Morrow holstered his pistol. He looked at the dark line of cypress trees, the black water, the place where 29 had vanished. “Then let’s not disappoint him,” he said. And the Manhunters walked into the flood.
The rain over Louisiana had not stopped for three days. In the attic of a collapsed plantation house, five men sat in a circle of dim lantern light. They were not friends. They were Manhunters—operatives of a secret international contract agency that only activated when Interpol, the FBI, and the UN collectively admitted failure.
Outside, rain turned to thunder. Vega knelt by tire tracks leading into the swamp—not away from it. “He doubled back,” Vega whispered. “He’s not trying to escape. He’s drawing us in, one by one.”
Their target: Subject 29. Escaped from a black-site medical transport three weeks ago. Former special forces, later augmented with experimental adrenal-splicing and bone-density weaving. He had killed seventeen people since breaking free, including two of their own—Manhunters who had tracked him to a warehouse in Baton Rouge and never walked out.
They moved out before dawn, vehicles extinguished, moving through flooded roads with the patience of wolves. Vega found the first sign at a bait shop on Highway 317: a shattered lock, a single drop of blood on a glass counter—type O negative, Kō confirmed, too high in cortisol and synthetic adrenaline. 29 was hurting. That made him more dangerous, not less.
No one argued.
Morrow picked up the syringe. He turned to Phlox. “Find him.”
The team’s handler, a woman named Driscoll who never smiled and never missed a detail, pinned a satellite photo to a corkboard. “Twenty-nine was spotted twelve hours ago near the Atchafalaya Basin. He’s moving west. We think he’s trying to reach a smuggler’s airfield outside Lafayette.”
Driscoll nodded. “That’s your window. He’ll hit a rural clinic or a veterinary supply depot. We have three possible targets along his route.” She handed each a slim dossier. “Go quiet. No local law. No air support. Twenty-nine can hear helicopter rotors from four miles out.”
They found the clinic at the end of a gravel lane, rain hammering its tin roof. The front door hung open. Inside, a single fluorescent light buzzed and flickered over a reception desk splashed with blood.
Morrow closed his eyes for a long second. Then he gave the order. “We contain the area. No shots unless I call it. Vega, you and Kō flank south. Phlox, jam every frequency except ours. Driscoll, hold the extraction point.”