Hotbloods 6: Allies

I turned to make a run for it, but steel bars shot up out of the ground, surrounding me. The more I pushed against them, the more they pressed into my body.

“You’re making a mistake!” I said, desperate to get out of here, even though I had earned that wanted poster.

“You cannot run from the law, miss. There is no place you can hide from Lady Justice. She is all-seeing, all-knowing, all… justifying!” Xiphio stated proudly, puffing out his chest again. “We are the peacekeepers; we are the defenders; we are the ones who come for the monsters under the beds of children and lock them away… after a fair trial, of course. I mean, we wouldn’t simply lock people away without first ensuring we had all the facts. That just wouldn’t be good policing. Although, if someone was hiding under a child’s bed, I presume there would be just cause for concern,” he rambled, having gotten himself confused.

As entertaining as his bemusement was, he’d made one fatal error: he’d wasted precious time on me, when he should’ve been watching the others. Navan, Bashrik, Angie, and Ronad lunged for him before he could say another word, knocking him to the ground and pressing his face to the floor. He flailed, struggling against Navan’s firm grip.

“Bash, get those bars off her!” Navan instructed. His brother leapt to his feet and ran around to the far side of the control panel, his hands working deftly at the buttons.

Mort and Angie had sprinted toward a storage cupboard at the opposite side of the ship’s main bay. I couldn’t see what they were doing, as they were somewhere behind me, but I heard things clattering and falling. Mort swore after something particularly loud clanged against the floor.

They emerged a moment later, carrying a long coil of thick electrical cable, and hurried over to Navan’s side. I guessed they wanted to tie Xiphio up with it. The only problem was, Navan was in an awkward position on Xiphio’s back, trying to hold his arms and press down on his face at the same time, making it tricky to get the cable in to tie the agent’s hands together.

As Navan shifted to one side, Xiphio managed to lift his head for a moment. “Computer, call for backup!” he yelled.

Ronad tried to muffle Xiphio’s mouth with his hand, only to recoil as Xiphio bit down hard. Unlike his straight white ones, these teeth were jagged and triangular, emerging from his gums the way a shark’s would.

“Son of a frostfang!” Ronad yelped, clutching his hand to his chest.

I realized the agent could’ve bitten down much harder if he’d wanted to, likely severing Ronad’s hand clean off, but Xiphio was an oddly gentlemanly creature, and I guessed that wasn’t in his moral code. It was a warning bite, nothing more, leaving a crescent of deep tooth-marks in Ronad’s hand.

“We’re not going to hurt you. We just can’t have you arresting any of us right now,” Navan muttered, shifting again so Angie and Mort could get in with the cable. “I’m sure you understand, right?”

As Xiphio lifted his head to answer, Mort seized his opportunity, ramming a clump of fabric into the agent’s mouth and wrapping a coil of cable around to hold it in place. After Mort handed her the rest of the cable, Angie set to work on the agent’s hands. I felt even sorrier for the poor guy as they bound and gagged him. One against five was terrible odds for anyone.

“Got it!” Bashrik said triumphantly. The bars collapsed around me, freeing me from my temporary prison.

I ran to help, kneeling to hold Xiphio’s shoulders as Angie finished the last of her loops. I smiled at her, knowing how many hours we’d spent at Girl Scouts as kids, perfecting the art of knot-tying. I doubted either of us could have predicted using those skills to tie up an agent from a universal peacekeeping federation, but I was sure our scout leaders would have been proud, regardless.

“I’m really sorry about this, Agent Xiphio,” I murmured, as Angie checked the integrity of the knots. “If it makes you feel any better, I’m normally a law-abiding citizen. Today has just been a bad day. Please don’t add assault of a Fed agent to my rap sheet.”

He couldn’t answer, but it made me feel slightly better to tell him how sorry we were. There was something kindly about Xiphio, though I understood that even the friendliest of Fed agents probably couldn’t ignore being tied up and gagged. By doing this, we were heading into more trouble, but what else could we do? Lauren was out there, waiting for us to rescue her—there was no time to lose.

As soon as Angie was satisfied that he was properly bound, we all sprinted down the gangway. I could hear muffled protestations behind us, but I was sure he wouldn’t starve or anything. Even if Xiphio couldn’t untie himself, some other Fed agent would probably find him soon enough, especially when he didn’t report back to his superiors by the end of his shift.

“We can’t take the Coeptis,” Bashrik said grimly, as we paused in front of our vessel. “She’s a wanted ship now, and Xiphio won’t stay tied up forever. He’ll get an alert out on her as soon as he gets out of those bonds.”

I knew he was right. Even if the Coeptis hadn’t been on the Fed’s radar, our ship was broken and almost out of fuel; we wouldn’t get far before we’d have to stop again.

“Why can’t we just take the Fed ship?” I countered.

“Same reason we can’t take the Coeptis. The Fed keep tabs on all their ships. They’d start to notice if Agent Xiphio didn’t check in. It’s too risky.”

Navan grimaced. “Let’s get everything valuable from inside the Coeptis and get out of this garbage pile. We can decide where to go from there.”

Nodding in agreement, we all hurried inside the Coeptis and retrieved as much as we could, though that wasn’t a lot. I just had my useless compass, a knife I’d found, and the spear I’d stolen from the pawnshop. The others came away with similarly meager collections. Everyone but Mort carried one of the guns that Navan had tried to sell at the pawnshop, while Ronad tugged a bag containing Naya’s journal and a few other bits and pieces over his shoulder.

With that, we took off across the shipyard, running past the derelict shells of grounded vessels. I wondered how they all came to end up here, in this ship graveyard, and who their crews might have been, once upon a time. They were silly thoughts, but they kept me from darker concerns, like how the hell we were supposed to get away from Wander without a ship.

“So, what’s the big plan now that we’re ship-less?” Angie asked, voicing my thoughts as we ducked down a passageway between two huge freighters.

“We’ll just have to steal a new one,” I replied nonchalantly, knowing that was precisely what we needed to do. It wasn’t as though we could ask someone to give us a ride out of here, not with a bounty on our heads. Well, my head.

She shot me a worried look. “Stealing is how we got into this mess in the first place.”

“I only stole the compass because I thought it would help,” I replied, feeling defensive.

“Well, if you hadn’t, Xiphio would have let us go. We’d be flying out of here right now, without worrying about an entire police force coming after us!” Angie said.

“Don’t hold back, Ange,” I said, my voice dripping sarcasm. “No, please, continue to make me feel worse than I already do!”

Angie sighed. “Let’s just forget about it, all right? What’s done is done. I just think we need to stop taking risks without any thought of the consequences.”

I wanted to defend myself, to tell her that we’d never get any closer to finding Lauren and the notebook without taking chances, but I didn’t want to fight with her anymore. She didn’t deserve the brunt of my anger when it wasn’t even her I was mad at. Although I hated to admit it, I knew this mess was all my doing; I just didn’t like being reminded.

Feeling my frustration rising, I jogged away from Angie and ran toward Navan, who was a short distance ahead. The coldbloods had slowed to a more human pace so we could keep up.

“Everything okay?” Navan asked, as I jogged alongside him. Ronad was just ahead, with Bashrik running next to him.

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