The Psy-Changeling Series, Books 6-10 (200 page)

BOOK: The Psy-Changeling Series, Books 6-10
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Sascha.
Mother, we’ve received the letter advising us of the trust fund.
What does that have to do with me?
Her mother lied, Sascha thought, with such effortless ease. Instead of forcing the issue, she said,
You know I ’ve given birth?
Your child carries a Russian first name. I expected you to sever all ties with your past.
Sascha had considered that, but she carried the past within her. The echo of it would resonate to her child, if only in the fierceness of the love Sascha felt for her.
Lucas and I decided it was important for Nadiya to know both parts of her heritage.
The line of Slavic monikers went back to Sascha’s grandfather, while Naya’s middle name had been that of Lucas’s healer mother.
Would you like me to e-mail you an image of her?
We cut our familial ties, Sascha.
A statement so cold, it was beyond cruel.
She means nothing to me.
Once, the words would’ve made her bleed. Now, Sascha saw the truth buried beneath the lie.
No, of course not.
Because if Nikita acknowledged Nadiya as her grandchild, the baby became a target.
Mother, the trust fund—
Is a private matter in which I bear no interest.
A single tear trickled down Sascha’s cheek.
All right.
The telepathic connection ended in silence.
“Sascha.” Lucas’s arm curled around her chest to hold her against his side, the tension in him communicating itself through the mating bond. “What did she say?”
“Nothing hurtful.” Turning, she rubbed her face against his chest as she watched Naya’s fragile body rise and fall in innocent sleep. “I’m a mother now, Lucas. I would do
anything
to keep Naya safe, even if it meant she would hate me for the rest of her life.” Swallowing, she touched a finger to their baby’s plump cheek. “It makes me wonder if that isn’t exactly what Nikita did.”
 
 
STILL
able to feel the canvas of Sienna’s body against his own the next afternoon, and wondering why the hell he’d given in to his good side and stopped, Hawke finished clearing the decks. He and Kenji had had an interesting conversation with the BlackSea Coalition this morning, and the lieutenant was following up on the details.
In Los Angeles, Jem was doing the same with Aquarius. Shooting back a reply to an e-mail she’d sent, he checked the other things on his mental list. The novice teams were scoping out the warehouse district, Brenna was building the remotes, while Mariska and Judd were going over video footage. Riley had the rotation of soldiers in hand, Indigo and Riaz the newly revised training schedule.
Finding Lara, he got an update on everyone who’d been injured in the attack. Simran was almost recovered and resting at home, as was Riordan. Elias, however, remained in the infirmary. “I almost broke a scanner over his head today,” Lara muttered. “Never knew it would be Eli who drove me to drink.”
Hawke grinned. “So he’s on the way to being healed?”
“Yes.” A faint smile. “I have to keep him here because his new skin is so fragile, but he’ll walk out with no scars in less than a week.”
“You do good work, Lara.” He kissed her on the cheek, then popped in to see Riley.
“No one else needs you today,” the lieutenant said and pointed to the door. “Take advantage of it while you can.”
Doing exactly that, Hawke went tracking his favorite prey. “Toby,” he said, catching the young boy as he ran outside with a soccer ball in his arms, school having let out half an hour earlier. “Have you seen Sienna?”
Toby shook his head, his hair—not yet as dark a red as Sienna’s—getting into his eyes. Hawke narrowed his own eyes. “When was the last time you had a haircut?”
Pushing back the strands, Toby shifted from foot to foot, his face flaming a shade perilously close to that of his hair. “Um . . .”
“Toby.”
Never before had Hawke needed to use that tone with the preteen who was so well-behaved, it left his wolf a bit bemused.
“I don’t like scissors,” Toby blurted out. “Near my head, I mean.”
“Walker’s okay with this?” The Psy male wasn’t the type to let things slide.
“Sienna kind of got me out of it.”
That, Hawke understood. Sienna was fierce in her protectiveness when it came to Toby. Maybe too much so. Hawke understood taking care of those who were his own, but he also understood that a boy needed to explore and be proud of his own strength. “Come on, you’re having a haircut today,” he said, shifting his priorities because no matter the searing depth of his need to see Sienna, this young member of his pack needed him. “How can you get anything done if you can’t see?”
Toby dragged his feet, but he obeyed. Hawke had him dump the soccer ball in the backseat of the truck as he started it up.
“Where are we going?”
“To see Sascha.” His wolf’s curiosity about the baby was too strong for him to wait any longer, and he knew the empath would be happy to tidy up Toby’s hair.
Except Toby went stiff at the idea, the scent of his distress slapping against Hawke. Stopping the truck at once, he reached out to rub the kid’s down-bent head. “What’s the matter?”
“I like Sascha. A lot.”
“I know.” That’s why he’d figured the whole haircut deal would go down better with the empath’s help.
Fisted hands on tense thighs. “I don’t want her to think I’m a baby.”
Oh.
“Same with Riley?” The kid worshipped the lieutenant, who treated him like a much younger brother.
Toby’s nod was hard and fast.
“Hmm. In that case, I’ll have to do it.” Driving to park the car deeper in their territory—and aware of Toby gaping at him—he had the boy get out, then rummaged around in the storage well until he found a pair of scissors in the first-aid kit. When Toby gulped, he pointed to the bed of the truck and said, “Sit.”
The boy clambered up onto the tailgate, legs hanging off the edge and words tumbling out at high speed. “My mom used to use Tp to make me sleep when I had a haircut. I never liked it.”
Happy to hear that the fear was a harmless remnant of childhood, not based on hidden trauma, he said, “We’re not using the sedatives in the first-aid kit, so forget about it.”
Toby’s face fell. “Those look really sharp.”
Reaching up, Hawke snipped off a bit of his own hair to test the blades. “Yeah, should do the trick.”
“Uh-oh.” Huge cardinal eyes. “You shouldn’t have done that.”
“Why?”
“ ’Cause every time you cut your hair, Sienna gets mad.”
His wolf pricked up its ears. “Yeah?” He stepped closer.
Toby froze.
“Okay,” Hawke said, having had enough experience with pups to understand logic wouldn’t help right now, “close your eyes and scream as loud as you can.”
“What?”
“Just do it.”
Toby took a deep breath, scrunched his eyes closed . . . and screamed.
Wincing at the earsplitting volley of sound, Hawke snipped off the boy’s far too long bangs in one cut, making sure not to touch the metallic blades to the kid’s skin. “Not bad.” It wasn’t crooked in any case.
Toby’s eyes snapped open. “Did you do it?”
Hawke handed him his hair. “What do you think?”
“I don’t think anyone else will let me scream.” A pensive statement.
“Well, as long as you don’t mind looking like a prison escapee, I can do it.”
“Okay.” Toby beamed.
“How about the bottom?”
“Yours is longer than mine.”
“You can leave it that length on the condition it doesn’t get in your way.”
Toby frowned, considered. Serious little man, Hawke thought, realizing he hadn’t spent that much time with the boy. But man and wolf both liked him—Toby had a simple and deep kindness to him that Hawke knew would never disappear. The last vestiges of childhood fears aside, there was strength there, too. Hesitant yet, still growing, but when Toby came into his own, he’d make the pack proud, of that Hawke had not a single doubt.
“Cut it.” A decisive statement. “I can have it longer after I pass my outdoor lessons.”
Hawke was impressed. “You sure?”
A strong nod. Then Toby closed his eyes, inhaled. It took three screams and by the last one, Toby was laughing. So was Hawke. They sat on the tailgate afterward, eating peanuts from a bag Toby had had in his pocket. The nuts were crushed, but that didn’t matter.
Hawke found himself reevaluating his opinion of the boy as they talked. Toby had the gentleness of an empath, but he saw everything—and he understood that the world wasn’t always kind. Who better, after all, to know the dark side of the human heart than someone gifted with the ability to sense emotion?
But he was also a child.
“I’m thirsty,” he said after crunching the last peanut.
“Me, too.” Turning around, Hawke hunted through the first-aid kit and came up with a bottle of water. “Aha.”
“You’ll have to replace that or Lara will tell you off.”
“Don’t I know it.” Taking a gulp from the bottle, he passed it to Toby.
Who copied his actions.
Hiding his grin, he grabbed the soccer ball. “Come on, squirt.”
Toby’s face beamed. “Really? Me and you?”
Hawke played the ball over his foot. “Move it.”
“I’m coming!”
They spent over a half hour together, with Toby proving to be both nimble and intelligent as an opponent. Afterward, they finished off the bottle of water before getting back into the truck.
Toby did up his safety belt. “How come you didn’t ask me stuff about Sienna?”
Hawke raised an eyebrow as he started the vehicle.
Toby shrugged. “I figured you were spending time with me to find out about my sister.”
Yeah, the kid saw everything. “Maybe I thought about it,” Hawke said, because he didn’t believe in lying to his pack. “But turns out I like hanging out with you.”
Toby’s whole face lit up. “You mean it. I know.”
Mussing the kid’s hair, Hawke drove him home. He went with Toby to the practice field to ensure the boy’s coach was aware Toby hadn’t played hookey, and the kids begged him to stay. He was alpha. Caring for pups was instinctive. As a result, night had fallen by the time he was able to go after Sienna again.
And this time, nothing was going to keep him from his prey.
 
RECOVERED FROM COMPUTER 2(A)
TAGS: PERSONAL CORRESPONDENCE, FATHER, ACTION NOT REQUIRED
FROM:
Alice
TO:
Dad
DATE:
November 12th, 1974 at 11:04pm
SUBJECT:

 
Dear Dad,
 
I received a notice today terminating my access to the X-designation volunteers and “requesting” I cease my research. I’m a scientist. I can’t do that, especially when I’m on the brink of discovering the answer.
What worries me is that if I’m right, I may well be giving those who seek to control the Xs a way to hold them hostage. The promise of safety could be used as an “incentive” to force them to act as psychic weapons—I wouldn’t have worried about such a thing a few years ago, but the Psy Council is no longer what it once was.
Call me when you get this e-mail. I can’t get through to the dig.
 
Love,
Alice
Chapter 33
SIENNA WASN’T IN
her room. Nor was she in the family quarters—but Walker was. The telepath jerked his head toward the corridor. Realizing the eldest of the Laurens wanted to have this conversation away from the kids, Hawke led them to a small, private alcove before saying, “I’m surprised you waited this long.”
“There’s a time and a place. This would be it.” Holding Hawke’s gaze in a way that not many men could, Walker said, “You will be good to her.” Not a statement, but an order.
Hawke’s wolf stirred. “Do you think I’d be otherwise?”
“If I did, you’d be dead.”
It was Judd who’d been the assassin, but Hawke had the sudden, crystal-clear realization that when it came to Sienna, Toby, and Marlee, it was Walker who was more dangerous. “Understood.” If he had a daughter, he’d kill any man who dared hurt her. And whatever their actual relationship, Walker was the closest Sienna had to a father.
She’d said as much to him when he’d asked about her father as they danced that night in the training room.
“I know his identity, but per the reproduction contract, his only involvement in my life—and Toby’s—was biological.”
“Did you ever feel the need to track him down, demand more?” he’d asked, unable to comprehend how a man could walk away from his children.
“No. I don’t think Toby has either.” There’d been no emotional distress in her tone, her next words explaining why. “We’ve always had Walker, you see.”
Now Walker gave a clipped nod. “Then we’re clear.” Turning on his heel, he walked back to his quarters.
Hawke’s wolf shook its head, staring after the Psy male with pale green eyes. “You told me you were a teacher in the Net.”
The man looked over his shoulder. “I was. You never asked me who I taught.” The door closed.
Deciding that conversation could wait, because whatever he’d been, Walker was now loyal to the pack, Hawke continued on his search. Sienna wasn’t hanging out in the common areas. He checked Lara’s domain next, discovered she’d been in an hour earlier. Starting to lose his temper, he shoved into his own place to grab a bite to eat before resuming the hunt.
The scent of autumn and spice in the air, in his every breath.
“You owe me a game,” Sienna said, picking up a card from the deck she’d placed on the carpeted floor of the front room of his quarters. Dressed in jeans and that sexy-as-sin black shirt with those tempting snap buttons, she sat cross-legged on the carpet, her hair a sheet of dark fire licking down her back.

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