From his first introduction in American Hellhound, Reese has been one of the Dartmoor characters I most want to explore. Because I have a bad habit of exploring the same concept from a variety of angles, his struggles of having been raised as a weapon rather than a human being are struggles I've carried over into my Sons of Rome series. Those themes of identity and personhood, of finding a place in society are all things I'm going to explore with Severin - and Kolya, to a lesser degree, though with Kolya it's more about remembering. But because their circumstances are so different, it doesn't take away the importance of those themes in Reese's story.
I've had requests for a Reese book, and that's definitely something I'm interested in - but a lot of work has to happen before that. Work that needs to occur on the page, and not offscreen. His journey to feeling like he's a part of the club - and even the world - will be slow, and strange, and, for the moment, he's got a rival he never intended on having.
Here's a snippet from one of my current WIPs, and the next Dartmoor-related book, Lone Star.
“Texas,”
Fox said. “Amarillo.”
That
was where they were going. Reese had spent enough time with Fox at this point
to know that he was someone who didn’t mince words, and who didn’t like to
waste effort.
Reese
appreciated that. He understood it. Mercy was like that, too – but Mercy was busy.
He had a wife, and three children, and he liked to linger over lunch with
Aidan, Tango, and Carter, laughing in that loud, bright, open way that Reese
struggled to comprehend. He knew what laughter was – but didn’t know
what inspired it.
Fox
laughed, some, but it didn’t strike Reese as the explosive, involuntary release
of good humor like with Mercy. With Fox, it seemed performative; he laughed
when he was supposed to, when it was socially appropriate; an effort to blend
in with the others, though his eyes flashed darkly, and the way he bared his
teeth didn’t speak to good cheer.
That
Reese understood perfectly.
So
he was fine with going to Texas. Was glad of an opportunity to put his skills
to use, actually. Training was important, was necessary, but not a replacement
for actual wet work. This was perhaps the longest he’d gone without performing
an op, and he could feel himself growing complacent. Maggie’s rich cooking, and
Aidan trying to explain the wonders of college football to him, and Tango explaining
Instagram to him – a phenomenon for which he had yet to find a justification.
Roman was courting Kristin, and Reese was keenly aware that he and his sister
viewed the world very, very differently.
I’m
happy, she’d told him. I
want you to be happy, too.
He
didn’t understand. Probably he never would.
So
he would go to Texas, and he would work, and he would be useful.
But
they were traveling via bike, Fox had told him, and Reese couldn’t take his
usual arsenal.
It
lay on top of his neatly-made bed, now, arranged in orderly rows, largest to
smallest, all the guns clean and smelling of oil, all the knives gleaming in
the soft glow of lamplight.
The
sniper rifle he would have to leave behind, he decided; even broken-down, it
would make for awkward carrying. He stared at it a moment, already missing it,
then dismissed all thought of it. His regular shotgun wouldn’t work, either,
but the sawed-off he thought he could manage, in its leather scabbard.
He
would take the .45s, worn in their usual shoulder holster; there was a slim
little sheath built into one of the straps that held his two-inch, double-edged
emergency knife, so that would go, too.
He’d
take the Glocks, and plenty of extra magazines, ammo for all the handguns. The
bowie knife he’d leave, but take all the others, the slender stabbers and the
serrated utility knives. A switchblade for each boot. All of that he could wear
on his person, save the mags and ammo; those he’d pack in his knapsack, along
with a bit of wire, some gauze pads, tape, eye drops, and a tin of grease
paint.
“We’re
going to Texas,” a scathing voice said from the doorway behind him, BBC
British; a cultivated accent, carefully chosen for the weapon who would wield
it. “Not Fallujah.”
Reese
cinched the knapsack and carried it to the dresser to set beside his folded
hoodie and Kevlar vest. Only then did he acknowledge Ten.
Fox’s
brother lounged in the doorway, a shoulder braced against the jamb, arms
folded, and hips cocked negligently. He had this way of melting and adhering to
whatever wall or bit of furniture he was near. A kind of casual that he’d
perfected, Reese knew, through long hours of practice, but which wasn’t
natural. It was too perfect, too artless to have been anything like Evan’s
unconscious sprawling across surfaces.
“Preparation
is important,” Reese said, because that logic had been drilled into his head
since his earliest memories. Tie your shoes, clean your plate, preparation is
important.
Tenny
rolled his eyes. “Yes, it is.” He pushed off the doorframe and stepped into the
room. “Are you taking that?” He pointed to the broken-down rifle where it
rested on the pillow.
Reese
knew a sudden, intense urge to throw himself down on the bed and shield the gun
from view. His things were his things, and he didn’t let others touch them.
Didn’t share.
When
he didn’t respond, stood there with his hands at his sides, open and loose from
great effort, Ten took a few steps closer to the bed, and reached out.
“It’s
clean,” Reese said, voice tight, and Ten’s hand paused, hovering in the air.
His
head lifted, gaze sharp and assessing. “You don’t want me touching it.”
Reese
swallowed. “The oils from your skin–”
“I
know how to pick up a gun,” Ten said, faintly insulted. “But you don’t want
me to touch it.” Probing now, the way he always seemed to.
When
they’d arrived home from London, and Fox had introduced Ten to everyone, Ghost
had said, “Shit, now there’s two of them.”
(“Um,
three?” Evan had said, but no one had listened.)
He
and Tenny had been slapped with the same label. Reese had known that he didn’t
fit with the Lean Dogs. He did like them, and when he thought of Knoxville, of
this clubhouse where he had a dorm room all to himself, he thought home.
But he didn’t think like them; didn’t
act like them. Didn’t understand, for instance, what was so special about the
girls in the skimpy clothes who Boomer looked at with such round-eyed, baldly
appreciative stares. Chanel had looked at Reese once, and closed one eye, and
Boomer had come hustling over with his chest stuck out, his voice too deep, and
told Reese to “back off,” He’d apologized after, when Reese only stared at him,
pale and stammering. Chanel had laughed.
Reese
didn’t understand.
But
it didn’t bother him, not knowing; not speaking the strange social language
that everyone around him did. He had his skills; he knew his place.
But
then Tenny had come along.
Tenny
who’d been raised to fight, and kill; to assess, and assault, and act without
hesitation or prejudice.
But
Ten had been groomed differently. He spoke a dozen languages, and he could slide
into a conversation in the same easy way Reese slid a knife from his boot. He
understood the social cues that Reese didn’t; his master hadn’t been just a man
like Reese’s, but a government. An organization. They’d had resources necessary
to teach Ten to blend into a crowd; to seduce, and set at ease, and play mind
games.
Ten
thought Reese was weak, and he hadn’t been subtle in expressing that.
The
idea of him touching Reese’s belongings left Reese thinking about the distance
between them, and the force necessary to put his emergency knife in the other
killer’s throat.
“No,”
Reese said, “I don’t.”
Ten
smiled, the blade-sharp grin that looked like Fox’s, the one that confused
delight with aggression. “Because you don’t like me.” It wasn’t a guess.
I
hate you, Reese thought,
but didn’t say, startled by his own hostility. Hate wasn’t a prudent
emotion in an assassin.
“I
have no opinion of you,” he said, and thought he managed to keep his voice flat
and neutral. Restraining himself was a foreign concept; he was struggling with
it.
Ten
chuckled; a forced sound, another practiced behavior too perfect to have been
real. He sat down on the empty patch of bedspread where the knapsack had
rested. “Do you know what your problem is?”
That
I hate you.
“You
haven’t been challenged.”
Reese
thought of the small composition notebook in his sock drawer, the one
rubber-banded shut. Thought of the tally marks on the pages. Of the accounting
of his kills. He’d dropped over the wall of a bathroom stall to strangle a man
to death. Had sniped down targets from rooftops, four blocks away before the
body had cooled.
He’d
crawled through the tangle of wires and vents and dropped out of a ceiling to
save Ten’s own sister – whom he didn’t know, and didn’t love.
He
lifted his chin a fraction. “I’ve been challenged.”
That
earned another chuckle. “What? Killing rednecks? Drug dealers, and
hooker-killers? You paint your face black, and you play grim reaper, and, what
then, disappear? You murder the untrained civilians your masters point you
toward. Where’s the challenge in that?”
When
Reese only stared at him, Ten’s gaze sharpened. “You stick out. You stick out
in a room full of people like a stinking, festering wound. You can’t play at
charming, or interesting. You barely know how to speak.
“Could
you work the long game? Could you befriend someone? Seduce someone into bed?
Learn all their secrets before you slit their throats? No,” he said, when Reese
gathered breath to speak. “You can’t. You haven’t the faintest notion how to
get information out of a mark. Killing is good – it always comes down to
killing, in the end – but any dog can kill. The best assassins can learn
– and I don’t think you can.”
I
hate you, Reese thought. I
hate you, I hate you, I hate you.
Ten
stood. “Fox might be taking you, but he doesn’t need you. When we get to Texas,
stay out of my way.” He turned to leave.
He
was at the threshold when Reese found his voice. “I have a name.”
Ten
froze. Turned back around.
“I
have a name,” he repeated. “And you only have a number. Don’t pretend you’re
more human than me.”
Ten
stood impassively a long moment. Then he bared his teeth in another too-sharp
smile, and walked off.
His
shoulders were tight, though. Reese noticed that.
Because
he noticed everything.
This will be a fascinating story and I can’t wait to read it! Loved the snippet!
ReplyDeleteI CAN NOT WAIT.
ReplyDeleteThis will be an amazing journey. Thanks for your hard work.
Awesome!!
ReplyDelete