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Their Cartel Princess: The Complete Series: A Dark Reverse Harem Box Set

Page 107

by Logan Fox


  “Bravo, come in for fuck’s sake!” Finn yelled into the radio. “Over!”

  “This is Bravo,” came Bailey’s staticky response. “What’s going on, over?”

  “Might have a lead on Lars. Checking the back of the kitchen, over.”

  “Need me to get there, over?”

  “No. Stay where you are.” He gritted his teeth. Worms moved under his skin. His eyes were agitated. And his beast had long since began pacing, claws tick-tick-ticking over the basement of his mind. “But if I don’t check in after five minutes, then you get down here. Over.”

  “Roger that. Over and out.”

  Finn clipped his radio back on his belt as he pushed open the door leading outside.

  Full night had fallen, hardly dispelled by a full moon and a light dusting of stars.

  “Lars?” Finn bellowed, scanning what little he could see. There was a light on outside the kitchen’s back door, but it highlighted little more than the front of an overflowing dumpster. “Lars!”

  He moved to the left, but a wall soon cut him off. He turned back, about to head back inside the kitchen.

  Lars had probably come outside to smoke a joint. Maybe the waitress had not seen him come back inside and cut through the kitchen. It was fucking busy in there, how could she? He had to be inside—probably jiving on the dance floor. He loved dancing after he’d smoked; said it was almost as good as getting high and fucking.

  Pale moonlight gleamed off something, catching Finn’s attention. He narrowed his eyes, stepping to the right.

  There, in a tangle of weeds on the other side of the chain-link fence spanning the hotel’s perimeter, lay an empty bottle of soda water.

  “Lars?”

  Finn hurried forward, and ducked his head around the corner.

  His heart sunk into his feet, which was why they were suddenly so heavy and clumsy that he half-fell, half lunged forward.

  Lars lay on his side, one hand outstretched, the other trapped under him.

  Motionless.

  Skin as gray as moon dust.

  Bailey cracked open his sixth beer of the evening. It was weird; whenever he turned around, a waiter came by with a tray of his favorite brand and paused to offer him one.

  Then again, it was a popular brand.

  Five minutes, Finn had said. It had been less than two, but he already felt edgy. Maybe it was the crush of people around him, although he’d never had an issue with crowds before.

  Either way, he had to get back to Cora. He took a long sip from his beer as he walked toward the crowd on the dance floor. Shouldering his way inside took some effort, but eventually he’d made it far enough in he should have been able to see Cora and Ana.

  His stomach tightened when he didn’t see her at first. His casual saunter through the crowd gained momentum, until he was shoving people aside, his heart beating furiously.

  And then Cora popped up out of nowhere, like she’d been crouching on the floor. He was still about three yards away from her, but relief made his fingertips prickle.

  “Fucking hell,” he muttered to himself as he again headed for her.

  Where was Ana? Shit, had the girl gone and left Cora alone?

  But no…Cora wasn’t alone.

  As he came closer, he saw a man standing in front of her, his back to Bailey. Cora was talking to him, gesturing furiously.

  A brave cocktail girl made her way up to Cora, and held out a bottle of tequila. Cora made a shooing gesture toward the man in front of her, and then tipped her head back so the waitress could pour a shot into her mouth.

  It looked like the last shot too; when someone beside Cora asked for a drink, the waitress shrugged and wriggled the bottle.

  What the hell?

  When he glanced back at Cora, it looked like she was dancing with the stranger. Not like she and Bailey had—Cora flush against him so he could feel every curve of her body—but a foot away from each other.

  This brought him to a stand. He’d been gone less than a minute, and she was already dancing with someone else?

  Confusion surged up inside him, but he stamped it down with ruthless determination.

  Why the hell was he surprised? She’d made it damn clear that despite loving him she was happy to make him share her with two other men. And he’d been okay with that. Fuck, he’d been ecstatic that she’d ever consider him as anything more than a hired gun.

  But this?

  Dancing with a stranger? What was next?

  Bailey’s hands bunched into fists. People bumped into him as the music grew frenzied, but he hardly noticed.

  As much as he wanted to walk away, to leave her there with her new friend and never look back…he knew he couldn’t.

  He’d be happy to have just a sliver of her, if it meant he could be with her. It was fucking ridiculous—he was a grown man—but it didn’t make it any less true.

  His heart ached for her love, even if that love was just a fragment of the whole.

  Fuck, maybe it was all he deserved after his betrayal. But that wouldn’t stop him kicking the living shit out of the guy who thought he could try and make a move on her.

  He surged forward, but a crackle from his radio made him pause. He hurriedly unclipped it, raising it to his ear.

  His imagination?

  How much time had passed?

  “Mike, this is Bravo, come in!”

  The DJ decided it was the perfect time to drop the bass.

  “Milo, can you hear me?” He held the radio to his ear.

  “…get…Lars…fucking…”

  Cora was facing the DJ box now, arms in the air, yelling. The man behind her was standing a few paces away, but he wasn’t looking at her anymore. Instead, he was scanning the crowd.

  Of course; he’d probably mistaken Cora for someone else. She wasn’t the only woman with a sugar-skull painted on her face; he’d seen a handful of other girls wearing similar makeup and outfits tonight.

  “Hold on,” Bailey yelled into the radio. “I can’t hear you, over.”

  He shouldered his way out of the crowd again, ignoring the cusses thrown his way.

  When he reached the outskirts, he radioed in to Finn again. This time, the man’s reply was clearly legible.

  “Man down! Get Cora the fuck out of here!”

  The beer fell from Bailey’s fingers. He spun back, this time sending party goers sprawling to the floor if they didn’t move out of his way fast enough. Shocked cries and angry yells traced his path of destruction through the crowd.

  He fought his way to where he’d last seen Cora.

  She wasn’t there.

  “Cora!” He didn’t care if anyone heard. He had to find her. “Cora!”

  Bailey spun around, rising to his toes to give him as much height over the crowd as possible.

  But he already knew what he’d see.

  Cora was gone.

  24

  Blue Tequila

  Eleodora Rivera turned away from Kane, dismissing him as if he was begging for change. His lips thinned, anger rippling its way through him. He grabbed her arm, spinning her back to him.

  “It’s rude to turn away a gift on your birthday,” he said, talking over the music.

  “No it’s not,” the girl countered with a scowl. “Go away.” She gestured at him to leave with a rough sweep of her hand, as if irritated by his presence.

  But it wasn’t annoyance brimming in those pretty eyes.

  Oh no.

  Eleodora Rivera was scared. Scared of him. Scared of his insistence. His obsession.

  She’d expect her bodyguards to deal with people like him. But now she was alone, stranded in a sea of people that didn’t know who she was.

  Who didn’t know who he was.

  That was the problem. If she knew who he was, she wouldn’t be acting like this. She’d be even more terrified. He wanted to smell the sickly-sweet aroma of terror on her skin. Just the thought made his dick harden. How would she sound, whimpering as she pleaded for him
not to turn her in?

  Mother Mary have mercy, he couldn’t wait to find out.

  A cocktail waitress wearing a fanciful mask popped into their small clearing. “Want some?” she yelled, grabbing Eleodora’s arm and showing her a bottle of tequila.

  Eleodora glanced at the woman, and then at Kane. “Yeah, I need it,” she yelled back. She shooed him away with her hands and tipped her head so the woman could pour a shot in her mouth. It was a brand he wasn’t familiar with; the bottle was dark, almost black, and had a sugar skull on its label, but no brand name.

  Some of that blue tequila trickled down the side of her mouth. Eleodora swiped at it with the back of her hand, smearing her makeup even more.

  She turned away from him again just as the music swelled and crashed over them in an ephemeral wave of energy and vibration. She sprang up, yelling at the DJ box. Kane caught her arms, yanking them down. Then he slid a hand around her waist and dragged her against him.

  He doubted she could feel his erection through the many layers of her skirt. Pity—that would have terrified her even more.

  Lifting his mask to the top of his head, Kane brushed his lips against her ear. “I don’t like your attitude, Eleodora,” he murmured.

  She tried to look at him, but he grabbed her chin and forced her to look forward.

  “I think it’s best we go somewhere quiet, where we can talk.”

  “Fuck you.” She jutted her elbow into his stomach. Then her stiletto crunched down on top of his shoe.

  The elbow to his belly hurt more than the blow to his foot, but he released her in surprise. An instant later, she was gone, slipping away through the crowd like a fish disappearing between seaweed.

  Kane inhaled deep. A thousand different smells came to him; sweat, deodorant, shampoo, tequila, cigarettes, weed, new clothes, body lotion.

  But her unique scent hung in the air like a tracer, and he followed it through the crowd.

  He caught up with her a few seconds later, when she’d just broken free from the crowd and had swung back to see if she’d lost him.

  Her eyes went wide in shock when he stepped out of the throng of dancers, sliding his mask off his face as he drew near.

  “It is you,” she said, taking a step back and tripping over her dress. She would have landed on the floor if he hadn’t caught her.

  A few party goers looked over, but he waved them away with an apologetic grin. Repeatedly swiping a stiff hand in front of his throat, he made the universal gesture for ‘she’s had too much to drink.’

  And that was all it took to get everyone to lose interest.

  Leaving him alone in the shadows with the intoxicated capo of the El Calacas Vivo cartel.

  25

  Spread your legs

  Cora tried to pull herself free from the man’s grip, but he held on despite how she tugged. She sagged, her legs suddenly too heavy and clumsy for her to walk with.

  This was the drunkest she’d ever felt, and she’d only had two glasses of champagne. And a shot of tequila, which had burned her throat like liquid fire.

  The man from the restaurant slid an arm around her waist, maneuvering her into one of the alcoves studding the ballroom. It was furthest away from the bar and the crowd, but much closer to the DJ box. Here, the music was so loud that it made her clothes shiver against her body.

  Something soft under her—a booth—and then a warm body flush against her urging her deeper inside the dark well.

  “Who are you?” she asked, when she should have been yelling for help. But, for some reason, she didn’t feel in danger. Not right now. Her body was warm, the air fuzzy and thick around her. Like a hug.

  “Simon,” the man said, speaking into her ear.

  Simon says, ‘spread your legs, bitch.’

  Cora laughed.

  Simon gave her a quizzical look, his brown eyes glittering as a strobe light caught them.

  He snatched up her hand, feeling her pulse. Then he leaned close, thumbing back her eyelids in a smooth, practiced motion.

  “How much have you had to drink?” he asked, his voice different now. No longer soft and sensual, but brisk and business like.

  She’d preferred the man who’d dropped to one knee with a gift in his hand. If he hadn’t done it in the middle of a crowded dance floor, letting everyone in the vicinity know who she was, then she’d have accepted it.

  It would have been the first present she’d received today. The first present in the last ten years that hadn’t come from her father.

  She held out her hands, cupping her palms. “Give it,” she said, but the words came out soft and slurred. She giggled, and ran her hand down the man’s chest. She’d seen him put the box back in his pocket, but she couldn’t remember which one.

  Clumsy fingers couldn’t hold their grasp, and her hand slipped into his lap.

  He was hard.

  Her hand flinched away, but he grabbed it back and lay her fingers over his dick, urging her to stroke him through his suit pants. He slid closer on the bench, and took the gift box from his pocket.

  “Looking for this?” Simon asked, his mouth right by her ear.

  His voice had gone soft again. It sent a shiver through her.

  He drew her hand off his lap, and levered open the lid of the box. In the darkness, she couldn’t quite make out what was inside, but when cool metal brushed her skin, she knew it was jewelry.

  “Thank you,” she said, her mouth garbling the words into something unintelligible.

  Simon tugged at the bracelet as if to make sure it was securely closed. Then he turned concerned eyes back on her.

  “What did you take?” His voice was stern again.

  She shrugged, and then shook her head. No, she hadn’t taken anything, had she?

  Had she?

  Dios Mio, he was so much hotter than she remembered. Flawless skin, thick long hair, and such intelligent eyes.

  Simon ducked his head, and pressed his mouth to hers. A shock coursed through her, sending a warm, tingling wave between her legs.

  What the hell was she doing?

  Cora tried to push away, but she had no strength in her arms. Simon deepened their kiss, forcing his tongue into her mouth, sucking at her, urging her to respond.

  Was she having an out-of-body experience? Because things were happening that she had no control over.

  This was wrong. This guy could be DEA, FBI, anything, and she was sitting here making out with him?

  But it didn’t matter how tumultuous the thoughts were racing through her mind; she just got wetter and wetter.

  Simon pulled back, panting into her mouth. “Christ,” he murmured into her ear as he grasped roughly at her breast. “I should be arresting you. But all I want to do is fuck you.”

  His words sent an electric whip over her skin. Cora’s back bowed, pushing her breast firmly into his hand.

  Then her body went numb.

  Panic made her heart flutter in her chest.

  “What’s…wrong…?” she asked.

  Simon drew back, blinking at her in sudden confusion. He touched the corner of her mouth with a finger, and then looked deep into her eyes.

  “You’ve been drugged,” he said, putting his mouth by her ear.

  Her heart should have started pounding. Instead, she laughed.

  Who would drug her?

  No…Who wouldn’t?

  Her men had known this party was a bad idea, but she’d pressured them into accepting it because she’d wanted to prove to everyone that she wasn’t scared, that she wouldn’t back down.

  “You…” she tried to imply.

  “Christ, no,” the man said. Simon drew away from her and began backing out of the booth. “Let me see if I can find someone to—”

  A silhouette blocked his path. Vaguely familiar.

  Hope soared through her.

  And then crystallized a second later when light flashed on the side of the person’s face.

  Neo.

  He had to see
she was in some kind of trouble. He would help her, wouldn’t he?

  Neo stepped aside and gestured. She recognized both men who stepped from the shadows; Santino because he wasn’t wearing a mask, and Miguel because he was still wearing his terrifyingly lewd devil’s mask.

  Santino grabbed Simon by the scruff of his neck, dragging him out of the booth. And then they were gone, and it was Neo sliding onto the seat.

  She hadn’t moved, because she couldn’t.

  Neo lifted her hand from the table, laying it over his palm and patting it. He gave her a mirthless smile before leaning closer.

  “There’s someone I’d like you to meet,” he said.

  26

  Possible Suspect: Dreamy

  “Hey, wake up!” Finn patted the side of Lars’s face with his hand. Lars’s head rolled to the side, his ear on his shoulder.

  He was out cold.

  Finn gritted his teeth, hoisted Lars to his feet, and swung his arm over his shoulders. He dragged Lars around the corner, flung open the kitchen door, and wrestled him through the bustling crowd. As soon as one of the waiter staff saw them, people began asking if they could help.

  “We’re fine,” Finn snapped, turning around so he could back out the kitchen door.

  Halfway up the ramp that led to the ground floor of the hotel, Bailey arrived at his side.

  Finn stared past him, waiting for Cora to emerge from the corridor they were headed toward, but she never did.

  When he turned furious eyes to Bailey, the man broke eye contact, deciding instead to grab Lars’s other arm and swing it over his shoulder.

  “Where is she?” Finn craned to see past Lars’s bobbing head.

  “She was dancing,” Bailey said, refusing to make eye contact, “and then she was gone.”

  “Gone?” Finn climbed out under Lars’s arm. “Take him to the den,” he said, stabbing a finger down the corridor to where they’d met with the dealers earlier that night.

  Bailey went without another word, but at a much slower pace than Finn had. It wasn’t that Lars was heavy, but the man was so tall that it was difficult to get him around corners.

 

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