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Betting on the Jackal
5th Race - Runaway Princess

5th Race - Runaway Princess

“Shit, shit, shit…!”

Desperately, one by one, I put away the floating orbs—returning them to their liquid silver original state, storing them in glass tubes.

From afar, I could hear more explosions. The panic, the roars.

The entire city trembling.

Even with all windows closed, my chamber sealed in an empty building, I could hear.

Her voice.

“It is futile to resist. We have pinpointed your location, closed these Blocks, and captured your accomplices. You have five minutes to exit the building on your own volition.”

Alantra spoke with the tiniest hint of contempt, something that was almost imperceptible.

From outside, I heard dragons approaching. Yet those dragons were being ridden by authorities. Because every other dragon had either been put to sleep or had been restricted and locked away.

As I threw everything inside my bag, I cut myself on a piece of metal I didn’t even know what it was.

“Fuck…!”

Never, not even once, did the authorities blow up the underground to make an arrest.

They would barely interfere with the illegal races, since they were still under the big four criminal organizations. Unless the person had rotten shit for brains, it was obvious to anyone the authorities had some kind of agreement with the organizations.

So why were they here?

Why this day?

Why me?

Ikarus will fall

I kicked my chair hard, sending it flying against the wall. Breaking three of its legs.

“Ringleader Jackal, you have one minute to leave the building under a peaceful approach.” Her voice was defiant, almost like a dare.

I let out a scream, the frustration, and rage tearing their way up my throat enough to make it bleed and hurt.

Think, think, think.

What can I do?

Where can I go?

Of course I had escape routes. The problem was the closest one had been blocked by the wreckage when they blew up the ceiling.

Trying to outrun a dragon rider enforcer was a fool’s endeavor at best; a desperate death sentence at worst.

Alantra’s team had at least fifteen riders, and it was best to assume they also had ground officers as well. She said they had closed my Blocks, and although it was not an impossible thing to do, there was fated to have some blind spot or small crack they didn’t cover.

This underground city was practically my home. I had grown up in the slums and lived in these streets my entire life.

Those shitty bastards couldn’t know those Blocks better than I did.

I took a deep breath, trying to center myself. It was difficult to calm my nerves—to soothe the untamed rage that kept crushing against my entire being like violent waves. Yet I couldn’t lose control at this moment.

I had to escape first.

After grabbing my bag, I gave one last glance across the room to make sure I wasn’t forgetting anything. Then I started to run.

A cape and hood concealed my face alongside the jackal mask, my clothes as dark as they could be, and as I escaped through one of the broken windows my eyes kept wandering and glancing in all directions. My heart racing and trembling against my chest.

“Let the records show you were accordingly warned, Jackal.” Alantra’s voice, as she spoke, was a haunting mockery. As if she wanted me to go against their orders, just so she could humiliate me even more once she caught me.

If she caught me.

The building I had been in not even ten seconds before blew up, the explosion followed by roars and cries. To cause such an explosion, they had to have a high-breed dragon with either a fire or air attribute. Maybe both.

Or a freakish good alchemist.

Avoiding the riders was even more challenging than I had anticipated. I had to crawl in the dirt and lurk in narrow alleys like a dirty rat, hiding at the faintest noise, freezing in the spot by the weakest breeze.

From afar, I kept hearing Alantra giving orders and directions, coordinating the entire squad’s movements. Wasn’t she too young to be a leader?

It felt like hours, but perhaps not even ten minutes had passed when I reached the border to another Block.

Officers in their immaculate white and red uniforms stood in lines, blocking the passages. Between houses and buildings, I saw riders enforcers, some carrying enhanced weapons.

I cursed under my breath, leaning against the cold stone wall.

What now, Vex?

Suddenly my eye caught a faint glow coming from my wrist. In my hurry, I had forgotten to destroy my crystal. I was about to throw it away when the message displayed on the black ball made my eyes jump.

It didn’t show the sender.

It was as if a dark mist cleared inside my mind, memories connecting with each other as I spotted a manhole across the street. It was on another alley, yet I would have to get in the open for a few seconds regardless of the path I chose.

Most people forgot about the underground sewer system. It was practically useless, after all. They only worked, partially, on the residential Blocks—which consisted of 6% of the city. The remaining sewers were practically abandoned and forgotten, an invisible afterthought.

I had a few potions with me—potions that could help create some distractions—yet I had to use them sparingly.

Wisely.

They were too difficult to acquire, even more so for people with my background.

As I debated which one I should use, if any, a blinding light poured down on me followed by an amplified voice.

“Jackal’s location spotted. Deploy operation 3-6-9.”

Before she had even finished her sentence I was already running, hearing the shouts and roars following me close. If I went down the manhole, they would see and keep chasing me. I had to use them when there were no eyes on me.

As I entered the alleys, ducking and dodging whatever they were shooting at me, my right leg got hit. I felt the projectile pass through my calf, the flesh burning as the pain intensified with each step I took.

Then the enforcers caught up to me.

I was about to turn right when a lightning ray was shot across the entire street. I bent my body, throwing my weight down so I could slide beneath it, barely avoiding the ray.

The top of my hood grew hot, the scent of burnt fabric filling the space. I had no time to catch my breath as another dragon came flying only a few meters from me. Yet when I had to avoid both a howling gust of ice and a poisonous goo—one that almost got my bag stuck—I realized there were more.

Ahead of me, more officers were approaching and closing possible escape routes.

They were all driving me to a corner.

I went to one of the main streets, the space wide and out in the open with high buildings. I had no idea where I was running to, and even if I did it would make no difference.

Before I even realized, I was being pinned on the ground, the air knocked out of me.

Her hair fell on me like silver cascades, some red locks blending and mixing here and there. Yet her voice was like a warm flame, low and inviting at first but prone to burn at the slightest touch.

“You should’ve listened to me when you had the chance.” Her voice was not as harsh as her words, her body pressing against my back as she twisted my arms.

There was a sweet fragrance that filled the air. To me, it felt like poison—a suffocating stench that would always remind me of my own descent and failure.

“Great job, captain! Your aim was perfect, I’m impressed.”

That crazy woman had jumped from her dragon just to pin me down.

I glanced around, my mouth hanging open when I realized there were floating orbs all around the area.

All that time, they had been broadcasting this as if it was a damned show. As if it was fun to see me fight a losing battle.

I bit my lip, my eyes burning as I fought back tears.

This is humiliating…

Those people, they were treating me like a low criminal. Something less than a vermin.

If they wanted the real culprits, they had to look inside their ranks. Inside the prestigious and fancy academies that kept using underground races as their golden fishing pond, or within the big families who backed and supported all underground operations.

Not me.

I was just someone exploiting their corrupted and dirtied system. Someone making money like anyone else, using the tools I had in my set in my favor. I was but a small coil helping to turn the gears and set everything in motion.

I was not the one controlling the machine.

None of us were.

“I will make you pay for this…” I didn’t realize I had spoken out loud until Alantra replied.

“It will be something difficult to do, once you are behind bars.”

Blood trailed down my lips, tears finally streaming down my face.

I would definitely make them pay.

I would make her pay.

Before she could remove my mask and reveal my identity to all those who were watching number one Jackal’s arrest, a loud bang echoed in the area followed by screams and shots.

The ground below me shook and grumbled as if it was coming to life, and soon enough me and Alantra was being thrown up in the air.

Clouds of dense smoke covered the area, and though I could barely see a thing, I knew the dragons were growing restless by their roars and shrieks, followed by frustrated grunts from their riders.

I had no idea who or what had been responsible for this, and it didn’t matter.

I did not stall for time.

Before Alantra could get up I was already on the move, my right leg throbbing and aching. My mask provided me some protection from the smoke, yet not much. I had to hold my breath to not start coughing and reveal my position.

Soon enough I found a manhole, its form almost impossible to spot amidst the wreckages and its faded form. I opened and closed its lid in a hurry, starting to climb down the ladder with quick steps.

At some point my foot slipped, the strength in my legs long gone while the blood that ran from my right leg made my foot slippery. I tried to hold on to the ladder, but before I knew my body was leaning backward as gravity pulled my body down.

The fall wouldn’t kill me.

But it would hurt.

A lot.

I closed my eyes with fear, praying I wouldn’t break too many bones—that I would still be able to walk or even run for a few more hours if I had to.

However, the impact never came. Much less the pain.

Instead, I found myself falling into strong arms.

“Seeing you like this, you resemble a runaway princess. I must say, it’s not the worst look for you, Vex.”

Staring deep into my eyes while holding me in his arms was a man I never thought I would see in the unsavory, forgotten sewers.

Angus Quennin.

And to my amusement, he was wearing a black animal pelt.