He never did tell meâ¦
I realized that as I stood there clutching my motherâs diary in my hand. When weâd left the diner, before Tobias collapsed, Nick had promised to tell me the reasons why Mom had handed me over to those sick fucking pieces of shit. But as I stood there, holding the small leatherbound notebook, I realized he never hadâ¦
As the words blurred on the page in my hand, now I wished he never had.
I swallowed hard, trying to find my voice, only to whisper. âBreeding program.â I lifted my gaze to Nickâs sad stare. âThatâs what I am?â
âNo.â Caleb shook his head. âThatâs not what you are. All that is, is how you came to be.â
âThey were bred, Caleb,â I whimpered, and lifted the journal. âMy mother, other women, they were bred.â
âAnd if they had the chance, theyâd do the same to you,â Caleb added.
Youâre a natural.
A natural.
A natâ
The kitchen spun, blurring under the savage rush of my panicked breaths. Oh, Godâ¦oh, Godâ¦
âEasy.â Tobias gripped my arm, shooting a savage glare Câs way. âA little bit of fucking tact, huh?â
âTact wonât give her answers,â Caleb bit back. âAnd it sure as hell wonât keep her safe.â
Tobias shook his head as anger burned in his stare. âAnd you think scaring her half to death will?â
Caleb turned away, raking his fingers through his hair, his unbuttoned crumpled white shirt flapping as he turned, and paced the length of the kitchen counter. âFuck, this is a mess.â
I thought it was a lie.
That it was all some sick, twisted lie. But it wasnât, was it? Not only wasnât it a lieâ¦it was far worse than Iâd thought. âI donât know whether to throw up, scream, or get drunk.â
âWe can try all three at once if you want,â T muttered beside me. ââCause that sounds like an average Saturday night out partying to me.â
I let out a bark of laughter, shooting him a glare. âWay to crack a joke at a time like this.â
There was a quirk at the corner of his lips as he gave a shrug. âHey, it worked, didnât it?â
I was about to give him a jab in the ribs, but Nickâs phone vibrated on the counter. Then what little laughter I had inside me died away in an instant. Nick glanced at me, then pressed the icon on his phone, putting it on speaker. âWeâre here.â
âMy guys are almost there to pick her up.â Ben Rossiâs deep growl echoed huskily through the phone. I doubted heâd had a second of sleep. âThought Iâd give you a heads-up.â
Nick stared at me, then reached out, his finger hovering over the phone. âThanks. Keep us informed.â
âWill do.â
I surged forward. âWait!â
Nick stilled from ending the call. My heart hammered, my chest was tight. âCan you stay on the line?â I asked. âI just want to make sure sheâs safe, thatâs all.â
âRyth,â Nick cautioned.
There was a sadness in his stare. One I didnât need to see right now. âIâm not getting my hopes up,â I muttered. âI know what she did was wrong. But if thisâ¦â I lifted the diary. âIf this doesnât speak volumes as to her state of mind, then I donât know what does.â
âShe seemed fine when she had them abduct you from that warehouse,â Nick growled.
âShe also seemed fine when she shot our fucking dad,â Tobias snarled.
I flinched at the words. After Tobias told us what had happened that night, I couldnât believe it. Thatâ¦murderer wasnât the woman whoâd given birth to me, whoâd raised meâ¦whoâd cared for me. She was a stranger. AâI gripped the diary in my handâby-product of vile men.
Hate seethed in the kitchen, making goosebumps race along my arms. I hugged my body as Benâs voice came again. âLet me call my men on the other phone. Iâll put them on speaker and as soon as we have her, then you can rest easier.â
He knew. I didnât understand how, but he did. âThank you,â I whispered.
I waited as sounds filtered through the phone, until the voices of other men echoed. âYeah, weâre coming up on the Pier now.â
âDo you see her?â Ben asked.
âWeâre lookingâ¦thereâsâ¦â his man started.
âWhat the fuck?â Ben snarled.
Nick snapped his head up at the sound. âWhat is it?â
âI just got a goddamn text from a private numberâ¦thereâs been an explosion.â
âWait!â his manâs voice cracked through in the background. âWait, WHAT THE FUCK!â
Crack!
Crackâ¦crackâ¦crack crack crack.
I flinched at every sound. Panting breaths consumed me. âWhat is it? Whatâs happening!â
âNick!â Rossi roared. âGet the fuck out of there NOW!â
Crack!
I stared at the phone on the counter, but the screen was dead nowâ¦the call disconnected.
Crack!
âWhat the fuck?â Nick snapped as a blur of movement came in the corner of my eye from behind me.
I spun as Tobias whirled around, and found three men dressed in black and wearing balaclavas striding toward us with their guns raised in the air.
Crack! The shot rang out as Caleb lunged sideways. Tobias was savage, pushing in front of me, protecting me with his life as the men spread out, each one of them going for my brothers. But it was the middle one who shifted the gun in his hand, taking aim at Tobiasâs head.
Until Nick unleashed a savage roar, vaulted clear across the kitchen counter, and kicked the gun from the attackerâs hand. Crack! The shot went wide, hitting the counter next to me. There was a second where Tobias jerked his gaze to mine, then found the bullet hole, then turned back to the asshole.
âYou fucking bastard!â he screamed and lunged, driving his fist into the black mask. âYou almost hit her!â
Thump!
Thump!
Crunch!
Rebelâs savage snarls came from around the corner of the dining room. Her black lips were curled back, and rage shone in her midnight eyes. She lunged at the attacker as he lashed out at Nick, sinking her fangs into his leg. He bucked with the pain, kicking out. But there was no way she was letting go. If anything, she held on even tighter, thrashing her head from side to side.
âThe fuck!â Nickâs gunman screamed.
They were an unmerciful blur of fists and balaclavas and a savage pup who was my brotherâs protector. I shoved away from the counter and stumbled backwards as all three of my brothers fought for our lives. But I wasnât running. No fucking wayâ¦I was done with thatâ¦I was so fucking done. I rounded the edge, moved into the kitchen, and grabbed one of the butcher knives from the block instead, then turned back to them.
They were here to abduct meâ¦
No. They were here to kill themâ¦
I gripped the knife tightly and plunged back around as grunts and snarls and the sickening sounds of fists on flesh followed.
âShoot this motherfucker!â one of the attackers roared.
Nick was throwing fists, then swept out his leg to take the gunman down. But he was so focused on Tobias that he took a fist to the jaw. He stumbled backwards, then went down himself, while the other man went for Tobiasâs wounded leg.
âIâm gonna kill you!â Tobias roared. âIâm gonna fucking kill you!â
Crack!
A gunshot rang out, deafening in the space. I gripped the hilt of the knife and searched the walls to see where the bullet had hit. But it hadnât made a hole, not in the walls or the counter. Instead, Caleb tumbled backwards, blood blooming neon red at edge of his shoulder.
Theyâd shot him.
Theyâd shot Caleb!.
Something savage unleashed inside me. A feral, uncontrollable rage justâ¦snapped. I lunged across the dining room and drove the knife through the air as Caleb stumbled, trying to stay upright. The gunman snapped his head toward me. But it was already too late as I plunged that wicked point right into him.
The blade carved deep, sinking steel into flesh until there was no more steel left.
Numb, I stared down at his middle, where the glint was swallowed by black, then lifted my gaze to his. There was a stunned widening of his stare as the grunts and howls of my brothers came behind me.
âRyth!â Caleb grabbed my arm, tore me away, and pulled me behind him. âYou fucking touch herâ¦â he warned. âYou fucking touch her and Iâll kill you.â
But the gunman just looked down and stared at the big knife embedded in his middle, then he gripped the hilt and pulled it out. Wait! The cry ripped through my head. But thatâs where it stayed. The idiot jerked the knife free, carving upwards and all I could hear in my head was Tobias as heâd showed me just where to stab. Jerk it up, little mouseâ¦do more damage that way.
And it did do more damage.
Crunch.
Crunch.
Thud!
Tobias lunged, driving himself between us and the man whose blood began to flow out from under his black shirt to enlarge the pool of his blood already on Benâs beautiful floor. âGame over,â Tobias snarled, wrenched his fist backwards, and unleashed it right into the manâs face.
Nick joined us a second later as the gunman dropped to the floor. âWe have to go.â
âWhere?â I whispered, staring at all the blood. âWe have nowhere to go.â
Nickâs phone vibrated on the kitchen counter where weâd left it. He crossed the space, grabbed it, and answered the call. âYeah?â
There was a second of sickening silence, where the only sounds were the choked off crackle of escaping air and the slick sound of dripping blood. I donât think I really heard that, or maybe it was my mind playing games. Still, I was rivetedâlike we were all riveted to Nick as he turned pale and muttered, âWhat the fuck?â
âSpeaker!â Caleb demanded as he lurched toward him.
Nick lowered his hand instantly and hit the speaker icon. âSay that again, Ben.â
âSomethingâs gone down at The Order. Thereâs been an explosion. Jackâ¦Jackâsâ dead, right? Dadâs dead. âEscaped and headed this way.â
I jerked my gaze upward. All three of my brothers stared at me as the mafia boss kept talking.
âRyth, honeyâ¦thereâs no easy way to say this, but your momâs dead.â
Momâsâ¦dead?
âWhen my men turned up, so did three men from The Order. They killed her, right there in front of my men. They opened fire, but by the time they got there, it was too late.â
It was too lateâ¦too late. My knees trembled, but Tobias was there, wrapping his arm around my waist, holding onto me like I was about to become adrift.
âBut her dad is alive,â Nick insisted, drawing me back to the only flicker of hope I had left.
âYeah, and heâs on his way here.â
âHow the fuck did they get him out?â Caleb stepped closer and braced his good hand against the counter.
âHow the fuck do you think?â Tobias snarled next to me. âItâs Kingâ¦King, who seems only too happy to help him, as long as he can get to Ryth.â
I flinched and jerked my gaze to his. Those dark brown eyes sparkled with malice. âHeâs not getting anywhere near you, little mouse,â he promised. âNo one is.â
âThen weâre heading your way.â Nick gripped his phone and turned toward us.
âTake the back roads,â Ben warned. âCall me when youâre close.â
âWill do,â he acknowledged, then ended the call.
I looked down at the blood that had almost reached my bare feet and flinched, before pushing into Tobias. He followed my stare, then pulled me away.
âIâll get the car started,â Nick growled. âYou get the guns.â
âHurry, princess,â Caleb urged. âGrab your clothes and weâre out of here.â
But I turned on him, searching body. âYour shoulder.â
He looked down, the smear of blood on his shirt hadnât grown. âIâm okay, just a flesh wound. Grab your things, princess. We have to move.â
Fuck the things. âRebel?â I searched the space, finding her sitting near the end of the counter, panting hard. I lurched forward and dropped to my knees beside her. âYou okay, girl?â I ran my hands over her head and gently searched her body. âDid you hurt yourself? Did you tear a stitch?â
âIn the car, princess,â Nick snapped, gathering our attackersâ weapons and searching their bodies. âIâll get the dog.â
I pushed upwards as my pulse boomed in my ears and snapped me out of it. âYouâre right. Iâll be quick.â I didnât bother to look behind me as I rushed for the stairs.
âFive seconds, Ryth!â Nick roared behind me.
Five seconds. Five damn seconds. I took the stairs two at a time and the deafening sounds of heavy steps behind me closed in. Strong hands around my waist lifted my feet from the stairs and thrust me faster up to the first floor.
âHurry, little sister.â Tobias gently shoved me forward.
But he didnât follow me. I didnât slow long enough to see where he went, just raced to the room Iâd been sharing with my brothers and grabbed every piece of clothing I could find before yanking on jeans, boots, my bra this time, and a shirt, then grabbed my jacket.
I wasnât five secondsâ¦but I was damn fast.
I stumbled out of the room, finding Tobias waiting at the stairs with a heavier duffel bag filled with guns. Corded tendons strained in his neck with the weight. Still, he motioned me first, leaving me to slip around him and race down the stairs.
The heavy throb of a carâs engine beckoned. We were heaving our bags into the rear in a blur of movement, climbing into the carâ¦and tearing away from the Rossi house.