The Chaos Crew: Killer Reign (Chaos Crew #4) – Chapter 4
The Chaos Crew: The Complete Series (Devil’s Dozen Box Sets Book 2)
I HELD myself still and calm in the back of the car as Julius parked by the diner where weâd arranged to meet his old military colleague. Blaze had managed to dig up Petrovâs contact information with his usual skill, and heâd agreed to speak with us. Well, with Julius and Talon, but Iâd insisted on coming along for additional back-up as well as to help with the questioning.
This guy had been part of one attack on us. He and whatever pricks he was working with wouldnât hurt my menânot again.
Blaze was watching the streets around the café from afar, ready to alert us if he saw any signs that the former soldier had brought company. Weâd chosen this spot partly because of the extensive street cam coverage in the area.
The diner was kind of dingy, not unusual for this neighborhood on the fringes of the city. Only one of the rickety patio tables was occupiedâby an elderly couple who didnât look like much of a threat. We scanned the nearby buildings cautiously through the car windows.
Julius frowned. âThis could be another trap. We reached out to him, but who knows what he did after that. The fact that he was involved in that first ambush means heâs not the same man I once knew.â
I touched the gun concealed at my side. âIf he makes one wrong move, heâll regret it.â
Talon gave me a grim look, but I thought I caught a hint of amusement behind his pale eyes. âI think we should try to avoid shooting anyone unless itâs definitely necessary. Weâve got to give him the benefit of the doubt. Why are we here otherwise?â
Julius nodded. âWary but open to listening. Weâre ready for whatever heâs got in store.â He sat up a little straighter. âHere he is.â
I recognized the man immediately as he came into view. He was nearly as tall and brawny as Julius, with tattoos that stretched up his neck and over his forearms. The shadows under his sunken eyes suggested heâd been dealing with stress, health issues, or drugsâor all three, for all I knew.
His gaze swept over the street just as ours had a moment ago. He looked as apprehensive as I felt. That reassured me a little. He wasnât trying to put on a show and lull us into a false sense of security. It seemed like he was worried about what we might do to him.
Julius checked his phone. âBlaze says the area is still clear. No sign that anyone else has come with him. Letâs go.â
As we got out of the car, Petrov was just sitting down at one of the larger tables at the opposite end of the patio from the elderly couple. He spotted us immediately, his posture tensing. I kept my own senses on the alert while we approached, watching for any indication that I needed to go on the attack.
The guy stayed rigid in his seat when we sat down across from him. He considered each of us in turn, his gaze settling on Julius. âItâs been a long time,â he said.
âIt has,â Julius agreed. âAnd our initial reunion didnât exactly go how Iâd have preferred.â
Petrovâs mouth curved into a grimace. âThatâs why you wanted to speak to me. I figured.â
Julius folded his arms over his chest. âSomeoneâs been working against us for a while now. It seems youâve gotten caught up in their agenda. Iâm hoping you have enough respect for me and the work we once did together to tell me what you can about your employer and what the hell is going on. Unless you went into this knowing youâd be trying to take me down.â
Petrov shook his head in a jerky motion. âI had no idea Iâd be seeing you until I was, well, seeing you. And it wasnât a happy sight. Thatâs why Iâm here. But Iâm not sure I can tell you anything all that useful. I donât know shit about the man who gave us that mission.â
âTell us everything you do know,â I said firmly.
Petrov blinked at me but turned back to Julius at the other manâs nod. âTechnically Iâm still working for the army. A bunch of us got assigned to this special squad, and every now and then we get sent on missions that arenât what weâd typically do. I donât think those orders are coming from within the military. My best guess is that someoneâs been buying off or otherwise getting some of the higher-ups under their sway.â
âWhat makes you sure itâs not internal?â Julius asked.
âWell, we never get any indication of the reason for the missions from the commanding officer who passes on the orders. I donât think he knows either. And like I said, theyâre not things weâd typically be doingânot within the armyâs purview.â
âLike what?â
âLike what happened the other day,â Petrov said. âWeâve had two other missions like thatâweâre sent in locally to attack small groups of what appear to be skilled criminals. With you, we were told to go in for the kill if possible, but with the others, they only wanted us to draw blood and then retreat. We were supposed to do that with your crew as well if we couldnât manage to take you down completely.â
Juliusâs deep blue eyes hardened. âAnd you did. Your guys cut up a couple of ours pretty badly. Why would they want that? Why would they want only that when it came to the other groups?â
Good question. I studied Petrov as he formed his answer. His forehead creased with what looked like honest confusion. I wished Garrison had joined us for this meeting tooâhe was the expert at reading people.
âI donât know that either,â Petrov said. âWe were instructed to keep all the blood on our blades and turn them in to our command for processing. They put the weapons in lab bags, but I have no idea where they took things from there.â
A prickle of apprehension ran down my spine. I rubbed my arm, remembering the scientist weâd had take a sample of my blood. Thatâd been for our own purposes, at least. Sheâd sequenced my DNA, and weâd then been able to match it to Damien Malikâs so I could find my birth family.
âCould they be testing it for something?â I said. âOrâif they planted it at crime scenes, they could frame people for things they didnât do.â
âEither of those is possible,â Julius agreed, his frown deepening. âI donât like the sounds of it.â
Neither did I. We knew the Blood Hunter was behind most of the attacks on the Chaos Crew. Probably he was the figure behind this one too, manipulating the army by whatever means he had at his disposal, which were clearly a lot. It would fit his name to be collecting criminalsâ blood, wouldnât it? And he always managed to stay several steps ahead of us. It didnât seem like this situation was any different.
What did he have in store for us next now that Iâd officially refused his invitation? His two-day deadline had passed last night.
I cleared my throat and focused my attention on Petrov again. âFrom the missions youâve been given with this special group, have you gotten any idea what the person behind them might want other than blood? What their larger agenda could be?â Surely the Blood Hunter hadnât bought or blackmailed his way into control over part of the army just so he could do a little DNA sampling. There had to be easier ways if that was his only goal.
âAll I can tell you is that heâs got to be someone with a lot of power,â Petrov said. âNot anyone Iâd want to go head-to-head with, so I wish you luck there.â
âAre there other squads like yours that might have been given different missions?â Talon asked.
Petrov splayed his hands in a helpless gesture. âI donât know about that either. They keep us mostly in the dark.â
âWhy the hell do you go along with all this, then?â I demanded. âStrange secret missions, attacking people you used to work with now⦠Why donât you walk away? Or expose them?â
Julius shot me a cautioning glance, but Petrov simply hung his head. âItâs a reasonable question,â he said, and ran his fingers over his thinning hair. âItâs been made clear to me by various methods that my family would be âpunishedâ if I go against my orders. If it was just me, Iâd say fuck it. But when I have no idea how much theyâd hurt my wife or my sonâ¦â
My stomach twisted with sudden understanding. Of course he wouldnât want to provoke a threat to his family. I should know better than anyone here how hard it was to face the possibility of losing your familyâitâd been hell for me even when that family had been made up of psychotic child-torturing lunatics.
I relaxed a little in my chair, letting my hand drift farther from my gun. This guy wasnât the enemy, not really. He was only protecting the people he cared about from an impossible situation. He hadnât wanted to attack us. It said a lot that heâd come here to talk to us at all with the threat to his family hanging over his head.
âIâm sorry for coming at you the other day,â Petrov went on, looking at Julius. âI donât think any of us on the squad really likes the position weâre in. If we saw a way to get out of it safely, we would.â
Julius inclined his head and stretched his arm across the table to shake his former colleagueâs hand. âI understand. The powers weâre up against have put us all in difficult situations. I appreciate you coming to share what you do know with usâI know even that was a risk.â
âIt was.â Petrov shook his hand quickly and stood up. âWhich is why Iâd better get going. I hope the little I could tell you helps you figure this out. Weâd all be grateful to be out from under this assholeâs thumb, whoever it is.â
He strode off down the street, and I walked with Julius and Talon back to our car. I stayed silent until Iâd dropped into my seat.
âDo you believe what he said?â I asked Julius. Heâd known the man the longest, so I trusted his judgment over my own.
Julius started the engine and pulled away from the curb. âConsidering we didnât have anyone shooting at us, Iâd say his story was pretty believable. It wasnât a trapâhe really did want to talk to us. He wouldnât have come to meet us if he didnât want to help us, especially when his familyâs safety is on the line.â
âHe sounded like he was being honest to me,â Talon put in. âBut he didnât know a hell of a lot.â
âTrue.â I rubbed my hand over my mouth. âCollecting blood from criminals. Manipulating army commanders. Itâs got to be the Blood Hunter behind all that, right? Everything else weâve been dealing with has come back to him.â
âFrom what weâve seen, he definitely has the resources to pull off something like that,â Julius said. âThe real question is, whatâs his master plan? Where is he going with this?â
Silence filled the car, undeniably ominous. Whatever the Blood Hunter was up to, it now felt way bigger than just a complicated revenge scheme against a single family. And knowing about his other activities and the global influence heâd claimed to wield, I had trouble imagining it could be anything good.
The ring of Juliusâs phone broke the quiet. He quickly tapped it, putting it on speaker phone. âWhatâs up?â
Blazeâs voice filled the car, and I knew something was wrong the second I heard his tone.
âYou need to get back. You wonât believe whatâs on the news now.â