XIII
City of Flames -- 7
It was a strange thing, to crack the door and peer out into the shadowed streets that had kept her hidden for so many years and know that someone, someone she couldn't even see was looking right back at her.
Or they were in the house.
Sarah's hand trembled against the latch, gaze darting left and right as she tried to gather her wits. Was that shadow between the refuse and the front door across the street a humanoid or just a lump? She squinted, strained. Her grip tightened. This was a waste of bloody time.
She had to get out of the city and that didn't leave time to wait for some shadow to jump out at her. After all, she was Sarah-bloody- Kettar, dammit. It took her another ten seconds to gather up the courage to crack the door enough to poke her head out.
The streets were criss crossed with shadows under a low hanging moon that was too busy crawling into the horizon to lend any light to her situation. Even with her mixed heritage and classically good night vision, trying to make sense of the confusing mess of gloom and once comforting hiding spots.
The alcohol still warmed her thought processes, making full on panic sound less attractive than it might have if she were sober. Sarah fingered the playing card to occupy her thoughts for a brief moment as she worked out the most sensible plan she could manage.
Stage one, distraction; two would be to get to the others and three. . .
She needed a stage three. Everything worth doing involved three of something. Why couldn't a plan be the same way? This assassin wanted to send a message but they didn't know who they toying with. No. No, they had no idea.
Sarah took a deep breath and, full of alcohol fueled bravado, flicked the card into the open street in open defiance of whomever may be watching. With the challenge laid down, she closed the door and sprinted towards the back door.
On the list of things not to do when an assassin was trailing you, meandering about in the dark like an oblivious shopper in the middle of a fire sale at the 'marital aid' stall was reasonably high on the list.
When she got to the back door she almost tripped into the bar that had kept it locked. It was set up in such a way as to serve as much a warning as a playful gesture; the kind of thing a hunter would do to distract their prey from something more immediately dangerous.
She
was
being toyed with. Didn't that just figure?
Sarah cocked the hammer of her pistol and cracked the door, stealing a peek. Nothing moved in the back alley and yet there was a sense, as though someone was holding their breath, that something was waiting to act.
Not seeing anything immediately threatening, she slid the door open and poked her head out. Yet again, nothing moved. So far so good-- the killer was probably in the house anyway, right? Sarah looked back to the darkness. That was probably right. She stepped out into the alley.
The metallic
pwang
of a trap being actuated was always the first sound that registered right before you realized that you stepped on your own face. It was a sound she had learned long ago and had ingrained itself into the very fiber of her soul when it almost cost her her left hand. That was the sound that split the still air like a gunshot. She was too drunk for this.
By instinct, Sarah took the most advantageous route she could with her body's 'oh shit' reaction still in full swing; she fell flat on her ass in a half hearted attempt to tumble backwards. Even as she slammed into a bookshelf a flood of tiny bright red, purple and yellow gold-flecked cloth scraps fluttered over her when a bucket on a tightly wound spring arm slammed into the edge of the door frame and discharged its contents back into the house.
Toyed with indeed. Sarah muttered an obscenity in sphinx as she tried to right herself, ignoring the throb in the back of her skull. "Clever! But hardly sporting!"
Something clicked and groaned behind her-- leather being tightened as someone moved. Sarah didn't hesitate. She grabbed a hand full of cloth and tossed it in the direction of the noise as she dived for the open spot in the doorway. To hell with pretensions, it was time to leave.
Tumbling wasn't quite the word for the near face-plant she did off the stoop, but she landed with enough momentum to vault off into a half-stumbling sprint. She was too damn old to be killed in an alley and here she was, bumbling through shadow like it was her damned occupation.
A glance back revealed absolutely nothing about her pursuer. Not so much as an errant strip of black or form chasing her. Even despite this momentary reassurance, Sarah exploded onto the main street, toppling into a misplaced sack of refuse waiting for pickup.
From the cage she'd fashioned in her mind out of booze and poor decision making skills, her rational mind screamed that it was best to stay on the main streets and get back to the south end, avoid the docks at all cost and get to the gate. Her papers would be in her bag and, provided the idiot paladin didn't get everyone killed, her papers would get them protection and out of the city.
No sooner did this notion cross her mind than the clattering of roof tiles assaulted her ears. At first it was one being smashed under foot and then it was one dropping to the cobbles to shatter. Sarah raised her pistol and juked to the side. An indistinct form swept from the crest of the roof of a single story building along the road.
With no clear shot, Sarah tucked the pistol back into the sash of her dress and pumped her arms for extra speed. It was a loosing battle, though; years of being lazy and comfortable were taking their toll as her muscles started to burn and her lungs felt as though they were trying to clench in her chest.
Gods, it was always so much easier watching someone else doing this kind of crap.
Sarah took advantage of the momentary change in her pursuer's direction and ducked into the shadow of an overhanging tenement, sliding deep into the recession where the door was until she could have been confused for a red stain on the moldy plaster. Given the circumstances, the analogy made her heart tighten.