The plane starts to descend, and I spread my feet apart, bracing against the change.
“He said I’d regret it. And the only thing I regret is not killing him right then and there. Because after that, he found money. And now he’s using that money to come after me. Some last-ditch attempt to make a name for himself. But he didn’t even come after me himself. He hired mercs.” Grumbling sounds from the men before me. They know how dishonorable that is. “And I’m pissed. I’m pissed that I didn’t put it together sooner. Pissed that I’d written him off. Pissed that my men have paid the ultimate price for my uncle’s grab at glory. And I’m pissed that he tried to kill my fucking wife.” My jaw flexes and I roll my shoulders back. “And that’s why I’ll be the one who kills him. Everyone else is fair game. Everyone on that compound works for him and knows the risk. There are no women. No children. It’s just a circle jerk of assholes. So they all die. And we all walk out.”
King rises to stand beside me. “You heard the man. We all walk out.”
Nero stands on my other side and cracks his neck from side to side. “The Alliance just got bigger. And meaner. Let’s give the world a little demo.”
As the tires beneath us hit the ground, I grin. “Welcome to South America, boys.”
“About fucking time.” My uncle slides his wine glass toward the edge of the table without even looking up from his food. “You trying to kill me with dehydration?”
“That’s not how I’m going to kill you.”
His head jerks up at my voice.
The room is lit by a gaudy chandelier hanging above the long, heavy wooden table. It’s an old-school dining room, closed off from the rest of the house, and set for one.
But it happens to have three entry points. And I took the doorway straight across from my uncle. So I’m the one in his line of sight.
And when he looks at me, I know exactly what he sees.
A man dressed all in black. Tactical vest. Holstered silenced gun. Long-bladed knives strapped to each thigh. Blood dripping from the tips onto the tile floor.
His mouth moves, but nothing comes out.
When I step closer, he tries to lunge for the gun he’s carelessly left on the table in front of his plate.
But he doesn’t see Nero standing directly behind his chair.
And when my uncle leans forward, Nero swings his arm down in an arc, fingers clenched around his own straight blade, tip down. When his hand reaches the bottom of its trajectory, and Nero’s hand swings back toward him, the tip of the knife pierces through my uncle’s shoulder, under the clavicle, and slides all the way through until it embeds in the wooden backrest of my uncle’s chair.
The pinned man screams.
And I sigh. “No point in screaming, old man. Everyone is dead.”
He tries to jerk forward, still going for the gun, but the knife holds him in place.
King steps into the glow of the light from the side entrance. “Nicely done,” he tells Nero, nodding to the blade, his own bloody knives at his sides.
Nero smirks. “Learned that trick from you.”
“W-what do you want?” my uncle grits between clenched teeth.
“What do I want?” I cock my head. “I should think that’s obvious. I want you dead.”
“You ungrateful—” he starts.
But I close the distance between us, slamming my palm into the butt of the knife in his shoulder, shoving it deeper.
“You want to talk about ungrateful?” I use my right hand to draw one of my blades free. “I was willing to let you live out your pathetic life down here, unbothered. But not anymore.”
I grip the knife in his shoulder with my left hand and jerk it free. It takes effort, especially since I just pushed it deeper, but the singing in my ribs reminds me how close this man came to ruining everything I have.
Sensing what I’m going to do, Nero grabs the back of my uncle’s chair and yanks it back from the table, giving us space.
“Gonzalez means Chicago now. You’re done.” I toss the knife I just pulled out of his shoulder onto his lap.
He curses at me, and Nero cuffs him on the back of the head.
“Pick it up,” I snap at my uncle.
His eyes flare, and I can see he’s going to be a bitter fuck right until the end.
He grabs the knife and stands, blood soaking through his shirt. “You think you can just walk in here and kill me?”
“Yes.”
Instead of coming at me, he lunges toward the gun like the coward he is.
But I lunge, too. And I get there first, my upswing catching him in the chin. The V shape of the jawbone allows my knife to go in smooth, like cutting through cake. And our joining momentum means that the sharp point of my blade easily pierces through the roof of his mouth, sliding up into his brain.