Retrieve our dead and prepare to jump,
he sent over the command com channel that linked the Enforcers' comps.
I'm not leaving these bastards any trophies.
“Get your hands off that sword!” the Xeran snarled, outrage in his voice. “You're not worthy to touch it!” He lunged.
This time, Galar's parry was a fraction too slow. Though it knocked the Xeran's sword off-line, the big blade still slid right through Galar's right hip. He felt it grate on bone.
Bear Eso's big hand closed around his shoulder and jerked him back. His stolen sword fell from his hand. The Xeran swooped after it.
Galar reeled away. They had to jump. Now. Before they lost anybody else. He spotted something round and dark and snatched it up.
Jiri's helmet. Which wasn't empty. Teeth clenched against the pain, he looked around. Peter Brannon had Ando Cadell's body in a fireman's carry, while Ivar cradled the rest of Jiri. Riane, Frieka, and Dona were covering their retreat.
“Jump!” Galar bellowed, and hit the button on his belt.
Grimly, he limped
into the infirmary after the two body tubes and three regenerators. Eso had taken an ugly gut wound, and one of the Xerans' blades had caught Dona in the chest, narrowly missing her heart.
Galar still cradled Jiri's helmeted head in his hands, though he could have put it into the body tube with the rest of her. Her death was his responsibility, after all. He'd failed her. Failed all of them. It had been his duty to lead them safely, but the Xerans had outmaneuvered him. His culpability scoured his consciousness with a pain that dwarfed the sword wound in his hip.
“Galar.” Chogan met them in the doorway of the ward. Compassion gleamed in her eyes as she held out her hands. “Give her to me, Master Enforcer. I'll take care of her.”
Feeling numb, he handed her the helmeted head. She took it tenderly and carried it after the float tubes.
He looked down at his own body. He was covered in bloodâJiri's, Ando's, his own, Marcin's, and probably that of the Xeran he'd killed.
He did wish he could have held on to that damn sword long enough to get it analyzed and reverse engineered. Which was no doubt why the Xeran had been so intent on getting it away from him.
Galar rubbed his aching, bloody side. He should probably clean off all this gore. Before or after he gave Dyami his report?
“Galar?” He turned to meet Dyami's appalled gaze as the big Warlord stepped through the ward's double doors. “What the hell happened, Master Enforcer?”
“I underestimated them,” Galar told him baldly. “They had some kind of new sword that sliced right through body armor.” He shook his head in weary defeat. “There were only five of them, plus Marcin, but we couldn't do anything against those swords. We lost Jiri and Ando Cadell. Dona and Eso are in regen, but my comp says they're not badly hurt.”
Dyami studied him in the penetrating way Galar associated with a sensor scan. “Why in the hell aren't you in regen with them?”
“I'm not that bad.”
“The hell you're not.” Dyami grabbed him by the shoulder and steered him into the ward. “I need a regen tube here!”
Galar gritted his teeth as an unwary step sent pain lancing through him. “I need to finish making my report.”
“Report later. Regen now.” Dyami's tone did not brook argument.
“Galar!” Jessica burst through the wall of one of the ward's privacy bubbles. Her expression turned to outright terror as she registered the blood glistening on his armored body. “You're hurt!”
“It's not as bad as it looks.”
“Yeah, right,” Dyami growled. “Medtech!”
Galar ignored him, frowning as a question surfaced in his bleary mind. “What are you doing in the infirmary, Jess?”
“She damned near got killed by that fucking combot, that's what.” Wulf stepped from the privacy bubble after her. “She just got out of regen. Jess, go lie down. Chogan hasn't finished the scans.”
“Scans?” Galar pulled away from the medtech who was trying to hustle him toward the regenerator she'd just guided over. “For what?”
“Double-checking some odd readings.” Wulf frowned, his gaze shifting uneasily toward Jessica. “I'll explain later.”
Jess ignored him, instead moving closer to Galar as she examined him anxiously. “You're pale as milk. Where are you hit? You're covered in so much blood. . . .”
He started to touch her shoulder, then hesitated as he registered the darkening crimson covering his fingers. He dropped his hand. “Most of it isn't mine.”
“Too much of it is,” the medtech said, a frown on her pretty face. “Get in the regenerator please, Master Enforcer. ”
“Go on, Galar.” Jess caught his upper arm, ignoring the blood that coated it as she turned him toward the tube. “I'm worried about you.”
Even as weary and dispirited as he was, he felt warmed at the concern he could see in her eyes. He managed a smile for her as the medtech popped the tube lid. “All right.”
Jess rose on her toes and pressed a warm kiss to his bloody cheek. “Thank you.”
As he pivoted painfully to climb into the tube, his gaze caught Dyami's face. Galar frowned, registering the unease in the big man's eyes as he watched Jessica.
What had Jess done to worry Dyami?
Jess lay on
the privacy bubble's bed, staring glumly at the ceiling. She badly wanted to get up and find Galar to make sure he was okay, but she knew Wulf had no intention of letting her leave.
“Is he still in regen?” she asked abruptly.
And if he is, what does that say about how badly he's hurt?
“No, he's out,” Wulf said tonelessly. He was watching her with an intensity that made her feel more than a little uneasy. He'd said he was staying with her to protect against another murder attempt. Given what had happened with the combot, she certainly couldn't argue with that. So why did she have the chilling feeling he was acting less like a bodyguard and more like a prison guard?
“How are the other agents?” She bounced her foot restlessly.
“Why do you want to know?”
Jess lifted her head to stare at him, startled by his suspicious tone. “Because they got hurt trying to make sure I wouldn't get killed. Some of them gave their lives trying to make sure I wouldn't get killed. Why would you think I
wouldn't
care?”
“I definitely agree you should.” But his skeptical gaze seemed to suggest that he doubted she did.
Stung, she sat up and swung her legs over the side of the bed to glare at him. “What's your problem? Or have you forgotten I almost died in that gym?”
While you were off chasing wild geese
.
As Jess had suspected, whoever hacked the combot had faked the call from Dyami to draw Wulf away.
She frowned. Wulf had seemed so apologetic and worried when he'd found her after the attack. Yet his manner had grown steadily more chill since then. Why? What was going on that she didn't know about? Did it have anything to do with all the medical scans Chogan had been conducting?
“What did happen in that gym, Jessica?” His eyes were cool, watchful.
She gave serious thought to throwing the bedside vendser at him. “Exactly what I said happened. Exactly what the recording says happened. You saw the trid, Wulf. That combot came within two seconds of crushing my windpipe.”
“Until you used some kind of mental powers to blow it apart.”
Jess ground her teeth at the skepticism in his voice. “Well, something sure as hell blew it up.”
“Yeah, something did.”
“You saying I'm lying?”
“Are you?” The voice was deep, velvety, and devastating.
Jess turned as Galar stepped into the bubble. He'd cleaned the blood off, and he looked fit and handsome in his dark blue uniform. She gave him a sunny smile, too relieved to worry about his odd question. “You look as if you're feeling better.”
“Somewhat.”
Jess frowned, a chill sliding over her. He was studying her with the same wary expression Wulf was. As if she were a stranger, as if they'd never touched, never kissed, never made such sweet, overwhelming love.
Chief Enforcer Dyami entered behind him, just as narrow-eyed and skeptical.
Jessica's heart began to pound, her stomach lacing itself into an icy knot. “What's going on?”
“Did you think we wouldn't notice?” Galar's tone was emotionless, but hell burned in his eyes. They were literally glowing, a coal-red shimmer threading across his irises.
“Notice what? What the fuck is going on? I'm the one who almost died!”
“Jiri and Cadell did die.” The red blazed even brighter as his icy expression cracked into a snarl of fury. “What did you tell the Xerans, Jess?”
Jess blinked at him. “Tell the . . . ? The Xerans are trying to kill me! Why would I talk to them? Hell,
how
would I talk to them?”
“That is the question.” Dyami lifted a dark brow. “You don't have a communication implant, and no courier 'bots have come to you. You haven't used the com unit that we've been able to determine, and we've got trids of every move you've made since you arrived.”
“You've had me under surveillance?” She stared at him in shocked outrage.
“Actually, no. The Outpost records everything that goes on here, though we usually can't access that information without a legal reason.”
“So why did it do nothing when that combot was strangling the life out of me?” She knotted her hands into fists.
“I screamed for help, dammit!”
“I know.” His expression didn't change. “We discovered the hacker altered the Outpost's programming to keep it from sending agents to your rescue.”
“Are you suggesting I hacked it? Some kind of elaborate suicide attempt, perhaps?” She curled her lip at him in sarcastic fury.
“Or,” Galar said distantly, “some kind of attempt to make us believe you're a helpless target of assassins.”
Jess fisted both hands in her hair and pulled in sheer frustration. “Why in the hell do you think that? I'm from the twenty-first century, dammit. I wouldn't know how to hack a computer in my own time, much less in this one!” She pointed a shaking hand at the bedside console. “I barely know how to program that vendser!”
“No? Yet you've got Xeran genetic material in your cells. Particularly your brain.” Galar walked over to a sensor console at the foot of Jess's bed and waved a hand over the device. A trid image of a human brain appeared, rotating slowly. “This is the first scan Chogan did of you right after you arrived. Everything is just what we'd expect in a twenty-first-century human.” He gestured again, and a second image appeared beside the first, showing a sprawling area of bright blue in the frontal cortex. “This is the scan Chogan just made.” He pointed at the blue area. “Neurons in this part of the brain show signs of profound mutation, with an accompanying explosion in synaptic growthânew connections between the cells.”
Jessica stared at the scan, her stomach going icy. “Is it . . . cancer?”
Galar's blond brows lifted. “Cancer?”
She licked suddenly dry lips and managed a nod. “That looks like something that could kill me.”
His expression seemed to soften for a moment before it hardened again. “It's not cancer, Jess. And even if it was, it probably wouldn't kill you. Cancer is rarely fatal in the twenty-third century. Not as long as it's detected in time, anyway.”
She breathed out, slumping. “Oh, man. Good.” Then she frowned. “So if it's not some kind of cancer, what is it?”
“Chogan believes it has something to do with the Xeran DNA in the mutated cells.”
“Charlotte,” Jess said grimly. “Charlotte did this. Marcin said I smelled of her blood. It must have something to do with that.”
“Charlotte scanned as human.”
“Yeah, well, a few days ago, I scanned as human. Now you're saying I'm some kind of Xeran spy.” She lifted a bitter brow. “Obviously, you don't know what the fuck is going on.”
“The primitive's right,”
Dyami said grimly. “We don't know what's going on. And that's just not acceptable.”
“I do know one thing.” Galar scrubbed both hands wearily over his face. “She wasn't lying.” His sensors had told him she was feeling outrage, hurt, and fear, but there had been none of the telltale signs of deception.
What's more, his heart insisted she couldn't be a Xeran spy. Unfortunately, his heart had been wrong before.
“It's not that hard to fool sensors,” Ivar pointed out.
"Only if you've got a computer implant capable of controlling your involuntary nervous system,” Galar replied. “Jess doesn't.”
Ivar lifted a red brow. “Considering she just blew a combot into its component parts, we have no idea what your little friend can do.”
Dyami turned to Chogan, who sprawled wearily at the opposite end of the table. Between the wounded and the dead, she'd had her hands full. “Did your sensors pick up any unexplained energy spikes during the questioning?” Such a spike might indicate Jess was exerting influence on the Enforcers' brains.
Chogan shook her head, green hair sliding around her shoulders. “Nothing. Certainly nothing like the kind of spike when she blew up the combot. Which reminds me.” She pivoted her chair toward Dyami. “Chief, I've been thinking.”
He tilted his head, the beads in his braid clicking. “Yes?”
“If she could produce a blast like that, why did she wait so long? You saw that trid. She'd stopped struggling. She'd gone limp. I really thought she was dead. Then . . .”