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Chapter no 10

Rebel (Legend, #4)

DANIELโ€Œ

My heartโ€™s still hammering from my evening with June by the time I step out of the elevators and into the streets of the Undercity. My lips still burn from our kiss. A million thoughts run through my mind, and I find myself cursing silently at everything I did.

What a goddy idiot I am. Why didnโ€™t I just tell her exactly how I felt? What kept stopping me in the moment? So what if she doesnโ€™t feel the same way? Am I such a coward that Iโ€™d rather not know?

I sigh, indulging in my bad mood as I shove my hands in my pockets and hurry through the grungy streets. If I let myself, I could almost pretend that Iโ€™m back walking through Lake at night. Maybe nothingโ€™s changed at all since June and I first got together all those years ago.

By the time I arrive on the scene in the darkest district of the Undercity, there must be at least half a dozen AIS drone vehicles blocking the intersection, their flashing lights painting the buildings in alternating washes of red and yellow, adding to the mess of colors from the neon signs hanging overhead. Jessan and Lara are already here, and when they spot me, they wave me over with grim faces. Some distance away, I see Min Gheren, the AIS director, talking in low voices with some of the police. She and I exchange a brief look of greeting.

โ€œWhat took you so long?โ€ Jessan asks me as I approach them. โ€œYou in the middle of a date or something?โ€

I glare at her as we walk.ย Yeah. Only my first kiss in ten years with a girl Iโ€™m crazy about. โ€œSomething like that,โ€ I mutter back. โ€œWhat happened here?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ll see,โ€ Lara interjects from my other side.

The street is crowded with curious onlookers, and police and AIS agents alike keep telling people to get back behind the barricades. The pockmarked street is littered with broken glass, and burn marks against the sidewalks and the walls tell me there was some kind of explosion here.

Already, the name hangs unspoken in the airโ€”I can see it in the tense faces of my fellow agents, the way theyโ€™re taking extra precautions. This is Dominic Hannโ€™s work.

Then we reach the crime scene, and I halt in my steps.

In the middle of the intersection lies a body laid out so purposefully that thereโ€™s no question this was intentional. Itโ€™s been sliced open. The face is unrecognizable. Beside me, Jessan and Lara look away from the vicious wounds that lace the corpse. I look on, my heart beating rapidly. An ugly flashback emerges from the dark corners of my mind now, the memory of bodies piled next to me as I woke up among them, terrified and in pain.

The memory is so vivid that I barely register Min coming over to stand beside us. Her lips are folded into a grim line as she studies the body with us.

โ€œItโ€™s him, yeah?โ€ I say to her in the beat of silence that follows. โ€œHe did this?โ€

Min nods toward the telltale red handkerchief tied to the corpseโ€™s ankle. โ€œAnd he wanted us to know it,โ€ she replies.

The kind of cruelty that Dominic Hann inflicts on his victims is so sharply reminiscent of what the Republic used to be like, what Commander Jameson used to do, that I feel an ominous weight on my chest. This isnโ€™t just the work of a sadistic criminal. This is manipulation, someone trying to send a message. Someone threatening the city with his power.

โ€œWho was he?โ€ I ask as I bend down beside the body. โ€œDo we know yet?โ€

Lara nods. โ€œA councilman in the Presidentโ€™s inner circle.โ€

This stops me cold. The Presidentโ€™s inner circle. My eyes go back to the mutilated figure before us. Most of Hannโ€™s past attacks have been against people who couldnโ€™t repay his debts, but an act like this is bold beyond belief. Had this councilman owed him money too? Itโ€™s possible. But this isnโ€™t a regular citizen. He had bodyguards. All kinds of security attached to his account.

If Hann was able to do this to a prominent councilman in a coordinated attack, then heโ€™s not only growing more confident, heโ€™s got more connections in powerful places than I thought.

โ€œHow did it happen?โ€ I ask.

Jessan runs me through what they already know: that the councilman

had gone missing earlier today; that heโ€™d been driven here and dumped at the intersection still alive; that he had then been set on fire. I wince at each graphic detail. My attention goes briefly to people sitting on the curbs now, being interrogated by the police. Probably nearby storeowners, some who mightโ€™ve witnessed everything happening.

โ€œAnd they still managed to get away?โ€ I ask when Jessan finishes.

She shrugs, and Lara nods at the scorched walls. โ€œThey seem like they struck fast and hard. Itโ€™s not their first time at this game. Itโ€™s just the worst one yet.โ€

I run a hand through my hair in frustration. โ€œBut what does Hannย want?โ€ I mutter to no one in particular. โ€œMoney? Revenge? Do we have any evidence? What does he get out of killing a councilman, aside from all of AIS descending on him like a horde of wasps?โ€

โ€œNo idea, but there was a theft tonight at the East City Laboratories, where a rare energy coil was stolen. No confirmation yet on whether or not these two events are related in any way, but the timing is unusual enough that itโ€™s worth noting.โ€

My eyes go back to the pitiful remains. Weโ€™re going to be the ones to deliver the news to the family.

Min is looking at me with a thoughtful expression. She turns to Jessan and Lara, then gives them a terse nod. โ€œI need you two to gather some more eyewitness accounts,โ€ she says. โ€œGo on. Let me have a word with Daniel.โ€

They donโ€™t hesitate. As they head off, Min turns to me and lowers her voice. โ€œI know that look, Wing,โ€ she says quietly. โ€œWhatโ€™s going through your head?โ€

โ€œThat this all looks familiar,โ€ I reply, my eyes still settled on the body. โ€œThe wounds?โ€

I shake my head. โ€œThe political escalation. Up until now, Hann has stayed in his realm, punishing anyone who fails to pay their debts to him or loses a gamble or is a part of some rival gang. But this is different.โ€ I cross my arms. โ€œHeโ€™s prepping the people.โ€

โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€

I give her a hard look. If there was ever a time to bring the topic up to her again, itโ€™s now. โ€œYou know how I feel about the cityโ€™s Level system. I remember what itโ€™s like to be part of the lower class when weโ€™re pushed to our limits.โ€

At that, Min makes an exasperated sigh. โ€œDaniel. You know my

answer to this argument already.โ€

โ€œThen donโ€™t ask for my opinion,โ€ I say. โ€œBut Iโ€™m warning youโ€”Hann isnโ€™t a fool. He knows that the number of poor down here is growing, that more people arenโ€™t able to raise their Levels and canโ€™t afford to feed their families. You got flattened Levelers setting up entire rows of tents down here. Hann knows that. Heโ€™s already instilled a proper amount of fear in the Undercityโ€”people here are intimidated by him. But he also shows them enough mercy to make them love him. Now heโ€™s attacking the city council. Prominent politicians.โ€ I point at the body. โ€œItโ€™s not a coincidence that Hann decided to put this body on display down here instead of hanging it up in the Sky Floors, where they live. He knows how much the people down here hate the Sky Floor politicians. Heย wantsย the people down here to see. To know whoโ€™s really running their city.โ€

Min gives me a skeptical look. โ€œYouโ€™re insinuating that Hann wants to stage a coup?โ€ she asks incredulously.

โ€œIโ€™m saying thatโ€™s a real possibility,โ€ I argue back.

Min shakes her head in frustration. โ€œHann doesnโ€™t have that kind of power. Youโ€™re telling me heโ€™s going to try seizing the capital of the most advanced nation in the world?โ€

โ€œA nation thatโ€™s still too young,โ€ I argue back. โ€œThat can topple just like anything else.โ€

She rubs her temples in irritation. โ€œGive me something I can work with. Iโ€™ll never be able to convince the council that this is even a remote threat.โ€

Her expression makes me want to scream. These cracked Antarcticans have never lived through a revolution before. Their country is barely a few decades old. They have no idea how fragile this entire system is. Everything always seems like itโ€™s going fine until suddenly, one day, itโ€™s not.

โ€œAll of you think this place is invincible,โ€ I snap. โ€œYou donโ€™t see the poison bubbling under the surface, thatโ€™s been here since day one.โ€

โ€œWhat do you propose we do, then?โ€

โ€œFind a way to Hannโ€™s side. Weโ€™ve had no luck hunting him because our relations with the Undercity are so poor.โ€

โ€œAnd how are we going to do that when we donโ€™t know the first thing about him?โ€

I smile grimly. โ€œIโ€™ve got some insight into how a notorious criminal can be caught by someone from the inside. She did it by becoming

someone I could trust. But you need to tell the President that this system is unsustainable. Weโ€™re setting the Undercity up for a revolution, and I donโ€™t even think theyโ€™re wrong to do it.โ€

Min still looks unconvinced. She shakes her head. โ€œThe Presidentโ€™s not going to like me bringing up this conversation again,โ€ she says. โ€œYou know how much he supports the Level system.โ€

These Sky Floor bastards always try to maintain order by giving themselves all the advantages. Edenโ€™s words linger in my mind, along with his disgust at my working for the AIS.

Sometimes I think youโ€™ve forgotten where you come from.

But I was never the same as someone like Dominic Hann. Hann is a killer.

โ€œYou donโ€™t have to talk the President into taking it down,โ€ I reply. โ€œJust tell him how much his own life is at risk. Hann isnโ€™t going to stop at killing a councilman. President Ikari is the prize at the top, and if he wants to stay alive, he needs to do something to quell this.โ€

Minโ€™s eyes have gone cold again, but she doesnโ€™t dismiss my words. Instead, she nods at me. โ€œGo join the others to gather eyewitness accounts,โ€ she says. โ€œWeโ€™ll talk again later.โ€ She doesnโ€™t wait for me to respond before walking away with her hands in her pockets.

Jessan comes up to me as I watch the director go. โ€œI think weโ€™re narrowing down where the drone raceโ€™s final is happening,โ€ she says to me, sending me a virtual map of the Undercity.

โ€œYeah?โ€ I answer.

โ€œYeah. It might be the same place as the semifinal. Weโ€™ve pinpointed a few scattered crowds idling on the sides of the streets. Looks like theyโ€™re waiting around for drones to pass through.โ€

โ€œThen itโ€™s happening very soon.โ€

She nods. โ€œItโ€™s too hard to track the drones, since they move so fast.

We can only rely on the gathered crowds.โ€

โ€œOnce those spectators catch on that theyโ€™re being watched, theyโ€™re going to scatter in a second.โ€ I force myself to turn away from the crime scene. โ€œShow me where the crowds have been spotted.โ€

As I start to follow Jessan away from the crime scene, I bring up my directory of names and instinctively pick out Edenโ€™s account to send him a message. But heโ€™s offline again, the tracker on his system disabled. Barely a day since our argument, since he almost got a knife to the stomach down in the Undercity, and heโ€™s already at it again, off to do hell

knows what. I sigh. What do I have to do to force him to stay putโ€”tie him down in a chair?

Maybe heโ€™s back home, I tell myself.ย Or out celebrating, as he should be. Today had been his last day of classes, after all, and he could be out with his friends, laughing his head off in some Sky Floor bar.

If I track his location and find him again, heโ€™ll know. Andย thatย wonโ€™t get me anywhere with getting him to open up. I take a deep breath and try to ignore the nagging feeling in my gut.

But all that swirls through my mind are memories of the days when Eden was lost to me, when the Republic had taken him somewhere and I had no idea where he was. All I remember is seeing him stumble forward through the ash and fog of war from the hospital, and me scooping him into my arms.

Screw this. I give in to my worries, then tap on the icon for Edenโ€™s location. My AIS privileges let me bypass permissions, so that I can track him without his consent.

A small loading icon swirls in the center of my vision as my system traces him.

Ahead of me, Jessan pauses to bring up a virtual map between us. โ€œSee?โ€ she says. โ€œWeโ€™ve noticed hints of drone spectators crowded along these locations. Itโ€™s not much evidence to go off of, but it puts the rough estimate of where the race is happening tonight right โ€ฆ here.โ€

She points to a spot on the virtual map.

At the same time, my system finishes tracking where Eden is. His location dot appears, bright red, over almost the same spot where Jessan is pointing.

I blink, then frown and shake my head. โ€œHang on a sec,โ€ I mutter, reloading the geolocator. โ€œI think my system glitched. Show me where the race is on the map again?โ€

Jessan brings it up again, while Edenโ€™s location also refreshes.

This time, thereโ€™s no mistaking what Iโ€™m seeing. A sudden wave of dizziness sweeps over me. Eden is exactly where Jessanโ€™s finger is pointing.

Heโ€™s down here in the Undercity. And heโ€™s at the drone race.

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