Are you okay?
Her eyes widened, clearly startled by his voice in her head again.
Yes. You?
I’m good.
Amazing. He’d
never
had a telepathic connection with another
living soul besides his sister, Victoria, yet he heard Lexi’s thoughts as if
she were speaking out loud. When it had happened earlier he’d been
startled as hel . With Lexi, it was a far more intimate process than it had
been with Victoria. Victoria had learned to block his intrusion by the time
they were eight. Lexi’s mind was open and intriguingly complex.
Her lips tilted.
Al you need is . . .
“. . . A parrot,” she finished aloud. Her
hair stuck to her damp face and neck and stood up in golden spikes where
she’d obviously run her fingers through it. She looked sexy as hel .
Focused. His heart did a somersault in his chest.
Daklin gave them both an odd look. “A parrot? What—oh. Yeah. What’s
with the patch?”
Alex imagined the patch gone. Checked his vision without it. Clear as
crystal. “I’l explain later.”
Right after I figure it out.
“Any injuries?”
“Negative.” Kiersted holstered his weapons, looking around. He whistled.
The far wall where the students and teachers had been clustered was
littered with kid paraphernalia; book bags, papers, gym equipment, etc.
Alex did a sweep, shimmering everything outside to where authorities
were now interviewing the hostages before sending them to quarantine.
One of them used a bullhorn to reassure the families that their children
were unharmed.
The press and people eagerly waiting for information would be soothed
and given additional details by local T-FLAC personnel. Alex and his team
were done here.
“Debriefing at the safe house in two minutes,” he told them. “Stone. With
me.” The men shimmered, leaving them alone.
“Do you want me to—”
“No.” He combed his fingers through her damp hair. Mental fireworks. A
swirl of heat.
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Night Shadow
Lexi wrapped her arms about his waist, drawing him against her soft, lush
body. She smelled of honey and hard physical labor, a little like gun oil, a
lot like the woman he—A lot like Lexi. The scent of her, the taste of her
turned Alex inside out, making his brain spin and his heart race.
Want me.
I do.
His pulse leapt as he bent his head and touched his mouth to hers. Lexi’s
tongue greeted him. He tasted her hunger and the smile curving her soft
mouth, and welcomed the slick sweep of her tongue tangling with his.
A furnace of heat spiraled through him, making him wish they were
anywhere but where they were.
Her hands fisted the back of his shirt as they kissed. She was panting
slightly as their mouths broke apart. “We have to meet the others back at
the safe house in—” She shot a glance at the large clock on the far wall.
“One point seven minutes, but before we do—” She broke off as he
nibbled the plump lobe of her ear. The rumble he made told her he was
enjoying her shudder of pleasure.
“I want to t—” she tilted her head to give him better access to the curve
of her jaw. “This physicality between us
has
to stop.” She nipped at his
lower lip as he trailed his lips across her cheek and back to her mouth.
“No, I mean it, Alex. First of all, Section whatever of whatever clearly
states—whatever it states about fraternizing.”
He made a noise that sounded like agreement as he continued his
exploration of her neck.
“Second—Stop tha—Okay, just
one
more.” She kissed him back hungrily,
the fingers of one hand somehow entwined in his hair, her other hand,
fingers spread, on the cheek of his ass. It was several seconds before she
pul ed away again. “I have to tel you something important.” She placed
her palm across his marauding mouth to prevent him swooping in for
another drugging kiss. “Internal Affairs sent me to keep an eye on you,”
she finished quickly, waiting for his reaction, knowing it was going to hurt.
He kissed her salty palm. “Ah.”
Her jaw dropped and she leaned away from him. “Ah? That’s it?”
“Lexi. If it has to be anyone, I’m damned glad it’s you.”
That took her aback. Her eyes narrowed. “You are?”
“Hel , yes. I don’t know what’s been going on lately, but if I
am
going
rogue, I trust you to be my moral compass, and to terminate me if
necessary.” He stroked a hand up her slender back, tugging her closer. “I
asked you to do so earlier, and I meant it. I trust you to do the job.”
“I—Wait a minute.” She used both palms to shove at his chest. “What do
you mean
if
you’re going rogue? Don’t you
know
?”
Thirteen
“No. I don’t. And let’s get back with the others. I have to fil them in on
this, and I only want to say it once.” “Wait. I w—Honest to God,” Lexi said
crossly, grabbing his arm for balance as they materialized back at the safe
house. She was almost used to this ridiculous mode of transportation.
Almost. It wasn’t even bad if one discounted the vertigo and slight nausea
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Night Shadow
that traveling in utter defiance of the laws of physics caused. “I should
shoot you for doing that without notice.” Her stomach rol ed.
“No friendly fire while I’m eating,” Lu deadpanned, glancing up at their
entry. He had the remnants of a large steak on the plate floating two feet
off the floor in front of his chair. He materialized a bottle of ketchup and
poured a dol op on top.
Lexi shuddered. “Sacrilege.” Ketchup on a perfectly good steak? Her
stomach reacted to the sight and smel of food by growling loudly. She
shrugged unapologetically as both men looked at her, brows raised.
“The coronavirus arrived safely at the lab,” Daklin informed them as he
passed through the room from the kitchen. He carried an oversized mug
and a plate with several enormous sandwiches on it. The time of day
didn’t matter. Downtime, no matter how short, no matter when, was used
for refueling, both food and sleep.
“Top priority,” he continued, as he crossed the room to find a seat.
“They’re working round the clock to ID the manufacturer of the
components now. Maybe they can get a hit on that while we’re dicking
around.”
Lexi gazed longingly at his cup and plate.
“Lu’s coffee’s strong enough to strip paint, but it’s hot.” Daklin slouched in
the chair Lark had perched on earlier, setting the mug on its wide arm. He
rested the plate on his flat bel y, and picked up one of his sandwiches.
Lexi’s stomach rumbled again.
“And they’re sorting through baggies of evil tango dust as we speak.” He
took a bite, chewing methodically. Cold cuts, Lexi saw. Slabs of dark
bread. Mustard. Like Daklin, she was on her own as far as food went. No
magical room service for her. She was too tired to go and forage, but her
salivary glands were urging her to get off her butt and go find something
to eat.
Before Daklin finished the ham slices.
Across the room at the dining table, Kiersted typed on a holographic
keyboard with one hand, and drank from his glass. Milk, Lexi noticed. Her
stomach gurgled. Did she have time before the briefing to make herself
something—
What kind of sandwich would you like?
Alex’s lips twitched slightly.
Had she really been irritated with him and his magical self ?
Gril ed cheese. American. Two, on white. And Campbell’s tomato soup. Are
you going to make it for m—
“Oh.”
Six,
not two, hot, greasy, angle-cut
sandwiches and a steaming blue mug, all on a large Spode plate,
materialized in his hand. Lexi shot him a grateful smile as she took her
meal from him.
“Thanks.” Talk about fast food. Her mouth watered as she weaved her
way between the furniture to the far end of the sofa.
“They’ve already identified some aspects of the dustlike substance,”
Kiersted tapped on a second screen, pul ing up the report as Daklin
inhaled his meal. “There’s definitely human DNA in all of it. But these
things don’t appear to have blood per se. Powdered blood? Clear liquid,
plasma? They should have a more extensive report back to us shortly.
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Night Shadow
“As for the coronavirus, it’s a completely new strain of LZ17 but still has
the same basic viral signature, it’s just more virulent, lasting longer so
that it can infect more people via casual contact. We compared the base
viral signature against components gathered from various European
locations. But there’s no doubt that the viruses released in Africa, London,
Moscow, and Taipei, and the one found here are all from the same
manufacturer.”
“What about the kids who sustained bul et wounds?” Alex asked, coming
to sit on the arm of the sofa behind Lexi. He reached over her shoulder,
snagged half a sandwich, and dipped it into her soup.
“One wil be released later today,” Lu told him. “Released into quarantine
with the others, but out of ICU. The second kid’s in surgery. Prognosis
good.”
“Anything else?” Alex asked. Lexi felt the heat of his body as he sat
directly behind her.
“Not right now.” Lu gestured to Alex with his fork. “Want to tel us what
that was about earlier?”
Good question. Lexi leaned in a little as Alex’s legs brushed against her
arm when she shifted, reaching for another deliciously greasy triangle.
Fortunately, stress had never affected her ability to eat. A good thing,
because this whole business with Alex—all of it—was enough to turn a
lesser woman off her feed.
How could she regret having sex with him? She couldn’t. She didn’t. The
experience had profoundly shaken her.
Her feelings for this man went far beyond what she’d thought was a crush
coupled with some serious hero worship. How could she have such strong
feelings when she was halfway to reporting his actions to IA?
“As I told you, three weeks ago I started intermittently losing my powers,”
Alex told them. His voice, deep and steady, did something strange to
Lexi’s entire body. His voice seemed to stroke her skin almost physical y.
She vigorously wiped her hands on the paper towel he’d given her when
he’d handed her the plate.
Do not fall in love with him.
She froze, paper towel in hand.
Oh, shit. Too late.
Lexi turned to see if he’d somehow read her mind again. It was one thing
to take a meal order, and a whole other thing to telepathically hear her
newest, most intimate freaking secret.
He didn’t appear to have heard her girlish heart going pitter-patter. He
just sat there, looking grim and focused. “Up until a few days ago I
thought it might be some kind of cold or flu, but now I don’t think so.”
“What do you think it is?” Daklin asked, biting down on a pickle.
“Wish to hel I knew.” Alex absently rested his hand on Lexi’s shoulder,
and the heat of his palm seemed like a brand burning through her
clothing. “First, my powers. Then this thing with Lexi and Ruben Ginsberg
at the Opera House—”
Lu glanced at Lexi. “You and Ginsberg got into a thing?”
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Night Shadow
Since Alex was the one laying things out on the table, Lexi felt a
tremendous sense of relief that she wasn’t the one who had to blow the
whistle. “No. In #8212;”
“I believe some form of mind control was used on both of them,” Alex said
flatly. “Both behaved contrary to the way they normally conduct
themselves. Yet there they were, middle of an op, with blood in their eyes
and doing a damned fine job of attempting to kil each other.”
Lexi spun around to stare up at Alex incredulously. The soup sloshed in
the mug, and one of the sandwiches shot off the plate to land on the
carpet at her feet. Her mouth was dry as she stared up at him, stunned
that he’d tel a bald-faced lie to them, while she was right there to dispute
it. Her personal feelings for him had nothing to do with the job she’d been
sent to do.
“That is not what happened at al ,” Lexi said quietly, but implacably.
One brow went up. “Honey, you were so out of it, you don’t remember
clearly.”
Oh, my God. Why was he making this up? Lexi’s heart twisted painfully,
then started a hard, uncomfortable beat in her chest. “That’s not true,
Alex.”
“I’m afraid it is.” When she shook her head, he indicated the others. “Ask
them, they were there.”
Lexi looked at each man in turn.
Lu shrugged. Kiersted nodded, and Daklin shot her a sympathetic look.