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Winds of Change

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by Christine Pope




  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, places, organizations, or persons, whether living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  WINDS OF CHANGE

  Copyright © 2020 by Christine Pope

  Published by Dark Valentine Press

  Cover design by Lou Harper

  Ebook formatting by Indie Author Services

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems — except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews — without permission in writing from its publisher, Dark Valentine Press.

  Don’t miss out on any of Christine’s new releases — sign up for her newsletter today!

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Epilogue

  Also by Christine Pope

  About the Author

  1

  His phone was ringing. Jake Wilcox rolled over in bed and cracked an eyelid, noting how his bedroom was still quite dark, with only a faint dim glow beyond the wooden blinds telling him that morning was on its way, that it wasn’t still the middle of the night.

  He rolled over and grabbed the phone so he could look at the screen and see what time it was. Six-twenty, which felt about right, based on the amount of low light filtering into the room. He’d set his alarm for six-thirty, wanting to get on the road as soon as he could. Now that he had his parents’ blessing — well, more or less…they weren’t exactly happy about his decision to move to Wyoming with Addie Grant, the woman who had stolen his heart, but neither had they tried to stop him — and now that he had his cousin Molly to watch the house until he decided whether to sell it or rent it, he didn’t have any reason to linger in Flagstaff.

  But then his brain locked on the uncomfortable realization that no one called at six-something in the morning unless it was an emergency or something was terribly wrong.

  The number on the phone wasn’t familiar.

  “Jake Wilcox,” he said, hoping he sounded calm and assured, not like someone who’d just been awakened from a deep sleep by a call he hadn’t been expecting.

  A man’s voice, one he knew he’d never heard before. It was deep and slow and deliberate, something in its timbre indicating that the person speaking was at least several decades older than he. “Jake, this is Carson Archuleta.”

  At once, Jake sat up in bed, the unease that had already been nagging at him morphing into a flash of sharp-edged anxiety. “What’s wrong?”

  Because he couldn’t think why the head of the Northern Arapahoe tribe would call him at such an ungodly hour of the morning…unless something awful had happened.

  “Addie,” Carson replied, his voice heavy with worry. “She’s been taken.”

  “‘Taken’?” Jake repeated. At first, the simple word didn’t want to penetrate his sleep-fogged brain. Almost at once, though, realization dawned, bright and terrible as the lightning bolts Addie commanded with her weather-working powers. “By Randall Lenz?”

  “I believe so…unless she had someone else trying to track her down.”

  God, Jake hoped not. Agent Lenz on his own was quite enough for them to deal with. Scrubbing his hair again in the vain hope that doing so might help to wake him up more quickly, Jake asked, “What happened?”

  “He must have brought a team with him,” Carson said. “That’s the only explanation, because I had three men guarding Addie’s house in your absence. She was feeling worried about being alone.”

  With good cause, apparently. Right then, Jake cursed himself for leaving her in Riverton by herself. She’d assured him that she would be fine, and they’d both honestly thought she was safer in Wyoming than she would have been if she’d come with him to Flagstaff, but it seemed they’d both been mistaken.

  Horribly mistaken.

  And he also cursed the miles that separated him from Riverton now, even though he didn’t know what the hell difference being there would make.

  Addie was gone.

  “My men were overpowered,” Carson went on. “They didn’t see their attackers, which tells me they were skilled and stealthy.”

  “Are your people okay?” Jake asked. Even though worry for the woman he loved knotted his gut and sent adrenaline surging through his tired limbs, he had to hope that Carson’s men hadn’t paid the ultimate price for the protection they’d offered.

  “They were knocked out, but they’ll be all right in a day or so,” the older man replied. “I have a feeling Lenz’s team wanted to make sure they didn’t suffer any life-threatening injuries. Even on tribal lands, that sort of thing would have opened up all sorts of inquiries by the authorities.”

  Although he guessed the question was probably futile, Jake decided he needed to ask it anyway. “Any idea where they took her?”

  A pause, and then Carson said, “I have a feeling you probably know the answer to that better than I do.”

  “Maybe,” Jake allowed. Carson had been nothing but an ally in this mess, but at the same time, Jake didn’t feel comfortable telling him that yes, he actually had a damn good idea where Lenz had taken Allie, thanks to his younger brother Jeremy’s superior computer-hacking skills.

  Archuleta didn’t seem put off by the equivocation, and went on, “I have reports that a private jet landed at the airport outside Riverton a little before dusk and then took off around ten-thirty last night. I assume the jet belonged to Agent Lenz.”

  “Probably.” A pause as Jake rubbed his forehead, all the while wishing he could snap his fingers and make a mug of coffee appear magically in his hand. However, while his telekinetic gift sometimes came in useful, it didn’t allow him to bend time and space quite that much. “But how did he even know to look for her in Riverton? She did a damn good job of covering her tracks.”

  “You found her,” Carson said, his tone so mild that the words couldn’t really be construed as a rebuke.

  “Yeah, but….” The words trailed off there as Jake realized he probably shouldn’t explain his brother’s magical gift with computers to someone who was next thing to a stranger, even if the other man did happen to know there was a hell of a lot more to Addie than met the eye. “She told me she would be careful,” he added, knowing even as he spoke how inadequate those words sounded.

  A sigh rustled its way through the phone’s speaker. “No doubt that was her intention. Unfortunately, the universe decided otherwise.”

  “I don’t understand.”

  “There was a fire. A prairie fire, threatening the casino. She didn’t want the tribe, the town, to lose something that supported so many people in the community. So….”

  Carson went silent then, but he didn’t need to finish the sentence. Jake understood all too well what must have happened. A fire that no ordinary methods could put out, but one that Addie, with her vast weather-working gifts, could extinguish easily. She brought the rain, and saved the casino.

  And doomed herself at the same time.

  Amazing how steady his voice sounded as he said, “Thanks, Carson. I need to
talk to my cousin, figure out what to do next.”

  Most people probably would have asked what Jake’s cousin could possibly do in such a situation. However, the tribal leader didn’t question his words, whether because he knew something of how witch clans were structured, or simply because he didn’t think it was his place to probe too deeply. Instead, he responded, “Is there anything you need me to do?”

  Not unless you’ve got a team of people there on the reservation who know something about breaking into secure government facilities, Jake thought, although he didn’t bother to say those words aloud. As much as he would have liked the help, he had a feeling the Wilcox clan was on its own with this one.

  “Can you keep an eye on Addie’s house?” he asked instead. “And maybe come up with some sort of cover story as to why she won’t be in to work for a while?”

  “Consider it done,” Carson replied. “It’s the least I can do, when there’s a very good chance the casino wouldn’t still be standing if it weren’t for her intervention.”

  “I appreciate it,” Jake said, and left it at that. There was no point in telling Carson that he didn’t think the casino was a fair exchange for the life of the woman he loved. Obviously, Addie had believed it was worth the risk. She’d known that Randall Lenz had tracked her to Kanab because of the storm she’d caused there, and so she must have known there was a very good chance he’d be able to find her in Riverton if she used her powers in such an obvious way. Those worries hadn’t been enough to stop her from doing what she knew was right, though.

  And that was why Jake loved her…or at least, it was just another in a long list of reasons why she’d stolen his heart. Addie Grant was not the sort of person to shy away from making the hard choices, even when she understood all too well what those choices might cost her.

  “I’m sorry,” Carson said again. “All my well wishes — and those of my tribe — go with you.”

  “Thanks,” Jake replied.

  Right then, he wasn’t sure whether well wishes would be enough.

  Adara Grant lay on the bed in the suite that had been prepared for her, the monitors at her bedside showing the slow, strong beat of her heart, her steady respiration, blood pressure holding at an optimal one-twenty over eighty. Randall Lenz sat at her bedside, watching her, even though he knew it would be several more hours before the drug released its hold on her and she swam back up to consciousness.

  He’d expected to feel triumphant at the realization that she was finally here, that her amazing talents would soon be put through a battery of tests to determine their limits and strengths. All the other participants in the program had gone through similar testing, although those tests had each been tailored for their individual talents.

  In that moment, however, he felt more exhausted than anything else. Too much running from place to place, he supposed; too many time zones and not enough sleep.

  And perhaps the after-effects of the lightning bolt he suspected she’d zapped him with nearly two weeks earlier. Although he still didn’t know for sure what had really happened to him, whatever it was, it had definitely caused some lasting damage. No, his headaches weren’t quite as bad as they’d once been, and he hadn’t experienced any further nosebleeds after the first one, but Lenz guessed his body still hadn’t completely recovered from the shock — no pun intended — it had experienced.

  What would Adara do when she awoke? Would she know immediately what had happened, and attempt to use her powers to defend herself?

  Very possibly, but the effects of such an attack probably wouldn’t be what she’d intended. There were no windows in the rooms where she would be living at the secret government facility just outside Alexandria, no way for the weather to affect him or anyone else inside what was, to all intents and purposes, an underground bunker. The suite had been furnished to look like a well-appointed vacation condo…except for a complete lack of windows, along with state-of-the-art biometric locks on the doors. Those locks wouldn’t open for anyone except Lenz himself and a few others, like Dr. Richards and her team, and those whose job it was to bring the subjects their meals and make sure they weren’t lacking for anything.

  Well, anything except their freedom.

  At any rate, it would be difficult to use lightning as a weapon when there weren’t any windows to give it access, and where the facility’s electrical system had been shielded to protect it from any unusual surges.

  That thought comforted him somewhat, as did his memory of the raid on Adara’s rented home in Riverton, Wyoming. Really, the operation had been pretty much textbook. Just the slightest bit of a surprise when he and Ives and Tolliver discovered that her house was being guarded by three tough-looking Native American men, but they’d been able to regroup and re-strategize, and the guards had been dispatched easily enough. Quite possibly they were good to have around during a barroom brawl, but they were no match for a group that included a former Air Force pilot, an ex-SEAL, and an agent who’d trained in hand-to-hand combat for more than fifteen years.

  The street where Adara’s house in Riverton was located was a quiet one, and no one had taken any notice of Lenz’s group driving her away in a dark SUV. The men they’d knocked out would wake in the morning with a set of nasty headaches, but they would be fine in a day or two. And because he and his commandos had made sure to wear masks during the raid, there was no way those guards could identify their attackers. No one should have any idea who had taken Adara Grant, or why.

  Except possibly the mysterious Jake, the man who’d come to her rescue in Kanab. Lenz still couldn’t quite figure out what the connection was between the two of them.

  But he had Adara now, and soon enough, she would tell him what he needed to know, including who Jake really was, and why he’d been able to find her in Kanab. Once he was in possession of those particular facts, Lenz had a feeling a great many things would be explained.

  He couldn’t wait for her to wake up.

  2

  My head pounded. I lifted a hand to touch my temple, thinking I might find a bump on my forehead, something to explain the throbbing ache I was experiencing, but my searching fingers couldn’t find anything out of the ordinary. And I felt strange all over, too, oddly limp and weak, as if I’d been in bed with a fever for days.

  But my skin didn’t feel hot. If anything, it was almost too cool to the touch, as though the room where I lay was overly air-conditioned. I realized I wasn’t dressed for a warm summer night, though — I wore a loose dark sleep shirt with long sleeves and what felt like some kind of lightweight knit pants that hit mid-calf. Maybe I’d turned up the air conditioning in my rented house because the only nightclothes I had were too warm for a June night.

  Problem was, I couldn’t remember turning on the A/C. It had been a pleasantly cool night in Riverton, with a gentle breeze wafting in through the open windows. I couldn’t even smell the remnants of the fire that had threatened the Wind River Casino, a fire I’d put out by summoning a tremendous thunderstorm to quench the flames.

  A storm….

  Memory hit with the force of a gale wind, and the weakness I’d just experienced fled. I sat bolt upright in bed — only to realize I wasn’t in the house I’d rented only a few days earlier, but a nicely furnished yet somehow anonymous room I’d never seen before, with dark oak furniture and autumn landscapes on the walls, which had been painted a warm tan shade. Next to my bed was a hard-backed chair that looked as if it had been brought in from another room, and sitting in that chair was Randall Lenz.

  A squeak of fright escaped my lips before I could hold it back. At once, his ice-blue eyes met mine, and his rather thin lips lifted in a smile.

  “Awake?” he asked — quite unnecessarily, since it was pretty obvious that I’d finally shaken off the effects of whatever drug had been in the needle he’d poked me with.

  I didn’t bother to dignify his question with a reply. No, I pressed my hands down flat against the mattress and blinked, willing the room to stop s
pinning. Obviously, sitting up that quickly after I’d been out of it for God knows how many hours hadn’t been a very good idea.

  “Where am I?”

  He didn’t blink. “In a secure facility.”

  “The one where you’re holding all the other people like me?”

  Still no blink, but I saw the way his eyes flared in surprise for less than a second before his expression grew shuttered once again. As I watched him, I noticed that he was only in his shirtsleeves, the tie and jacket he seemed to always be wearing nowhere in evidence. And he looked tired, with shadows under his eyes, much more shadowed than the eyes of a man around forty should have been. Had those shadows been there before I hit him with that lightning bolt? I couldn’t remember. Frankly, when he’d confronted me at the cottage in Flagstaff, I’d been so shocked to see him that I hadn’t taken in many details of his appearance. His mere presence had been enough to throw me completely off balance.

  Lenz’s voice was even as he responded, “What other people?”

  “Like I said, the ones like me. The ones with…powers.”

  Maybe the slightest compression of his lips. He was pretty good at hiding whatever might be going through his mind, but I’d been watching closely for his reaction. I already knew the truth; I wanted to see whether he’d keep trying to cover it up.

  He crossed his hands in his lap. For the first time, I noticed he wasn’t wearing any rings. No big surprise, I supposed — I couldn’t really imagine someone like him having a normal life with a wife and family.

  “How do you know about that?” he asked after a lengthy pause.

 

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