Sancte Diaboli – Part Two (The Elite King’s Club #7) Read Online Amo Jones

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Dark, Mafia, New Adult, Romance, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: The Elite King's Club Series by Amo Jones
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Total pages in book: 103
Estimated words: 97397 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 487(@200wpm)___ 390(@250wpm)___ 325(@300wpm)
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“I need to ask you a question, but I need you to answer me honestly.”

“O-okay?” she answered, but I knew the stutter wasn’t from nerves. It was from sleep.

“Have you been sleepwalking more often lately?”

She shook her head as I stumbled farther into her bedroom. Kore and Hades were fast asleep in their beds in the corner, not a single flinch at my being in her space.

“I don’t really know,” she said softly. “I don’t know if I’ve been doing it and then walking myself back to my bed.”

At this point, I was directly beside her bed, the poison of rum strong on the tip of my tongue. I dropped down onto her mattress, right beside her. It was dark, with the only crack of light spilling in from the hallway. “You need to tell me if you know.”

“Why?”

She didn’t get to finish her sentence because my fingers were wrapped around her chin and my mouth was an inch away from hers. “Promise me you will tell me.”

“Yes, Brantley.” Her hand was on my cheek, and my eyes squeezed shut when she lowered it onto her lap and looked down to it. “Is that blood?”

The question I know we are all wondering is who, if anyone, is haunting her now. That’s the one fucking thing I can’t get out of my head. Our lead on The Gentlemen has gone cold. We chased it all the way to an old warehouse near the Canadian border, finding it had been completely emptied.

“We’ll find them.” The second I pulled the trigger that ended Elijah Garcia, I knew it was going to start a war. One I wasn’t sure we knew how to win. It’s hard to win a war when the opposing team goes ghost. “Maybe bring her home. I don’t know, Brantley. Something about this makes me feel uncomfortable. They’re too quiet.” I understand what he’s saying. The Gentlemen have always operated this way, which is what make them such a viable threat to The Kings. We are loud, forceful with our power, and precise, but The Gentlemen are pure stealth.

“Are we going to ignore the elephant in the room, meaning Hector?” Eli asks from behind us. I snicker, running my fingers through my hair while making my way out of the shed.

“Oh, I’ll take care of Hector.” We have a plan, and I’m not so sure he’s following it.

“Brantley!” Bishop snaps, and I knew it was coming. I pause. “I know you’re angry with him, as am I, but he thought he was doing the right thing for her.”

I spin around. “He thought he was doing the right thing for her?” I mimic, and an ugly laugh escapes me. “When the fuck will any of you get it that I’m the only person who will always know how to keep her safe?”

Bishop’s jaw tightens. “You need to accept that other people are a part of her life now. I am a part of her life now.”

I ignore him, not wanting to go into more detail about Hector. If it were up to me, we would have put a bullet in him a long time ago. People have died for a lot less than what Hector Hayes has done.

It doesn’t take long before I’m back in the heart of New York, arriving at the penthouse where Hector is staying. Scarlet isn’t with him; she’s away on set for a new film.

I kick open the door and find him staring out over the city, dressed in a suit with his hands buried in his pockets. It’s as if he was waiting for me to enter. “Do you know who my first kill was, son?”

I shut the door behind me, strolling farther into the sitting room. “I don’t know, but if I had to take a guess, I would say it’d be someone you stabbed in the back. Someone who trusted you.”

Hector finally turns to face me. “No.” He relaxes into a leather sofa. Brown and distressed, as if it has been sat on millions of times before today. His eyes narrow on me, though his smile is tense. “Not quite. He was young. A boy, really, but then so was I.”

I close my eyes, shaking my head. It doesn’t disturb me. It should, but when you’ve been assassinating people for the better half of your life, you become void of feeling any sympathy about death. Except one. “You were going to allow me to think she was dead.”

“Ah, that’s what this visit is about.” He leans forward, unbuttoning his jacket to reach forward for his glass of whiskey. He sits back, his eyes on me. “Yes, I was. And given the chance, I would do it again.”

“She’s mad at me.”

“Hmmm, why ever would she be mad at you?” His eyebrow cocks, and I have to fight everything inside of me not to reach forward and tear his throat out of his body.


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