The Chaos Crew: Killer Heart (Chaos Crew #3) – Chapter 10
The Chaos Crew: The Complete Series (Devil’s Dozen Box Sets Book 2)
I SHOULD HAVE KNOWN BETTER than to rebandage my wounds with the bathroom door even slightly open. I didnât think the minor scrapes and cuts were anything to fuss about, but after Iâd peeled off my shirt and paused to study the marks in the mirror over my shoulder, Dess peeked in.
âDo you need some help with those?â she asked, nodding to the ones on my back. âYouâll have trouble reaching them on your own.â
Blaze tsked his tongue from the room behind her. âDonât be shy,â he teased. âYouâre just looking for excuses to grope all those muscles.â
âOh, hush,â Dess said, rolling her eyes. I had a feeling sheâd have had a harsher retort if itâd been Garrison whoâd made the comment. Our hacker tended to bring out the softer side in all of us⦠just like our chameleon tended to do the opposite.
I looked down at myself and decided that patching myself up would go a lot faster with help, even if I didnât like to ask for it. Sheâd volunteered, after all. And I didnât particularly mind the idea of her hands on my muscles, whether Blaze had only been teasing or not.
âCome on in,â I said. âIâve already disinfected the ones I can reach.â
She slipped into the bathroom with me and positioned herself next to the stone basin that served as a sink, where Iâd set out my supplies. I applied fresh bandages to the minor cuts on my shoulder and my chest while she dabbed antiseptic cream on the marks down my back. They stung more now than they had when Iâd gotten them yesterdayâIâd barely noticed the swipes of the enemy knife in the midst of the surge of adrenaline thatâd gotten me through the fightâbut Dess kept her fingers light.
âYou have almost as many scars as I do,â she murmured.
I gave a faint hum. âAnd youâve had about half as much time to build your collection.â
âOh, I donât know about that. When did you start this kind of training?â
The words came out before Iâd thought them through. âThe earliest ones arenât from any kind of training.â
I hadnât meant to bring up my past. It wasnât something I liked to discuss with anyone, and I sure as hell didnât need to drum up sympathy from Dess of all people. But sheâd clearly caught my insinuation even from that brief statement.
Her hands paused over my broken flesh. âIâm sorry. I didnât know.â
âOf course you didnât,â I said. âHow could you have? It isnât important now anyway. And even with that, youâve still got me beat.â
I wasnât any kind of jokester, but I must have managed to work enough dryness into my voice that Dessâs mouth twitched with a hint of a smile. To my relief, she laid the subject to rest. Instead, she patted the polished stone of the sink as she reached for the bandages. âThis house is⦠interesting, isnât it?â
âYou mean the way itâs practically a cave?â
She snorted. âYeah, that part. Itâs a little closer to nature than Iâd generally prefer to live. I swear I saw a centipede as long as my hand run across my bedroom floor last night.â
âDonât tell me youâre afraid of bugs?â The thought of Dess, the famous Ghost assassin, being scared of anything that small and weak amused me.
âI wouldnât say afraid,â Dess said. âMore like disgusted. No living creature has any business growing that many legs.â
Her fingers brushed against my skin as she fixed the bandages into place, so careful to avoid putting any pressure on the wounds themselves. Even Julius with his medical training didnât offer this light a touch. Maybe the real contradiction was how such a skilled and ruthless killer could be so gentle when the situation called for it.
âI guess I can agree with you on that,â I said. If I saw a centipede in my room, itâd be mashed into the floor in two seconds flat.
âThere. I knew there was a reason I liked you. We can hate on bugs together.â
Dessâs tone was playful, but her touch stayed soft and careful. Something about the tenderness of her attentions brought an unfamiliar warmth into my chest. It unfurled further with each graze of her hands. I found myself closing my eyes, wanting to focus on nothing but her soothing presence behind me.
Iâd never had a woman look after me like this. Never had a woman who cared enough and understood my kind of life enough to want to. In that moment, Iâd have killed anyone who so much as looked at her wrong.
She was my woman. The rest of the guysâ too, but still mine. I wasnât used to this possessive sensation either, but it felt right somehow.
Some part of me wanted to bundle her up with all the same tenderness sheâd shown me and hide her away until all the danger that lurked in this city had passed. Be a shield between her and the rest of the big bad world.
But Dess didnât need that, didnât want itâand I wasnât sure I could be tender anyway.
âThere. All patched up.â Dess stepped back, and I turned to face her. Her brightly affectionate smile provoked a flutter amid the warmth that had filled my chest. A fucking flutter.
What the hell was I supposed to do with that or all these other emotions I wasnât used to feeling? My heart had been as much of a cave as this building was before sheâd come alongâan empty cave. And suddenly it was buzzing with way too much feeling that I had no idea how to adjust to.
One impulse rang through all the restâone thing I did know how to do. I was going to defend her every way I knew how, every way sheâd let me. And that included figuring out how much danger she was in from the man sheâd accepted as her father.
âIâd better see if Blaze is ready to head out,â I said.
Her smile dimmed a little. I didnât know whether she was more concerned that weâd find something damning about Damien Malik or that we wouldnât and itâd turn out weâd violated her familyâs trust unnecessarily. I guessed both made sense. Neither were impressions I associated with my own family one bit.
âRight,â she said, putting on her determined face. âYouâre ready to go.â
I didnât really have a clue how anything Blaze was planning to do at the Malik home worked. It was all buttons and wires as far as I was concerned. But I didnât need to know. That was his job, and mine was keeping watch and being ready to leap into action if he ran into trouble.
Sneaking around a large house with two people inside wasnât particularly difficult. But the Maliks didnât give us a problem even when they came outside. Iris Malik walked along the porch collecting old beach towels without even glancing toward the garden shed we were using for shelter. Her sonâDessâs teenager brotherâsauntered around the pool and then back into the house with equal inattention.
I grimaced to myself. One thing was obvious: Dess didnât have a lick of protection from the people living here. No wonder Damien needed professional bodyguards.
When Iris had left for work, leaving just the boy in the house, we slunk across the lawn to the back wall. Blaze stalked along the perimeter, holding a device that beeped faintly, while I peeked through the windows. Dess had told us where her brotherâs bedroom was, and we were heading in the opposite direction, but we wouldnât want to be spotted from the common rooms.
Blaze paused partway down the east side of the house, where the device had started beeping faster. He spoke under his breath. âThe routerâs around here.â He glanced up. âProbably on the second floor.â
I cocked my head as he pawed through his satchel for some other electronic box that looked almost the same as the other one to me. âAnd this is going to let you tap into their internet?â I murmured.
He nodded. âI didnât have the equipment to manage it beforeâand even now, I need to get this thing very close. Give me a lift?â
I moved without hesitation, bending down and offering my interlaced hands for a boost up. My muscles only strained slightly hefting the slim manâs weight. I raised him to the level of the second-floor window above us.
Blaze gripped the ledge for balance. Peering inside, he let out a soft whistle. âHoly cow. Theyâve got a whole games roomâthis kid has everything. Systems, special controllers, fancy sound system, the works.â
A whole room just for playing around? I wondered if the teenager who lived here had ever known a hardship in his entire life. Iâd enlisted in the military the second I was old enough, and he had what were likely the most expensive consoles piled recklessly in a room.
It wasnât anger that I felt, and it wasnât jealousy, but when I considered Dess being surrounded by this spoiled family, it just seemed⦠wrong.
âBingo,â Blaze said. âThereâs the modem and the router. No wonder I couldnât get into this thing without being closer. Itâs state of the art.â
I held him steady, keeping my ears pricked. Blaze got to work attaching his device, which was about the size of his palm, to the siding next to the window. Heâd painted it the same color as the siding ahead of time, and it was so small itâd blend in easily, especially tucked against the protruding frame. I barely noticed it when I looked up, and I knew it was there.
Would we find anything useful from his efforts? I wasnât sure I believed that the Maliks would say anything incriminating even in the privacy of their own internet network. They might not have been great at physical surveillance, but they struck me as awfully cautious about appearances, even with each other.
But this wasnât my wheelhouse anyway. Blaze thought the attempt was worthwhile, and heâd had plenty of brilliant brainstorms to earn the right to experiment.
The hacker was twisting another screw into place when he froze above me. I tensed too.
âShit,â he whispered. âThe kid just walked into the room.â
He flattened himself against the outer wall. I eased closer too, my pulse speeding up just slightly. Iâd have yanked Blaze down, but the thump of his landing seemed like more of a risk for drawing the boyâs attention than the chance that heâd crane his neck around looking out the window.
What exactly would we do if he did spot us? Two strange men forming a tower against the side of his house⦠There was no way it wouldnât be suspicious. Iâd been prepared to eliminate any guards who came at us, but Dessâs brother himself?
My stomach twisted. The seconds slipped by, both of us waiting in rigid silence. Then Blaze exhaled in a rush.
âHe went back out again. Iâd better finish this quick. Are you holding up all right down there, Talon?â
âIâve carried guns that were harder on my arms than you are,â I muttered at the slender man, and he chuckled lightly.
âJust have to get this last screw deep enough in so it stays in place⦠There.â He tapped a few buttons on the outside of the device and nudged my hand with the toe of his sneakers for me to lower him. As he hopped out of my grasp, he aimed one of his broad grins at me, his brown eyes sparkling.
âWeâre in.â