Perfect Ruin (Unyielding #2)



I NODDED TO Deck and Vic who stood on either side of the doorway then glanced over my shoulder in the direction of Josh who was on the roof of a neighboring house with his sniper rifle.

Tyler was in the SUV on his computer, taking out the security cameras around the perimeter. Since there were no alarms blazing, he’d been successful—so far. Or we were made to believe that.

Either way, we were going in and coming out with London.

I stepped onto the porch and put my eye up to the scanner. The door clicked and I pushed it open with the toe of my boot.

I had my hand close to my knife as I walked inside.

Two feet into the foyer, I glanced at the camera up in the right corner then crouched to tie my boot. A signal for Tyler to black out the screens for five seconds in the foyer. If he took them all out at once, they’d lock down the basement and we’d never get in unless we blew up the place, and that wasn’t happening with London inside.

Deck came in behind me then Vic and we moved in quiet unison across the marble floors to the oil painting. I nudged the frame of the painting with my palm on the frame and it swung open. Then I punched in the code for the door to the basement.

This was our only chance to get her out. Once Mother’s body was found, security would be almost impossible to break through and then they’d move London most likely to the one place we had yet to locate—the farm.

But it had to be done this way.

I opened the door and started down the stairs with my back against the wall. I reached up to the bulb hanging in the stairwell. It was hot as hell, singeing my skin as I unscrewed it until it flickered off, masking us in the shadows.

Footsteps came toward the stairs and I held up my hand to Deck and Vic who stopped, and then I walked down the last few steps. Brice appeared around the corner, his gun drawn. He smiled when he recognized me then it faltered when his gaze hit my hand on my knife.

He aimed his gun at me, but it was too late. My blade sliced through the air like a bullet. Brice didn’t even have time to pull the trigger before my knife embedded in his neck.

He dropped to the floor, blood seeping between his fingers that were clasped around the handle. Within seconds, he went limp, red-stained skin covering his neck and blood pooling onto the rough cement floor.

I walked over to him, grabbed my knife, and wiped the blood off on his shirt. I had no remorse about killing Brice, because he was responsible for what went down in this place. And that meant he hurt London. I approached the door into the prison, did the retina scan and the lock clicked open.

“Give me five.”

I jogged down the sterile, cold hallway to the cell I’d seen London in over a month ago. Fuck. It felt like those two years without her. Except this time, I knew where she was. I just couldn’t get to her. That was much worse because I’d had to fight the urge to say fuck it and come here and get her. Would’ve killed us both the second I used my fingerprint scan with Mother’s extra security on it.

I placed my finger against the pad reader and waited for the distinct click. My breath stalled in my throat as I waited, praying Mother had really taken the lockdown code off London’s cell.

Click.

Fuckin’ Christ.

I kicked the door open and stopped, my gaze skimming the musty cell for London. There was a bare cot, no sheets, no pillow, a toilet, and large metal rings on the damp cement wall with chains hanging from them.

Bile rose in my throat as I was reminded of my childhood because I knew what it was like for London here. I knew the chill in your bones that refused to go away.

It felt like minutes passed before my eyes finally locked on the curled ball in the corner of the room.

“Fuck,” I swore beneath my breath.

I knew what I’d see; I’d been prepared for it. I’d witnessed enough torture and despair in my life that I was immune. I’d tortured men to get answers. Killed. Maimed. But the haunting memory of seeing London in this cell had been my own torture. I’d take being physically tortured over the constant images since that day and the echoing sound of my footsteps as I walked away, knowing I had to leave her here.

Knowing what they’d do to her.

I approached the huddled form on the floor. She was filthy, a greyish brown film covering her scantily clothed body. Her long hair hung in oily strands across her face and over her shoulders as if it were her blanket from the chill in the air.

I crouched beside her and was about to brush the hair away from her face when I saw the flash of silver clutched in her hand. “Lon—”

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