CASSIAN
The heavy steel door of the vehicle bay swung open, and I moved through it with the cold, rhythmic focus of a man who had already seen the end of the world. The space was massive, a cavern of damp concrete and shadow lit by flickering orange sodium lamps.
At the far end, the black armored sedan was idling, its exhaust a white plu in the cool air. Emilio was already at the door, but three n stood between us.
I read them imdiately. These weren’t the panicked guards from the basent. These were professional shadows. They didn’t rush; they spread out.
Their spacing was perfect, a triangular formation that ensured no matter which way I moved, I was in the line of fire or a strike zone.
They didn’t speak. They didn’t need to. They had worked together long enough to share a single nervous system.
The first one ca at with controlled aggression. He didn’t swing wild; he aid for where my head would be if I flinched. He anticipated a retreat.
I went the other way. I stepped into his guard, taking the air from his lungs with a calculated elbow to the stomach. He absorbed it better than I expected, grunt-hissing as he pivoted to reset. He was good.
The second man used that half-second of engagent as a distraction. He tid his strike with careful precision, a heavy kick catching square in the side. It landed right on the ribs the vest had saved but the bullet had bruised.
The pain was a flash of blinding white light. It was brief, sharp, and sickening. I didn’t stop. I couldn’t afford to.
The third man was the most dangerous. He hung back, chin tucked, eyes tracking my center of gravity. He was the anchor. I realized then that I couldn’t go through all three cleanly, not with my jaw throbbing and my ribs screaming. I had to make a trade.
In my peripheral vision, I saw Emilio get into the car. The door slamd. The engine revved, a low, predatory growl echoing off the walls. Ti was up.
I lunged at the first two, accepting a brutal hit to the jaw from the second man’s fist just to get a clear angle on the third. The inside of my cheek split against my teeth instantly.
The taste of copper was a hot flood in my mouth. But the trade worked. The third man, surprised by my willingness to take damage, caught my weight full-on. One fluid motion, a sweep and a drive, and he was down.
The car was already moving. The heavy bay doors ahead were groaning open, revealing the dark city beyond. Emilio didn’t look back. He didn’t have to. He had bought his ti with the blood of his n.
I stood in the center of the bay, spitting a mouthful of blood onto the concrete. The armored sedan was gone, its taillights two red sparks vanishing into the night.
I scanned the remaining vehicles. There was a secondary car, but I didn’t have the keys and I didn’t have the seconds to hotwire it.
Then I saw it, a sleek, dark motorcycle leaned on its kickstand near the rack. The keys were still in the ignition. Whoever had ridden it in had been too arrogant to think they’d need a fast exit.
I was on it before the thought fully ford. The engine roared to life, a high-pitched scream that promised speed.
"Cassian," Reid’s voice crackled in my ear. "The car went north. I’m tracking the traffic caras, but I’m going to lose him in about four blocks. The coverage drops off near the old industrial sector."
"Give what you have," I said, kicking the bike into gear.
I roared through the bay doors. The night air hit like a physical blow, the first breath of outside air I’d had since the operation began. It was cold, sharp, and tasted of salt and diesel.
"North on the main road," Reid directed. "Then east at the junction. There’s a highway access two blocks after that. If he gets to the highway—"
"He won’t," I snapped. I leaned the bike hard into the first turn, the tires screaming for grip on the cold asphalt.
The city’s industrial edge was a wasteland of corrugated tal and empty lots. The streets were wide and sparse, the kind of place where you could see a car’s silhouette from half a mile away.
Emilio’s sedan was visible ahead, maybe two hundred ters out.
I didn’t feel fear. I didn’t even feel the strategy that usually governed my life.
I felt sothing older. Sothing that had been coiled in the base of my spine since the night Julian died.
Since I stood over a body that didn’t look like him anymore and realized the world was still turning, and the n who did it were still breathing.
Pure rage is the wrong word for it. Rage is hot and ssy. This was cold. This was a vacuum. It was the focus of a man who had been patient for four years and had finally run out of ti.
I opened the throttle. The gap closed.
The sedan’s brake lights flickered, he’d seen . The car accelerated, fishtailing slightly as it pushed for the junction. Then, the rear passenger window slid down. A gun appeared.
The shooting started. Muzzle flashes strobed in the dark. I dropped the bike’s angle, leaning so low my knee almost scraped the pavent.
The first shot whistled past where my head had been a second ago. I adjusted, the riding and the dodging becoming a single, fluid instinct.
Then I felt it. A sharp, burning sting in my left arm. A graze. The sa arm as the shoulder injury. The specific cruelty of the universe made want to laugh. The arm felt heavy, the muscles protesting, but I forced it to hold the grip. It had to.
"There’s a junction ahead," Reid warned. "Left takes him to the highway. Right takes him into the warehouse district. There are no caras there. I’ll lose him completely."
"Which does he take?" I asked, my voice flat.
Reid paused for a heartbeat. "Left. He’s going for the highway."
I didn’t follow. I saw a narrow side street, a service alley that cut diagonally through the block. I knew the geotry of this district. If I took the alley, I could bypass the long curve of the main road and et him at the on-ramp.
"Cassian," Reid said, his voice rising. "What are you doing? You’re off the route."
"I know."
"You’re going to, "
"Yes."
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