Total pages in book: 73
Estimated words: 66480 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 332(@200wpm)___ 266(@250wpm)___ 222(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 66480 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 332(@200wpm)___ 266(@250wpm)___ 222(@300wpm)
Vex's scream cut through the chaos of the warehouse, a sound more animal than man. Jack didn't let him suffer long, unfortunately. He slammed Vex's head against the concrete wall with enough force to paint it with brain matter and blood.
"Get these fucking cages open now!" Jack snarled, his massive chest heaving as he turned from Vex's corpse. His eyes burned with righteous fury as he scanned the room full of caged women.
It didn’t take long to cut off the padlocks. The prisoners reacted with varying degrees of fear and confusion. Some cowered deeper into their cages while others reached through bars with desperate hands.
Across the warehouse, Ghost moved like a specter through the chaos. Unlike Jack's berserker rage, Ghost worked the room with cold, methodical precision. Each shot from his pistol going into the head of some sick fuck, a look of satisfaction on Ghost’s face with every execution.
"Rocky, you hit?" Marcus appeared beside us, his weapon scanning for threats.
“Huh?” I gave him a quizzical look. “Am I hit?”
He pointed to my left arm and I glanced over. Blood coated my sleeve. Now that Ghost had pointed out the blood, my arm stung like a motherfucker.
“I hadn’t noticed. You know, until now.” I ripped my sleeve where the bullet had torn through. I tore the material away from my arm to get a better look at the wound. “Just a graze.” I winced as I wiped the blood off with the torn bit of material. “Stings like a mother bitch.”
"Medical team's outside," Hotwire reported. "We're ready to move to the safe house."
I nodded, pressing a hand against my bleeding arm. “Did we get them all?”
Jack approached as I spoke. “Goddamned right we got em’ all.”
"Start moving the girls out. Keep them as calm as you can." Vittorio and some of his men helped the girls move out. Some of the girls had to be carried and my heart broke a little for the lives forever altered.
Ghost caught my eye again across the room, this time with a slight jerk of his head toward my bleeding arm. I shook my head, waving off the injury. He frowned but gave a grudging nod of understanding.
Blood and shell casings now covered the warehouse floor, telling the story of our night's work in crimson smears and brass glints under harsh lights. The last Copperhead lay face down in a spreading puddle of blood, no longer a threat to anyone. The gunfire stopped ten minutes ago, replaced by the soft sobbing of traumatized women and the low, reassuring voices of our team as they guided them toward help and freedom. I stood by the loading dock, my arm throbbing in time with my heartbeat, watching as Marcus helped get everyone loaded into three separate vehicles.
"You count twelve?" I asked him, scanning the huddled forms wrapped in emergency blankets provided by Vittorio's team.
"Fourteen," Marcus corrected, his voice rough from shouting commands during the firefight. "Found two more locked in a supply closet at the back. Both alive, both need medical attention."
I nodded, relief flooding through me despite the pain radiating from my arm. Looked like my time in hell with the Copperheads had paid off.
"We’ve got them all loaded," Bug called from the main entrance, his voice carrying across the emptied warehouse. "Ready to roll."
"Get them to Vittorio's safehouse," I instructed, moving toward the vehicles parked outside. "Medical team first, then food, then rest. No questions tonight, no bullshit. Just help them feel human again."
Bug nodded, his normally tech-obsessed demeanor replaced by solemn purpose. "Ghost wants confirmation when they're secure."
"I'll call him myself once they're settled," Vittorio promised. “Might want to get that looked at, Rocky.”
I winced, finally acknowledged the state of my arm. I hadn’t even realized I’d been hit. Graze or not. The bullet had carved a deep furrow, blood soaking my sleeve and dripping from my fingertips in a steady rhythm.
“Yeah. I’ll get all over that.”
The convoy pulled away ten minutes later, headlights cutting through the darkness as they carried their precious cargo into the night. Behind us, cleanup crews moved in to start their work. Vittorio called them in to make sure no trace remained anything had happened here. By morning, nothing would be here to connect us to this bloodbath. The Copperhead operation lay in ruins, most of its leaders dead, its infrastructure shattered, its victims rescued. Acid was still in the wind, but catching him would only be a matter of time.
I climbed into Marcus's SUV, finally allowing myself to slump against the seat as exhaustion and possibly blood loss caught up with me. The adrenaline that carried me through the fight ebbed away, leaving behind a bone-deep weariness and the stinging reality of my wound.
"Compound or hospital?" Marcus asked, starting the engine.
"Compound," I answered without hesitation. "Their medic can handle this." And I wanted to get back to Wren.