guys—you’d better cool it as wel . Here.” Alex tossed the sat phone across
the table to Daklin. “I’l be back after I’ve reamed him a new one.”
He attempted shimmering to intercept Ginsberg. Couldn’t teleport. “God
damn it.”
Kiersted, who’d moved to an easy chair and a three-day-old newspaper,
glanced up. “What?”
“My powers are FUBAR. Just tried to shimmer. Can’t do it.”
The newspaper was put down, as Kiersted gave him a narrow-eyed look.
“You’re shitting me. Why not?”
Alex shrugged. “Anything like this ever happen to you?”
“No, thank God. Has it happened before?”
“Has what happened before?” Lexi asked, arms laden with white paper
bags. She headed to the table, followed by Lu, similarly burdened. Alex’s
mouth watered at the savory aromas of the food.
Christ. He hadn’t wanted to make this public knowledge—but . . . What
the hel . “My powers are flickering.”
Lexi’s head jerked up, her gray eyes concerned. “What does that mean?
Does it hurt? Is it serious . . .”
“I don’t know how serious it is,” Alex admitted. “I wasn’t actually going to
fil you all in on the situation while we’re here. This has been going on for
the past several weeks. Not just my ability to teleport—Remember when
we were outside the National Palace Museum? Tried to shimmer before
the explosion. Couldn’t do it.”
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Night Shadow
He stuffed his fingers into his front pockets. “I’ve had problems off and on
with invisibility, too, of course. Every power is apparently short-circuiting
to some degree. Turned down an op in Greece because my amphibious
powers didn’t work at all for a while. Yet I was able to make use of a small
amount in Rio. Unpredictable, to say the least.”
“What about your Temporal acceleration?” Kiersted asked with a frown.
This revelation had more impact on Kiersted, a fel ow wizard, than it
would have on either Lexi or Daklin.
“Hasn’t worked—at all—” he admitted. “Not even a flicker for three
weeks.”
“Holy hel .” Kiersted slid his chair back. “Think this is contagious?”
“Not that I know of.”
Lexi hadn’t moved from her position on the other side of the table, but he
felt her empathy as if she were physically touching him. “Alex, what are
you going to do?”
He blew out a deep breath. “I sent a message to Duncan Edge, Head of
the Wizard Council, when we got to Germany last night. I was hoping this
would pass, but it’s—Shit. It’s getting worse, not better. I can’t depend on
my powers.”
Her brows puckered. “Do you have a—wizard doctor of some sort?”
“Yeah, there are doctors who are wizards, and of course I’l consult
someone.
After
I talk with Edge and see if anyone else has reported this
anomaly. Also left a message for Mason Knight. He might be able to shed
some light on this.” Alex shook his head. “Look, let’s eat. My power
outage won’t be resolved here, and we could get a call and have to
mobilize any minute.”
“How wil you mobilize if you can’t teleport?” Lexi asked reasonably.
“Same way you and Daklin do, if I can’t manage it.” He could practically
hear her agile brain working as she finished hauling take-out boxes out of
the bags.
Her eyes were clear and direct as she asked, “Want me to go and tell
Ginsberg the food’s here?”
“No.” Alex pulled out a chair for her. Out of sight, he brushed his
fingertips across her back as she sat down and was rewarded by her small
shiver. “He was sent to his room without dinner as punishment for being
an ass.”
Turning to look at him over her shoulder, Lexi grinned. “Bad Ruben, bad
bad
Ruben, no
Ling Mung Gai
for him.”
Her smile did something weird to Alex’s insides. His heart double-clutched
and an unfamiliar warmth seemed to permeate his entire being.
He was so fucked.
Ten
Sydney Opera House
Daklin, their bomb expert, was off inspecting nooks and crannies with his
toys, hunting traces of any explosives secreted away. In what amounted
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Night Shadow
to eleven acres of floor space, including six thousand seats in five
theaters, several restaurants, rehearsal halls, sixty dressing rooms,
extensive plant and machinery rooms and all the admin offices, it was a
monumental task.
Good thing he had a large chunk of Sydney’s police force and a dozen
bomb-sniffing dogs, as well as the building’s excel ent security people,
working with him.
Lexi stood with the rest of the team in the back of the Concert Hall,
watching the people and dogs scattered across the building scurrying
around like ants. She shoved her fingertips into the front pockets of her
baggy black cargo pants. “I don’t want to sound pessimistic,” she said
soberly. “But even with all that manpower, I don’t know how they’d find
an explosive device in such an enormous structure. This building is packed
with thousands of hiding places.”
“No idea if the tangos already planted an incendiary device, or not. But I
sense the Trace, indicating the presence of a large number of Halfs. And
recently. They weren’t visiting to hear the symphony. Still, it’s a
challenge,” Alex said dryly.
No shit, Sherlock.
“A wizard can go through this place in less than half the time,” Lu told
Lexi, obviously reading her skepticism. “And we have about a hundred
wizards with the Sydney PD. If anything’s here, they’l find it. Quickly.”
“Or the whole fucking place wil blow, and the city wil lose a landmark.
But there won’t be any people kil ed,” Ginsberg said, rubbing his forehead
as if he had a headache. “That’s gotta be a plus.”
Lexi didn’t think Australians would be quite so blasé about their precious
Opera House being reduced to rubble. She gave Ginsberg a considering
glance. He was an ass. She hated to complain, but if he kept on the way
he was going she was going to take him aside and have a serious
operative-to-operative chat. Maybe Alex hadn’t been able to give him an
attitude adjustment yet. Or didn’t want to. She figured she could give it a
shot.
Through the doors opening into the outside lobby Lexi heard several of the
dogs barking. Bomb-sniffing dogs. The place was being gone over with a
fine-tooth comb. And then again with an even finer comb that could
cleave a nit’s ass in half.
“Possibly, they want to demolish a world landmark, not the people inside.”
Kiersted rested a hip against a seat back. “The planet would definitely sit
up and take notice if the Sydney Opera House went bang.”
Lexi frowned. “It seems like being here’s a stretch. It doesn’t fit their
MO—”
“Nothing’s a stretch as far as tangos go,” Alex said curtly, cutting her off.
“Everywhere else they’ve hit has seen extensive property destruction
and
massive collateral damage. Something doesn’t fit.” A persistent itch was
building on her neck.
She was stil surveying the activity when Alex muttered something in his
sat phone, then clipped it to his belt.
70
Night Shadow
“Ginsberg. Stone. Go help get them out of here.” Standing in the middle
of the tiers of velvet-covered seats in the empty Concert Hall, Alex
indicated the Copenhagen Royal Chapel Choir rehearsing onstage. The
kids and adults making up the group were here an hour ahead of
schedule, Lexi knew. The place was supposed to be empty.
Alerted by Alex to the potential terrorist threat, in-house security had
called in reinforcements to assist the team with evacuation of all
personnel and performers as quickly and quietly as possible. Uniformed
police officers and Opera House security personnel moved with purpose
through the auditorium. Weapons and bomb identification equipment were
everywhere.
Lexi ran her gaze over the men searching each row of the large theater,
the people milling about in the aisles, the choir stil in rehearsal, and
apparently—so far anyway—oblivious to what was going on beyond the
lights onstage. No one moved quickly. No one was panicking.
She frowned. This was way too laid-back. Way too easy.
Dealing with tangos was never this clean and neat. She’d studied enough
data to know that. Had their conclusion been wrong? They’d had the bar
code on the guy’s arm. No mistaking the lon gitude and latitude. That was
all they had to work with. The Sydney Opera House was an international
landmark . . . She saw the logic in the Opera House as the possible target,
but the pieces didn’t match. It was like looking at a jigsaw puzzle where
the pieces all fit, but the images on top weren’t lining up correctly. The
picture just didn’t make sense.
Evacuating a couple of hundred people in six hours was nothing. Yet her
stomach and her gut told her not to dil y-dal y. Lexi trusted her instincts.
The same instincts had served her wel as a kid. They’d warned her hours
before her parents made a middle-of-the-night, one-step-ahead-of-the
creditors run for it. That sixth sense had allowed her time to grab up a
favorite toy, or article of clothing in the nick of time.
One part of her was sure that she and Alex and the team were in the
wrong place at the wrong time. The other part of her wanted everyone out
of the building ASAP because something unimaginable was about to go
down. And why was Alex sticking her with Ginsberg when he knew they
were having issues?
Was he trying to have them tough it out or put her in her place as a
rookie? Perhaps the amazing, illicit sex in the early hours of the morning
had fractured her brain, because none of it made sense.
“Got a problem, Stone?” Alex asked, shooting her an indecipherable look.
He looked tall and grim as he addressed her. Like the rest of them, he was
dressed in black, his weapon holstered in plain sight. At least the Glock
was in plain sight. His other weapons were more discreet. And not all of
them had been issued by T-FLAC.
They might both be all business, but having Alex’s hot green gaze focused
on her made Lexi vividly and viscerally remember where his hands, his
mouth, and his penis, had been mere hours before.
Got a problem?
Hel
yes. She did. But since she couldn’t figure out what her problem
was,
she
shook her head. Ginsberg was way ahead of her and close to the
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Night Shadow
orchestra pit, while she was forty rows back trying to analyze her
screwed-up instincts.
Focus, Stone.
“No problem. I’m gone.” She hauled ass to fol ow the other operative, her
steps accompanied by the young soloist singing the “Breton Fisherman’s
Prayer” up on the stage. Still oblivious to the activity around him, the
boy’s piercingly sweet treble soared over the voices and shouts in the
enormous auditorium as he stood, eyes closed, completely transported by
his music.
Taking the stairs two at a time, Lexi jogged down to the front of the
theater. The afternoon performance wouldn’t start for six hours. Logically,
the tangos would have timed their strike for the sold-out evening
performance when all two thousand, six hundred and seventy-nine seats
would be fil ed. And that was just in this one theater. There were several
more venues in the Opera House scheduled to hold evening performances
that night. So potential y upward of five thousand theatergoers would be
their target. That’s when the frankenvirus could do its worst.
But that wasn’t going to happen. There was plenty of time to evacuate
everyone with time to spare. Plenty of time to cancel performances. Plenty
of time to cordon off the streets and surrounding area. Plenty of time. And
that was precisely what bothered her.
Tangos didn’t do black-and-white, they did red all over. A hit here would
grab worldwide attention, but not if everyone were evacuated. Tangos
weren’t above picking a secondary target if the primary was a bust. What
if this was a decoy? What if the Trace they’d fol owed on the Halfs was
just a planted trail to lead them astray?
What if Alex was wrong about the target? They didn’t have sufficient intel
to back this up definitively as the target. But orders were orders, and she
was going by the book. Stone had ordered them here to do a cleanout.
Not a bad idea, erring on the side of caution.
She’d do it, even if she had to do it with Ginsberg at her side. The notes of
the child’s voice faltered to a discordant halt as the stage was swarmed by
uniformed security personnel. Lexi jumped up onto the apron, and started