Chapter 43
Alpha Loren Book 4
ELLA
Half an hour later, I was sitting on the wall outside Andreaâs house.
The driveway had filled with trucks and dozens of men, walking back and forth all with machine guns strapped over their chests and determined looks in their eyes.
In between making orders, Andrea glanced over to me and looked me up and down before thrusting the clipboard he was holding to the man next to him and coming over to me.
âWhatâs going on?â I asked as he sat beside me on the wall.
âYouâll see,â he said. âAll in good time.â
Of course, that was the answer. It usually was.
âCome,â he announced, standing up and holding out his hand. âI want to show you something.â
I looked up but didnât move. He raised an impatient eyebrow, maintaining cold eye contact, and I eventually stood up. Instead of taking his hand, I walked past him, which of course only amused him.
âBy all means, lead the way, Blanca,â he said. âTo the garden.â
I walked through the house to the back garden with Andrea following me.
Luciano was sitting on the patio, sharpening a stick with a knife. He looked up at me and smiled before lifting the stick up to his face and examining the sharp point.
There were three empty beer bottles on the table, which Andrea then grabbed before balancing them on the wall at the edge of the patio.
âYou ever shot a gun, Blanca?â he asked.
âNo,â I said.
He smiled before taking the gun that had been strapped around his chest off and holding it out to me.
âTake it,â he said.
He held it in both hands, the black metal gleaming in the sun and the weight of it tensing his forearms.
After a little more encouragement, I finally took it from him and stood motionless, completely unsure of what to do.
âThis should be goodâ¦,â Luciano remarked from behind us.
He let out a short laugh before stepping behind me and reaching around to guide my hands to the correct position.
âIf youâre gonna be in this cartel, Blanca, youâve got to learn to shoot,â he said.
âYou trust me?â I asked. âWhat if I shoot you?â
âYou wonât,â he replied confidently as he kissed my neck. âNow shut up and lemme show you what to do.â
He brought one hand underneath, toward the front, and the other to the trigger and kept both of his on top of mine.
âGot it?â he asked once I was steadily holding it.
I nodded, and keeping one hand still on top of mine on the gun, he brought the other to my waist and turned my body to the side.
âKeep both eyes on the middle bottle and pull the trigger,â he said.
I did as he said, but I was not greeted with the sound of breaking glass. Only the loud bang of a shot.
âHold it steady, Blanca,â he said, gripping my arms. âUse your strength and try again.â
This time I locked my eyes on the bottle and took a deep breath, keeping myself as still as possible. Andrea slowly let go of me and stepped to the side.
The bottle was brown glass and small, probably only a pint. From what I could tell, the label, although written in Spanish, read something about a tiger, and it was 7 percent alcohol.
I shot.
The glass shattered and crumbled to the floor in pieces.
âGood job, Blanca,â Andrea said, slapping a hand on my shoulder. âImpressive.â
He then walked over to the wall and crouched to pick up the broken glass.
His back was turned, and I still had the gun.
Slowly, I raised it and focused again. This time not on a glass bottle, but on Andreaâs head.
I momentarily glanced over to Luciano, who had noticed my advancement.
His eyes glistened as if they were encouraging me, begging me for the drama, while he sat relaxed in his chair, making no movement toward stopping me.
I could feel the courage bubbling inside me. He was turned, and there was still glass on the floor.
This was it. My chance.
My finger played at the trigger, feeling the simple piece of metal with so much potential.
Hands? Steady. Target? Close and stationary. Chance of missing? Low.
All I had to do was pull the trigger.
My target then got to his feet and turned to face me. Unsurprised by my position (aiming a huge gun right at him), he gave a dark glare.
âGo ahead, Blanca. Iâm unarmed. You have the control,â he urged, holding his hands up in a relaxed manner.
I kept it pointed at him as he stepped closer, a menacing grin creeping onto his face.
~Do it, Ella. Do it now.~
I lowered the gun, and he laughed shortly.
âAs I said, you wonât shoot me,â he said. âNow shoot those last two bottles and donât miss.â