Page 20
Story: Girl, Unseen (Ella Dark #23)
Felix might have looked like a strong wind could knock him over, but he ran like the devil himself was on his heels. He cut between two rusted silos and vanished behind the main barn. Behind her, she heard Luca telling the father to stay put, followed by the kind of language that suggested the old man wasn't listening.
‘Stay put,’ she shouted at Luca. ‘I’m going after him.’
She didn’t give Luca a chance to respond, but she saw in her peripheral vision the image of him holding Felix’s dad at gunpoint. That was good enough for now, so she hurried in pursuit of Felix, trying to predict his movements. The burns on her legs sent lightning bolts of pain up her spine with each stride, but it subsided when she caught a glance of Felix trying to climb over a fence behind the barn.
‘Felix! Freeze!’
The suspect abandoned ship, dropped off the fence and hurried away on foot again. Ella sped in pursuit and found that the mud wanted to keep her boots. Each step felt like running through wet cement. Felix bee-lined for a stack of empty feed containers and vaulted over them with the grace of someone who'd done this before. Ella reached the same mark and pushed off the containers. Twenty feet between them. Fifteen. Then her boot skidded on a patch of mud, and the world tilted. She caught herself against an ancient tractor and used the momentum to launch into a faster sprint.
‘Last chance, Felix! Stop!’
She could end this now. Her hand brushed her weapon, but she pushed the thought away. Too many variables – buildings full of who-knew-what and the ever-present risk of a ricochet in this maze of metal and wood. Besides, dead men told no tales about dead professors.
He reached the barn door and plunged into darkness. Ella pulled up short at the entrance. The smell hit her first – hay and horse and a century of farm life compressed into one sucker punch to the sinuses. Weak sunlight filtered through gaps in the roof. Dust motes danced in the beams like stars gone wrong.
Movement above. Felix scrambled up a ladder toward the hayloft.
‘FBI! Don't make me-, ’
A hay bale crashed down where she stood. Ella dove sideways and rolled behind a stack of crates. More bales followed, thuds echoing through the barn like artillery fire. If Felix wasn’t her man – and she had a good feeling he was, because innocent people didn’t run – she had him on assault of a federal agent.
She scanned for another way up. The barn's support beams crisscrossed overhead like a jungle gym from hell. Ella spotted a ladder bolted to a support beam.
‘If you don’t come down, I’m coming up.’
Felix's answer came in the form of another hay bale missile. Ella picked her moment then sprinted for the ladder. Up she went, ignoring the protests from her legs. The burns wouldn't thank her tomorrow, but that was tomorrow's problem. At the top, she hauled herself onto a beam as Felix disappeared through the hayloft door.
Height gave her a new perspective. The barn's upper level formed a twisted maze of wood and steel. More catwalks connected to the grain silos next door. Rusted machinery hung from chains like medieval torture devices. Felix threaded through it all with the ease of practice until he reached a junction where three walkways met. He turned left, but Ella had already read his moves. She cut across a parallel beam and dropped onto his catwalk. The whole thing swayed. Thirty feet of empty air waited below. One bad step, and she'd make headlines as the FBI agent who died fighting gravity.
Felix glanced over his shoulder and saw his chance. He spun and charged straight at her.
‘Son of a–,’
His shoulder caught her in the ribs. Pain exploded through her chest. She staggered but grabbed his hoodie. They grappled on the narrow walkway, and the whole structure swayed with each movement. Felix struck at her face, but Ella blocked it. She tried to spin him into an arm lock, but he slipped free. Her legs screamed as she shifted her weight. He aimed a kick at her knee. Ella twisted away, but the movement threw her off balance. Her back hit the guide rope. For one horrible second, she felt herself tilting into empty air.
Felix saw his opening. He lunged forward to finish the job. His fist sailed past her head close enough to ruffle hair. Amateur hour. Bureau training kicked in, and Ella caught his extended arm. But instead of following through, Felix twisted away and broke her grip.
Not so amateur after all .
Felix bounced on the balls of his feet – young and stupid and convinced of his own immortality. Two years of taking down killers had taught Ella better. She kept her stance low. Let him come to her.
He did. This time, he led with his left. A feint. His right hook followed, but Ella had seen that combination in a hundred gym fights. She blocked the hook and countered with a palm strike to his sternum. The impact knocked him back three steps.
‘That all you got?’ Blood ran from his nose onto his black shirt. ‘My sister hits harder.’
Sister? Ella filed that detail away for later. Felix came at her again. Raw energy versus experience. He had youth and reach but Ella had fought bigger men in smaller spaces. She slipped his punches and waited for her moment.
There. Felix overextended on a right cross. Ella drove her knee into his gut. The breath exploded from his lungs. She followed with an elbow to the base of his skull – not enough to kill but enough to ring his bell, maybe leave him with the kind of concussion that could coax out a few confessions later.
Felix staggered. The catwalk swayed. He tried for a desperate tackle, but his legs betrayed him. Ella sidestepped and grabbed his arm. All his momentum turned against him. Basic physics with a side of karma.
One quick twist. A shift of balance. Felix's feet left the catwalk. For a split second, he hung suspended between heaven and earth. Just long enough to realize how badly he'd screwed up.
Then gravity remembered its job.
Felix hit the hay bales shoulder-first. The impact knocked what little air remained from his lungs, and then he bounced once and tumbled to the muddy floor.
This time, there was no graceful recovery. Just a meatsack of bad decisions learning what regret felt like.
Ella watched him fall. Not her cleanest takedown but it got the job done. From this vantage point, she could see that Felix was still breathing, and that was all she needed. She'd pulled her strike at the last second, turned a bone-breaker into something that would just leave him hurting tomorrow.
The chain felt slick under her palms as she readied herself for the descent. Thirty feet up suddenly felt like three hundred. Her legs burned at the mere thought of landing, but there was no time for self-pity. Felix lay in a crumpled heap below, but even wounded animals could still bite .
She wrapped the chain around her forearm once, twice, and let her weight pull it taut. The descent sent jolts through her shoulders and legs, but there'd be time for respite once Felix Blackwood was in cuffs. Back at ground level, Felix had managed to push himself onto his hands and knees.
Now, she pulled out her gun and trained it on him. Clean shot. No chance of collateral damage.
‘Felix Blackwood, you’re under arrest.’
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20 (Reading here)
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53