Shadows of Self (Mistborn #5)(58)
Why keep firing so rabidly? Were they trying to bring the wall down with the force of their shots? No. They’re trying to hold my attention so I can be flanked.
Wax grabbed Vindication, holding his bleeding arm as he raised it—it hurt—just as several shadows wearing no metal ducked into the other side of the building site. Wax plugged the first one in the head, then dropped the second with a shot to the neck. Three others knelt, raising crossbows.
Something pulled one of them into the shadows. Wax faintly heard an urk of pain just before he fired at the second. He turned his gun toward the third to find it slumping down, something stuck into its head. A knife?
“Wayne?” Wax asked, hurriedly reloading Vindication with bloody fingers.
“Not exactly,” a feminine voice said. A tall figure crawled through the mists, moving over a pile of bricks to reach him. As she drew closer, he could make out large eyes, jet hair, and a sleekly elegant gown—that was now missing the bottom half, below the knees. The woman from the party, the one who had tried flirting with him.
Wax flipped Vindication, reloaded, up in a smooth motion, pointing it at the woman’s head. The bullets outside stopped pounding the wall. The silence was far more ominous.
“Oh please,” the woman said, pulling up beside the wall with him. “Why would I save you if I were an enemy?”
Because you could be Bleeder, Wax thought. Anyone could.
“Um … you’re hurt,” the woman said. “How bad is that? Because we should really start running right now. They’re going to come charging in here shortly.”
Damn. Not much choice. Trust her and potentially die, or not trust her and almost certainly die.
“Come here,” Wax said, grabbing the woman and pulling her close. He pointed Vindication at the ground.
“They have snipers,” she said. “On five roofs, watching for you to Push into the mists. Aluminum bullets.”
“How do you know?”
“Overheard those fellows with the bows whispering as they moved around to come get you.”
Wax growled. “Who are you?” he said through gritted teeth.
“Does it matter right now?”
“No.”
“Can you run?”
“Yes. It’s not as bad as it looks.” Wax took off, the woman running at his side. The wound hurt like hell, but there was something about the mists.… He felt stronger in them. It shouldn’t be so—he was no Pewterarm—but there it was.
In truth, getting shot was bad, but not as bad as people often made it out to be. This shot had gone through the skin and muscle under his arm, making it difficult to raise, but he wouldn’t bleed out. Most bullets wouldn’t actually stop a man; psychologically, the panic of being shot did the most harm.
The two of them charged out the back side of the building, past the man with a knife in his head. Behind them shouts rose in the mist, and a few of the ambushers trying to get into the building took wild shots.
The woman ran well despite being in a gown. Yes, she’d ripped off the bottom half, but she still seemed to run too easily, without seeming to break a sweat or breathe deeply.
Blue lines. Ahead.
Wax grabbed Milan by the arm, yanking her to the side into an alleyway as a group of four men burst out of a cross street, leveling guns.
“Rusts!” Wax said, peeking around the corner. This short alleyway ended at a wall. The thugs had him surrounded.
“How many men does Bleeder have?” Wax muttered with another curse, under his breath.
“These can’t be Bleeder’s men,” Milan said. “How would she have recruited such an army? In the past she’s always worked on her own.”
Wax looked at her sharply. How much did she know about all this?
“We’re going to have to fight,” Milan said as shouts sounded from behind them. She reached to her chest, where her gown exposed considerable cleavage.
Waxillium had seen some odd things in his life. He’d visited koloss camps in the Roughs, even been invited to join their numbers. He’d met and spoken with God himself and had received a personal gift from Death. That did not prepare him for the sight of a pretty young woman’s chest turning nearly transparent, one of the breasts splitting and offering up the hilt of a small handgun.
She grabbed it and pulled it out. “So convenient,” she noted. “You can store all sorts of things in those.”
“Who are you?”
“MeLaan,” she said, rising and holding her gun in two hands. The pronunciation was slightly different this time when she said her name. “The Father promised you help. I’m it.”
A Faceless Immortal. As soon as she stopped speaking, he heard a rustling in his mind. You can trust this one. Harmony’s voice, accompanied by a sense of endlessness, a vision like he’d seen before. It was as good a confirmation as he could get that this wasn’t Bleeder.
Wax narrowed his eyes at the woman anyway. “Wait. I think I know you.”
She grinned. “We’ve met once before tonight. I’m charmed you remember. You want the ones in the back or the front?”
At least a dozen chasing them. Four ahead. He had to trust someone, sometime. “I’ll take the ones behind.”
“Such a gentleman,” she said. “By the way, technically I’m not supposed to kill people. I … uh … think I already broke that rule tonight. If we happen to survive, please don’t tell TenSoon that I murdered a bunch of people again. It upsets him.”