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Synopsis
For the most hated crew on Requiem, the only way out is up.
It's been four months since runaway heiress Asa crash-landed on the matriarchal outlaw colony Requiem, bringing a nasty AI and a host of deadly secrets with her. Now, she runs with her almost-girlfriend Riven's smuggler crew, stealing kisses between gunfights and heists. But when a mysterious hacker sabotages their latest job, other gangs turn against them, blaming them for the destruction the rogue AI caused. Nowhere in the city is safe.
The only way to protect their crew is a series of trials for control of an underworld faction–and vying for a matriarch's throne is a dream Riven can't let go. But as the trials intensify, the saboteur hounds Asa and Riven's every step, determined to kill Asa and right her father's wrongs. When the saboteur reveals a horrific conspiracy threatening all of Requiem–one involving the crew member they thought they'd lost–the girls must decide whether to risk their own skins for a city that loathes them.
Release date: May 23, 2023
Publisher: North Star Editions
Print pages: 409
Content advisory: This book contains depictions of violence, including blood, mild gore, death (on-page and past), and gun violence. It also contains strong language, sexual content
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
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City of Vicious Night
Claire Winn
chapter 1
AFTERSHOCK
Hunters watched from the balconies like vultures.
Asa kept her gaze low as she and Riven cut through the dirty alley. The headhunters aimed scanners down at them, searching for any faces matching posted bounties. Every scavenger on Requiem was looking for a quick payout, but Asa didn’t intend to be an easy target.
Especially not with a bounty as large as hers.
“Keep moving.” Riven sauntered past the broken windows and flashing neon like she owned the whole city.
“Are they still watching us?” Asa adjusted her scrambler—a thin wire across her cheekbones to disrupt facial recognition tech.
“Only one. But I think he’s just a creep. Might have to shoot that smirk off his face.” Riven’s hands hovered near the old-tech Smith & Wesson revolvers holstered at her hips, a pair of firecrackers waiting to be lit. Sweat and sleepless nights had smeared her gunpowder-black eyeliner into scorch marks.
Riven was no stranger to street brawls, but Asa had grown up on Cortellion, where her list of potential career paths had never included criminal-for-hire.
“Much as I’d love to see that, the last thing we need is to draw more attention.” Even the stunner at Asa’s hip felt dangerous. Four months on Boomslang’s crew, and she hadn’t quite adjusted to the hot whisper of death at her back.
But she’d chosen this life, and she’d be damned if she wasn’t going to earn her place.
“Hey, slowpokes.” Kaya’s chipper voice came through the comm. “Where are you?”
“On our way,” Asa told her sister. “We’ve got the passcode. Heading in soon.”
“Took you long enough.” Samir’s voice. “The two of you probably spent as much time canoodling as conning.”
Heat shot through Asa’s cheeks. Conning underworld smugglers in the roughest part of the roughest city in Alpha Centauri wasn’t her ideal night out with Riven, but they made a good team. Even if sometimes she found it hard to concentrate.
“Sounds like you’re jealous of my ability to multitask,” Riven said into the comm, her eyes glittering. An ad screen silhouetted Riven’s silver-blonde braid streaked with magenta, the confident sway of her hips. “Need to blow off steam somehow.”
The flutter in Asa’s stomach almost distracted her from her pounding heart. “We haven’t! We’ve been . . . focused,” she blurted, grateful the dim light hid the blush creeping across her cheeks.
“Killjoy,” Riven muttered.
“Well, we’re already
landing Boomslang at the pickup point.” Diego’s voice was fast and rasping. “Though Samir seems to have forgotten where the cabin-pressure release is.”
“Cut me some slack. This thing’s a relic with no auto-nav.” Samir was learning to pilot Riven’s ship, since it was good to have more than one person who could fly them out in a pinch.
“Blue switch,” Riven said. “Left of the main control panel.”
Shouts and frantic scuffling resounded from the alley behind them—the headhunters must’ve found a target. Asa picked up her pace, trying to fade into the maze of streets.
Even in the underground sector, Requiem was a fever dream of refracted neon and electric sweat, where the bass pulsed like a cybernetic heartbeat beneath Asa’s boots. The air-con chill was a far cry from the surface’s scorching heat during the 154-hour day cycle. Holoscreen ads hounded passersby, flashing images of caffeine-vapors and virtual experiences. Things that only a few months ago, Asa could’ve afforded by the dozen, without a second thought.
It had been her face on the holoscreens then, the successor to the galaxy’s biggest tech corporation. The girl with the petal-red lips and the media-darling smile. But now she was a fugitive, and she’d done her best to wipe her profile for targeted ads. Since escaping her father, Asa was mastering the art of lying low.
The sooner they finished this job, the better.
“Is this the place?” Riven said.
As promised, the entrance to the fighting pits was marked with a stylized cobra, washing the door and its guard in red light. The guard’s mottled-blue sclerae peered from the shadows, the mark of a glitch addict.
“Looks like it.” Asa was suddenly conscious of their clubwear—bodices to mimic the candy girls who worked at Grindhouse nightclub. Asa’s clung to her torso above her baggy mechanist pants. The outfits had been useful for getting backstage and conning one of the arena mechanists for the passcodes—even if Riven had still needed to break two of the man’s fingers—but now they might just draw extra attention.
Riven didn’t flinch as the guard sized her up. She radiated cool, like the first droplets before a thunderstorm, as she casually thumbed the grips of her holstered revolvers. Asa tapped the passcodes into the panel next to the door. When it lit up, the guard waved them forward, and they moved through the gaudy lobby and stepped into the elevator.
Riven hit an unlabeled button, and the elevator lurched, then plunged. Numbers flashed overhead. Asa could already feel the bass from the lower levels, a steady thump growing louder as they descended. A sour metallic taste bloomed on the back of her tongue. She’d never get used to the rush. But it helped to pretend her fear was only excitement.
“Ready to break some skulls?” Asa said.
“Rare for you to be the one
leading us into trouble.” Riven’s grin was deadly. “I kind of like it.” She gripped Asa’s waist, and Asa leaned in, if only to brush their lips for a moment. But Riven kissed her fast, hard, the way Riven did everything.
Asa gasped as Riven’s fingers tangled in her already-messy hair, and Riven’s tongue slipped between her lips. She found herself pulling Riven closer, deeper, the kiss burning wild as her racing heart. Sparks fell as the lights flickered, strobing in time with her rising pulse.
In times like this, Asa wouldn’t trade life in Riven’s crew for anything.
Riven pulled away, a flush staining her pale, freckled cheeks. “For luck.”
“Right,” Asa said, remembering the job. “We’ll need it.”
A gagging noise came over the comm. “I cannot believe you just forced us all to listen to you sucking face.”
Kaya’s voice. Asa realized she hadn’t switched off her comm.
“Can’t argue. That was pretty gross,” Samir said.
“We were not,” Asa lied.
“If sucking face is a colloquialism for heated kissing, they absolutely were,” Galateo tattled from the tiny drone attached to Riven’s wristlet.
Asa groaned. She’d built Galateo a new set of drones, but his factory-reset version still had a habit of talking out of turn. Even without his old memories, the AI was quickly learning how to get on their nerves.
Riven clicked her tongue. “Get over it.”
“You’d better watch it, Hawthorne,” Kaya said. “If you’re not careful with my sister, I’ll break your face.”
“Kaya,” Asa hissed, mortified.
Riven grinned. “Come and try it, mech-head.”
“Push me and I might.” On Asa’s wristlet screen, a vidclip appeared in their shared comm channel: Kaya smirking and throwing a punch, then a digital crack spiderwebbing across the screen. Her hair was cropped to her earlobes and mermaid blue—after the surgery, it had grown in white, and now she picked a different color every few weeks, undecided on permanent color grafts like Riven’s.
“Kaya’s tough now, eh? They grow up so fast.” Samir mock-sniffled. “Seems like just yesterday you were only a brain in a jar.”
“Oh, shut up.”
“Everyone. We’re moving in, so drop it,” Asa said, grateful the elevator was grinding to a stop. She turned to Riven. “That means you too.”
“All right, fine.” Riven’s hand squeezed hers. “I’ll be on my best behavior tonight.” When Asa raised her eyebrows, she added, “Nothing reckless. I promise.”
With a soft chirp, the doors slid open.
Asa sucked in a breath as the discordance of the fighting pits crashed over her. Graffiti stained the black-lit walls in violent color, covering old scorch marks and scratches. The crowds were a riot of exposed skin, glowing cybernetics, and holograms. At the arena’s ce
nter, harsh spotlights glinted off a pair of modded mechs slugging it out, and jeering erupted from the stands. Asa could barely breathe over the bass rocking through her bones.
Another job, another den of degenerates.
Asa squared her shoulders and slid through the lines at the betting terminals, the flashing leaderboards. Near the top of the screens, she glimpsed the name of the mech they were after. Halcyon Vengeance.
They were just in time for the final match. According to the Duchess’s tip, that mech would be targeted by a hacker tonight, forcing it to throw this match—and losing one of the Duchess’s allies a lot of money. If Asa could get Kaya in, her sister could stop the hacker and forward the evidence to Diego. Simple enough.
Now to get to the mechanic bay, where Vengeance was probably being prepped for its next match.
Asa followed Riven toward the back hall, circling the lowest tier of the room where the penultimate fight was happening—the crowd cursing and roaring as a mech with a beetle-blue exoskeleton and tank treads rammed another mech outfitted like an armory on legs. A volley of fist-sized slug bullets hurled from the taller mech’s arm gun. As its opponent wheeled backward, two slugs crashed against the holo-barrier covering the audience. Asa winced. She didn’t trust any safety measures in a place like this.
“We’ve got a guard,” Riven said. Sure enough, their corridor was blocked by a three-eyed bouncer. “Just like we practiced, huh?”
“Got it,” Asa said.
“Where you going, tarts?” the guard said as they approached. He pointed to the side corridor. “Restrooms are that way. Also . . .” His cybernetic third eye slid over Riven, likely some kind of scan-tech. Asa’s skin prickled, but his wandering attention made it easier to move into position near his shoulder. “Nice outfit.”
“You’re welcome.” Riven crossed her arms over her chest. “Also, eat shit.”
His whole body seized as Asa’s stunner prodded him in the back of the neck. She had to bite her lip to stop from apologizing. But it felt good to drop him.
Riven caught him in a choke hold and hauled him the other way. “Your cue,” she grunted.
Asa nodded, her pulse rising. The worst part of any job was letting Riven go. Playing their parts alone.
Asa ran down the concrete steps into the garage area, a maze of workbenches and maintenance scaffolds with a tunnel extending to the pits. Some of the mechs’ mod-jobs were impressive—armored security speeders had been amalgamated into hulking tanks, others’ spidery frames had been upgraded with cloaking tech. Among the mechs, it was easy to pick out her target.
Halcyon Vengeance had clearly been a combat mech before it’d been stolen and repurposed for pit fighting. Asa immediately recognized its sleek, dancer-like silhouette. One of her father'
’s designs. The white-and-gold logo of Almeida Industries, which would’ve covered its chest, had been sanded off and slapped over with a decal of a furious, hollow-eyed mask.
She approached the twelve-foot-tall mech and carefully set a hand on its red hull. Boomslang’s crew had been called on this job because it involved dealing with Cortellion tech, but Asa hadn’t realized it would be something of her father’s. She wheeled over a rolling stepladder, pulled her tool kit out of her cargo belt, and began prying open the circuit board cover on the mech’s shoulder.
“Hey. Don’t recognize you. Have we met?” Another mechanist waited on the ground, their gaze hidden behind mirrored goggles.
“Oh. Naith sent me for emergency maintenance,” she lied, dropping the name of the mechanist they’d conned. She flashed his keycard. “Vengeance’s main gun almost overheated in the last match. I’m just installing a quick patch.”
The other mechanist stared at her a second too long. “Well, you’d better make it fast. That thing’s on next.”
Asa kept her face blank even as her heart thudded. She opened the shoulder hatch and found the main control panel—the seductive glow of screens and keypads, of hidden data and locks to be broken. Like home.
“All right,” she whispered into the comm. “Hooking you up, Kaya.” She plugged in the transmitter. An easy, familiar point Kaya could link to and load in.
“Great,” Samir said. “The three of us are in the lobby. Let me know if you need backup.”
After a moment, Kaya’s voice came through. “I’m in. You sure this is the right mech? There’s nothing else in here. No hacker, no malware.”
“Bria definitely said Halcyon Vengeance.” Asa snapped the panel shut again. Distinctive name and model. Unmistakable.
Kaya’s breath caught. “Well, that’s weird.”
“Weird?”
“It’s . . . I don’t know. This thing has more processing power than a mech should. And—oh. There is something in here.”
Asa glanced at the holoscreen broadcasting the fight over the garage door. The blue mech lay on its back, sparking and inert, as the crowd booed. After the cleanup crews, Vengeance would be up next. “We don’t have much time, Kay. Lock them out and send us tracking data.”
“I . . . I don’t know if I—” A sharp gasp.
“What is it?” Asa said. “What’s wrong?”
The mech shuddered to life, and Asa lost her balance. She stumbled off the ladder, landing in a sloppy crouch.
When she got back to her feet, there was a blade against her throat.
“Move,” came a voice through Vengeance’s internal speaker, smooth and brassy and unfamiliar. “Now. Into the ring.” The blade extended from the mech’s forearm.
“Kaya?” Asa said. “What’s going on?”
Kaya didn’t respond, but th
e mech’s voice did. “I said move.”
Asa’s pulse stuck in her throat. This wasn’t Kaya. Memories flashed of Banshee—the rogue Etri mind escaped from her father’s lab—trapping them within a nightclub, every circuit under his control. Whether the mech was being puppeted by the arena hacker or something else entirely, it was impossible to tell. But she wasn’t about to call their bluff.
Asa held up her hands and walked toward the garage tunnel and the muffled roar of the crowd.
“What are you doing?” the other mechanist said, standing in their way. “This doesn’t look like a—”
Vengeance shoved him aside with one massive fist.
“Asa,” came Riven’s voice through her comm. “I took care of our guy. He’s on, uh, extended bathroom break. But did you hear more from Kaya? Is she okay?”
Asa couldn’t risk responding. The mech’s serrated blade guided her.
“What are you after?” she murmured, hoping whoever was in control could hear her.
“You’ll know soon enough, Miss Almeida.”
A fresh spike of fear shot through her as her feet met gravel and she stepped into the scalding spotlights. Around her, the crowd’s roars turned to scandalized murmurs.
Was the hacker aligned with her father? Had he given her a head start, only to send the star-system’s best hackers after her when the time was right?
You’ll never be free of his shadow, a deep-buried voice whispered. Never have been.
Never safe.
“Looks like Vengeance has brought something extra to the show tonight!” The announcer’s voice boomed over the speakers, but there was a whiff of hesitation there. “An unexpected surp—”
His voice cut to a whine of microphone feedback. The music’s pulsing bass went silent.
“Hello, Requiem,” the mech’s voice said over the speakers. “I’ve brought you a traitor.”
The spotlights plunged into darkness. The holoscreens surrounding the ring all lit up with the same image—a face made of red wire frames, with Xs for eyes and a sharp-toothed grin that looked scrawled from neon.
“I’m sure you all remember the destruction that racked this city four months ago,” it continued. “The creature everyone named Banshee. Corrupted and created by a man named Luca Almeida. And do you know who brought it here?”
It felt like icicles had rammed through Asa’s chest. The blade nudged the base of her spine, urging her to the center of the arena.
“Both Almeida’s daughters have been hiding in this city ever since. Complicit in their father’s crimes, unwilling to atone for the damage he caused.”
Kaya was still dead silent
. Nobody was coming to save her. Unless Asa could re-expose the mech’s control board, her stunner would be useless.
She raised her palms. “Let’s talk,” she said softly, turning toward the mech. “Banshee wasn’t our fault. We tried to—”
Vengeance ignored her. “And a crew calling themselves the Boomslang Faction has been harboring them—under the protection of your Duchess. Shameful.”
Murmurs erupted through the crowd. Confusion, and some cries to get on with it! They’d be just as happy watching her die as a mech.
“Here’s another secret,” Vengeance continued. “Almeida never left this place. Even now, your people are being taken and harvested. And if we want to destroy his work, it starts with her.”
Asa couldn’t move. Harvested. Something the hacker believed was her fault? This wasn’t a hunter after her bounty—this was an execution.
The mech’s chest cannon stared down at her, molten lights churning beneath it.
“You can call me Redline,” the mech said. “And while this girl is his heir—I am his antithesis.”
chapter 2
DEATH WISH
Whoever was messing with this mech had fucked up.
Rage boiled in Riven’s throat as she shoved her way to the front of the arena stands. Had someone faked this job and set them up? She’d known hunters might have Asa in their sights, but putting her on display in an arena, a massive gun poised to turn her to ashes—
It went too far.
“Riv, are you seeing the arena feed?” Samir said. “I’m heading your way.”
“Oh, I’m seeing it, all right.” Riven elbowed a tattooed man out of her way. “Kaya. I thought you were supposed to be on this.”
“I . . . I can’t.” Static from Kaya’s comm. “Someone’s trying to poke around inside my head.”
If Kaya couldn’t save her sister, there was no time to wait. Riven unclipped her retracting blade hilt from her belt. It was something Asa had built for her—a tech-blade with a vibrating edge.
“Hey, Asa,” Riven said. Asa’s comm was still open, even if she wouldn’t respond. “I said I wouldn’t do anything reckless tonight . . . but I guess that was a lie.”
Riven vaulted over the arena railing and into the gravel, then ducked beneath the inner holo-barrier that protected the audience. Her ankles ached from the ten-foot drop, but she kept going.
“Hey, jackhole,” she called. “Seems you’ve got a death wish.”
Halcyon Vengeance’s head swiveled toward her. She strode past a heap of scrap, a mech the cleaning crews had abandoned.
The spotlights came back on, sizzling like heat lamps. The announcer’s voice came through the loudspeaker. “Well, it seems we have another unexpected contender, and some considerable stakes! What do you say, glitchers and mech-heads?” Jeers rippled through the audience. “We can let them try. Been a few days since we’ve had blood in the gravel.”
The crowd’s roar rose to a thunderclap. Colors strobed as the thudding music began again, the drums rolling like storms.
Riven yanked her left-hand revolver, Blackjack, from its holster, spinning it into place on her index finger. No telling whether its disruptor bullets would do anything to that hull.
The mech turned back to Asa as its fingers unfurled into a trio of rusted sawblades, and a minigun emerged from its other forearm. The thing was a behemoth twice her height.
“Asa, run!” Riven said. “Take cover behind that scrap heap!”
Laughter rang over the lo
udspeakers. “Anyone who wants to place a bet has about five seconds before Vengeance turns her to raw sausage filling!”
“Go to hell,” she muttered. “Galateo, bring up the pinpoint shields. Protect Asa.”
Galateo’s zip-drone split into three spheres, each projecting a small holo-shield of blue hexagons. “Happy to be of service, my deathless queen.”
That nickname was somehow even worse than his previous iteration calling her my lady—she’d chosen it after a night of bad decisions. But right now it was the least of her problems.
Riven fired a disruptor at Vengeance’s egg-shaped head. The bullet splattered into sparking metal, leaving barely a dent. But the distraction gave Asa an opening.
Asa ran. Galateo’s shields scudded alongside her, absorbing the shock of Vengeance’s bullets with tiny kinetic pulses and then whirring back into place. Enough for her to reach cover behind the scrap heap.
Riven fired again, and Vengeance turned its attention back to her, swiping its whirring buzzsaws. As she ducked and weaved, they slammed into the gravel behind her, kicking up a shrapnel storm of pebbles.
She regained her balance and took aim at the joints holding the sawblades. Breathe. With deadly familiarity, the stillness came through her nerves, her muscles, until there was only her and the bullet and the target at the other end.
Crack. Crack.
The bullets hit, cracking open and discharging electromagnetic energy. The saws sparked and fell, and the remaining blades ground to a stop. Perfect shots.
The mech had other tricks though. Like the hull-piercing slugs in its fully charged chest cannon. Galateo’s shields would be useless against those.
Two disruptor bullets were left in Blackjack’s chamber, with no time to reload. Verdugo, her executioner, was full of regular bullets. She had to end this quickly.
The pulse in her ears, the roar of the crowds and the bass, had all but drowned out the chatter in her earpiece—Asa’s frantic requests, Samir’s calculated commands.
“Asa,” Riven shouted. “Tell me where this thing’s brain will be!” She slid aside as the first slug slammed the gravel.
Asa’s voice wavered. “The processor is at the top of its left shoulder. But a bullet probably won’t be able to get through the hull—”
Riven sighed. “Blade. Right.” If she could get close enough.
She flipped the switch on the tech-blade’s hilt. It unfurled, metal slotting into place until the blade was the length of her arm. The wicked edge hummed with a pulse that could cleave carbon fiber.
Samir’s voice came through. “Riv! Hang on. I’m close.”
“I’m staying with Kaya,” Diego said. “She’s fading fast.”
I might be, too, Riven thought as the massive cannon at the center of Vengeance’s chest glowed, back at full power. It was aiming at the scrap heap now.
Riven fired one of her dis
ruptors at the arm joint. The mech shuddered, and the minigun targeted lower. She gritted her teeth. One last bullet. Samir was always on her ass about getting a backup gun—something with a bigger mag and automatic firing—and now she almost wished she’d listened.
As she ducked another slug, pinpricks of pain shot through her skull—the creeping sickness, the white noise that clung to her nerves like a nightmare. She swore. The last thing she needed was for her body to eat itself now.
Riven flipped the blade in her palm. The other mech was still lying in the dirt, a mound of scuffed blue metal. Something she could climb. She just had to let Vengeance get close, but without endangering Asa.
Shouts from the crowd behind her. “It seems we’ve got another death wisher tonight!” the announcer’s voice called. “More fun for Vengeance?”
She whirled to see Samir land in the gravel behind her and unsling the rifle from his back. With his tailored black-and-silver armor vest—and his perfectly sculpted hair and stubble beard—he looked out of place in a fighting pit.
She’d never been happier to see him. Especially when he raised his rifle, sending a disruptor into the base of the mini
gun. Another weapon down.
“Should’ve known you’d end up in front of the crowd,” he shouted.
“You know me well!” Thoom. Another slug hit the arena wall near Samir. “Hey, if you’ve got more disruptors, try to clog up its chest!”
She holstered Blackjack and brandished the blade. One chance. She slid behind the scrap heap near Asa, its target.
Vengeance loomed over her, weaving to find an angle to shoot them. Metal whined next to her as a slug punched through the dead mech, straight between her and Asa.
Then—
“Now!” Samir shouted.
Gunshots. Vengeance sputtered, its chest riddled with disruptors. Riven climbed the scrap heap, staring that sparking cannon in the eye, and leaped, grabbing the mech’s shoulder in one hand. The panel Asa had mentioned was inches from her face.
The mech lurched. Riven latched on tighter as it tried to shake her off.
“Riven!” Asa’s voice came through her earpiece.
Had to be now. Riven clung to the mech like it was her last hope and drove the blade’s buzzing tip straight into the panel seam. She levered hard, and with a thunk, the wires and circuits were exposed.
Vengeance smacked her off with a massive fist. She saw stars as her shoulder hit the gravel. Dammit. The fist ca
me down toward her face, and she twisted aside in time for it to graze her shoulder, tearing the skin bloody. She stumbled to her feet, drawing Blackjack.
Her final disruptor bullet—and the circuit board was exposed.
She narrowed her eyes, letting the world slow to a crawl. Cocked the hammer with her thumb.
Click. Thoom.
Vengeance’s circuit board shredded under her disruptor, just as another bullet tore through it. Samir’s. The mech’s red laser-diode lights went dark, its limbs hung limp, and its massive bulk collapsed with a heavy thud.
A cacophony of cheers and booing erupted from the crowd. Riven spat on the downed mech. Whoever Redline was, Kaya and Diego needed to track them down so Riven could slit their throat.
“Damn near perfect,” Samir said. He always came through when she needed him. Though her bullet had been a split-second faster, probably. “But we need to get out of here.”
“Oh god.” Asa stumbled toward Samir, disoriented and starry-eyed. “I didn’t think you’d make it in time.”
Asa was in one piece. That had been far too close. Riven’s head cleared, relief killing the adrenaline, and the throbbing pain in her shoulder turned sharper.
Samir was already helping Asa onto the arena railing and back into the stands. Asa flinched as a liquor bottle flew toward her from the crowd. Redline had put a target on them all.
“Are you all good?” Diego said over the comm. “Kaya fell unconscious, but she’s waking up. I’ve got her.”
“Listen. This was a trap.” Riven tuned out the announcer’s complaints about the unexpected turn of events as she climbed the stands. “Someone has it out for us. We need to get the hell out of here.”
Murmurs followed her through the crowd.
“ . . . that Banshee business a few months back . . .”
“Isn’t that her? Deadeye Riven?”
“Half expected the Feds would’ve locked up that whole crew.”
They’d all seen. Ahead of her, she glimpsed someone reaching for Asa’s shoulders, and Samir shoving the person away. Riven picked up her pace.
“Got it,” Diego said. “We’re in the lobby, heading back to Boomslang—”
A prickle of instinct told her that was a bad idea. The ship was the most recognizable thing her crew owned, with its venom-green paint job and black-scale bands.
“No,” Riven said. “Meet up with us first. Don’t get back on the ship until we know it’s safe.”
Her hands were shaking. If they made it out of here, they still had to face the Duchess empty-handed, with their tails between their legs. The Duchess’s betting mech was dead. And worse, someone out there wanted Asa gone.
She caught up with Asa and Samir at the elevator. They rode to the lobby to collect Diego and Kaya, and then the numbers climbed in silence as they headed to the surface, where the ship waited. Asa held Kaya, who looked exhausted.
Riven had Verdugo up
as soon as the doors to the upper deck slid open.
She strode down the corrugated-steel ramp, hit with momentary relief at the sight of her ship. Boomslang waited at the end of the dock, anterior gun poised, docking controls locked in place. Ready to take her crew home.
“Wait.” Samir held a hand in front of Asa and Diego. “I think I saw something moving.”
Asa’s wristlet buzzed with an incoming call. “Unknown messaging code?” she murmured. She put the call on speaker.
“Leaving already?” The eerily processed, saccharine voice sent a greasy chill up Riven’s spine.
“Who is that?” she said.
“Make no mistake, Asanna Almeida.” A sick amusement cracked through the voice. “The next time I find you, you won’t be able to run.”
A blast rocked the floor. Heat and light rushed toward them.
Clouds of black smoke erupted from a roiling fire, bursting through a metal shell. Burned scraps of a former ship hull.
Where Boomslang had been.
chapter 3
HEAT WAVE
As usual, everything had gone to shit.
Riven was sweating like a burger in a frying pan as she pressed her cheek to the greasy bar table. Middays on Requiem were hot as hell. Maybe if she lay here long enough, she’d become a crispy meal for the spinebacks looting the alley trash bins.
It would be better than facing the mess last night’s job had left in its wake.
“Whiskey cola,” the android droned, sliding her third drink of the hour in front of her.
She grabbed it. The glass was warm. “You don’t have anything colder?”
“Out of ice,” the bartender said, scrubbing a glass. “Freezer broke earlier.”
Riven groaned but downed the drink in a few gulps anyway. The burn helped drown the white-noise pain that had worsened over the past few months. The pain that had nearly knocked her unconscious on the trek back from the fighting pits.
Every time something good entered her life, it was snatched away. Emmett and Ty—the first person she’d loved, and his brother she’d sworn to protect. Then Boomslang. And now the goddamn universe had its sights set on Asa.
Her clever, frustratingly beautiful runaway. The girl who drew her in like a magnet to the iron in her blood.
But she couldn’t protect Asa from vicious rumors or powerful hackers. And with no ship—no home among the stars, no offworld transit—Riven was just another broke smuggler in a death-trap city, who couldn’t do a job right if her life depended on it.
She’d been avoiding her whole crew since last night.
“My deathless queen, I believe we need to discuss your dietary habits,” Galateo droned from her wristlet. Even after his memory had been wiped, ...
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