chapter 31
Whips and electricity hurt less than simple needles pumping drugs into his veins. Nathan spit out blood, aiming for the commander’s boots. Chains held his arms high above his head while cold concrete bit into his bare feet. Blood and other fluids slid across the floor and into a drain in the despondent cell.
The commander threw an electric prod across the room to smash against a table holding all sorts of interesting devices. “How’s the head?”
Cloudy as fog. “Fine.” Nathan concentrated on the concrete beneath his toes. Cold. Hard. Real.
“I doubt it. There’s enough sodium barbital in your veins to make a priest confess.” The commander eyed a grate in a far corner of the ceiling. Through the night, rain had poured down the grate, and a couple of trucks had passed over it, sending down leaves and water. “Dawn is breaking.”
So dawn had broken before he did. Nathan eyed the locks on the one door and smiled with cracked lips.
The commander nodded, an odd pride glowing in his black eyes. “I made you tough.”
“No, you didn’t.” Nate tried to roll his bellowing shoulder to snap it back into place. “Matt made me tough.” Nate tried to bite back his comment, but the words flowed freely. Stupid drugs.
“Yes, he did.” The commander twisted his wrist, frowning at a growing bruise from one of Nate’s early kicks. “Mathew’s obsession with training, with learning, with becoming so deadly—I was impressed. Not once did I see his true motivation.”
“Which was?” Nate fought to keep his head from lolling forward.
“Escaping me.” Injured ego and bewilderment glimmered in the man’s eyes for the briefest of seconds. “Training you. Training Shane and Jory to survive. To someday leave.”
“Yes. Leaving was always our plan.” Nate couldn’t stop the truth.
The commander’s gaze hardened. “But your duty, your role, differed from your older brother’s, didn’t it?”
“What role?” Nate’s words slurred on the end.
“Oh, don’t think I don’t know you, Nathan.” The commander chuckled, low and deep. “Matt taught Shane and Jory to avoid death. You taught them to embrace life.”
Nate shook his head. He’d never embraced shit. “You’re crazy.”
“Am I?” The commander scraped blood and tissue off one boot with the heel of the other. “You tried to give them a childhood. A sense of normalcy, of being wanted and protected in this environment.”
Nate spit out another clot of blood. “You’ve been reading too many of Madison’s psychology journals.”
“You gave them the one thing you wanted more than anything else in the world. To belong. To have a family.” The commander smirked.
A slow smile lifted Nate’s bruised lips, the feeling malicious. “I succeeded, you prick.”
“Think so?” Anger burst red across the commander’s face. “You will never have normalcy. You’re abnormal. We created you like a science project.”
Nate started to laugh. “So?”
“So? Freaks can’t have family.”
Nate laughed harder and rattled a broken rib. “You tried so hard. So damn hard to make us cold killers. I’d never realized how badly you’d failed.”
The commander shot a punch into Nate’s gut.
Nate folded over with a harsh oof. He spit blood. And laughed harder. “No wonder you’re pissed.”
“I’m not pissed.” The commander straightened his bloody uniform. “I won. You are a killer.”
“Maybe, but I ain’t cold.” The current environment notwithstanding. “Neither are my brothers. You tried so f*cking hard, but you couldn’t break us. Not one of us.” The muscles in Nate’s back vibrated from the pressure of keeping him from dropping and injuring his wrists. “Matt survived the pressure you put on him. Even more so, he survived the pressure he put on himself to save us. He f*cking survived and found love.”
The commander punched Nate in the face, sending spittle flying from his mouth.
Nate’s head rocked and his vision fuzzed. Pain radiated through his ear. So he smiled. “Shane is happily married. F*cking married, Commander.”
“And Jory?” the commander said softly. “You didn’t save him.”
“Maybe not.” Nate lowered his chin to look evil in the eye. “But I gave him the best childhood possible here, and he thrived. When we escaped, he became truly happy. Almost twenty, a trained killer, he went to Disneyland and rode the rides like a kid on holiday.” The memory would always warm Nate.
The commander reared back. “Disneyland.”
“Yep.” Nate finally let the past go. “If he’s dead, he’s in a better place.”
“You think you creations go to a better place?” the commander spat.
“Yes.” Nate exhaled in release. “I actually do.”
“You’re still in this place.” The commander manacled Nate’s hair and jerked back his head. “What if I forced you to choose?”
“Chocolate chip. Forget the vanilla.” Nate forced his eyes to remain open. “You meant ice cream, right?”
“No.” The commander smiled, malice carving grooves next to his mouth. “How about a choice between Audrey and your brothers?”
Nate tried to chuckle, but more blood slipped out of his mouth. “My brothers are free, and Audrey will be soon.”
“I’ll kill her. Cut her into little pieces while you watch, unless you get your brothers here.” The commander reached into his boot and drew out a fresh blade he hadn’t used yet on Nate.
This time Nate did chuckle. “Right. Killing Audrey while she’s pregnant with my baby. Not a chance would you do that.”
“I can wait six more months.” Sharper than the blade he played with, the commander’s smile promised pain. “Let’s be honest. While she’s done a good job with the senator, Audrey lacks commitment to my organization. Once the baby is born, Audrey will be a hindrance.” The commander lifted a muscled shoulder. “I will have to kill her.”
“You f*cking touch her, and I’ll rip you apart tendon by tendon.” Rage sped up the drugs in Nate’s blood, making him even more light-headed. Even so, he held the son of a bitch’s gaze. “Trust me. I. Will. End. You.”
Dark amusement echoed on the commander’s chuckle. He peered closer at Nate. “Listen to you tell the truth. Your pupils are three times normal size.”
Not a big surprise considering the drugs infecting his blood. “What’all did you give me?” Nate’s long-hidden Southern accent broke free.
“Truth serum, drugs to increase pain, and some others we’re not quite sure about.” The commander tightened his hold. “Now that you’re in a talkative mood, let’s talk.”
“F*ck you.”
“Good start.” The commander smiled. “Where is your new headquarters?”
“San Diego.” Nate let the truth slip out, not sure if he could stop it. Sins Security was based in San Diego and counted as headquarters. Of course, it wasn’t where the family had dug in, but the commander hadn’t asked that question. “Why did you let somebody shoot Jory?”
The commander sighed. “I didn’t approve that. I needed Jory to bring you all back in.”
Needed? For the first time, real pain sliced into Nate’s chest. “So he’s dead?”
“I didn’t say that.” The commander leaned closer, his minty breath brushing Nate’s skin. “How’s the heart? I had to restart it twice.”
So he’d died twice during the night. Interesting. “Still pumping. Where’s Jory?”
“I can stop your heart again if I wish. When are Matt and Shane coming to get you?”
Nate smiled and fresh blood washed down his chin, cooling aching bruises. “They’re not coming here. Period.”
The commander blinked.
Triumph, almost sadistic in its intensity, flew through Nate. He’d made the bastard blink. “You know I’m not lying.” He couldn’t at this point.
“Hmmm.” The commander rubbed his chin. “Yet they know you’re here.”
“Yes.”
The clinch on Nate’s head loosened, and the commander stepped back to study him. “Why aren’t they coming?”
“I told them not to. It’s more important that they figure out the codes to the chips… and find Jory.” Nate spit out more blood. “We have the computer program but not the codes. Yet.” He should probably worry about the internal bleeding going on right now.
“No.” The commander shook his head. “They wouldn’t have listened.”
“They did.” Nathan’s voice sounded oddly strangled and hoarse. How long had he screamed during the night? The whole thing was a blur. “I thanked them for being my brothers and hugged them.”
“And they?”
“Shane told to me to shut up, and Matt told us both to shut up. That was the end.” Nathan rose up on his toes as his leg cramped.
“Interesting.” The commander drew out a cell phone to type in a text. “So they figure I won’t kill you… might even reprogram your chip. You’re here to get information.”
“I would like information.” Nate’s vision blurred. “Why do you want Matt and Shane here, anyway? We won’t work for you.”
The commander’s jaw hardened. “You will work for me. There’s important missions to be accomplished, and after I filet Matt in front of all of you, you’ll do what I want.”
“Filet?” Nate’s brain fired.
“Yes. He took my training and betrayed me. He tried to take my place with you and your brothers.” The commander nabbed the back of Nate’s head and jerked. “You follow me,” he spat.
It had always been personal between the commander and Matt. “So you want him dead?”
“Yes, and I want his brothers to follow my command.” Spittle flew from the man’s mouth. “Forever.”
The commander truly hated Matt.
Nate spit out blood and spoke directly from his heart. “You will never beat Matt. Ever. He’s twice the soldier and man that you’ll ever be. And. You. Know. It.”
The commander yanked hard, and Nate’s vision blurred.
Then the leader released him. “I’ll kill Matt slowly.”
Nate grimaced. “Where’s Jory?”
The door opened, and a solider wheeled in a laptop. “I received your text.”
“Thank you. Leave.” The commander pressed a couple of keys on the keyboard, and the soldier scrambled out of the room.
Nate tried to raise an eyebrow. “We’re going to watch a movie? I haven’t seen the new Disney one. I love monsters that talk.”
The commander glanced over his shoulder. “You’re under the influence of potent truth-inducing drugs. You really do love Disney movies.”
Nate tried to shrug. Disney movies rocked.
The commander chuckled and rolled the screen closer to Nate. “This is a different movie.”
Nate tried to focus and keep his gaze stoic as Jory came into focus. His baby brother, the one who’d grown huge, the one who never exploded in temper, sat bound on a chair, bloody and furious. A woman’s high heels came into view as she shot three rounds into Jory’s chest. Jory fell to the floor, and the screen went blank.
Nate’s heart thundered fast enough to hurt his broken ribs. “I’ve already seen that movie.” Hundreds of times, actually. He’d studied it frame by frame, trying to find any clue.
“Yes, I figured.” The commander leaned over and punched in a new code. “But you haven’t seen this one.”
Everything in Nate stilled. The drugs disappeared, the cold room faded into the background. The screen showed Jory’s massive body on a surgical table, surgeons scrambling to save his life. They lost him once, but he came back.
Nate lifted his chin. “He survived being shot?”
“Not exactly.” The commander pushed a button, and the video fast-forwarded through the surgery to Jory lying unconscious in a hospital bed, tubes hooked up to him everywhere. “Coma. Brain dead.”
Please, no. Nathan turned a cold look on the commander. “This won’t break me, either.” But he’d watch. If these were his younger brother’s last moments, he’d watch and experience them with Jory. He’d be there for his brother, even if it was too late.
“I think it might.” The commander smiled without humor. “I’ve always known that physically, you can’t be broken. Emotionally, you’re the easiest target in the Gray family.”
“Isss that a fact?” Nate slurred.
“Yes. You need them so much more than they need you. Without them, you’d free that beast I know lives in you. You’d be the cold-blooded killing machine I f*cking created. It’s in your DNA.” The commander’s smile turned triumphant.
The truth of the words slithered deep into Nate’s gut, taking root. “Maybe you’re right. Maybe not.” He levered up to get better balance, even as his wrists bellowed in pain. “But I do have brothers, and Matt made sure I stayed human. Jory and Shane kept me good instead of bad.”
The commander shook his head. “But that need in you? The need to be other than who you are? That’s what makes you weak.”
Did it? Or did it give him strength? Nate blinked blood out of his eyes. “You’ll never understand me.”
“Oh, I get you. Let’s see, shall we?” The commander turned back toward the video and fast-forwarded through scenes, each day documented with a date. Day by day, Jory didn’t move. He became paler and his muscles lost definition… but he didn’t move. For nearly two years, he didn’t even twitch.
Nate allowed no emotion to show on his face, but inside, knives sliced through everything he was. Everything he’d hoped for, and everything he’d wanted to be. He’d failed his little brother, the one he’d promised to protect. Jory, so good and powerful, had wasted away in a hospital bed. Alone.
The commander pushed PAUSE at a date six months ago. “I actually hadn’t planned on showing you this, but you’ve left me no choice.”
“Finish it,” Nate ground out.
“Fair enough.” The commander pressed PLAY and stepped away.
The date blinked on the bottom of the screen, and the beeping of medical machinery filtered through the speakers. A monitor to the side of Jory’s bed blipped with his heartbeat.
Nate watched three months pass, waiting for the final moment when the beeping ended. Something inside of him started to crack.
Jory opened his eyes.