Chapter 1

The music died.

Then Ella Whitmore's champagne flute hit the marble floor and exploded into a scatter of golden light.

Dozens of politicians and local power players turned in unison toward the man standing in the doorway of The Plaza Hotel's banquet hall. Kyle Miller. Still as a statue cast from iron.

One of the waitstaff — a young guy with white gloves balancing a serving tray — glanced over as Kyle walked in. His eyes snagged on the ugly old gunshot scar running down Kyle's cheek, held there half a second, then dropped to the floor.

Kyle moved deeper into the room. His combat boots struck the marble in a slow, deliberate rhythm — heavy as a funeral bell in an empty church.

In the center of the hall, Ella stood in a white couture gown that looked like it had been thrown on in a hurry. The fabric was creased and pulling at the waist. 

She stared at him with the look of someone watching a ghost materialize, lips trembling, not a single sound making it out.

Kyle stopped three paces in front of her.

"Ella." His voice came out rough as gravel. "Sorry I'm late."

"You —" Her throat locked up like something had clamped down on it. "You're actually alive?"

"Died once already. Hell didn't want me." Kyle pulled his gaze off her and swept it cold and slow across the room. "So I came back."

A silver-haired old man shoved through the crowd. 

Marcus Whitmore — Ella's father, a man who'd spent years running smuggling routes along the border. 

He was shaking so hard his finger nearly poked Kyle in the nose, his face swollen red as a slab of raw meat.

"Kyle Miller! You goddamn bastard!" His voice hit the pitch of a cat getting its tail stepped on. "You killed Ramón Santos's own son! Got my whole family hunted down because of you! And now you've got the nerve to walk in here?!"

Kyle looked at him. 

This old man ,who six years ago had thrown his pregnant daughter out onto the street just to grovel at the cartel's feet — was now standing here playing judge and jury.

"I didn't murder anyone, Marcus." Kyle didn't even bother raising an eyebrow. "Henry died in a crossfire. If don Ramón needs someone to blame to save face, that's his problem. Not mine."

Marcus went apoplectic. "Security! Get this troublemaking piece of garbage under control!"

Six men in black suits fanned out from the crowd and closed in a half-circle around Kyle.

Kyle didn't move. Didn't even take his hands out of his coat pockets.

The first guard threw a punch at his temple. 

Kyle turned his head just enough, caught the man's wrist in a backhand grip, and twisted. 

The crack of bone was loud and clean. The guard screamed and went down to his knees.

The second went for his gun. 

Kyle's boot caught his wrist on the draw — the Glock spun up into the air, and Kyle plucked it on the way down. 

He pressed the cold muzzle against Marcus's forehead in one smooth motion.

The other four guards froze like they'd been nailed to the floor.

Kyle pulled the trigger without hesitating.

The round clipped the outer edge of Marcus's ear and punched into the solid wood wall behind him, blowing out a hole the size of a fist. 

Marcus's legs gave out. He folded straight to the ground.

Kyle lowered the gun. "Next one, I won't aim wide."

The entire banquet hall went pin-drop silent.

Ella came at him like something had snapped loose inside her.

She grabbed his coat lapels with both fists, her smoky eye makeup streaked down her face with tears, her voice shaking apart at the seams. 

"Where the hell have you been for six years? Why?! Anya is dying …her heart won't make it through this winter…"

"I know," Kyle cut her off. For just a moment, something in his eyes went quiet. "That's why I'm here."

He turned his head. 

Across the room, a thick-necked middle-aged man was quietly edging toward the back of the crowd. 

Victor — a corrupt border patrol official, and the man who was supposed to walk Ella down the aisle tonight.

Then Kyle's gaze moved to the darkest corner of the banquet hall.

Two children were huddled behind a velvet chair.

A little girl, six years old, was curled up tight. Her skin was nearly transparent, the veins at her temples standing out clearly, her breathing fast and labored. Anya.

Standing in front of her was a boy of about ten. He had both hands locked around a silver fruit knife lifted from the dessert table . 

His hands were shaking hard, but his eyes never once looked away. Sharp eyes. Hawk eyes. 

Liam.

Kyle walked over and dropped to one knee.

Liam pushed the knife tip forward. "Back off! Who the hell are you, mister?"

"Liam!" Ella started toward them. Kyle raised a hand and stopped her.

Kyle turned his palm up, spreading his rough, scarred hand so the boy could see the crescent-shaped scar carved across it. "What's your name?"

"Liam." The boy's jaw was locked, the muscles in his cheeks drawn tight. "And who the hell are you supposed to be?"

"Your dad."

Liam's eyes went red in an instant. 

He held it back barely . "Bullshit. My mom told me my dad died out in the rocks on the border."

"He did." Kyle kept his voice low. "But he crawled back."

"Then where were you for six years?!" The knuckles wrapped around the knife handle went white. "Anya's been sick for six years. Mom's been crying for six years. You got the guts to walk back in here, you should've had the guts to stay dead!"

Kyle held the boy's gaze. He didn't flinch. Didn't defend himself.

"You're right, kid," he said. "I'm here to pay what I owe."

Liam went still.

Kyle reached up and moved his hand toward the boy's head. Liam pulled back on instinct .

The little girl was pressed into the corner of her chair, eyes wide.

"Anya." Kyle crouched down in front of her. "Dad's late. I'm sorry."

"Daddy…" Her voice was barely above a whisper, thin as wind across desert sand. "Are you really the superhero Mommy used to tell me about?"

"That's me."

She reached out a trembling hand. Kyle took it and held on. Her palm was ice cold.

Then the windows went white.

A high, drilling buzz cut through the air outside, and a searchlight beam ripped through the glass and tore across the banquet hall.

A helicopter.

Kyle stood in one motion. His hand shot out and closed around Victor's throat from behind, hoisting the man off the floor like he weighed nothing.

"Who's out there?"

Victor's face went purple. He forced the name out through clenched teeth. "Ra — Ramón Santos—"

Kyle's pupils shrank to pinpoints.

Ramón Santos. 

The most savage boss the Juárez Cartel had ever produced.

He dropped Victor, let him hit the floor, and bent down to pick up Anya. His other hand found Ella's and locked around it.

"Party's over." Kyle's voice didn't rise, but it carried to every corner of the room. The kind of voice that didn't need volume to be obeyed. "The kids come with me. Anyone who gets in my way tonight meets God before morning."

He glanced down at Marcus, still crumpled on the floor.

"Pass a message to Ramón Santos," Kyle said, his tone flat and final. "Tell him Kyle Miller's back in Texas. Tell him to say his prayers and wait for me on the other side of the river."

Outside, the searchlight swung closer. The rotor wash hit the reinforced glass and set the whole wall humming.

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