Authors: Lolita Lopez
mole.”
“I already know that she worked very closely with the
Red Feather,” Terror countered. “It’s one step from
political dissidence to terrorism.”
Behind them, Vicious cleared his throat. “I wouldn’t
go that far, Terror. The Red Feather has done a lot of
good. They’ve worked with us quite a bit in the last few
months and provided a great deal of intel and aid.”
months and provided a great deal of intel and aid.”
“Naya’s cover as some simple girl from Connor’s Run
who ran a pawnshop and does good works for the Red
Feather doesn’t jibe with the truth, Vee.” Terror held out
his hand and Torment slapped an oversized and
overfiled brown folder into it. “I got her police records.
This woman is no stranger to trouble.”
The folder hit the countertop jutting out from beneath
the one-way mirror. Terror started whipping out paper
arrest records and photographs. “She has two arrests for
theft as a child. She was picked up for smuggling
medicine and technology as a teenager but managed to
escape before she could be booked or processed. I
suspect her Red Feather friends bounced her from the
police station and helped her disappear.”
Menace stared at the arrest photographs of Naya.
Painfuly thin and with hair cut as short as a boy’s, the
adolescent Naya wore il-fitting men’s clothing. It
occurred to him that she’d probably taken on a boy’s
persona while living on the streets to protect herself from
kidnapping or rape. The expression of defiance on her
face didn’t surprise him.
Terror didn’t stop there. “She was suspected of being
part of a gunrunning ring out of The City. They tried to
part of a gunrunning ring out of The City. They tried to
sweep her up in their stings, but she managed to evade
them four times. The fifth time she wasn’t so lucky.”
A booking photo of an older Naya, maybe eighteen or
nineteen, hit the counter. A black eye and split lip marred
her beautiful face. She wore only a man’s tank top and
low-cut panties in the photograph. By the look of her
mussed hair, she’d been roused from bed and hauled in
for questioning. Bruises were already forming on her
upper arms and neck. He shuddered to think what kind
of violent pigs had put their hands on her.
“She told me al this.” Menace lifted his gaze to
Terror’s face. “Not the part about the guns but the rest
of it.” He didn’t add how much it hurt him that she’d kept
this vital piece of information from him.
“And did she tel you about her family? About her
brother and her mother?”
Menace nodded. “Her mother ran off when she was
six. Her brother abandoned her when she was a
teenager.”
Terror laughed with disbelief. “Wel I guess that’s one
way of putting it, huh?”
“What the hel is that supposed to mean?”
“What the hel is that supposed to mean?”
“It means she lied to you, Menace.” Terror retrieved
two photographs and rap sheets. The similarities between
the older woman and younger man and Naya were
striking. “This is Naya’s mother, Amalie. She’s now the
most notorious gunrunner in this sector and lives in The
City, not sixty miles from Naya’s shop in Connor’s Run.
Her late husband was the leader of the Sixer gang, a
violent group of thugs who work with the Splinters. This
is Nattie, her older brother. Our most recent intel says
he’s become a drug-addicted loser but he stil provides
muscle for his mama.”
Menace didn’t know what to say. Numbness spread
through his body. That night in his kitchen when Naya
had spoken of her family, the pain on her face and in her
voice had been so real. Was she realy that good an
actress? More importantly, was he realy that stupid?
Could he have been such an easy mark?
“The files from the secret police tel us that Naya
started off doing smal jobs for the Red Feather to eat
and survive on the streets. When she was thirteen or
fourteen, she started getting jobs from the Sixers to run
guns. They were smal shipments at first, but she was
very good. Soon she was making a great deal of money.
very good. Soon she was making a great deal of money.
How else do you think a homeless orphan girl got her
hands on the cash necessary to fund a pawnshop at
eighteen?”
Menace didn’t have an answer. He remembered their
conversation about the gun shipment. What had she said?
They couldn’t ensure the safety of every shipment? Was
that her coded way of teling him that her people were
going to steal the weapons?
Betrayal surged through him. The burning pain of it
threatened to choke the life right out of him. He’d bought
her sob story hook, line and sinker. He’d believed that
she was the one. When Flare had wanted to take her
away from him, he had fought for her. After showing her
nothing but kindness and love and patience, she had lied
to him.
Terror put both hands on his shoulders. “I have to
question her. Legaly she’s stil your property and I have
to ask permission. I’m teling you right now that I won’t
hesitate to go above Vee’s head to get that permission
granted. Please,” Terror said gently, “give me permission.
Let me help you. I can’t keep you out of prison, but I
can save your life if you give her up. Show some
cooperation.”
cooperation.”
Menace reeled with the awfulness of it al. There was
no choice here. Even if he said no, even if he tried to
protect the woman he’d grown to love so deeply, Terror
would make one subspace satelite cal and get
permission to do whatever he wanted to Naya. If he said
yes, maybe he could spare her some ugliness.
“I won’t alow Torment to put his hands on her,”
Vicious said quietly. “She may be a terrorist, but I won’t
alow a woman to be tortured on this ship.”
Staring at her, Menace couldn’t believe she’d fooled
him so easily. Had anything they’d shared been real?
Was it al a ruse? He didn’t think so. She couldn’t fake
their connection. She couldn’t fake the depth of affection
they shared when they made love.
But his love for her couldn’t overcome the awful truth.
Knowingly or unknowingly, he’d fed information to a
mole, and men, his brothers-in-arms, had been kiled.
The guilt of that would eat away at him until he drew his
last breath.
“Interrogate her.”
Terror let loose a relieved a breath. He clapped
Menace’s shoulder. “I’m sorry it went this way, Menace.
Menace’s shoulder. “I’m sorry it went this way, Menace.
I never wanted—”
“I know.” Deep down inside, he hoped she had a
good reason for betraying him. It wouldn’t make it any
easier to swalow but maybe he could learn to
understand it. Menace kept his gaze fixed on Naya,
trying to remember every detail of the face that had
ensnared him. There was no doubt in his mind. Once he
left this room, he would never see his wife again.
“Take him to another room and get his statement,
Torment. When you’re done, transfer custody to the
general.”
Torment grabbed his arm. “This way, Menace. I’l
make this quick and painless.”
Menace didn’t appreciate the galows humor. Head
hung with shame, he refused to meet Vicious’
compassionate gaze. He’d put every soldier and airman
in this sector at risk. Compassion wasn’t something he
deserved or even wanted.
Vicious grasped his shoulder and gave it a reassuring
squeeze. “It wil be al right, Menace.”
But it wouldn’t be.
Naya glanced at the door again. Her legs ached from
being seated so long. She’d tried bouncing her feet up
and down to maintain blood flow, but that only made her
ankles and arches burn. She needed to use the restroom
and her mouth was incredibly dry. Her stomach rumbled
with hunger and reminded her about the brunch date with
Halie she’d missed.
The room’s stark white wals and painfuly bright lights
made her slightly dizzy. A sensation of claustrophobia
crept into her chest. She inhaled slowly and folded her
arms on the table. She leaned forward and rested her
cheek on them.
Breathe. Just breathe.
How long had it been since she was separated from
Menace? Three hours? Four? She couldn’t tel. It
definitely felt that long. Was he in trouble? She prayed
that he would be spared. Whatever she’d done in her
past, it had nothing to do with Menace.
Eyes closed, she fought the urge to laugh at the irony
of her situation. Just last night she’d been “interrogated”
senseless. Now she shivered with fear at the very real
senseless. Now she shivered with fear at the very real
prospect of her fantasy becoming a true nightmare.
The door suddenly hissed and beeped as the locks
disengaged. Her stomach lurched but she muscled down
the urge to puke. She had to keep it together. Menace
would find a way to save her. She may not have trusted
him enough to tel al her secrets to him, but he had to
know how much she loved him. He was going to be
angry when he learned about what she’d done al those
years ago, but he would find a way to protect her. He
wasn’t her mother or her brother or any of the other
people who had let her down. He was Menace—and he
loved her. She believed that with every fiber of her being.
With al the swagger of a man who was untouchable,
Terror entered the interrogation cel. Another man
flanked him, this one sporting a battered face and injured
arm. He took up a position near the door. Terror strode
toward her. He had a brown folder clamped under one
arm and a tablet in the other hand. The folder she
recognized. She’d seen the same ones down in The City
and Connor’s Run when she’d been arrested.
“Sorry to keep you waiting,” Terror said and dropped
into the chair across from her. He placed the folder and
into the chair across from her. He placed the folder and
tablet on the table. “Interrogating Menace took longer
than I’d anticipated.”
His words hit her like a punch to the gut. She didn’t
dare let her expression change. She pushed down the
fear she felt for Menace and tried to keep a handle on
her emotions. Menace and Terror were friends. He
wouldn’t put his friend through an interrogation.
He’s
playing you.
“That’s Pierce. He’s one of my agents.” Terror
reached into his pocket and produced a smal piece of
candy. He took his time unwrapping and popping it into
his mouth. Totaly relaxed, he leaned back in his chair.
“I’m sure you’ve figured it out by now but I’m not
exactly a logistics clerk.”
“No! Realy? I’m shocked.” Past experience told her
the smart-ass routine was a quick way to catch a boot to
the face or worse but she couldn’t help herself. Sarcasm
had always been her default setting in times of fear.
“I’m sure you read me as easily as I read you.
Pawnshop girl from Connor’s Run?” He snorted. “I
hardly think so.”
Terror’s remark sent a quiver of doubt through her.
What, exactly, did Terror think her guilty of doing?
What, exactly, did Terror think her guilty of doing?
“Your radar seems to have a glitch, Terror. I realy am
just a pawnshop girl from Connor’s Run.”
He crunched the candy between his teeth. His
unwavering stare unnerved her. “This doesn’t have to
end badly, Naya. You can come clean right now and I
can pul some strings at your sentencing. Cooperate and
I’l show my gratitude.”
Sentencing? Naya’s heartbeat sped up but she tried to
regain control of her body.
“Tel me about the Grab.”
She blinked. “What?”
“Tel me about the Grab.”
“It was cool that morning. I was wearing shorts. I had
my hair in a ponytail. I ran with my friend Jennie. There
were lots of birds. It was sort of overcast.” She rattled
on at the mouth. “Have I told you enough?”
Terror clicked his teeth and sat forward. She fought
the urge to shrink back in her chair. Showing him
weakness would give him an easy victory.
“I know you weren’t on the original list. Your number
wasn’t puled in the lottery. You bought your way onto
the list. Why?”
the list. Why?”