Devil Mine: Part 1 – Chapter 1
Devil Mine: A Dark Cartel Romance (London Underworld Book 1)
âCan I be the one to kill him, Diablo? Itâs been almost a week since I had to load a new clip,â Marco says, knee bouncing frantically as he caresses the handle of the nine-millimeter pistol resting on his hip. âIâm getting a little twitchy.â
I shift my gaze from where I was staring out the window at the passing river Thames over to my trigger-happy lieutenant sitting across from me in the back of the Rolls. I unwrap one of the cinnamon candies I always have on me and pop it in my mouth, moving it to one cheek.
A humorless smile pulls at my lips.
Marco has the youthful exuberance of an unbroken mare and the bloodlust of a cage fighting pitbull. Heâs barely restrained at the best of times, when potential violence isnât being dangled in front of him like a red handkerchief in front of a bull.
That handkerchief is flying front and center right now.
âYou can kill him when heâs paid me back in full.â
Marcoâs leg bounces even more agitatedly as his grip tightens on his gun. His jaw flexes and his lips purse into what might be labeled a pout if he was a teenage girl and not a ruthless hitman.
When my father assigned him to me as my personal guard a little over a year ago, he didnât warn me that Iâd have to spend quite this much time managing Marcoâs anger at being ordered not to kill someone.
All things considered, heâs been exactly the type of lieutenant I needed when establishing the cartel in new territory â violent, depraved, and psychotic.
His bloodlust rivals my own but he lets himself be blinded by it, his hotheadedness routinely getting him in trouble. Together, weâve razed London to the ground, both in a bid to expand our territory and in search for much needed answers.
Next to me, Arturo clicks his tongue against his teeth and glares at Marco in reproach. He dislikes Marcoâs unbridled style and the lack of deferential respect he shows me as his jefe.
If anyone else spoke to me with such obvious defiance, Iâd put a bullet between their eyes.
Transparently, I thought about doing just that in the early days of him working for me, but the value he brought to my life in sheer entertainment alone made that decision a hard one to make.
Plus, the psycho turned out to be tirelessly loyal, as well as having a penchant for getting the job done with a flair for the dramatics much to the horror of our enemies, so he got to keep his brain intact.
Arturo likes to complain about him but even he has a soft spot for the younger lieutenant, although heâd rather sheer off one of his own fingers than admit it.
A little over a year ago, they were both part of an elite group of lieutenants sent by my father to scout new territories across the globe for potential expansion, so theyâve worked closely together for a while now.
Perpetually with a scowl on his face and a reproving word on his tongue, my second in command is outwardly in complete opposition to Marco. Heâs more restrained, not so overt in his brutality and much more cerebral.
Heâs been instrumental in helping establish an offshoot of the da Silva cartel from where my father started it in MedellÃn, Colombia to where we finally decided to expand; in London, England, where Iâve been based for the past year.
At first glance, Arturo is easy to underestimate. With his glasses perched on the tip of his nose and his paunchier belly, heâs often mistaken as the cartel accountant.
That misjudgment gives him a massive yet unnecessary advantage â by the time our enemies realize their mistake, heâs already relieved them of their heads. His violence might lurk beneath the surface, but heâs as vicious as Marco and I.
He was my fatherâs man before he was mine and Iâve known him since I was nothing more than a prepubescent boy. Heâs one of a select few people I trust implicitly.
âAlways wanting to kill first and solve problems later, cabrón,â he chides. âHow about you focus on the objective?â
âNow why would I do that when I know you get your rocks off worrying enough for the rest of us?â Marco quips with a playful grin. He points at his forehead. âYou should be careful, you know. Those lines in that dome of yours get any more pronounced and youâll have to get Botox. Maybe while youâre there you can ask them to do a little mouth lift to curl those lips of yours into a smile one of these days? Just a thought,â he adds helpfully, putting his hands up in a picture of innocence.
âHijo de pââ Arturo starts, lunging across the space to grab Marco.
âStop,â I order, grabbing him by the collar and throwing him back in his seat. âEnough.â My voice drips with ire, making them both freeze.
Marcoâs leg instantly stops bouncing, halting the almost physical urge I had to plunge the blade Iâm toying with into his thigh so as to bring an end to the annoying habit.
âArturo is right. He doesnât get to die until heâs repaid every penny he borrowed from us,â I grind out between clenched teeth. âDoesnât mean I wonât let you send him a message,â I add.
Marcoâs eyes snap up to meet mine, a barbaric shine twinkling in his eyes at my concession.
Itâs an easy one to make.
People donât get to default on payment to the da Silva cartel and get away with it. And the man weâre on our way to pay a visit to is about to understand that.
I twirl the knife in my hands between restless fingers.The sharpened tip digs into my index until a trickle of blood erupts from beneath my skin and flows down my wrist.
I notice it but donât feel it.
Pain doesnât register in my brain. Iâve been numb for years, my tolerance unusually high, blunted by uninterrupted bloodshed. My body is a canvas of healed bullet holes and cauterized stab wounds to illustrate the wars Iâve won. I display them as proudly as I do the tattoos that cover over half of my body.
As the Rolls ambles slowly through the busy streets of London, my mind wanders back to my arrival here.
London was such a perfect location for us that the scouts had come back from their mission with a common message â the choice was obvious. It was a massive international city, close enough to a coast with plenty of legitimate shipments coming in through which to divert attention away from us, and, importantly, an entry point to the rest of Europe.
But it was also highly contested territory with almost every gang, mafia, cartel and criminal enterprise fighting for the same fucking land, the same money, the same power, regardless of global legitimacy or not.
The da Silva cartel had the weight of being the largest criminal network in the Americas behind it. Once weâd run out the competition in the North and South, weâd looked to the East for expansion.
We announced our presence in London subtly, by blowing up over five hundred kilos of imported blow from various sources. Italian, Armenian, Russian, English, it didnât matter.
Thiago da Silva was here and they needed to know it.
Since then, weâve had to fight for every square inch of the new territory weâve acquired in Europe. Itâs been a hard-fought year of blood and mud and sweat and death.
And Iâve loved every fucking minute of it.
The adrenaline, the rush of a plan going tits up.
The surge of excitement when eliminating an enemy, whether a single man or an entire fucking army.
Of their screams as they beg for mercy and I give them none, of laughing in their faces as I rip their throats out and bathe my hands in their blood, of them dying by my hand.
Theyâve all come to fear me now, the one they call âEl Diabloâ, and they should.
The European arm of the da Silva cartel is mine and mine alone. My father remains in Colombia overseeing that part of the business while I continue to grow my empire here.
Iâm a king who doesnât sit on a throne. The minute I get comfortable in this leadership position is the minute Iâll get my throat slit.
Comfort is the enemy of ambition and the manic feeling violence gives me fuels me to newer heights. I wonât stop until Europe is completely ours.
Completely mine.
The reputation weâve cultivated since being here of being completely ruthless and merciless is one I fully embrace, born both out of necessity when establishing ourselves against more legacy players and out of a purely visceral need for vengeance.
Because the real reason Iâm in London, beyond the opportunity, the money, and the power, the reason I campaigned for this to be the base of our expansion and not another city, is very simple.
Iâm going to find Adrianaâs body, and I donât care if I have to burn the entire fucking country down to do it.