Steelheart (The Reckoners #1)(8)
I couldn’t hear what they said, but in the end, this newcomer displaced the other women. She led Fortuity down the road, whispering in his ear and laughing. The other two women waited behind, arms crossed, not daring to complain.
Fortuity did not like his women to speak back to him.
This had to be it. I wanted to get ahead of them, but couldn’t do so on the street itself. Instead I moved back through a few alleyways. I knew the area perfectly; studying maps of the theater district was what had almost made me late.
I hustled around the back of a building, sticking to the shadows, and arrived at another alleyway.
From here I could peek out and see the same road, but from another angle. Fortuity ambled along the steel sidewalk outside.
The area was lit by lamps hanging from streetlights. The streetlights themselves had been turned to steel during the transfersion—electronics and bulbs included. They no longer worked, but they did provide a convenient place to hang lanterns.
Those lanterns left pools of light that the pair moved through, in and out. I held my breath, watching closely. Fortuity was packing a weapon for certain. The suit was tailored to hide the bulge under his arm, but I could still make out where his holster was.
Fortuity didn’t have any directly o ensive powers, but that didn’t really matter. His precognition powers meant he never missed with a handgun, no matter how wild the shot seemed. If he decided to kill you, you had a couple of seconds to respond, or you’d be dead.
The woman didn’t appear to be carrying a weapon, though I couldn’t be certain. That dress showed plenty of curves. A gun strapped to her thigh, perhaps? I looked closer as she moved into another pool of light, though I found myself staring at her, rather than looking for weapons. She was gorgeous. Eyes that glittered, bright red lips, golden hair. And that low neckline …
I shook myself. Idiot, I thought.
You have a purpose. Women interfere with things like a purpose.
But even a ninety-year-old blind priest would stop and stare at this woman. If he weren’t blind, that is.
Dumb metaphor, I thought. I’l have to work on that one. I have trouble with metaphors.
Focus. I raised my ri e, leaving on the safety and using the scope for its zoom. Where were they going to hit him? The street here ran through several blocks of gloomy darkness—broken only by the lanterns—before intersecting Burnley Street. That was a major hub of the local dance scene. Likely the woman had enticed Fortuity to join her at a club. The quickest route was through this dark, less-
populated street.
The empty street was a very good sign. The Reckoners rarely struck at an Epic who was in too public an area. They didn’t like innocent casualties. I tilted the ri e up and scanned the skyrise windows with my scope. Some of the glass-turned-steel windows had been cut out and replaced with glass again. Was anyone up there watching?
I’d been hunting the Reckoners for years. They were the only ones who still fought back, a shadowy group that stalked, entrapped, and assassinated powerful Epics. The Reckoners, they were the heroes.
Not what my father had imagined —no Epic powers, no
ashy
costumes. They didn’t stand for truth, the American ideal, or any such nonsense.
They just killed. One by one.
Their goal was to eliminate each and every Epic who thought himself or herself above the law.
And since that was pretty much every Epic, they had a lot of work to do.
I continued scanning windows.
How would they try to kill Fortuity? There would only be a few ways to go about it. They might try to catch him in a situation impossible to escape. A precog’s powers would lead him down the safest path of self-preservation, but if you set up a situation where every path led to death, you could kill him.
We call that a checkmate, but they’re really hard to set up. More likely, the Reckoners knew
Fortuity’s weakness. Every Epic has at least one—an object, a state of mind, an action of some sort—that allows you to void their powers.
There, I thought, heart leaping as —through the scope—I spotted a dark gure huddled in a window on the third oor of a building across the street. I couldn’t make out details, but he was probably tracking Fortuity with a ri e and scope of his own.
This was it. I smiled. I’d actually found them. After all of my practicing and searching, I’d found them.
I kept looking, even more eager.
The sniper would just be one piece of the plot to kill the Epic. My hands began to sweat. Other people get excited by sporting events or action lms, but I don’t have time for prefabricated thrills.
This, however … getting the chance to watch the Reckoners in action, seeing one of their traps rsthand … Well, it was literally the ful llment of one of my grandest dreams, even if it was only the rst step in my plans. I hadn’t come just to watch an Epic be assassinated. Before the night’s end, I intended to nd a way to make the Reckoners let me join them.
“Fortuity!” yelled a nearby voice.
I quickly lowered my ri e, pulling back against the side of the alleyway. A gure ran past the opening a moment later. He was a stout man in a smoking jacket and slacks.
“Fortuity!” he yelled again.
“Wait up!” I raised my weapon again, using the scope to inspect the newcomer. Was this part of the Reckoners’ trap?
No. That was Donny “Curveball”