The Wrong Package

1423 Words
Rain fell like a curtain across Greyridge City, drumming on rooftops, bouncing off puddles, soaking the alleyways, and turning the neon lights into streaks of color that blurred into the wet asphalt. Liam Oduor pedaled his beat-up delivery bike through the labyrinthine backstreets, the tires hissing over puddles as he navigated between the broken-down cars, dumpsters overflowing with refuse, and the occasional stray dog. The city at night was alive in a way most people didn’t see: the low hum of distant engines, the muffled shouts of street vendors closing shop, the occasional scream carried on the wind. He hugged his jacket tighter against the rain, hood drawn low over his head. His hands, calloused from long hours in the garage, gripped the handlebars, fingers trembling just slightly from cold, adrenaline, and anticipation. He hated deliveries in bad weather — wet packages, irritable clients, and a higher chance of trouble. But tonight wasn’t about convenience. It was about money. Mama’s medical bills didn’t wait, and every shilling he made counted. The delivery bag sat heavy on his shoulder, its contents unknown to him but strictly ordered. The instructions were simple: Gate 12. Knock twice. Do not open. He had checked the bag three times, feeling the rigid contours of the package beneath the damp canvas. Whoever had packed it had warned him clearly: curiosity could be lethal. Liam had never understood that kind of language before, but something about it tonight made the hairs on the back of his neck stand on end. He turned a corner and entered a narrow alley, flanked by crumbling brick buildings. A single flickering streetlight barely illuminated the path. He could see the steel door at the far end — Gate 12 — standing silently like a sentinel. The rain had turned the alley into a mirror, reflecting the dim glow of distant neon signs from the Lucky Dragon Casino, the Red Sparrow nightclub, and the endless maze of backstreet stalls. Every step echoed in the alley, amplifying the sound in the otherwise quiet night. Liam slowed, bringing the bike to a stop. He took a deep breath, tasting the metallic tang of rain mixed with exhaust fumes. He knocked twice. Nothing. He waited, the seconds stretching. The alley swallowed his knocks, offering no reply. He knocked again, harder this time. Still nothing. “Great,” he muttered under his breath. “Another ghost customer.” He shifted the weight of the delivery bag, fingers brushing against the edges of the mysterious case inside. It was heavier than it should have been. Solid. Cold. Dangerous, somehow. He reached for his phone to call the dispatch office when a sharp crack of thunder—or maybe a gunshot—split the air. His chest jolted. Heart hammering, he crouched behind a dumpster, the smell of wet garbage pungent in his nose. Another shot rang out, closer this time. Something was happening. Liam’s instincts screamed at him. He peeked around the edge of the dumpster and froze. A shadow moved across the rooftops above him, graceful, impossible, hunting. Rain streamed off the edges of the roof like molten glass, reflecting the glint of something in the shadow’s hand — a gun. “HEY! YOU!” the figure shouted, voice cutting through the rain. “DELIVERY BOY!” Liam stumbled back, his knees weak. “I—I’m just delivering…” he stammered, but the words fell into the rain and disappeared. “DROP THE BAG!” the voice barked again. Instinct overrode reason. Liam spun on his heels and ran, boots splashing through ankle-deep water. The gunshot cracked again. The bullet tore through the alley wall just inches from his shoulder. He barely ducked behind another dumpster, breaths ragged, muscles screaming. The shadow leaped down from the rooftop in a single, fluid motion, landing like a predator stalking its prey. Liam scrambled for his bike, fumbling with the kickstand as another shot rang out. The impact rattled the dumpster he had used for cover. Rainwater ran down his face, stinging his eyes. He kicked the engine to life and swerved into the street, tires screeching on the wet asphalt. Horns blared. A bus honked. A motorist yelled something he couldn’t hear. All of it merged into chaos as adrenaline drove him forward. For a few blocks, the city felt alive, watching, waiting. Liam dared a glance behind — nothing. He breathed heavily, but the sense of being hunted didn’t fade. Every shadow seemed alive, every corner a threat. When he finally came to a stop under a flickering streetlight, drenched and trembling, he unzipped the bag to check its contents. The black metal case inside was cold, solid, and impossibly heavy. A small label, smeared by the rain, read: PROPERTY OF LANTERN — DO NOT OPEN. Liam’s hands shook. He had no idea what it contained, and he didn’t want to. He knew one thing: he had just stolen something very dangerous, even if he didn’t mean to. The sound of a car engine starting in the distance made him freeze. A sleek black sedan slid through the rain-soaked street, headlights cutting across puddles, tires hissing on the wet asphalt. Someone was already tracking him. He could feel it. He shoved the case back into the bag and mounted his bike. Every instinct screamed at him to flee, but which way? Greyridge City at night was a labyrinth. He tried to remember every alley, every shortcut he’d learned over years of deliveries. Every turn brought a new puddle, a new corner, a new sound that could signal danger. Minutes felt like hours. Liam’s chest burned, lungs gasping as he pedaled faster. He took a narrow side street, praying the sedan wouldn’t follow him there. The street was tight, littered with broken crates and the carcasses of old vending carts. Water splashed over his shoes. He could hear the engine behind him, low and patient, waiting for the right moment. He ducked into an alley that emptied into the old market district. Neon signs flickered across wet tin roofs, advertising food, phones, and cheap watches. A few late-night vendors were closing up shop, shouting at each other over the rain. Liam’s head whipped left and right, searching for another escape. He could hear footsteps on the rooftops now — silent, calculated. He finally found a temporary refuge under a collapsed awning. His back pressed against the cold brick wall, chest heaving, sweat mixing with rain. He looked down at the bag. The case was heavy. Dangerous. And in his hands, it felt like it could change everything. His thoughts raced. Who were the Black Lanterns? What was in the package? And how had he, a simple delivery driver, become the center of something so deadly? He had no answers. Only instincts, and those screamed one truth: survive. A shadow moved across the street in the distance. A figure, tall and deliberate, was approaching. Liam could barely make out a long coat, rain dripping from its edges. The footsteps were careful, precise. This was no ordinary criminal. No ordinary cop. No ordinary man. This was the first predator to mark him as prey. Liam’s heart slammed against his ribs. He wanted to run, to hide, to disappear, but the city had no hiding places for someone being hunted. Every alley could be an ambush. Every rooftop a sniper’s perch. Every passerby could be a threat. He knew one thing: he had made a mistake. One small delivery, one wrong package, and now the entire underworld of Greyridge City was hunting him. He mounted his bike, hands gripping the handles like his life depended on it — because it did. He kicked the engine again, tires skidding on wet asphalt, rain blurring his vision, lights of the city streaking past him like neon fire. As he rode, Liam felt the weight of the bag against his shoulder. The weight of the package. The weight of the night. The weight of the choices he hadn’t yet made. Somewhere in the shadows, the hitman watched, patient and calculating. Somewhere else, corrupt cops plotted. Somewhere deeper in the city, the Black Lanterns knew their property had been taken — and they would not stop until it was returned, or the thief was dead. Liam Oduor was no hero. He was a delivery driver. An ordinary man. But tonight, that ordinary man had entered a world where ordinary didn’t exist. Tonight, survival was a game, and the city played for keeps. And so, the chase began.
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