by Zoey Parker
Because Toro was a coward and an idiot, but cowards and idiots still got in lucky shots. A lucky shot could take him out; Milo wasn’t immortal. He didn’t want the mother of his baby to have to watch that.
Maybe he wouldn’t die. Maybe he’d make it through all of this. Maybe the whole thing wouldn’t be some kind of insane game.
He couldn’t leave her behind, not now. Live or die, she’d never forgive him for it. He had to see this through, no matter what came of it. No matter how much either of them was hurt. She’d made her choice; now they’d go through it.
There was an abandoned warehouse on the outside of town. Somehow, it was always an abandoned warehouse. Tess woke up then, slow and soft, rubbing the sleep out of her eyes as she straightened up. She watched the last few miles roll by, eying the GPS as they got closer and closer to their destination.
When they were nearly there, she said, “What’s the plan,” sounding exactly like some guy with a crew cut in an action film.
He bit back a laugh. “It’s hard to know without having a better understanding of the building and its layout,” Milo said. “I’m not sure. I need to go in quiet and dark, and frankly…” He swallowed hard. He hadn’t said it before, not like this. “I love you, Tess, I think you know I do, but it would be best if you stayed out of this. I know why you want to be here, and I know why the house didn’t feel safe to you on your own, but you’ll slow me down, and you might even give away my position.”
“I know how to be quiet,” she said, indignant, and then bit her lip.
He nodded. “Quiet isn’t the same as silent. It’s not the same as stealthing or skulking or whatever else you want it to be called. It’s different than all of that, and my God, Tess, this has to be more than silent. I don’t know what kind of defenses Toro has, I don’t know what I’m going into. I need to be laser-focused on getting in and getting out alive. I can’t do that if I’m in there worrying about you. About the baby.” He took another long, slow breath. “About our baby. Does that make sense?”
She brushed at her eyes like she was still sleepy, not like she was trying to hide the tears that were peeking out.
“Yeah,” she said, after a long minute. “Yeah. I know how to handle myself in a lot of ways, but this… not this. And I want you back, so I want you to do what you have to.” She was clearly fighting back tears now, and he reached out to touch the back of her hand. She grabbed his hand and clung to him. “I should have let you send me back. I shouldn’t have made you worry like this…”
“No,” Milo said, his voice stronger. As soon as he said the words, he knew he meant them. “No, none of that. You said your piece, and I listened. I could have figured out a way to get you back there, and you could have figured out a way to go. It’s okay that we’re here like this. It’s okay that this is who we are.” He cracked a grin. “We’re not exactly traditional love birds after all.”
She laughed with him after a moment. “That we are not.”
He pulled the car over about a mile from the warehouse, tucking it under some overhanging trees. He gave Tess the phone and the car keys as he got himself situated with his gear. “First sign of trouble, you take off. Understand? I’ll find you if I can. You go where you go, and you use the ID I gave you – it’s the cleanest there is – and you and the baby, you survive. Don’t come looking for me, don’t ask anyone about me, don’t do anything but protect yourself and that baby.”
She looked right into his eyes and nodded. “I promise, Milo.”
He nodded harder than he meant to and blinked back the moisture that threatened to cloud his vision. There would be exactly none of that; he couldn’t afford to have his eyes sore and aching. He hadn’t cried in a long time, and once he started, he wasn’t sure he’d have an easy time stopping. So, there would be none of that. After. After, when he knew they were safe. Then he could let the tears come – if they still needed to.
Guns strapped to him, clips in his pockets, a utility belt with everything he might need. He managed to keep the chill from descending over his face for a moment longer. He leaned down into the car, put his hand on the back of Tess’s neck, and pulled her tight and close for a long, smoldering kiss. He wanted it to be one she could remember, just in case. Just in case it was – well, the one she had to remember.
He wanted to promise her he’d be back. Tell her he’d be okay, that he’d come back to her like an action hero, covered with grime and staggering from a wound to his calf, but still unblemished, either by what he’d done or what had been done to him. He wanted to come back to her like that, rugged and masculine and not covered in blood and too cold to be moved.
But he didn’t want to lie to her. He’d made a point of never lying to her. So, he left her with that kiss, and he moved off into the darkening night.
Chapter Twenty-One
Tess kept still in the car for a while. She toyed with the phone and found a book, reading for a little while. She played games for a little bit. She glanced at the clock and saw that only fifteen minutes had passed.
The baby kicked. She’d been feeling that more, and it had been a pretty fantastic feeling. For a long time, the growing lump in her stomach had felt like that; just a lump, just someone else’s daydream. Not hers. Feeling the baby kick, that made it alive in her head. Alive in her body. That was amazing.
If she’d been a regular woman having a regular pregnancy, they’d have done the big anatomy scan by now. She’d probably know if she was having a boy or a girl. At least, what was between the baby’s legs; she’d been in enough nightclubs to know that what you saw between someone’s legs didn’t always match up with who they were. But she’d still have an idea. She could start thinking about what sort of person the baby might be... A tall child with their father’s eyes… A small one with his curls… What features would they get from her? She could barely remember her face some days. She’d covered it up with makeup so many different ways, and she was damn good with contouring. She could make herself look like so many different people, and sometimes it was hard to remember which one was her. Since she’d met Milo, she hadn’t had much of a chance to use makeup; even when she’d been in the club, dancing, it had been a different sort of look that she’d reached for. Her face, in very many ways, hadn’t been the point.
Watching Milo walk away from her had been hard, harder than she’d expected. It was the right thing to do. He needed to be completely undistracted, totally focused on what he was doing if he was going to survive. He couldn’t just wander through and expect to be alright. And she needed him to come back. She needed it more than she’d thought was possible. So, staying here and being terrified on her own was the best was the way to do that? Fine. That was what she’d do. Even if it meant she had to sit on her hands and force herself to take many long, deep breaths to stay put.
She’d had plenty of boyfriends she’d watched head off into near-death situations. Being involved in the criminal underworld made that almost a necessity, though she hadn’t really thought of it that way. She hadn’t really ever cared before either. It hadn’t mattered because the men hadn’t mattered. They were interchangeable – nothing but a way to survive in a world that wasn’t all that great. It could have been much worse, and it certainly was for many of the girls she had known over the years, but it hadn’t been out and out bad for her for a while.
It was weird, wanting him to come back. In a way, he was the one she’d needed the least. She had the financial security she’d been trying to find for years. So why did she want him so much?
She didn’t realize she’d been crying until she felt the wetness on her cheeks. She sniffled for a moment, grabbed a tissue out of the center console, and pulled down the mirror on the sun visor to wipe her eyes. She needed to stretch her legs. She got up out of the car, taking a long moment to settle her body. It wasn’t actively hard to get up and down yet, but she could feel how it was going to happen. But stretching was good; she put her hands up to the sky and let all the creaks and st
retches move down her spine. It felt good to be up and moving around. She knew she needed to stay in the car in case she needed to bolt, but surely stretching for just a moment would be fine. After all, she’d need to pee eventually. With this baby on her bladder, sooner rather than later.
Of course, that was when she felt the arm around her middle and the cloth against her face. Of course it was. She fought hard for the thirty seconds she had before her vision blurred and her limbs got too heavy to move. She tried to push whoever it was away, but she couldn’t do a thing. All she could think was that their arm was wrapped just above her baby. How could they possibly do this to her baby?
Chapter Twenty-Two
Milo was barely a hundred steps away from the car before the old chill descended over him. He knew who he was and what he was in this place; he knew how to move through the dark and be unheard. He knew how to be death. It was a skill he’d learned a long time ago, and at the side of a man he’d once thought of as a brother. Thinking of that time, of Bastille, hurt him through and through. They had been close once. They had been – Well, friends was too much for the likes of them. They had been willing to work together. That was the most he had expected, some days. The most he’d been able to hope for.
They’d trained side by side, and in the early days, they had worked on jobs together. And then Bastille had gone rogue, murdering so many of the men who had raised them, even if their version of “raising” was “turning into sharpened weapons”. The men had known nothing more than that world themselves. And the children who’d been slaughtered – there was no version of that which had been fair or just. They had been children. Nothing but children. If Bastille had taken them away from the compound, they might even have grown up to be men, instead of death. But it was too late to think about it now. Milo hadn’t been able to save them, and he couldn’t avenge them. Life didn’t work that way.
He moved through the growing darkness, part of the shadows. He wasn’t some kind of action hero who pulled out his gun miles before the target was reached; that was a good way to get your arms tired or hamper your hands in a way that made an unreasonable amount of noise. It didn’t help anyone. He drew close to the warehouse and found his entrance – a window to the side which had been broken ages ago, based on the dust on either side. There wasn’t any glass left in the frame; it had all been knocked out by those who used the warehouse for shelter, or weather, or something else entirely. He boosted himself up through the window easily – Another reason you never get your gun out until you need it, he thought to himself – and slipped down inside. The distance was slightly more than he expected, and he landed with more noise than he preferred, but still nothing anyone else was likely to hear. He moved quickly through the building; once he got away from the side windows, he did see that there were tracks in the dust. More than one set, enough to have worn something of a path. He made a scornful noise – in his head – about whoever had let security get so sloppy here. Even if Toro was running on his own, he should have known better.
He moved carefully along the path, searching for wherever Toro and his men would be hiding out. The building was quiet, far quieter than it should have been. Something twisted in his guts, and he found himself thinking of Bastille again; he’d had the same sense of nervous concern heading into the facility that day. He hadn’t known then what was wrong in his head, but he knew now. He knew that sense of too quiet that meant something was seriously, seriously wrong. People waiting for him would leave a scent of anticipation in the air. This feeling? Either Silk Road had given him bad information, or something else had gone horrendously wrong on the way.
He was about fifty feet into the warehouse when he smelled death. Blood and shit in a toxic mixture that still made him gag after all these years. His feet sped up; he knew, somehow, exactly what he was going to find. The dust trail led to an open door into an office, a light hung in the corner that was splaying down into the rest of the room, and the stench of death heavy on the air.
Bastille sat on a desk, one foot up on the surface, the other dangling down. He was the absolute picture of lounging casual appearance, except for the gun resting in his lap.
“Milo,” he said, without looking up, “so nice to see you.”
“Can’t say the same, Bastille,” Milo replied. His weapon rested on his thigh, but he didn’t for a moment pretend that would mean Bastille didn’t know exactly where it was. “I was just fine not having seen you for years. What are you doing here?”
Bastille shrugged. “Hired for a contract. You know how it is.”
“I do,” Milo replied. “Little strange, though, don’t you think? That we got hired for the same deal?”
Bastille smiled the wide, creepy grin that Milo had hated for a lot of years. “What makes you think it was the same deal?”
Milo’s brain stuttered just a little over that, trying to guess what in the world Bastille was talking about. If they hadn’t both been hired to deal with Toro, then why had – oh God.
“That’s right, little brother,” Bastille said, his voice twisting harshly on the final word, “I was hired to take you out. To deal with you, after all these years. Silk Road wasn’t satisfied with your work, and I was their insurance policy. Does that feel good – knowing that you didn’t deserve a clean death? They knew I’d take out all these frustrations on you. All the years of living in your shadow…”
“Bastille,” Milo said, trying to regain his mental footing. “It’s been a lot of years. Do we really still have a grudge? After all this time?”
Bastille laughed, and then his gun was trained on Milo so quickly that Milo caught his breath and froze. He wouldn’t have a chance to bring his own weapon up, and at this range, Bastille couldn’t miss.
“Do we still have a grudge? Brother, you got me shot, got me caught. Yeah, we have a grudge.”
“So, you’re here to murder me. That’s how we’re going to end this? Just like you murdered all our brothers, all our fathers?”
Bastille shook his head. “You’ll never understand how that happened. You’ll never understand—”
It turned out that Bastille was right; Milo never would understand. There was a loud crack of gunfire, and then a small hole appeared in Bastille’s face, just above his eyes. Blood and matter spattered behind him, and even though he was dead in a heartbeat, his body didn’t seem to quite know it for a moment. His mouth opened and closed a couple of times, muscles operating on fading electric impulses, before his body went limp and slid to the floor.
Milo spun around, ready to face down whoever was coming through the door, but before he could, pain exploded in his head, and his vision went black.
Chapter Twenty-Three
Milo came back to consciousness slowly and with an incredible, world-shattering headache. He choked back the groan that wanted to escape; without knowing where he was, he didn’t know if it was safe to make any noise at all. He could hear a woman speaking, switching back and forth between Spanish and a lightly accented English, but he didn’t know the voice. He probably could have opened his eyes, but based on the color penetrating his eyelids, there was a lot of light, and that light was going to hurt. He might be more at risk conscious than unconscious, so the best thing to do was keep his muscles lax and his body still until he was alone, and then figure out what was the next step.
But whoever was watching him was watching too closely; in the moment between waking and realizing that he needed to be still, the woman had noted his returning awareness.
“He’s awake,” she said to whoever was with her, and the person grunted sharply.
Milo expected to be handled roughly, but instead, a cool cloth rested on his forehead. A drier, warmer one had been taken away. Someone was taking care of him. Why was that happening?
“Wake up, Mr. Sykes, it’s time you and I had a face-to-face conversation.”
He didn’t recognize the voice, but now that he was coming out of the fog, he recognized the intonation. But why – how was Sil
k Road a woman?
He opened his eyes to see an older Latina woman standing over him, wearing a pretty smile with her arms crossed under her breasts, and looking no less deadly as she did it.
“Hello, Mr. Sykes,” the person he had known as Silk Road said. “It really is about time, isn’t it?”
Milo’s mind raced. If she were just going to kill him or have him killed, he would already be dead. It was either torture or something else. He didn’t think torture was likely to be on the menu. Maybe some people started torture that way, but he’d always found that starting with abject terror did a lot to loosen a subject’s tongue. Of course, you didn’t get real information under that kind of duress. But sometimes it was good to make someone hurt before they died.