Dragon Fixation

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Dragon Fixation Page 54

by Amelia Jade


  Climbing down the stairs, he cautiously moved toward the front of the house. His eyes searched the street for any suspicious activity or anything that might indicate that they had been compromised. The house was on a very busy street, which actually helped with the cover. There were so many people coming and going that passersby rarely noticed someone new in their midst. To the right were more houses, but to the left, the direction he now turned, shops began to populate themselves. Across the street were more houses, then a small park to break up the buildings before shops began on that side as well.

  There was a small coffee and sandwich shop just at the street corner that he had been to several times. In the morning the owner, Myles, served egg, cheese, and thick-cut bacon on a freshly baked croissant that was to die for. Connor smiled as he imagined the reaction from Madison. He hoped she was happy with his choice.

  “Myles,” he nodded casually as the little bell rung to announce his entrance. The portly little owner, a man with a thick foreign accent who nonetheless understood English perfectly despite his lilted speech, looked up.

  “Ah, Meester ‘Onnor,” he said politely. “You have the same?”

  “Yes, but I’ll need a second portion of everything if you please,” he said.

  The slightly-older gentleman’s face lit up like a neon light. “Oh, yes yes! For a lady?” he asked, his bushy eyebrows bouncing up and down happily.

  Connor laughed, shaking his head as he smiled at the man. “Indeed, though not quite like that,” he protested. “More like a coworker.”

  Unfortunately.

  Now where had that thought come from? Connor was more than willing to admit that he found Madison very easy on the eyes. But that was quite different from being interested in her. Wasn’t it?

  Shaking his head, he forced that thought aside, turning to look out the front of the building while Myles put together his order.

  Connor froze. There, parked across the street, was an Agency SUV. And loitering against the hood with his back to Connor was someone who unquestioningly was an Agent. Connor wasn’t sure how he knew that he knew, but he did. Something about the body language. With his back to him, the black clothing could have been anything, but that just reinforced his notions.

  How the fuck had they located them this fast? Could it be a coincidence?

  He shoved that thought from his brain almost immediately. There was no such thing as a coincidence, especially not one of such a huge magnitude as this. The Agency knew where to find them. He doubted they knew exactly where, because nobody had been watching the particular unit that contained their safe house. Nobody that he had seen, at least. Perhaps they had been using some high-powered binoculars or similar technology. That wasn’t really the Agency’s style, but he supposed it was possible.

  The trick now was going to be getting back without them seeing.

  “Here you are Meester ‘Onnor!” Myles said, putting the coffees in a cardboard tray and the packages of food in a bag.

  “Thank you Myles,” he said absentmindedly, pulling out a couple of bills and pushing them across the counter at the man. Pocketing his change, Connor grabbed the food and drink and turned to leave.

  An idea struck him.

  “Myles,” he said slowly.

  “Ah, yes?” the man asked cautiously, aware of the change of tone in Connor’s voice.

  “Do you drive?”

  “Ah, I sorry, what you say?” he asked again.

  “Drive,” Connor said more forcefully. “Do you have a vehicle?”

  The old man looked around somewhat nervously, then nodded. “Ah, yes, but, you no tell anyone, but Myles not supposed have one.”

  Connor smiled. “Can you take me a block and a half that way?” he said, pointing back in the direction of the safe house. The safe house and Madison.

  Myles began to protest, but Connor put the order down, pulled out his wallet, and shoved the cash in it across the table. The shop owner brightened immediately and bustled around the counter without saying a word, locking the front door and flipping the Open sign over to Closed.

  “Dis way!” he said, beckoning Connor to follow him.

  He followed Myles out through the kitchen and into the back of the shop, where a pink Cadillac sat in the parking spot nearest the door. Connor felt his mood sink. This was not the inconspicuous little sedan he had hoped to find. Not only was it a powder pink, but it was an older model with high tailfins and big cherry-red lights.

  Connor groaned a little. He was going to get caught. They were all going to die. The crinkling of the food brightened him. At least he was going to die with a full stomach!

  Snorting away his nerves, he climbed into the front seat, relieved to see that the windows were actually a little tinted. That should work. Myles sat back and very carefully did up his seatbelt before looking in the various mirrors and adjusting them. Then he slowly inserted the key into the ignition and turned it over.

  The engine roared and coughed, rolled over again, made a loud bang, and then began to pour black smoke out of the dual exhaust.

  This time Connor groaned aloud as his head sunk toward his lap. This idea was not turning out the way he had expected it to. Not at all. Next he half-expected Myles to lean on the horn as it played a musical tune.

  That—thankfully—did not happen, and they cruised from the parking lot. Myles did, however, jam on the gas and cut off two cars as he swerved through traffic to the far lane to make the left-hand turn from his shop onto the road. Connor had visions of dying all over again, this time via vehicular crushing. He breathed a sigh of relief as they cruised by the Agency SUV without anyone seeming to notice.

  “Where I go?” Myles asked in his stilted English.

  “That house there,” Connor said, pointing. “Go all the way to the back.”

  Myles followed the directions perfectly, putting the car in park at the back of the house, where the driveway ended in a detached single-car garage.

  “Thank you,” Connor said, slipping out quickly and heading for the steps up to the third floor.

  “See you soon Meester ‘Onnor!” Myles said, then gunned the vehicle backward toward the street.

  Connor stood at the bottom of the stairs, trying not to flinch when more tires squealed as Myles probably cut off at least one, if not several more cars. There was no bang, thankfully, and so after a second he climbed up quickly, hoping that Madison was still asleep.

  She was, but the sound of the door opening woke her with a snap.

  “Easy!” he said. “It’s me. Everything is okay.”

  “Where did you go?” she asked, eyes wide awake, face unsmiling. She was looking around the room, reminding herself of where she was.

  “Food,” he said brightly, holding up the bag. “And caffeine,” he finished, holding up the drinks.

  Her mood brightened almost immediately. “Now you’re talking my language,” she said, though she still didn’t smile.

  He frowned at that, but let it slip. She had been through quite a lot in less than twenty-four hours. It was perfectly okay if smiling wasn’t at the top of her list of priorities.

  Pulling the little table in the room closer to the couch, he laid out the contents of his haul from Myles’s. Two breakfast sandwiches, along with a donut, and two coffees with a handful of sugar packets, a little pre-sealed cup of creamer or two, and stir sticks.

  “You’re all right,” Madison said.

  That’s what Connor interpreted her half-formed words to mean as she took several big bites from the sandwich, without touching anything else.

  “I’d like to say it’s because I’m a nice guy, but I just know the sandwiches are damn good and I was hungry myself,” he laughed, then dug in to his own meal.

  “You know what I don’t understand?” Madison asked, taking a swig of coffee as she swallowed her first bites.

  He raised an eyebrow in answer, not wanting to speak with a full mouth.

  “You shifters, you heal fast, correct?”
<
br />   He nodded slowly, wondering where she was going with the conversation.

  “So why does this super-secret Agency kill so many shifters? Why don’t they just keep them hooked up and constantly take their blood?”

  Connor nodded, understanding her point now. He finished his bites, wiping his mouth with the back of his hand, ignoring the crumbs that fell onto the floor.

  “Couple of reasons,” he said, beginning to elaborate. It was a valid question. “First, we don’t know for sure, but we suspect they need a lot of it in short order, and fresh. That’s why they basically take everything at once. We’re not sure, but it seems to fit. That may not have been the way they started—” He paused. “In fact, we’re almost positive that’s not the way they started. But that’s how they do it now.”

  Madison nodded. “And second?”

  He took a quick bite of sandwich, eyes becoming slits as he relished the savory mixture of flavors. “The second is because they don’t want to keep housing all the shifters while they continue their search.”

  “Their search for what, exactly?”

  “We believe,” he said, pausing to take a drink. “That they are searching for an Alpha.”

  Madison frowned, thought for a moment, then shook her head. “I don’t get it. An alpha what?”

  “Capital A Alpha,” he said. “It’s a sub-strain of shifter. It can manifest itself in any race, though it is more prevalent in some than it is in others.”

  “There’s different types of bear shifters?” she asked, confused. “What’s the difference?”

  “We’re bigger, faster, stronger, and most of us are a bit more feral,” he told her, only hesitating for a moment over the particular words he used.

  He watched as her eyebrows shot up. “We?” she asked simply.

  Connor nodded. “Yes. Me, my team, most of the shifters in and around Genesis Valley—we’re all of the Alpha strain. Some take more prominently toward it than others, but it’s present in almost all of us.”

  Madison was quiet as she digested this bit of information, taking several bites of her food. He mimicked her, constantly reminded of the truck out front. They would need to be going. Soon.

  “So what happens if they get an Alpha?” she asked at last.

  He shrugged. “We don’t know. But their serums are improving. The man I fought last night was a handful. I’ve been training for close to a decade in all manner of combat, in addition to increased physical training. I don’t mean to brag, but I’m good, Madison. I’m damn good. And he almost beat me. I probably would have gotten the better of him without your help, but it wasn’t a sure thing. That’s without the blood of an Alpha to distill,” he finished, the ominous implication of what might happen if the Agency did get an Alpha clear for all to see.

  Madison sat back, looking thoughtful once more. His eyes flicked over, noting a hint of troubled thought this time as well. Each time she glanced over at him, that seemed to increase several fold, until she looked away.

  She was wearing small silver hooped earrings, he noticed. Connor was about to comment on them when she opened her mouth. Sensing that this was something important, he stayed quiet.

  “Call me, um, call me Maddy, okay?” she asked haltingly, her voice full of indecision.

  Connor nodded slowly. “Okay, Maddy, I can do that.”

  She smiled weakly.

  “Those are nice earrings,” he commented. “Where did you find those?”

  “Oh, these?” she said, looking relieved at the change of topic as she reached up to finger them gently. “I almost always wear them. I guess my dad knew about this, and so he had some packed away in the bag he made up for me.”

  He didn’t ask when she had gotten up to put them on, figuring that she must have not slept well. She had been quiet enough not to wake him, which was both a good thing and bad thing. It meant he had recovered mostly from the day before, but it meant he needed to be aware of that in the future. He normally woke at the smallest sound. If he couldn’t be trusted to do that, he was going to have to change some of his patterns and habits.

  “Have you, ah, heard, anything?” she asked cautiously. “From my father, I mean. Are they okay?”

  Connor and the rest of the team purposefully did not take their phones with them on a mission, in case they were captured. That meant, however, that unlike many of their peers in the modern age of cellular technology, he actually knew certain numbers by heart. This included the direct line to Lionshead Mining Consortium, the company that operated out of Genesis Valley and was funding the shifter underground here in King City. The number would connect him directly with Valen Kedyn, one of the brothers—twins—that owned the company.

  “Let me find out,” he said, grabbing the cordless landline off the table and punching in the number.

  “Valen,” came the response.

  “It’s Connor, in King City,” he said briefly. “Did they arrive yet?”

  “Not yet, but they have made contact. All seems clear. What’s your status?”

  Despite the short sentences, there was a genuine compassion to Valen’s questions. He truly cared about all those in his care, even if he wasn’t particularly loquacious about it.

  Connor looked over at Madison. No, Maddy, he corrected. Thinking carefully, he prepared his response.

  She doesn’t need to know how bad it is.

  Chapter Six

  Madison

  “Still in the field. Going to arrange extraction today.”

  Something about the way he glanced at her before speaking set off warning bells in Maddy’s head. She could hear the other end of the line. So why was his response bothering her? She knew that the plan was to find an alternate route out of town today. They had already talked about that yesterday. So why was his answer bothering her?

  Because he never stated that we were going to be okay. He only reported what we’re going to do. He thinks we’re screwed.

  The unsettling thought raced through her mind, sinking its claws in deep before she could ignore it, forcing her to acknowledge the reality of things. Basically they were trapped with nowhere to go.

  Connor hung up the phone and turned to face her. “They’re okay,” he said without preamble.

  “They got there safely?” she asked, perking up.

  He shook his head. “Not quite. They’re still en route, and should get there later today. But they haven’t had any issues so far, so all should go well.”

  She nodded. “Okay, well, they’ll call to let us know they get there safely, right?”

  Connor frowned. “No,” he said. “They won’t. We can’t have anymore contact with them. I really shouldn’t have done that, truthfully.”

  “Why not?”

  “In case the lines have been tapped,” he told her. “We don’t want them knowing more about our organization than they have to.”

  It was her turn to frown, eyebrows furrowing together as she looked up at him. Even sitting on the couch he was much taller than her. “How would they have these lines tapped? I thought you said this was a safe house.”

  “That’s what I thought,” he replied. “I got this food from a place a block and half that way,” he said, pointing. “Across the street, there was a big black SUV with an Agent leaning up against it.”

  Maddy bolted upright, looking around in a panic. “What? Why didn’t you tell me that? If they know where we are, we need to get out of here, don’t we?!”

  His hand closed around her wrist. He didn’t squeeze tightly, but she could sense the restrained power in his fingers anyway. With a gentle tug Connor pulled her back into a sitting position.

  “They don’t know where we are exactly,” he said, but even Maddy could sense his lack of absolute certainty in the statement.

  “How can you say that?” she asked, bewildered. “They’re a block down the street!”

  “Block and a half,” he corrected lamely, giving her a wink.

  She stared daggers at him for a moment, then rel
ented. “Still, that’s a little too close for my liking. We should go.”

  Connor nodded. “On that, we agree. How long for you to pack?”

  She walked over to where several things were strewn on the floor next to her bag, picked them up, dumped them inside, zipped it up, and threw it over her shoulder.

  “Ready.”

  The big shifter laughed, his chest muscles bouncing with the effort. “Okay, well, why don’t you go use the washroom, freshen up and such while I finish eating, and then I’ll do the same. Then we’ll get out of here.”

  Maddy frowned but did as he suggested. Although she had mixed feelings on the current situation, that didn’t make his suggestion any less of a valid one. Even as she washed her face, she tried to decide whether his calm or her instinct to flee were more pertinent.

  “Why are you so calm?” she asked after pacing back and forth while he finished getting ready. “Isn’t it likely that they’re closing in on us already?”

  Connor shrugged. “I doubt it. If they knew where we were, then we’d have been taken in our sleep.”

  “That’s…not entirely logical,” she said, waiting by the door as he put his shoes on. He double-knotted them she noted, so they wouldn’t come undone. She bent down to do the same to her shoes, just in case. “I mean, what if they found us just now? If we’d left ten minutes ago, we could be safe.”

  Connor gave her another uncaring shrug before opening the door. He peeked out, ensuring no one was there, then jerked his head for her to follow. They moved down the stairs quickly. He paused, but Maddy continued to head around the corner to the front of the house.

  A heavy hand landed on her shoulder, stopping her progress.

  “Not you,” Connor said firmly.

  No, that wasn’t just him saying it. That was him commanding it. That was the Alpha in him.

  She shivered at the realization as the authority in his voice locked her spine straight as she turned to face him.

  “You’re going that way,” he told her, pointing through the yard and into the neighbor’s property behind them. There were no fences in this area of town.

 

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