up to. Going rogue wasn’t even on the table as far as he was concerned.
These two men were brothers to him. None of them would turn. Not now.
Not ever. Were they holding something back, though? Nothing came
through.
The Council might be wise and just, but they also took a no-prisoners
approach to anything that threatened their rule of the wizarding realm. If
the Council’s accusations were an indication, they weren’t just in deep
shit, they were in hot-holy-hel deep shit.
“Heavy hand,” a light female voice cautioned from the shadows. Alex
recognized Lark’s light Scottish brogue. Great, the whole fucking gang was
here. His heart took up a harder beat, and he was surprised to realize that
his palms were a little damp.
“The DNA tests confirm there is a link between you and the army of half-
wizard clones appearing across the world.” Another man in the dark circle
gave his two cents’ worth. “Whatever it is that you have done, we wil
know the truth. Let me repeat: What is your connection to Vitros?”
“Thank you, Jack,” Edge said dryly. “I’m quite capable of conducting this
interview without assistance.”
Again from the dais came a distinctly female clearing of the throat and
Alex shifted his glance from Duncan Edge to the cloaked figure behind him
that had moved from the chair to stand just behind the Head of the
Wizard Council.
“Excuse me, Duncan.” Lark dropped her hood to her shoulders, her hair
gleaming blue-black in the stark overhead lighting. Twinkling purple lights
danced like tiny fireflies around her ears and wrists. “Perhaps they cannot
answer us, because they are truly as in the dark about this threat as we
are.”
“What do you suggest?” Edge countered.
“How about—” Caleb muttered.
Duncan cut his brother off by raising his hand so Lark could finish. “Too
many damned chiefs. One question at a time. Lark?”
“Beside the use of their DNA,” she said quietly, the light catching both a
nose ring and the sparkler in her dark eyebrow, “which may—
probably
was taken without their knowledge or consent, we have nothing to confirm
their link to Vitros. I’m sure they realize the seriousness of this matter,”
Lark turned her gaze on Lucas, Simon, and Alex in turn, “and would be
wil ing to do whatever is required to clear themselves of these charges.”
“And if they instead succumb to it?” Edge challenged.
Jesus. We’re sitting right goddamned
here,
Alex thought, as they talked
about him rather than to him.
No hint of a smile curved Lark’s purple lips. “Then we’l have to give them
ample reason to ensure they don’t.”
Lexi had no freaking idea where Alex had disappeared to or why. Under
normal circumstances she’d be annoyed that he hadn’t informed her
before splitting.
Again.
But these weren’t normal circumstances, she
reminded herself.
106
Night Shadow
Hundreds of his clones were running around terrorizing small children,
blowing things to hel and gone, and releasing a God-awful— as Alex
called it—frankenvirus to infect and kill hundreds of thousands of people.
The man had a lot on his plate. Excusing himself was probably not on his
to-do list.
But stil . . . she’d thought they were at least past the need-to-know basis
and on a little more intimate terms.
She’d been stripped of her weapons en route.
Al
of them. She’d checked,
then double-checked. Like she could miss the heft of her Glock, for Pete’s
sake. That had pissed her off as well. What in the hell did Alex think he
was doing? It was bad enough to abandon her in mid teleport, worse stil
to leave her unarmed, even if she was at T-FLAC HQ. At least that’s where
she thought she was.
She sat on a hard bench upholstered in black leather in an empty corridor.
Waiting. For whom, or what, she had no idea. Alex hadn’t bothered to tel
her that either when he’d grabbed her hand and hocus-pocused them to
HQ. At least she thought this was HQ, but not a part she’d ever seen
before. The hallway was two hundred and eleven paces long.
The bare walls were painted a soft gray. The linoleum floor was charcoal.
No pictures on this floor, which was a little odd. As far as she knew, every
floor had stunning black-and-white photographs in the hal ways. And a lot
more important than artwork—there wasn’t a door.
Anywhere.
Good
damned thing she didn’t have claustrophobia.
Alex?
Lexi gave telepathy a shot.
She snorted. Honest to God, she couldn’t believe she’d actually
tried,
and
expected
a freaking answer.
Telepathy,
of all things. The transference of
thoughts or feelings between two or more subjects through
parapsychology. Somehow, since getting to know Stone, she’d bought into
all of his psi crap.
But was it crap? She’d seen and experienced things in the last few days
that had no scientific explanation. No
Alexis Stone
explanation. She didn’t
like rhetorical questions. She hated il ogic. She didn’t believe in woo-woo.
But she’d already been shoved down the rabbit hole and landed in
Wonderland whether she liked it, whether she
believed
it, or not.
“Mind if I sit here?” A slight redhead, wearing shorts, a bright blue T-shirt,
and kick-ass orange hiking boots indicated the end of Lexi’s bench.
Lexi did a double take at her sudden, and unexpected, appearance. “Sure.
Where’d you come from?” She hadn’t been there a second before.
With a frown the redhead looked around. “Information dissemination
department. Where are we?”
“
You
work for T-FLAC?” Lexi had a pretty good idea how the woman had
ended up in this hallway so fast. The question was
why.
“Couple of weeks.” She offered a slim, ringless hand. Short, no-nonsense
nails. Nice firm handshake. “Kess Goodall.”
“Lexi Sto—Holy shit!”
“God. Sorry about that.” A slender brunette with expensive golden
highlights in her long hair removed one high-heel-shod foot from the
instep of Lexi’s boot, shooting her an apologetic smile. A slinky, strapless
107
Night Shadow
black T-shirt dress hugged her body and showed off her tanned, olive skin
and ample bosom. She smelled like gardenias and looked like a mil ion
bucks. Lexi had an irrational and unwanted surge of relief that Alex wasn’t
there to see her.
The woman flicked her perfect hair over her bare shoulder and glanced up
and down the empty corridor. “T-FLAC headquarters, I presume?”
“Magic carpet ride?” Lexi asked wryly. The psi department must save a
ginormous amount on travel expenses.
The Jessica Alba look-alike smiled. “Yeah. You?”
Lexi pushed off the bench and stood. Expensive girl was tall, Lexi was
taller. Lexi stuck out her hand and introduced herself. She turned to the
redhead, who sat tailor-fashion on the bench, her back braced by the wall,
her gray eyes heavy-lidded and sleepy. “And this is Cass . . . ?”
“
Kess,
actual y. Kess Goodall.” The redhead said around a yawn. “Sorry. I
fel asleep watching a movie on TV and ended up here.”
The brunette turned, and held out a hand to Kess. “Sydney McBride.” Her
hand was soft, her nails scarlet, her shake businesslike. And she wore a
diamond the size of Mt. Rushmore on her ring finger. “Do these people
know it’s the middle of the night?”
“I doubt they care,” Kess muttered, scratching what looked like an insect
bite on her neck, and yawned again. “Why are we here, anyway?”
“I don’t know,” Lexi said grimly. She didn’t like not knowing. It was her
job
to know things. Either this had something to do with the weird dust
clones or IA was seriously pissed she’d missed her last report. “Let me
guess. You both came into contact with a wizard recently.”
Kess’s eyes popped open from the doze she’d nearly dropped into and she
jumped off the bench. “Yes. How do y—”
“This has something to do with Lucas’s short-circuiting powers, doesn’t
it?” Going pale, Sydney frowned. “Where is he? I’ve been on tour and
haven’t seen him in weeks. Damn that man. If something’s happened to
him, I’l kil him myself.”
Great.
“Lucas Fox—?” Lexi kept her on topic.
“Yes.”
“Ah.” Thoughts started tripping in her brain like the tumblers in a safe.
Both women had T-FLAC psi in common. She’d been keeping her
suspicions to herself, not wanting to freak out Alex until she was
absolutely sure . . .
She looked at Kess. “Let me guess. Yours is Simon Blackthorne. And
his
powers have been screwed up as wel .”
Three
connections to Mason
Knight. Lexi didn’t believe in coincidences.
“Yes and yes.” Kess dropped back to the bench, her eyes wide and
worried. “What’s happened?”
“Nothing. As far as I know.”
Okay, Stone,
Lexi thought, trying
not
to jump
to the same conclusions of death and mayhem as the other two women
were doing,
get the hel back here and explain what’s going on. To all
three of us.
“But I bet my favorite Glock that this has something to do
with Alex, Fox, and Blackthorne’s faulty powers.”
108
Night Shadow
The redhead narrowed her eyes. “Alex?”
“Stone.”
“Your husband?”
“No. No relation.” Lexi left it at that.
Sydney tapped the toe of her pricey black sandal. “I’m not sticking around
here waiting for . . . whoever to tel me what’s going on,” she told them.
“The only person I want to see and talk to right now is Lucas.”
“Ditto.” Kess tucked her shirt into her jeans as she stood again. “Except
with
Simon,
not Lucas.” She turned to Lexi. “I haven’t been here long
enough to know my way around these damned labyrinths. You work here,
right? Take us to someone who can tel us what the hell we’re doing here.
Or beam us back where we came from.”
Take me to your leader,
Lexi bit back a smile.
Now wouldn’t that be nice?
Nice, but impossible.
She might not know what floor they were on, but
she knew what
division
of T-FLAC inhabited this area. The freaking psi
unit, of course. “I’m not a wizard. But it wouldn’t matter. If we were
shimmered here, here is where they want us.”
Sydney’s chin went up, and she shot Lexi a haughty look. “And who are
they
?”
Lexi shrugged.
“There aren’t any damned
doors
!” Kess suddenly noticed.
“Claustrophobic?” Lexi asked sympathetically, glancing at Sydney’s back
as she walked—stalked—determinedly down the blank corridor.
Lotsa luck,
lady. Been there, done that, nothing to see.
“Pissed off,” Kess snapped. “Brace yourselves, I’m going to yel .”
“It won’t do yo—” She covered her ears as Kess let out a Tarzan-like yel .
Like that was going to help. This time she did smile. “Feel better?”
“Not reall—”
A doorway silently opened in the wall in front of them. Kess looked at Lexi
and cocked a brow. Lexi shook her head slightly.
“Sydney?” Lexi called softly, not shifting her attention away from the open
portal. She had an un-warm and definitely anti-fuzzy feeling about this.
Not exactly fear, but not optimistic either. The door might be open, but
Lexi couldn’t see anything beyond it. Nothing but misty white. For all she
knew it was the end of the Earth and they were being asked to walk off
the edge. In Wonderland, anything was possible.
Alex?! Where the hel are you?
Fifteen
“Al right, Caleb,” Duncan Edge told his brother. “The floor’s yours.”
“My brother asked me to TiVo time,” Caleb said soberly as he rose to
stand beside his brother’s massive desk. He cast his hand over the
shimmering hologram and it came sharply into focus. “Went back thirty-
six years. Almost thirty-seven to be precise. To the moment of your
conception.”
“Oh, Jesus,” Alex said with a grimace. “Don’t show me my parents having
sex, please. There are some images a guy shouldn’t have in his brain.”
109
Night Shadow
Caleb shook his head. “That’s what’s interesting. Your parents
didn’t
have
sex to conceive you, Stone. Neither did the parents of Blackthorne or
Fox.”
“We were adopted?” Fox asked, surprised, but clearly not horrified by the
notion. He shrugged. “So what?”
“No. Your mothers each gave birth. To you and your ‘twin’ sisters.”
Alex frowned. “You lost me.” Caleb manipulated the hologram to show a
low-slung, white building surrounded by trees. “Okay. I’l bite.”
“This was a clinic in Berkeley, California. Each of your mothers went to