she’d even completed her first op. The only thing that could make it
better, could possibly salvage the damage she’d likely already caused, was
if she took herself out of the equation. It would be so easy. Just one foot
over the edge.
The overwhelming desire to step off that damned building in a freefall to
the ground below and the realization of how close she’d been, just a
heartbeat away from acting on the impulse, now made her insides twist
with revulsion.
Before tonight Lexi had never had a suicidal thought in her life. Thank God
the dark thoughts were gone and she was back to her normal, pragmatic
self.
What was up with
that
?
She’d had a psych eval a month ago. She’d tested sane, rational, and
extremely wel adjusted.
Perhaps the dark thoughts happened to all new operatives their first time
in the field? Lexi thought that through, then shook her head. “Bull. There
hasn’t been
one
report, not one, of any such thing happening.” Of course,
an operative wouldn’t broadcast their diagnosis, and the medical staff
10
Night Shadow
would get handed their heads on a plate if they divulged private
information about a patient.
Stil , she hadn’t heard any rumors about new operatives being suicidal or
committing
suicide. And the research department heard just about
everything, true, false, or rumor.
Logically, Lexi knew she had nothing to be concerned about. An
aberration, then. An aberration brought on by adrenaline, fear, cold, and
the damn headache from hel .
It took a few minutes of deep breathing—in through the nose and out
through the mouth—to col ect herself enough to stand up and remove her
coat. Adrenaline stil surged through her system at breakneck speed. If
operatives felt this way after every confrontation, it was a wonder they
didn’t all keel over with heart attacks before they turned thirty.
She leaned over and turned on the shower to get the water warm—
research told her water was rarely
hot
in Russia—then went back into the
room to hang up her coat in the curtained-off closet space and col ect a
change of clothes. Alex’s black duffel, nearly identical to hers, was on the
floor near the bed. The difference was, his bag was battered and beat up,
hers was pristine and new.
God, just how pathetic had she looked to him, busting into the room, shot
up without LockOut on? Mortified, she briefly squeezed her eyes shut,
then told herself to buck up.
He’d taken a bottle of her water and consumed half of it, then left the
open container on the table next to the head of the bed. The room
smel ed like him. Which was patently ridiculous; operatives used nothing
containing fragrance for obvious reasons. Yet there was something
indefinable about Alex that clearly left his imprint on the room.
Lexi lifted the lumpy pillow from its crushed position at the head of the
bed and pressed it to her face, inhaling deeply. It smel ed of fresh air and
. . . Alexander Stone.
Asinine.
Her,
not him.
With a curse, she tossed it back onto the rock-hard single bed, then
stared at it. He’d know she’d moved it. She leaned over and tried to re-
create the way Alex had smashed the pil ow under his head. He’d claimed
the only bed in the room.
And just where does he think he’s going to
sleep?
she thought, annoyed with her foolishness.
With her? Not in this
lifetime.
Section C, paragraph v, subsection 1 stated that
Operation team members
are expected to share quarters as necessary to accomplish mission
objectives when safe houses are in use.
The room. Fine. But she’d be damned if that regulation would mean she’d
share a
bed
with him too.
Really?
A little voice in her head taunted.
Disinterest is why I fol owed his every op. Why I learned languages he
was learning. Why I know just about everything about him including his
underwear choice and size? Boxers. Medium.
A crush. A small case of hero worship. That was all. Proximity and her job
would nip that foolishness right out of her.
11
Night Shadow
Her shoulder burned like fire. She needed to tend to it and take that
shower before he got back. She also had to get her story straight so she
didn’t trip herself up.
The lock on the bathroom door wouldn’t keep out a determined child, so
she took a straight-backed chair into the tiny bathroom with her. Not that
he’d invade her privacy if he returned and found the bathroom door
closed. He wasn’t a man who had to go out of his way to pick up women.
His thick dark hair, dark green eyes, and body, buff enough to make
grown women weak in the head, ensured he was never lonely. Rumor of
his conquests were bul etined all over the research department like a
weekly soap opera update.
In her department, all the women wanted to date him, and the guys
wanted to
be
him. Her coworkers thought Alex was
the
most charming,
amusing, hot, dedicated operative they’d ever worked with. The women’s
emphasis was on the charming/amusing/hot portion of his program. They
rhapsodized about his sexy mouth. His great body. His naughty smile and,
oh God, those bril iant green eyes. They laughed off the fact that he was a
rule breaker and a renegade.
Whatever.
Al he was to Lexi was a pain in the butt.
And the fact that she and Alex had names that were almost identical
amused their coworkers as much as it confused human resources.
Lexi
thought it all embarrassing, especially the part about their names.
He’d received her paycheck seven times in the last five years. When she’d
accidental y received his,
twice,
Lexi had put it in his mail slot
unopened.
When he’d returned hers, he’d not only opened the damn envelope, he’d
written some irrelevant comment across her pay stub. It was an invasion
of privacy.
Just like now. He was here. Instead of Paris where he was supposed to be.
The man was annoyingly unpredictable. And in her neat, tidy world,
unpredictability equaled liability.
Lexi stripped as steam fil ed the bathroom. She suspected only the frigid
air had produced steam from water barely above room temperature. Using
the single threadbare white towel, she cleared away a circle on the mirror
and tried to see how bad her shoulder was. Hard to tel with al the blood
smeared on her skin. She’d look again after she washed it off. Right now,
it felt as bad as it looked. The bul et had only made a four-inch furrow in
the fleshy part of her shoulder. She shook her head as she tested the
temperature of the water.
Only.
Twelve hours on the job, and a bul et wound was
only.
Feeling like a fool was a new and annoying experience. Alex was right.
She’d had no business not wearing LockOut under her clothing. The T-
FLAC Protocol Manual was crystal clear on the matter.
Chapter One Section vii , paragraph 1 on uniforms. LockOut suits must be
worn as appropriate on all T-FLAC sanctioned operations. Injury resulting
from the lack of a LockOut suit will result in disciplinary action.
But I only went there to
watch,
dammit. How was I supposed to know
what would happen?
Then she shook her head. It was her job to know, to
be prepared.
12
Night Shadow
Damn. Not a full day into her first black op and she’d already violated one
of the basic rules. Not good. Not good at all. The excruciating pain in her
shoulder served her right. The write-up was going to feel worse.
Gritting her teeth against the pain that had grown into agony, she climbed
into the tub, pul ing the mildewed curtain across the opening. The thin
spray stung her chil ed skin and she shifted out of the way to adjust the
temperature before stepping back under the three pencil-thin, limp jets of
water reluctantly shooting out of the antiquated showerhead. The once-
warmish water was now tepid.
She made it quick. One, she had no idea when Alex would be back. She
didn’t want to be in here, naked, when he was out there, knowing she was
in here, naked. Two, she wanted to dress the bullet crease. And three,
she’d run out of tepid water; it was now a few degrees above cold.
“How many did you say there were?” Alex yel ed through the door just as
she stepped onto the bare linoleum floor. No bath mat, and she wasn’t
going to use the only towel.
Lexi covered her breasts with one hand and her pubes with the other as if
Alex had X-ray vision. Which he didn’t. At least she didn’t think so. It
wasn’t in his file. His powers were the ability to null psionic fields,
temporal acceleration, and she’d heard rumors that he was amphibious.
He might have several more improbable talents that she didn’t know or
want to think about.
Al , as far as she was concerned, contributed to being a T-FLAC operative
the
easy
way. The psi unit had so many tricks up their col ective sleeves
she wondered that they didn’t rule the damned world.
There was the easy way, and then there was the right way.
She grabbed the ratty towel and started drying off. “Six.” She didn’t have
to raise her voice; the door was hol ow and paper-thin.
“I didn’t see anyone, alive or dead. You say you got five of them? Where
are the bodies, and where’s the sixth guy? Did you miscount?”
Reaching for her panties, Lexi rolled her eyes. Blood dribbled down her
arm and she had to mop that up before she put on a bra. “I don’t
miscount,” she told him, making a pad out of the damp towel and laying it
over her shoulder so she could pul on her tank top. “One . . .
evaporated.”
Silence.
Lexi pulled jeans over her damp skin. “Alex?”
“Evaporated?”
The vision of the men vaporizing into clouds of black dust against the
white snow was clear in her mind. “More like disintegrated.”
“Which is it?”
“Disintegrated.”
“Know who these guys were?”
God. She hated tel ing tel him this part, she really did. It was
embarrassing. “They fol owed me from the railway station.”
“
Belorussky
station?”
His voice was neutral, but she winced anyway as she moved the chair out
from under the handle and opened the door. He was leaning against the
13
Night Shadow
jamb and she walked right into his hard chest. “Yes,” she muttered
shoving him with the flat of her hand. Surprisingly, Alex stepped back.
He wore black pants and a close-fitting black sweater over his LockOut.
She saw the edge of it at the neck of his sweater. Wel , big whoop-de-do.
Give the man a freaking prize. For once, he’d fol owed the rules, which
was all the more grating on her nerves as she held the towel to her
bleeding shoulder. An injury she wouldn’t have had if she’d done the
same.
He fol owed her as she retrieved her duffel from the floor of the closet.
“And you were there—why?”
She slammed the bag down on a rickety table, and yanked down the
zipper. “I’m an operative now, if you must know. I went to
observe.
” She
took out her own personal first-aid kit. The one given to field operatives
was excel ent. Hers was better. Better if she could get the darn thing
open
one-handed.
“Here.” Alex stepped in and removed the small soft-sided kit from her
hand. “Let me do that before you break a damned fingernail. Sit.”
Lexi parked her butt on one of two straight-backed chairs. The other one
was still in the bathroom. She held up her hand. “As you can see, I don’t
have long nails to break, in accordance with Chapter One, Section vi i,
paragraph four on uniforms in the protocol manual, regarding personal
grooming. If you’d just ope—”
“Got it. You talk. Start anywhere.” Alex’s green eyes glittered as he
opened the kit and started assembling items next to her on the table.
“Actual y,” Lexi said smoothly, “I was on a T-FLAC jet en route to join you
in Paris. In flight, we received intel that tangos were holding several
hundred people hostage at the station. The plane was diverted here.”
He removed the bloody towel from her shoulder. Lexi felt the heat of his
body on her cold skin. She wanted to crawl into his nice thick sweater with
him; for warmth, of course. That would heat her up fast. She imagined his