by Kit Rocha
Unsurprisingly, the third man turned out to be Gabriel Montero, another son of a wealthy family and the third member of what the Sector One faithful referred to as the Royal Trio. Ashwin didn’t have to close his eyes to summon the intelligence briefing from memory—a sneering, verbose tirade by an officer disgusted by Sector One’s backslide into feudalism. They’ve already anointed themselves a king. Soon there will be dukes and knights, all the excesses of aristocracy. And all the vulnerabilities. The maneuvering for power has already begun. With minimal intervention, the families can be reduced to infighting.
According to the dossier, Gabriel Montero’s eldest brother had married into the Rios family, as well. The accompanying prestige had lifted the Monteros—and caused the anticipated friction with the Reyes family.
Whatever their family politics, Reyes, Hunter, and Gabe remained friends—and loyal to Gideon Rios first, though the Base officers doubted that loyalty.
Ashwin did not. He’d been there during the war.
Down below, the three Riders swung their legs over their bikes. Ashwin couldn’t hear their words as they started up the temple steps, but the rise and fall of their banter drifted up to him, a comfortable give-and-take punctuated by laughter. They’d made this run a hundred times, secure in the knowledge that they were the dominant predators in their sector.
Unfortunately, war had a way of displacing predators.
The deserters appeared as soon as the temple door closed, flowing from their hiding places with the silent grace that made Base soldiers legendary. With their superior military training and access to whatever equipment they’d stolen, the soldiers fanning out into the courtyard could prey upon the sectors and vanish before anyone could stop them.
Especially when they were smart enough not to underestimate their opponents. Ashwin counted nine men moving into position. The Riders were good, but few people were good enough to survive a surprise ambush by trained killers at three-to-one odds.
Ashwin was.
Moving silently, he slipped back from the edge of the roof and folded his binoculars. They fit easily into his thigh pocket, and he took a moment to check his weapons. Two pistols, six throwing knives, a pair of smoke grenades, a garrote, and a hunting knife strapped to his calf.
He’d taken down nine men with less. But this time he wouldn’t have to do it alone.
The drop to the ground was far enough to break bones. Ashwin performed the calculations automatically, redistributing his weight and momentum into a roll that dispersed the force and brought him back to his feet unharmed. He did the same for the angles of visibility, recalling the layout of the buildings and the positions of the soldiers in order to slip through the alley unseen.
By the time he reached the edge of the courtyard, Reyes was stalking toward two of the deserters near the temple doors. “You want to start some shit?” he demanded with a wide grin. “Let’s start some shit.”
They both pulled guns. Reyes’s grin didn’t falter. Reckless, even for a man with his reputation, and Ashwin eased a throwing knife free of its sheath and judged the distance to the steps.
His mission would go to hell if he let one of the Riders get killed.
Reyes’s confident stalk melted into a run. He slammed into one of the men, knocking him into the other, and the three of them went down in a tangled flurry of limbs. Reyes finally drew his pistol, but only to smash the butt of it across one deserter’s face.
The other two Riders were smart enough to maintain distance—and cover. Hunter fired from behind a pillar, taking down two men before a third blasted the pillar, sending shards of marble raking across Hunter’s face.
Gabe had chosen knives as his weapons, and he was good with them. As the attacker took aim at Hunter again, Gabe’s wrist snapped forward. The bright silver blade embedded itself cleanly in the man’s throat. Gabe killed another deserter with a second knife before turning to check on Hunter.
The leader of the group dropped from the roof of the temple, crashing into Gabe and carrying him to the ground. Ashwin surged out of the alley, already calculating the angles and velocity and the chance that any shot he fired might go through the deserter and kill the man he was trying to save.
Low. Acceptable, perhaps, under other circumstances.
Ashwin ran faster.
There were seven steps leading up to the temple. Ashwin vaulted up three of them and landed behind the leader, who had his pistol pointed at the back of Gabe’s head, his finger squeezing the trigger.
He was a seasoned soldier, but Ashwin was faster. He grabbed the man’s wrist and jerked back. Bone snapped as the gun fired, blowing through the leader’s chin to tear off the top of his head.
The body went limp beneath him. Ashwin stripped the pistol from his hand and spun. Six men down, three remaining. One using the bikes for cover, one grappling with Reyes, and one standing out in the open, gaping at Ashwin with naked fear in his eyes.
“Makhai! There’s a fucking Mak—”
The bullet silenced him. He toppled backwards, dead eyes staring up at the clouds.
Reyes reared back and took one last swing, a mighty blow that left the man beneath him still and unmoving. The final deserter, the one hiding behind the bikes, took off, kicking up a trail of dust behind him as he ran.
Letting him get back to rest of the deserters was an unacceptable risk. Ashwin fired, then turned back toward the temple as the man’s body pitched to the ground.
Gabe was on his feet, swiping blood from a broken nose. His other hand hovered near his knives, but the wariness in his gaze melted into recognition. “You’re the soldier who was helping the O’Kanes during the war.”
“I am.” Extending his hand in greeting was probably the correct thing to do, but Ashwin had learned early in life not to try and mimic human social gestures. No matter how precisely he thought he’d executed them, people could sense the deliberation behind them. The emptiness.
He’d been genetically engineered to be good at many things. Small talk wasn’t one of them.
A shot rang out, followed by another. Reyes was on his feet, his gun still in his hand, standing over the now-dead deserters he’d fought with.
Hunter pinched the bridge of his nose and sighed. “If you were going to fucking shoot them, man, why didn’t you just shoot them?”
Reyes dragged his arm across his bloodied mouth and shrugged. “Didn’t seem fair not to give ‘em a fighting chance.”
Gabe snorted, then winced, poking gingerly at his nose. “Well, now my face is as busted as yours. It could have been my head.”
It likely would have been. “Those weren’t ordinary raiders,” Ashwin told them. “They’re deserters from the Base. In the future, it would be best not to give them any unnecessary opportunities to kill you.”
“Deserters, huh?” Blood dripped from Hunter’s lacerated cheek. “What are they doing all the way out here?”
Ashwin used his foot to turn the leader’s body over. His face was almost unrecognizable, but Ashwin knew who he was. Rick Porter had been one of the elite soldiers. Not as elite as Ashwin—not Makhai—but still trained from birth to excel at strategy and killing. “Looking for the credits and wealth they think they’re owed.”
Hunter muttered something under his breath and knelt to check another of the bodies as the temple doors swung open. Several acolytes rushed out, their robes flowing as they ran toward Reyes and began fussing over his nonexistent injuries.
Gabe turned to Ashwin. “The priestess will have called for help. Are there more of them out there?”
“A few dozen. Maybe more, if they’ve been recruiting.” Ashwin nudged the leader again. “But I doubt they’ll have backup coming. This wasn’t a well-planned operation. They were sloppy, overconfident.”
“He still might have killed me if you hadn’t been here.” Gabe extended a hand, and Ashwin had to clasp it. Not doing so would have been awkward. But he disliked the physical contact, and he struggled to judge the appropriate amount
of pressure. Too hard would be considered aggressive, too lax would signal weakness.
The intricacies of nonverbal communication had always been tedious, but Ashwin found he had even less patience for them since the war. He gripped Gabe’s hand and knew it was too hard when the other man’s eyes widened slightly. Irritated with himself, he let his hand drop. “I was doing my job.”
“Your job?” Reyes studied Ashwin while one of the acolytes prodded his bruised knuckles. “There’s no way the Base sent you to clean out upwards of forty deserters all by yourself.”
Hunter scoffed. “Maybe if you hadn’t been busy getting your face bashed in, you could have listened.”
“To what?”
“The man’s Makhai.” He straightened and pinned Ashwin with a flat stare. “Forty against one—those odds aren’t so bad when you’re dealing with a walking science experiment.”
If he’d had any feelings to speak of, the mistrust might have stung them. But fear and aversion were the only constants in Ashwin’s life. “I was doing recon when they decided to ambush you. A defeat like this may subdue them for a short time, but when the others strike, they’ll be better prepared.”
“All the more reason to see if these corpses have anything useful to tell us.” Hunter moved on to searching the next body.
Reluctantly, Reyes joined him. Gabe crouched and started with the leader.
Ashwin could have told them everything they wanted to know. He could have slipped his scanner from his pocket and used the bar codes on the deserters’ wrists to access their service histories. But it was interesting to watch this methodical examination. Instead of tech and gadgets, they used wits and observation.
“Gabriel, mira.” Reyes grabbed the toe of Porter’s boot and pried a small piece of quartz from the treads. “The gravel pit?”
Gabe took the rock from him and tilted his palm so it caught the light. “They could be camped out there.”
“We can—”
The rumble of a truck interrupted them. Ashwin gripped his gun and turned, but at the sight of the open-topped truck that was racing toward the temple, the other men immediately relaxed.
It slid to a stop, and a blonde woman stood up in the passenger seat, her hands locked around the roll bars that formed the top frame of the truck.
Kora Bellamy.
Pain sizzled through Ashwin, a teasing shock. The echoes of agony. For the first few seconds, looking at her hurt. It hurt enough that a normal man might have turned away from the sight of her.
Ashwin had never been normal.
He catalogued her features like probing a bruise. Her silver-blue eyes, heart-shaped face, and high cheekbones. The narrow bridge of her nose and the elegant arch of her brows. Her lips, full and soft but parted in shock.
There had been a time when the symmetrical arrangement of her features had made his pulse race. When he’d seen her face every time he closed his eyes, a sweet afterimage of the only thing in his life he’d ever wanted.
Now, he couldn’t remember what wanting felt like. Six months of torture had cured him of that particular aberration.
Kora stumbled from the truck. Her lips formed the silent shape of his name, and then she was running, hard and fast. She was still moving when she reached him, and he caught her out of instinct as she slammed into him.
He didn’t care for physical contact, but holding her wasn’t unpleasant. She was made of curves and smooth skin, and tall enough that he could smell her hair. When she’d worked as a doctor on the Base, her scent had been subdued. Mild traces of something floral, nothing he could ever identify. Now she smelled like coconut, and beneath that, spice or incense.
She smelled like she belonged here.
And she was crying. The salty scent of her tears mixed with the sound of her ragged, exhaled sob as she slid her arms around his neck. “I thought you were dead.”
It hadn’t occurred to him that she’d think any such thing. It hadn’t occurred to him she’d care. Most people Ashwin had known in his life would feel nothing if he vanished, except perhaps vague relief.
But he should have known. Kora Bellamy wasn’t most people.
He didn’t know how to soothe her. He wasn’t trained for it. Her grip on him tightened, and he moved his hand between her shoulder blades in an awkward circle. “I’m sorry.”
“What happened? Where have you been?”
“Kora.” Deacon Price, the driver of the truck and Gideon’s second-in-command, stood nearby, a black bag in one hand. “You need to look at Hunter’s face.”
“Oh, God. I’m sorry.” She pulled back, but it took another few heartbeats before she untangled her fingers from the back of Ashwin’s shirt. “Sorry, I’m just... Don’t go anywhere.”
“I’ll be here,” he promised, letting his fingers linger on her back until she turned away. Then he lowered his hand, and it didn’t hurt to let her go. His bones didn’t ache with the need to follow her. When he closed his eyes briefly, he saw only darkness.
The Base had spent close to twenty-one weeks tearing her out of him, one painful memory at a time. They’d practically rebuilt him on a cellular level. Whatever compulsion had gripped him, whatever obsession had driven him—he was no longer fixated on Kora. He had to believe it. He had a mission to execute, and he couldn’t allow her presence to compromise it.
The first stage had gone well. The deserters had taken his bait, including the false schematics he’d planted, hinting that the vault in the basement was beyond their ability to crack. They’d done exactly what Ashwin had anticipated—waited for the Riders to remove the loot for them.
He’d been meticulous. Even if some of the deserters had survived this raid, there was no way for the Riders to trace their intel back to him. And that was the only variable he’d misjudged—the sheer competence of Gideon’s men. The three of them had almost taken down the entire squadron before he had a chance to intervene and help.
He wouldn’t repeat the mistake of underestimating them.
With a little luck, he’d be in Gideon Rios’s house by sunset, one step closer to infiltrating the Riders. Gideon might mouth pieties about compassion and peace, but he was a ruthless enough leader not to squander the chance to have a genetically engineered soldier at his disposal.
Ashwin had planned for everything...except Kora. But he was Makhai. He’d find a way to make it work.
He always did.
Chapter Three
Kora had never seen a miracle before.
Even if he hadn’t been presumed dead just hours earlier, Ashwin would have looked out of place sitting across from her at Gideon’s idyllic table. His brown skin was bronzed by the candlelight, and the shadows softened the usual hardness of his gaze. But not even the romantic lighting could soften the effect of his Base-issue fatigues, and he held the silverware stiffly and precisely, as if he’d studied a manual on proper etiquette but felt uncomfortable with the formality.
She couldn’t stop staring at him.
To be fair, it was only pride and arrogance that had led her to the conclusion that Ashwin must have fallen during the final battle with the city. She’d never heard or seen anything that would have confirmed him as a casualty of war. But when it was all over and he never came looking for her, she’d just assumed.
Silly, silly Kora. She was a scientist; assumptions were beneath her, especially when there were easier explanations to be found. Ashwin was a soldier. When the battle ended, he did what any soldier would have done—he reported back to his superiors.
She drained her wine, and one of the silent servers standing around the perimeter of the dining room stepped forward immediately to refill it. His task complete, he melted back into the shadows beyond the candlelight that illuminated the small, intimate table.
Gideon lifted his own glass and watched her over the rim. “I assume there are no permanent injuries from today’s encounter.”
“No,” she murmured. “Hunter needed a few stitches and some med-gel. Gabe’s nose
might be a little more crooked. And I still think Reyes has anger issues.”
Maricela snorted, then tried to cover it with a cough. “Excuse me.”
Gideon favored his sister with an indulgent smile before turning to Ashwin. “I hear we have you to thank for the lack of casualties.”
His answer to Gideon was the same as his posture—stiff and precise. “I intervened in time to assist, but they may have persevered without me.”
“Well, I don’t like may. Not when my men’s lives are at stake.” Gideon swirled the wine in his glass. “Tell me about these deserters.”
“There were thirty-seven of them to start, though I’ve seen some evidence they may be recruiting other raiders now. Four were from the elite training program, the rest basic soldiers. But even a basic soldier has superior training.”
“Superior to what?” Maricela asked.
“To any threats you’re accustomed to facing in this sector.”
“True enough,” Gideon murmured. “We’ve dealt with our share of robbers and raiders, but they’re not much for working together. So why did these men desert?”
Ashwin hesitated, his gaze flicking to Kora and away so quickly she might have imagined it. “There was tension after the war. Some of the soldiers on the Base wanted the generals to declare martial law and occupy Eden.”
“Seize the city?” Kora stared at him. The idea wouldn’t have been so unthinkable back when the Council was running it into the ground. But now that it had been liberated… “Why would they want to do that?”
“You know what the Base is like.” His gaze shifted again, sweeping over the table this time. They were in the smaller family dining room instead of the formal one, but the elegant furniture was still expensive. Candlelight glittered across a feast of fresh produce and perfectly seasoned meat, served on colorful, handmade dishes. “They’re tired of doing without.”
Taking the city would get them nothing. But taking the sectors was a different story—at least on the surface. Surely they remembered that the rebels had burned Sector Six to the ground rather than let the city forces have it.