Terminal Vendetta (A Diana Weick Thriller Book 3) Cate Clarke (little red riding hood read aloud TXT) đ
- Author: Cate Clarke
Book online «Terminal Vendetta (A Diana Weick Thriller Book 3) Cate Clarke (little red riding hood read aloud TXT) đ». Author Cate Clarke
The house beyond him was dark, all of the curtains drawn, furniture covered in dusty sheets. Several electric fans hummed behind him, clanging against the cheap painted metal of their partsâone pointed right at Laird but rotating on a steady back and forth, occasionally spinning his long greasy hair into tendrils. Underneath the sound of the fans, there were footsteps up the stairs behind Laird.
Following Cameronâs gaze up the steps, Laird yelled out, âMa! Stay up there!â
âHow do you know youâre not interested?â Cameron asked, leaning against the doorframe, being careful not to touch the wire with the tip of his sneakers.
âI donât work with terrorists,â Laird replied.
âYou worked with Ratanake,â Cameron said.
The corner of his mouth twitched slightly, but he brought the joint to his lips to hide it, taking a large, long inhale.
âRatanake wasnât a terrorist,â Laird said. âHe was a soldier.â
âYeah, yeah,â Cameron sighed. âSo was I. So were you. So was Asher. We were all damn soldiers.â
âUntil you killed them all at the funeral,â Laird snapped.
The smell of the weed made its way over to him, collapsing down into his mouth, making him think of college. He shook the memories from him and said, âNot you.â
âBecause I left early,â Laird muttered, the marijuana smoke catching in his throat, stifling his words. He exhaled.
âSimple as that.â Cameron raised his arms in an outward shrug.
âWhatâs the job?â Laird asked.
Cameron and Asher exchanged glances. There was a certain desperation in him, exactly the type of soldier that the Readers looked for. That was their mistake with Diana Weick. She hadnât been beaten down enough for them to get through to her. Now she probably was, but there was no way sheâd be joining them after what went down at Ratanakeâs funeral.
It wasnât difficult for Cameron to see a bit of himself in the bloodshot eyes of Lairdâthat same defeat over a multitude of years serving the wrong people, paying your dues into the wrong conformity. This man had served on the same team as his father, somehow. It was hard to see the SEAL in him now, but that was because Ratanake and the other military officials had picked out every piece of him, molding him to exactly what they needed and then dropping him back inside this decrepit farmhouse, forcing him to crawl his way back.
It was money for him as it had been for Asher. And Cameron could work with that.
âFifty thousand to get us a password,â Cameron said.
âWhose password?â Laird asked.
âWeâll forward you the info if you agree,â Cameron replied, not mentioning that they didnât know whose password they needed yet. They would know soon. The VBA couldnât leave that position empty forever, though he was sure they would like to.
Laird clicked his tongue against his teeth. âAnd if I donât?â
âWeâll leave you to yourâŠâ Cameron gestured to the house. âDevices.â
âYou got this place pretty rigged up,â Asher noted from the other side of the doorframe, leaning his hat inside to take a look around the corner. With a hard gaze, he followed a labyrinth of wires, stapled to the wall across from a couch that was covered in a stained sheet. There was a staticky purr coming from all of them like the whole house had electricity running through its foundation.
âTo keep out the aliens,â Laird said, watching Asher follow his surprisingly organized wires.
Asher and Cameron both looked at him as he waved the shotgun between them.
âJesus. Okay.â Laird laughed at their expressions.
Taking a look around his home, Laird sucked in his cheeks and took another hit of the joint.
âArenât you going to give me the pitch?â he asked. âGet me to join your Girl Scout squad?â
âDo we need to?â Cameron laughed a little.
âIâd like to hear it,â Laird said.
âMust get lonely out here in the middle of fucking nowhere,â Cameron murmured. âI donât need to pitch you, Laird, because you know exactly why weâre doing what weâre doing. Youâre living in it right now. You sat for years on a military secretâyeah, Nelson Rank, we know all about thatâand it nearly destroyed you. It wasnât your responsibility to save Rank. It wasnât even your responsibility to tell Ratanake that Kushkin had him, yet you felt like you had to because the United States military instilled this guilt in you from the moment you enlisted. They tell you âHonor, courage and commitment,â but how much courage and honor do you see from those guys sitting on their asses up in DC? The only ones who are committed are the guys like you, Laird. Youâre so committed that you drive yourself crazy because you didnât follow orders that you never got. That whole funeral was a bullshit show put on by the officials⊠pretending like they ever gave a shit about Dominic Ratanake and the soldiers beneath him. They donât care! Even now, with all those guys dead. What do you think they're up to? The important guys, the rich guys, are in hiding. Theyâre scared, terrified, of the Readers. As always, letting the young guys, the freshly enlisted, the fucking kids, die for them. Donât you want to be on the right side of this battle? The side thatâs not only going to win, but thatâs going to change the way things are done for the rest of our lives. Weâre all going to get our payday. We are. Weâre going to get what weâre owed. And you can get yours a bit sooner if you step in with us here and now.â
âNehemias!â a woman called from upstairs.
âShut the fuck up, Ma,â Laird called back, contemplating Cameronâs words, his face and eyes filled with the low-hanging smoke from the joint. It was almost burned down to a roach. He ashed it out on the floor by his leather boots.
âIs that not the pitch?â Laird said. âSounded like a pitch to me.â
Cameron shrugged and replied, âI like to talk about our cause.â
The heat was filtering in through the outside, humidity landing on all
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