“Shit, shit, shit…!”
Desperately, one by one, I put away the floating orbs returning them to their liquid silver original state, storing them in glass tubes.
From afar, I could hear more explosions. Panic, roars.
The entire city trembling.
Even with all windows closed, my chamber sealed in an empty building, I could hear.
Her voice.
“It is futile to resist. We have pinpointed your location, closed these Blocks, and captured your accomplices. You have five minutes to exit the building of your own volition.”
Alantra spoke with the tiniest hint of contempt, something that was almost imperceptible. Yet I could tell—I could smell it from afar.
From outside, I heard dragons approaching. Yet those dragons were being ridden by the authorities. Because every other dragon had either been put to sleep or been restricted and locked away.
As I threw everything inside my bag, I cut myself on a piece of metal that I didn’t even know what it was.
“Fuck…!”
Never, not even once, did the authorities blow up the underground to make an arrest.
They would barely interfere with the illegal races, since they were still under the big four criminal organizations. Unless the person had rotten shit for brains, anyone could tell the authorities had some kind of agreement with the organizations.
So why were they here?
Why this day?
Why me?
Ikarus will fall
I kicked my chair hard, sending it flying against the wall. Breaking three of its legs.
“Ringleader Jackal, you have one minute to leave the building under a peaceful approach.” Her voice was defiant, almost like a dare.
I let out a scream, the frustration and rage tearing their way up my throat enough to make it bleed and hurt.
Think, think, think.
What can I do?
Where can I go?
Of course I had escape routes. The problem was the closest one had been blocked by the wreckage, from when they blew up the ceiling.
Trying to outrun a dragon rider enforcer was a fool’s endeavor at best, a desperate death sentence at worst.
Alantra’s team had at least fifteen riders—it was best to assume they also had foot officers as well. She said they had closed my Blocks, and although it was not an impossible thing to do, it was fated to have some blind spot or small crack they didn’t cover.
This underground city was practically my home. I had grown up in the slums before moving here, yet I had lived on these streets practically my entire life.
Those shitty bastards couldn’t know these Blocks better than me.
I took a deep breath, trying to ground myself. It was difficult to calm my nerves—to soothe the untamed anger that kept crushing against my entire being like baleful waves. Yet I couldn’t lose control at this moment.
I had to escape first.
After grabbing my bag, I gave one last glance across the room to make sure I wasn’t forgetting anything. Then I started to run.
A cape and hood concealed my face alongside the jackal mask, my clothes as dark as they could be, and as I escaped through one of the broken windows, my eyes kept wandering and glancing in all directions. My heart racing and trembling against my chest.
“Let the records show that you were warned accordingly, Jackal.” Alantra’s voice, as she spoke, was a haunting mockery. As if she wanted me to go against their orders, just so she could humiliate me even more once she caught me.
If she caught me.
The building I had been not even ten seconds before blew up, the explosion followed by roars and cries. To cause such an explosion, they had to have a high-breed dragon with either a fire or air attribute.
Or a bloody good alchemist.
Avoiding the riders was even more challenging than I had anticipated. I had to crawl in the dirt and lurk in narrow alleys like a dirty rat, hiding at the faintest noise, freezing in the spot at the weakest breeze. From afar, I kept hearing Alantra giving orders and directions, coordinating the entire squad’s movements. Wasn’t she too young to be a leader?
It felt like hours, but perhaps not even ten minutes had passed when I reached the border to another Block.
Officers in their immaculate white and gold uniforms stood in lines, blocking the passages. Between houses and buildings I saw dragon rider enforcers, some of them carrying enhanced weapons.
I cursed under my breath, leaning my back against the cold stone wall.
What now, Vex?
Suddenly my eye caught a faint glow coming from my wrist. In my haste, I had forgotten to destroy my crystal. I was about to throw it away when the message displayed on the black stone made my eyes jump.