Empire of Shadows: From Gutter to Godfather
Empire of Shadows: From Gutter to Godfather
Author: dbranch writes
Rats in the Rain
last update2025-10-18 07:58:46

Rain fell in sheets that swallowed the city whole. It drummed on rusted rooftops and ran through the cracks of forgotten alleys, washing the filth but never the sins of New Avalon. The night smelled of iron and rot—of old blood and old dreams.

Beneath the dripping bridge of Iron Alley, a boy crouched beside a dumpster, shivering. His name was Lucien Kane, ten years old, and invisible.

He’d been invisible since the day the world forgot his parents existed—two addicts who overdosed and left him a broken lighter and a debt to hunger. The orphanage spat him out when he stole bread. The streets took him in.

Now, the streets were his family. And like any family, they beat him, starved him, and whispered lies to him between the cracks of thunder.

Lucien’s thin fingers rummaged through garbage bags, pulling out a soggy bun that smelled of vinegar and decay. He wiped it on his sleeve and bit down anyway. The rainwater slid down his face like tears he didn’t have the luxury to shed.

Across the alley, another figure moved—short, wiry, with a grin that refused to die.

“Yo, Rat King,” the boy called. “You found dinner or a disease?”

Lucien smirked without looking up. “At least I found something, Rico.”

Rico jogged over, his patched jacket flapping like a tired flag. Together they huddled under a makeshift tarp of plastic and metal.

“Tomorrow,” Rico said through chattering teeth, “we hit the food trucks again. Word is, the night guards got lazy after last week’s rain.”

Lucien shook his head. “They’ll expect that. We go for the garbage behind them instead. Less risk, same food.”

Rico laughed. “You’re thinking like an old man again. Where’s your fire, Lucien?”

“It’s waiting,” Lucien said softly. His gaze drifted toward the distant glow of the city’s skyline—the towers of glass and money that loomed above their world like gods watching ants drown.

That was his first obsession: light. Not warmth, not love—light. The kind that came from power.


That night, they slept in shifts, as they always did. The city’s hum was their lullaby: sirens, engines, arguments, and the faint music of rain hitting corrugated metal.

When dawn cracked gray over Iron Alley, Lucien was already awake. Hunger had a way of waking you before dreams could find you.

He followed the smell of fried dough from the corner market. The food trucks were lining up, steam rising like ghosts. Rico trailed behind, bouncing a stolen marble in his palm.

“Just one truck,” Rico whispered. “We grab and run.”

Lucien nodded. “You run. I distract.”

It wasn’t bravery; it was logic. He was faster with words than feet.

As Rico slipped into the crowd, Lucien approached the truck, pretending to beg. The vendor cursed him off, but Lucien didn’t move. He waited until the guard turned his back—then Rico struck, snatching a bag of pastries and bolting through puddles.

Shouts followed. The guard chased, but Lucien stepped in his path, tripping him cleanly. He caught a blow to the ribs for it, but it bought Rico time to vanish into the maze of alleys.

When Lucien stumbled back to their hideout, bruised but alive, Rico was there waiting with two warm buns.

“You’re crazy, man,” Rico said, tearing one in half. “You could’ve died.”

Lucien smiled faintly. “Not today.”

“Why’d you do that anyway?”

Lucien stared into the rain outside their shelter. “Because someday, no one will hit me again. And I’ll choose who eats.”


That night, lightning clawed at the sky. The gutters overflowed, and the river turned black with oil. Lucien and Rico huddled closer to their small fire.

“Think anyone ever gets out of here?” Rico asked.

Lucien shrugged. “People leave Iron Alley all the time.”

“Yeah, in body bags.”

Lucien looked up at the distant skyline again. “Then I’ll build my own way out. Step by step. Brick by bloody brick.”

Rico laughed. “You? A king? What’ll they call you—Lord of the Rats?”

Lucien’s eyes didn’t flinch from the firelight. “Maybe. But rats survive where lions starve.”

The wind howled. Somewhere, a gunshot echoed like a promise.


Two weeks later, Iron Alley woke to death.

Rico lay face-down in a puddle near the warehouse district, his pockets turned inside out, his blood mixing with rainwater.

Lucien found him before the cops did. He knelt in the mud, staring at the boy who used to laugh at hunger. The world around him blurred into silence, except for the sound of rain tapping on metal.

Someone had slit Rico’s throat clean—professional. A message.

On the wall behind him, scrawled in red spray paint, were three words:
“The Rats Rule.”

Lucien didn’t cry. He didn’t shout. He just stood there, letting the rain wash his hands until the water turned pink.

That night, he went to Old Marla’s junk shop. The old woman squinted at him from behind her curtain of cigarette smoke.

“You’ve got murder in your eyes, boy,” she said. “Careful. It stains worse than grease.”

Lucien said nothing. He placed Rico’s old marble on the counter.

Marla exhaled a cloud of gray. “So it begins, huh?”

He nodded. “Tell me who runs the Rats.”

She chuckled dryly. “You think names will save you?”

“No,” Lucien said. “But they’ll die with me.”

Her laughter faded. For the first time, she saw the boy not as a rat—but as something else. Something coiled and waiting.

“Fine,” she whispered. “Their leader’s called Briggs. Runs the warehouse district. Deals in stolen tech, girls, and souls. But you didn’t hear that from me.”

Lucien turned to leave.

“Wait,” Marla called. “You got no weapon.”

Lucien looked down at his trembling hands. “I’ll find one.”


The next day, the boy who once begged in puddles followed the river through Iron Alley’s veins. He watched, listened, and learned. Every corner had eyes, but no one saw him.

He found Briggs in the back of a warehouse—drunk, laughing, surrounded by his men. Lucien hid in the rafters, watching.

He memorized their routines, their weaknesses. Every insult, every cruelty.

By the third night, he knew enough.

He waited until the rain came again, covering his footsteps.

He slipped through the shadows, stole a knife from the kitchen, and crept toward Briggs’s quarters.

But before he reached the door, a voice whispered behind him.

“You lost, rat?”

Lucien spun. A guard loomed, huge and mean, eyes full of mockery.

Lucien’s hand trembled—but only once. Then he drove the knife upward, fast and silent, into the man’s throat.

The sound it made was small and wet.

Lucien stood over the body, breathing hard. For the first time, he understood power—not the kind in stories, but the kind that hums under your skin after the world stops breathing.

He pushed the door open. Briggs was snoring on a couch, bottle in hand.

Lucien stepped closer, raised the knife, and whispered, “For Rico.”

The cut was quick.

When the thunder rolled, it sounded like applause.


Lucien walked out into the rain. The city shimmered under streetlights, silver and cruel. He left no footprints.

Behind him, Iron Alley burned—the warehouse a pyre for the life he’d buried.

Old Marla watched from her window as the boy disappeared into the smoke.

“Good God,” she murmured. “The rats found their king.”


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