Midnight Vengeance (The Midnight #4)
Chapter 1
PORTLAND, OREGON, NOVEMBER 15
‘INSIDE/OUT’ EXHIBIT OF SUZANNE HUNTINGTON’S INTERIOR DESIGNS
“ G irlfriend on your six.”
A hard elbow jabbed into Morton ‘Jacko’ Jackman’s hard side. It would have knocked a lesser man down. Former Senior Chief Douglas Kowalski wasn’t known for his gentleness or delicate touch. But then neither was Jacko. He was a former Navy SEAL too, just like the Senior. But both of them were out of the service and working in the same company, Alpha Security International, so Jacko could knock Senior on his ass and not be court-martialled.
Except, well, Senior was a good guy.
The Senior’s elbow couldn’t knock Jacko down, but his knees nearly buckled at the thought of the woman behind him.
“Not my girlfriend,” he mumbled, hoping the tan over his dark skin he’d got this past week teaching Mexican federales in Baja the fine art of fucking with the enemy hid his red face.
Senior shifted his eyes sideways, a hint of a smile on his big ugly mug. “No?” He shook his head and jabbed him again. “So why the chubby every time you lay eyes on her?”
Fuck. Busted. Jacko pulled his tuxedo jacket lower. He’d learned to control his dick at fourteen and here he was, back in high school? Why couldn’t he be in jeans, like he was most times he saw her? Tight stiff ones, that kept the hard on down because it didn’t have anywhere to go.
Except you don’t wear jeans to a fancy show in the ballroom of the Parks Foundation. Particularly not when your boss’s wife’s works were on show.
“Bravo red, moving fast,” the chief murmured. Anyone further than a foot from them wouldn’t have heard a word. The orientation clock. Bravo red meant she was moving behind him to his right. Man.
Lauren Dare.
Oh. God.
Jacko thought he could smell her from twenty feet away but that was crazy. Still, why not imagine he could smell her because she drove him crazy in every other way. But smelling her in a room full of hundreds of people, every single one wearing perfume or cologne, with caterers walking around with hot food on platters and glasses of wine everywhere—well, that stretched even Jacko’s sense of craziness.
He wasn’t known for this. He wasn’t what Suzanne Huntington, the big boss’s wife and the star of the show, would call a ‘fanciful man’. He was known for being hard-headed and hard-hearted and hard-bodied. He was a roughneck from Texas who’d be in jail if he hadn’t signed up for the Navy. They’d pounded self-discipline and a sniper’s focus plus a dozen lethal martial arts into him. He could handle any type of weaponry, explosives, hand to hand combat.
Not one ounce of his very extensive and very expensive training gave him a clue on how to handle Lauren Dare.
There she was! Alone and lost-looking against the wall across the room to his right. For such a beautiful woman, she was doing her best not to attract attention, though for Jacko that didn’t work. Couldn’t. It was like the roof opened up and the sun shot a beam straight down onto her like a spotlight. Jacko was surprised people weren’t gasping and turning to watch her.
She was doing everything possible to keep a low profile. She didn’t even want her name on the program, though all of the works on the wall were hers. Suzanne insisted she take the credit for them, but Lauren had insisted right back. Very few people knew this entire show was all hers.
Lauren was moving through the crowd like a ghost, nodding and smiling and never stopping to talk to anyone. Jacko couldn’t understand how the men managed to avoid staring at her, but then he’d always known deep down that most men were assholes. You’d have to be an asshole and blind to boot not to realize that Lauren was the most beautiful woman in a room full of them.
Two of the beauties were married to his employers, John Huntington and the Senior.
Lauren moved gracefully, not speaking a word to anyone, accompanied by notes from heaven. It took Jacko a full minute to realize that angels weren’t sending down a sound track for Lauren Dare to move to. It was Allegra Kowalski, up on a dais, playing her harp. The notes morphed into a recognizable tune he’d heard the Senior’s wife play a million times.
The Senior was married to a talented musician—a harpist and singer, Allegra. Jacko remembered the first time he’d met her, sent to be a bodyguard while the Senior hunted down the fuckhead who’d attacked her and blinded her. Jacko would have done his duty, even laid down his life, for a snaggle-toothed banshee girlfriend of the Senior but as it happened, Allegra Kowalski was beautiful and sweet and had played her harp for him for a couple of hours while he sat in a chair facing the door, Glock 22 on his lap, finger along the trigger guard.
Allegra’s music had fucked heavily with his head and changed him forever.
Till then his kind of music was more on the lines of Megadeth. The only classical music he knew was ZZ Top and the Ramones. He wanted music that was fast and hard because that’s what his life was all about, moving fast and hard from the trailer park where he’d been born to a druggie mom who dragged home a succession of uncles who rarely spent more than a weekday or two them. One of them had been his father, though he had no clue which one. Neither did his mom. He didn’t even have a clue what race his dad was. One thing was for sure, though—the fucker wasn’t white bread, no sir. Jacko looked like a mongrel with a hundred different ethnicities swimming in his blood. In the Navy he put himself down as ‘Mixed Race’.
He’d zipped fast and hard through adolescence where he’d been thrown out of high school for fighting so often he just stopped going, then straight into the Navy where he got his GCE. From there just kept moving faster and harder up into the SEALs.
Allegra Kowalski’s music had changed his brain cells and then the wife of John Huntington, aka Midnight Man, Suzanne, had finished him up. She designed places where you walked in and felt like you were in another world, some kind of stylish fairyland. It wasn’t just money, though money played a part. Jacko’d grown up where a fork was considere dainty, at times superfluous. And though the navy had plenty of forks, and taught the raw recruits who often came from the underbelly of society like Jacko how to use them, everything in the barracks was spare and necessary and functional, not decorative.
So there hadn’t been anything in his life that prepared him for the kind of places Suzanne decorated.
But first they were dreamscapes Lauren created on paper and she was the one who messed with him the most. Those long, white, delicate hands of hers created things he couldn’t even begin to imagine existed and yet became stone hard reality for him the instant he saw them.
He’d seen her drawings and paintings first. Suzanne had sent him to pick her up in her workshop to talk about creating images of Suzanne’s designs. Jacko had walked in to a big airy room and had frozen because he was surrounded by the most beautiful things he’d ever seen in his life. He’d simply stood stock still and gaped, mouth open like some raw recruit watching SEALs in training.
And then Lauren had walked into the room and even her gorgeous paintings and drawings vanished from his head like smoke.
Suzanne and Allegra were beautiful women. They were known for being beautiful, though they never used those coy tricks most good-looking women did. But Lauren—it was like she was another species. A cloud of shiny dark hair surrounding a heart-shaped face with silver-gray eyes on top of a body to make men weep. It had been a hot late summer day and she’d worn a sun dress which showed delicate pale shoulders, slender arms and a tiny waist and when she spoke Jacko didn’t hear a word she said.
His head was buzzing too loud.
She tried twice. He got that much. He saw her full mouth open and close and all he could think about was that mouth on his while his entire body buzzed and he got the first of many many hard-ons that sprouted whenever he was around her.
At the third try, he tried very hard to focus and managed to grasp that she was asking him a question. Morton, right? He simply stared at her. Suzanne said she’d send someone called Morton? And at the end there was this little inflection, making it a question. And fuck him if he didn’t forget his own name was Morton.
He was an asshole and blown away by her and in his defense was the fact that only the Navy ever called him Morton and that was only on official occasions or when he was being chewed out. He’d been known as Jacko forever.
It was only when he saw the first glimmerings of fear in her eyes and she took a quick instinctive step back that he pulled his head out of his ass. And felt ashamed. Having a 240 pound thug who lifted weights daily, had a pierced nose and pierced ears, barbed wire tats around his wrists, tribal tats on a shoulder and had spent the last fifteen years training to kill people stare at you was not a good thing. Particularly if you were a beautiful woman with a slender build alone in a space with the thug.
So he’d used every single ounce of self discipline the Navy and particularly SEALs training had beaten into him and nodded and said — Yes, Morton’s my name, most folks call me Jacko, how do you do, Suzanne Huntington sent me to pick you up.
She’d just stood there, staring at him. Well, he could do something about her unease. He tapped his cell and called Midnight’s wife, Suzanne. When she answered he simply handed the phone to Lauren and watched as some color came back into her face.
And when he complimented her on some of the paintings she actually blushed.
And Jacko was lost.
He drove her to Suzanne’s office in Pearl which was also the headquarters of Alpha Security International, where he worked. Jacko thought that driving under 80 mph was for dead men but he kept it at a steady 40 and would have driven at 20 miles an hour if he could, just to stay in the vehicle with her. He waited for her as she and Suzanne talked then drove her back. At 30 mph. When he dropped her off at her house, he drove around the block and stopped the car and waited for his hands to stop shaking.
When he found out that Lauren taught drawing at a community center he enrolled immediately and got another huge whack of a shock to his system. He was good at it. Damned good. Particularly maps.
The past four months of his life had been work, thinking of Lauren, attending her classes, drawing maps and drawing Lauren in his empty apartment. There hadn’t been room for much of anything else. No cycling out to the boonies and letting his Kawasaki Ninja rip. Megadeth came through Portland, one night only, and he didn’t go. It was a Tuesday and Lauren taught on Tuesday evenings. So no Megadeth.
No fucking, either.
That was a shocker. He didn’t even realize he’d stopped fucking chicks until three weeks after meeting Lauren. It hadn’t even occurred to him. When it did, he made a point of going out that evening to his usual hole, The Spike, and picking someone up because Jacko Jackman didn’t do abstinence. A couple of chicks he’d hooked up with before stopped by and made interested noises and to his enormous surprise, his dick said no. Fuck no.
As a matter of fact it felt like his balls tried to crawl up into his body.
He never tried that again and so he might as well have been a tattooed and pierced monk these past four months for all the tail he got.
And the reason was right in this room.
Jacko tracked Lauren as she made the rounds, speaking briefly with a few people when they spoke to her, then moving on. In the room full of trendy women dressed in bright peacock colors tottering on stiletto heels she was low key in a midnight blue dress with ballerina slippers. Jacko couldn’t even see the other women while she was in the room.
They all seemed overblown and shrill. Sharp laughing voices crackling. Lauren’s voice was never sharp. It was soft, with an underlying tone like music, only not.
She was sweeping the room with her eyes and Jacko felt a change in the air when she saw him. Her face went from slightly sad to joyous in one second, and his heart nearly exploded out of his chest when she veered course immediately, making a beeline for him. He could feel himself stiffening in every sense.
“Incoming,” the Senior muttered. “You’re on your own here, kid. I’m going to my own woman.”
Palm Beach, Florida
“Go on in,” the muscle said, waving toward the door with his Sig 44, a weapon that probably cost more than he did.
Frederick Rydell stifled a sigh. The quality of Guttierez goonhood had declined sadly since the death two years ago of that thuggish, though stylish, mobster Alfonso Guttierez. The organization had fallen to his moron nephew, Jorge Guttierez. Alfonso had had discreet, well dressed security at the gate, Frederick passed through a metal detector and that had been that.
Jorge’s muscle had actually frisked him, rumpling Frederick’s Hugo Boss jacket, and had taken entirely too much pleasure in touching his private parts and between his buttocks.
Really.
Alfonso would never have hired this outlandish man-child with a backwards baseball cap and oversized jeans with the dropped crotch.
Morgan, Alfonso’s personal bodyguard, had always been impeccably dressed, able to serve tea or shoot you between the eyes without breaking a sweat. This goon looked incapable of thought, let alone style.
Frederick opened the door to the suite of rooms Alfonso had used as a study and had to work hard to hide his shock. The two rooms were high-ceilinged and elegantly decorated. Alfonso’s late wife had been a bitch of the highest order but a bitch with exquisite taste. And Alfonso himself was a thug with social ambitions. It didn’t really make any difference in Floridian high society if you made your money running drugs and arms and trafficking in humans. As long as you made a lot of it, you were in. Alfonso had had a lot of it and Chantal, the new wife, knew how to spend it.
Alfonso’s study wouldn’t have been out of place in a lord’s palace. It had been filled with superb antiques, exquisite rugs, decent art on the walls. And Chantal managed the staff like a general. Frederick had never seen the mansion less than perfect. Never even a fallen petal from the numerous floral arrangements.
Now it looked like pigs had rooted through the rooms, followed by the Huns.
After the death of Alfonso and Chantal, the staff had kept things going but Jorge had let them go, one by one, replacing the maids with the girls he fucked and who had no desire to pick up after themselves.
Frederick stopped on the threshold willing his stomach not to rise. This was the worst he’d seen the rooms, a physical manifestation of the disintegration of Jorge’s personality.
The rooms smelled of sex, expensive whiskey and overwhelming perfume. Someone had vomited and someone had shat and not flushed, so there was an overlay of that coupled with disgusting smells of fast food. The French chef had been one of the first of the staff to go.
Two of the sofas had been pulled askew, cushions on the ground. Pizza and takeout boxes littered the marble floor. One of the antique mirrors—made by the same craftsman who’d made the mirrors in Versailles, Chantal had told him—was cracked.
Frederick schooled his face to blandness but his mind was racing as he crossed the room. He stepped on a used condom and his throat quivered as his stomach shot up his gullet.
Jorge was sitting with his back to the huge bullet proof windows that gave out onto a flagstone terrace that ran the width of the mansion.
“Party last night?” Frederick asked, keeping his tone light.
Jorge grunted. He was sitting in Alfonso’s chair, forearms on the surface of the Chippendale table that had served Alfonso as his main desk. A satchel sat next to Jorge’s right hand. As Frederick walked closer he could see that Jorge was keeping himself upright by his arms on the table. Frederick checked Jorge’s eyes, overly bright with pinpoint pupils. Christ, the man was wasted.
Jorge was going to talk business stoned out of his mind.
With an inner sigh, Frederick felt a pang of pity for himself course through his system. He’d earned a lot of money off the Gutierrez machine and it was coming to a close. Like most good things, he supposed.
“So,” Frederick said, sitting down on one of Chantal’s antique chairs, noting with a repressed shudder that the seat cushion was stained. He couldn’t bear to think of what might have caused the stain. “Here I am for my monthly report.”
He’d had a not-unpleasant monthly appointment with Alfonso, to deliver ongoing reports. Frederick was the Gutierrez family’s computer expert and the confidential conduit for communication with the various international…dealers Alfonso had business with. Alfonso owned two hotels, three nightclubs and four restaurants in Florida which, being Alfonso, were exceedingly well-run and turned a tidy profit.
But they were fronts for what earned Alfonso the real money—drugs, prostitution, people trafficking. All activities Alfonso managed at a remove with Frederick’s help. He never got his hands dirty, directing everything via secure computer, which was Frederick’s lookout. Vast amounts of money exchanged hands via bitcoins on the darknet, and every month Frederick visited Alfonso, was treated to a superb brandy while delivering his report, and watched as 50K was deposited in his account in the Caymans.
Everyone was happy.
Since Alfonso’s death, the businesses, legal and otherwise, had been going to hell. Very quickly. Frederick would have left long ago if it weren’t for the fact that Jorge was desperately looking for Anne Lowell, Chantal’s daughter, Alfonso’s step daughter. Right after Chantal and Alfonso’s wedding, Anne had fled from her family, disliking everything about her mother’s new household. Anne had come from an upper crust family in Boston and hadn’t mixed well, to put it mildly.
She’d been gone ten years before Frederick’s association with Alfonso, and no one would have given Anne Lowell a moment’s thought if it weren’t for the fact that Chantal had died an hour after Alfonso, as his main heir. And then Anne had been Chantal’s main heir.
So she had inherited most of the estate, the above ground one anyway, and Jorge had gone wild. Alfonso’s brother had sent his only son up to Miami to learn the business, but Alfonso soon understood his weaknesses and had made sure to leave everything to his wife. Who would probably have wisely put Frederick in charge.
Alfonso had never said a word to Frederick about his succession. Alfonso had been a very healthy self-disciplined fifty year old and Frederick had looked forward to many more years of happy association with an empire efficiently run by Alfonso. But that happy scenario had come to a crashing halt when a drugged-up teen slammed straight into Alfonso’s Panamera Porsche.
Frederick often wondered whether the teen had been hopped up on Alfonso’s product. Alfonso had had a great sense of irony and would have appreciated it.
Frederick had been sorry for Alfonso but above all, sorry for himself. Alfonso’s death had put a serious crimp in Frederick’s plan to sock away ten million in the Caymans before forty.
“Give me your report,” Jorge said sullenly, slurring the words. With a sigh, Frederick complied, knowing that Jorge understood one word in ten. Concepts like bitcoins, Tor, arbitrage, currency conversion flew right over his head.
Only one thing mattered to Jorge—Anne Lowell.
Jorge had somehow got it into his head that if Anne Lowell died, everything would become his. Magical thinking, of course. Anne Lowell would certainly never have left anything to Jorge in a will. Jorge had no concept of legal issues pertaining to estates and succession. Somewhere in his drug addled mind, a dead Anne Lowell equaled a magical return to prosperity.
Frederick did nothing to disabuse him of the notion. An obsessed Jorge was going to pay the monthly retainer forever. Frederick had even stopped looking very hard. He’d found Anne Lowell. Twice. It wasn’t his fault Jorge was an idiot.
In college, majoring in computer programming, Frederick had had to take a course in creative writing and had been unexpectedly good at it. He loved movies and often thought he had the makings of a scriptwriter in him. Lately he’d been observing Jorge and his antics, thinking he could turn the situation into one of those tragicomic TV series everyone loved so much, like Breaking Bad.
Jorge and his minions trying to be crime lords, but fucking everything up. Frederick even had a title for the series. Code Name: Moron .
Jorge pushed the satchel over to him and then fixed baleful bloodshot eyes on Frederick. “You find the bitch yet?”
“I’ve found her twice for you,” Frederick said, as he’d said many times before. “And both times your goons botched it.”
Either she’d had advance notice or she was very very clever, or both. Twice they’d killed the wrong girl. Frederick had found her both times because of a tiny mistake Anne had made, but now she’d completely disappeared.
And he’d stopped prioritizing her. Let Jorge stew in his juices.
Jorge pounded a fist on the desktop. He was sweating like a pig. The side of his fist left a sweatprint. “Find that bitch! Find her now!” Jorge’s attempt at being tough was pitiful. Something was very wrong. The rumors Frederick had heard was that Jorge was deep in the hole with some very bad guys and the loan was coming due. Alfonso had left some well run businesses but Jorge was running everything around him into the ground. And he couldn’t get it out of his head that finding Anne Lowell and killing her would magically erase his troubles. Jorge was a cretin who wanted to run with the big boys and was in way over his head, not that Frederick gave a fuck.
A dead Anne Lowell was not going to solve any of Jorge’s problems. But Frederick wasn’t about to say that.
He would find Anne Lowell, sooner or later. It might be too late for Jorge but who cared? As long as he was being paid, Frederick would keep at it on a low-level priority basis. Nobody could hide forever in a country with fifty million surveillance cameras.
Pity. Anne Lowell by all accounts was a charming, kind young woman, who didn’t deserve getting killed by a low life like Jorge.
But hey.