by Berinn Rae
She ignored the offered hand and slid into the booth. “Yep. And I’m guessing you’re Jax’s CO.”
A smirk crossed his face. “Major Sommers at your service.” He eyed her before sitting back down. He put both elbows on the table and leaned forward over his beer. “Jax mentioned that you might have run into trouble with some illegal aliens.”
Sienna simply shrugged and glanced at Jax, who stood at the edge of the booth as though on guard. Not that she was an I-told-you-so kind of girl — okay, maybe a little bit — but she’d kept warning Legian that the U.S. military wasn’t half as dumb as he thought. If the Sephians had one flaw, it was that they thought they were smarter than everyone else. Not exactly an ego boost for the lone human in a bunker of five hundred-plus aliens. Then again, they earned their freedom the old-fashioned way. With blood, tears, and death. They deserved a little self-righteousness, no matter how annoying that could be at times.
Even with radar dampeners installed on their ships and throughout their base, Sienna figured it was just a matter of time before someone started sniffing around and noticed that something wasn’t quite right. Heck, she was surprised it took as long as it did.
Clasping her fingers, she leaned forward. “Let’s say I have friends in from out of town to help us with the problem of some unfavorables who’ve also decided to come for a visit.” She spoke as if her insides weren’t tied in knots. Breathe in. Out. In.
Buzzcut raised a brow. “We believe your friends have been here for some time, before we found that interesting weapon in your cabin.”
Her mouth dropped. “You searched my place?”
Buzzcut continued. “Our country has a stand. We don’t put up with illegal aliens of any kind.”
While anyone overhearing the conversation would assume they were talking about workers coming over from Mexico, they both understood the true meaning of his words. “The Sephians don’t want to raise a fuss. It’s the Draeken you have to worry about,” Sienna whispered.
He gestured to her, or to her soullare more likely. “So tell me why I should trust you.”
“I’m sure you did your homework. So you already know I consulted with your division — the ET unit — for some time.”
“Yes. And your late husband was a trusted officer in the unit, which we prefer to call the 51st Division,” the man added.
“How much do you know about the Sephians and Draeken?” she asked.
The major shrugged, giving her a non-response.
“Well, I can put you in touch directly with the Sephians. They’re not the ones you have to worry about. The Draeken plan to set up shop here, and they don’t share well.”
“When do they plan to do that?”
“Soon.” Sienna rose to her feet, forcing Jax to take a step back as she fought to tamp down the fear building within her. “I can assure you we’re on the same team. It’s time to help the Sephians help us, and I hope you’ll agree. Think on it. I’ll call Jax one week from now.”
Sommers eyed her for a moment before giving a tight nod.
“I’ll be in touch.” As she turned to walk away, she noticed Sommers said something as he lifted his beer. It wouldn’t have been odd except Jax was standing next to her, leaving no one near Buzzcut. Dammit. Ear piece.
Jax followed her to the door, and she stopped him with a forearm to the chest.
His next words were haunting. “Get out of there now, Sienna.”
“Too late for that, Jax.” Sienna threw open the door and stepped into the cool night air. Grabbing the helmet off the seat, she hopped on her three-wheeled Bombardier Can Am Spyder, and peeled away from the curb, not quite sure if she just helped the Sephians or opened their back door to the proverbial wolf.
As she sped under flashes of streetlamps, it hit her that Jax and Buzzcut were the first humans she had talked to in the three months since she’d moved to the base. It seemed like forever ago since she hadn’t been the one the Sephians looked at like she was the alien. The normalcy of something as simple as a dance reminded her of a quiet, easy life she used to have. A life nothing like the commitment she’d made when she jumped down that rabbit hole with Legian.
Intense emotions washed over her, and she gunned the engine. There was no going back. She had to get her head on straight, quit thinking of the way things used to be, and focus on what they were now. Life changes. You of all people know that. Get over it, and get on with your life.
She nearly crashed when a bike identical to hers pulled up alongside her. She didn’t even have to look to know a furious Legian glared back at her. She could feel him glower. She should have known her tahren would follow her. He yanked his bike in front of hers.
Sienna followed him down a country road, making turns every couple of miles until he stopped abruptly, kicking up rocks. He climbed off his bike, pulled off his helmet, and stalked toward her like he wanted to kill her.
She scowled right back.
He abruptly stepped forward, grabbed her brusquely by the arms, and kissed her hard and merciless. When he let go, she was breathing heavy.
Legian released her and began to pace and forth, pausing to look up at her every few steps. “Dammit, Sienna. You could’ve gotten taken. Or worse.”
“But I didn’t. And someone needed to warn my people. The 51st Division can help,” she replied, crossing her arms over her chest.
He mimicked her stance and said nothing.
She broke first. “It was Jax. I gave him a heads up on the Draeken threat, and said I’d talk to him in a week. Everything turned out fine. Well, except for the fact that the U.S. military is already onto you big and bad. Oh, and they got it in their heads that you’re aliens.”
He rubbed his head, the moonlight glistening off his skin. Then he dropped his arms, walked up to her, and ran his hands over her.
She batted his hands away from her neck. “Stop that. That tickles.”
He held up a tiny device of some sort, which looked exactly what she’d seen before on her job. “Bug?”
He nodded tightly.
Sienna flashed him an innocent smile, shrugged, and then slumped. “Jax. That bastard bugged me.”
Chapter Five
Legian dropped the tracking device and shot it, sending dirt and leaves scattering. Sienna cringed from the blast and from the anger radiating off him.
He watched the charred device smoke for a couple seconds before he spun on his heel and gave her the I’m-pissed-off-at-the-world-and-at-you-most-of-all look. “You could have been taken. Or harmed.”
Sienna held up her hands in surrender. “I thought I could trust him.”
He turned away, giving her his back. With a sigh of exasperation, he ran a hand across the back of his neck and rolled his head from one shoulder to the other, the sound of his neck cracking breaking the night’s silence.
The action was a telltale sign that he was getting a tension headache. Legian and headaches did not mix. She lifted a tentative hand and rubbed his bicep. “I just wanted to help.”
After a moment, he turned his head and looked her up and down, not appearing one bit happier. But at least he was no longer a racecar in red. “Take off your clothes.”
Confused, Sienna cocked her head. He said nothing more, just continued to watch her. He looked neither happy nor aroused.
“I don’t understand,” she said.
“You could have another tracer on you.”
She furrowed her brow. “Why in the world would they plant a second bug?”
“It’s what I would do. Clothes. Off. Now.”
“Please,” Sienna mumbled as she yanked off her jacket and began to undo her belt. Suddenly, he grabbed her wrist, stopping her. She glanced up, but he wasn’t looking at her. Legian was too busy looking down the dark road to take notice.
“Too late. They’re moving in.”
“Guess you shouldn’t have destroyed the bug to let them know we’re onto them, huh,” she muttered and bit her lip, instantly regretting not keeping
that little outburst in the Inner Dialogue category. But, freaking A, that man knew how to push her buttons. After all, getting bugged was an honest, newbie mistake. Getting bugged by her late husband’s best friend … that just hurt.
“I don’t hear anything.” With the bike headlights off, the country night was black under a thick cloud cover. Exactly how Sephians liked it best.
“Three vehicles. About a mile off. Closing in fast.”
“Call the base for pick up?” she asked, at the same time thanking God for Sephian night vision.
“No time.”
Her heart plummeted. In a rush, Sienna threw on her helmet and jumped on the bike. Legian moved even faster. The headlights came to life when they revved the engines. Kicking up gravel, they sped down the one-lane road and away from the military.
Legian drove way too fast for her skill. It was a miracle she kept up with him without breaking her neck. That was, until he hit the brakes, and he almost had a Spyder and a human shoved up his ass. She cranked the bike sideways, her grip superglue on the handlebar. Having two wheels on front saved her. If it had been a regular bike, she would have laid it flat. As it was, the front right tire stopped an inch from his bike.
“Why did you stop?” she asked, the words coming out more shrill than intended.
“Dead-end.”
Shit, shit, shit. She tilted her head enough to look past him. “Hoof it from here?”
“We go on foot. Into the woods.”
She shook her head before turning off the bike and grabbing the key, just in case she could get back to it.
About the time she pulled off her helmet, she stopped and turned. There was no mistaking the engine noise now; they were coming up fast and hard. Multiple big vehicles. Go Army. Her helmet fell to the ground with a thud, and she gave one last winsome look at the Spyder.
I really loved that bike.
“We’ll find out soon enough if you have a second tracer on you.” Legian grabbed her hand and led the way into the woods. She followed him in the blackness, putting all her faith in his ability to find them a way out of this mess.
Adrenaline kicked in as Legian helped Sienna weave around trees and crash through saplings in the cloudy night. He picked up the pace. Branches whipped at her from all directions, and she used her free arm as a shield. Still, she could hear footsteps closing the distance between them. Air blistered in her lungs, and her legs were bleeding momentum. She’d worked out twice a day for the past three months, and she was still no match for the speed of the military guys hot on their tails.
“Omigod. You’re. A. Freaking. Mutant,” she panted out between breaths while trying to keep up with Legian.
“Stay safe.”
“Wha — ” Without any additional warning, Sienna went sailing the air. She bit back a scream, and then landed hard, rolling back onto her feet. Legian was strong, and he’d swung her into a gulley of some kind. She cautiously cocked her head side to side. No whiplash. Good. No broken bones. Good. Still, her body was going to hate her in the morning. Legian tended to forget that she lacked the Sephian ability to heal. And she made a mental note to remind him every chance she got for the next decade. Speaking of which … “Legian?” she whispered.
No answer. Damn, damn, double damn.
With the moon hidden by clouds, she couldn’t make out much in the blackness. She held out her arms and began to walk forward as fast as a nearly blind woman could in a forest. Once she could hear above her ragged breathing, she whispered again. “Legian? You here? I think we lost — oof.”
Lying in the dirt, her shin throbbed. She leaned back against the fallen tree she’d catapulted over. To make matters worse, when she squinted, she saw Jax standing over her. Except now he wasn’t wearing a ten-gallon hat. His eyes were covered with night goggles, meaning he could see fine and dandy in the darkness. He held a GPS-style device in one hand with a flashing bleep right in the center, the red light glinting off the nine millimeter he held in the other. Damn, Legian had been right all along. She still had a second bug on her.
“Where’s the one that was with you?” he commanded, the gun never wavering from the bulls-eye right between her eyes.
“Tut, tut, Sienna. Then how’d you get two bikes out here?”
Oops. “He ditched me.” Except the words sounded more like a question than a statement.
“Halo Two reporting. Target One attained. At least one unaccounted for. No tracking,” he spoke into the night air.
Sienna could barely make out his frown in the darkness. “Halo One. Come in.” He paused for a moment and looked around, his gun still trained on her. He tried to reach his squad several more times, and by the number of F-bombs he was dropping, he wasn’t getting the response he was looking for.
“Thanks for the flowers, Jax.”
He paused. “It didn’t have to be this way, Sienna.”
Ever since Bobby died, every year Jax sent her flowers for her birthday. Too bad he got the date wrong. Just like Bobby. She took the risk and pulled herself up onto the log, yelped, and grabbed her leg. She winced and looked up at him. “I think my leg’s broken.”
Jax watched her for a minute. A sliver of moon had peeked out from a cloud and made sweat glisten on his face. He did not look happy with the situation, which perked her up a little, considering she was downright miserable with how the night had turned out. Then, surprisingly, he slid the gun into his holster and reached down to her.
Sucker.
As he pulled her up, she whipped out the Taser from the waistband of her jeans, pushed him off her, and zapped the hell out of him. Electrical buzz filled the air as two wires sent a violent charge into his chest. The shot lasted five seconds, but she imagined it felt like an eternity for the poor bastard. When the burst stopped, he fell to the ground, his muscles paralyzed. She almost felt bad for him. Almost.
Sienna bent over Jax, and shook her head while he convulsed on the ground. “That’s what you get for bugging me.” She then pulled out a small cylinder that looked like a mini lipstick tube. Except this stuff was way cooler. Colorless, odorless, and über potent. She took off the cap and ran it across his neck the moment his hand grabbed her calf. Instantly, his grip relaxed, and his eyes fell shut. The guy would be out for hours.
She pulled the wires from his chest, retracted them into the Taser, and slid the weapon back into her waistband. Then, she felt around his neck for a transmitter and realized it was an all-in-one earpiece. She placed it on top of the log and crushed it with her heel.
“Hey.” A voice startled her from behind. She swung out, and he ducked. “Nice one.” Legian sounded more pleased than pissed that she tried to clothesline him.
She settled back down on the log and felt a bump the size of Texas forming on her shin. At least her leg wasn’t broken. Jax didn’t need to know that she’d exaggerated slightly. She pulled out her black bandana with pink skulls and wiped the sweat from her face, and then she looked up at Legian. “Where’d you go?”
“Leading the rest off trail. I hijacked this one’s transmissions and tricked the others into thinking I was him. Should buy us extra time before they figure it out.”
“So that’s why Jax couldn’t get a hold of them.”
“This is Jax?”
Sienna nodded down at the guy lying on the ground. He stalked toward the fallen soldier, and she hoped he wasn’t going to do what she thought he might do.
“I may still be bugged,” she blurted out in an attempt to distract him.
Legian stopped, looked at her, at the soldier, then back at her. Then he held out a small button. It looked like a mini Easy Button. Ironically, the thing was even red. “I blocked the signal.”
“Awesome,” was all she could say. After all, when it came to that sort of thing, Legian was pretty much Mission: Impossible. Then she stopped cold. “So I couldn’t be tracked …”
“Once I activated the blocker,” he finished for her.
She stared at him for a moment, and then
shoved him. Or, at least tried to shove him. The big oaf didn’t move an inch. Not even for charity’s sake. “You could’ve done that the moment I left the bar.”
“I wanted to know if they planted tracers on you.”
“I think the first tracer you found gave it away,” she replied drily.
“Yes, but I wanted to understand how they operate.”
“And now you know?” she asked with her hands on her hips.
“I know more. Your race is better trained than I anticipated.” She glared, and he sighed before speaking again. “I would never have done it if I felt you were at risk. You know that, yes?”
She stood for a moment before relaxing. “I know,” she whispered.
He smiled and held out a hand. “Let’s go.”
“Uh, Legian?”
“What?”
She didn’t want to ask, but she had to. “What do we do with Jax?”
“Leave him.”
She was still pissed at the betrayal, but leaving the soldier was flat out wrong. “We can’t leave him here. What if they don’t find him? What if he gets bit by a rattlesnake or eaten by a bear?”
“The bears in this area are small. They could only gnaw on him.”
“Like that’s any better.”
“Not my problem.”
“Well, it’s mine. I knocked him out. He’s not part of a catch-and-release program.”
“He’ll slow us down. You can’t afford to be soft, Sienna. He wouldn’t show the same mercy to you.”
Legian wouldn’t back down. Sienna wouldn’t back down. And so the battle of the wills began. Not that he was always hard-headed. Even though he could be a vicious tiger around everyone else, when he was alone with her, he usually morphed into a fuzzy kitten. Not that she could blame him. Whenever she hurt his feelings, she felt like a complete shit. She figured it had to have something to do with the whole tahren bond. She’d rather undergo death by a thousand cuts than see Legian hurt.
She could feel him already wavering when it hit her. Win-win. She snapped her fingers. “Leverage! Once Jax wakes, we question him — which does not mean torture, by the way — to find out how much the military already knows. They’re obviously onto you guys a whole lot more than we thought. And we can prove to him that we’re on the same side. It’s perfect, really. If we play our cards right, he’s our perfect in.”