Chapter 1: When everything nearly went right, nearly.
Ideworld Chronicles: Alexa May [art magic, urban fantasy, cultivation, slice of life]
It was supposed to be easy. A clean job. In and out, no mess. But nopeâhere I was, three seconds away from getting caught. Classy, right?
The party? High society nonsense. An auction. Glimmering dresses, fake smiles, champagne flutes clinking like bad jazz. Just a bunch of rich folks throwing money at glitter and calling it cultureâat least, thatâs how she pitched it. âEasy pickings,â she said. âNo heat.â Yeah? Well, guess who showed up? The FBI. And the Cityâs Mob. Both. At the same damn time. I mean, seriouslyâwhat are the odds?
Canât a girl get one night off from cosmic irony?
Anywayânameâs Alexandra May. Though if you ask the guy who hired me, Iâm Jess Hare. Little nod to Jessica Rabbit, if youâre into that kind of thing. Iâve always loved rabbitsâclever little survivors, fast on their feet and impossible to pin down. At the party, though? I was waitress Claudia. Tight blonde bun, fake accent, trays of overpriced drinks. You get the picture.
Hereâs the thing: I didnât exactly choose to become a thief. Life sort of... nudged me. But I did make one clear decisionâI wasnât gonna be the same person while doing it. Different name, different face, different story every time. It helps, you know? Keeps the lines blurry between who I am and who I have to be.
However, as I mentioned, I was about three seconds away from getting caughtâand Iâd like to return to that moment to explain. There was this ladyâEveline de Marcoâwhose necklace I âborrowedâ while she was in the toilet. Apparently, sheâs from those de Marcos. I didnât even know that was a thing until the rest of them showed up, all sharp suits and heavier shadows. And Mr. De Marco? Yeah, a couple of FBI agentsâdressed like someoneâs idea of âblend inââwere not-so-subtly hinting heâs some mid-level mafia boss.
Perfect. Just fucking great.
Anyway, the theft itself? Surprisingly easy. Like I said, I got into the ladiesâ restroom through a little maneuver earlierâIâd opened the window ahead of time, assuming sheâd need to pee eventually. Guess I wasnât wrong.
There were guards posted, sure. But I slipped right past by using the menâs room instead, climbed out the window, and swung back in through the one Iâd prepped. No alarms, no drama. Just me and a little bit of luck.
She was surprisingly nice, Eveline. Real talkative. Seemed like she actually gave a damn. I spun her this story about being bullied by the other staffâtold her I was hiding in there, crying, just trying to make it through the night. And you know what? She bought it. Hugged me, even. Real warm. The kind that makes you forget, just for a second, what youâre really doing there.
And when she let go? The necklace didnât come with her.
She didnât noticeâuntil about three seconds ago.
I saw her do itâone hand stroking her neck, the other pointing right in my direction. Could she be any more obvious? Honestly, it was like she was starring in her own mob drama.
That was my cue. I wasnât sticking around to find out what little tale she spun for the goons in suits. I turned straight toward the kitchen, ready to vanish.
âExcuse me. Where the hell do you think youâre going, Claudia?â
Ugh. Him.
My shift supervisor for the nightâofficial title: waiter-in-chief; unofficial one: professional dick. I sometimes wondered if he got hazard pay for being that consistently insufferable.
âYouâre excused,â I shot back, cool as ice.
That alone made his eyebrows knot like heâd smelled something bad, but I wasnât done. Iâd been waiting for this moment.
âI need to head to the kitchen. I heard your balls might be there.â
Boom. The look on his face? Worth every second. He snapped like a mousetrapâquick, loud, all teeth and temper. Lunged at me like he actually thought he could stop me.
But Iâm smallâ5â5â compared to his 6'2"âand faster than I look. I ducked under his grab and slipped past him like Iâd done it a dozen times before. He stumbled, still fuming, making just enough of a scene to draw attention and chaos.
Which, honestly? Worked in my favor.
Or at least, thatâs what I thought.
I shoved through the big double doors like I had every right to, and just like thatâI was in the kitchen. Chaos. Controlled, overheated, slightly frantic - chaos. A dozen cooks barking at each other, pots clanging, steam rising. At least twenty other waiters and waitresses rushed around in the same black-and-white getup I had on. And just like me? Every single one looked like they had somewhere more important to be.
I weaved through them like I was stitching my own getaway into the fabric of the room. Smooth, fast, not drawing too much attention but never slowing down. Near the far end, I spotted itâa second door leading out to the delivery lane. Perfect.
I pushed through it just as the kitchen doors behind me flung open again. Someone was hot on my heelsâeither Mr. Dick from hell or the mafia muscle. Maybe both.
No time to find out.
The second I was outside, I ripped down the zipper on that ridiculous dress. Underneath, I had on a tight black sports suitâsleek, silent, and made for running. Tucked into the lining was a tiny hidden pouch, and inside it? Evelineâs necklace, still warm from where Iâd slipped it off her neck. I bolted.
The alley was too bright for comfort, lit up like a stage I never auditioned for. I didnât make it more than thirty meters before three guys in sharp suits stepped into view, right at the mouth of the exit.
Fantastic. There went escape route number one.
I didnât hesitate. Jumped, planted a foot against the brick wall, launched myself up, and grabbed the loose end of a fire escape. My fingers caught metal, rough and cold. I hauled myself up and started climbing like the building owed me something.
Below, I could hear my pursuers yellingâmore than just the first batch now. The ones whoâd tailed me from the party linked up with the suited trio and were stacking up, trying to reach the fire escape. Idiots. But persistent ones.
By the time I reached the rooftop, my lungs were burning and the wind bit harder, but I didnât stop to celebrate. I was too high up to be sure, but Iâd bet good money some of those new arrivals down there were FBI, trying to figure out what the hell just hit their joint operation.
And me? I was still not caught.
Yet.
Of course, my luck hadnât been entirely on my side up until now. A lot of it was because Iâd been here before, scouting every inch of this roof before I even accepted the job. Multiple escape routes. That's how I roll. But even the best prep can go sideways.
And yeah, I could feel itâmy luck was about to turn.
I sprinted across the roof, leaping over vents and dodging steel rodsâgod knows what they were even for, but they werenât slowing me down. The other end of the roof was coming up fast. I reached it, jumped, pulled myself over onto a higher wall, and from there, vaulted myself to the next building. I landed in a roll to absorb the impact, my feet finding the ground quickly so I could keep running.
And then I froze.
Two figures stood against the edge, their pistols aimed right at me.
âFreeze!â
Of course. Law enforcement. Great. The FBI mustâve set up snipers on this roof, just in case things went south. And guess what? My luck? Definitely south.
I raised my hands, staying calm, scanning the roof quickly. These guys werenât chasing meâthey were just there to observe the gala. If things got real, theyâd take the shot. But they hadnât made any moves to secure the roof or anythingâthankfully, because I saw the rope. My escape rope, still coiled up against the other edge, one end fastened to a metal pipe sticking out of the building.
I didnât have time to second-guess myself. I had a route. I just needed to get to it.
âMove away from the edge!â another shout. âCome closer to me!â
Why all the shouting? I could hear them just fine if they spoke like normal human beings.
âI can hear you, man,â I said, way softer than he did, easing toward the center of the roof. But I pivotedâsubtlyâtoward the rope. My plan was still alive: bail as soon as the goons showed up on the roof Iâd just jumped from. But I needed to stay free until then. No cuffs, no tight corners.
The guy approaching me had his pistol leveled at what I guessed was either my chest or headâit was hard to tell from my angle. His partner had already settled back in at the edge, rifle braced and ready. Two pairs of eyes on me. Couldâve been worse. Still, I needed their attention to shift, even just a little. A glance. A thought. Something.
âIâm sorry to interrupt,â I said, soft and sweet, sliding into my innocent-girl act like it was custom-made. âI was just practicing parkour. I didnât know anyone would be up here. Usually no one is.â
Voice light. Shoulders tucked. Eyes wide. My body language did most of the talking.
He didnât lower the gun, but I saw the tension slip from his shoulders. That was something. A maybe. A thread.
âWhy are you running around at night? Youâre not supposed to be up here,â he said. âCome over. Iâll call someone to pick you up.â
That told me something. If he was serious about calling it in, then maybe I was wrong about the FBI joining the mob downstairs. These two definitely hadnât been briefed on anything happening.
I was still piecing that together when I heard the footstepsâfast, heavyâhitting the edge of the roof behind me. The agent noticed them too, glanced over.
That was all I needed.
I bolted, slipping behind a rooftop service hatch for cover. My feet barely stopped movingâI dropped, slid across the surface, grabbed the end of my rope, rolled toward the edge, clipped it to the hook on my belt, and jumped.
Shots rang out behind meâsharp cracks slicing through the airâbut they missed, I think. Maybe.
Thing is, you donât always feel the hit right away. Not when adrenalineâs in the driverâs seat. It keeps your body going long past the point where you should stop. I knew that from experienceâunfortunately.
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But I was still moving. And as long as I was moving, I wasnât caught.
Yet.
The rope ended right where Iâd measured itâjust short of the open window of an abandoned apartment. Not a perfect line, though. I had to shimmy across the ledge a bit to reach it, since I couldnât hook the rope in a straight drop.
As I slid sideways along the buildingâs skin, I heard someoneâprobably rooftop guyâhit the edge behind me. Then came more shouting, probably the agents arguing with the mob muscle. A few shots fired. Lovely. Just keeps getting better, doesnât it?
Then came the sirens. Red-and-blue lights started to paint the street below, and the soundtrack? As shrill and grating as you'd expect.
I finally made it to the window, unclipped the rope, and slipped inside. Dusty air, peeling wallpaper, and a musty silence welcomed meâmy kind of temporary haven. I headed straight for the old dresser Iâd stashed clothes in earlier and pulled out my casual wear: a worn T-shirt, faded jeans, and a jacket with a hand-painted iceberg on the back. Forgot to mentionâwhen Iâm not swiping necklaces or dodging bullets, Iâm an art student. Big-time enthusiast. Life costs money, though, and it turns out âstarving artistâ isn't as romantic when you're actually starving. No family. No trust fund. Just hustle.
I tossed the blonde wig into the drawer like it personally offended me. My own hairâshort, brown, and wavyâfinally breathed. A swipe of makeup remover erased the sugary-sweet blonde mask Iâd painted on earlier. My freckles came back. So did my real eyes, once the blue contacts were outâhazel, sharp, and mine.
I slipped on a baseball cap, slung a small purse over my shoulder, swapped the waitress shoes for my worn-in sneakers, and stepped into the hallwayâjust another nobody in the city.
I moved fast. The more chaotic this whole situation got, the higher the odds Iâd run into something I hadnât prepared for. And considering how many things had already gone sideways in record time, I wasnât feeling lucky.
I hit the stairwell and dropped down a level. Then another. Just two more and Iâd be clearâexcept no, of course not. Five cops were already storming up. Probably backup for whatever mess was unfolding on the roof. Would they let me go if I played innocent? Maybe. But most likely, Iâd end up cuffed and questioned, and that was something I planned to avoid at all costs.
I ducked into the hallway on this floor and ran toward the opposite end. Thatâs when an old man opened his door to peek out, no doubt curious about the ruckus. He could be my undoing⦠or my shot at disappearing. Well, no reward without risk.
âExcuse me, good man,â I said in my smoothest, sultriest tone.
âWhat do you want?â he barked, squinting at me through a mess of greasy hair.
âIâm a working girl. Was called here by someone a few floors up, but with the cops showing upâ¦â I let the sentence hang suggestively. âIf you let me in, Iâll give it to you for free.â
He was maybe fifty, wearing a stained T-shirt stretched over a generous belly, and house slippers. But his eyes lit up like a teenagerâs. Poor guy. Still had a full head of hair thoughâgood for him, I guess.
âFree? For real?â he asked, sucking in his gut.
I nodded and smiled sweetly.
âCome in then!â he grinned, opening the door wider. I slipped inside fast, and he locked it behind us.
His apartment was the disaster I expectedâthree crusty plates on the table, garbage near the couch, and some old soap opera blaring on the TV. A single naked bulb swung from the ceiling like it was contemplating ending it all. Mood matched mine.
âHow do you wanna do this?â he asked, already pulling off his shirt.
I sighed. âHowever you like, honey. But Iâd love it if you took a shower first, okay?â
I crossed to the window and peeked outâno fire escape. Just the main street, two cop cars, flashing lights, and a couple officers standing around.
âSure, whatever you like, babe!â he said, enthusiasm almost making me pity him.
âYou need a little help getting it ready?â I asked, playing the part.
âWhat do you mean?â
âIâve got a Viagra. Makes everything better, sweetie.â I smiled wide.
He hesitated, insecurity flashing across his face.
âEh... sure, babe.â
I pulled the little blue pill from my purseâa fast-acting sedative disguised as Viagraâand handed it over. He popped it dry, no hesitation. Perfect. Heâd be out in two minutes, tops.
âTake your shower, handsome. Iâll be waiting.â
He grinned and shuffled off. I checked my watch. One minute later, he was back, still towel-damp, walking a little too straight. Okay, unexpected. But I played along, led him toward the bed in the corner, helped him lie down all seductive-likeâand, right on cue, he was out cold.
I tossed a blanket over him and turned just in time to hear a knock.
I crept to the door and peeked through the peephole. Cops. Of course.
I opened the door slowly.
âGood evening, maâam. May we check your apartment? Weâre searching for a suspect,â said one, polite but firm.
âSure,â I said with a smile. âBut my boyfriendâs sleeping.â I gestured toward the snoring lump in the bed. âHeavy sleeper. Please try not to wake him?â
The officer nodded and did a quick sweepâtiny place, just a bathroom, kitchenette, and the mess of a main room. He seemed satisfied, nodded again, and started to leave.
âMind if I head out?â I asked.
He paused, turning back. âBit hectic out there, maâam. Incident at the auction house nearby. Weâre locking things down. Where are you going?â
âDowntown. Iâve got a shift. Boss is a jerk, Iâll catch hell if Iâm late.â
I gave him my best pitiful shrug. He cracked a smile.
âI get it. Rick!â he called down the hallway. âEscort this lady downstairs and come back up.â
A loud sigh echoed from somewhereâpoor Rick, probably stuck with everyoneâs grunt work. He appeared anyway, young and already tired of life, and led me toward the exit.
The chaos outside had only gotten worse. Fire trucks screamed toward the auction house, more squad cars flooding in, ambulances pulling upâwhatever had gone down over there, it was way bigger than a missing necklace.
Rick explained the situation to another officer near the barricade. They waved me through.
I kept walking, calm, casual. A block away, my getaway driver shouldâve been waiting. Time to disappear again.
I walked up to one of the parked cars, adjusting the side mirror until it pointed right at my face. I pulled out my makeup kit from my purse, steadying my hands as I began to work. My usual round face was too soft, too recognizableâno, I needed sharp angles, more defined. I made my skin fairer, erasing every freckle, and I darkened the brows a touch, turning them redder, more dramatic. My eyes widened, creating that look of innocent allure, and then a nice strong swipe of red lipstickâbold and sultry, the perfect finishing touch to make my lips look fuller.
The final transformation came with the red wig, which I slid on effortlessly. In minutes, Jess Hare was born, from the inside out.
I reached into my now much emptier purse and put the necklace thereâa thing of beauty. Pearls with silver linings, shaped like a dragon cradling its precious white eggs. I tucked it carefully inside the purse, just in reach of the paralyzer hidden at the bottom. I always kept it close, just in case my usual ploy didnât work. It never hurt to be prepared for the unexpected.
I rushed toward the carâmy ride, though I'd never worked with this guy before. He was someone my employer had arranged, keeping my natural face a secret. He was supposed to get me out of trouble if things went sideways, and judging by how the night had been going, it seemed I could really use his help.
The black Camaro was parked, the window rolled down, and the faint smell of smoke wafted out. UghâGod, I hated the smell. And the dark, completely blacked-out windows at the back didnât help either. It made me feel trapped, unsafe. I immediately pivoted, intending to keep my distanceâno more than twenty feet from the car. But before I could turn away completely, I heard a voice.
âGet inside, thief.â
The word thief hissed from his lips, like it was the dirtiest thing in the world. Great. To make matters worse, he pressed a gun to my stomach. Damn it. I had no choice now. I turned, resigned, and moved toward the car. He opened the door and shoved me inside.
Well, so much for my escape. Not the mob, not the FBI, not the copsâbut the guy who hired me. Damn, Lex. Youâve got to stay more vigilant, girl.
The guy with the gun slid in next to me, and the driver started the car, merging into light nighttime traffic. The gun never wavered, pointed right at me the entire time.
âWhere are you taking me?â I asked, keeping my voice steady.
âBoss wants the necklace right away.â The gunmanâs words were flat, cold. He was a well-built guy, dressed casually in jeans, a white T-shirt, and a brown jacket.
âWhat necklace?â I played dumb, hoping to buy some time.
âDonât play dumb,â he snapped. So much for that tactic. âWe saw the fallout from your escape. Youâve got it, right?â
I raised my hands in mock surrender. âLet me check, I mightâve lost it on the way.â I reached for my purse. He watched me closely, eyes narrowed, gun still trained on me, but the safety was still on. A rookie mistake.
âDonât do anything stupid, or Iâll shoot you right here.â
âSure, sure,â I said, my voice almost too calm. I reached into the purse, slowly, deliberately. When I pulled out the necklace, I held it up for him to see. His eyes lit up for a moment, the tension in his posture easing. Then, with the other hand, I drew the paralyzer, just out of his sight.
In one swift motion, I jabbed the prongs into his left arm, unleashing a burst of electricity. His body jerked as the current shot through him. He dropped the gun, his body spasming from the shock. The driver glanced around in time for me to slam the butt of the paralyzer into his temple, using all the force I had.
The car swerved violently as the driver lost control, the tires screeching against the pavement. We slammed against the railing, the car tumbling and rolling off the grass sidewalk, until we finally collided with a tree.
I braced myself, my body small and compact, buckled up and ready for the impact. I tightened my grip on the front seat, and the crash hit.
When the world finally stopped spinning, I unbuckled my seatbelt, feeling bruised but thankful that I'd emerged relatively unscathed. I grabbed the gun from the unconscious man's lap and quickly exited the wrecked car, tucking the necklace back into my hidden pocket.
I hobbled away from the wreck, making for the nearest pedestrian crossing. Cars on the main road had already stopped, drivers stepping out, craning their necks to see what the hell had just happened. Phones were outâno doubt someone was calling the authorities already.
Thatâs why the gunshot caught me completely off guard.
The crack split the air, and I felt the bullet whistle past my ear. I dropped instantly, ducking behind the tree I'd just passed. Screams erupted from the bystanders as they bolted for cover, jumping back into their cars and slamming doors.
The driver. Heâd woken up. And apparently, heâd decided that I wasnât worth keeping alive.
I peeked from behind the trunk. There were more trees ahead of me, lining the road, but reaching them would mean runningâsomething I couldnât manage in my current state. My legs trembled with the adrenaline crash, pain blooming across my side. I scanned the area, trying to assess my options.
To the left: another road, sloped slightly upwardâout of reach.
Ahead: the pedestrian crossing, about thirty feet away. Too far.
My hand brushed over the pistol Iâd takenâsafety still on. I clicked it off, the small red dot glowing like a warning light.
I didnât want to kill him. But if it came down to him or me, I knew who Iâd choose.
I heard his steps coming closerâslow, uneven. He was limping too. We matched in that way. For a few seconds, it was just the soft crunch of his shoes on the grass, then... nothing.
I waited, holding my breath.
A muffled grunt. A thud. Silence.
I dared a quick glance and then another, longer one. He was down, collapsed in the grass, pistol just out of reach. One hand clutched his side, his shirt soaked with blood. The grass around him was already turning a dark red.
I approached slowly, kicked the gun away with one foot, then checked his pulse. Faint, but there. He wasnât dead. Not yet.
Good. I wasnât looking to add murder to my résumé tonight.
I didnât wait. I turned and made for the crossing, limping across just as the wail of sirens split the night air. The cops had arrived.
I melted between the buildings and slipped away, heading for the metro. Each step hurt like hell, but I was still moving. Still breathing. Still free.
--
I reached my apartment about an hour and a half later. The limp had eased up a little, but I still took the elevatorâno way I was tackling stairs after tonight. It was just past 1 AM when I quietly unlocked the door. I didnât want to wake my roommates.
I lived with Peter and Sophie. Peter and I went way backâwe met in the orphanage as kids and became siblings in everything but blood. Sophie came into the picture in high school. Somehow, all three of us ended up at the same university.
Peter got in on a scholarshipâhe ruled the swimming pool like heâd been born in water. Sophieâs parents were loaded, so tuition was never a problem for her. As for me... I got in the only way I could. Sticky fingers and a talent for slipping through cracks. Only Peter knew the full truth about that part of me.
Of course he wasnât sleepingâPeter never did when he knew I was out on a job, even if I told him it was just waitressing. He sat on the couch, the sharp lines of his jaw lit by the cold blue glow of his phone screen. As soon as he saw me, he stood up without a word and helped me sit down, careful with how I moved.
âLex,â he said, voice low but firm, âwhat the hell happened at the auction house? I kept calling, but then I found your phone in your room.â
Right. I had told him Iâd be working the galaâjust another catering gig, nothing special. No mention of Jess Hare or my âhobby.â But the second he saw the red wig and that face I painted on, he knew.
âWhat are they saying?â I asked, pulling the wig off and tossing it to the side.
âThe news is calling it a shootoutâmafia and the police. Apparently, they were after some mob boss who dipped early. Thereâs mention of a fire starting in the kitchen too.â He paused. âYou involved in any of that?â
I leaned back, exhaling. âI mightâve heard some shots... and yeah, some of that might have been my fault.â No point in lying to Peter. He never lied to me.
âDamn,â he muttered, already filling the kettle. âYou okay? You look like hell.â
âI had an unexpected roller-coaster ride out of a moving car.â
He shot me a look but kept silent. We both came from hard placesâhe knew the value of silence when words couldnât fix anything. Heâd been lucky lately with his swimming; all that hard work finally paying off.
âIâll be fine by tomorrow,â I said, even if that was a stretch. Of course, that also depended on whether the guy who sent me into this whole mess wasnât planning to tie up loose ends.
I felt bruised, battered, and exhaustedâand it seemed the price would be paid in a different currency than Iâd anticipated. Still, all things considered, it had been a solid night.
Ten out of ten.
Would not recommend.