Fractured Read online




  Fractured

  Recovery Enforcement Division

  Cheyenne McCray

  Contents

  Beginnings

  Untitled

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Excerpt: Vendetta

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Also by Cheyenne McCray

  About Cheyenne

  Beginnings

  Fractured was originally titled The Second Betrayal: a Lexi Steele novel

  When churchyards yawn and hell itself breathes out Contagion to this world.

  —Hamlet

  William Shakespeare (1564-1616)

  Prologue

  Dasha

  * * *

  A new life. She would no longer live in poverty as she had in Moscow from the time she was born. Now she was in New York City, a place that would give her a new beginning.

  Cold late-September rain slashed against Dasha Orlov as she stepped out of the bus and moved past the other girls to get a look at the magnificent sight.

  The cold stung her cheeks and her bare legs, yet the chill was nothing but enticing wet kisses compared with the freezing temperatures she had known in Russia.

  Only twenty girls had been chosen by the American modeling agency that came to Moscow. It seemed almost unreal that the Americans had paid her way to New York City and would give her money to model beautiful clothes. It could be nothing more than a perfect dream.

  “Can you believe it?” Yulia squeezed Dasha’s fingers as she laughed and looked up and around at what the bus driver had told them was Times Square. “That we are finally here?”

  “It is so…,” Dasha answered in Russian as she searched for something to say that could put into words every feeling of hope, joy, excitement that she felt at that moment. It didn’t matter that she was nervous, too. All that mattered was that she was finally in America. “It is all so magical,” she said, then grinned at her brown-eyed new friend.

  Yulia laughed, her long brown hair swinging into her eyes when she rose up on her toes and swept her gaze around them. The petite girl’s face, hair, and plaid coat were as wet as Dasha’s own, but it was too precious of a moment for either of them to care.

  “When do you think they will take us to the modeling agency?” Yulia asked.

  “I hope now.” Dasha grinned. “It seems so much time has passed since we were chosen.” Her words were almost drowned beneath the sound of the deep-throated throb of the bus’s engine, the other girls’ giggling, and the voices of the men who had taken them all on the bus from John F. Kennedy Airport.

  Yes, Dasha thought again, into what must be a dream. A perfect, beautiful dream.

  Thump after thump from luggage being unloaded from storage bins beneath the bus and thrown onto the concrete sidewalk made her turn slightly. She hugged her handbag to her chest. Three men were tossing their luggage out of the bus so hard she was afraid the suitcases would fly open and all of the girls’ belongings would be strewn across the dirty street. The men flung the cases as if they were garbage.

  She shook her head. Silly. They were just in a hurry.

  Gray exhaust puffed from the back of the bus. Hard slamming sounds could be heard over the girls’ laughter as the men shut the doors of the luggage compartments.

  Dasha looked back at the amazing flashing signs around them. ABC News, Target, Coca-Cola, Virgin (an odd name to be flashed in the street), Cingular, Swatch, Planet Hollywood, CNN, NASDAQ… And there were the familiar golden arches of a McDonald’s, along with a hundred more advertisements.

  “Into the vans.” A man’s rough voice came from behind Dasha as she was shoved toward one of the two long, white, and windowless vans.

  Dasha stumbled when the man pushed her, but Yulia had a hold on her fingers and Dasha didn’t bump into Jenika who was in front of her. Who was this man with the rough voice and even rougher hands?

  Dasha glanced over her shoulder and saw that the man’s expression was as hard as his voice. Her belly clenched as he met her gaze with a strange look in his eyes. She didn’t want to know what it meant—it was almost as if she were staring into the eyes of the devil. She shuddered and hurried to sit in the van with Yulia, Jenika, and at least seven other girls. The harsh man climbed into the front next to the driver.

  Disappointment stirred inside her as she sat in the confines of the van. No windows. She wouldn’t be able to see much of her new city on the journey to the modeling agency, because it was difficult to get a good look through the front windshield from where she was sitting. Well, there would be time enough for sightseeing later.

  The driver pulled out behind the other white van, and they started moving through traffic. Excited chatter filled the enclosed space as most of the girls spoke in Russian about their new lives in New York City.

  Bubbles of excitement tumbled in Dasha’s belly as Yulia chatted next to her. Dasha barely heard her friend as thoughts of earning lots of money made her excitement grow. She would be able to send Matushka and Otets, Mother and Father, money to make their lives better. Her father had lost his job months ago, and they barely got by with her mother working as a maid in a Moscow hotel.

  The van came to a stop that caused Dasha to jerk forward and back in her seat. She grabbed the seatback in front of her to steady herself. The harsh man jumped out of the passenger seat, and the driver turned the engine off and got out, too. The van door slid open, and she met the gaze of the harsh man.

  “Get out,” he said to all of the girls in a way that made Dasha flinch.

  She hurried to climb out with the others, who suddenly went quiet when they all stood on the sidewalk. One of the men walked from the vans and through a polished wood door after passing beneath a red awning with Elite Gentleman’s Club scrawled across the street-side flap of the canvas.

  A sick feeling that something wasn’t right churned Dasha’s stomach. She glanced at buildings to either side of the club. The buildings were made of brick coated in grime from pollution; shuttered windows were like staring, blank eyes.

  To the left of the building, they faced was Rocco’s Pizza. On the right was another business—One-Day Dry Cleaning. Garbage bags were piled on the sidewalks up and down the street in front of the buildings, probably to be taken away.

  Where was the modeling agency? Dasha’s English wasn’t perfect, but it was good enough to read each sign and not one business had a name that would tell them they were at a modeling agency. Dasha tipped her head up to look at the blank windows again. Five stories. Maybe there were apartments above where they would live when they weren’t working.

  She looked at the sign that said Elite Gentleman’s Club again. A sudden cramp in her belly shouted at her that something was wrong.

  Dasha clutched her handbag tighter and took a step back. She bumped into someone hard and tall, and she looked over her shoulder to see the harsh man.

  He grabbed her upper arms, leaned down, and pressed his lips against her ear, his bre
ath hot and foul. He said in accented English, “Don’t make a sound or I will kill you.”

  Panic rose in Dasha so fast her heart throbbed hard enough to hurt. Kill her? Why would he kill her?

  The harsh man gripped her upper arms tighter and shoved her forward through the now silent group. Men surrounded the twenty girls. At least ten or eleven men, all hard-featured, and all had eyes filled with threats…and something she couldn’t read. Maybe she didn’t want to read.

  Shudders started racking Dasha’s body as the harsh man pressed his fingertips hard enough into her arms that she gasped. He propelled her forward. He didn’t take her into the gentleman’s club, but opened a recessed door to the left of the building and shoved her through the open doorway.

  Dasha stumbled in a darkened hallway but didn’t fall. What was going on? What was happening? Her heart raced and her throat tightened. She blinked to get used to the dim lightbulbs strung down the length of the hallway. It smelled of filth and as if someone had urinated on the cracked, chipped, and stained linoleum tile.

  Her heart beat impossibly faster and faster and her chest hurt. This wasn’t right. This couldn’t be right. The man pushed her past closed doors on their right and took her all the way to a staircase. He pushed her up the staircase, and the sound of all the girls’ shoes clinked against the stairs as they went up past floor two, then three, and stopped at the fifth and final floor.

  The harsh man opened the first door on the right before he flung her to the floor.

  Dasha cried out as she landed hard on her hip and elbow. Her handbag flew from her fingers, and the contents scattered across the floor of a large room that was just as ugly and smelled as bad as the hallway.

  Vaguely she was aware of two brown tattered couches with stuffing squeezing through tears. An old television was on a stand against one wall, a long table behind one of the couches.

  She couldn’t take her eyes off the harsh man as all the girls were shoved into the room and the door slammed shut behind them. The way the harsh man looked at her made her want to scrabble back on the floor away from him, but something in his eyes told her that wouldn’t be a good idea. He would hurt her if she did. She knew it with everything in her heart.

  Instead of giggles and laughter, mostly silence crowded the room. A few whimpers and sobs made her blood chill.

  “Take their passports and other belongings,” the harsh man said without breaking eye contact with Dasha. From the corner of her eye, she saw men ripping away handbags and coats from the girls, and she heard their cries and screams.

  “Forget anything to do with modeling right now,” the harsh man said next. “Instead, you’ll be working off the cost of the plane tickets and other expenses we paid to get you to the U.S.”

  Confusion and fear tore through Dasha. Working off the costs, how?

  The harsh man reached into his pocket and pulled out a handful of syringes. He started tossing them to some of the other men then grabbed more out of his pocket and gave the rest of the men syringes, too.

  Tears rolled down Dasha’s eyes as the harsh man approached her then knelt at her side. She tried to scramble backward, but he grabbed her arm and jabbed a needle into a vein on the inside of her elbow.

  Dasha cried out as she felt a burn in her vein that slowly died. Almost immediately after that, she relaxed as her mind turned fuzzy. The harsh man’s words seemed distant, far away, and too unreal to believe.

  No. Soon she would wake from this nightmare. She would be back in her small home in Moscow, asleep in her own bed.

  Chapter 1

  Little Red Riding Hood

  * * *

  It had been a mistake having totally wild sex with Nick Donovan during our first assignment together.

  Including the hundred or so times we ended up in bed—or up against a wall, on the kitchen table, on the floor, in my office—when we weren’t working on Operation Cinderella.

  The breath I sucked in burned my throat as I tried to control myself while I watched Donovan. His jeans tightened against his muscular ass as he bent over the shoulder of Agent Chandra Kerrison to look closer at the widescreen monitor in front of her.

  Donovan had become like a drug to me. An addiction. I couldn’t get enough of him.

  I pushed my hair out of my face in frustration. Lexi Steele had never allowed distractions like Nick Donovan. I had to get a grip.

  I’d been telling myself that for a good six months now, since June, a couple of weeks after we finished our first op together. Here it was, the end of November, and I still couldn’t get enough of Donovan.

  “Damnit,” I said under my breath. This infatuation had to stop. It was like being a freaking teenager.

  Another thought crossed my mind as I watched Donovan, a thought that was always there and wouldn’t let go of me. The big man held so many secrets tight to his chest and had never let me in far enough to know what any of them were. I had spilled my guts about what had happened when I was in Army Special Forces, and how I’d been forced into being an assassin. Why was Donovan keeping a big part of his past from me?

  I shook off the thoughts. This wasn’t the time for lust or secrets. It was time to get back to work. I turned my attention to the current op and headed toward David Takamoto.

  Takamoto stood at the opposite side of the banks of monitors and screens of our Team Center, TC. A blue glow encompassed the whole of the Command Center, the glow given off from walls of screens in the CC where various teams tracked activity on their assignments.

  Agents had put up holiday decorations here and there, some for sheer amusement, like a small Santa who dropped his pants every time someone walked by.

  There were also decorations on agents’ desks reflecting their own holiday beliefs. A silver-and-blue-depiction of a Jewish menorah with its white candles. A picture of a Kwanzaa kinara with its colorful candles—three red, one black, and three green.

  Some wiseass had put up a Mexican donkey pinata in a corner of the CC—a picture of Special Agent in Charge Morris Carter on its ass. Our SAC would be entirely oblivious considering he spent his time in his first-floor office playing computer card games as he waited out the last year until his retirement.

  Of course, our Assistant Special Agent in Charge might not find it amusing. Our ASAC, Karen Oxford, was tough, fair, and had no obvious sense of humor. Then again, the picture was still up, and the donkey had been there since two weeks before Thanksgiving. Maybe she had a sense of humor after all.

  A soft buzz and hum filled the CC as agents spoke into headphones and kept track of their assignments on the enormous high-tech screens. I smelled pine from a small Christmas tree that overpowered the familiar scent of climate-controlled air as I passed the tree.

  “Steele.” Takamoto caught sight of me, and I tilted my head to meet his brown eyes when I reached him. “I was just about to find you and give you the news. It’s about Wolf.”

  A petite five-four, I had to look up at most of the guys at the Recovery Enforcement Division. Seemed that Oxford liked to hire male agents six feet and over. Or maybe it was a coincidence.

  Ha.

  Most of the guys on RED task forces made me feel like I was in the land of the giants—just like my four older brothers did. Even my twelve-year-old brother towered over me. Little shit. Make that big shit.

  “I’d give anything for news on Hagstedt.” I put my palms on my hips as I met Takamoto’s gaze. “Tell me you have something on that bastard.”

  Takamoto was excellent at schooling his expressions, and right now I wanted to shake him for looking so calm. He slipped his hands into the pockets of his slacks, causing his shirt to pull against his athletic runner’s physique. He pressed his shirts and slacks so stiffly I don’t think a wrinkle would dare sneak in. I managed not to look down at my T-shirt and Levi’s that I’d snatched out of the laundry basket this morning and felt the material almost crawl with wrinkles.

  “Operation Big Bad Wolf looks like it could be hot in Manhattan
just like we expected.” Takamoto glanced in the direction the group of agents on his intel team. “Rublev just reported in after she sent us the coded message. She said the Elite Gentleman’s Club is definitely Hagstedt’s. She overheard a conversation that verifies what info Johnny gave us. And if we can crack that coded message she intercepted earlier, that may give us all we need to get in there and get to Hagstedt.”

  I wanted to grip my fist and jerk my elbow back in a yes! motion. We’d known the key men were involved in kidnapping and prostituting young women in their club, but we hadn’t known for sure if that operation was part of Hagstedt’s enormous human trafficking ring. “Thank God. We’ve been working that club for how long once Rublev was in?”

  Takamoto shook his head. “At least two months.”

  “About friggin’ time.” I breathed a sigh of relief. “I can’t believe it’s been over six months since we brought down his man Cabot in Cinderella.”

  Operation Cinderella had been a huge coup for the Human Trafficking and Sex Crimes Unit, which was part of the Recovery Enforcement Division. RED was a clandestine offshoot of the NSA, and we had clearance to do any damned thing we wanted to.

  Yeah, Cinderella had been a success, but Wolf had not been going so well. Beyond six months of fruitless searching over the summer for Anders Hagstedt grated at me more and more every single day. The so-called mastermind of countless human trafficking rings in China, Russia, Switzerland, and the United States needed to be brought down. Now. We doubted Hagstedt was his real last name, but we’d still run all the leads we could on anyone with that surname with no luck.