Croc and the Fox

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Authors: Eve Langlais

BOOK: Croc and the Fox
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Croc and the Fox

Title Page
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen Chapter Fourteen Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen Chapter Eighteen Chapter Nineteen Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty One Chapter Twenty Two Chapter Twenty Three Epilogue

Croc and the Fox
By

 

Eve Langlais Copyright © August 2012 Eve Langlais Smashwords Edition

 

ISBN: 978-1-927459–10-2

Croc and the Fox
is a work of fiction and the characters, events and dialogue found within the story are of the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, either living or deceased, is completely coincidental.

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then

please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Chapter One

Early morning, at Moreau Island Industries…
Forget the experimental drugs killing her, boredom would get her first. Breakfast eaten – lukewarm mush again, yay – teeth brushed – with the hem of her gown because the guards feared them making a shank out of toothbrushes, whatever that meant – she’d even finished her daily walk – a dozen turns around her tiny cell. Morning routine completed, she now had the whole day ahead of her. That sucked. With nothing better to do, Project counted the cracks decorating the walls of her cell again. Sure, she already knew the answer – five thousand, three hundred and forty one – but it beat counting the bars – a measly twelve – which she finished too quickly.
What a slow week. No new prisoners for her to gawk at and eagerly question about the outside world. No hallucinatory drugs giving her the pasties or helping her see pretty rainbows. Not a single jab with an electrified cattle prod. Nothing.
I feel so underappreciated.
What did a prisoner need to do to get some attention from an evil doctor?
At this point in her doldrums, she would have even welcomed the unsmiling countenance of Fred, the guard. Not that his presence boded well since it meant someone usually wanted to poke her with sharp objects. Still though, a girl liked to feel wanted, even if only for experiments.
It seemed like forever since any of the mad scientists took her out to run tests – she beat the mice in the maze every time – or got her to chug some new, steaming concoction. Lest you misunderstand, it wasn’t that she enjoyed those times – the needles were painful, the electric shock therapy left her trembling, and the potions she swallowed tasted vile – but she couldn’t deny getting treated like a lab rat broke up the boredom of her current status. Locked in a room only slighter wider than she was tall, there just wasn’t much for a girl to do.
Unlike the other occupants in the holding area, she didn’t give in to screaming – it made her head hurt – or banging her noggin on the wall – which also gave her a wicked headache. But given the lack of amenities, some form of entertainment was needed. Televisions weren’t allowed in their cells anymore because some of the prisoners used them as weapons. Books ended up banned years ago, mostly because they jammed up the toilets when people used them to wipe their bottoms. Drawing on the walls with her bodily fluids, like blood, pee and feces? Talk about an
ick
factor and totally not her thing. What did that leave? Not much to entertain her mind.
So, she counted things. Constantly.
One. Two. Three. She’d reached seven hundred and thirty one cracks when the first rumble shook the walls. She didn’t pay it much attention. Every few months, something blew up in the labs. Lucky for her, she wasn’t present when that happened, but she couldn’t say as much for some of the others. Poor Project M87 never was the same when he returned without his left arm and one of his eyes.
Seven hundred and thirty two. Thirty three. Again, the room around her shuddered, followed by the faint blaring of alarms.
Uh-oh, someone is going to be in trouble.
She could always determine the severity of a screw up by the turnover in staff. Failure wasn’t tolerated.
The rumbles continued and the wailing of sirens increased. Around her, in the flanking cells, the other inhabitants perked up, coming to their bars to peek, craning to hear the vague commotion so far overhead. To her surprise, the chaos got louder. Odd, because just overhead were the storage levels, an added buffer between the projects and the experimental labs. What had the scientists done this time to create such havoc?
Cracking sounds. Screams. More shaking of the walls. And for the first time ever, the sirens in their section lit with a red whirling light and ululating screech. How exciting.
The end was nigh. Or so the misshapen creature in cell number twenty-nine began to scream.
“We’re all gonna die!” yelled the monster, who was halfman, half-melted monstrosity. “Me first! Please!”
“Get in line,” warbled the amphibious prisoner in the cell across from hers. “I’ve been here longer than you. I should go first.”
Actually, Project was the longest living inhabitant of the dungeon, but she kept that to herself, not wanting to draw their jealousy.
I am the queen of experimental torture. Yay for me!
Up and down the corridor, people shouted their right to die first. Project didn’t add her voice. Life as a prisoner might suck, but still, who said death would be an improvement? Surely there existed more to the world than an endless series of sterile labs, concrete cells, nondescript corridors and men in white coats? Not everyone lived in a locked room, and according to the books she’d read, before the doctors took them away, a whole world existed outside the lab, a vast place where a shifter could live, free of rules and rounds of blood-work.
Amelie, who used to occupy the cell alongside hers, spoke wistfully of the life she left behind. When their guards served gruel, Amelie used to stare at it and cry about how much she missed McDonald’s.
Wasn’t he the guy who owned a farm?
Still, despite some of her obvious off the wall observations, Project loved to listen to Amelie and the other captives tell their stories. Tall tales about how outside the lab there were no doctors in white coats waiting to do tests, or guards kicking over their bowls of mush, and where the toilet paper didn’t scrape a bottom raw.
Okay, so Project believed in fairytales. It helped pass the

time.
It took a while – two thousand, seven hundred and sixty one seconds to be precise – before the popping sounds and screams stopped. The building ceased its shudders, but the sirens still spun with a macabre red light while wailing. As melodies went, she preferred the occasional screaming.

And then, the alarm stopped. Dead silence took its place as even the prisoners clammed up, everyone straining to hear something. The lack of any noise proved even worse than the blaring horn.

The click and metallic clang of the door unlocking at the far end of the row saw her stepping back from the cell’s only opening. Trepidation weaved its icy tendrils through her frame and she chewed her lower lip. Who came?

Usually in an emergency, the inhabitants of the dungeon were the last to get checked on, the prisoners considered expendable. Something about this whole scenario didn’t seem right.

The thump of feet –
one, two, three…
– signaled someone

 

came. “Oh my god, he’s got a gun,” an inmate screamed.

 

“And he’s covered in blood.”

 

“Welcome, death. I’ve been waiting,” blubbered the

 

blob. None of the comments inspired confidence, and Project

took another step back.
“Holy freaking nightmare!” The curse, uttered in a
gravelly voice sent shivers down her spine. She didn’t recognize
the owner of the voice, another bad sign.
Feeling suddenly faint, she huddled into a ball in the
corner of her cell, trying to drown out the echoing pops that
preceded the clank and creak of bars being swung open, the
muttered expletives, the harsh sobs as her cellmates met the
man with the deep voice.
Has death finally come for us?
Project squeezed her eyes tight and clenched her fists,
straining to call her other shape.
Go-go, shapeshifting animal.
She sighed, as once again, she
flunked Morphing 101.
I am the most pathetic shapeshifter ever.
It
seemed her lack of ability to switch meant she would meet death
without even a chance to fight. Her own fault, she guessed.
I did
wish for some excitement.
But still, this was kind of extreme. She
would have settled for a book.

*

Viktor shot the lock off the last cell, already cringing at what he’d probably find inside. The other locked and dank rooms with their contents would haunt him forever, the occupants, pitiful experiments gone wrong. Horribly wrong. Any semblance to humanity, any remnant of sanity, long gone.
The mastermind will pay for this.

At least now, the prisoners, blubbering messes who kept begging him to kill them, could get the help they needed. Everyone owed a big round of thanks to the FUC agent who deciphered the riddle of the mastermind’s location. Jessie, their resident swan geek and tech expert, was the one who discovered Moreau Island Industries.

On the surface, the establishment seemed legit, a laboratory for the testing and creation of hemorrhoid medication and cough syrup. But, a furtive investigation of the premises showed large numbers of shifters and mercenaries, disguised as guards, scattered about. FUC – which stood for Furry United Coalition, a group of shapeshifters dedicated to protecting their kind – along with the Avian Airforce – led by Jessie’s dad, the swan king – mobilized their forces and struck within days of verification.

Less than an hour ago, Viktor led the troops into the ground fight to capture the hidden lab. He, and the others under his command, battled the human mercenaries. Killed the renegade shifters, and found a nightmare under several hidden levels of basements.

What kind of shifter experimented and tortured his own kind? The mastermind did, that was who. Yet, once again, FUC arrived too late to apprehend the foul villain.
But he can’t run forever.
One day, the mastermind would slip up, and they’d pounce on the bastard, putting an end to his evil regime once and for all.

In the meantime, though, they had victims to help. Even now he could hear the gasps of surprise and murmurs of pity as some of the agents filtered into the basement prison. He only hoped they had enough room to transport them all.

Viktor swung open the final door in the macabre dungeon and braced himself for another nightmare. The lack of stench surprised him. All the other cells stank of waste and rot. Perhaps they’d cleaned this one out, their victim mercifully succumbing to the call of death.

A step into the room and at first he thought it empty, until he caught a whisper of movement. Turning his head to the left, he noted a huddled form in the corner lift a head crowned with tangled red curls and a gaze that glowed, bright and golden. The eyes blinked, and even though he couldn’t see the face for the mess of hair, Viktor found himself enthralled with the luminous beauty of the orbs peering at him.

“Can you talk?” he asked when the female, had to be with those long lashes, kept staring at him. “It’s okay. You’re safe now. I’ve come to rescue you.”

“Safe?” She spoke the word questioningly. Perhaps she didn’t believe rescue had finally arrived.
“Yes, safe.”
“Are you…” She paused, her soft voice fading. She scrambled to her feet, a dirty gown falling to her knees and molding to curves that raised her from his first impression of a child to woman, a tall woman, who just about matched him in height. Viktor forced his gaze from her shapely frame to her face with its delicate features. She lifted her pointed chin, some of her hair falling away from a grubby face adorned with a pert nose and full lips. Staring him boldly in the eye, she said, “Are you my father?”
God, he hoped not, because that would make his body’s response totally inappropriate. Sanity reaffirmed itself. “Of course I’m not your father. Don’t you remember who you are?” She cocked her head. “I am Project X081.”
He recoiled from the impersonal tag she used. “But what about before they began experimenting on you? What was your name then?”
A frown creased her brow. “Before? I was born here. Have always lived here.”
The very idea appalled him. He held out his hand. “Come with me then, and see what freedom is.”
Slender fingers slipped into his and Viktor almost yanked his hand away as awareness of her slammed into him. He fought it as he led her back through the dungeon housing so many failures and one sexy enigma. He let her tuck into him when they passed other agents as they searched the compound for

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