Chapter 252: A bloody trap
Chapter 252: A bloody trap
The noise of the transaction floor died instantly, replaced by the heavy, rhythmic thud of boots on concrete.
Cyan had been right. The perimeter four, the ones standing perfectly still, moved first.
They didn’t shout. They didn’t hesitate. They converged on us with the cold, synchronized grace of people who had been paid a lot of money to be exactly this dangerous.
I looked at my two men. “Split,” I said. It was all they needed. They vanished into the shadows of the crate stacks, drawing half the heat with them.
The first Serbian reached the walkway before I could adjust my stance. He was big, the kind of man who had spent his life believing that being the largest person in the room was the same thing as winning.
He swung a heavy, telegraphed right hook.
I didn’t dodge it. I let it land against my forearm, absorbing the shock to gauge his strength. It was significant, but his balance was garbage.
He tried to follow up with a left. I wasn’t there. I stepped inside his reach, my movement small and economical.
I drove my palm into his throat, heard the wet gasp of air leaving his lungs, and followed with a sharp kick to the side of his knee. The joint buckled. He hit the floor hard, and I didn’t give him a second look as the bullets struck his skull.
Minimal movement. That was the rule. Don’t go where the hit is going; just don’t be there when it arrives.
Every exchange costs energy, and I managed my energy the way people manage their bank accounts, with a very strict eye on the balance.
A few meters away, Cyan was working through his own set of problems. His style was entirely different. Where I was a hammer, he was a scalpel.
The first man to reach him was fast, but Cyan was faster.
I watched him from the corner of my eye as I dealt with a second attacker. Cyan wasn’t just fighting; he was reading the man’s body like a technical manual.
The man was right-handed, dropping his shoulder a fraction of an inch every time he committed to a punch.
Cyan waited for the drop, let the man commit fully, and then simply evaporated from the man’s line of sight.
Four seconds later, the man was on the ground, clutching a shattered wrist.
The second one came from Cyan’s blind side.
Cyan didn’t even turn his head fully. He just shifted his weight, catching a swinging pipe on the meat of his shoulder and driving an elbow back into the man’s jaw.
“You telegraphed that from across the room,” Cyan said, his voice remarkably steady for someone in the middle of a brawl. “The footwork was a mess. Very obvious.”
A third man stepped up, pulling a short blade. Cyan actually smiled. It was a dark, jagged expression that looked entirely out of place in a shipping warehouse.
“Oh, good,” Cyan murmured. “You’re actually going to try.”
“Cyan!” I barked, slamming a man’s head into the metal railing of the walkway.
“I’m fine!” he called back. He wasn’t fine by any normal person’s definition, his jacket was torn and there was a streak of oil across his cheek, but he was fine by Cyan’s standards. Which meant he was having the time of his life.
One of the Serbians broke away from the pack. He was older, with a face that looked like it had been carved out of granite and a scar that ran from his ear to his chin. He looked at me, and I saw the recognition in his eyes.
“Wolfe,” he said. He sounded bored. “Son of Charles Wolfe.”
I didn’t give him the satisfaction of an answer. I just moved.
He was good. Better than the others.
He’d clearly been trained in a real system, not just a street fight. He blocked my first two strikes and managed to land a heavy blow to my ribs that made my vision swim for a heartbeat.
“I thought you’d be harder to find,” he grunted, stepping into a clinch. “I’ve heard about you. The prison reputation. I wondered if it was earned.”
He threw a knee toward my midsection. I caught it, twisted, and drove my elbow into the bridge of his nose.
The bone cracked with a satisfying pop. I followed through with a sweep that sent him crashing into a stack of pallets.
I stood over him for a second, my chest heaving. “It was earned,” I said flatly.
I didn’t wait for him to get up. I pulled the trigger.
Cyan appeared beside me, his breathing finally showing signs of exertion. His hair was a mess, and his rings were stained with something dark, but his eyes were bright with a frantic, forensic energy.
“Cassian,” he panted.
“What?”
He looked around the floor. The bodies of the first wave were scattered across the concrete. Some were groaning; most were still. “These are too easy.”
“Don’t get comfortable,” I warned.
“I’m not comfortable. I’m suspicious,” Cyan said, his head tilting as he scanned the upper darkness of the warehouse.
“Emilio isn’t stupid. He’s rash, yes, but he’s not an idiot. These people are filler. Either he doesn’t value them, or he just wants us busy while he sets something else.”
I’d been thinking the same thing. The resistance was too thin for a man who knew I was coming. “Reid,” I said into the comms.
“Yeah,” Reid’s voice came through, sounding strained. “I see it. There’s a secondary power grid on the facility, Cassian. It wasn’t on any of the blueprints I pulled. Someone added it recently. It’s localized to the transaction floor and the exits, Sir, ”
The lights went out.
Every floodlight, every flickering yellow bulb, every LED on the transaction floor died at once. For three seconds, the world was absolute, suffocating black.
Then, the emergency lights kicked in. They weren’t white. They were a deep, blood-red that bathed the warehouse in a hellish glow.
It was the kind of light that showed you shapes and movement, but swallowed the details. You couldn’t see faces. You could only see targets.
“Sir,” Reid’s voice was a frantic whisper now. “The exits. They’re sealed. East is mag-locked. West is barred from the outside. The monitored entrance you came through? A steel shutter just dropped. And the underwater access… someone is physically blocking the pipe from the inside. You’re contained.”
The silence of the warehouse was broken by a new sound. The metallic clatter of dozens of weapons being readied.
New shooters appeared on the upper levels, angles that hadn’t been occupied minutes ago. They were behind crates that had been stacked specifically to provide cover for this moment. They weren’t the Vincenti goods. They were the walls of a cage.
“Don’t kill them!” a voice shouted from somewhere in the red gloom. It was an authoritative bark, carrying the weight of a command that had been repeated many times. “We have to capture both of them! Alive!”
The order changed everything. A man trying to kill you is predictable. A man trying to capture you is a different kind of problem. They would aim for the legs. They would use numbers to overwhelm.
“They’re trying to take us alive,” I said, backing up until I felt the cold metal of a shipping container against my spine.
“Oh,” Cyan said. I heard the rustle of his jacket as he shifted his weight. “That’s actually more fun.”
“Cyan.”
“I mean, it’s also objectively worse,” he clarified, “but definitely more fun.”
The next ten minutes were a blur of red light and shadows. We moved from cover to cover, the geography of the warehouse working against us at every turn.
Every time we found a solid position, a new group of men would appear to flush us out.
They weren’t trying to win each exchange. They were wearing us down. It was a strategy of attrition, keep us moving, keep us fighting, until our muscles burned and our reactions slowed.
Cyan was a blur in the red light. His movement was adaptive, almost instinctive. He was reading the body language of the shooters before they even pulled their triggers, ducking and weaving through the crossfire like he was following a map only he could see.
And he was laughing. It wasn’t a fake laugh; it was the genuine, terrifying delight of a man whose nervous system had finally been given exactly what it wanted.
“There are so many of them!” he shouted, ducking behind a crate as a hail of non-lethal rounds peppered the wood above his head. “This is genuinely exciting, Cassian!”
“Focus!” I yelled, sliding across the floor to take out a man’s ankles.
“I am focused!” Cyan replied, dropping two men with a rapid-fire combination of strikes. “This is my focused!”
He got reckless. I saw it happening before I could stop it. He saw an opening, an angle that existed for maybe four seconds, and he took it, leaping out from behind cover into the open space of the floor. He engaged three men at once, a whirlwind of rings and silk.
He didn’t see the fourth man.
The shooter was positioned on a staircase, his weapon leveled at Cyan’s unprotected back.
I didn’t think. I moved. I covered the distance in a blind sprint, tackling the man off the stairs just as he pulled the trigger. We went down in a heap of tangled limbs and metal. I neutralized him with a short, brutal punch to the temple and rolled back to my feet.
“You took the angle without checking behind it!” I hissed at Cyan as he scrambled back to cover.
Cyan was breathing hard now, his chest heaving. “I know. I saw it when I was already committed.”
“Then you committed too early.”
Cyan looked at me, and for a second, the performance dropped. The wild light in his eyes softened into something real. “Thank you for covering it,” he said, his voice quiet. “I won’t pretend I didn’t need it.”
“Don’t make me cover the same mistake twice,” I said, already looking for our next move.
I ducked as a shot grazed the top of the crate I was leaning against. Six inches lower and it would have found my shoulder.
The realization was settling in. This wasn’t a fight we could win by standing our ground.
The exits were sealed, the lights were rigged, and the rotation of enemies was endless.
This wasn’t a battle; it was a container. Emilio had built this entire operation just to hold us in place so he could watch us fail.
“Reid,” I said, my voice low and urgent.
“Yeah, Cassian?”
“This isn’t resistance. It’s a cage. He wants to watch us exhaust ourselves.” I paused, watching a fresh group of Serbians enter from the far side of the room. “The accounts. Move on them. Now.”
“But the cascade risk, ” Reid started.
“Accept the risk,” I snapped. “The money is less important than the exit. Use the cascade as noise. If it triggers the federal alerts, let it. That brings outside attention to this facility. It puts pressure on the exits that Emilio didn’t account for. Do it.”
There was a pause. I could hear the hum of servers through the earpiece. “That’s… that’s actually a brilliant, terrible idea,” Reid said. “Moving now.”
I prepared to move to the next stack of crates. I’d done this crossing six times already. I knew the timing. I knew the gaps in the fire.
I stepped out into the open space.
But the angle had changed. Someone had repositioned. Someone had anticipated the pattern I’d been using for the last ten minutes.
BANG.
A sharp, white-hot sting erupted in my side. The world tilted. I hit the concrete hard, the red emergency lights spinning above me like dying stars.
“Cassie!” Cyan’s voice sounded miles away.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 258: Rats know when to run
- Chapter 257: A name
- Chapter 256: The Wait
- Chapter 255: The Man from his past
- Chapter 254: Grocery runs
- Chapter 253: Mission Failed
- Chapter 252: A bloody trap
- Chapter 251: Ambush
- Chapter 250: Operation
- Chapter 249: The hidden prince
- Chapter 248: the calm before the storm
- Chapter 247: A change of scene
- Chapter 246: Temporarily Useful
- Chapter 245: The little Secret
- Chapter 244: Bathroom tease r18
- Chapter 243: Gym Session
- Chapter 242: House Tour
- Chapter 241: Potential Husband/Tuesday Morning
- Chapter 240: Sweet wine
- Chapter 239: A specific kind of torture
- Chapter 238: A comfortable lie
- Chapter 237: Warmth
- Chapter 236: The Void 2
- Chapter 235: The Void
- Chapter 234: Foundation
- Chapter 233: A white whale
- Chapter 232: Transaction
- Chapter 231: Itch
- Chapter 230: A regular dinner
- Chapter 229: The Menu and The Lie
- Chapter 228: A new hobby
- Chapter 227: Favors
- Chapter 226: The Leak
- Chapter 225: Softness
- Chapter 224: Unresolved
- Chapter 223: Deja vu
- Chapter 222: The Exotic Bird
- Chapter 221: Pink Storm pt 2
- Chapter 220: The Pink Storm
- Chapter 219: Freight Train
- Chapter 218: Bait
- Chapter 217: Games
- Chapter 216: Distracted
- Chapter 215: Intruder
- Chapter 214: Saturday pt 2
- Chapter 213: Saturday
- Chapter 212: The Logic of Destruction
- Chapter 211: The blueprint of the wolf
- Chapter 210: Unwanted
- Chapter 209: The Ugly Past pt 2
- Chapter 208: The ugly past
- Chapter 207: Snacks
- Chapter 206: A small Wish
- Chapter 205: A park
- Chapter 204: A ghost in the corner
- Chapter 203: Subjects
- Chapter 202: The Wrong Bennett
- Chapter 201: Masterpiece
- Chapter 200: Disruption
- Chapter 199: Mistake
- Chapter 198: Old bruises
- Chapter 197: A worm
- Chapter 196: Man in the mirror
- Chapter 195: Anchor
- Chapter 194: The Devereaux Disaster
- Chapter 193: Bright Colorful Nothing
- Chapter 192: Invitation (A puppet)
- Chapter 191: The Perfect Son
- Chapter 190: Routine
- Chapter 189: Woes of A prodigy - Nick Bennett’s POV
- Chapter 188: Body pt 3 r18
- Chapter 187: Body pt 2 R18
- Chapter 186: Body r18
- Chapter 185: Screwed
- Chapter 184: More of him
- Chapter 183: Untouched
- Chapter 182: Satisfaction
- Chapter 181: Alley
- Chapter 180: The bigger pervert
- Chapter 179: Unwanted guard
- Chapter 178: Unexpected guest
- Chapter 177: Drinking game
- Chapter 176: Back to Work
- Chapter 175: Fading Light - End of Volume One
- Chapter 174: Alive
- Chapter 173: A splash of color
- Chapter 172: Theater pt 2
- Chapter 171: Theater
- Chapter 170: Over-fucked or Fucked Over
- Chapter 169: Surrender r18
- Chapter 168: Death by fucking r18
- Chapter 167: Obscene r18
- Chapter 166: Petty Face r18
- Chapter 165: Sex with a criminal r18
- Chapter 164: Hands up r18
- Chapter 163: Melted Candy - Thirty Seconds
- Chapter 162: Trapped Mouse
- Chapter 161: Nice
- Chapter 160: Answers
- Chapter 159: Laundry and Kdrama
- Chapter 158: New plates. New life
- Chapter 157: Safety
- Chapter 156: Verdict
- Chapter 155: Separation
- Chapter 154: Home
- Chapter 153: Wishful Thinking
- Chapter 152: Selfish
- Chapter 151: Home
- Chapter 150: Inconvenience
- Chapter 149: Stitches
- Chapter 148: Deer caught in headlights
- Chapter 147: Void
- Chapter 146: Weight of guilt
- Chapter 145: A wounded animal
- Chapter 144: Hunt
- Chapter 143: Demon
- Chapter 142: Buffet of Destruction
- Chapter 141: Devil in disguise
- Chapter 140: Trouble Trouble
- Chapter 139: Carnage
- Chapter 138: Kill Switch/Old debts
- Chapter 137: A Trap
- Chapter 136: Broken image
- Chapter 135: Stranger
- Chapter 134: Dance
- Chapter 133: Trapped
- Chapter 132: Chessboard
- Chapter 131: Gut feeling
- Chapter 130: Fuck-or-cry pt 2 r18
- Chapter 129: Fuck-or-cry
- Chapter 128: Masterpiece
- Chapter 127: Theater
- Chapter 126: The gala
- Chapter 125: Stranger in the Mirror
- Chapter 124: Kill shot
- Chapter 123: Back in the hospital
- Chapter 122: Promises promises
- Chapter 121: Appreciation
- Chapter 120: Good man
- Chapter 119: Stubborn
- Chapter 118: Cold
- Chapter 117: Suspicion
- Chapter 116: Terror
- Chapter 115: Ghost
- Chapter 114: Fear
- Chapter 113: Unexpected
- Chapter 112: Confession
- Chapter 111: Regret
- Chapter 110: Condition
- Chapter 109: The morning after...
- Chapter 108: Drunk, high mess pt 3 r18
- Chapter 107: Drunk, high mess pt 2
- Chapter 106: Drunk, high Mess
- Chapter 105: Death Sentence
- Chapter 104: Nothing
- Chapter 103: Taste Of Freedom 2
- Chapter 102: Taste of freedom
- Chapter 101: Villain
- Chapter 100: Selfish pt 2
- Chapter 99: Selfish
- Chapter 98: Coward
- Chapter 97: Leverage
- Chapter 96: New Rules
- Chapter 95: Idiot
- Chapter 94: The Truth
- Chapter 93: Stockholm Syndrome/Test
- Chapter 92: Sentimental
- Chapter 91: Surprise Wedding
- Chapter 90: Unpredictable
- Chapter 89: Gym escape
- Chapter 88: Help
- Chapter 87: "My little puppy."
- Chapter 86: Reckless
- Chapter 85: A bet?
- Chapter 84: Competition
- Chapter 83: Bathroom Shenanigans pt 2 r18
- Chapter 82: Bathroom Shenanigans
- Chapter 81: Sweet Torture
- Chapter 80: Lesson
- Chapter 79: King Noah
- Chapter 78: A new plan
- Chapter 77: Morning After
- Chapter 76: Yours to break r18
- Chapter 75: Surrender r18
- Chapter 74: Torture r18
- Chapter 73: trapped r18
- Chapter 72: Teasing r18
- Chapter 71: Game Over
- Chapter 70: Puppy
- Chapter 69: Angel
- Chapter 68: Picture
- Chapter 67: Third wheel
- Chapter 66: Unwelcome surprise
- Chapter 65: A good kisser
- Chapter 64: Agreement pt 2
- Chapter 63: Agreement
- Chapter 62: Pink-haired Lunatic pt 2
- Chapter 61: Pink haired lunatic pt 1
- Chapter 60: Cassie?
- Chapter 59: Anticipation
- Chapter 58: Distracted pt 2
- Chapter 57: Distracted
- Chapter 56: Secrets
- Chapter 55: I am a man
- Chapter 54: Worry
- Chapter 53: Negotiable
- Chapter 52: Angel
- Chapter 51: Hazard
- Chapter 50: HOSTAGE
- Chapter 49: Offering
- Chapter 48: Marked Prey r18
- Chapter 47: Ridiculous
- Chapter 46: Conversation
- Chapter 45: Imposter
- Chapter 44: Alexander
- Chapter 43: Inspection
- Chapter 42: Corrections
- Chapter 41: Underneath
- Chapter 40: Pretty Cage
- Chapter 39: Philanthropist
- Chapter 38: Impending doom
- Chapter 37: Humiliation Ritual
- Chapter 36: First Kiss
- Chapter 35: "You’re not special."
- Chapter 34: Helpess
- Chapter 33: Patience
- Chapter 32: Distraction
- Chapter 31: The Spare
- Chapter 30: Disowned
- Chapter 29: Provocation
- Chapter 28: Ghost
- Chapter 27: Family House pt 2
- Chapter 26: Family House
- Chapter 25: Bigger Problem
- Chapter 24: Interview pt 2
- Chapter 23: Interview
- Chapter 22: Bathroom
- Chapter 21: denial r18
- Chapter 20: Corrections r18
- Chapter 19: Therapist
- Chapter 18: Late Night Summons
- Chapter 17: Worse
- Chapter 16: USEFUL
- Chapter 15: Distractions
- Chapter 14: Acquisition
- Chapter 13: The Transfer
- Chapter 12: First Lesson r18
- Chapter 11: Agreement
- Chapter 10: The Offer
- Chapter 9: Consequences
- Chapter 8: Welcome to hell
- Chapter 7: Monday Morning
- Chapter 6: A New Toy
- Chapter 5: Defeat
- Chapter 4: Victory
- Chapter 3: The man who ruined my life
- Chapter 2: Shots and Bad decisions
- Chapter 1: "You’re pathetic Noah"