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Den of Shadows Collection: Lose yourself in the fantasy, mystery, and intrigue of this stand out trilogy

Год написания книги
2018
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Wyld’s eyes faltered momentarily. She lowered her telescope and gazed into the distance. A whisper, sweet and strong like cherry liquor, haunted her thoughts. It was some advice given when she was far more headstrong, when her saviour tried to show her the benefits of patience and observation.

You’re too headstrong, kid. Take a breath. Don’t rush. You’ve got all the time in the world.

The words lingered as Wyld blinked back a tear. He wasn’t behind her. She knew that. It wasn’t worth turning to check, but she did so anyway, only to view what she expected – nothing. All the time in the world. If only that was true. She would have given anything for more time with him: the man who sheltered her in her younger years, who taught her the meaning of everything.

No, time was cruelly robbed when he vanished – the man who had served as her protector from the bitterness of life, her guardian in a manner of speaking. It’s why she moved from the south, shadowing his footsteps and funding her travel any way possible. To hunt him. To find him. To get an answer as to why he left her to fend for herself.

But this was no time for sentimentality.

She raised the brass eyepiece once more. A breath steadied her rogue emotions.

All the time in the world, she repeated to herself.

When the guards separated for their individual checks, eight hours of observation had paid off. She slinked, catlike, from rooftop to rooftop, sliding down guttering and sprinting to the fence. When there, she climbed, effortlessly to its apex, pressing the barbed wire aside with thick leather gloves and vaulting over, landing perfectly.

Another run, now to the building. She quickly slid downward, forcing herself beneath a closed window, the passing visage of a guard keeping her down. Now pressed against the outer wall, Wyld held her breath, waiting for the boots to faintly echo past until it was safe, before she slid the glass aside and ventured inside.

She pulled a small facemask up from her beige poncho, covering her nose and mouth as she glided from corridor to corridor. The entire structure was decorated in aged tiling, from floor to ceiling. Gaslights were placed spottily, giving plenty of shadow to hide in. What little of that new devil electricity made it out here must have been used for the alarm alone. A roar of laughter emanated from above her – a collection of men playing cards off shift. Six at a guess from the unique voices.

Moving into the middle of the building, Wyld stopped immediately, staring at the impressive sight presented at the end of the central passage.

Protruding from the surface, in grand size, was an immense vault door.

Circular in appearance, with a large turn handle at its heart, the tarnished steel spoke volumes of its age, though even at its creation it would have been mightily impressive. Twenty years at a bet, she figured.

A mental calculation revealed she had another twenty minutes until the next guard passed, so time was not as forgiving as she hoped. Racing to the door, Wyld fingered her way over to the lock, gauging the scale of work based on size and type. The combination dial was awfully imposing, tarnished black with embossed gothic numbering, though on the bright side, there was no need to obtain a key.

Wyld got to work, pressing an ear against the cold metal, spinning the drive cam and gently feeling the wheels inside contact the drive pin. Each small click was scrutinized until each unique snap indicated the combination was being matched.

There was nothing as perfect and particular as the mechanics of a combination lock. Simple, effective, a masterpiece of engineering. The world made sense when Wyld caressed the craftsmanship of such things. Machines were easier to be in the company of than people. Simple actions. Easy decisions. No backchat.

Another click. A heavy clunk. All that was left for the fence to drop and the bolt slide out.

Wyld pressed her ear, firmer, against the metal, holding in every breath possible, listening to the final reverberation from its mechanism.

Click.

Click.

Click.

Click.

Pop.

Wyld narrowed her eyes. Pop? That wasn’t a noise she was familiar with. It was not a click, not a clunk, nor one that belonged on the end of an attempt to open a vault door. Again she turned the dial between thumb and forefinger, comforted by the return of the familiar clicks.

And suddenly, the pop returned.

This time, with three others.

Wyld pulled back, with the stark realization that these noises did not come from before her, but outside instead.

A sudden burst of commotion reverberated all around. From outside gunfire cracked and burst. Voices yelled. Screams of death accompanying them. Then the shrill chime of the alarm exploded throughout the halls.

Wyld gripped her ears, hammer striking metal so fast, so violently that it pierced her. Still, despite this, she sprinted, fast, skidding to a stop at a window. A shot pierced the glass, if by accident or by aim she did not know, but its impact caused a sudden lurch and duck aside.

The bells still rang, the voices louder, their owners making their way through the corridors. Outside, when Wyld braved a look, ten men flanking a horse and cart stood in a cloud of dust, freshly fallen bodies scattered nearby. Wyld may not know who these men were, faces disguised and brandishing obviously outlawed steel, but she knew what this was.

This was a missed opportunity.

Gunfire snapped violently as Wyld hurried herself to an exit at the back of the building, in running catching sight of the intruders packing the Vault door with explosives. Clearly they were not to be subtle in this endeavour, fighting off the guards who peppered the surroundings with sidearm fire.

In her retreat Wyld raced over the stone floor, sliding past any conflict before the back entrance was in sight, though before it could be claimed, a blow took the girl off her feet and she crashed onto the ground. Her gaze, now focused on the ceiling, was awash with sparks but she could see the figure lunging towards her, club in hand that struck and split tile where her head once lay.

Wyld wailed in surprise, after having rolled onto her side to evade the strike from the guard who assumed that she was one of these new intruders. He roared loudly, yanking his revolver from its holster and firing into the ground, chips spraying aside. On her side Wyld kicked out in a scramble, catching the gun barrel and sending it into a skim across the floor.

It was clear that she hadn’t intended for a confrontation of this magnitude – something that the guard sensed and capitalized on. He fell, with his full weight, onto Wyld, forcing every scrap of air from her lungs in a pained exhalation. Hands swung in punches, trying to force through the girl’s guard. This little runt wouldn’t escape this, he promised himself in a red mist. In this desperate struggle, as Wyld’s head rolled side to side, her arms buckling under the impacts, she reached for something, anything in her grip that could grant her freedom.

A crack was muffled by cloth and flesh, as the guard gasped aloud and life escaped his body. He slumped aside, eyes still bugged in disbelief, a shock of red flooding over his blue tunic, pooling on the floor.

All Wyld could hear was the panting of her own breath. Her hands, still trembling, were clenched tightly over one of her revolvers, a virgin shot smoking from the barrel, with spots of the victim’s life tarnishing her own clothes. She had killed a man. Not just any man. A man of the law. She was a murderer, simple and clear. Never had she done such a thing – such a horrid, brutish thing – and the shock burnt through her limbs, making every movement weighted and every thought nonsensical. For this, she would be hanged by the neck and they would be right to do so.

Escape.

She had to escape.

As she heaved against the back door with one shoulder, the building quaked violently as the Vault door was blown asunder, powdering her hair with brick dust. Daylight embraced her in warmth as she sprinted as best as she could back over the fence in a mad scramble. It wasn’t until she had hid herself sufficiently into the shadows of the shanties that she dared to look back, a cheering posse making their getaway on horseback, with a cart of goods pulled behind at speed.

Now, she allowed herself to finally breathe, watched casually by locals from their dilapidated windows. They had seen this kind of thing before. They nonchalantly closed shutters or deliberately ignored the commotion. They had no reason to trouble themselves with whatever this was, leaving Wyld to find solace in hiding.

Chapter Nine (#ud3cfe107-c58b-5017-8cfb-68c33a6b1e73)

Wise Men

Jacques had never deemed himself wise.

Clever, yes, observant, for sure, but wise? Wise wasn’t his thing. Wise was a quality for folks with big glasses, who spent all their time reading books, wrangling numbers and the like. Wise was, to him, an insult – a proclamation that a person was focused on small complexities rather than indulging in the world at hand.

So when Misu had playfully called the head of security wise, he wrinkled his nose and pouted in disappointment. She didn’t mean anything by it of course, but when realizing that it may have caused offence, she explained that it wasn’t a word that should be taken in the wrong way and the reason she needed his wise council was because she was concerned about Franco’s next endeavour and he needed company, wise company, to steer him from any lapses in intelligence he may suffer.

* * *

The Den was still impounded so Franco made it his business to ensure that it wasn’t damaged in the search. Secretly his paranoia was gnawing away at his conscience. Wyld had been with them for a month. Who knows what she had stashed in the storage car. Whatever it was, it was hopefully something that the law did not find.

‘Wise?’ Franco chuckled, walking out of the station clad in his long brown leathers protecting his smart attire, animal-skin boots clicking down each stone step. His green vest was finely tailored, a trail of brilliant buttons rising from belly to collar almost dazzling in the equally brilliant noon sunlight. His crisp white shirt beneath was clean – not scuffed with dirt.

‘Misu certainly did think so.’
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