But they will fucking help me, whether they want to or not.
“You’ll have to let me know the source of these rumors,” Ryker cuts in. “The
last thing we want is word getting out.”
“I’ll point you to the forums they’re posted on. You can handle it from there,
yeah?”
Ryker nods. “They’re dangerous.”
“Because they’re true,” I finish, already understanding the ramifications that
can have. They have a process, and it’s built off their reputation.
“You trust him?” Slade asks, raising a brow.
Ryker shrugs, unconcerned. “There’s one of him, and four of us.”
My top lip pulls over my teeth, just as unconcerned. I settle into the couch next to Slade, earning a glare that I dutifully ignore. Not hard when it’s like a chihuahua growling at you.
“So, if you’re not bad guys, how the hell do you traffic in organs… politely?”
“We handle the extraction process of the organs before selling them. If they’re
already deceased, we purchase the body for an inflated price, remove the
valuable organs and discard the rest. Then sell the organs in the market. If they’re alive, we send them home.”
He pauses, waiting for a reaction he’s not going to receive. I keep quiet, and
after another beat, he continues.
“Daire is the one who understands the trading system best. Locates the
product and keeps track of what’s going in and out of the market,” Ryker informs me. Oddly, I’m surprised by that. Daire winks at me, the corner of his lips still curled up.
“Slade is our negotiator and accountant. Sets up the deals, negotiates prices,
and handles the money. Kace removes and preserves the organs. And I conduct
the deals once terms have been agreed to. Our priority is to intercept humans who are being sacrificed for their organs and get them back home.”
“But you do sell people’s organs?” I clarify.
“Absolutely, but who we sell to provides a service to families in desperate need. People who have been on waiting lists for transplants or those who can’t properly afford it with our current healthcare system. Doesn’t matter if it’s underground, they still go to good people who deserve it. The black market is full of evil, but not all of us are. It’s only necessary we appear that way.”
“If you’re only extracting organs from the dead, are you saying you only sell bone and skin? Doesn’t seem like a profitable business.”
Ryker and Slade glance at each other, a short conversation trading between them. I arch a brow, waiting for their decision.
Slade turns to me. “Kace used to be a mortician. He’s not a doctor, which is
why we went to Dr. Garrison for serious injuries, but outside of his mortuary knowledge, he’s well-versed on how to painlessly put someone to sleep.”
“For good,” I say, filling in what he didn’t say.
“Yes.”
I glance between Ryker and Slade, narrowing my eyes as I figure out what exactly they’re trying to say. Daire is now petting the girl’s hair, zoned out of our conversation.
“You assist in suicides.”
Slade’s stare turns grave. “Consensually. These are people who have a low quality of life. Whether they’re terminally ill, old and tired, or suffering from other mental illnesses. Whatever their reason, it’s their choice, and they agree to donate their organs. Kace puts them in a deep sleep, extracts the organs, and then
they pass. Completely painless.”
I nod my head slowly, turning that information over in my head. People often
only care about life when it’s inside of a woman’s stomach but stop caring once
that life is born. Makes me wonder if people choose this route because they couldn't get the help they needed.
I purse my lips, then state, “Oregon is a state that passed the Death with Dignity Act.”
“The people who come to us are not from the states who have passed that law.
In order to qualify for a physician-assisted death, you have to prove your residency,” Slade explains.
“And the money you get for their organs—where does it go?”
“Depends on their wishes. Sometimes they ask it to go to the family, and we
honor that. But in most cases, whether it’s because they are not on good terms with their family or they don’t have any at all, they don’t care what we do with it, as long as it’s helping someone.”
Ryker cuts in, “It’s a stable income, and they pass with dignity when they otherwise would not be able to. It also allows us to maintain our secrecy. As much as we want to be like the big, bad Z and go around killing all the evil guys, they’re the ones who deliver the victims directly into our hands so we can save
them.”
I cock my head. “The little girl that was shot. How did that happen?”
Shadows fall over Ryker’s eyes, darkening them to a moss green. “That’s how
one of the traders brought her to us. He didn’t say how it happened, just that she
was now useless and that we could sell her organs since she was going to die, anyway.”
In this corner of the world, even the dead are valuable.
“If you killed them, that’s one less person capable of stealing innocent people
from their lives. One less child getting shot and sold for their organs.”
Ryker leans forward, resting his elbows on his spread knees.
“We do, when we’re able to, which is why our reputation as ruthless,
murderous assholes is important. But if every single tradesman in the black market were killed, it would raise suspicions. The second that happens, we’re out. We don’t have a worldwide organization like you, we’re only four men. This means if people catch on to us, that’s thousands of lives we don’t save. You know as well as I do that they’re parasites and breed like rabbits. Snuffing out a few doesn’t even put a dent in the cesspool of sick fucks. We save more lives this way, but that doesn’t mean we don’t have our fair share of blood on our hands.”
I nod, pursing my lips. “Fair enough,” I concede. “Good thing you have a mass organization at your disposal now. Maybe hold on to the next IOU paper, yeah? You can even sell it on eBay after—those are valuable.”
Slade tightens his lips and looks away.
“Fuck off, smartass.”
Chapter 17
The Diamond