Chapter 2 The Boundary

Chapter two

The Boundary

Shadera Kael shouldered into Wolf’s Head like a bullet entering bone. The neon script and skull motif above the door spat a red and violet haze, scattering color over a room packed with Daggermouth mercenaries who would kill for less than a full day’s ration.

Shadera blinked past the stinging light, let her vision settle into the shadows, and read the crowd the way a butcher might inspect the next carcass—efficient, unsentimental, already hungry for the cut.

It wasn’t the worst den in the Boundary, not by a long shot, but it stank of iron, old sweat, and the sweetly synthetic tang of antifreeze. The walls were poured concrete scored with graffiti and scars, posters for dead uprisings and missing rebels fluttering above chipped tables.

The main event tonight, as every night, was the slow consumption of chemical despair, poured by the glass, in a dozen brands of Shadera’s favorite bottom-shelf poison.

Liquor.

The regulars tracked her approach. A few nodded, some looked away, and a handful braced for violence.

Word of her return ran ahead of her boots, a nervous twitch running through the Daggermouth ranks.

She’d broken her last assignment in half—literally—a Cardinal ring snitch.

The cleanup crew was still scraping bits of them out of the storm drains.

She moved past the battered pool table where two wiry teens played for credits, one of them cradling a splinted hand, the other sporting a swollen black eye.

Shadera passed by the half-circle bar, returning the old bartender’s offer of a smile, and threaded toward the back wall where the real authority lurked.

Jaeger Nolin, the Wolf.

Daggermouth guild master.

He sat alone at a corner table under a sickly pink corona of cheap LED, left hand curled around a chipped glass, right one palming a dull coin he flipped and caught with impossible rhythm. Even in shadow, his eyes tracked everything—his people, the doors, the angles of approach.

Most thought there was no warmth in him, not for his mercenaries, not for anyone. But Shadera knew better. She’d seen his heart, seen the way he took care of the Boundary and its people, seen him take orphans off the street and care for them.

She’d been one of those orphans.

She stopped in front of him and he flashed a thin smile.

“Kael.” His voice was coarse but never raised, a low predator’s rumble. “Take a seat. You look like shit.”

She slid into the chair opposite him, leather jacket creaking as she lifted a sculpted brow. “You always say that. I’m starting to get offended.”

He grunted, nodding for the bartender who appeared and set four clear shots on the table in front of Shadera then vanished back into the crowd.

“Heard you finished the Dunmore contract early. Nice work.”

“Guy had it coming. He really thought no one would find out he was helping the fucking Heart.” Shadera inspected her nails, flecked with black paint and old blood. “You got another?”

Jaeger reached into his coat. The movement was casual, deliberate, no threat implied—but every Daggermouth in the room tensed except for her.

No, instead she reached for the shot glasses in front of her, swallowing the liquid down without flinching, one after the other.

She dropped the last glass on the table and placed it on its side.

A signal she was ready for another round.

His hand came back with a thick envelope, wax-sealed and ringed with the Heart’s crimson insignia. He slid it across the battered table, never breaking eye contact.

She broke the seal.

The inside was lined with a thin, scan-resistant mesh, an extra precaution taken only by buyers who resided in the Heart, to make sure the contract made it past the ring checkpoints. She let the envelope fall open, and began to read.

Shadera’s eyes widened, darting from the paper to Jaeger and back to the contract. “Is this a fucking joke? This has to be a setup.”

Jaeger grinned across the table. “Vetted it myself. I assure you, this contract is as real as they come.”

She snorted. “It says the target is Greyson Serel. The Greyson Serel. This’ll start a war.”

Jaeger shrugged, taking a sip of his drink as Shadera looked back down at the contract.

“What’s the price?” she asked.

“Enough to pay off this whole joint for the foreseeable future, and feed every family in the Boundary camps for a year.” Shadera choked on the gasp that flung itself out of her lungs as Jaeger tossed the coin once, let it spin on the table until it slowed, then snatched it up again. “You up for it?”

“Of course I’m fucking up for it.” She scanned the brief, already memorizing the information supplied. “You want the mask or the corpse?”

Jaeger leaned in, the table creaking under his weight. His burn-scarred throat flexed as he swallowed the rest of his drink. “The mask, too dangerous to try and sneak that corpse into the Boundary.”

At the next table, a brawny Daggermouth grinned, showing gold-capped teeth. “You mess it up, Shade, I’ll take the job off your hands. Bet I can get to the little heirling first.” He leaned back, boot propped on the bench. “Hell, I’ll even split the payout if you’re lucky.”

Shadera didn’t bother with a reply. She simply reached into her sleeve, thumbed the edge of her blade, and flicked it across the gap between the tables.

The knife bit into the meat of the Daggermouth’s shoulder as he slammed against the wall at his back.

Blood ran quick and dark, painting the wood beneath him.

The room went silent.

She got up, crossed the short distance, and pressed a boot to his thigh as her fingers wrapped around the blade and twisted. He howled in pain and tried to bring a hand up, but she slapped it away.

“Anyone else want to take this job off my hands?” she asked, glancing around the bar. “Speak now, or shut the fuck up.”

No one did.

The gold-toothed mercenary glared, pulling the blade free with a snarl and a spray of blood, then slumped back, holding his ruined shoulder. Shadera plucked the knife from his hand as the bartender set four more shots at her table. She wiped the blade on her sleeve before tucking it away casually.

Jaeger sat back, eyes shining with mirthless amusement. “Never change, Kael.”

She downed the first two shots. The liquor tasted of melting plastic and old fruit rinds, but the burn steadied her hands. She took the third shot slow, savoring the way it seared the back of her throat.

“Anything else?” Shadera asked, throwing back the last of the shots.

“Yes.” Jaeger’s gaze was all edge now. “If you fail, we are all on some pretty short lists.”

“Nothing new there,” she said. “Anything I should know about the Heart’s precious little heir?”

Jaeger’s laugh was a single, low bark. “He’s not little. And he’s not an idiot. He’s as calculating and ruthless as his father. He may have grown up in the luxury of the Heart but he sure as hell doesn’t fight like it.” Jaeger rolled his jaw. “Do not underestimate him, Kael.”

The bartender appeared, collecting the empty glasses, and dropped a fresh round in front of Shadera. She took one, eyed the men and women around them, then drank the rest.

“When’s the next drop from the Heart coming to the Boundary? I need more antibiotics,” she asked, voice lowering.

“Sometime this week. The rebels are going to intercept it again, but we haven’t received a concrete day.” Jaeger tucked the coin into his pocket.

Shadera slid from her chair and stood. “If you get word before I do, send a runner. I’ll be at the usual spot.”

Jaeger nodded, eyes already moving on to the next problem. “Don’t get killed, Shade. There’s no one left who could replace you.”

Shadera grinned. “I know.”

She left the bar through the back, into the alley where rain hissed against the hot neon, and let herself think—just for a second—about the thrill of it. Hunting Greyson Serel, the city’s golden bastard.

The thought tasted better than any liquor.

Like most, she hated the Heart. Hated the way it watched, the way it judged, the way it decided who mattered and who got ground into the slop beneath its boots. Hated the Veyra, the masks. Hated how the Heart pretended the Cardinal ring was any less a prison than this shithole.

But above all, she hated President Serel and his whole fucking family.

The rage that boiled inside her at even the thought of that name, burned a hole into her soul.

It was that family name, that family’s legacy, that created the oppression of New Found Haven, that created the rings and outlawed even the basest of human emotion.

It was that family who was to blame for all the suffering in this godforsaken city.

Killing Greyson Serel would be an honor for Shadera.

It would be a pleasure to take a life from the very people that had taken so many away from her. Greyson deserved to pay for his crimes as Executioner, but his family was the hammer, and people like her were always the nails.

Shadera kept to the alleys, the black arteries of the Boundary where even the rain couldn’t cleanse.

Nothing stayed clean for long. The gutter water frothed underfoot, leeching out the names of dead brands and long-forgotten products from the trash that choked every drain.

Chemical stench clung to her hair, her boots, the exposed skin of her neck.

Her every sense was tuned to the next threat, the next twitch behind a broken window, or whisper down a pipe.

The walk from Wolf’s Head to her home was three blocks, if you took the high routes, twice that if you looped the long way to lose a tail. Shadera always took the long way, moving with a killer’s patience and paranoia.

People watched her pass, but didn’t bother her. In the Boundary, you learned early: keep your face blank, your hands visible, and your intentions hidden. Shadera’s reputation bought her quiet, but never safety. There was always someone newer, hungrier, or dumber on the block.

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