The Dope Man
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
Compra ahora por $4.99
-
Narrado por:
-
Virtual Voice
-
De:
-
Prophet X
-
Dell Sweet
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Their briefing had been delivered by a man whose face was perpetually shrouded in shadow, his voice a low, emotionless drone. There were no pleasantries, no wasted words. The information was delivered with an economy that spoke of a system that valued efficiency above all else. Murk’s profile was minimal: a former operative, a ghost from a past he’d tried to erase, now resurfaced with a child and a valuable commodity. The stolen goods were not merely merchandise; they represented leverage, a piece of information that could destabilize rival factions or expose inconvenient truths. Their recovery was non-negotiable. The problem, Murk, was to be dealt with permanently. The syndicate did not tolerate loose ends, especially those that threatened to unravel carefully constructed empires.
Silas and Rook began their pursuit not by following the road Murk had taken, but by anticipating it. They knew the syndicate’s network. They knew the patterns of movement, the likely escape routes. They didn’t need to be told every turn; they intuited them. They utilized a network of informants, a silent web spun throughout the city's underbelly, each person a potential pair of eyes, a whisper in the right ear. These weren’t informants bribed with cash alone; they were often people indebted to the syndicate, bound by fear, by obligation, or by a shared history of transgression.
Silas stood on a rooftop overlooking a grimy industrial district, the air thick with the metallic tang of exhaust fumes and decay. He held a small, almost invisible earpiece, his gaze scanning the distant highway that snaked away from Havenwood. Rook stood a few yards behind him, a shadow against the flickering sodium lamps, his broad shoulders hunched as if carrying the weight of the city itself.
“The description is thin,” Silas murmured, his voice barely a whisper, yet carrying the authority of command. “Male, mid-thirties, average build, dark hair. Carrying a child. Vehicle: dark sedan, make and model unknown, stolen. Objective: retrieve package, neutralize target.” He paused, letting the grim finality of the words settle in the night air. “The courier was sloppy. Left a trail, albeit a faint one.”
Rook grunted, a low rumble in his chest. He didn’t need specifics. He understood the essence of their mission. The ‘package’ was what mattered. The ‘target’ was secondary, a consequence of the primary objective. His focus was on the tangible, the recovery. The abstract notion of ‘problem elimination’ was his domain, but it was always in service to the material.