Mimics of Rune 02- Surrender (24 page)

Read Mimics of Rune 02- Surrender Online

Authors: Aimee Laine

Tags: #Paranormal Romance, #genetic testing, #Shape Shifter, #Romance, #mimic, #abuse, #urban fantasy

BOOK: Mimics of Rune 02- Surrender
10.31Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Well, as much as I wanted to bust Wyatt’s chops over getting me in so much trouble, the truth was, I hated working that gig. Two years I spent walking in Jagger’s wake, though I swear, I didn’t know about Kevin until about six months ago. And you guys know I never would do anything to put Lily in harm’s way.”

“We know,” Charley said.

“Right …” Another sigh bled through the air.

Cael stood. “I need to walk.”

“You’re going to have to hunch a little or lose about four inches,” James said.

Cael stood, propped his head against the ceiling and reduced his own size until he could safely storm his way through the cabin—all twenty feet of it. “Keep going, Stuart.”

“So … we were always picking up kids from shelters and orphanages, and Jagger handed them over to me to ‘deal’ with, as he put it, depending on what he found. Generally, I placed them in the hands of the Feds who did whatever they did, but always said ‘keep going, Stuart, this is exactly what we need—evidence.’ Then Kevin shows up to take over that one route, and I was supposed to train him so Jagger could do something else. Two years!”

Cael went back down the single person aisle. “Didn’t Roy tell Lily he’d been working on this for a couple years?”

Wyatt’s head popped up from behind his laptop. “Yeah, he did.”

James tilted up from his study of whatever materials. “I’ll be damned. There’s no way this is a coincidence.”

“Could Jagger and Roy be the same person?” Cael’s fists clenched. “How does Lily fit in, then?”

“I thought you said Roy always kept his eye color the same.” Wyatt waved a pen through the air.

“Supposedly, he does,” Charley said. “And Jagger definitely did not have purple eyes or his signature freckle. I’d have noticed that right away.”

“What color eyes did he have?” Cael asked.

• • •


Begin?” Lily asked. “Now?”

Kevin nodded in Roy’s direction. “We have a whole series of events planned for tomorrow and need to ensure you get the most rest possible before then.”

Rest. Okay. Rest I can do.

Two men stepped from the shadows and grabbed Roy’s arms.

“What the fuck?” He struggled against their hold but failed to budge their grip.

Kevin sidled closer to them. “Calm down, Roy. I thought you were smarter than this.”

Lily shivered at the menace in his tone.

Roy glared at Kevin, his grey eyes deepening toward near-black as he fought for release.

“Take him to his suite.”

The two men dragged Roy backward toward a set of doors, Roy kicking out and jerking his arms right and left the whole way.

Maggie stayed silent through the interlude, her ears pricked, eyes narrowed.

Lily kept a hand on Maggie’s back, soothing herself more than anyone.
Why did they take him so abruptly? Are they going to do that to me?

Two women appeared from nowhere Lily had seen. She spun and scooted backward away from their outstretched hands.

Kevin caught her elbow. “Ms. Crane. There is nothing to fear. We’re happy to have you here.”

“Then why?” Lily started.

“Why take Roy so forcefully? Surprises aren’t Roy’s favorite thing. They’re just … necessary for your privacy. Do you think he would have left you on your own otherwise?”

Lily had no idea if he would have. They’d come as partners, though she’d been forewarned about Roy’s ulterior motives to everything.

“Take Ms. Crane to her room. We don’t want anyone interrupting either of them.” Kevin reached for Lily as though to shepherd her toward the waiting arms of the two women. “You understand, I’m sure?” At an impressive growl from Maggie, he yanked his hands back just as fast.

What do I do? Why isn’t the crew on the plane talking to me?

The two women, dressed in surgical scrubs, took Lily by her arms and guided her in the opposite direction as Roy had gone.

“Until morning, friends.” Kevin’s smile etched itself into Lily’s mind.

• • •

The only sounds emanating from Lily or Maggie’s microphones came in the form of Maggie’s barks and muffled voices. Cael counted his blessings that Maggie hadn’t barked in a three-in-a-row succession—the sign they’d agreed to for an absolute emergency. When she’d chimed in with two, Cael’s heart had sped up. That had been about the time Lily and Roy met up with Kevin.

“Lily’s video feed is horribly grainy and coming in intermittent spurts … and the connection is breaking all the time. I’m guessing the building they’re in is fortified,” James said. “Maggie’s collar isn’t giving us much, but some. Until we get on the ground and see it with our own eyes, we’ll be stuck listening.”

Thirty-thousand feet in the sky while Lily is toughing out whatever torture they dish on her, on an island in the Atlantic.

“Okay. New game plan. Stuart,” Wyatt said. “I have all your files on Kevin, but not on this Jagger guy. Go back to your Director from before you switched over to me. Get those files and authorization codes to unblock them. Have them sent directly to me.”

“Why wasn’t Kevin put in jail if he was ‘caught’, so to speak?” Stuart asked. “I know my ass got reamed, but they knew I was undercover.”

“They wanted more data,” Wyatt said. “But they never asked about the other guy. He’s not in any of the records, and I assumed, wrongly, that he was just a peon. A minion.”

Cael shot a glance at Charley. She bristled as she closed her eyes. “Thinking about his eyes?” Cael asked.

Charley nodded. “They were a blue, but I’m trying to focus on the details to determine if they were a Mimic blue or just regular. So far, I can’t tell.”

Cael pointed a finger toward his friend and boss. “We know the government is behind this. We know our own kind have their own agenda. Now with Kevin and Jagger in the mix … I don’t know. It’s just so—”

“Convenient,” they all said.

Cael stopped his pacing, let his body return to his favored size and sat behind Charley. “What now?” He leaned forward, propping his elbows on his knees.

“We back track,” Wyatt said, shutting the laptop. “We take Kevin’s details and search Jagger to see where it started. Get a connection to Roy beyond just what Roy told Lily and find out who else is behind this.”

“Could Kevin be a Mimic?” Stuart asked. “Or Jagger?”

“Did you ever see him change form or adjust his eye color, or anything?” Cael asked.

“No. Never. But I wasn’t with them twenty-four seven. Kevin was with Jagger, supposedly for the last year, maybe a little less. That’s about all he’d tell me.”

“I’m guessing Kevin’s not one because he was really easy to subdue in Montreal.” Cael ran a hand through his hair. “But Charley was the only one to see the other guy.”

“We need to figure out who’s running the show,” James said.

“We have to stop what’s going on.” Charley’s voice broke. “But we have to know what
it
is, first.”

Cael reached around and took her hand. “We’ll figure out both.”

Wyatt took her other hand as Cael let go and rested against his seat back. “Remember what you told me when I asked you why you weren’t in a lab being tested by the government?” Wyatt asked.

“I said ‘who says I haven’t been’,” Charley said.

“Did you mean you, or did you mean Lily?” Wyatt asked.

“I meant Lily.” She squeezed his hand. “If I’d been a hundred years younger, I’d probably have gone through the same thing as Lily, but I’m that much older, so I bypassed it all. I missed it, thanks to the convenience of age.”

“I’ve never been in one, either,” James said. “Missed the beginning of the program by forty years.”

“Twenty for me,” Cael said.

As a quiet descended upon the plane’s occupants, Maggie barked three times.

20

As the two women held Lily in front of a door, Maggie jumped to the ground and took off. Lily wrenched herself free and launched after Maggie, having no clue why she’d made the emergency call.

Worse still, she hadn’t heard anything from the team in the plane—or wherever they landed. If they did.

Does Maggie know something?

Lily raced after her dog, passing only four doors before her two escorts caught up with her and yanked on her arms, stopping her in the middle of the walkway. “I need to get my dog.”

The little, white fluff ball continued running, the clickety-click of her nails on tile echoing off the sparse walls.

“We’ll get your puppy. But you’ll need to stop here.” They turned Lily toward a door marked ‘A’.

With a swipe of a key card, the door slid open. Not just a room waited for Lily, but a whole suite. A home away from home, much like the larger version where she’d met Kevin. Plush carpeting in a deep green, accented with blues and red, blended into a second room of light maple and neutral browns.

“This is your room. This is your key.” The one on the right handed Lily a plastic card. “Someone will come get you in the morning.”

“I need to get my—”

“We’ll see that she’s taken outside and cared for.”

I bet you will.
Neither had shown Lily any malice, but her gut churned at the way they talked. Had Maggie figured that out?
I wish I was better at this … even as good as Charley is without her shapeshifting abilities. I’d take just that.

“Sleep well,” one of the two said.

“There are water bottles and snacks in the kitchen …” the other started as the first one dragged her back toward the door, which slid open as they approached. “We have an eight a.m. start.” Once they’d stepped out, the barrier closed.

Lily followed, but the door didn’t budge when she reached it. She tapped it with the flat of her hand.

Nothing.

A series of switches to the right took her attention. She pressed the round one.

Desk lamps illuminated the space, giving it a soft, warm glow.

Lily flicked two other switches and lights came on over a small kitchen area with a separating bar and stool, as well as over a sunken living room with couches and a television. The red button she left alone, fearing it would send the entire place into a fit of alarms.

She closed her eyes for a moment and tried to imagine herself inside a regular house, not a huge lab facility made up to look like one.
If they have Leigh in one like this, I might not get as mad at them.

The couch faced a wall of windows, which in the pitch black, Lily hadn’t noticed overlooked the ocean. Waves crested, crashed and retreated no more than fifty feet from her room, separated only by a patch of grass. For a moment, she forgot about her confinement and imagined herself sitting on the sand, dipping her toes into the water with Cael at her side.

“I miss you, Cael.”

Not a sound returned.

Okay, remember what they said. Connections can go wonky. Play it cool. Always.

Lily shivered at the idea that she’d been jailed, her line of communication taken, and Maggie had run off. The moment’s thought only served to distract her for a second as she caught sight of a green, blinking light in the corner of the room.

Lovely. They’re watching everything I do, too.

To the left, a queen-sized bed covered in a velvety, blue cover waited in a side room. Lily craved climbing in and falling asleep to replenish her energy, yet at the same time, she wanted to curl up in a ball and wait for Cael to save her.

You can do this, Lily. You really can. You can deal. Pretend you’re Charley. What would Charley do?

She’d look around, get the lay of the land and fake whatever she needed.

Because she’s so much better at this than you.

Lily fisted her hands.

Okay, enough chatter in my head.

She drew in a deep breath and spun around in one big circle, taking in every ounce of detail possible.

To the right, another door waited, closed but there. She had no interest in finding out where it led, but since she’d decided to do as Charley would, she forced herself toward it.

A twist of the handle unlatched it.

A push opened it right up.

Lily ran her hand up the inside of the wall, hit what she figured would be a light switch and pushed it up.

“Oh, my god.”

• • •


Shit!” Cael’s curse came for the fifth time as both the audio and video feed from Lily remained solidly dead.

“You aren’t helping,” James said. “And we still have Maggie’s audio.”

“Too bad dogs can’t talk,” Wyatt said.

James tapped keys on his laptop. “I hear breathing.”

They all quieted, the sound of the plane’s engines and the slight bump of turbulence making the only noise. Cael leaned over James’s seat as Charley and Wyatt both pressed themselves forward. Four adults staring at one laptop screen left little room to maneuver.

A whimper broke the breathing, but no light or color appeared on the screen.

Indiscernible scratching came with a long, low sigh. “Reconnaissance,” Maggie said in a low whisper.

Cael’s eyes opened wide as James tilted up to him.

Charley leaned forward toward the blank screen. “You okay? What’s going on? Is Lily okay?”

“One question at a time.”

James tapped the brightness key. “Video’s not working.”

“I’m in a closet. Give me a minute.” Rustling, like the crumbling of paper, came through. “Okay. I’m going out.”

“Wait!” Cael leaned over the back of James’s chair. “Are you naked?”

“Of course. How else am I going to get someone’s attention so I can steal their lab coat? I saw a couple guys walking down a hall I passed. If I’m going to go check out the building, I gotta look like them.”

Fury pumped through Cael. “This isn’t what we agreed to. You’re supposed to stay with Lily.”

“Lily’s in lockdown.”

The video feed livened up again. The wide angle lens didn’t give much of a view and distorted the edges. From what showed, Cael took in a stark white hallway bathed in a soft pink light. “Why is her communication working and Lily’s isn’t?”

“Gimme two seconds, and I’ll explain what I think. Just gotta make contact.”

“Maggie, don’t!” James and Cael both said.

Other books

Super Emma by Sally Warner
The Losing Game by Lane Swift
Legendary Warrior by Donna Fletcher