Chapter 18 18
The eastern staging point looked exactly like a merchant house.
That was the point, obviously. Plain tiled roof, shuttered windows, a modest sign above the door advertising imported cloth. Nothing that said four to six armed operatives and a Shadow Sect coordination network. Nothing that said anything at all.
They approached from the south, keeping to the shadow side of the street.
At the corner Xiao Miyao stopped. Turned to him. In the low lamplight her expression was composed and completely focused.
"Sixty seconds after I knock," she said quietly. "That's your window."
"I'll be in position in forty."
She looked at him for one moment longer than the plan required. Something moved in her eyes — quick and honest, there and gone.
"Go," she said.
He went.
The building behind the staging point was a storage warehouse, locked but not difficult. He found a handhold on the drainage pipe at the corner, tested it, and went up fast. The roof was flat and gravelled, the night air cold at this height, the city spread below him in amber lamplight and moving shadow.
He crossed to the far edge and looked down.
The rear exit was directly below — a plain door into the service alley, closed, no light underneath it. He measured the gap to the staging point's roof.
Four metres. Maybe slightly more.
The system was quiet. No prompts, no skill suggestions. Just him, the gap, and the cold air.
He stepped back. Three running strides and he left the roof edge without hesitating.
For one suspended second there was nothing under him but city.
Then he hit the other roof hard, rolled across the gravel, and came up silent in a crouch. His shoulder protested from yesterday's cut. He ignored it.
Below him, at the front of the building, he heard a knock.
Xiao Miyao's voice — unhurried, slightly imperious, the voice of someone with a legitimate grievance and the confidence to pursue it. Something about noise and disruption and expecting better from a business operating in a respectable district. Completely convincing. He almost felt sorry for whoever opened the door.
Movement inside.
He dropped from the roof edge and landed in the alley beside the rear door, knees bent, impact absorbed and silent.
Forty seconds.
He'd used thirty-two.
Inside the building voices — low, alert, the particular quality of people who've just been interrupted doing something they'd rather not be seen doing. Footsteps moving toward the front. A door.
Then a different sound. Faster footsteps. Coming toward the rear.
Someone had read it as a distraction.
The rear door burst open and two figures came through fast — not fleeing, moving with purpose, hands on weapons, expecting to find the alley empty.
It wasn't empty.
Xian Rui hit the first one before he'd fully registered there was someone there. One sharp strike, precisely placed, and the man went down without making a sound.
The second reacted fast — better trained, already drawing his blade. Purple qi flared along the edge.
\[Depravity Surge — activating.\]
He felt the power flood in and moved inside the blade's arc before it fully extended. Close quarters, no room for the sword. He grabbed the weapon arm, drove the man back into the door frame hard enough to knock the breath out of him, and followed with two quick strikes that ended the conversation entirely.
Two down. In the alley. Rear exit sealed.
He went through the door.
Inside was dim — two lamps, a ground floor room set up as a communications centre. Documents on a central table, a message cylinder open beside them, ink still wet on the paper inside. Two more operatives turning from the front of the building where they'd heard the door.
They saw him at the same moment he saw them.
He didn't give them time to think about it.
The surge was still running — strength pushing past its baseline, agility sharpening every movement into something faster than it should be. He crossed the room in three strides. The first operative got a strike to the jaw that sat him down immediately. The second was smarter, backed up, reached for something on the table — the copper qi disruptor.
Xian Rui got there first.
He closed his hand around the device and held it away, the man struggling against his grip for two seconds before a firm elbow to the solar plexus resolved the disagreement.
Four down.
He stood in the sudden quiet of the room. Breathing hard. The surge fading.
The front door opened.
He spun.
Xiao Miyao stepped through, her lamp in one hand, her composure intact. She took in the four unconscious operatives, the overturned stool, the ink still drying on the communication documents, and him standing in the middle of it all holding a copper qi disruptor.
She looked at the room for exactly three seconds.
"I had them occupied for forty-eight seconds," she said. "You were done in forty-five."
"I had a head start."
She crossed to the central table and examined the documents without touching them. Her eyes moved rapidly across the pages, absorbing, processing. He watched her read a week's worth of Shadow Sect communications in approximately ninety seconds.
"They have an intercept team," she said quietly. "Positioned on the main route between the west quarter and the Council chambers." She turned a page. "Six operatives. And—" She stopped.
He moved to her side.
She pointed to a line near the bottom of the last document. Sharp brushwork, recent.
Primary target: Xiao Miyao. Secondary target: the outsider travelling with her. Both to be neutralised before the morning bell on vote day.
He looked at it. Then at her.
She was very still beside him. Not afraid exactly. Processing. Running the numbers on a problem that had just added a variable she didn't like.
"They want us both," he said.
"Yes." Her voice was level. "Which means they consider you a genuine threat." A pause. "Which means you should leave."
"No."
She turned. "This isn't your vote. Not your city. Not your fight." Her eyes were steady and serious. "The risk to you—"
"Is mine to take." He held her gaze. "I'm not leaving two days from the vote."
"Xian Rui—"
"I'm not leaving you two days from the vote."
The room went quiet.
Outside the service alley was still and dark. Somewhere distant the city moved through its night, indifferent and continuous.
Xiao Miyao looked at him for a long moment. All that calculation, all that careful assessment, all the walls she'd built from twelve years of doing everything alone and necessary and hard — he could see her working through it. Looking for the flaw in his position. The angle he'd missed.
She didn't find one.
She looked down at the documents. "We need to take these. The Council needs to see the full extent of the sect's operation in this city." She began rolling them carefully. "And we need to move again tonight. If the rear two report in and get no response—"
"They'll know we were here. Yes."
"Third location." She tucked the documents inside her robe. "I have one more."
He looked at the copper disruptor in his hand. Pocketed it.
"Lead the way," he said.
She moved to the door. Paused. Her back was to him and she was quiet for just a moment — one breath, two — and then she said something quietly, half to herself and half to him, in a voice that had none of the Jade Strategist in it at all.
"I'm glad you're staying."
\[Ding. Affection with Xiao Miyao +12%. Current: 92%. She said it out loud. That's everything.\]
He followed her out into the night.
One day left until the vote.
The Shadow Sect had six operatives and a plan.
He had infinite stamina, a stolen qi disruptor, and a woman who could read a battlefield like a wei qi board.
Fair enough.