Chapter 2

Azrael

I snapped my pocket watch shut, taking in the front doors of the Training building.

It was the first time I had been here in over a year.

I escaped the asylum two months before my release with the help of three brothers who had been there long before I arrived, and for the last four months I focused on myself.

Building everything I was into something better.

But the person I was now wasn’t exactly what father dearest had hoped I would become.

What they did to me far surpassed anything he could ever possibly think up. They honed my psychotic tendencies into something more. Gave me the precious resources I had been too weak to handle on my own.

I was better now. Just like my precious daddy wanted me to be, and I came out with a mission.

It turns out that this world is far more connected than I had previously believed. Connections ran through the sinew of this earth so deeply that they led me right to these very steps.

Back to my so-called ‘home’.

I swung my custom-made cane as I walked up the front steps of our training building, my bike still parked in the parking spot labeled with my name, dust and dirt collecting on the cover they had so graciously put over it.

I placed my thumb on the pad to the right of the door, waited for the lock to slide, and walked right on in as if it were just another day.

The place looked exactly as it had 14 months ago, except for the fact that there were more people bustling around. People who stopped and stared like deer caught in the headlights when they caught sight of my cracked porcelain mask. Shattered and glued back together with gold.

A bleach-blonde, blue-eyed little vixen of a thing was the first to break free and prance away, probably to warn our great leader himself.

The thing was, I wasn’t here to see him.

I heard down the grapevine of this world that my brother had been looking for me since my release date two months ago. I didn’t know why, and I didn’t care. The mountains were calling, and I had finally made time to answer.

He was, after all, the most loyal to me out of the bunch.

I made my way through the building while those wandering the halls avoided me like the plague. It didn’t take me long at all to walk right into his room.

All of our rooms were studios. Filled with everything we needed to train, study, sleep, and eat, if we so chose.

None of us ever ate here though. We came here long enough to get some sleep before we were sent out on another assignment.

The mountain-boy finally had a lull in his assignments, so it was the perfect time for a surprise visit.

And was it a surprise.

He had his gun out and pointed at me before the door swung all the way open, but when he saw who it was, my smile stretching across my face, his icy-blue eyes widened, his gun lowering. “Azrael. You’re not supposed to be in the states.”

I wandered over to his desk, taking in the notebooks he had already started gathering. “And don’t we just hate when things don’t go according to plan,” I hummed, using the end of my cane to turn the notebook he had been writing in towards me.

He walked over, slamming it shut, pulling my eyes up. “Does Malachi know you’re here?”

“If he’s not stupid,” I replied. “I heard you needed me.”

His face twisted. “How—you know what?” He shook his head. “Yeah.” He walked over and shut the door. “For the last year, I’ve been putting together a plan I want to eventually pitch to Malachi and Beckett, but I need your help with it.”

“And the mountains they sing with a glorious praise,” I hummed.

He gave me a look as he made his way to his desk, eyeing me carefully. “I don’t know what that means.”

“You, dear mountain boy.”

He straightened, frowning. “Don’t call me that. How did you escape? I heard a rumor you checked yourself out two months before release.”

“Secrets are fun, aren’t they?” I asked.

He was clearly displeased as he pulled out a few notebooks and spread them out over his desk, opening them to seemingly random pages for me to see.

“Fine, whatever.” He released a breath. “You perfected the program here years ago,” he told me.

“Although, it does need some upgrades now, it’s still better than it would have been without you, and despite what they all say, you are the best of us.

Not the most stable, but you’ve gone through the program a few times in the earlier years, perfecting it, tweaking it, giving Malachi notes he decided to take. ”

Because he knew that he would never get soldiers like me who would willingly follow him into their graves without my help. Sure, there were more deaths throughout each group of participants, but when they came out, they were so much better than they had been before.

And yet I had been the one sentenced away for an entire year simply because I craved blood more than they. Such. A. Pity.

“I want you to help me build my idea, but I don’t want anyone to know about it, not until it’s perfected.”

I used the end of my cane to turn one of the notebooks my way, taking in his writing, his blueprints. This could benefit us in the long run, so long as he doesn’t enact his plan before he should.

“Less survivors,” I warned him.

“Better people to send into the world.”

I found his icy blue eyes, searching them carefully, my smile stretching from ear to ear. “Let’s get started.”

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.