The exhilaration hit me again, like a tidal wave, rolling up behind me and carrying me up the stairs seven at a time.
Get a grip girl.
I didn’t care—the feeling was overwhelming, overcoming my natural caution like a stimulant. I hit the top of the stairs, crashed through the door and spun as I threw my knives in either direction. Two blades struck home on targets I barely saw. The blades bit deep into their chests, ending their lives. I charged to my right, pulling my tanto.
Around the corner a gun fired, taking chunks of the wall out above me, but I was already rolling, coming up on my knee and flinging my blade into his knee. He screamed. I jumped up and snap kicked his gun hand. My strength was such that I bashed his hand into the wall, breaking every bone in it along with part of the wall. I didn’t care. I was on a roll, a high, and in that moment I wanted two things.
“Where is she?” I roared into his face, unable to control my volume. My vision flickered back to normal for a moment so I could make out his face. The room flashed blue like lightning had struck but I ignored it for now.
“Who?”
He played dumb. I wasn’t amused. I reached out to his good hand, grabbed his wrist and twisted. I was far stronger than I should have been; I snapped his arm like a twig and he hollered even louder. Tears welled up in his eyes as he sank to the ground. I followed him down, reaching for my knife and yanking it out. He whimpered as pain overwhelmed him.
“Don’t make me ask again.”
He nodded. “Okay, okay, don’t kill me alright? She’s gone.”
My heart stopped. Had they killed her? I was going to end him. The anger must have shown in my eyes because he backpedaled fast.
“No. No. No. We sent the shipment out early—she’s in Canadian waters by now, on her way to eastern Europe, where they distribute most of our product. The ship is called the Curly Sue.”
Even as the high of the other men dying hit, a cold calm washed over me—he probably thought it was a good thing.
“Product? Shipment? They’re human beings! They have family, friends, brothers and sisters, do you ever think about that?”
“Law of the jungle—it’s not personal, just the hand they’ve been dealt. We—”
I punched him. Then again. And again. I punched him until his chest stopped rising. I punched until my knuckles hurt. Until the floorboard underneath him cracked from me hitting the bare wood. With my blood covered hand, I wrote my message on the wall above his body.
NO MORE
The next wave of exhilaration hit me as I left the building, but I was too angry to enjoy it. Instead, I was running as fast as my enhanced powers would let me. The ship couldn’t be too far away; I had to hurry.
Chapter 31
Even with my enhanced night vision and standing on top of a stack of containers, I couldn’t see a ship north or south… Maybe I could find the port authority? Or call the police? But Canada is only a stone’s throw away. Couldn’t they just slip into Canadian waters and disappear?
It occurred to me I knew nothing of how the Great Lakes worked or how far away the ocean was… or anything about the area, really. I decided on a course of action and ran down toward the docks—there could be a clue to their location down there. If I couldn’t find anything then I would simply call the police and hope for the best.
I climbed down from the containers, darted under the cranes that were used to stack them, and ran over the train tracks and down the access road. I almost giggled, despite my worry, as I ran down to the docks. I wasn’t even winded. The euphoria had passed, leaving me strangely buzzed. Like I had a couple of good beers in me.
Movement to my left caught my attention and I pulled up sharp, skidding on the dirt. Somehow, both guns were in my hands, cocked and loaded, pointing where I had heard the noise. The shadows faded as my enhanced vision kicked in.
That’s when Spice appeared.
“This way,” she whispered. Then she turned and ran north, away from the docks and slightly parallel to the river. I was too stunned to follow until she stopped, turned around and winked at me the way Spice always did when she shared a joke with me. She ran again.
I ran after her. The uneven ground didn’t even slow me down as I climbed the little berm before the road. After a minute of following her, I was back at the main office. Spice wasn’t anywhere to be seen. A large map of the entire port area, along with the lakes themselves, was clearly visible on the side of the old wooden wall.
I’m an idiot.
This is what I get for not knowing the territory. There is only one way out of the Great Lakes. One canal where locks equalize the water levels for passing ships, raising and lowering them as needed. They are jointly run by the US and Canada. If I called the police and had evidence for them to act on, maybe they could stop the ship. Maybe. Or they could hem and haw for a few days and by then my friend would be on her way to Dubai, or wherever the hell they sold white slaves. No thank you.
I took off in a run for my bike, my feet pounding the ground and my lungs burning with each step. I wasn’t going to let them get away with this. I passed through the remains of the fort and then into the parking lot where I left the shiny red Ducati. The bike fired up instantly, tires squealing as I gunned the engine and laid a long line of rubber heading North East along the road.
I pulled out my cell phone and dialed nine-one-one. I also didn’t want them to cover it up
“9-1-1 what is your emergency?”
“The Wraith just wiped out a human trafficking gang at the docks.” I gave her the address before I tossed my phone into oncoming traffic. The plastic exploded against the grill of a cement truck.
A few minutes later I heard sirens as the police converged on the area. Too late to take me in, but hopefully fast enough that no one could cover up what happened. With that taken care of I weaved my way through evening traffic, keeping one eye on the waterways, looking for the Curly Sue. Even with my enhanced vision, the ships were too far out for me to make out any names on their hulls. The ships weren’t going very fast: all I could really do was get ahead and wait for it. On top of that, there was probably a line at the locks… I grinned. Oh, I had a great idea. The bike roared as I twisted the throttle all the way.
An hour later I slammed on the brakes, screeching my tires as I came to a stop in front of Joseph’s house. I needed to make a few preparations, and I needed a few things from his armory. I stormed in through the front door over to the mantle and pushed the picture back. He had said I could do whatever I wanted. Detroit was his city, not mine, and I doubted I’d be back here anytime soon. The Wraith was going to make a spectacular exit from the motor city.
I reloaded all my ammo, grabbed the anti-tank weapon, and pocketed as much cash as I could before I left. I grabbed the bike and smirked. I’d been in the basement an hour and no one even got close to the bike. This neighborhood knew who he was, even if they didn’t admit it. Not that there was much of a community left. Maybe after I cleaned up New Orleans I’d come back here and finish what Joseph started.
Chapter 32
The GPS said four-hours to Buffalo, New York. Lucky for me, I’m riding a Ducati. I tore out of Joseph’s place for what I believed would be the last time. Tires spinning, spitting smoke behind me as I went. I was on the freeway within minutes. I had to go through Cleveland and a dozen other little towns on my way to rescue Krisan.
I thought of Spice, my family, my one-time friends, all gone now. All in the past. Was I happy?
I’d beat a man to death with my bare hands. I lost count of how many I had shot, stabbed, and thrown out windows. The shock of what I had done slammed into me like a ten-ton hammer.
Not with shame, or remorse, but from the complete lack of those things. Was I a sociopath? Is that why I never felt happy as a kid? I left home to be a model because it was something I thought I could do really well. If I’m honest with myself, and I like to think I am, I’m attractive—not just sexually, but aesthetically. At least until that ass-hat put a s
word through me leaving a six-inch scar in the middle of my chest.
I dodged to the right of a large milk-hauler, spurring the bike to even higher speeds as I passed the smiling cow on the side.
My career, such as it was, was over. My last paying gig was my last gig. Twenty-seven might as well be forty-seven when it came to modeling. Thinking back to my homecoming with Spice and my family, I truly had no plans for what to do next.
Fate had certainly stepped in.
I just wished I could have saved Spice. Sara was such a joy to me—more than I had ever realized at the time. Our late night chats via Facebook and Skype really kept me going when I was low—which was all the time.
I had spent my life sleepwalking and now, for the first time ever, I felt alert, awake, aware. It was just too bad I had to become a killer to feel this way.
I pulled my thoughts out of that place and focused on the now. There would be time enough for navel-gazing later.
Midnight came fast. My eyelids drooped as I pulled into the little motel by the Buffalo lock. It wasn’t much—just nine rooms that had seen better days before I was born. To my surprise, neither the desk clerk, or the couple I passed on the way to my room, batted an eye at the anti-tank weapon Joseph had called an “AT-4” I carried slung on my back. Maybe they thought it was an artist tube? I didn’t exactly fit the bill for the terrorist type.
I tossed a hundred on the counter when the slovenly, half asleep man came up.
“Uh… It’s forty-nine a night, plus tax. How many nights?” As he spoke, he let out a long yawn that filled the air with his foul cigarette breath.
“One night, no registration,” I said holding my hands out for the keys. When he didn’t budge, I tossed another hundred on the counter. That got him moving. With a greedy smile, he snatched a key off the wall and slapped it down on the counter.
“Room Seven. Be out by eight am. My boss does a room check.”
I nodded, swiping the key with one hand. I was already heading for the door before he could say anything else. He had time to whistle at me and earn a death stare as I shut the door. Apparently, my death stares have upgraded because he went white as a sheet.
I checked my new burner phone; I had six hours until the ship was scheduled to hit the lock. I tossed everything in the corner, pushed a chair in front of the door, flipped the little table up so it covered the window, then fell face first into bed. My day caught up with me in a hurry—a weight of exhaustion came down on me and I fought a losing battle to stay awake.
You don’t have to be tired, just go shoot the front desk guy…
That thought brought a smile to my face, but I was too tired to act on it.
Chapter 33
The setting sun behind me caused the shadows to stretch out for hundreds of feet toward the east. It had taken me some time, but finding the Coast Guard page on the Curly Sue had paid off. Now I knew her route, destination, and crew complement, and had even managed to download a schematic. It might be their boat, but I knew it well enough to even the odds.
I was at the north end of the Buffalo lock, cradled in an alcove with my coat pulled tight around me, waiting for the cargo ship to pass underneath. It would be a hundred-foot drop, which wasn’t something I could survive. If I could spot one of the slavers and they were near a shadow… I could just shadow-step to them. I wasn’t quite sure how my new found powers worked, but that felt right. Like, I could do that.
My enhanced strength and speed had left me during the night. I woke up shaking, exhausted and ready to go back to sleep. The only reason I didn’t was coffee and lots of it.
Like a lot a lot.
Now I just waited. It was good to know that my powers wore off after a bit. At least a few hours. I was too consumed with the euphoria of using them while I was killing all those mobsters to worry about what would happen if they stopped working. Part of me knew they weren’t permanent, but I was starting to see maybe why Joseph quit.
An alarm rang out over the lock. The ship chugged along, looking like any of a hundred other cargo ships that passed this way. How did no one know about her cargo of people? It boggled my mind that in this day and age slavery was still very much alive and that no one talked about it.
You can’t save everyone. My dad’s voice came back so clear that for a second, I thought he was there. No, I can’t save everyone, can I? Most of all the people who matter most to me.
But I can save these people. If I have to kill everyone on that ship to do it, I will. They made their choice. You don’t accidentally get involved in human trafficking. A flicker of awareness filled me, that maybe I should feel bad about what I was planning. Then I saw Spice in my mind as if she were in one of those containers and what would be waiting for her on the other side…
Well, screw that.
The bow of the ship passed beneath me and I steeled myself for what was next. A literal leap of faith if I ever heard of one.
I heard the engines growl as the bow thrusters churned the water and the huge vessel came to an assisted stop. On either side were tugboats I needed to be aware of. I wouldn’t get justice by killing innocent people.
Once the ship stopped, the lock began to close behind it. A wave of something—nausea almost, but not quite—swept over me as I watched tens of thousands of gallons of water fill the lock.
I shook my head. I needed to focus. I stepped over to the other side of the crane I hid in. I saw more of the ship this way and could even make out figures on the deck. What I needed was someone off by themselves, near a deep shadow, just like that guy in the red jacket.
I cracked my neck, then stepped off. Air rushed by me as I free fell toward the deck. My feet dangled in the air below me and the deck flew up. I reached into my mind and I found that spot, like an itch between my shoulder blades. It was hard to find.
But I did.
The world vanished in darkness before it came back brighter than before. My feet hit the man square on his head, snapping his neck instantly and crumpling him to the ground. I landed in a crouch, with my hands out wide for balance.
When no alarms went off and there were no shouts of concern, I searched him. I removed his radio, plugging myself into their network. The earpiece slipped on and I attached the radio itself to my belt. He also had a Glock 17 on him, which I emptied before taking apart and tossing. No need to let the bad guys have more guns than me.
I stopped for a second, waiting for the euphoria to hit me. It didn’t. I frowned. I wish Joseph had been more forthcoming on how these powers worked. He was the one that was always going on and on about knowledge is power, after all.
Once I stashed body behind a container, I moved toward the stern. I had no idea where the prisoners were, but I figured I could find someone and make them talk.
Two men arguing ahead pulled me up short. I was on the left side of the ship, the railing was to my right, the mountain of containers to my left. The ship rocked ever so slightly as the lock filled with water. A process that took hours to complete. For now, the ship was going nowhere. I had time. Scrambling up the containers I found a place fifty feet up where I could hook my legs and pull my black coat tight around me.
Just as I did, I saw them. They had thick bushy beards and spoke in rapid-fire fashion. I had no gift for languages, but whatever they were arguing about was important to them. They stopped just below me to light a cigarette.
Crap.
He looked up as he pulled a drag from his cancer-stick, but he didn’t see me. They moved on after a moment and I let them. I needed more of a lay of the land before I started my assault—I wasn’t going to let them get away, but I also wasn’t about to rush headlong into the enemy.
I gave them a minute to get where they were going before dropping like a shadow down to the deck below me. Keeping my coat pulled tight and my hood down I headed to the aft of the ship where the crew quarters and bridge were.
The well-lit ship seemed at odds in my mind with the seedy underbelly of what they were doi
ng. However, I tried not to dwell on it, instead focusing on stealth and speed.
I was at the base of the tower when a hatch clanged open in front of me. I dodged behind some emergency gear stacked on the deck and flattened myself against the wall as another man came out. He too had a beard and immediately lit up a cigarette as he walked over to the railing.
He gazed out at the city lights and leaned against the railing, puffing on his smoke. I edged forward, slipping my Tanto out from the small of my back. Just as Joseph had taught me, I inched forward on the balls of my feet, knife in my right hand and other hand lined up with his neck. He was a much larger man than me, so I had only one chance to get this right.
He must have sensed something—too late though. I jammed the Tanto into the small of his back up into his lungs. With my other hand, I grabbed his mouth to keep him from crying out. It was a needless worry, though—just as I did this a fog horn sounded. He sank to the deck, blood running down his shirt gasping for a breath that would never come. I watched as he searched my scarf-covered face for some sign of recognition or reason. I gave him neither.
I wrapped one of the many safety lines around him, hefted him up, and tossed him over. His body hit the side of the ship with an audible thump before swinging to a stop. Hopefully, no one would notice for a while.
There was still no burst of euphoria. Maybe I had misread why it was happening? It didn’t matter, though, as long as my powers still worked, which they did.
I turned and ducked in the hatch he had come out of a few minutes earlier. The inside of the ship was loud. The hum of the engines, the clanking of pipes, along with a hundred other indistinguishable sounds, made listening for danger all but useless. On the flip side, no one would hear me until it was too late.
I moved steadily down the corridor, checking each open hatch along the way. This wasn’t quarters, but offices of some kind. Maps, charts, and other sailing paraphernalia filled the rooms here. In the center were two elevator doors, along with a set of stairs that extended from the bottom deck all the way to the bridge in a series of landings and switch-backs.
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