Authors: Parker Blue,P. J. Bishop,Evelyn Vaughn,Jodi Anderson,Laura Hayden,Karen Fox
Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Literature & Fiction, #Anthologies, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy & Futuristic, #Anthologies & Short Stories, #Paranormal & Urban
but despite his one-handed efforts, she slumped to the floor. His stomach
seized, anticipating more reactions, perhaps even a deadly one. But checking
her vitals, her strong heartbeat brought him a small measure of relief.
However, what worried him most was the sudden look of pain filling her
face.
No, maybe not pain. Maybe that was simply what it looked like when
someone changed.
She cracked open one eye. “Wh-what’s going on?” she managed to grit
out.
“Your face is trying to change, but you’re going to have to give it
direction.” It was an overly simplistic explanation but the only one he had at
the moment
“What do I do?”
Jon tried to put his own process into words, but he’d been doing it
automatically for so many years, it was hard to break it down into simplistic
steps. “It’s not a matter of looking like someone in particular—just not like
yourself. Work on your features one at a time. Hair color, eye color, facial
shape, skin color. All you have to do is change your face, not your height or
your body shape.”
She squeezed her eyes shut and hunched forward in obvious
concentration. After a few moments, he watched her blond hair darken and
shorten until it just grazed her shoulders. Her face structure morphed,
giving her higher cheek bones, erasing almost ten years from her age,
making her look too young for a club like this .
Or maybe like someone who could jeopardize a liquor license unless
she was immediately escorted out of the building.
“That’ll work. I can sell the fact you’re underage and need to be tossed
out. Can you stand up?” He held out his good hand and steadied her as she
rose shakily to her feet. “Let’s get out of here.”
Serenity had difficulty moving at first. Evidently, she’d made a few
alternations to her body and now had to adapt to a different height and
proportions. But the dire necessity of the situation helped her adjust on the
fly. Soon she moved in a more natural and almost smooth gait.
“You’re doing great,” he said in honest encouragement. He
remembered suffering many uncoordinated moments after his first change.
“Once we get onto the floor, if we get separated, you head to the car. Still
have the keys?”
She fished around in her skirt pocket which had luckily remained intact.
“Yes.”
“Lock yourself inside and hide in the back seat. We don’t know how
long the effect is on someone normal.” Or what the consequences might be
once it wore off.
“What about you?”
“I’ll hide in a crowd if I have to. But I’ll find you.”
As they reached the door to the main floor, they could hear the music
and voices beyond. Serenity placed her hand on the knob, but Jon stopped
her.
“Before we go, one thing—”
She kissed him.
In his mind’s eye, he was kissing the face he was familiar with, rather
than this different and much younger edition. And she was responding as
Serenity would—a bit hesitant but soon embracing the concept, sharing a
brief moment of measured passion. When she broke away, her borrowed
features sported a rosy blush.
“That’s for luck,” she said in a hoarse voice as she gently touched his
cheek.
Jon did everything he could to suppress the resulting shiver of desire.
He found his real voice. “Let’s double our chances of success.” He pulled
out one of the pill bottles. “Take this one.”
Serenity complied, tucking the bottle into her pocket. He reached into
his coat and held out the lab reports, but she pushed them away. “Don’t.
You keep them. It’s better that way.” She tried to give him a smile of
assurance. “Don’t worry. We’ll both make it.”
“I hope to hell we do. Ready?”
When she nodded, he opened the door, and they stepped out.
JUST AS JON FEARED, they’d walked into a big complication.
Plains-clothed security personnel were running a sweep through the main
floor, casing the crowd, probably looking for Worth. The moment they
spotted their “boss,” they split, half continuing the sweep, the other moving
through the crowd toward him and Serenity.
“Shit,” he said under his breath. “They saw us. They probably have
orders to protect Iceman.” He leaned closer to Serenity and whispered,
“Change in plans. The jailbait bit isn’t going to work.”
“Now what?” she asked, her fingers tightening on his arm.
“See that door?” He nodded toward the main entrance to the room.
“Work your way over there. In a minute, there’s going to be a stampede
toward the exit. You need to blend in with the first few people who exit,
before things get rowdy. Then once you’re outside, get to the car.”
“I’m not going to leave without you.”
“I’ll only be thirty seconds behind you.”
“What’s your plan?”
“Pull the alarm and trigger that stampede. But I won’t do it until you’re
in position.”
When she reached over and grabbed his hand, instead of a sudden
explosion of sensation, there was a continuous thrum as if a more
permanent connection had been made between them.
“We’re going to succeed, Jon. I just know it,” she said, her voice full of
the confidence that he lacked. The smile she gave him made her look less
like a teenager in the wrong place and more like a twenty-something in the
wrong place. That’s when he realized she’d managed to age her features, a
skill that had taken him years to master.
For one fleeting moment, he wondered what impossible shifts he could
achieve under the influence of Glue. But as soon as the thought formed, he
batted it away, berating himself for entertaining such a notion.
“Go,” he said, nodding toward the door.
“Thirty seconds?”
“Promise.”
Serenity broke away, slipping into the crowd. While she escaped, Jon
worked his way to the closest fire alarm, making small changes to his
features as he shouldered his way between the clusters of people. As he
made his minute alterations, he realized his crushed fingers had already
healed and were functional again, a welcomed side-effect of the Glue.
However, his plan to use the alarm as a diversion fizzled when a security
guard stationed himself next to it.
Jon hated his fallback plan; it was risky and dangerous. But it was the
only avenue of action he had. So he waited as long as he could to give
Serenity a chance to get closer to the exit, and then he acted.
“Gun!” he yelled and pointed across the room. Heads turned toward
him and then toward the direction he indicated. With most of the room
distracted, he reached into his pocket, pulled out Iceman’s weapon. Leaning
into the wall to shield his actions, he fired three shots, angling them into the
place where wall and floor met and hoping to avoid collateral damage.
As expected, panic ensued. Men yelled, women screamed. People rose
en masse and surged toward the exits. Several patrons drew their own guns,
but to Jon’s relief, no one fired. However, with everyone trying to exit
simultaneously, a bottleneck formed, ramping up the panic. People began
pushing and shoving to escape. He prayed Serenity had gotten out in the
first wave and was headed to safety. But his plans to escape undetected died
when the real Iceman stumbled through the door next to him.
“What th’ hell?” Iceman glared at Jon in confusion and shock.
That hesitation gave Jon enough time to react and plow a fist into the
man’s gut. As Iceman doubled over, Jon slammed him in the temple with
the gun’s butt. Thanks to the general hysteria, no one noticed the assault or
the large man that Jon deposited into a nearby chair. With Iceman
incapacitated, Jon turned away and ducked into the surging crowd.
Maybe it was the adrenaline.
Maybe it was the proximity of so many faces to borrow. In any case, as
the crowd rushed toward the exit, Jon managed to steal enough from other
men to change himself from Iceman into a homogenous version of those
around him.
Now, essentially anonymous, he moved with the group toward, then
through, the exit. Once outside, he resisted the urge to break out into a run
and instead, stayed in the middle of a pack of evacuated patrons who were
going in the right direction.
Once he reached the car, he peered through the side window but didn’t
see Serenity at first. After a few scary seconds, he made out the overcoat
lumped in the floorboards. He knocked on the glass. “It’s me. Jon. Open
up.”
The lump shifted, then Serenity peered out from beneath the garment.
Her slow smile of recognition and relief triggered something in him he
hadn’t felt in a very long time.
When the door unlocked, Jon slid into the driver’s seat.
“You made it,” she said, still breathless. “Thank God.”
“Give me the keys.”
She complied, and he started the car.
“What do we do now?” she asked.
He gunned the engine. “Get the hell out of here.”
As Serenity pushed herself off the floorboards and climbed up to the
back seat, she tried to tell herself the danger was over. They’d escaped with
the formula and the pills, and hopefully it wouldn’t take long to figure out
how to create an antidote or find a way to break the addiction. Until then,
they could provide the drugs to the shapeshifters so they wouldn’t be
dependent on whoever ended up with control of the club.
“Do you think—”
Jon slammed on the brakes. She lost balance and fell to the floor again.
“What are we stopping for?” she asked as she pulled herself back up into the
seat.
He nodded toward the windshield. “Him.”
After she righted herself, she realized he meant David, who was
standing in the middle of the road and pointing a gun at them.
“Just play along. He saw you, but he doesn’t know it’s
you
. Just let me do
the talking. Okay?” He rolled down the driver’s side window. “Thought you
ran out on me, Worth.”
David moved closer then lowered the gun. “Craft?” It took a moment
or two for David’s look of challenge to fade to relief. “Thank God. I
thought you were someone else who boosted the car.” He ran around the
front of the car and jumped into passenger seat. “Sorry. I got jumped before
I could do anything. Were you successful?”
Jon slammed the car in gear and took off. “Yeah.”
David straightened in his seat. “You mean you got it?”
“Formula was in the safe, just like you said.”
“Let me see.”
Jon shook his head. “No. We’ll be keeping it.”
“We?” David looked over the shoulder at Serenity. “Damn, you work
fast. Hello beautiful. Who are you?”
Before Serenity could speak, Jon jumped in. “She helped me get out.
I’m returning the favor.”
Sirens punctuated the air as a string of fire engines flew toward them in
the opposite lane. Jon slowed and waited until the vehicles passed and the
sound died away before he sped up. “Who’s Tanaka?”
Serenity watched David’s shoulders tense. “Just a guy.”
“Just a guy trying to take over Sinema?”
Her ex had the audacity to shrug. “So I’ve heard. But I doubt Iceman
will sell.”
Jon slowed for a red light but didn’t stop, sailing through the empty
intersection. “Sinema won’t remain exclusive if you steal the Glue formula
and sell it to his competition.”
David’s laughter sounded forced. “True. But that’s the beauty of the
free enterprise system. You have to expect some competition every now and
then. It’s good for the economy.”
Serenity finally spoke. “For
your
economy, you mean.”
He turned halfway in his seat. “Who are you? Cherish? Devine?
Doesn’t matter. You remember what happened to Laila, don’t you? Loose
lips . . .” He touched his own lips with his forefinger.
“Just one problem.” Jon took the next corner at an ambitious speed,
forcing Serenity to fumble for the seat belt.
David fell toward the door. “Slow down, cowboy. What problem?”
“The formula works too well.”
“What do you mean?”
“Glue works on normal people, too. Gives them the ability to shift.”
David shook in laughter. “You’re crazy. That’s impossible.”
“No, it’s not.” Serenity found her natural voice. “It worked on me.”
“Huh?” David turned in his seat to glare at her.
The idea that she knew something David didn’t, made her sit up
straighter in her seat. “I said the drug allowed me to change, David.”
His glare faded into confusion and then curled into a smile. “Well, I’ll
be damned. Sere!” His second look was far less cursory, and he had audacity
to whistle. “I really like the new look.”
Serenity resisted the urge to slap her ex’s insufferable, smug face. “Why
didn’t you tell us that it affects regular people?”
Worth’s grin faded a bit. “Because it doesn’t. Trust me—we tried them
on regular people. All it did was make them sick.”
Serenity reached into her pocket and pulled out the plastic bottle.