Predator Code (Tales from Wil...

By words_are_weapons

18.8K 722 156

Season 1 of Tales from Wildhearth In a world beyond imagining lies danger that's all too real. For centurie... More

Season List for Tales from Wildhearth
Chapter 01 - No-one Likes a Party Crasher
Chapter 02 - Risk Assessment
Chapter 03 - The Wolves Are Watching
Chapter 04 - In the Sight of Golden Eyes
Chapter 05 - It's Only Murder if Someone Knows
Chapter 06 - A Fear of Heights, Water & Dying
Chapter 07 - When the Sky Falls In
Chapter 08 - Trust is a Luxury Item
Chapter 09 - Remember the Day You Created a Monster
Chapter 10 - Traps Don't Scare Me
Chapter 11 - Home Is Where They Ripped My Heart Out
Chapter 12 - Time to Take on the Whole Wide World
Chapter 13 - I Got a Nose for Trouble
Chapter 14 - Who Did You Pay to Get Where You Are?
Chapter 15 - Rosewine Lies
Chapter 16 - You're Easier to Track When You're Dead
Chapter 17 - Somebody Lied to You
Chapter 18 - Your Word Against Everything and Everyone
Chapter 19 - Isn't Anybody Pleased to See Me Anymore?
Chapter 21 - Glad to Have Ruined Your Day
Chapter 22 - It'll Take More Than Another Bad Day
Chapter 23 - Not My People Anymore
Chapter 24 - Places Nobody Should Go
Chapter 25 - Two's Crazy Company
Chapter 26 - Getting in is the Easy Part
Chapter 27 - Empty Halls and Sabotage
Chapter 28 - Where Dirty Secrets Go to Die
Chapter 29 - I Think it's Built for Two
Chapter 30 - New Business Acquaintances
Chapter 31 - Euphemisms Get People Killed
Chapter 32 - Careful What You Steal For
Chapter 33 - Chemical Deterrent
Chapter 34 - Ring the Bell for Belforra
Chapter 35 - First Class Ticket Holders Only
Chapter 36 - Animals All Over Again
Chapter 37 - Tomorrow's Victims
Chapter 38 - Good Little Lab Rats
Chapter 39 - Wolfbait
Chapter 40 - Predator Code
Chapter 41 - Negative Test Results
Chapter 42 - Martyrs Don't Live Happy Lives
Chapter 43 - Ovens and Freezers
Chapter 44 - Kill Me If You Can
Chapter 45 - Nature Always Wins
Chapter 46 - Smoke From the Fire
Chapter 47 - Politics Makes My Head Hurt
Epilogue - Of Sickness and Cures

Chapter 20 - It Isn't Paranoia if Someone's Out to Get You

66 8 1
By words_are_weapons

The tram carrier ride back to the warrenary was quiet—a little too quiet for her liking. After the exertions of the day, the sheer emotional exhaustion had boomeranged back around and hit Jett like a ton of bricks, and she struggled to keep her eyes open as she lounged in a half-empty compartment. Through the window, she watched night begin its creeping march over the city, district lights glittering like a carpet of stars. In the distance, she could just make out the rising clump of structures of the Silk, their exteriors shining against the dark.

Jett tried to focus on her breathing, watching the lights twinkle. Things were coming together little by little, and her encounter with Rapid had, for a change, turned out to be a stroke of luck. The last piece of the puzzle, however, was still to be discovered, and that piece rested in the most dangerous place in the city.

She almost laughed at the craziness of the scheme currently hatching in her mind, but right now, crazy was really all she could rely on. Resting her forehead against the cool window glass, she let her mind wander. Tomorrow. She could get back to her plan tomorrow. First, a warm meal and a good night's sleep were desperately needed.

In the reflection of the glass, she could see a few of the other passengers and found herself examining them, her tired mind latching randomly onto any available stimulus. A scantily clad female felkin with a vibrant blaze of flame red headfur idly inspected her claws, boredom etched on her face. A couple of seats down from her sat a placid-looking deerkin, a young male from the look of him, his face twisted with concentration as he etched away at a bark-puzzle board on his lap. A plump beaverkin lay across a few seats further down, snoring gently. Jett wondered idly if he'd already missed his stop.

Suddenly the deerkin looked up. Through the reflection, it wasn't easy to tell, but he seemed to be looking straight at her. A tremor of unease filled her, and in a lazy motion, she turned around to lean her back against the window, eyes flickering to where the deerkin sat.

By the time she'd turned, his attention had returned to the puzzle board. Jett let her gaze linger on him for a moment. Did she imagine it? She was tired, but not that tired. He didn't look up again, however, and after a few awkward seconds, she shrugged off the sensation. Nerves—it had to be. Today had put her thoroughly on edge—more than usual.

The tram carrier rumbled its way through the twilight until it reached Carlikane District, and Jett gratefully dragged herself out into the streets once more, taking a deep breath of the cool night air to briefly stave off the weariness. Then she set off, pack hanging loosely on one shoulder as she walked towards the basin and the warrenary.

Further out from the centre, life remained in dribs and drabs, some of the quieter bars just beginning to fill up with patrons. Jett's eyes wandered as she moved through the streets, and she lazily turned in a circle, making a cursory sweep behind her to ensure no wolfkin had latched onto her tail.

She saw no wolfkin.

Something altogether stranger snagged her gaze. Her brows rose in surprise when she saw the deerkin from the tram carrier ambling along maybe thirty feet behind her, his head down, satchel clutched tight to his chest. Her hackles rose as a million thoughts and accusations rushed through her mind. Jett stopped, tracking the deerkin as he approached.

He wandered past her without a glance.

What the hell am I doing? she thought in exasperation as she watched him shuffle off into the night. Being careful was one thing, but she couldn't allow herself to turn into some gibbering wreck, jumping at every shadow. The only way she stood any chance of coming out of this in one piece would be if she kept her cool.

Rubbing her eyes with one paw, she put the deerkin out of her mind and continued on, trying to rein in her paranoia. Even with that non-incident, she still found herself accusing everyone with her eyes, her nerves fraying to their last the closer she drew to the warrenary.

By the time she turned the bend onto the warrenary road, Jett could barely keep herself in check, claws flexing and clenching with a mind of their own as her eyes flickered in all directions, constantly on the hunt for pursuit. Grinding her teeth together until they hurt, she shook her head violently, trying to clear it of all the dark thoughts and feelings.

Jett paused at the door of the building, unable to stop herself from casting one last wary glance behind for her imaginary followers. She almost convinced herself there was nothing there in the steady flow of citykin that passed her by, but her brain didn't let it slip by.

The felkin—the female from the train—stood outside a stall across the street, limbs slack and oblivious to the kin that flowed around her. Jett blinked, but the figure remained stubbornly in her field of view, looking back with a seemingly vacant stare. Something about the felkin's eyes looked wrong—the pupils too small, the gaze focused but somehow distant at the same time, as though there was no conviction behind it.

Jett's paw curled tight around the door handle as she looked back at the felkin for a long moment. Then she looked around more carefully in the crowds, nausea twisting in her gut with a sense of inevitability. Sure enough, although he was more inconspicuous than his companion, the mild-looking deerkin was here too, tucked away at a cafe table with his chair facing the warrenary. She looked closer.

Same blank-eyed stare.

What in the Peace and Fire is this...?

Jett ran her tongue along her teeth uneasily and turned away, forcing herself to move slowly and naturally. Why were these kin following her? The little paranoid voice told her that the wolfkin might have enlisted some local help in their search.

Fighting down the urge to vomit, she tugged the door open and slipped inside, closing it gently behind her and padding across the foyer towards the elevator. She exchanged a perfunctory wave with Hiyfa but didn't trust herself to speak, not wanting to drag the old quillkin into whatever new twist had impacted itself upon her life. Jaw tight and heart pounding, she stepped to the left and punched the button for her floor.

Jett stepped out into the hall, and after a quick scan of the corridors for any wayward guests, she sprinted headlong from the elevator, racing towards her room as fast as her limbs would carry her. Stumbling to a halt at the door, she fumbled the scent key into the lock and dove inside, slamming the door shut and leaning against it, breathing heavily.

Somebody had found her; that much seemed clear, but with no sign of the wolfkin, her confusion only increased. Who had she gotten on the wrong side of this time? Had some of Rapid's people tailed her here without her knowing? Steadying her breaths, she tried to calm her mind, the tiredness sending her thoughts shooting off into all sorts of wild places. Closing her eyes, she concentrated on her breathing for a moment, in through her nose and out through her mouth a dozen times.

Pushing off the door, she crouched low and crept silently over to the window of her room, drawing the longclaw for the reassuring heft of the weapon, if nothing else. Sidling up to the window, she eased herself up and looked out onto the street below.

People passed steadily back and forth, diminutive shapes far below her vantage point, but her sharp eyes picked out the two stationary figures of her antagonists, watching and waiting. She leaned closer, watching and waiting, prepared to spend the night hunched over the window if she really had to.

But then another group of figures emerged from the night, and her blood turned to ice.

A group of wolfkin seemed to materialise from a nearby side street and approached the warrenary, parting passersby like a shoal of fish. They paused briefly to confer with the deerkin that had followed her here, and the truth hit her like a bucket of water. The pair from the train had been tasked to find her and tail her to her hideout, and she quickly realised why. If there'd been even the slightest possibility a wolfkin was following her, she would have bolted in an instant, but with these two, she'd convinced herself she was being paranoid.

If only.

She tensed as the deerkin nodded to the newcomers and pointed at the warrenary. Six enforcers loped towards the building, sheathed in night-black body armour, claws and teeth flashing in the moonlight as they moved.

At their head prowled the female, the leader. The murderer. The chill of fear in Jett's veins turned to hot anger as she glowered down at the figure, the one person, more than anyone else, that bore responsibility for turning her life upside down and inside out. Her paw strangled the grip of the longclaw as she imagined running the wolfkin through, imagined finally getting her vengeance.

The image gave her a brief tremor of satisfaction, but she quickly got a hold of herself. Whatever was going on in the city went a lot deeper than one person—killing the wolfkin would solve nothing if she didn't get to the bottom of the mystery first.

With a low snarl of frustration, she jammed the knife into its sheath and began feverishly working to dismantle the computing rig, rescuing its central block drive and wrapping it in some clothes before stuffing it into her pack. More clothes went in, along with as many of the tech bolt-ons she'd purchased from Karno as she could fit. The last of her barkstamps disappeared into it, along with a couple of packs of dried meat.

And that was it. That was all the precious things she had in the world right now. Spitting a foul curse, she grabbed the heavy mass of the computing rig and, with a yell of effort, shoved it off the table, where it smashed into a heap of junked circuitry. She wasn't about to leave anything for the wolfkin to find.

She jammed her knife back into its sheath and swept up her flashgun, checking the charge level before slinging her heavy pack across her shoulders and pulling the straps tight. Flashgun in paw, she cast one last mournful glance at the room that had served her well over the past couple of weeks, then bolted out into the corridor.

Closing the door quietly behind her, she looked left and right and took off down the hall, away from the obvious escape route of the elevator, instead heading for one of the stairwells that wound through the warrenary. A sense of resignation descended on her as she ran. It had always been a matter of time before they tracked her down.

But the deerkin? The felkin? How had they ended up getting roped into helping the enforcers? Was it as simple as a threat? Somehow, that didn't stack up for her. Enlisting random civilians didn't fit the way the enforcers operated—too much exposure to things they shouldn't see, particularly if they'd been put on Jett's trail.

She couldn't shake the glazed, trance-like look in their eyes. Drugs, perhaps? Getting the pair to help by force seemed more like something the wolfkin would do.

The sound of the elevator doors grinding open pulled her from her thoughts and back into frightening reality once more. Jett gritted her teeth, forcing herself not to turn around. The wolfkin had to know which room she'd been staying in. Accommodating as Hiyfa had been, Jett hardly expected the quillkin to stand up to a squad of enforcers on her behalf. She twisted and turned through several passages, heading for one of the more isolated stairways that would lead her down to the building's back exit.

She skidded to a halt at a T-junction in the hall, looking quickly left and right before she spotted the entrance to the stairwell—a thin hardwood slab with a bronze handle.

"You're surrounded, foxkin!"

Jett whipped around at the sound of the coldly familiar voice, her body coiling with tension as she saw the female wolfkin flanked by a pair of her soldiers at the far end of the hall. The enforcer started walking toward her at an insultingly easy pace.

"Enough running," she hissed. "It's over."

"I'll tell you when this is over," Jett snarled back, fury overriding her instinctive fear. "I know all about your little schemes, wolfie, and when I'm finished, the rest of the city will too."

Not wasting any more time trading verbal blows with her enemy, she bolted for the stairwell door and wrenched it open.

On the other side, she found the snarling jaws of a wolfkin lunging for her throat.

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