The Chaos Crew: Killer Beauty (Chaos Crew #1) – Chapter 10
The Chaos Crew: The Complete Series (Devil’s Dozen Box Sets Book 2)
EVEN FIRST THING in the morning at this time of year, the roofed backyard was hot enough to send sweat trickling down my back. I wanted to pace to let out my restless energy, but walking around only made the heat more uncomfortable.
Nothing was as uncomfortable as the tension between the four of us, though. I couldnât remember the last time that the Chaos Crew had been so divided in our opinions, but a pretty girl and an angry client seemed to bring out our different moral compasses.
âToss her to the client, and let him handle the little thief. Wiping our hands of her will be the best thing we could do,â Garrison said, shaking his head. âWhatâs she worth to us anyway?â
âIt doesnât matter what sheâs worth,â Julius said evenly. âItâs a question of whatâs justified. If we believe her story, then she barely had anything to do with the job. It might look worse for us to admit someone got past our surveillance to see the scene of the crime. And whoever hired us for the job, theyâre not likely to want witnesses walking around.â
Despite what he was saying, I could hear the doubt in his words. Dess could be a threat to us as much as to the client, depending on how much exactly sheâd seen. Julius put the security of the crew above all else.
âIf we believe her,â Garrison said in a scoffing tone.
âShe hasnât acted as if she knows we had anything to do with it,â I had to point out. Dess hadnât exactly warmed up to us in the past day, but we hadnât given her much of a chance to. She hadnât seemed scared of any of usâthe opposite, really. Iâd rarely seen anyone less nervous when faced with Talonâs physical prowess and icy gaze.
Garrison grimaced at me, which meant he couldnât argue against that specific statement. That fact didnât stop him from going on, though. âYou heard her. She stole from her friend after finding her dead. Do we really want a chick like that sticking around?â He took a swig from his morning mug of hot cocoa.
I didnât know how he didnât end up as wired as I was with all the sugar and caffeine he put in his system. The guy downed the stuff like an insomniac chugs coffee.
Talon grunted. âIt didnât sound like she had another option. Desperate people do desperate things. But that applies to how she might act with us too. Sheâs unpredictable.â
Talon would go along with whatever Julius decided in the end, but heâd want to come to that decision quickly. The guy always preferred to deal with potential threats as swiftly as possible.
âExactly,â Garrison said. âAnd the client is breathing down our necks. If itâs those necklaces and the cash heâs after for whatever reason and he finds out we kept them from him, itâll be our heads on a platter. Weâre just seeing the job through.â
What he said made logical sense. I couldnât deny that. But something in me balked at his suggestion anyway. The same something clenched up when I saw how pensive Julius looked as he rubbed his jaw, as if he was seriously considering Garrisonâs suggestion.
Dess had a quality to her that I couldnât quite put my finger on, but it intrigued meâmaybe because I couldnât identify it. She wasnât like any other woman Iâd ever come across, and Iâd made the acquaintance of quite a few in my time.
I wasnât thinking just with my dick, though. She might have been mysterious, but I didnât think she was an enemy. Sheâd done what any of us would have done when trapped: fought to escape. Her story was tragic but understandable.
If we threw her to the client, heâd almost definitely kill her. How would we be any better than the asshole boyfriend sheâd finally escaped?
I cleared my throat. âWe all know whatâll happen to her if we hand her over. Sheâs going to end up dead, and possibly tortured plenty before then. All because she ended up in the wrong place at the wrong time? I thought we only hurt people who deserve it.â
âIt wouldnât be us hurting her,â Garrison said with a twitch of his jaw that indicated he wasnât as indifferent to Dessâs fate as he was pretending. âWould you rather we handed ourselves over instead?â
The sneer in his voice would have raised most peopleâs hackles. I knew it was just Garrison being his usual arrogant asshole self.
âWell, personally, Iâm confident that I can defend myself if the client tries to pick a fight,â I replied evenly, deliberately poking at him with the words. The implication was, of course, that he wasnât so sure of himself.
Garrisonâs eyes flashed, and his jaw tightened even more. âWhy would we put ourselves in danger if we can avoid it?â
I shrugged. âWhat part of our code makes using an innocent girl as a shield an acceptable approach? Or are you in favor of throwing out the whole code now, just because she made you feel incompetent?â
âWe think sheâs innocent,â Garrison retorted. âDo we really know her?â At the edge that came into his voice, I knew Iâd hit another solid blow.
It was way too easy heckling Garrison. Heâd never drop his mask completely, but he couldnât put on a total front with us. We might not know all of each otherâs dirty secrets, but we knew the biggest one that mattered right now, the one we were all mixed up in. It was good for him to remember that.
Besides, Julius was listening. I was mostly talking for his benefit.
I shot Garrison a wide smile. âI think I know her better than I know you.â
His mouth snapped shut. It only took him a few seconds to loosen up his posture, taking a deep breath and regaining his composure. âThen Iâm doing the job Julius hired me for well.â
âEnough,â Julius ordered, raising his hands. We both fell silent, our attention turning to him. He frowned, and then tipped his head toward us. âWe donât know how true her current story is. We also donât know if those necklaces are even what the client was worried about. Acting without informationâor with the wrong informationâis what screws people over. Weâll take her to the mansion today and see how she reacts to the crime scene.â
Talon frowned. âThe client could have eyes on the place now.â
âThe client doesnât know who we are or what we look like,â Julius said. âWe can play it cool, just walking by. We wonât stick our necks out too far, but weâll see what she gives us. If she puts one toe out of line, sheâs gone.â
Garrison sighed but nodded. Talon rubbed his hands together as if he was ready to get going immediately. Relief coursed through me. I didnât know whatâd happen to Dess after today, but Iâd convinced Julius for now. Which meant I had a little more time to figure out that intriguing part of her.
âDo we have any leftover pasta from dinner last night?â I asked, springing to my feet. My stomach had been growling for the last half hour, and I couldnât wait any longer. Carbs were the fuel for the energy I couldnât help expending even when I was sitting stillâwell, relatively still.
Juliusâs mouth curved into an amused grin. He gestured me toward the door. âItâs in the fridge. We all know better than to get between you and your noodles.â
I snorted and trotted down the steps to the safe-house apartment. When I reached the fridge, I paused, the door to the bedroom weâd stuck Dess in drawing my gaze.
Our guest deserved some breakfast too, didnât she? Although somehow I suspected pasta first thing in the morning wouldnât be to her tastes.
I strolled to her door and knocked, turning the lock in sync.
âWhat?â she said, sounding alert enough to reassure me that I hadnât woken her up.
I peeked inside. She hadnât turned on the overhead light, so the only illumination came from the small window at the top of the wall. Dess sat on the bed at the edge of the stream of sunlight, one leg crossed and the other pulled up next to it, providing her chin a place to rest. She considered me with obvious wariness. Her long black waves cascaded down her arms and brushed her raised leg, where her toned muscles showed through the fitted sweats.
With legs that looked like that, Iâd fight for her to stay here forever.
âGood morning,â I said. âI thought you might like some breakfast. Come out whenever youâre ready.â
Leaving the door open, I ambled back to the kitchen, dumped the garlic chicken linguine onto a plate, and shoved it into the microwave. By the time Iâd finished tapping on the controls, Dess had emerged into the main room of the apartment.
She glanced at the other guys, whoâd just come back in, and then at me. âI wouldnât mind breakfast. What are you offering?â
Iâd already looked through the cupboards. Steffie updated our safe-house stashes on a quarterly rotation, so while we didnât have much of anything fresh on hand, there were plenty of non-perishable options. âSince Iâm assuming youâre not a weirdo like me who would eat pasta ten times a day if I could, thereâs pancake mix, frozen waffles, and a couple different kinds of cereal.â Weâd thawed the freezer milk for the latter yesterday.
Dess cocked her head. âCereal sounds fine. Point me to it, and Iâll get it out.â
Sheâd learned to be cautious. Did she realize that weâd drugged her before, or was it force of habit? Sheâd still been shaken up by the accident when sheâd accepted that mug of cocoa from Garrison yesterday.
I appreciated her sense of self-preservation even if it worked counter to our goals. As the microwave beeped, I made a quick motion. âOn top of the fridge. Bowls are in the cupboard beside it. Help yourself.â
I grabbed my linguine, sat on a stool at the far end of the island, and started shoveling down my fuel, pausing to savor the first bite. I might eat it mainly for the energy boost, but I enjoyed a well-prepared plate all the same.
As Dess contemplated the two boxes of cereal and tentatively poured herself some of the nut-laced, not-so-sugary kind Julius favored, Julius and Talon drifted over. Julius took the cereal box after Dess finished with it, and Talon grabbed a smoothie heâd mixed earlier out of the fridge. Watching him chug it, I held back a grimace. Iâd seen what he put in those things, and Iâd sooner have licked the lawn out back.
Garrison sat on the sofa, watching us as he nursed the rest of his cocoa. Sometimes that was all he put in his stomach until lunch.
Dess perched on the stool a few feet over from me, braced toward the edge as if she thought she might have to spring off it at any second. I didnât need Garrisonâs skills with body language to pick up on the signs that sheâd needed to be on guard a lot in her life before now.
She ate a couple of spoonfuls, chewing slowly and thoroughly. Her gaze dropped to my leg, which was doing its typical bounce against the rung of the stool.
âDo you ever sit still?â she asked, not with the snarky tone Garrison would have used but like she was genuinely trying to understand.
Iâd spent my entire childhood being chastised for my restlessness, but I wasnât that kid anymore. I had better things to worry about.
I flashed her a smile. âRarely. It helps me focus. All the energy I need to power this brain ends up filtering down into my body too, and Iâve got to let it out somehow.â
She cocked her head again as she chewed. I liked the hint of playfulness that came into her face at that angle. âI guess that makes some kind of sense.â
âAbout as much as Blaze ever does,â Garrison had to remark. We both ignored him.
âI find many good ways to put it to use,â I said, letting a teasing note come into my voice. I wasnât going to turn all my charm on a woman whoâd just fled an abusive relationship, but a little light flirting couldnât hurt. Maybe itâd make her feel better knowing at least one man could appreciate her without beating up on her at the same time.
âFeeling better today?â I added. I took another bite of pasta and motioned to her wrist.
Dess let out a soft chuckle. âI feel kind of like I was hit by a small train.â
Her tussle with Julius and Talon yesterday wouldnât have helped her healing, but she didnât sound upset about it.
âNot a large one?â I joked.
âA large one would have finished the job,â she said dryly.
A laugh I didnât have to force tumbled out of me. Dess didnât strike me as a woman who put much stock in being funny. She seemed like she lived a serious life with serious problems, but she obviously didnât let it get her down too much. I liked that about her too.
âWell, Iâm definitely glad you didnât meet one of those, then,â I said.
âNo? It seems like Iâve messed with your job quite a bit.â
âAw, totally worth it to have a pretty face like yours around instead of only having these lugs in sight.â I winked at her and gulped the rest of my pasta. Even a heaping plate always seemed to vanish so quickly.
Dessâs posture tensed. Maybe Iâd said something thatâd reminded her of her boyfriendâs comments. I chucked my plate and fork in the dishwasher and came back to lean against the island a little closer but not too close to her. âBut hey, having a new voice with new thoughts in the mix is an excellent addition to the crew too.â
She relaxed enough for a sly glint to come into her eyes. âDoes that mean youâve considered my offer to check out the crime scene and see if I can help?â
âThatâs Juliusâs call. Iâll let him talk to you about that. But I can promise you that I have no doubt Iâd enjoy your company.â
She gave me a bemused look as if she wasnât sure how seriously to take me. âYou hardly know me.â
The words echoed Garrisonâs pointâmade with much darker intentionsâso well that I had to counter it. âWell, everything I know, I like.â
Just then, a strand of her hair slipped from behind her ear to drift across her face. I reached automatically to tuck it back, my fingers just grazing her cheekâ
Dess moved so suddenly I didnât have time to so much as catch my breath. One instant I was touching her face, the next sheâd lunged forward to shove me against the edge of the island, one forearm smacking the center of my chest and the other hand at my throat. There was no humor at all in her eyes now, only fury and⦠and something behind it that looked more like panic. The faintest tremor ran through her limbs against my body.
âKeep your hands off me,â she snarled, her voice somehow soft and yet full of the promise of death at the same time. My pulse stuttered. All at once I was sure she could kill me in the space of a second if sheâd really wanted to.
âGet your hands off Blaze, or you wonât be around to have any opinions on what he does with his,â Julius said with just as clear a threat in his tone. Heâd whipped up his gun from where heâd taken a seat at the corner of the island, and he aimed it at Dess. Talon had drawn his as well. I couldnât see Garrison in my current position, but the click of a safety from several feet behind me told me that for all his snark, heâd leapt to my defense as well.
Dess jerked her hands back to her sides, with a wince as her braced wrist brushed her side. I stared at her for a moment before yanking my gaze away. The other guys gradually lowered their guns.
âI donât want him touching me, or any of the rest of you either,â Dess said tightly, her gray eyes smoldering like embers. Then she sat back down on her stool and picked up her spoon as if she hadnât just pinned me against the countertop like I was a fifty-pound child.
My throat didnât even hurt, but my pulse was still racing. Someone had definitely hurt Dess beforeâbad. But she had more capacity to deal out hurt than Iâd given her credit for too. I swallowed hard and stepped away.
Iâd spoken up for her. I really hoped that hadnât been the wrong call.