The City Revolts: Age Of Madness - A Kurtherian Gambit Series (The Caitlin Chronicles Book 4)

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The City Revolts: Age Of Madness - A Kurtherian Gambit Series (The Caitlin Chronicles Book 4) Page 17

by Daniel Willcocks


  “I would never shoot him,” Caitlin said bluntly. “I merely needed an out.”

  Alicia’s face screwed up in anger. She ran at Caitlin but found herself dragged back by the Weres. After a minute or two, she calmed, shrugged them off, and glared. “Well, next time, can you consider not using my son as bait?”

  “Only when he decides to adhere to that rule, too.”

  “Enough!” Belle shouted.

  “Woah, where did that come from?” Joe asked.

  “Look.”

  From their vantage point in the building, they could see a large section of the city below and, in the distance, saw what Belle was pointing at.

  “Is that a fire?” Caitlin breathed.

  No one answered. They didn’t need to. The flickering glow of flames was unmistakable as the blaze grew and spread at a rapid pace and began to engulf the library.

  “Oh shit,” Caitlin breathed.

  “That’s not the worst of it,” Drake said and cocked his ear. “Listen.”

  Caitlin heard nothing to begin with as her human ears were less keen than the Weres’. They listened intently for a moment or two, and even the humans could now hear things shattering downstairs and a rush of footsteps.

  “More Mad?” Belle whispered.

  Nell wrinkled her nose. “Not by that stink.”

  They waited with their weapons drawn as the noises increased and the determined steps of a large group ran up a flight of stairs. Growls and moans and gasps suggested an attack, and Caitlin tightened her grip on Moxie.

  Her stance eased when she saw Kain appear from around the corner of the stairs.

  He looked up and continued toward her, clearly more out of breath than he had ever been in his life. When he reached the top, he managed a rasped, “Kitty—” before his eyes rolled back and he collapsed face-down on the floor.

  “Kain!” Caitlin said and rushed toward her friend.

  “Don’t mind him. He’s somewhat overdramatic.” A muscular Were who seemed unaffected by the flight of stairs laughed. “Ain’t that right, Sudeikis?”

  Kain raised his head, then a finger, and collapsed again. His tongue lolled out the side of his mouth.

  Caitlin blinked tears away. She’d never imagined she would have missed him so much but seeing him filled her heart with joy.

  “How did you find us?” she whispered.

  “I never forget your smell,” he replied.

  “I’m not sure if that’s a compliment or not.” She laughed.

  Chapter Twenty-One

  The Sewers, The Broken City, Old Ontario

  Bryce was angrier than he ever remembered being.

  Goddamn son of a bitch… He growled darkly inside his head, pictured Kain’s face, and imagined the satisfaction he’d feel when he caught him and…and…

  And what?

  The Were’s nostrils flared. He closed his eyes, breathed deeply, and wondered what would he do. Geralt had been a different breed of Were. Bryce wasn’t the type to kill someone for the sake of disobedience, and he had once enjoyed Kain’s company. He had even considered him a friend. Was he more pissed off that Kain had abandoned the pack again, or was it more that he had run from his Alpha? He couldn’t forget that he had hidden, avoided him, and lied to his face.

  “Sound the alarm,” Bryce growled at Leena who huddled in the corner. Her eyes lit up and she scrambled to her feet.

  “Of course, sir. Of course.”

  The alert rang through the sewer and mingled with the howls of the Weres. Several sprinted forward to stand at attention in front of him, ready for his commands.

  “Rouse every single shit-excuse for a Were in this joint,” he said. “I will wait at the exit. Tonight, we’ll attack the surface.”

  The glee on the Weres’ faces was almost too much to hide. They nodded and dashed off again.

  Bryce shifted into his bear form and shambled down the tunnels toward the exit. He had more than enough time before the others joined him. From there, spurred on by the vampire’s words, he would lead the charge.

  What he hadn’t expected was the fire that sent dark columns of smoke rising in the distance.

  The Broken City, Old Ontario

  Vex kept his head low and refused to make eye contact with anyone in the library. The city’s citizens had all gathered in stony silence as the revolutionaries were driven through the crowd like livestock.

  This is not the way it’s meant to end. He focused on the exits and pictured Caitlin smashing through a window and swinging across on a rope to rescue them all.

  Any minute now…

  “Citizens of The Broken City,” Triston called at last to the silent crowd as Vex, Tom, and Laurie stood side by side on the raised platform where they had seen Felicia and her nephew eat their meals on many occasions. “It is with great disappointment that I must display to you these traitors and our enemies.”

  A chorus of booing and hissing erupted. Some residents raised their fists in the air, and the others spat on the ground.

  “It’s not the worst welcome I’ve ever received.” Vex smiled weakly.

  Laurie looked away.

  Triston gestured for quiet. Behind him, Felicia sat impatiently on her chair and seemed bored at the nuisance of it all.

  Triston nodded. “It is a sad day when we discover that those whom we have invited into our home, who have shared our resources and been taken into our hearts and given nothing more than kindness, should be revealed as nothing more than liars and traitors fighting against this very city we have all built.”

  The boos were louder this time.

  “Send them to hell!” someone shouted.

  “What are our charges?” Tom shouted suddenly.

  The boos and hisses quickly silenced. Even Triston seemed caught off-balance.

  “You heard me. What are our charges?” Tom repeated. “We stand before you today with no more idea of what is happening than the rest of you.”

  Triston fought to regain his composure. “Why…a smart trick, indeed. We all saw your companion hold me at gunpoint and threaten my life to avoid capture.”

  “But Caitlin wouldn’t—”

  “The little bitch has our leader hostage and refuses to release her unless we bow to her will!”

  A wave of gasps rippled through the crowd. Little Ruby cried, “Not Alicia!”

  “And there it is. Should we bargain and plead with a woman who claims to have our city’s interests at heart? Or do we make an example of her kin and turn the tables? That, then, is the question we must all face today.”

  The room fell into a tense silence. The Revolutionaries exchanged glances and wondered what would follow.

  “So what is the answer?” Triston asked quietly, but the words carried around the room. The people shuffled nervously, resistant to the possible violence this decision could bring but loyal enough to the city to want justice.

  “Hang them out to dry—”

  The woman’s voice stopped as someone yelled from above. A moment later, a group of watchmen burst into the room.

  “Fire! There’s a fire!”

  Triston looked enraged. “A…what?”

  “Fire! And Weres.” The man who had seen the jug fall shouted and entered through the front door. “I saw them! Scuttling over the roof like bugs.”

  “Fuck,” Triston exclaimed. “Battle stations, people.”

  He barked orders from the platform, and many of the citizens were already preparing for the fight. Those who were trained and assigned to firefighting dashed outside, while those charged with protecting the women and children led them into safe areas. Many fighters disappeared to hunt for the rooftop Weres whom they would never find.

  Vex glanced at the others and mouthed, ‘Caitlin?’

  Triston saw this.

  “Do you really think your little bitch friend is evil enough to start a fire and send us all up in smoke?”

  Vex thought about it. The man had a point. Was this really something Caitlin woul
d initiate?

  “Either way, you’re coming with me,” Triston barked. He turned to where Felicia sat and found her chair empty. “You’re never around when I fucking need you, just like my father.” He sighed.

  Triston took them outside and onto the street. With their hands bound behind their backs, they were hardly in a position to run—not that the idea didn’t cross their minds. He forced them to kneel before the library where the air now filled with the blistering smoke that spilled from the ever-growing fire.

  Vex watched with interest as men and women arrived with large buckets and attempted to extinguish the blaze with water. Their efforts managed to slow it a little, but they’d need much more to stop it entirely.

  “We have to get out of here,” he muttered.

  “How?” Laurie asked quietly.

  “Guys? Look,” Tom said and nodded into the darkness where they could make out the shape of three men who watched from the shadows. Triston and the others were too preoccupied to notice.

  A moment later, they were gone.

  “Fucking Weres,” Triston said.

  Izzy appeared beside him. “They’re gaining control of the fire at the back, but there’s little more we can do at this point except to contain it. We don’t have enough water stored without having to go to the Black Lake—”

  “Not at this time of night. We’ll lose more people than we’ll save.”

  Izzy nodded. “Who do you think could’ve done this?”

  “Who do you think?” Triston said and waved his arms in the air. A manic look settled in his eyes. “Fucking Weres and the enemy, that’s who!”

  He breathed rapidly, his eyes wide, and decided at that moment what he would do.

  “Enough of this shit,” he growled. “Enough hiding. It’s time we took the fight to them.”

  They gave the Weres the last of the food rations and water they had to spare.

  “Thanks, Kitty-Cat,” Kain said after finally catching his breath. “You’re always there when I need you.”

  “I wish you’d thought about that before running off at the factory. We might have been spared this whole mess.”

  He laughed.

  The Weres muttered amongst themselves, both parties still bemused by the current situation. For Nell and her kin, it had been months since they had even conversed with other Weres. For Zach, Sasha, and Jimmy, they had given up hope of ever seeing the others again. They hugged and cried and laughed and reminisced all in the space of a few moments but long enough for Kain to eat all the spare food.

  “And who’s this delightful creature?” Jimmy asked as he stepped closer to Alicia.

  “I’m the woman who’ll likely rip your bollocks off if you make a pass at me, boy,” she said.

  Jimmy retreated, much to the amusement of the others.

  “This is Alicia,” Caitlin said.

  “The leader of the free folk of the city,” Kain finished.

  The Weres’ faces fell.

  “You mean, this is the bitch who has kept us underground for years and years?” Sasha growled.

  “Locked in a stinking sewer while the humans thrive up on the surface?”

  Even Jimmy rumbled his anger.

  “Now, now,” Caitlin said. “Let’s not leap to assumptions here. Everything you’ve been told about this woman is a lie. Everything she has been told about you is wrong. You are all the victims of a feud between Geralt and the city. More than anything, Alicia wants the city at peace. Isn’t that right?”

  “Yes,” the woman said.

  “That’s why she handed herself over to us as a hostage so we can use her as a bargaining chip with those in the city. We haven’t captured her. She’s here of her own volition.”

  “Fuck off,” Sasha said in disbelief. “You’ve chosen to be captive?”

  Alicia nodded.

  “And, let’s be honest, you’ve all chosen to follow Kain because you’re sick of all the fighting, too. Right?”

  The Weres nodded and mumbled agreement.

  “There. So let’s agree that everyone in this room is on the same fucking side. No more arguing. I’m sick of it, I’m tired, and we have a lot of shit to do.”

  “Right,” Kain confirmed. “That’s how you give a rousing speech,” he muttered to Cynthia.

  She rolled her eyes.

  Caitlin then called for volunteers to guard Alicia. If most of them were to head into the city and determine the reason for the fire, the woman would need to stay behind for her own safety. She was the last surviving trump card of their play.

  “Uh-uh,” Joe said and shook his head. “Nots me. I’s been cooped up like a chicken alls day. Joe needs to stretch his legs.”

  “I suppose that means you, too?” Caitlin asked Belle.

  “If you make me stay here, I’ll put dog shit in your breakfast.”

  Caitlin grinned. “Very well. Who volunteers?”

  Brett and Jimmy raised their hands slowly. Both their parties looked at them in surprise.

  “I’ll be honest, that sprint across the city was enough action for me,” Jimmy said softly. “I’m happy to take my turn with Alicia.”

  “Slut.” Zach winked.

  “Not like that!” Jimmy protested and looked at the woman in alarm.

  “And you, Brett?”

  “Same reasons.”

  “That’s good enough,” Caitlin responded. “But you both need to know you’re not in for an easy ride. If anyone comes after her, you lay down your life and make sure she survives.”

  “Deal.” They both nodded.

  “Good, then get your asses in gear, gentleman.”

  Sasha, Nell, and Belle coughed.

  “Oh, don’t make it about sexism. You realize I’m a woman, too?” Caitlin smiled and poked her tongue between her teeth.

  They had made their way down several flights of stairs before they heard yells and shouts outside. Caitlin signaled for the others to stay back and moved to a window in an adjacent room where she had a clear view of the street below.

  “Oh, shit.”

  She could see hundreds of people filing down the streets in droves. Howls resounded from the other direction followed by a tremendous roar. She turned to see dozens upon dozens of Weres stream from a side street toward the humans.

  “Fuck, fuck, fuck,” Caitlin muttered and hurried back to the stairs.

  “Is everything okay?” Joe asked casually.

  Caitlin had already begun to sprint down and called back, “It’s happening. Get your asses in gear. War is coming.”

  The others glanced nervously at each other and followed.

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  The Broken City, Old Ontario

  Bryce was shocked at the number of people who poured into the street ahead.

  In his mind, he had seen this differently. He had imagined sneaking up on the humans in secret and so able to take them by surprise, flush them out of their hive in one swift movement, and use his brute strength to declare a change in regime.

  How the fuck did they know we were coming?

  As if summoned by the question, three faces he recognized appeared from a street to his left.

  “We’ve done it, boss! We’ve fucking done it!” Frank cackled with glee. He bounced up and down and clapped his hands.

  Bryce growled furiously.

  “We’ve flushed them out and stoked the flames. After tonight, the city will be ours,” Frank continued smugly.

  The werebear stopped in his tracks, and his followers stopped behind him. He transformed into his human form with immeasurable anger in his eyes.

  “You did this?” he practically roared.

  Frank’s glee dissolved immediately. “I… We…we thought we’d help get things going—”

  Bryce picked him up by the collar and threw him across the road. “Idiot. I’m surrounded by fucking idiots.”

  Leena opened her mouth to protest but decided against it.

  The Alpha shook his head and looked at Tara and Chad. />
  “It was his idea,” they muttered at the same time and pointed to where Frank massaged his head.

  Bryce grimaced and shifted into a bear. He strode ahead quickly, careful to not let his facade weaken in front of the humans. When they were less than fifty feet away from each other, the front two rows of the humans dropped to one knee and revealed a row of spiked weapons that marked their first line of defense.

  A solitary man strode forward. His thick locks blew in the cool night breeze.

  “Well, met, Were.”

  The bear growled, insulted that he’d pronounced that final word like he scraped something off the bottom of his shoe.

  Bryce stood tall and enjoyed the nervous glances his great bulking shape garnered from his adversaries. He returned slowly to his thickset human form and stepped forward to meet the man in the middle.

  “Human.”

  If Triston had learned anything through his years of fighting and leading, it was to never show the fear he felt in his heart.

  And he felt fear as he stood within arm’s reach of a monstrous-sized man whose eyes seemed to declare death without words. He had watched this man turn from a gigantic bear into a human, and he now wondered how long the transformation would take from man to bear and if he’d have time to say his prayers before death came.

  Triston resisted the urge to draw his gun.

  “It’s Triston.”

  “Bryce.”

  “This ends once and for all, Bryce,” the man said with more confidence than he felt. “Enough of this hiding and fighting and waiting it out. We settle this once and for all.”

  The Were spat onto the street. He looked at the front line of humans. “I see your leader is in hiding. Shouldn’t the great Alicia lead the charge and not leave the fight to her little boy?”

  Triston’s eyes narrowed at the insult. “You mean you don’t know?”

  Bryce remained silent.

  Triston laughed. “So first, she escapes your clutches, and now, you don’t know where she is either. Caitlin told me you Weres had changed and that you were ready to talk. But that’s all bullshit, isn’t it? I should’ve known from the moment you and your men lit the fires and triggered this war.”

 

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