Devil’s Redemption (Devil’s Pawn Duet #2) Read Online Natasha Knight

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Dark, Erotic, Mafia, Romance Tags Authors: Series: Devil's Pawn Duet Series by Natasha Knight
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Total pages in book: 100
Estimated words: 97535 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 488(@200wpm)___ 390(@250wpm)___ 325(@300wpm)
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The hotel is large with over five hundred rooms. It’s just one step above a hostel. A place for someone to get lost in. To be overlooked. I park the SUV in the lot—no valet here—and walk inside. It’s run down with fixtures and furniture that are cheap knock offs that needed to be updated about thirty years ago. It’s very different to the usual sort of place Zeke would stay.

There’s a pit in my stomach as I make my way to the front desk where a young woman looks up and smiles as I approach.

“Good evening, sir. How can I help you?”

“I’m here to see Mr. Spencer. Mitch Spencer.”

I don’t give her my name.

“Yes, he said he was expecting someone. I’ll call him. Just have a seat.”

“Thank you.”

I’ve sent a sizable deposit to Mr. Spencer for the work he’s done. I expect discretion in return. Discretion and information. Because I found something in Santiago’s files. Something he may not have intended for me to see.

The guest list from this hotel contained a name I recognized. Jack J. Z. Wilder. He was my brother’s best friend when we were in high school. It’s too coincidental that his name would be on the overnight guest list.

Santiago had gone so far as to gather the names of all the guests in the nearby hotels and chalets. The out-of-town renters. The locals. He was thorough. And Jack’s name caught my eye. It was the middle initials. That’s what Jack went by in school.

When I contacted Mr. Spencer, who has been working here for fifteen years, he was kind enough, after some financial encouragement, to share with me that there is a camera recording the comings and goings of the lobby, the front entrance, the side doors, and the staff entrances and exits. Normal security measures. But Hotel Petterhof never got rid of any of the old recordings. He was able to find the one from the week of my father’s death. The week Jack J. Z. Wilder supposedly spent skiing in Austria.

Except, Jack had been killed in a motorcycle accident the summer after graduation. I attended his funeral.

The camera footage, although grainy, shows a clear enough image of the tall, dark-haired man posing as Jack.

My brother.

My brother was in Austria the night my father’s car went off the road.

My brother was in a hotel room not half an hour away.

And I had no idea he’d even left the country.

“Mr. St. James. It’s good to meet you. I’m Mitch Spencer.”

I blink, clear my head, and drag myself out of my reverie to meet Mitch Spencer. He’s a short, thickly built man in his late fifties. He extends a hand and I notice how his suit is worn at the wrist.

“Mr. Spencer,” I say, shaking his hand. “Thank you for making time for me on such short notice.”

“This way.” We walk in silence down a corridor where the carpet is frayed, and the smells of food, stale cigarettes and weed permeate the walls. Zeke would hate this place.

I walk behind Spencer into a small office overcrowded by large ledgers and books, stacks of videotapes, a desk that’s seen better days, and a chair behind it that tilts to one side.

The one thing it has going for it is the view from the window behind the desk. It is spectacular.

“The office isn’t much but watching the sun set nightly is something else,” Spencer says, as if reading my mind.

“I bet.”

He gestures to a seat. I take it while he slips into the chair behind the desk. He turns the laptop around and without preamble, hits play. I watch the footage. I saw screenshots of it just days ago. I watch Zeke enter the lobby, a baseball cap pulled low over his face. He also wears a heavy, bulky coat zipped up to his neck, and walks to the elevator. I check the date of the footage. The night of my father’s accident.

I bite back any emotion, any thought.

Spencer pushes a few keys to play another scene. Zeke again, this time dressed in a suit and wool coat not for skiing.

“He checked out early. His reservation was for two nights but he left after one.”

I look at the date and time stamp. “Just an hour after he came in. Play them again.”

He does. And I watch Zeke come into the lobby in the cap and oversized coat. Spencer kindly pauses to expand the image and although grainy, I can make out his expression. At least a little. It’s determined. Hurried.

But when he checks out his hair is wet. He must have showered and changed.

“There’s one more,” Spencer says. “A curious one.”

He turns the laptop around, punches some keys then angles it so I can see the screen. Zeke, walking out of the hotel, dumps his full duffel bag into a trash can near the entrance before climbing into a taxi and leaving the property.


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