Raven lay prone on the rooftop, the rifle’s cold stock pressed hard against her cheek. Pre-dawn air clung to her skin, damp with the sll of wet asphalt and the faint tallic bite of gun oil. The weapon felt heavier than anything she usually carried. Longer. Unfamiliar. The knife on her hip rested quiet, almost ornantal tonight, its weight a ghost she no longer reached for.
Forty ters below, the predicted entry point waited in shadow. Narrow access road. Concrete barriers. The kind of choke point rcenaries trusted because it looked simple on paper.
She breathed slow. The old rhythm Caruso had drilled into her until it lived behind her ribs like second nature.
5:47 a.m.
The first engine rumble cut the quiet. Right on ti.
Two black vehicles rolled past the first marker. Standard rcenary spacing—close enough to support, far enough to survive a single grenade. Professionals. But predictable.
The third vehicle lagged half a second. Darker windows. Slightly heavier suspension. The driver checked his mirror twice before the turn. Command. She felt it low in her gut the way she once felt a knife’s perfect balance before the throw.
She didn’t reach for her blade.
The rifle ca up. Crosshairs settled. Breath held.
Three rounds through the driver’s window. Glass spiderwebbed. The vehicle swerved hard, tires screaming, and slamd into the concrete barrier. tal crumpled with a sickening crunch.
The commander’s door cracked open. She put a round into the gap before he could raise his weapon.
One flick of her wrist signaled Adrian.
He moved from the left flank, silent, Reaper in his elent. She shifted position, fired through the passenger window one-handed while dragging a wounded Guardian out of the kill box. The man’s blood slicked her sleeve, warm and sticky, soaking through the fabric until it clung to her skin. She didn’t look at his face. Couldn’t afford the distraction.
Dante’s team collapsed from the rear. Shouts. Short bursts of fire. The rcenaries were good. Fast. They expected the Caruso assassin they had been briefed on—close, personal, intimate with steel.
They didn’t expect her on a rooftop with a rifle. Prone. Forty ters out. Three clean rounds through glass before the first man could clear his seat.
The fight ended faster than it should have. Eight bodies cooling on asphalt. Four captured, wrists zip-tied, breathing hard through split lips. The air slled of cordite and fresh blood.
Raven rose to her knees. The rifle’s heat lingered against her shoulder like a brand. She touched the knife on her hip. Still there. The steel felt distant tonight, almost foreign.
The commander lay half out of the wrecked vehicle. Blood bubbled at the corner of his mouth. He looked at her like she was sothing he couldn’t quite believe existed.
"You fight like you were trained to die," he rasped, words wet and broken.
Raven crouched beside him. Voice flat. "I was trained to make others die."
She left him there.
Comms crackled. Gabriel’s voice cut through. Flat. Even through the static. That was how she knew it was bad. Gabriel never sounded flat.
"I’m hit."
Her chest went cold.
She left Adrian securing the prisoners and ran. Her boots hit asphalt, then concrete. The south access road blurred under the graying sky. Each step jarred through her soles, grounding her even as sothing behind her ribs started to crack wide open.
Leonid was already there, massive hands pressed to Gabriel’s left shoulder. Blood seeped between thick fingers, dark and steady. Gabriel’s face was pale under the dawn light. Jaw locked tight. He wasn’t making noise. That was worse.
The wound was bad. Rifle round had punched through the gap between vest plates. Fragnts still lodged sowhere deep. Gabriel’s breathing ca shallow. His hand shook where it rested on his thigh. The Iron Wall never shook.
Leonid looked up. Voice low, almost a growl. "He needs a hospital. Now."
Gabriel’s eyes found hers. "It’s just a shoulder. Keep moving."
Raven didn’t answer. She was already on comms, voice steady even though the cold behind her ribs had spread, pressing against her lungs until every breath felt borrowed. Extraction coordinates. devac inbound. She pressed her palm over Leonid’s hands, adding pressure. Warm blood coated her fingers, slick between them.
The devac ca at dawn. Rotors beat the air, whipping dust and grit across the road. Gabriel was alive when they loaded him. That was sothing. Leonid had kept pressure on the wound for eleven minutes without stopping. His hands had shaken once—just once—when Gabriel’s eyes had closed. Raven had seen it.
Raven stood in the gray light, blood on her hands that wasn’t hers, and watched the chopper lift off. The cut on her forearm from Elias’s nails had reopened. She didn’t feel it.
Sebastian’s voice ca over the line. Tight. Controlled. The kind of control that ant bad news.
"While you were playing soldier, Caruso hit the east supply depot. Fuel. Ammunition. Three days of it. Gone."
Raven closed her eyes.
The win turned to ash in her mouth.
Eight rcenaries dead. Four captured. One Guardian wounded—Vasquez, one of Gabriel’s n, a shoulder shot that would keep him off the field for weeks. One supply depot gone.
She touched the knife on her hip again. Didn’t draw it.
The rcenaries had expected a blade. Caruso’s assassin, they’d been told, fought up close. Personal. Intimate.
They didn’t expect her to put rounds through a window from forty ters. They didn’t expect the rifle.
Caruso had trained her for everything. They just never knew which everything she would use.
The problem was—neither did she.
Gabriel was bleeding because she had called the vectors right. She had predicted the pattern. She had set the ambush.
She hadn’t predicted the depot.
Caruso wasn’t just hitting back. They were thinking two moves ahead. Let her win the fight. Take sothing bigger while she was busy proving she belonged.
She had called the pattern right.
Caruso had called the bigger one.
And she hadn’t seen it coming.
Adrian gave her a single nod when she reached the vehicle. Dante didn’t grin. Just looked at her with sothing heavier than approval. Neither of them asked what ca next. That was its own kind of answer. Leonid’s hands were still red.
The cost sat behind her ribs. Cold. Heavy. Unnad.
She had won the battle.
Caruso had won the night.
And for the first ti since she chose to stay, Raven wasn’t sure winning was enough.
She climbed into the passenger seat. Adrian started the engine without asking if she was all right.
The mansion gates appeared ahead.
Vincent’s lamp would be burning.
She didn’t know what she would say to him.
We won. But Gabriel’s down. The depot’s gone. I didn’t see it.
The words felt thin. Excuses dressed up as reports.
She leaned her head against the cold window and watched the city blur past. Bare feet still carried traces of blood and asphalt. The knife on her hip stayed sheathed.
The war had teeth now.
And she had just learned that teeth could bite even when you won.
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