The rain came down in sheets, pounding the deserted streets of Prague like a drumbeat of warning. Marcus Hale adjusted the collar of his trench coat and tucked his hands deeper into the pockets. He wasn’t supposed to be here, not tonight, not anywhere near the cobblestone alley behind the old opera house. But that’s where the message had led him.
Hale was retired, and he liked it that way. No missions. No dead drops. No lies. But someone had other plans. An anonymous tip, a photo of a man dead in his own hotel room, the kind of staged assassination only an intelligence agency or someone smart, could pull off. And now, the world thought Marcus Hale did it.
The alley smelled of wet stone and gasoline. He counted five exits, five ways someone could corner him. Smart. He’d prefer to corner them first.
“Marcus Hale,” a voice called from the shadows. Smooth, with an edge like a scalpel.
Hale didn’t flinch. He had heard that voice before. “I don’t do reunions,” he said.
“You used to,” the figure said, stepping forward. Rain slicked hair, trench coat flapping. A gun glinted in their hand. “And you still do.”
Hale’s hand went to his side, but the gun wasn’t there. He never carried a gun in public. Never needed to. Muscle memory, reflexes, and a knack for reading intentions were enough. He shifted, subtly positioning his body between the shadow and the exit.
“Step aside,” the figure said, but it wasn’t a request.
Hale lunged. Rain turned into a blur around him. The first punch snapped the man’s wrist back against his own shoulder. The gun discharged once, the bullet embedding itself in a brick wall. Hale grabbed the weapon mid-fall, twisted, and disarmed him.
“Not tonight,” Hale said, letting the man crumple into the alley’s puddles.
He didn’t have time to wonder who sent him after. He had a bigger problem. Someone had orchestrated an assassination, framed him, and the trail led straight to a shadowy group called Blackbird. They weren’t just killers, they were puppeteers, pulling strings through governments, banks, and corporations.
Hale sprinted down the street, dodging cars that ignored the red lights, sprinting through markets half-closed for the night. His instincts were sharp. He ducked behind a parked van as a black SUV tore past, headlights slicing through the rain.
Inside the van, he flipped open a small laptop. Quick hack, no password, no fuss. A single folder popped up: BLACKBIRD OPERATIONS – PHOENIX INITIATIVE. Images. Names. Dates. Targets. And one name in bold letters: MARCUS HALE.
Hale scowled. They wanted him dead, framed, and for the world to burn while they slipped away. Typical. Predictable.
“Looks like I’m not retired,” he muttered.
He needed answers. Fast. His first stop: a contact from the old days. Lara Chen. She was a ghost now, living off the grid, but if anyone knew Blackbird’s next move, it was her.
The safehouse was in an abandoned warehouse outside the city. Hale moved like a shadow, wet shoes silent against rusted metal. He found her in a corner, scanning digital files with a tablet.
“Marcus,” she said, not looking up. “You’ve got three minutes before your ‘fans’ catch your scent.”
“I have a plan,” he said. “I always do.”
She finally looked at him, eyes sharp as daggers. “They’re not just framing you. They’re rewriting history, Marcus. Every assassination, every theft, every destabilized government, they’re behind it. And if we don’t stop them, no one will.”
Hale nodded. “Then we make sure I don’t die tonight. And they do.”
The plan was simple in theory. Infiltrate Blackbird’s meeting in the abandoned cathedral downtown, capture their leader, and recover the proof that would clear his name. In practice… it was a death trap.
They slipped in under the cover of night. Candles flickered, casting long shadows over vaulted ceilings. Blackbird operatives moved like ghosts, scanning, whispering, watching. Hale’s heart beat slow and steady, each step calculated.
“Right here,” Lara whispered, pointing to a raised dais. A man in black sat at the center, pulling strings like a conductor. Blackbird’s leader. Hale’s target.
He moved. One, two, three steps. Lara covered the back. He dropped behind a pillar, rolled, and launched the first operative off the stairs with a knee strike that would have made a boxer proud.
Gunfire erupted. Hale and Lara were shadows and steel, gliding, striking, disappearing. By the time the leader realized they were there, it was too late. Hale lunged, grabbed the man by the collar, slammed him against the stone floor.
“Who sent you?” Hale demanded.
The man laughed. A chilling, hollow sound. “You think it’s just me? You’re a pawn in a game you can’t even see.”
Hale’s jaw tightened. “Then I’ll burn the board.”
He smashed a laptop, grabbed files, destroyed anything that could be used to continue Blackbird’s scheme. Lara kicked open a door, and they ran as the cathedral erupted into chaos.
Outside, sirens wailed. Hale checked his watch. Ten minutes to vanish into the city. Blackbird would hunt, but he had the proof. The files, the evidence, the names—they all pointed back to the real masterminds.
“Do you ever sleep?” Lara asked, breathless.
“Not tonight,” Hale said. He looked up at the storm-laden sky. “Tomorrow, maybe.”
By dawn, the world knew Marcus Hale had not assassinated anyone. The real killers were exposed, their network dismantled, their faces splashed across headlines. Hale disappeared again, as always, into shadows and whispers.
“Retirement,” Lara said, shaking her head.
Hale smiled, a dangerous, sly curve of lips. “I’ll take it one day at a time. But tonight… I won.”
He melted into the misty streets, rain washing off the last trace of the night’s violence. For Marcus Hale, the spy retired only in name, justice was its own kind of thrill.
And somewhere, deep in the ashes of Blackbird, someone was plotting. But Hale? He’d be ready.
Silent. Deadly. Unseen.
END
No comments:
Post a Comment