Authors: Lolita Lopez
door to her cel. He touched the gun holstered on his hip.
“Don’t make me use this, Naya.”
“Don’t make me use this, Naya.”
“I won’t.” With his twitchiness, she didn’t make any
sudden movements. Being shot by Nattie wasn’t on her
bucket list. Side by side with her brother, Naya walked
through a maze of halways. The pungent scent of fuel
and chemicals filed her nose. “Is this an old
manufacturing plant?”
Nattie glanced at her. “They used to make batteries
here before they got that newfangled solar power plant
set up across town. The size and location makes it
perfect for our needs. Besides, with al the toxic fumes
and the dump site out back, no one wants to come here
to nose around.”
Naya tried not to dwel on the effect al those toxic
fumes were having on her right now. She could almost
feel her brain cels melting.
They passed through a set of double doors and
entered the main manufacturing space of the warehouse.
Most of the equipment had been cleared. A living space
had been set up in one section and smal mess hal in
another. Dozens of hard-looking men and women
stopped what they were doing to watch her.
One entire side of the room was taken up by stacks of
crates. They bore the stamp of the central government
crates. They bore the stamp of the central government
and were labeled as perishables. Her brain pieced
together the information. There weren’t any food
shortages and the Harcos treaties weren’t demanding too
high quotas. No, some corrupt bastard in the government
was seling food supplies to the Sixers.
“It’s a good deal,” Nattie said, his gaze moving over
the floor-to-ceiling stacks of food. “We get a wholesale
price. Mama sels it to the Splinter guys for three or four
times as much as we paid. They need supplies so badly
they’l pay anything. They’l even do food-for-gun deals.
You should see the shit they hijacked last night and
traded us this morning!”
“So you get your hands on weapons and cash while
the Splinter cel gets to agitate the people of Calyx,”
Naya murmured.
“You always were the smart one.”
Naya’s gut clenched at the sound of her mother’s
husky voice. The memories of her childhood, most of
them painful and tear-ridden, flooded back. She turned
slowly to face the woman who had abandoned her.
Decked out like a low-rent general, her mother
commanded the attention of every eye in the place.
commanded the attention of every eye in the place.
“Helo, Mama.”
She didn’t reply. Instead she walked a slow circle
around Naya. “You turned out prettier than I’d imagined.
With your daddy’s genes, I was sure you’d look like
someone beat you with the ugly stick by now.”
Naya let the insult rol right off her back. Unable to
help herself, she gestured to her own cheek. “The scar’s
a nice look for you. Makes you look powerful.”
“Keep it up,” her mother warned. “I haven’t forgotten
how easy it was to make you cry. I’ve stil got my strap.”
Naya’s jaw tightened. “You don’t scare me anymore.”
“I should. Who do you think controls this city? It sure
as hel ain’t the government. It’s me.” She touched her
chest. “Me and my crew and my guns.”
“You and your crew and your guns are in big trouble.
The Harcos forces know you’re working with the
Splinter cel here on Calyx. They don’t care if they get
their hands on you or the Splinters. They just want their
weapons.”
Her mother laughed. “Honey baby, they’ve been
trying to pin me down for years. They haven’t succeeded
yet.”
“I found you in half a day,” Naya snapped. “You have
no idea what kind of pain these people are wiling to
inflict to get their answers. Al it takes is one set of loose
lips and your operation is toast.”
“Let them come.” Her mother looked gleeful. “It wil
accelerate our plans but we’re ready. People are already
on edge because of the food shortages and the riots. Al
it wil take is one spark and this populace wil rise up.”
“And what? You’l be right there to supply them with
weapons?”
“And food,” her mother gestured to the crates. “The
easiest way to win hearts and minds is to give them what
they need.”
“You are insane. This plan isn’t going to work. It’s just
going to get a lot of people kiled.” Naya pointed to a
man decked out in stolen Harcos weapons. “Look, those
weapons are fine for close-quarters combat but the sky
warriors control the high ground. They have ships and
bombs and weapons we can’t even imagine. If they think
they’ve lost this city to enemy control, they wil destroy
this whole damn place.”
“Let them.” Her mother shrugged cruely. “I’l be long
gone. Can you imagine the kind of sales volume I’l have
gone. Can you imagine the kind of sales volume I’l have
then? Every backward country bumpkin on this planet
wil want one of my weapons.”
Naya’s stomach lurched. The Splinter cel and her
mother’s Sixer crew had it al mapped out. The cost in
human lives was nothing compared to the profits they
could expect. “You’re a monster.”
“Oh, sugar baby, don’t look so sad.” Her mother
drew the weapon from her thigh holster. “You won’t be
around to see any of that.”
Before Naya could react, her mother fired three
rounds. The impact registered in her brain before the
searing pain ripping through her abdomen hit. Hands
clutching her stomach, Naya stumbled backward. Rich,
dark blood spiled into her hands. She stared at the
crimson fluid, her brain on the fritz from the shock and
trauma of actualy being shot. Even when meting out
death, her mother had chosen the cruelty of a slow,
painful demise over the mercy of a plasma weapon.
“Naya!” Nattie rushed to her aid, cradling her body as
she crumpled to the floor. He put a hand to her face.
“Mama! Why? You said you were going to give her to
one of the Splinter men.”
“You think I’m going to hand them a girl who has intel
“You think I’m going to hand them a girl who has intel
on us and our enemies? Grow up, Nattie!” Their mother
tossed a gun toward him. “Drag her into the middle of the
floor and leave her there. The rest of you? Get ready.
They’re coming.”
* * * * *
Menace nervously chewed his gum while Cipher got
his mini-drones operational. Once they’d touched down
outside The City, Halie had come through like a champ.
She’d made contact with a man who quickly put her in
touch with Dankirk. Naya’s friend had been waiting for
Halie’s cal. Menace had been sick with worry as the
man relayed Naya’s plans.
In that moment, he’d understood why Terror had been
so tempted to use her. She was tenacious—and reckless.
He’d never had such a strong urge to swat her backside.
She had to learn that her life was precious and worth
protecting. Once she was safely at his side, he intended
to do everything in his power to convince her that she
was very much loved and needed.
From the staging point, Menace had a good view of
the dilapidated factory. Their ship’s environmental
the dilapidated factory. Their ship’s environmental
sensors had gone haywire as Hazard brought them in for
a stealth and fuly cloaked landing. It seemed the place
had been a factory at one point. Most of the toxic
chemicals and byproducts were stil onsite. The sooner
they got Naya out of there the better.
His earbud clicked twice, alerting him that Pierce, their
strike team leader, was coming on the line. He stopped
chewing and listened.
“Cipher tels me we’l have drone feeds within the next
sixty seconds. The charges are set at the entry points.
Once recon is complete, we make entry on my mark.”
Menace glanced to his left where Raze and Venom
had taken up their positions. Hazard crouched down just
to his right. The pilot hadn’t been hard to convince to
take the dangerous mission. Pierce, two members of the
Shadow Force and the other three members of the SRU
team were ready to breach the old factory from another
angle. Terror had remained behind on the
Valiant
to
supervise from his war room. It was no secret that no
one wanted to go into battle with him right now.
Menace pushed his tactical glasses into place. The
polarized lenses displayed a real-time feed from Cipher’s
drones. He glanced away from the picture, not at al
drones. He glanced away from the picture, not at al
interested in the swooping turns the devices were
making.
But when a drone entered through a broken window
and provided a ful view of the main factory floor, he
grew very interested. Menace spotted the open
barracks-style housing section. The stacks of crates
stamped
perishable
interested him the most. Naya’s
stories of food shortages and riots came to mind. Was
this where al that food was going?
The silent drone began to slowly shift its view. There,
finaly, Naya came into view. She wore strange men’s
clothing. Her gait seemed off to him. Had she been
drugged or hit on the head?
As if reading his mind, Cipher came across the radio.
“Target in sight. Wil put medical on standby for possible
head injury or sedative exposure. Acquiring audio feed in
ten, nine, eight…”
Menace’s earbud crackled. A moment later, Naya’s
sweet voice filed his ear. “While the Splinter cel gets to
agitate the people of Calyx.”
A woman dressed in men’s tactical gear came into
view. He recognized her from the photos Terror had
shown him.
Turn around.
He silently urged Naya to see
shown him.
Turn around.
He silently urged Naya to see
the woman coming up behind her.
“You always were the smart one.”
Naya stiffened. She faced her mother slowly. “Helo,
Mama.”
His gut clenched as the woman took her time studying
Naya. He waited to see what she would say to her
daughter.
“You turned out prettier than I’d imagined. With your
daddy’s genes, I was sure you’d look like someone beat
you with the ugly stick by now.”
He spotted the tic in Naya’s jaw.
No, sweetheart,
don’t poke the bear.
Naya pointed to her flawless cheek. “The scar’s a nice
look for you. Makes you look powerful.”
“Shit,” Menace whispered. She simply couldn’t stop
those smart-ass remarks from leaving her mouth.
“Counting twenty-seven armed on the main floor,”
Cipher informed. “I read a dozen heat signals in other
portions of the factory. Wil engage and separate enemy
with drone missiles on command’s mark.”
“Affirmative,” Pierce answered.
Down on the factory floor, Naya and her mother
Down on the factory floor, Naya and her mother
continued to face off. He’d missed some of their
conversation. He was sure it had been a doozy.
Her mother grinned. “Let them come. It wil accelerate
our plans but we’re ready. People are already on edge
because of the food shortages and the riots. Al it wil
take is one spark and this populace wil rise up.”
The whole evil plan came to light. Menace had to
admit it was a tried-and-true method for fomenting
revolution.
“And what?” Naya shouted. “You’l be right there to
supply them with weapons?”
“And food. The easiest way to win hearts and minds is
to give them what they need.”
Naya glared at her mother. “You are insane. This plan
isn’t going to work. It’s just going to get a lot of people
kiled. Look, those weapons are fine for close-quarters
combat, but the sky warriors control the high ground.
They have ships and bombs and weapons—”
“Prepare to breach.” Pierce interrupted the feed.
“Cipher, give us a sixty-second countdown.”
“Yes, sir. Breaching in sixty seconds.”
“Can you imagine the kind of sales volume I’l have
“Can you imagine the kind of sales volume I’l have
then?” Naya’s mother asked. “Every backward country
bumpkin on this planet wil want one of my weapons.”
Naya’s shoulders slumped. “You’re a monster.”
“Breaching in forty-five.”
“Oh, sugar baby, don’t look so sad.”
Menace’s heart skipped two beats as the other