes in from the earpiece as I switch to the surveillance screens and watch everything unfold.
I need to move. Standing here is fucking killing me but I have to remind myself that this is war and decoys are common. I wonât be fooled like Talvery was.
Three streets on two sides are under attack, two on top of each other to the east and one furthest to the west of this house.
âThey hit three streets at once.â
âDo we have a count on how many men are firing?â I need numbers. Talvery canât have more than fifty men left.
Eliâs earpiece buzzes and it takes everything in me not to rip it out and take it for myself. âIt looks to be about thirty.â
âThey may be distractions, hitting the two sides and leaving the south side untouched. Donât move the men on the south side.â
âYes, sir,â Eli answers, speaking into the device.
âCount of our men,â Eli barks out the order before relaying what I said. I have fifty men to his thirty. Fifty well-armed and guarded but spread out.
Two men down.
One man down.
Weâre holding.
I stare at my phone, waiting for Daniel to reply, but I get nothing. Where the fuck is he?
âThree total, Boss,â Eliâs voice is tight as I grip the phone tighter and scream internally for him to tell me where the fuck he is. The cords in his throat tense as he rips the Velcro of his holster, moving it to the side and checking his ammo.
Three men dead.
Three more men dead.
âKill them all,â I grit out, feeling the rage turn incandescent. My head feels light as I take in a deep breath.
âYou and Cason stay with the women,â I give the command while my phone pings and Jase tells me heâs close and coming up the south side and he already told the guards there.
His jaw is hard and clenched, and I know he wants to be out there, but I need him here.
âYou two stay here.â I harden my voice and look him in the eyes until he nods.
Shoving my phone in my back pocket, I reach for my gun and then move past Eli to the back room where the other weapons are stored as he tells me, âYes, Boss.â
I need men with them who know when to leave.
The back room has shelves of guns and I choose from the racks of metal shining back at me, picking up one and shoving it and the ammunition into the waist of my pants before picking up another.
Talveryâs on the outer edge. Thereâs no way heâll get in and this entire ground is a safe house. But every safe house can be broken into. Iâve done it before. Sebastian knew that when he built this place.
With time ticking, and the bullets still firing every minute, I turn my back on the arsenal and prepare to join my men. I only stop to tell Eli one thing, âThe basement has an underground exit. The code is six, fourteen, eight, eight. Repeat it to me.â
âSix, fourteen, eight, eight.â Heâs quick to answer, but I can see the defiance in his eyes.
âDonât forget it, and if Iââ
âWe have enough men,â Eli cuts me off and I struggle to hold back the anger. âThereâs no wayââ
âIf I tell you to,â I say looking him in the eyes as my nostrils flare and my body heats with the need to strike back, âtake them and lock the door behind you.â
I donât wait for him to answer, although as I turn my back to him and head down the stairs, I hear him say heâll do it. The buzzing in my ears is like white noise as I climb down the stairs. Iâm ready with a gun in my right hand as I stare at the front door.
I pray Talveryâs here in the flesh and blood, ready to finally pay for all his sins.
âCarter,â Eli calls out to me as I reach the front door.
âWhat?â I snap at him, feeling the rage, the immediacy, the fear even of losing men and protection for Aria and Addison.
âYour estate⦠He sent men there.â Eli visibly swallows as my blood chills.
âMy brothers?â I ask him quickly, my breathing coming in short pants. The gun in my hand slips and I grip it tighter, praying and swallowing down my fear.
âJase said heâs coming,â I speak as I remember the text and Eli confirms with a brief nod.
âJase and Declan are together, theyâre on their way and missed it.â
Daniel. My heart beats slow, so slow itâs painful. âThree bombs hit the east wing. And another four to the south wing and the garage.â
âHow many men are dead?â The question comes out without conscious consent, all I can think of is Daniel and the last time I saw him when he told me he had plans with Addison.
âSix currently.â
âWhereâs Daniel?â I ask him, feeling the threat of a pain that can never be soothed brimming inside of me.
âWe donât know.â