They rode the river like a wound—slow, slick, and inevitable. Dawn seeped gray and reluctant across the hull, painting the water in bruises. Cain watched it from the bow, coat pulled tight, and let the river tell him what it wanted. It said nothing he didn’t already know: distance buys time; time bends men. "Outpost’s ahead," Steve said without looking up from the comm board, voice thin with static. "Three structures on the lee. One looks active. Scanners show movement. Light signatures are small, localized—defensive, not public." "Defensive’s better than hostile," Roselle said, checking the chamber of her pistol with a practiced slide. "Defensive means someone’s trying to hold ground. Hostile means they’re ready to kill us on sight." Susan spat into the water, a dark line that vanished into the current. "Either way, we don’t stroll up with a flag and a smile." Hunter folded his arms, watching the shoreline where ruined cranes stabbed the sky. "We don’t pretend to be anything. We tell them what we are and why their hands will be taken. Quietly. Or loudly. Whichever makes less mess for us." Cain let the words settle. "We’ll do both," he said. "Quiet if we can. Loud if we must." He turned to Steve. "Bring up the approaches. I want shadows before sound." Steve thumbed at the board. Tiny icons crawled across the map. "There’s a sluice we can cut through—take us under the east pier. Covers approach and gives us a blind side. I can drop a pair of cams that look like debris. They’ll ignore it." "Then do it," Cain said. "Do it now." They threaded the sluice like thieves. Metal scraped and water dragged their progress in little, hungry pulls. Above them the outpost looked small and stubborn—a ring of shipping containers, a shack with a rig, a mast with a ragged flag. Men moved like ants across the tops, checking lines, looking bored and wary. As they neared, movement shifted: a silhouette thinned, a door opened, a shadow paused. Cain watched the men below and cataloged them—their postures, the slouch of tiredness, the half-closed gestures of boredom that meant twenty hours without change. He could tell a tired man’s hunger just by the way he avoided the light. "Two lookouts on the east ridge," Steve whispered. "They’ve got sidearms. Not elite. Contractor issue. Someone’s paying for this out of a clean ledger." "Pay tells stories," Hunter said. "Tracks the money, you find the hand." Cain sucked air through his teeth. "Find the hand. First, we make sure the eyes don’t see us." Roselle lowered herself into a sling and then swung like a pendulum from the rail, legs wrapped, boots finding the rusted deck of the pier with a soft kiss. She moved with the economy of someone who had broken too many things and learned how not to make it loud. Hunter dropped after, a specter among rotting ropes. Susan followed last, face set like a promise. Cain stayed on the deck until Steve gave the nod. The cams dropped with a soft thud into a driftline and blinked dead until Steve coaxed them alive. They sat like rubbish until the outpost’s patrols passed them by, ignoring what they thought was flotsam. Then Steve tuned their feeds to the men’s walk, fed Hunter quiet laughter into a channel, and Hunter used it to set the timing. They moved when the second watchman turned his head to scratch his jaw. Precision was small mercies: a clip flipped silent, a throat nicked, a shadow that swallowed a man whole. By the time the first alarm blinked red, Roselle had already gone into the shed and returned with manifests and a sat-phone that still had life. "Daelmont contractors," she said, flicking through pages. "Private ledger runs to three shell companies. One routed through a port house north. Names aren’t pretty, but they’re familiar." For more chapters visıt 𝗇𝗈𝗏𝖾𝗅•𝖿𝗂𝗋𝖾•𝗇𝖾𝗍 Cain ran a hand over his face. "Names to track. Hands to pull." Susan watched the shore. Her chest rose ragged and slow. "We take the phone and the manifests. We leave two bodies and a story of men who vanished. We do it clean." "Clean has edges," Hunter said. "Paper trails, habits, people who remember faces. We can do it clean, or we can do it loud. Both have cost." Cain looked at them—Roselle’s jaw, Steve’s jitter, Hunter’s patience, Susan’s pain. He thought of the Grid shuddering and the fleet reduced to hulks. He thought of Daelmont money pouring like oil into other men’s pockets. He thought of the city that would rebuild on other bones if they left the source uncut. "We don’t leave the ledger," he said. "We leak it. Not to every corner. To the right corners. Enough that someone with taste will read it and press. Enough that the Daelmonts spend more time cleaning than rebuilding." Roselle’s fingers tapped a rhythm on the sat-phone. "I can seed it. Embed a route. Make it look like blackmail. Make the blackmail point to a broker in the council who likes to argue about morality in public. He’ll scream. People will notice." Hunter’s hand dropped onto the manifest like a seal. "And when they scream, we know where the money moves to hide. We follow. We choke." Cain nodded. "Then we choreograph the outrage. Steve: prep the leak. Roselle: find the broker’s public channels. Hunter: prepare the shadow paths. Susan and I will take the outpost’s boat and cut a float of their own—make sure the story has weight." Steve chewed the inside of his mouth and exhaled. "I can splice it. Make it look like an accident. Drop trails pointing to council accounts, to lobbyists, to a man who buys silence in the old quarter. Do it clean—no fingerprints. Or messy, with a signature that says the city remembers." "Clean with a scar," Cain said. "We leave a mark they can’t ignore." They worked with the kind of silence that meant concentration, the hum of men doing what they were trained to do. Outside, the river carried the outpost’s waste in lazy eddies. Inside, they stitched names to numbers and numbers to shame. By the time the sun lifted enough to light the masts, the sat-phone had become a bouquet of calls they hadn’t made. The manifests were copied. A small package of files lived on drives that would find hungry eyes.