Authors: Megan Sybil Baker
Tags: #Fantasy, #Romance, #Fiction, #General, #Science Fiction
This was the kind of day that Kira had loved as a child. Warm, but with the hint of winter to come. Days for playing in the backyard, or running on the beach with her father. Now, she barely noted the sparse clouds scuttling across the azure sky, or the late autumn flowers that still purpled the white salt grass. Her attention was focused entirely on the roadblock ahead - and searching the Guards for that too-familiar face.
Seemingly at random, the Guard on the left signalled and sent vehicles off to a side area, near a hastily erected portable office, for closer inspection. The passengers of the vehicles were asked to step over to a second group of Guards for further questioning.
Kira felt her lip curl in a snarl. All very efficient. All very organized, and outwardly by the book. She forced her mouth back to a straight, expressionless line.
Ten years ago, she wouldn’t have been bothered by this scene. It was routine. The Guards were free to randomly inspect the citizens of Narava for contraband, drugs, illegal goods, interplanetary imports, immigrants trying to avoid taxes and fees, aliens. The Shifters.
No. Ten years ago, she wouldn’t have been bothered. Because ten years ago there was so much she didn’t know.
They reached the forward Guard, and Kira prepared herself for the inevitable questions. She didn’t bother to smile or flirt. The Guard, a man in his late fifties, wore the familiar signet on his uniform. He already knew who she was.
“Farseaker,” he greeted without inflection. His gaze traveled over her face, then into the back of the van, taking in the four other women.
“Officer Herot,” Kira returned. She didn’t know the man, not well, but she had seen him before, dealt with him before.
“You know the drill, Farseaker. Contraband? Illegals?”
She couldn’t help the cynical smile that answered his questions. He already knew her answers. “What do you think, Officer?”
“I think you’ve been skirting the law for too long now, Farseaker. He knows you’re involved with them. Deeply involved.”
“If he had any proof that I was involved in something illegal,” she said evenly, “he would have had me locked away in a hole a very long time ago, Herot. And he would relish putting me there.”
The Guard’s thick dark brows drew together over a prominent nose. His thin lips pursed for an instant, then flattened. “Pull the van over to the side,” he said, gesturing to the second set of Guards. “They’ll have to be questioned further,” he nodded to the four in the back, “and the van will be inspected.”
“Of course.” Kira didn’t argue. She pulled the van to the side, hissing another silencing order as a nervous chatter started behind her. “Remember,” she said under her breath, “they don’t know anything. Can’t know anything. Just keep your heads and we’ll be all right.”
“Kira?”
She looked over her shoulder at the sound of the timid voice. Vettine was only nineteen years old. Her cropped blonde hair and heart-shaped face gave her an ethereal beauty, but her deep jade eyes were wide with fear, making her look every year of her youth. “You’ll be okay, little sister,” Kira assured her with a firm voice. “Don’t panic on me now.”
The girl took a long, shaky breath, straightened her shoulders and nodded.
“Good girl,” Kira murmured as a Guard walked up to the passenger side of the van. This Guard was a man she’d never seen before. He was young, but not too young. Midthirties, she guessed at a glance. Handsome, but far from pretty. A faint scar along his right jaw and the first few wrinkles of his age saw to that. His short, brown hair held just a touch of wave. His black-coffee eyes were hard and efficient. But there was something...
Something in his eyes. Something familiar, that she couldn’t name. Maybe it was an underlying quality of pain, or the hint of humanity she so rarely found in the Guard. Whatever it was, it was absent from the firm line of his mouth, the set of his jaw, the sharp movement of his arm as he gestured the four women behind her out of the van’s side door. Whatever it was, he hid it well.
When Kira turned to open her own door, he stopped her. “You’re to wait in the car, ma’am,” he told her sternly. And Kira almost smiled. He had a beautiful, husky voice. A voice she wouldn’t mind hearing more of. Her stomach twisted just a little, pleasantly reminding her that she was still a woman. Her gaze dropped to his chest, a rather nice, broad one she thought, before noticing the signet above his left breast.
Her self-control snapped back into place.
She turned, sitting forward in the van, watching as her four friends were led not far away by a half-dozen fully armed soldiers. She tried to relax against the seat, tried to ignore the inconvenient tear in the imitation leather that poked her in the back. This could take hours, if Ennoren saw fit to detain them.
The sound of the passenger door opening startled her. She looked over to see the Guard settle himself onto the floorboard, shifting so that his head wouldn’t show above the dash. Kira cocked her head to one side, raising her eyebrows, and the man flashed the most charming smile she’d ever seen. The grin was just a touch guilty, and would have made him look like a mischievous boy if it hadn’t stretched the scar and deepened the wrinkles around his eyes.
He plucked a pack of cigarettes from a pocket inside his uniform jacket and showed them to her. “Not allowed to smoke on duty,” he told her as he tapped one from the pack and stuck it in his mouth. He replaced the pack and pulled out a small lighter while staring up at her. Before he lit up, he extended a hand. “David.”
“Kira.” She shook his hand, quick and firm, and pulled her hand back before she had time to notice how nice his grip felt.
He lit the cigarette, took a long drag, then offered the end to her. She stared at the thing for a moment, then took it and helped herself to a puff. Through the cloud of tobacco-scented smoke she blew out, she studied him. “You been with the Guard long?” she asked, handing the cigarette back.
“Twelve years now.” He took another drag, never taking his gaze from her face.
“You’re one of Ennoren’s.” She wasn’t asking. She knew the signet on his uniform too well.
He nodded, his dark eyes still locked to hers. “For about three years.”
She half-smiled, chuckled and shook her head. “Too bad, really,” she said, turning to see how her friends were doing.
All four seemed to be holding up under the scrutiny of the men questioning them. Vettine’s shoulders were straight, her posture unwavering. Grainne’s stance was relaxed and cocky as she tossed her waist-length red hair over one shoulder. Breeanne had her arms crossed over her chest, her legs braced slightly apart. Her pale skin was flushed, but her expression controlled. And Jo, with her stylishly braided black hair brushing her shoulders in the breeze, had her hands on her hips, a slight smile on her full mouth, and a sexy glint in her violet eyes. Kira couldn’t help smiling. Her second would flirt with the Devil himself if she were standing at the gates of hell.
“Why too bad?”
The husky voice brought her attention back to the man sitting on the floorboard of her van. He offered her the cigarette again, and she took a long drag before answering. “I would have liked to get to know you. Under better circumstances. I think I could have liked you,” she answered without guile, a slight, sad smile tugging at her mouth.
“‘Could have’?”
She shrugged. “You’re one of Ennoren’s men.” She looked away again, thinking there was really no need for further explanation.
“Don’t you think you’re jumping to conclusions? Judging me based on the Commander I work under? You don’t know me.”
Kira snorted and looked into his handsome, upturned face. “It doesn’t matter whether I know you or not. You work for Ennoren.” A movement to her left caught her attention, and she turned away from David’s narrowed eyes. She reached down for the cigarette without taking her eyes off the man walking toward the van. When she’d taken another drag, she said, “Your boss is on his way over. Better let me finish this.”
David stood, unhooked a thin, foot-long cylindrical device from his belt and began running it over the interior of the van without another word. Her gaze flicked to the device, then back to the approaching Commander. The steady beep of the detector echoed in Kira’s pulse as she watched Ennoren step up to her open window.
He was tall and thin, with a face Kira had once found interesting, if not attractive. All lines and angles, sharp nose, hard mouth, heavy-lidded blue eyes; his face was imposing, commanding and often intimidating. But Kira had long since stopped being intimidated by Ennoren.
He looked at the cigarette in her hand, then into her eyes. “I thought you didn’t smoke.”
She set the cigarette against her lips, inhaled deeply and blew smoke in his face. “I don’t.”
He waved the smoke away, a sneer forming in place of a smile. For a long moment he studied her, his eyes running over her faded, ripped jeans, the cotton flannel shirt, her amber hair where it brushed her shoulders. Then he turned to study her van, pointedly staring at the cracked dash, battered steering wheel and worn imitation leather upholstery. “New van?”
Kira nodded.
“I didn’t think you’d be into this late twentieth-century Earth fad, either,” he said through a frown. “But then, you always were a fashionable socialite, weren’t you? And since you have the money to afford this mock-up of an Earth car...” He let the sentence trail off as he looked back into her eyes. “You’re looking good, Kira.”
She stared back, taking another pull on the cigarette so that she didn’t have to answer him.
When she remained silent, Ennoren shifted his gaze to David. “Find anything, Officer Cario?”
David straightened, snapping to attention. “No, sir. Appears clean.”
“Well,” Ennoren said, turning a contemptuous look on Kira, “appearances can lie.”
“Was that a dig, Eain?” Kira said, keeping her tone mild, even as she used his first name in front of another Guard - something she did only to annoy him. His mother had been a poet and fond of alliteration. Ennoren went out of his way to keep his full name, Eain Edward Evander Ennoren, from his subordinates.
He covered his indignation well, but the slight narrowing of his eyes and the flare of his nostrils gave him away. “Take from it what you will.” He paused, studied her again. When he spoke, his voice was low. “The ring will collapse out from under you, Kira. It won’t be long now. Do you know what will happen to you when you’re found guilty of treason and conspiracy to commit treason against the planetary government?”
“They’ll throw me into a hole?”
“They’ll throw you into space without a suit,” he hissed. Dropping his voice again, he leaned into the car, putting his face only inches from hers. “End this now, Kira. End it. Tell me where they hide. I can see that you get off with a light sentence.” A slight smile curled his lips. “I might even arrange to serve as your paroler. Just like old times, eh?”
Kira turned her head to take one final puff off the cigarette, time to gain control over both her revulsion and her anger, before turning back to his leer. “There’s a reason those times are old, Eain. I wouldn’t have gone to all the trouble of divorcing you if I’d
wanted to end up right back under your thumb. Besides,” she half smiled, half snarled at him, “how would I know where they hide?”
She watched with satisfaction as his leer turn into a lip-trembling scowl. Flicking the cigarette past his shoulder, she turned back to David. He was standing at attention, a silent, emotionless witness to the scene. “Forgive my ex.,” Kira said to the handsome man. “He seems to think I’m some sort of underground anti-government terrorist leader.”
David raised an eyebrow. “Are you?”
She smiled. Then she laughed.
The side door to the van opened and Kira’s four friends climbed up to the padded bench along the side of the van. Kira kept her eyes on David’s, enjoying the twinkle of amusement that didn’t filter into any other part of his expression. When the side door slammed into place, Kira leaned across the passenger seat and pulled that door shut. “It really is too bad we didn’t meet under different circumstances, officer,” she said when David leaned into the open window.
His half-smile made his scar jump, his knowing stare made her pulse dance. She chuckled and moved back behind the wheel. Without another glance at her ex-husband, she put the van into gear and returned to the line of traffic hurrying away from the blockade.
David watched her go, feeling like he’d been kicked in the gut, and strangely liking the feeling. Kira was interesting. Beautiful, yes. Enough so that his pulse sped just remembering her golden-brown eyes and the sound of her sultry chuckle. But there was something else about her, under that smile and sharp attitude, that he wanted to get to know better. Something that was almost familiar.
He couldn’t remember the last time a woman had caught his attention, or his lust, this way. He wasn’t even sure if another woman had before this woman. That was one of the few things in the universe that managed to frighten him. But anyone who could make Commander Ennoren lose control was worth getting to know. Whether she scared him or not, Ennoren’s ex-wife could prove to be quite valuable.
His heart stopped for a single beat when the Commander cleared his throat from right beside him. David looked to see Ennoren also staring after the rapidly retreating van. “Don’t let her pretty face fool you, Officer Cario,” Ennoren said, his voice low, almost a whisper. “She’s not as sweet as she appears. A viper lives beneath that silky skin.”
Knowing it best to keep his opinions to himself, David studied his commander’s profile. His nostrils flared, but other than that, his sharp features were now composed and emotionless. Before David could look away, Ennoren turned on him, catching and holding his gaze. “You don’t believe me, Cario?”
“I have no opinion on the matter, Commander.”
Ennoren smiled. “Yes, you do.” He cocked his head to one side, studied David’s face with eyes that saw beneath outward expression. The stare was disconcerting, but David had faced and hidden from it before. “Doesn’t matter. Because I think I can use this situation to our benefit, David.” He turned away and began walking toward the temporary offices. “In my office, Cario,” Ennoren ordered, and David fell in step just behind him. “We’ve got a few things to discuss.”