Page 108 of Adam

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“Anderson’s such a fool,” I say, savoring the flash of surprise in his eyes. “Putting a rat on guard duty was a really bad move.”

“What are you doing here?”

“You know him?” Wes asks, puzzled.

“Why are you here? Who let you in?”

I stalk right up to him and grab his face in my palm, not even flinching at the gun jammed into my ribs.

“Looks like Anderson is a dick with a real talent for trusting the wrong people,” I snarl, enjoying the panic cracking through his bravado. My smile pulls wide and sinister. “He trustedyouto guard him. He trustedmeto wander his house alone. That’s two bad calls already.” I lean in closer. “Fairy tales don’t end happy when everyone’s this stupid.”

“Listen, brother?—”

“We arenotbrothers.” I shake him like a broken toy, hauling him clear off the floor. “You’re a loose-end fuckup I allowed to keep breathing because I was stupid enough to feel generous. I had endless chances back in training. All those possible neat little accidents I chose to let pass.”

His nostrils flare, eyes glassy, panic finally punching through.

God, I love that part.

“Let me explain.”

“I could drown you in a sink, light you up like a match, take you apart and scatter the pieces so wide no one would even bother asking where you went.”

I walk up to him, kneel, and press my forehead to his, savoring every twitch. “You hear that?” I murmur. “That little noise in your head? That’s your survival instinct screaming while I decide how creative I feel.”

“I’m sorry,” he mutters, finally folding.

“Why didn’t you finish the fucking task already?” I growl.

The gun slips from his fingers and clatters to the floor.

“The money was too good,” he wails. “I’m sorry, Adam. I have a family.”

Something in my head clicks sideways.

Family.

That word rattles around like a loose screw. I grin again, my thoughts racing in little circles. Everyone’s got a family. Everyone’s got a price. Funny how those two always end up in the same sentence.

Oh, I could end this so clean, so quiet. It would barely register as a memory. I would get my revenge and find my peace of mind.

I pull back and stand.

My smile wobbles, manic, almost playful.

God, it would be easy.

Too easy.

“Figures,” I murmur. “Get up.”

He sprawls on the floor, stunned, then forces himself back to his feet.

“Adam, I?—”

“Get out,” I say lightly, waving him off. “Go be a dad. Spend the money. Lose sleep over it.”

He nods sharply, panic jerking his head, then scrambles for the door.