Margot turned down the next alley, waiting for Alistair to elaborate, surprised when he did not. She thought hard in his direction, even visualizing the snapshot of him that she been forced to memorize to aid the uplink, but it availed her nothing. She tried for Rebecca Levy, an admitted long shot given her limited telepathic abilities, and got nothing. Margot came to a halt in the middle of the narrow alley, a vendor pitching knockoff sportswear to one side, a tennis shoe vendor on the other, and puzzled over the wall in front of her, creating an unexpected dead end. She consulted the map of the city that Alistair had implanted in her mind and could not find it. Then Margot cursed her own stupidity and started to scramble.
It was too late to try to dodge the attack, but she did manage to roll with it, diminishing the force of the blow. The Weir’s claws tore gouges from her shoulder, exposing white bone, and the impact sent her tumbling backwards. She hit the ground rolling, trying to give herself some distance to work with.
Obviously, they were feeling confident. They let her get back up to her feet.
They hadn’t bothered with an isolation field, probably to avoid tipping Margot off to their presence, or to avoid alerting the other Operators scattered around the metropolis. Foregoing it meant casualties and chaos among the normal citizenry, something that was normally avoided, but not an apparent concern for her adversaries. Three Weir lurked in a rough group, ambling cautiously toward her, the alley behind them filled with the wreckage of shattered stalls and mutilated bodies, some still able to move and cry out. Margot knew there was nothing she could do for them. She never even considered trying.
Behind them, a western woman in a fancy black cocktail dress and too much gold jewelry watched the scene unfold, her hair braided with jewels, stones, and clasps of platinum and jade. Margot felt the involuntary grin, lips pulling back as her razor teeth extruded a few centimeters, a defensive reaction as a primal as a lion’s roar. She had never met one before, but she knew it by instinct — Anathema. This was no Witch. This was an exiled, heretic Operator, and she could feel the Ether recoil at her very existence.
Margot stood up, putting one hand to her chest to check on the damage. Her hand came away sticky, but the wound had coagulated, and the bleeding was slow and thick. In a minute or two, it would heal completely, without leaving as much as a scar. Just another part of her gone quiet and dead, porcelain-white silicon where there had been flesh and blood. Nothing she wasn’t used to. Nothing that would stop her, or even slow her down. Mixed feelings about Alistair and loneliness for the Academy aside, Margot wanted the job badly. She was going to be an Auditor, no matter whom or what got in her way.
Starting with this lot.
The Weir that had struck her was licking her blood from its jagged talons, a long purple tongue snaking grotesquely through its furred paws. The other two lagged behind, advancing cautiously, one on each side. They looked hungry and eager, which meant that they had underestimated her. Margot charged them, weaving her way between the wooden stands of the vendors and the frantic passersby who could not seem to decide which way to run. She kept her head low and moved as fast as possible, though she wasn’t certain the precaution was merited until the head of a nearby shopper exploded like a wet balloon.
Margot’s eyes narrowed, searching the rooftops automatically for the sniper, hoping to see the light reflect from the scope, but she had no such luck.
It didn’t matter. Margot hit the first Weir running, driving her shoulder into the matted fur of its chest, bowling it over and then stepping on and over it, grabbing the Weir on the right side by its arm and the scruff the neck. The creature bit and spat and clawed, tearing out chunks of the flesh above her ribcage and out of the side of her head, but Margot ignored it, using her momentum to spin the thing sideways, up and over, headfirst into the wall. She did not have time for technique; she just muscled him around and swung like a hammer throw, the crown of its skull breaking right through the cinderblocks, leaving a crater several inches deep. The Weir shook, convulsed, and leaked disgusting fluids from the remnants of its head. The remaining monsters exchanged what was obviously, even on from a Weir, a worried look.
The alley was crowded, and Margot never stopped moving, so she got lucky again — the sniper’s second shot went wide, sinking deep into the new asphalt roadway a second behind Margot. She ducked underneath a broad swipe from the claws of the closest Weir, and then landed a sidekick solidly to the side of the knee. The Weir had not bothered to try to dodge the strike, and she didn’t really blame it — normally, even an Operator could not hope to damage a Weir hand-to-hand. Margot was different, though, as life never failed to remind her. The Weir’s leg bent like a eucalyptus tree in the wind, and the Weir shuddered and cried out. She used the opportunity to close and wrap her hands around the thing’s long, muscular throat, the greasy fur sliding underneath her hands as she squeezed. The Weir convulsed and raked her back with its claws, but she ignored it, pressing her thumbs into the trachea. By the time the last of the Weir had made up its mind to charge, she had collapsed its companion’s throat and was back on her feet.
The Weir moved too fast for her to dodge, so Margot braced for impact instead, but the creature fell limply to the ground in front of her. A split second later, she heard shots and rolled, hoping to evade the sniper’s scope. This time, Margot saw the muzzle flare from one of the roofs, but again, she didn’t have time to do anything but dodge.
As it turned out, she didn’t have to.
A shadowy figure tossed the sniper over the side of the building, and he crashed down through the top of a car next to Margot. He landed in a heap, to the sound of crunching plastic and glass, and then he didn’t move again. Mitsuru Aoki ported down after him, appearing next to Margot in a flash of sparks and light, a belated isolation field sinking down along with her, silencing the bedlam all around them, the cries of the dying and the wounded.
At that point, Margot remembered to look around, but the Anathema had already fled.
Mitsuru gazed at her with burning red eyes, giving her an appraising look. She also wore a heavy jacket that hung to her knees, made of woven Kevlar, but Mitsuru’s coat wasn’t shredded and punctured and hanging off one shoulder by a thread like Margot’s.
“Report,” Mitsuru snapped.
Margot reported, crisp and concise, as she had been trained to do.
Everything had been blurred since she had gotten off the plane. Margot had gone straight into the field, no time for sleep, only a telepathic briefing from Alistair. He implanted a map of the city and images of the targets in her head, as well as a dossier and a working knowledge of Cantonese and Mandarin. Then she had been set loose on the back alleys of Shanghai. Margot hadn’t seen anything or anyone even vaguely suspicious until she had been attacked, without even the pretense of an isolation field, a nicety that even the Witches never dispensed with. She briefly outlined her concerns about who they were actually fighting — namely the Anathema, but Mitsuru nodded as if she had expected to hear that.
“Are you alright?” Mitsuru asked, nodding at her shoulder.
Margot poked at her shoulder experimentally. The wound had crusted over, and part of the scab came off when she touched it, revealing cold, white skin underneath. She pressed it with her razor sharp fingernail until she drew blood, but Margot didn’t feel a thing.
“I am very difficult to injure,” Margot said, considering whether or not to abandon her shredded jacket. She wasn’t entirely sure that the Lycra long-sleeve that she had worn beneath it was still capable of preserving her modesty. “My fighting style is easy to misinterpret.”
“I understand,” Mitsuru said, with surprising sympathy. “Can you move? The car should be here any moment.”