CHAPTER 12 THE DEVIL’S DESIGN POV THAYER
The concussive force of the explosion does not just shatter the silence; it shatters the very air in my lungs.
A violent, deafening roar completely consumes the subterranean vault, a shockwave of kinetic energy that travels straight down the elevator shaft and slams into the reinforced steel doors of the bunker.
The floor violently heaves beneath my combat boots.
The emergency red strip lighting blinks out entirely, plunging us into a thick, suffocating darkness laced with the sharp, acidic stench of pulverized concrete, burning electrical wiring, and vaporized metal.
My instincts do not require thought. They bypass my conscious brain entirely, operating on the singular, terrifying, and absolute directive that has ruled my existence for the past six years.
Protect the girl.
Before the deafening echo of the blast even finishes reverberating off the walls, my uninjured right arm locks around Sybil’s waist like a vise.
I haul her small, fragile body completely off the concrete floor and spin, putting my broad back between her and the buckling steel doors of the main entrance.
I collapse forward, driving us both down onto the cold, hard surface of the floor, completely caging her beneath my massive frame.
A shower of debris rains down from the high ceiling.
Chunks of plaster and stone strike the ruined, bloody fabric of my tactical shirt.
A jagged, white-hot spike of agony flares through my torn left shoulder, a blinding surge of pain that radiates down to my fingertips, threatening to pull me under.
I grind my teeth together so hard my jaw audibly pops, swallowing the groan of agony that fights to tear free from my throat.
"Thayer!" Sybil screams, her voice completely muffled against the heavy muscles of my chest. Her hands frantically grip the fabric of my shirt, her small fingers tangling in the material as she desperately tries to pull me closer, entirely unaware that I am already completely blanketing her body with my own.
"I have you," I growl, my mouth pressed directly against the crown of her head. The thick, dark silk of her hair smells of the cedarwood soap I bathed her in, a sharp, beautiful contrast to the scent of destruction completely saturating the air. "Keep your head down. Do not move, Sybil."
The bunker groans—a deep, structural, metallic shriek of agonizing stress. The Commission didn't just hit the power grid. They packed the primary access tunnel with enough C4 to completely cave in the elevator shaft. They are burying us alive.
It is a tactical miscalculation on their part. They assume the vault is a tomb. They do not realize it is a staging ground.
I wait for ten agonizing seconds, my muscles completely rigid, listening to the cascade of falling concrete slowly taper off into a heavy, dust-choked silence. The main structural beams of the bunker hold. The ceiling is cracked, but it has not entirely failed.
The emergency backup generators finally kick in, a low, mechanical hum vibrating through the floorboards. A row of dim, amber tactical lights flickers to life along the baseboards, casting long, eerie shadows through the thick, gray smoke filling the room.
I shift my weight, rolling slightly to the right to take the agonizing pressure off my left shoulder.
I push myself up onto my uninjured arm, my pale gray eyes immediately scanning the ruined space.
The heavy steel doors to the elevator are completely warped, buckled inward in the center, effectively sealing us inside.
I look down.
Sybil is lying on the concrete beneath me.
Her oversized, dark gray t-shirt is completely covered in a fine layer of white dust. Her face is pale, a stark, terrifying contrast to the bruised, flushed crimson of her lips.
Her midnight-blue eyes are wide, fractured with shock, darting frantically over my face, searching for any sign that the explosion took the last of my life.
"Are you hurt?" I demand, my voice a dark, gravelly vibration that brooks absolutely no hesitation. My right hand immediately sweeps over her limbs, checking her arms, her ribs, her legs, desperate to ensure she isn't hiding an injury out of fear.
"No," she gasps, her chest heaving, coughing as the thick, acrid smoke burns her lungs. "I'm okay. I'm okay. You're bleeding so much, Thayer."
Her hands reach up, her trembling fingers hovering over the massive, ragged tear in my left shoulder.
The blood is flowing freely now, a heavy, hot crimson tide that is soaking the tactical shirt and dripping onto the concrete.
One of the Commission rats in the grand foyer managed to bury his combat knife deep into my deltoid during the breach, before I snapped his neck, severing muscle and grazing the artery.
The blood loss is significant. My vision edges with a dark, fuzzy static every time my heart beats.
"It's nothing," I lie smoothly, completely ignoring the blinding agony. I cannot afford to be weak. If I show her exactly how close I am to bleeding out on this floor, she will completely shatter.
I force myself to my feet. The room violently spins, a sickening tilt of the axis, but I lock my knees, refusing to fall. I reach down with my good arm and haul Sybil up. Her legs are shaky, but she stands, her small hands immediately gripping my right bicep to anchor herself.
"They trapped us," she whispers, staring at the buckled steel doors. The sheer, claustrophobic terror in her voice is a physical wound to my chest. "We're buried."
"No, we are not," I state, my voice cutting through her rising panic with absolute, cold authority.
I grab her hand, my blood-slicked fingers lacing tightly with hers. I drag her away from the ruins of the entrance, pulling her across the vast expanse of the bunker toward the back wall, behind the massive tactical monitors.
The wall appears to be solid, polished concrete, entirely seamless.
I release her hand just long enough to press my palm flat against a specific, unmarked section of the stone.
A hidden biometric scanner registers my print.
A heavy, pneumatic hiss echoes in the dim amber light, and a massive section of the concrete wall slides backward and to the side, revealing a dark, narrow tunnel carved directly into the subterranean bedrock.
Sybil gasps, her eyes widening. "An escape route."
"I do not build cages that I cannot open," I murmur, reaching into a hidden compartment inside the entryway.
I pull out a heavy, waterproof tactical duffel bag—a bug-out kit prepared specifically for a catastrophic breach.
I sling the heavy strap diagonally across my chest, resting the bag against my right hip to avoid the ruined, bleeding mess of my left shoulder.
From the same compartment, I retrieve a high-powered tactical flashlight and a spare 9mm Glock.
I turn back to her. She is shivering, the thin cotton t-shirt offering absolutely no protection against the rapidly dropping temperature of the bunker.
I open the duffel bag with one hand and pull out a thick, heavy black tactical jacket lined with fleece.
"Put this on," I command.
She doesn't argue. She slides her trembling arms into the sleeves. The jacket completely swallows her, the hem hitting below her knees, but it immediately insulates her body heat. I zip it up to her chin.
"The tunnel is exactly one mile long," I tell her, my pale eyes locking onto hers, forcing her to focus entirely on my voice and not the collapsing world around us.
"It inclines upward. It will exit into the dense forest on the northern edge of the property, well beyond the electrified perimeter.
The terrain will be rough, and the storm is severe.
You do not let go of my hand, Sybil. If you fall, I will pick you up.
If you cannot walk, I will carry you. Do you understand? "
"You can't carry me," she argues, her voice cracking as her eyes dart back to my shoulder. "You're losing too much blood. You're pale, Thayer."
"Do you understand the instructions, Sybil?" I repeat, my volume rising into a dark, unforgiving growl, completely shutting down her argument.
"Yes," she whispers, nodding frantically.
"Good."
I take her hand again, my grip an iron manacle.
I click on the tactical flashlight, the blinding white beam cutting through the absolute darkness of the tunnel.
We step inside, and I press the internal button.
The heavy concrete wall slides shut behind us, locking with a definitive, hollow echo, entirely sealing us off from the bunker.
The air in the tunnel is freezing, smelling of damp earth and ancient stone. The passageway is narrow, forcing us to walk close together. My left arm hangs uselessly at my side, a dead, throbbing weight that sends fresh waves of nausea rolling through my stomach with every step I take.
We move quickly, the silence broken only by the rapid, jagged sound of our breathing and the heavy, rhythmic thud of my boots against the dirt floor.
I calculate the variables as we walk. The Capos are currently engaged in a brutal firefight in the compound above.
Dante will hold the line. He is a ruthless bastard, and he knows that if he fails, I will resurrect myself from hell just to kill him.
But the Commission is entirely focused on eliminating the perceived weakness of the Thorne Syndicate. They are entirely focused on Sybil.
My vision blurs. A dark, terrifying wave of dizziness washes over me, making my boots drag heavily against the dirt. I stumble, my right shoulder slamming hard into the rough rock wall of the tunnel.
"Thayer!" Sybil cries out, immediately using both of her hands to grip my waist, bracing her small body against mine to keep me from collapsing. "Stop. You need to stop."