Kings and Sinners

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Kings and Sinners Page 55

by Alta Hensley


  Anson knew his father wasn’t talking about vehicular traffic. Ruta 34 was the route taken by drug couriers. “So, there could be a great number of bad men in the same place at the same time,” Anson reflected.

  “Yes, but if some turf war breaks out among the cartels, your mission just got more dangerous,” Drake said instantly. “You are not there to try to take out every drug lord in the country. As much as the idea is appealing, it wouldn’t truly help.”

  “I know, Pops. It would just have more fucking cockroaches coming out into the light. Don’t worry. I’m only interested in the birthday boy.”

  “Just remember that,” his father said. “Now, get some sleep. You sound exhausted.”

  “I am,” Anson admitted. “I’ll call tomorrow.”

  After hanging up, he stowed the sat phone on the table beside him but tucked his knife beneath his pillow. He was asleep within seconds of closing his eyes.

  The Alvear Palace Hotel was located on Avenida Alvear. Over a dozen colorful flags hung from poles along the façade of the porte cochère. Six stories rose above the street that contained the suites, with additional large domes along the roof. Anson knew the true luxury began when a guest stepped inside.

  He slipped into the hotel from a service entrance in the back before the sun began to rise. Very few people roamed the halls, and most of them were cleaning staff. If they even bothered to look up, Anson gave a slight nod and continued walking. He’d learned that in most situations, if he acted as if he belonged, people were far too involved in their own business to question his presence.

  Climbing the spiral staircase, he had to admit that either Montez had a far bigger set of cajones than he’d given him credit for, or he was a complete idiot. No matter how luxurious a hotel was, it didn’t provide the security he’d think a man in Montez’s position would expect. Guests from all over the world chose this five-star hotel for both vacation purposes as well as to conduct business meetings. A place this size and this opulent would have a staff numbered in the dozens if not hundreds. The wealthy did not condone waiting for anything. They would expect private, individual attention from the moment the doorman welcomed them to the Alvear. Security would be a nightmare, as there was no way to know if the man who was wearing jeans and a polo shirt was a lookie-loo or the newest member to join the club of the ultra wealthy. That definitely worked to Anson’s advantage while he reconnoitered, but he knew he couldn’t depend on it.

  Despite the mask he’d worn that night, Anson couldn’t count on the fact that his identity was unknown to Montez. Not only had he been in the same room in Moscow, attending the same auction, he’d actually bid against him. The man hadn’t been pleased to have another raising his bid, and while circumstances had forced Anson to drop out of the bidding, he had drawn Montez’s attention. Of course, it hadn’t helped him remain invisible when Vasily Poplov had “suggested” the winning bidders join their recently purchased sex slaves on stage and provide a bit of entertainment. It had been one of, if not the most, delicate situations he and his brother Stryder had ever had to orchestrate. Though Montez had been slobbering all over his recent acquisition, Natalia, causing Anson’s blood to boil, he’d had no choice but to help Stryder perform a scene which would keep the woman his brother had purchased safe from any true harm, as well as convince those assholes around them that they belonged in the same room and were as evil and perverted as the rest of them.

  The moment he stepped through the glass doors and saw the huge roof-top pool, Anson could easily envision Natalia’s lithe body gliding along its length. Tables and lounge chairs sat along the edge, the glass dome covering the area offering stunning views of the city. A commotion behind him snapped him out of his thoughts. Turning, he saw a maid was struggling to get her heavily laden cart through the doors. Pulling it open for her, she looked up and gave him a smile.

  “Gracias, señor.”

  “De nada,” Anson answered, returning her smile. He watched as she began laying thick white towels, folded with precision, on every chair. As the image of a wet Natalia wrapping one around herself filled his head, he silently berated himself.

  You’re not some horny teenager, so get a grip and concentrate on the mission.

  After stepping closer to the windows and selecting the locations that would give him the best chance of watching activities within the hotel without being seen, he left the rooftop. Additional staff had obviously arrived during his walk throughout the hotel as the halls were far more crowded. He heard, “Disculpe” several times as he strolled down the halls as maids excused themselves for having carts blocking his path. What he found more interesting was that bellhops had begun to file out of the elevators, luggage carts in tow. It was a bit early to be checking out and yet, when he stepped onto one of the elevators and it stopped at the next floor, he was joined by guests and their luggage.

  Once they exited on the lobby level, Anson began to understand the early morning activity. The registration desk was crowded and staff were directing departing guests to the door, where a long line of taxis had pulled beneath the porte cochère.

  “Do you need assistance?”

  Anson turned to see a man he supposed was the concierge hurrying towards him. “No, I’m just leaving,” Anson replied.

  “I hope you enjoyed your stay, señor, and will come visit us again.”

  Trusting his instincts, Anson gave a shrug. “That would be more likely if this visit wasn’t being cut short.”

  The man looked pained. “I’m afraid it couldn’t be helped. We have… a private party coming in who has booked the entire hotel for the weekend. Of course, we are more than happy to assist you in finding other lodging—”

  “That’s not necessary, I’ve already arranged to stay with friends.”

  “Very well, have a good day.”

  Once satisfied that his help wasn’t needed, the man hurried off. Anson moved across the lobby, turning into the gift shop when a half dozen men pushed through the hotel’s front door. A soldier recognized another despite the fact that these men weren’t dressed in combat fatigues. Anson could see the bulge of guns beneath their coats and the look in their eyes as they began to scan the lobby. Anson understood that the first wave of the hotel’s special guests had arrived.

  “This is ridiculous. Richard, we have reservations! I do not appreciate being treated so rudely. I insist that you talk to the hotel manager and demand we be allowed to check in!”

  Anson looked into the shop and was stunned to see that he recognized the couple. Before he could duck out, Richard Latham looked up and caught his eye.

  “Well, I’ll be. What in the hell are you doing here… son?”

  The fact that he hadn’t addressed him by name told Anson that the man was as sharp as a tack. Anson stepped forward and held out his hand.

  “Good to see you again, sir. Hello, Mrs. Latham.” Directing the attention from himself, he turned the tables. “What brings you so far from Austin?” Richard Latham was a highly respected member of the Texas Legislature. He was so popular, he often ran unopposed, well into his third term in the senate. There was talk of him becoming the next governor.

  “Mixing business with pleasure,” Richard said, and when his wife gave a harrumph, he chuckled. “Though Elizabeth isn’t pleased at being asked to leave. I’ve assured her that there are additional hotels—”

  “But, Richard, you know that Judith said that the Alvear is the only decent hotel in the city. I simply can’t return home and tell her that we’d been kicked out like… like stowaways on some cruise ship! I don’t understand how you can just stand there and accept this!”

  “Judith Thorenson?” Anson asked, drawing a nod from Elizabeth. “As I recall, the woman is a wine connoisseur. Why don’t you purchase a bottle of the hotel’s house wine and take it home?” he suggested, nodding towards a display where several bottles of wine with the hotel’s distinctive label were displayed. “Argentina has several wineries that have produced a variety of
award winning wines.”

  “She’s more of a lush than a connoisseur, but that is an excellent idea,” Elizabeth said, looking towards the display.

  “That’s right, darling, and what Judith doesn’t know won’t hurt her. Why don’t you make your choices, and I’ll be over to arrange delivery?”

  The men waited until Elizabeth walked away before turning back to each other. “You want to tell me what’s really going on? Is Drake here?” Richard asked, dropping the volume of his voice.

  “No, sir, Pops is back at the ranch. I’m on my own this time, but I can tell you that you don’t want to be anywhere near this hotel this weekend,” Anson said, just as quietly.

  Richard nodded. “So there’s a reason they are willing to piss off a bunch of guests by cancelling reservations made far in advance?”

  “Yes, sir, a very good reason,” Anson said, and with that, Richard nodded.

  “That’s all I need to know, son. But if you run into trouble or need help, all you need do is call.” He pulled a card from his pocket, scrawling a phone number on the back. “I’m serious. I might be in South America, but I’m not about to abandon a fellow Texan.”

  “Thank you, sir,” Anson said, taking the card.

  The two men shook hands and as the senator moved to join his wife, Anson slipped out of the door. It hadn’t needed to be said that he’d appreciate it if Richard didn’t mention their encounter. The man was not only a good friend of his father, he’d often been instrumental in getting intelligence and offering his legal expertise to the Steeles over the years. The man might work within the boundaries of the government, but understood that some missions required him to look the other way.

  An hour later, from his position on a rooftop across the street, Anson watched as the hotel slowly cleared out. As the line of taxis diminished, they were replaced by black SUVs. More and more men appeared and began to take up positions around and inside the hotel. The morning’s activities answered Anson’s earlier question about Montez’s choice of venue. He didn’t need to worry about either unknown guests or lack of security. The invitation list provided only those guests he knew, and the small army patrolling the hotel was all the security needed.

  His stomach was growling by the time the guest of honor arrived. If the hotel staff had been polite to their guests as they kicked them out, they were practically groveling by the time Montez rolled himself out of the car. No doorman or concierge was good enough for the birthday boy. No, it took them, as well as the manager of the hotel, to bow low as if subjects to some king of eons ago. Anson corrected his thoughts as he remembered how in the movie The Godfather, people had supplicated themselves, bowing and kissing Marlon Brando’s ring. Just like the movie, it was evident that the citizens of Buenos Aires considered Juan Montez to be their Don Corleone.

  Anson watched as Natalia exited the car. She looked tiny next to Montez and his goons. She was wearing a red dress that molded to her body like a second skin. The bodice clung to very generous breasts that accentuated how small her waist was. The hem came to mid-thigh, her legs trim and shapely, and Anson could see the muscles of her calves as she stood in ridiculously high heels. When she turned towards the hotel, Anson saw that the woman had a figure any man would lust after. Her rounded ass was full and the dress tight enough to have him doubt she wore anything beneath it. Long brown hair fell in curls to the middle of her back, held at the nape of her neck with some sort of clip whose stones glittered in the sun. Another flash of splintered light came from a bracelet when she lifted her hand to place it on Montez’s forearm. Every man with eyes watched her walk beside the most dangerous man in Argentina as they entered the hotel. Even as they disappeared into the lobby, Anson saw that it took a few seconds for Montez’s underlings to seem to remember they had a job to do. He couldn’t blame them. The woman was gorgeous.

  With the assurance of Natalia’s location, Anson left the roof. He needed to make his contingency plans. He walked down the block and then hailed a cab. “Avenida de los Corrales, por favor,” he requested. Though the fair would not begin until Sunday, he was hoping to get not only the lay of the land, but pick up any information and perhaps some clothing that wouldn’t brand him a tourist. As the taxi let him off, Anson again began to stroll, ever vigilant to possible scenarios… one that he prayed would lead to him rescuing Natalia Alvarez.

  Chapter 4

  Natalia stood in her robe, staring at herself in the mirror, and felt nothing but disgust. She’d been given another red dress. Another fucking red dress. Montez liked her in red, so much so that she had grown to detest the color. She had to keep telling herself that the day would come when Montez would also be dressed in red—the red from his own blood when she slit his damn throat. The woman looking back at her was a stranger. Dark circles under her eyes, pale complexion, hip bones visible through the fabric due to tightness of the mini dress, her collarbone jutting out from all her weight loss. This woman in the mirror was not the Natalia Alvarez who began this act of revenge. She was no longer the strong, skilled, ruthless, and cunning woman who began this mission. No. This woman Natalia stared at had become broken. She had greatly underestimated how hard getting into Montez’s inner circle would be.

  Sighing, she reached for her brush that sat on the dresser. She knew that Montez would want her hair long and shiny. He didn’t like it pulled up, and all but demanded she always show its length in however she styled it. The first thing she would do when she left this hell hole would be to cut her hair. Her mother had also loved her hair long, but Montez ruined that memory. Everything about him would need to be wiped out from her mind. No red, no long hair, no submitting to a piece of shit ever again.

  Combing her hair, she heard a knock at the door. One of the guards entered before she could even give permission, but that was always the way and had ceased to surprise her one bit. She had no privacy. She was a slave, and whenever she even dared act like she deserved respect, Montez would beat her into submission again.

  Know your place, he would shout. Know your fucking place.

  Yes, she would… for now. But her place would soon be standing over his dead and limp body—just like his pathetic excuse of a dick.

  “Mr. Montez would like your hair down, red dress, black heels, and red lips,” the guard said.

  Looking into the mirror, it was all she could do not to point to the red dress on the hanger and roll her eyes. Natalia could see the guard got pleasure in dictating Montez’s command. They all did. Each one of his men got so much gratification from doing exactly what Montez said. It was like he was some sort of God, and they all were his devout followers.

  “I know. Thank you.” She continued to run the brush through her hair, trying her best to pay no attention to the guard in hopes that he would simply go away.

  “He also said to wear no stockings, and no panties.” The guard chuckled. “He said he would be checking.”

  Her once pale cheeks flushed, and the rage inside threatened to boil over, but she maintained her silence.

  “Mr. Montez will be here in fifteen minutes to escort you to the ballroom. He does not wish to wait.”

  Natalia nodded. “I will be ready. Thank you.”

  Luckily, the guard left without saying anything further. One more sick chuckle from the damn minion would have caused her to completely snap and beat the man to a bloody pulp.

  Removing her robe and panties, she put on the dress from hell. It was two sizes too small for her, which was just how Montez liked it. Squeezing herself into the lycra-type material, forced her breasts inward and upward giving her cleavage that would have every man staring down, rather than in her eyes, all night. Groaning as she slipped her feet into the five-inch heels, she made another mental note that she would never wear high-heels again for as long as she lived.

  Closing her eyes, trying not to hate herself for following every order dictated by the sick monster, she reached for the tube of lipstick. Delicately applying the red paint to her lips, she wonde
red why she was waiting. Maybe she just needed to kill him tonight even if it meant losing her own life. But she was afraid to die. Not just for herself, but for all those poor women who had been sold off. Once she got out of this awful mess, her plan was to do whatever she could to help save each and every one of the women at the auction. If she died… they might die too. She had to think of the big picture and not let the thirst for revenge blind her and make her act carelessly.

  But then again, she hadn’t gotten anywhere with Montez. Not one little bit. Maybe he trusted her more than when she first arrived, as he didn’t require her to be chained up anymore or locked in a cage at night. He allowed her to have a room and her own bed—as long as she was well behaved and did exactly as he asked. But she hadn’t thought it would have taken her this long to figure out a way to kill him and walk out alive. Could it simply be that she was confusing caution with fear? Was she too scared to kill the man?

  Maybe it was the words of her grandmother that still haunted her to this day. “No more death. No more war. Peace, my Natalia. Find our family peace.”

  Killing Montez would go against her grandmother’s dying wish. Was that what was holding her back? Were her grandmother’s words keeping this sick bastard alive?

  The door opened without even a knock. Montez walked into the room and studied her appearance. Even dressed in a black tuxedo, he still looked like a fat slob.

  “Very nice, my pet. You look very nice. Every man will be staring at you and wishing to have a taste.” He took a few steps toward her and extended his arm. “Come. The party cannot truly start without its guest of honor.” Montez’s thick accent made her ill. He liked to speak English when possible because he had told her he was more intelligent than his enemies. He believed he was far superior to them all, and Natalia could only hope that his arrogance would catch up with him someday.

  When they entered the large room, every inch of space was draped in elegance. Strung lights twinkled all around, brightly colored flowers burst from large vases, and satin ribbons of orange and red hung from the ceiling. Women in slinky black dresses walked around with platters of food and flutes of champagne. Music filled the room from a full string orchestra in the far back corner of the room. Circular tables were scattered about the room with large centerpieces made of roses intertwined with black twisted twigs that appeared as if they were roots swallowing up the delicate flowers. The tablecloths were a bright red rather than the typical white you would expect to see. Yet no one sat at these tables for they were all too busy mingling, as dinner would not be served for some time. The sounds, the smells, and the overall buzz of the room were truly intoxicating.

 

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