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Blood Red Kiss

Page 27

by Kresley Cole


  Devyn gave her a faux pout, seemingly impervious to his own wounds. “I hate to add more bloodstains to your clothing, beauty, but you’re going to bleed buckets before I’m finished with you.”

  Dallas stepped in front of him, as if to have a go at her himself. But . . . he just stood there. Intending to stop his friend before he hurt her?

  Wishful thinking. No doubt he wanted a front-row seat to her downfall. And she would fall. At least for a little while. Devyn’s words were more than a scare tactic; they were a vow.

  Never let them see your pain. “You call what I’m wearing clothing?” She tsked and smiled at him. The glow-in-the-dark jumpsuit was a staple of IOT and all she’d ever worn. “You are too kind. And haven’t you heard? Blood is the new black.”

  Both men peered at her, silent. Baffled by her boldness?

  They shared a look, but still didn’t speak a word, and she wondered if they could communicate telepathically the way she and Jade did. A link she’d struggled to maintain since her capture. Because of the distance between the garage and the institute, she had to use more power than she could spare, which was why she’d only checked in once a day as proof of life.

  Devyn tapped a bloody finger to his chin, leaving a smear of crimson. A smear that should have been obscene; on him it was right at home. “Either you’re afraid of what Trinity will do to you if she finds out you betrayed her, which means you fear the wrong person. I will do much, much worse than she could ever dream. Or you like her, maybe even consider her a friend. Otherwise you’d help us. So tell me. Which is it?”

  Panic threatened to overtake her. The more they knew about Lilica’s connection to Trinity, the less her chances of success. Reveal nothing. “You’re the world’s worst host.” Blithe smile. “Why would I want to help you with anything?”

  He arched a brow. “Do you think she’s going to swoop in and save you? She won’t, I assure you. I’ve never met a more self-serving individual—and I meet myself every day.” He shrugged. “I told you the day I found you I wouldn’t hurt you if you told me everything you know about Trinity. The deal still stands.”

  “Why should I believe you?” She ran a finger along her neck, where he’d last sliced her. “What makes you think I know anything?”

  “Perhaps my Spidey senses are tingling.”

  She didn’t understand the reference, but she would never tell him the truth or even attempt to weave a lie. The scientists had lied to her always, about everything and nothing. A beating was preferable to emulating the ones she despised.

  Devyn’s head tilted to the side, his examination of her intensifying. “What’s your endgame?”

  Easy. Once Lilica had dealt with Dallas, the newest threat to Trinity’s life, then found and cleansed her eldest sister of the Schön—somehow, some way—the Swans would leave New Chicago for good and start over.

  Start over? Please. They’d finally start. Live for the first time, do normal things like grocery shop and date. Move into a normal house. Drive a car. Host a cocktail party. Celebrate the holidays like a real family. The way she’d seen families celebrate through Jade’s visions. Maybe Lilica would even fall in love with a tall, dark, and handsome man, get married, and have children.

  A dull pang of longing struck her.

  Could she have children? Should she? She was part of an experiment gone wrong, not human and not alien, but the worst of both. If ever another research lab or government agency learned of her abilities, she would be hunted to the ends of the earth, and so would her kids. Their lives would end up as terrible as hers. No, thanks.

  “Tell him,” Dallas said, those arctic blues no longer cold but hot on her. “Please.”

  Her eyes widened. His voice! The epitome of sex. And his plea! Why? Why would he beg, willingly revealing a weakness?

  “I . . .” Want to obey him. She sucked in a shocked breath. Did he possess his own version of voice voodoo? Resist! “No. I won’t.”

  “Very well. If blood is the new black,” Devyn said, “you’ll be very pleased with what happens next.” In a single fluid motion, he withdrew a gun from the holster at his side, aimed at her, and squeezed the trigger.

  No time to react. A whoosh of air, a sharp sting in her neck where a dart embedded in her vein . . . A rush of warmth tugged her toward a never-ending pit of darkness. . . .

  Son of a scientist! He’d drugged her while his friend distracted her. She fought to retain her lucidity, but her knees were too weak to hold her weight and soon crumpled. “Both . . . will . . . pay. . . .”

  “That’s right,” Devyn said. “You will pay. Nighty-night now, beauty. You’ll discover your punishment as soon as you wake.”

  Wake . . . wake . . . she had to stay awake. . . .

  Her mind raced back to another time she’d ended up like this: drugged with predators around her. The time she’d attempted to kill Dr. Walsh. He’d survived, but his coworkers had feared for their lives, as she’d suspected they would, and locked him away, ensuring he remained comatose. She’d wondered why they hadn’t just killed him themselves, but they’d known something she hadn’t. Not until eight years later, when Walsh woke up and slit his own throat—and then, because her compulsion was so strong, he had risen from the grave to pick off his coworkers one by one. Even those who no longer worked at IOT.

  A horror movie come to life.

  She had no idea where he was now or what he was doing. She’d lost track of him.

  And because the lab was top-secret, independent of any other affiliation, and operating completely in the black zone with zero paper trails, no one had shown up asking questions or demanding answers.

  Walsh’s actions had marked the end of her torturous existence and the beginning of her fresh start.

  Suddenly the lab had been devoid of employees, and with no one there to drug Lilica and Jade, they’d soon begun to operate at full capacity. For the first time in their lives, they’d had complete access to the computers and recordings . . . and antidotes. . . .

  The antidote to sedation! Hidden in the sole of her shoe as a “just in case.”

  She tried to reach it, but her arm was far too heavy. And so were her eyelids. They closed so tightly she couldn’t pry them open. All too soon, darkness swallowed her whole.

  3

  Dallas reeled as a thousand and one thoughts rolled through his head. This woman . . . she was the one he’d seen in his first waking vision. The naked intruder who’d reclined in his chair, drunk his single malt, and asked oh, so seductively to play a game of pretend.

  She wasn’t even close to his type, but . . . he wanted her in his bed at his earliest convenience. Or now. Yes, now would do.

  She was tall and slender with a glorious ebony mane, the silken strands curling like ribbons. At her temples were braids that had been twined with a string of blood-red rubies. A perfect match for her lips. Blood-red, heart-shaped. Provocative and provoking. Her eyes possessed the catlike slant of a Teran. Her irises were deep . . . an endless span of ocean crowned by the darkest night.

  Every time she’d looked at him, he’d been set adrift in that ocean, lost and drowning. The worst part? He’d had no desire to be saved.

  He took in the rest of her. She had pointy ears and sharp, prominent cheekbones. Too prominent to be human. In contrast, she had a delicate nose.

  When she’d attacked Devyn, Dallas had seen what looked to be butterfly wings etched into the corners of her eyes and a strand of ivy etched across her forehead, as if she were wearing a mask. The markings weren’t tattoos, exactly. They couldn’t be. At certain angles, they appeared iridescent and jewel-toned. Which had to mean they were a natural, if unusual, pigmentation in her flesh. Something he’d only ever seen once before . . . on . . . what race? He couldn’t remember the name, could only remember the people had been experimented on before total extinction.

  The extinction had happened before his time. But when he was a plucky AIR trainee, he’d spent most of his free time studying different h
uman-alien battles, as well as the strengths and weakness of the creatures who’d lived and died so that he could better defeat the ones still in existence.

  A feminine moan pulled him out of his head and into a haze of lust he struggled to control.

  The prisoner moaned, nothing more, and he shot hard as a rock?

  Not exactly the greatest start to their relationship. And they would have a relationship. His visions had never lied.

  The rest of her skin glittered as if it had been dipped in diamond dust, an effect he’d only ever seen on Targons. But she wasn’t a Targon. Devyn recognized his own, and he would have pegged her at moment one.

  Those sharp cheekbones and pointy ears somehow lent a shocking wildness to her serene beauty. Even better, she had a voice like sex. A voice that was sex. The raspy pitch had stroked over him, making him think of a feather at the end of a flogger.

  The scent of roses and a campfire ablaze with aged wood was stronger here, and most assuredly wafted from her. It only made him want her more. Must taste. . . .

  She wasn’t a sweetheart with a ready smile, the kind of woman a lawman like him should want. This girl had a mouth on her. Hold me back! Her mouth. Over and over again his attention had returned to it. So lush and red . . . decadence made flesh.

  She was exotic, unique, and that had to be the draw. But honestly, he thought he would have wanted her even if he were blindfolded. That scent . . . that screw me and screw me hard voice . . .

  He motioned to the cage with a jerk of his chin. “Open it.”

  Devyn sighed. “If you tell me your conscience is bothering you . . .”

  He simply lifted a brow.

  With another sigh, Devyn opened the cage. Dallas stalked inside, crouched beside the exotic beauty, and gently rolled her to her back. Despite the blood, dirt, and grime caked on her, the dusky hue of her skin revealed an even greater shimmer at close range.

  A suspicion about her had danced at the periphery of his mind since the moment he’d laid eyes on her, and now solidified. “She’s related to Trinity.”

  “Hell, no.” Devyn crouched beside him. “I would have noticed a resemblance.”

  “They have the same bone structure. Same oval face. Same prominent cheekbones that gracefully taper to a strong chin.”

  “ ‘Gracefully taper’? Did you acquire a degree in hideous poetry in the past hour?” His friend’s tone was as dry as the air in No Man’s Land. Then he cursed. “My boy, I think you’re right.”

  Perhaps the two females were cousins. Maybe even half sisters. Either way, he could use Lilica to draw Trinity out of hiding.

  “But she’s not diseased, right?” he asked, seeking reassurance even though his friend had already provided the answer.

  “She’s definitely clean. I had tests done before I brought her here.”

  She wasn’t Schön, then. But what was she? The power she radiated . . . he felt as if he’d been hit by shrapnel, with too many bits and pieces to identify a single source. His Arcadian side had reacted oddly to it, buzzing with a need to escape her and to draw her closer. He thought he understood the latter, though. Once, when she’d glanced in his direction, his Arcadian side had hinted at a very dark future—she planned to kill him.

  Keep your friends close and your enemies closer. . . .

  Devyn had mentioned Dallas’s pop-a-cap vision. Was that the reason Lilica now wanted him dead?

  Whatever the reason, she would fail.

  But he would not. He would use her as bait. Which meant, he would have to spend time with her. Could he resist her potent allure, or would he willingly risk his life in an attempt to seduce her?

  Her in his chair, drinking his whiskey . . .

  Yeah. He’d risk it.

  Desire wasn’t always a weakness; sometimes it could be a weapon.

  “I may not survive my association with her,” he admitted. But what a way to go.

  Devyn stiffened. “Well, then. She dies today.”

  To the Targon, all threats to Dallas were to be eliminated immediately, no questions asked. No investigation.

  “Your bromantic gestures always warm my heart, but I’m asking you to stand down just this once.” Dallas traced a fingertip along Lilica’s jaw. Softer than silk. “I’m taking her with me.”

  “Like hell. She’s not diseased—she’s worse. My people once warred with hers. The Falle.”

  Falle. Yes! The exterminated—well, the nearly exterminated race. Predators to the core. Wily, even deceitful, with off-the-charts possessive instincts.

  “For the first time in my reign, we almost lost a battle.” Devyn held up his arm, revealing the five finger-long wounds that hadn’t yet regenerated. “This one amplifies.”

  “And that’s bad because . . . ?”

  “With a single touch, she can make you stronger. Too strong.”

  Again he said, “And that’s bad because . . . ?”

  “Think of it this way. Right now you are able to run faster than the human eye can track. But after contact with her, you would be able to break the sound barrier, and you wouldn’t be able to stop yourself. You would run until you died. If your body could contain that kind of power for any real length of time.”

  Was that her plan, then? Kill him with his own alien abilities? “You have a way to neutralize her, I’m assuming.”

  “Of course,” Devyn replied without missing a beat. “I’ll cut off her hands.”

  Of course. “There’s no other less . . . damaging way?”

  His friend pursed his lips. “You’re losing your edge, and it’s embarrassing.”

  “Just tell me what you know.”

  “Fine. My people have indeed developed a poison that neutralizes the abilities of otherworlders, but the effects wear off quickly, lasting no longer than twenty-four hours. And the drug can be easily counteracted by a shot of doctored adrenaline.”

  “I’ll keep her away from extreme sports,” Dallas replied drily.

  “I said doctored adrenaline. There’s a difference.”

  “Give me two weeks’ worth of doses for her.” Surely he could spread the word of her capture and draw Trinity out of hiding within that time frame.

  Let’s do this. He straightened to his full six-foot-three height. “Also, I’m going to need a few hours to get my shit together. Do not—I repeat, do not—hurt her while I’m gone. You do, and I will be highly displeased.”

  There were cuts and bruises on her neck, arms, and legs, and probably more under her clothes. Dallas wasn’t against the use of torture whenever warranted—he believed in equal opportunity and all that garbage. But he didn’t like the thought of Lilica’s lovely face twisted with pain or her voice screaming with torment rather than moaning with pleasure.

  The protective instincts could be linked to his desire for her, but the intensity of that desire baffled him—until he remembered the pheromone Trinity released. He’d assumed it came from the Schön, but perhaps it came from a shared familial line.

  Devyn scowled at him. “What the hell is this?”

  “What the hell is what?”

  “This look.” A finger zigzagged in front of his face. “Are you fantasizing about our bait?”

  Bait. The guy had already deduced Dallas’s plan. Shocker. “Now you’re the one being ridiculous. She isn’t my type.” The absolute truth. And yet . . .

  She tried to amph and kill my friend, and I got a hard-on for her.

  Well, another hard-on for her.

  Devyn’s scowl only deepened. “Do yourself a favor and remain detached with her.”

  Something in his tone hinted at a deeper meaning. “You’re going to use her to amplify your powers, aren’t you?” Dallas demanded. “You think you’re going to stop her before she goes too far.”

  “Think is incorrect. I will use her, and I will stop her before she goes too far.”

  Power-hungry Devyn. Nothing new there.

  “There was another girl at the institute,” Devyn added. “I sensed her b
ut couldn’t find her. I’ve had an agent watching the place since I left with Lilica.”

  “Which agent?”

  “John No Last Name.”

  John, who’d been little more than a feral animal the last time Dallas had seen him. Poor guy had only recently been found and freed after months of torture—his skin flayed from his body over and over again.

  “Perhaps the other girl will help convince Lilica I’m the lesser of two evils,” Devyn concluded.

  Dallas couldn’t come up with a valid reason to argue over the matter. Lilica meant nothing to him. Proof: the slight prick of irritation in his chest stemmed from a sense of urgency to find Trinity, not a desire to protect Lilica.

  “I meant what I said. Don’t touch her while I’m gone, or you and me, we’re going to have a problem. The only contact she’s to have is with the needle you use to dose her.”

  Devyn studied him for a long, silent moment. Understandable. Dallas had never spoken to his friend so harshly. To everyone but his enemies, Dallas was a happy-go-lucky bachelor without a care. In this, he blamed Lilica and her mystical appeal.

  “All right,” Devyn said with a nod. “Consider it done. I just hope you know what you’re doing.”

  “I don’t, but that’s not going to stop me.”

  Bang, bang.

  Lilica dreamed of taking over IOT . . . of the day she finally uncovered the truth about herself and her sisters. Turned out they were a mix of twenty-three alien races, plus the human race, and each girl exhibited different dominant qualities found within the different species.

  Jade took after the Maleahdolla, a warrior race feared throughout the galaxies. Their ability to read the minds of others gave them an edge in combat, technological advances, medicine, and even relationships.

  Lilica took after the Falle, a corrupt race AIR had tried to exterminate during the human-alien war. And AIR wasn’t the first to try! Centuries ago, the Falle had nearly been obliterated by the Maleahdolla. The survivors were enslaved and used to amph their masters. But the Falle—insidious creatures who strengthened themselves by killing others—had bonded their lives to the lives of their captors, ensuring one race could not survive without the other.

 

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