Taken by Fire (13 page)

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Authors: Sydney Croft

BOOK: Taken by Fire
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More than once, Oz had lured him from the office with soft promises—and if Dev hadn’t responded, Oz would simply throw him over the desk, fuck him until he was too tired to protest, and then take him home.

Now Dev scrubbed his hands through his hair and realized it was past ten in the morning, that he still had it in him to work all night and not break stride.

That he’d started working again all night because he was getting too close to Gabriel and it freaked him out.

Dammit.

“I could lose him, Oz.” He tapped his fingers on the desk as if he was sending out a furious Morse code to the dead. “I could lose him the way I lost you, and then what?”

Oz, of course, didn’t answer him worth a damn.

But right now, that was unfortunately the least of his problems, because the shit with Itor had been getting worse to deal with. ACRO’s psychics might have built a protective shield around his mind, but the barrier didn’t do anything to keep Devlin from thinking about his biological father. And now his half sister was being thrown into the mix—a two for one, since there was an alter—and he didn’t know how the hell to deal with it.

Could he ever trust her? Would he have to kill her along with Alek?

Just then, the voices got louder—and he almost yelled out the office door to keep it down. Until he realized the voices were coming from inside his own head, and dammit all to hell, the arguing was enough to make him want to strangle one of them. He listened carefully to the angry male voices—and the worry, enough worry to make him nervous as well—and within moments had the who and where pinpointed.

Ender. Wyatt. Stryker. They were like extra-large children with enough testosterone among them to take down most of the free world.

Added to that, their goddamned posturing was making his
head throb. And not the good head in the good way either, dammit. Combined with this Gabriel thing, Dev was a far less than happy camper.

At least Avery was keeping his trap shut through all of this. But still, somehow, information that should’ve been classified was leaking out—and he knew for sure it wasn’t from his mind being read.

And then, another voice, one he didn’t know but it still made pins and needles shoot up his spine.
If you have to kill me, do it
.

“Call the plane,” he barked into the intercom, and Marlena walked back into his office and calmly did so, keeping the phone on speaker as she said to the pilot, “Devlin O’Malley has a message for the men on board—can you please transmit over the loudspeaker for him?”

“Yes, ma’am. And yes, sir, Mr. O’Malley. Whenever you’re ready,” Captain Liskin said crisply.

“Which one of you assholes wants to tell me what’s going on there?” Devlin paused to listen, heard Ender mutter, “Like you don’t fucking know already,” and that’s when he lost it completely.

“When you get off that plane, your ass is mine, Ender. Yours too, Wyatt. And Stryker, I don’t know what the hell’s going on with you, but you’ve been out of contact—”

“I was detained,” Stryker shot back with enough force to make Dev stop for a moment. But just a moment.

“You listen to me—all of you,” he said with a growl. “Stop talking. Right now. And don’t think about touching a hair on that woman’s head, do I make myself clear?”

“Yes, sir,” the men said in unison.

“And you, Melanie or Phoebe or whoever you are? Be careful what you ask for. Your wish might just come true.”

“Oh, my God.”

Annika Svenson stood at the threshold of Dev’s office, her heart thundering madly. She probably wasn’t supposed to overhear Dev on the phone, but Marlena had learned long ago that trying to stop Annika from barging into the office was useless, and now that Annika was pregnant, the secretary made even fewer waves. In fact, everyone on base had suddenly become all kid-gloves with Ani. Even people who had always hated her. Which was kind of funny, and it took the sting out of being treated like an invalid.

Dev’s brown eyes flashed with surprise, which was a rarity. “Clearly you forgot that conversation we had about you making appointments?”

“Which one?” She hurried inside, trying not to wince at how her boots pinched her swollen feet. “Dev—oh, my God, you got the bitch. You got that bitch who killed Akbar.”

Dev nodded, but there was an uncharacteristic hesitance in the action. “Yeah. We got her.”

Okay, so maybe he was having a bittersweet moment. Because, sure, they had the killer in their clutches, but the fact that Akbar was dead remained. Just as dead as the Phoebe bitch would soon be.

“Let me have her.”

Dev leaned back in his chair, folding his fingers over his abs. Anyone else would have looked relaxed, but in his black BDUs, Dev managed to radiate authority and danger. “Annika, even if you hadn’t lost your powers, you’re the most pregnant woman I’ve ever seen.”

“Oh, funny, Dev. It’s these stupid maternity BDUs. Not flattering at all.” She rubbed her very pregnant belly and ignored his smirk and his comment about losing her powers. That was one of the dangers of pregnancy among special-ability types like her; pregnancy often affected powers, and sometimes they didn’t return after the baby was born. Annika was terrified of not regaining her electric shock ability that made her so lethal in the field, but she tried not to obsess.

Much.

“I told you months ago that you could wear civvies, and you should be on maternity leave anyway.”

Whatever. She wasn’t the sit-at-home-and-knit-booties type. “So. Who bagged the skank?”

“Stryker.”

Annika’s head snapped back hard enough to give her a sudden headache. “And she’s still alive?”

Stryker had wanted Phoebe dead even more than Annika, had been consumed by the need to shove a blade into her black heart. No way would he have gone for the capture over the kill.

“She’s alive,” Dev said, “because I want her that way.”

“You planning to torture her first?” Excellent.

“I’m planning to get her to talk. She can help us bring down Itor—”

“Bullshit.” Annika eyed the couch and then decided that if
she sat, she’d be turtled and never get up again. “She won’t talk and you know it.”

“Phoebe won’t, but Melanie might.”

Okay, this was just bizarre. Annika didn’t buy the whole multiple-personality thing, and she wouldn’t believe anything the psycho said anyway. “And after you get what you want from her? Are you going to let Stryker have her?” The way Dev avoided her gaze put a lump in her gut, though it had to fight for room with the baby. “Dev?”

“Even if we can’t get intel from her, I can’t kill her. Not until Itor is dismantled.”

A chill ran up her spine, feeding her dread and her anger. “
You
might not be able to, but
I
can.”

“No,” Dev said softly, “you can’t. She’s Alek’s daughter.”

“Then we send her back to him in pieces—” Annika broke off with a gasp. “Oh, God.” She slapped her hand over her mouth and actually stumbled backward. Dev rushed around the desk to catch her, but she recovered and sidestepped him because, truth was, she didn’t want to be touched right now. “She’s … she’s your sister.”

He nodded.

Annika had to force herself to speak through a wave of nausea. “When did you find out?”

“Yesterday.”

The baby kicked, probably sensing Annika’s turmoil, and she willed herself to calm down. It didn’t stop the swirling in her stomach, though. Poor Dev. He had such evil in his family. Just once, couldn’t something be easy for him?

“I want to make one thing clear.” His voice was hard, all business. “I’m not bringing her here for a family reunion. I plan to use her to get to Alek. Taking down Itor is my number one priority, and I will do anything to accomplish that.”

“I know, Dev.” She did. But she also knew that he sometimes gave people more chances than they deserved. Annika herself was a prime example.

He nodded in that dismissive way of his. “And just as no one knows Alek is my father, no one is to know that he’s hers either.”

Well, it wasn’t “no one,” since Dev had made Annika, Creed, Ender, and Marlena aware of his relationship to Itor’s leader, but yeah, she got what he was saying. The fewer people who knew, the less pressure, speculation, and judgment would be on him.

“Goes without saying.” She waddled to the door, the sudden urge to pee cutting through her worry that Dev might be in over his head with this Phoebe situation. “Call if you need to talk or anything.”

“I will. Oh, and, Annika? You’d better decide on names. Soon.”

She narrowed her eyes at him. “Are you being psychic or paranoid?”

“I’m not telling.” He grinned, but damn, he looked beat. “I don’t suppose you want to know if it’s a boy or a girl.”

“If I’d wanted to know, I’d have asked at my last ultrasound.” She heaved her massive girth through the doorway, cursing when her belly brushed the doorknob. “This is all your fault.”

“The baby?”

“Yes. You threw me and Creed together.”

“Not like
that.

“Still your fault,” she grumbled as she shuffled through the waiting area, followed by Dev’s laughter. It really was his fault, and though she gave him a hard time, she wouldn’t change a thing. She might still doubt her ability to be a good mother, but she’d also once doubted her ability to love anyone. Yet here she was with her own little family she loved—Dev, Creed, and the unnamed life inside her.

And she’d do anything—
anything
—to protect them. Which meant that she didn’t give a shit if Phoebe was Dev’s sister or not. If the woman threatened Annika’s family in any way, shape, or form, she’d pay. And Annika didn’t believe in mercy. Or in second chances.

* * *

M
el had been in a lot of uncomfortable situations in her life, but hanging out on a plane with men who wanted her dead but who had been ordered not to kill her topped the charts.

Then there was Stryker. She couldn’t figure him out. She got that he was confused, and that he was struggling to believe she was a completely separate entity from Phoebe, and that she was on the up-and-up when it came to wanting to help take down Itor.

So yes, he had some issues to overcome. Which would explain why sometimes he was nice to her, and other times, like now, he glared and snapped. At least this time, she wasn’t the cause. His mood had been knocked around by Ender, Wyatt, and the man they’d called Dev, who had disconnected just a few minutes ago.

So now probably wasn’t the best time to tell Stryker that she had to go to the bathroom. Maybe she’d start out with something that wouldn’t require him to unchain her.

“This Dev guy … he’s your boss, right?”

Stryker nodded.

“What did he mean when he said to be careful what I wished for?”

Stryker shrugged. Great. This was going well.

“Would I know him for any reason?”

Stryker’s remarkable eyes narrowed, and she squirmed under the intensity of his stare. Well, that and because she had to go to the bathroom. “Why?”

“He sounded familiar.” She frowned. “No, not familiar. More like … I don’t know, like I felt him. Sounds crazy.”

Ender, who hadn’t taken his eyes off her, sat forward in his seat. “What do you mean, you felt him?” When she hesitated, he barked, “Answer!”

“Back off, asshole,” Stryker snapped. “You’re scaring her.”

“Waa.” Ender pouted mockingly. “I’m scaring the sweet widdle Itor agent. Maybe you can comfort her by trying to get into her pants again.”

Stryker shot to his feet, and Ender met him in the aisle. Tension became a soup in the plane, but then Wyatt was there, shoving them apart. “Knock it off. I don’t want another ass-chew call from Dev.” No one moved, and anxious energy began to build again.

“Um … excuse me? I have to go to the bathroom.”

“Too bad.” Ender sank down in his seat and kicked his feet up on another. “You can hold it for a few hours.”

“No,” she said, “I can’t. So unless you want me to ruin these really expensive seats, you’ll let me go.”

“I’ll take her,” Stryker muttered.

Ender swore. “I’ll do it. She stays cuffed and the door stays open.”

“You’re not taking her anywhere.” Stryker leaned over to unfasten her bindings from the chair. “And she can close the door.”

“You aren’t in charge anymore,” Ender said, and once again, Stryker whirled to face the other man.

Wyatt slammed his palm on Stryker’s chest. “Easy there, cowboy. Ender’s right. The door has to stay open. What if Phoebe comes out while Mel is in the bathroom?”

“I’ll go in with her.” The expression on Stryker’s face dared the other men to argue, and just as Ender opened his mouth to do exactly that, Wyatt finished unhooking the bindings.

“Go.” Wyatt stepped back to clear the aisle. “But, Stryker, don’t make us regret this.”

Stryker yanked her to her feet, which were still shackled, same as her wrists, so she had to shuffle down the aisle like a prison inmate during a transfer. Behind her she heard someone mutter something about “compromised,” and Stryker let out a series of nasty curses as he shoved her into one of the bathrooms. He came in behind her, and though she was grateful that it was
about three times the size of a commercial jet’s restroom and included a shower stall, it was cramped for two people.

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