supply," the lesser muttered after a moment.
"And I shall gladly provide it."
"I need a loan." Now Assail frowned - but the lesser continued before he could cut in. "You float me this next order, and I'll make sure you get paid."
"That is not how I do business."
"Here's what I know about you and yours. You have a small operation that controls a huge area. You need distributors - because you killed all the ones that were here before. Without me and my organization? No offense, you're fucked. You can't begin to service all of Caldwell - and your product is worth nothing if you can't get it into the hands of users." When Assail didn't immediately reply, the lesser laughed softly. "Or did you think you were unknown, my friend?"
Assail gripped his cell phone hard.
"So I'm thinkin' you're right," the slayer concluded. "You and me are homies. I don't need to deal with whoever the big wholesaler is. Especially not in my...current incarnation."
Yes, the smell alone would make Benloise shut the door in his face, Assail thought.
"I need you. You need me. And that is why you're gonna bring my order to me and give me forty-eight hours to pay for it. It's just like you said. We got shit without the other, brother."
Assail bared his fangs, the reflection of his face in the glass of the monitor fearsome indeed.
And yet he kept his voice even and calm. "Where would you like to meet."
As the lesser laughed again, like he was enjoying this, Assail focused on the snarling image of himself. It would be unwise for the slayer to get greedy, or take too many liberties.
The one thing that was always true about business? No one was irreplaceable.
As Trez came awake, he felt as though he were floating on a cloud - and for a split second, he wondered if he was. His body felt completely weightless, to the point where he wasn't sure whether he was on his back or his stomach.
A strange sound filtered in through his fog.
Shhhscht.
He lifted his head, and orientation came to him in a rush: The red glow of his alarm clock told him he was on his stomach and running diagonally down the bed.
That sound came again.
What was it? Metal on metal?
He could sense iAm moving around down the hall, his brother's presence as known to him as his own. So if it was anyone else in the apartment or a threat of any kind? iAm would handle that shit.
Pushing himself up, he got out of bed and - yeah, whoa, the room spun around. Then again, there was absolutely, positively nothing in his stomach. Matter of fact, it was possible he'd thrown up his liver, kidneys, and lungs during that migraine. The good news was that the pain was gone, and the spacey aftermath wasn't bad. Kind of like being drunk, with the hangover front-loaded.
When he walked into the loo, he knew better than to turn on the lights. Little early for that still.
The shower felt so good he nearly teared the fuck up. And he didn't bother shaving - there'd be time for that later, after he'd thrown some fuel into his gut. Robe was nice - toasty, especially as he curled the lapels in and covered his throat up.
Bare feet kind of sucked, especially as he stepped out of his bedroom and into the marble-floored hallway, but he needed to find out what the hell that -
Trez stopped as he came to the doorway of his brother's suite of rooms. iAm was in his closet, taking out shirts that were on hangers. As he pulled another armful together on the brass rod, that shhhscht sounded again.
Naturally, his brother didn't seem surprised that Trez had made an appearance. He just threw the load on his bed.
Fuck.
"Going somewhere?" Trez muttered, his voice too loud in his head.
"Yes."
Crap. "Listen, iAm, I didn't mean - "
"I'm packing you up, too."
Trez blinked a couple of times.
"Oh?" At least the guy wasn't pulling out solo. Unless he wanted the satisfaction of pitching Trez's gear off the balcony?
"I've found us somewhere more secure."
"Is it in Caldwell?"
"Yes."
Cue the Jeopardy! theme. "You wanna give me a zip code?"
"I would if I could."
Trez groaned and leaned against the jamb, rubbing his eyes. "You've got us somewhere to go - and you don't know where it is?"
"No, I do not."
Okay, maybe it hadn't been a migraine, but a stroke. "I'm sorry. I'm not following - "
"We have" - iAm looked