Read Dancing on the Wind Online
Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
said in a not-unkind voice. “You’re on your way home. I couldn’t let them kill you. She would
have died if I had.”
Whomp. Whomp. Whomp.
It was a chopper under which he was lying, a black military transport. He was strapped to a
gurney that had been stopped by the hand of the faceless man. The cold air moving over him
came from the spinning blades.
“I’ll be coming for her,” he heard the faceless man say. “Keep her safe until I do.”
He felt himself being lifted into the chopper and the pain was so great he knew he lost
consciousness. The last thing he remembered was the whir of the blades.
Whomp. Whomp. Whomp.
Coming back from wherever he’d been hurled, Fallon suddenly went as still as
death, his eyes open wide. He stared unseeingly at the fan blades circling above him.
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Dancing on the Wind
“Why am I still alive?” he whispered. “It doesn’t make sense.”
Whomp. Whomp. Whomp.
“One of these days I’ll be coming for her.”
“Groves,” he said, and slowly sat up as memories flooded through him. Matty
Groves had saved his life, had rescued him from unspeakable torment at the hands of
his enemy.
Other memories assailed him like flashing neon signs on the Vegas strip. They shot
past his mind’s eye in rapid succession. Snatches of a long-ago conversation rumbled
through his brain to shake him to the core of his being.
“When cloning becomes the norm, we’ll all have expendable molds from which to take the
pieces-parts we need to live fifty years longer than the norm. If I just had the money to complete
my personal research, stuff I’d just as soon the Exchange not know about for now.” He’d lowered
his voice. “I’m working up a facial replica right now from blood and tissue samples I received a
few days ago. Sort of a living mask. Guess who the model was.”
Something snapped inside Mikhail Fallon and he sprang from the bed as though
jerked by unseen hands. He didn’t bother putting on his shoes, ignored the cane as it
fell to the floor. Limping, hobbling, he left her room—crashing into the doorjamb but
barely acknowledging the pain that shot through him. He tore down the hallway, sped
through the great room and yanked open the door, not even bothering to shut it behind
him. He stumbled down the corridor and shoved the stairway door open with a bang.
Down the flights of stairs he flew as though demons were nipping at his heels. The pain
in his injured leg didn’t even register. When he slammed into the lobby of the dorm, he
never heard the doorkeeper yell out to him. His objective was beyond the doorway
leading outside and he plowed through it, shoving it aside as though it were nothing
more than tissue paper. Distantly he heard glass shatter but he didn’t give it a single
thought. He stumbled on the walkway leading to the Exchange, but he managed to stay
on his feet, increasing his speed as he tore across the distance between the two
buildings, his stocking feet tearing across the brick walkway, arms pumping.
Each of the entrances to the Exchange was governed by armed guards standing by
scanners, and when he jerked open the side entrance door and came hurtling through,
he saw guns come out of holsters, two men bending their knees in shooters’ stances, but
he shot through the scanner, ignoring them and their shouts of “Halt!” He’d gone no
farther than ten feet into the building before he was tackled roughly from behind, the
breath knocked from his body, sliding forward on the Terrazzo floor while his arms
were jerked savagely behind him as a third guard knelt with a knee to Fallon’s back,
snapping handcuffs around his prisoner’s wrists.
“Be careful of his leg!” someone shouted.
“What the fuck is wrong with you, Fallon?” he heard someone else growl. “Have
you finally lost your mind, bro?”
“She’s alive,” was all he could say in between gasps for breath.
“She’s alive!”
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Charlotte Boyett-Compo
“No.”
“Did I ask your permission?”
Mikhail Fallon glared at the man known only as the Supervisor. “I work alone.”
“You work with whomever I order you to work with,” the Supervisor snapped,
dark blue eyes flashing with irritation. “It has been decided that you are to have an
Extension and…”
Fallon put his clenched fists on the top of the Supervisor’s desk and leaned forward,
chiseled features hardening with rage. “I said no.”
“And an Extension has been assigned to you,” the Supervisor finished as though his
top agent had not interrupted him.
“You know what you can do with your Extension?” Fallon queried.
The Supervisor leaned back in his expensive formfitting chair and steepled his
fingers beneath his chin. “I wish I could say it has been nice working with you, Agent
Fallon, but I’m afraid I can’t. I do, however, wish you luck in your next job.”
Pale amber orbs narrowed dangerously. “That’s the way you want to play it?”
“That’s the way it will be if you refuse my orders.”
Straightening, Fallon nodded slowly. “Fine. You can forward my last check to the
Chelsea address.” He turned toward the door.
“Have you forgotten your service with us can not be terminated under any
circumstances?”
The soft words stopped Fallon in his tracks. He looked back, and the expression on
the Supervisor’s face made him walk back to the desk. “What does that mean?”
A nasty smile twitched the Supervisor’s lips. “You know perfectly well what it
means, but just in case you’ve had an extremely severe brain fart, let me be clear on the
matter. It means, Agent Fallon, that you can never leave your employment with us.
Employment with the Exchange is for life. There are no provisions within the contract
you signed for you quitting or us firing you. There are no provisions for disability or
retirement. Only death can sever the Connection. Now considering what I just said, let
me assure you I can assign you any job within this organization I deem you capable of
performing. Since you are proficient at many things, I can install you in any available
position from janitor to file clerk.” The smile widened. “Which position would you
prefer?” One thick brow arched upward. “Or would auxiliary groundskeeper suit you
better? I can’t offer you the head groundskeeper position since that is already filled.”
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Dancing on the Wind
A snarl lifted Fallon’s lip. “You can’t keep me here if I don’t…”
“How does solitary confinement for the next fifty to sixty years of your life sound?”
the Supervisor inquired. “If you don’t wish to work, imprisonment here at the
Exchange is your only other alternative.”
Fallon stared at the man everyone within the organization hated—himself more
than most—and his hands curled into fists again. “You are a fucking son of a bitch,” he
said.
“And you are a supremely arrogant little prick but, hey, what’s in a name?” the
Supervisor asked with a smirk.
“I don’t want a fucking Extension!” Fallon shouted so loudly the glass shade on the
lamp sitting upon the Supervisor’s desk rattled.
“There are perks to having a female Extension,” the Supervisor said.
“Goddamn it! I…”
“We went to a great deal of trouble picking just the right woman for you, Fallon,”
the Supervisor cut him off. “She had to meet certain standards even to be considered.”
“
I don’t want a fucking Extension
!” The bellow was like that of an enraged bull. This
time the force of it shook the windows.
The Supervisor smiled brutally. “Well, you don’t have a say in the matter. It’s
settled. Live with it.”
Snarling like a cornered weretiger, Fallon spun around and stalked to the door,
jerking it open with a curse so vile it turned the air blue.
In the office of the Supervisor’s executive assistant, Keenan McCullough looked up
from the novel she was reading as two hundred and sixty pounds of irate male stormed
past her. She saw him glance her way and felt the lash of his fury make landfall along
her spine. He stopped in mid-stride—giving her a murderous glower that might have
quelled a lesser woman—then he shocked her by hissing at her.
She blinked, taken back by the rage she saw brewing in his stormy amber eyes.
“What’s your problem?” she asked.
“Before I’m through with you, you’ll wish you’d never heard my name,” he
prophesied, his gaze raking over her insultingly.
Her eyebrows drew together. She had no idea who this towering hulk of
masculinity was. Although he was movie-star handsome—devastatingly so in fact—he
made her acutely uneasy. This was a man who could maim and kill without the
slightest hesitation. She had the unsettling feeling he was the man they intended to
hand her over to as his Extension.
“I don’t want a fucking Extension!”
That said he stomped from the room, jerking open the door then letting it slam back
against the wall behind his passing.
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Charlotte Boyett-Compo
“Who the hell was that?” Keenan asked the man sitting behind the desk.
“That was Mikhail Fallon,” the Supervisor’s EA said dryly. “His friends—and
believe it or not he actually has one or two—call him Misha.” He shuffled some papers
on his desk. “He’s your Alpha.”
Keenan scowled. “That’s
him
?” she asked. “That’s the great and powerful Fallon?”
“I’m afraid that’s the wizard behind the curtain,” the EA replied with a sigh.
“Oh bloody swell,” Keenan mumbled. “I don’t need…”
A buzzer sounded and the EA stood, adjusting the fit of his suit as he did. “The
Supervisor is ready for you.”
By the time he reached the cafeteria, Fallon’s jaws were aching from grinding his
teeth. He had dug deep half-moons into his palms and his back was stiff from the rigid
set of his shoulders. It had been a long time since he’d been this mad and longer still
since anyone had dared to make him do something he truly didn’t care to.
“Old bastard,” he muttered as he strode up to the counter and ordered a cup of
black coffee.
The young woman behind the counter knew better than to inform this particular
man he could pour the coffee himself from the self-service end of the cafeteria. Instead,
she hurried to do his bidding, making note at which table he planted his tall frame. The
service workers took extra care with Fallon, spoke only when spoken directly to, and
were very cautious not to garner his notice if at all possible. They were so terrified of
him that when he made an appearance in the cafeteria, they mentally held their breaths
until he left.
Slamming his brawny body into a chair by the far window, Fallon turned to stare
out at the miles of rolling green hills that stretched as far as the eye could see beyond
the Exchange. No trees dotted the landscape. No water mirrored the bright summer
sky, only acre upon acre of rye grass that was mown and rolled into large round hay
bales that resembled pencil erasers at harvesting time.
As his cup of coffee was placed silently before him, he acknowledged it with a
quick bob of his head then took up the cup to take a long sip of the piping-hot liquid.
The steam made him squint and the heat scalded his tongue but he welcomed the minor
discomfort for it momentarily took his mind from the anger building within him in
leaps and bounds.
“Fucking romance novel,” he grumbled as he put the cup down and returned his
attention to the outside scenery, reaching up to unconsciously tug at the gold hoop in
his left earlobe. “The bitch was reading a fucking trashy romance novel!”
Those few people taking a late breakfast glanced toward the Exchange’s main
operative then quickly away. It didn’t pay to gain Fallon’s attention. If he wanted to talk
to himself, no one would dare listen in to the one-sided conversation.
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Dancing on the Wind
“She probably has a two-twenty-volt G-spot vibrator in her nightstand,” he said,
and lifted the cup to his lips.
He thought about that for a moment then a nasty smile pulled at his mouth as an
idea began to take shape in his mind.
“I hope I’ve done nothing to cause that spiteful grin.”
Fallon didn’t bother to look up. At the sound of the sardonic voice, he leaned back
in his chair and propped his booted feet on the one opposite. “You’d best be glad you
haven’t,” Fallon replied.
Dr. Matt Groves set down his breakfast tray then took a seat, snapping a linen
napkin into place on his lap. He reached for the salt shaker sitting in the center of the
table and began sprinkling its contents onto the soft scrambled eggs on his plate.
“Who’s pissed you off now, you crazy Mick?” he inquired.
“The old man has gifted me with a fucking Extension.”
Groves looked up, his eyebrows elevated. “The new woman who came in
yesterday?” he asked in a surprised tone. “The one from Langley?”
“I don’t know where the hell she came from and I don’t give a rat’s ass where she
came from,” Fallon growled. “All I know is that that rank old bastard is foisting her off
on me.”
Groves sat back, his meal forgotten. “Misha, what did he tell you about her?”
“Not a fucking thing,” Fallon answered, and took another gulp of coffee before