⦠ONE YEAR LATER
âWe havenât had a happy hour like this in years,â Leander says as he tosses a dart. An instant later, a garbled cry bounces off the concrete walls as the metal point lands in Robbie Usherâs cheek. A few more darts quiver in his face as he shakes with fear and pain. His sobs escape from the gag that stretches back the corners of his mouth to reveal his swollen, bloodied gums. His top and bottom teeth are gone all the way to his molars. Bleeding gums aside, the dart hanging from his lower lip looks especially painful. Naturally, that one is Leanderâs favorite.
So far.
Canât say this is the life I imagined for myself, pulling teeth with pliers and playing darts with some guyâs face in my bossâs basement on a Friday night. Who does, I guess? Come to think of it, I probably didnât spend much of my childhood imagining what I wanted to be when I grew up. I was too busy figuring out how to survive. I donât remember dreams of being a firefighter or a police officer or a teacher or anything at all. The most vivid daydreams I can recall were how to get away with murder. I even wished for it on my thirteenth birthday, when my brothers cobbled together enough money to buy ingredients to make me a cake.
And we all know what they say about wishes.
Leander offers me a fresh dart on his upturned palm. I stare at it. Swallow my distaste. Catch an irritated sigh in my chest. Try to keep my apathetic mask from slipping. But Leander Mayes has known me since I was seventeen, when he appeared like an angel in my darkest hour.
Little did I know that angel would turn out to be the devil in disguise.
âCome on now, Lachlan. You know how much I love darts.â
âRight â¦â I say, taking my time to raise my glass to my lips and down a long sip of water. Goddammit. I wish it was something stronger, but I learned the hard way to not indulge in Leanderâs extensive supply of thirty-year-aged whiskey on a Friday night when heâs in the mood for a âhappy hour.â Last time that happened, I came to three days later, stuffing my face with watermelon as I sat on a curb in Carlsbad, New Mexico, with literally no recollection of how I got there. New Mexico. Motherfucker.
Leander grins like heâs crawled into my feckinâ brain as I pick up the dart and toss it in Robbieâs general direction without taking my eyes from my boss. Judging by the clatter of metal against concrete, Iâve missed and hit the wall.
Leander sighs and drags a hand through his silver hair. His eyes twinkle with amusement even though he tries to look disappointed.
âYou know,â he says as he lays another dart on his open palm, âIâve always kept my promise to you. Iâve never given you an innocent person to kill. And you know as well as I do that Robbie is no saint.â
Heâs right. I do know. Iâve heard Robbie Usherâs name pop up over the years. My brother Rowan even brought him up once as someone he wanted to kill before the reckless little shit started his annual murder competition with Sloane and lost interest in drug dealer assholes like Robbie.
âYeah, I just prefer to get these things done and over with. Cleanly. Not like ⦠this,â I say, waving a hand in Robbieâs direction. When I glance his way, he tries to beg for freedom. Tears and snot collect blood in their rivulets as they streak down his pale skin. âMy job is a contract killer. Not a cleaner. Not a torturer.â
âYour job is whatever I need it to be.â
When I meet Leanderâs gaze once more, the amusement in his mossy eyes has burned away. Only a warning remains.
âAs I recall, the last time you forgot your job and your manners, it ran you into a little bit of trouble. I definitely donât recall instructing you to piss off one of our most valuable customers, did I?â
Though I often think I should be impervious to emotions like shame or embarrassment, sometimes they sneak up on me and burn in my cheeks. Just like now, when I remember the aftermath of the cleanup job he sent me to do last year on Halloween night. That particular contract shriveled up after that night, along with my hopes of getting out from under Leanderâs thumb.
And the part that annoys me the most? Iâm not even sure why I acted like such a prick to that woman whose mess I was sent to fix.
Maybe I was already annoyed that I had to leave Fionn behind at that goddamn party when he was a blubbering mess to do cleanup when that isnât my job. Maybe it was the way she acted like the death and chaos sheâd just caused were no big deal. Maybe it was even the fact that she was clearly injured when Iâd been told she was fine. She was definitely not fine. And that inexplicably made me almost as irate as being called out to scuba dive in dark and frigid waters on Halloween night. Iâm not really sure what it was that tipped me over the edge. I just know that Blunder Barbie slipped right under my skin. And I fucking let her. Worse still, she slipped away and I donât even know how.
I shake my head.
We stare at each other for a long moment before Leanderâs expression softens. He lays a hand on my shoulder, the other still holding the dart aloft like a precious offering.
âRobbieâs the one behind that latest batch of rainbow fentanyl that the cops discovered in a raid last week. Rainbow fucking fentanyl. He made his drugs look like candy,â Leander whispers, a dark melody that rings in my ears. Leanderâs brows raise as Robbie squeals his protests from across the room. âHeâs purposely targeting kids, Lachlan. And this time, he just happened to reach kids whose parents can hire the kind of people who will actually deliver justice where itâs needed the most. People like you.â
I turn my attention to Robbie as he struggles against the cable ties that trap his wrists and ankles to a metal chair. His wide eyes are not innocent. His muffled protests are selfish pleas, not words of remorse. Though I didnât bother looking up the details on Robbieâs latest escapades before we grabbed him, I know Leander isnât lying. He never does.
My eyes donât stray from Robbie as I pluck the dart from Leanderâs palm. Thereâs no need to turn and look at my boss to gauge his reaction. I can feel it. His smile is a breath against my skin before he steps back.
I take my shot. Robbie cries out as the dart hits his forehead and ricochets off bone to land in his lap.
âOof, good try. Almost a bullâs-eye. But Iâm winning,â Leander declares as he lines up to take his next shot. Heâs about to let the dart fly when a security alert dings through the speakers. We turn in unison to the screen hanging behind the bar. A rugby game is on mute and the security feed in the upper right-hand corner shows the front gate of Leanderâs estate. Thereâs an old Honda Civic waiting to be let in.
A second later, a call comes through to Leanderâs mobile. âLet him in,â he says in lieu of a greeting. He hangs up without a goodbye and I watch the screen as the gates open. The car rolls forward on the driveway, which snakes through pines.
I exchange my glass for my gun and stride toward the fortified basement door as Leander lets another dart fly. âBe right back,â I grumble. Robbieâs shrill cry snaps at my heels as the heavy steel slams shut behind me.
The silence in the rest of the house is a balm, soothing and sweet after suffering. The October sun is already so low behind the woods surrounding the house that all the expensive furniture and curated decorations are coated in shadow. Leanderâs wife and teenage kids are gone for the weekend. Even the security guards are keeping their distance. Sometimes, the boss wants to pretend heâs just a simple guy with an uncomplicated life. The kind of guy who has a few beers on a Friday night. Has fun with his tools. Orders some takeout. Maybe plays a round or two of darts.
But in his typical high-functioning psychopath style, Leander puts a bloody spin on pretty much everything he does.
I open the front door and keep my gun hidden behind the thick mahogany, the muzzle pointed toward the kid. At Leanderâs house, one can never be too careful.
âOne pepperoni and one meat loverâs?â he asks as he checks the receipt.
My stomach flips uncomfortably. Pizza is never a good sign. Leander is always better behaved when itâs Thaiâhe doesnât like to waste the good food. âSounds about right.â
When Iâve tipped the kid and locked the door behind me, I holster my gun and take the boxes back down to the basement, casting a longing glance at the wall clock as I go. Nearly five-thirty. Thank fuck I have an excuse to get the hell out of here tonight.
Robbie has three more darts stuck in his skin when I enter the room.
âFuck yeah. Iâm starving. This is a sport, you know,â Leander says as he tosses a dart in a high arc, probably in the hopes of getting it stuck in the top of Robbieâs head like a little flag. It lands in his thigh instead, the metal point lodged deep, the sound of our captiveâs distress a grating accompaniment to the music that plays through the speakers mounted on the walls.
A headache surges behind my eyes. âMmhmm.â
âHard work.â
âYeah, youâre really breaking a feckinâ sweat there.â
Leander grins and follows me to the counter of his copper bar where I set the boxes down next to the blood-spattered pliers and discarded incisors. âHungry?â
âShockingly, not at all.â
âJust one slice?â
I shake my head. âSaving myself for tonight.â
âAh yes. Is Rowan all set for the grand opening of his new Butcher & Blackbird place?â Leander opens the box of pepperoni and pulls a slice free. My molars clamp together like they do every time he mentions my brothers by name. Leanderâs never been anything but kind to them on the rare occasions when heâs come face-to-face with my boys. But kindness is an insidious mask. A lure in the dark. Iâve seen the grotesque creature that lies behind the pretty light.
âAs ready as heâll ever be.â
âWish him luck for me, yeah?â His grin is luminous as he takes another bite of pizza and washes it down with a long sip of beer. âTwo restaurants. Whoâd have thought youâd all be where you are now. Rowan a successful chef. Fionn a fucking doctor. And you with your own studio. Bet you never could have imagined it that first day I found you boys.â
âYeah,â I say, my voice thin as the haze of memory descends to battle with the present.
âI still remember it like it was yesterdayâRowan some gawky teenager with blood running down his chin. Looked like something from a zombie film. At first I thought heâd bitten a chunk out of Fionn until I realized Fionn was stitching up Rowanâs lip with a fucking sewing needle.â
I nod, or at least I think I do. Leander keeps talking, but I donât really hear him.
The memory is untarnished. Itâs like Iâve stepped into that moment. Every image is so sharp. So clear. I can recall every detail, from the minute to the monumental. I still feel the phantom throbbing beat in my fingertip that had been sliced off. I can see the precise shade of crimson that poured from a deep slice through Rowanâs upper lip. I picture Fionnâs face as he pulled the thread through the torn flesh, the concentration in his eyes. I remember the way the moonlight poured through the window and reflected off the broken shards of glass and the last of my motherâs porcelain plates scattered on the floor.
And most vividly, I recall my fatherâs lifeless body lying at my feet, my belt wrapped around his neck, one end still curled around my sticky, shaking fist.
Rowan had turned to me, the thread pulled taut between his split lip and the needle clutched in Fionnâs fingers. His eyes were soft, so soft that I realized that maybe it was the first time Iâd ever seen him relaxed. âYou can let go, Lachlan,â heâd said as his gaze flicked down to my hand.
It was only a moment later when Leander strode in and changed everything, even the things that had already been irrevocably changed. That belt was still wrapped around my fist. And when Leander looked down at me, he grinned.
â ⦠and then Rowan said, âI swear it was almost an accident,â and I thought, yeah, these kids are all right,â Leander says with a low chuckle. I blink away the memory, realizing I missed part of what he was saying â¦
⦠and all of what he was doing.
âWhat in the feckinâ hell are you making?â
Leander takes a slice of meat loverâs pizza and stuffs it into the blender where a first slice is already folded, grease and condensation smeared across the glass. âSmoothies.â
I look from the pizza box to the blender and back again. âWhat?â
âSmoothies. You know, drinkable food.â
âA ⦠pizza smoothie â¦?â
Leander simply grins as he pours half a can of beer into the blender.
âWhy?â
âRobbie doesnât really have teeth anymore. How else is he going to have a last meal?â Leander shifts his attention to Robbie, who cries in his chair. âDidnât anyone tell you that candy will rot your teeth out, dickhead? Speaking of which â¦â
Leander slides the teeth off the counter and onto his waiting palm before he plops them into the blender and turns it on. The beer froths. The melted cheese sticks to the glass. It takes a few stops and starts, but eventually he gets the mixture whipped into a thick, bubbly brown paste.
âFeckinâ Christ Jesus. That is truly horrific.â
Leander shrugs. âStill just pizza and beer, but with extra calcium.â
âDidnât he have a gold cap on one of them?â
Leander sloshes the mixture around and peers into the jug, but thereâs not much to see in the brown sludge. âYeah, he did. So, itâs got fancy calcium. Anyway, Iâm sure it tastes pretty much the same.â
âDoubtful. You should try it. Test your theory and let me know.â
âFuck no,â he says on the heels of a barked laugh as he pours the mixture into a pint glass. âI have a thing about teeth.â
I groan and Leander cackles again, clearly delighted with himself. He runs a hand through his silver hair and then rummages in drawers behind the bar until he pulls out the funnel with a sound of triumph. âChrist Jesus, man. Iâm leaving.â
I turn on my heel but donât make it even a step away before his words stop me dead.
âYou know, kid, I could make you stay.â
I stare at the door for a long, unblinking moment before I pivot to face Leander. Heâs still smiling as he walks past me with the funnel in one hand and the full glass in the other. But thereâs always a threat beneath his bleached smile and the creases that fan from the corners of his eyes. Thereâs a predatory edge to Leander that cuts through that mask like a razor.
Leander jerks his head toward Robbie in a bid for me to follow, and I do. âGood thing Iâm all benevolent and shit. I wouldnât want you to miss your little brotherâs special night. And I definitely wouldnât want him spitting in my meal the next time I pop in for a visit. Word is that while he might have scaled back on his Boston Butcher theatrics around town, heâs still a bit unhinged. I understand he was recently up to no good in Texas with that girlfriend of his. Thatâs where they went, right? Texas? And ⦠oh, where was it before that â¦? I remember now. California. Calabasas, specifically. And West Virginiaââ
âWhat do you want from me?â I snap.
Leander grins. âJust hold him steady.â
With a flash of a lightless glare, I step behind Robbie and press my palms to either side of his head. He trembles in my grip.
âOpen wide, fucker.â Leander pushes the end of the funnel past Robbieâs gag. Robbie tries to thrash free of my grip, but thereâs no escape. âLast meal down the pipe. Did you know the Nelsonsâ kid had to be tube-fed after he ODâd on your fentanyl candy? This is kinda the same thing,â he says as he pours the first thick dollops of pizza smoothie into the funnel.
âNot really the same at all,â I grumble over the sound of Robbieâs gurgling cough.
âClose enough.â Leander pours more mixture in, but it only ends up dribbling from the corners of Robbieâs mouth. A frustrated sigh leaves my psychotic bossâs lips. âHeâs not swallowing it.â
âCanât imagine why.â
âItâs just pizza and beer, Robbie.â
âAnd teeth.â
âJust imagine itâs protein powder. Come on, man. Down the hatch,â Leander says as he tries again. Robbie whimpers and whines, but still doesnât swallow. A petulant sigh leaves my bossâs lips as his shoulders fall. âPinch his nose.â
âHard pass.â
âThat wasnât a question, kid.â
âLeanderââ
âDo it, Lachlan, and then Iâll let you head off to your party.â
Our eyes lock for a moment that feels endless.
I could snap Leanderâs neck. With one punch to his throat, I could crush his trachea. I could shove the heel of my palm into the base of his nose with a satisfying crunch. Or I could take the easy way out and shoot him. Leave him to bleed across the floor like so many others before him who have found themselves in his basement on a Friday night.
But revenge for my betrayal would be swift and merciless. His equally batshit brothers would hunt me to the ends of the earth, just like I would do for mine. And their vengeance wouldnât start or end with me.
My fingers curl around Robbieâs nose and pinch it tight.
âThe Nelsons wanted him to suffer like they have suffered. This is not torture, Lachlan. Itâs not murder. This is justice,â Leander says, his eyes not straying from mine as he fills the funnel.
This time, Robbie has no choice but to swallow. Not all of the liquid makes it down his throat, of course. But Leander doesnât stop, not until the pint glass is empty. And even then, he keeps his unwavering stare on me.
When heâs satisfied, Leander gives a single nod.
I release Robbie from my grip, whip my gun from its holster, and shoot Robbie in the head.
The pressure and pain behind my eyes subsides now that Robbieâs gurgles and sobs and pleas no longer drone on around us. Itâs just the music, and now the steady drip, drip, drip of blood that falls to the floor.
I slide my gun back into its holster. There can be no threat when I let my next words loose between us. âI want to retire.â
A slow, predatory grin creeps across Leanderâs face. âYou donât say,â he says, turning his back to me. âIâm totally shocked.â
âLeander, Iâm grateful for everything youâve done for me and the boys. Covering our asses back in Sligo. Bringing us here, setting us up. You know how much I appreciate it. Iâve put in the years to pay it back, you know I have. But this â¦â I say, trailing off as I cast a glance down to the slumped body next to me. âI donât think I can do this anymore.â
Leander lets out a deep sigh as he sets the glass and funnel next to the sink and turns to face me. âIâm going to be straight with you, kid. I always am.â
I nod when he raises a single brow.
âWhen you pissed off Damian Covaci last year, that didnât just kill our contract with him. It had ripple effects on other contracts as well when gossip spread in certain circles. And you know what, kid? That pissed me off.â
Blush crawls into my cheeks. âSo I acted like a feckinâ eejit one time. This seems extreme.â
âYou put a Covaci in a fucking trunk, Lachlan.â
Shit. I really did.
Leander leans against the counter and folds his arms across his chest. He might be closing in on sixty, but heâs still built like a brute, and his thick biceps strain against the confines of his black sweater. âWe talked about this. Like it or not, weâre in the customer service business. You should know what that means, you do it every single day at your studio. If some client comes into Kane Atelier to buy leather saddlebags for their motorcycle or some shit and they piss you off, are you gonna lock them in the fucking closet? Chrissakes, I hope not. Because that would be terrible customer service.â
âSo, what, Iâve gotta keep doing this indefinitely?â
Leander shrugs. âUnless you magically find a way to fix the damage you caused, yeah. I guess so.â
A suspended moment lingers between us. Leander might feign disappointment in me, but sometimes I wonder if this mistake of mine worked out to his benefit, even if the jobs tapered off like he claims. As though he can see these thoughts turning over in my mind, Leander pivots away before I can read too much into his expression.
âGo on, get out of here,â he says as he cracks open a fresh beer. âSay hi to the boys for me.â
I wait for him to meet my eyes, but he doesnât.
Without another word, I stride away. The steel door slams shut behind me with a reverberant thud.
I leave Leander behind.
But I know Iâll never really get away.