Kitty's Mix-Tape (Kitty Norville 16) - Page 73

THE PAIR OF THUGS cornered Ben outside the men’s room.

His first thought: Kitty’s paranoia was rubbing off on him. Then: Damn, she was right all along.

He spotted the type right off and knew they were up to no good. Late twenties, bulky, hired muscle. Suits, no ties. Slicked back hair. One of them was the lookout: back to the wall, scanning the area. His hand never moved very far from his waistband—within easy reach of the gun holstered under the jacket. The other one got in Ben’s face.

“Hey there,” he said, pressing close, herding him to the wall, moving him away from the crowd. His breath smelled of mint and cigarettes. His accent was some flavor of New York City.

Ben didn’t bother responding. Nothing he could say would change what was about to happen. He did think about telling them they had the wrong guy. A flare of anger, a thread of pissed-offedness, made him stand his ground. Match the guy’s stare, and not blink.

The heavy was about the same height. He tried looking down on Ben, but it didn’t work.

“Friend of ours wants to talk to you,” the guy said.

Ben’s nose flared, taking in the guy’s aftershave, the scent of gun oil. The odor of seedy bars and backroom shakedowns.

“Why?” Ben said, wondering if it sounded like a growl. He wanted to growl, but that would be a bad idea.

The thug, the talker, opened his suit jacket briefly to show the gun inside, in the shoulder holster. “No arguments.”

“He couldn’t just call me?” Ben said. Arguing. The flame inside was growing. He was getting angry, and a beast with claws was waking up.

The thug put a hand on his shoulder and pushed him. “Come on. Walk normal. Don’t draw attention.” The lookout led them to a side hallway.

God, he really was being kidnapped out of a Vegas casino.

“What happens if I knock you down and shout right now? You going to shoot me?”

“Maybe not. But we may find a way to draw a bead on that pretty little girl of yours.”

That shut him up. They moved out of sight of the poker room and the main casino floor. Empty corridor now, and straight ahead to a set of doors leading to the outside. The lookout was still scanning, ready to jump at a sign of trouble. Ben could almost hear his body quivering. His own escort was steady, methodical, and kept his anxiety tamped down. A pro. Didn’t make Ben feel any better.

“How does this friend of yours even care about me?” he asked.

The thug gave a sly smile. “He had a game going. Pretty good game. His boys had a system and would have cleaned up. But you ratted them out. You’ve made yourself a person of interest. Congratulations.”

So much for being a good citizen.

“You can’t do this,” he said, realizing it was a stupid thing to say. They certainly could do this. They had. Ben could whine all he wanted—they still had the guns. But were the bullets silver? Did he risk getting shot in the back on the streets of Vegas to prove a theory?

“I’m getting married in a couple of hours.” As if that kind of argument held any weight with people like this.

“If she really loves you, she’ll wait. So—she really love you, or what?”

God, what a question. The worst part about it was the cold lump in the pit of his stomach at the thought the answer might be no.

“I don’t know what this is about. Your boss wants to talk to me, that’s fine. But at least let me call my girlfriend. Just to tell her I’m going to be late—”

The muscle patted him down, found the phone, tossed it on the concrete sidewalk.

A car was waiting outside. The quiet one opened the door; the New York thug pointed Ben inside. Ben didn’t fight, didn’t argue, didn’t resist—he didn’t want to get punched or pounded. That really would wake up the monster. And while that might get him out of this immediate situation, he couldn’t see how it would help in the long run. So he waited.

The windows in the sedan were tinted. They blindfolded him anyway. Only then did he start to lose it: heart fluttering, breaths coming in gasps. He curled his hands into fists and dug them into his thighs—and the creature inside him snarled, from a place like a cage, deep in his gut.

He had to keep it together himself this time. Kitty wasn’t here to hold his hand.

What was she going to think? What if she thought he’d run off, stood her up? Part of her would. Part of her was still an insecure pup. Amazing, considering what she’d been through, how well she stood up for herself under the gun—and she hardly realized it.

Thinking of her steadied him. Just like holding her hand would have. He had to get through this for her. She often talked about her wolf side like it was a separate entity. Like the two sides argued, conversed. The metaphor was useful. He’d adopted it. It let him say, Down, boy.

Tags: Carrie Vaughn Kitty Norville Fantasy
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