Shadow Falling (The Scorpius Syndrome #2) (13 page)

“We need to find the Bunker. If nothing else, they have to have some research about pregnancies. I’m worried that the rumors are true and there have been no live births since Scorpius.” Lynne rubbed her eyes. “It’s only been six months, but all pregnancies terminated. We haven’t had enough time yet to see if we’ll be able to procreate after being infected.”

He sighed. “We have one pregnancy here, and that’s it.”

“Yes. Jill Sanderson.” A sweet sixteen-year-old girl who was about two months pregnant. “So far, she’s doing all right.”

Jax frowned. “As far as we know. It’s not like we have ultrasound equipment.”

Lynne leaned into him. “You didn’t kill Raze.”

“He got bitten.” Jax flattened his hand between her shoulder blades.

“You could’ve left him,” Lynne said gently.

“No. He’s vulnerable now, and I need to find out his agenda.” Jax leaned in and let his mouth wander along her jaw.

Pleasure rippled through her, and she tipped her head back to allow for more access. “You like Raze,” she murmured. “It’s okay to like him and still not completely trust him. He hasn’t trusted you yet.”

Jax stopped and leaned back, capturing her gaze. “You need to understand that I’ll end him if necessary. Whether I like him or not is irrelevant. If he’s a threat to you, a threat to Vanguard, then he dies.”

Lynne swallowed.
She did understand that fact. “I’m sure he’ll come through.”

“We’ll see.” Jax tightened his hold. “If I decide he’s more liability than asset, it’s a done deal. Get on board now, Blue.”

Chapter Eleven

When the end for humanity arrives, it’ll be in the form of a whisper and not a shout
.

—Dr. Frank X. Harmony,
Philosophies

Needles poked
through his skin from the inside. Raze opened his eyelids as he shuddered, heat and freezing cold sweeping through him.

“You lived.” Jax Mercury kicked back to his right, boots on the bed and a sandwich in his hand. “I bet against you. Sorry about that.”

“Who bet for me?” Raze croaked out, his vision wavering.

“Tace bet you’d make it.” Jax dropped his feet to the floor.

Raze drew in a deep breath. “The fever broke?”

“Yep.”

His entire body thrummed with residual pain, and his muscles felt like he hadn’t moved in a year. He tried to sit up and failed to move. A quick glance down confirmed his suspicions. “Why am I still restrained?”

Jax finished his sandwich and dusted off his hands. “You know why.”

Ah, hell. Race had been tortured before, more than once,
but never when he’d been already so worn down. He glanced around the room, noting the door had been closed.

“You’ve been out for about eighteen hours. Tace is guarding the outside, and we’ve forced Vinnie elsewhere for the day.” Jax cocked his head to the side.

Raze blinked. “Did she put up a fight?”

Jax rubbed his cheek. “The woman has a decent right cross, truth be told.”

Raze’s lip quirked. Sweat rolled down his cheek. “She stayed with me the entire night.” As he’d drifted in and out of consciousness, the one constant was Vinnie. Her voice, her scent, her soft touch. “All night,” he murmured, a possessiveness rolling through him he’d have to figure out later. When his brain worked fully.

“Yep.”

Raze sighed. “Jax, I’ve been tortured by the best, and I’ve never broken. Not once. You’ll kill me before I break.” Unfortunately, it was the damn truth.

“I know.” Jax leaned forward. “That’s why I’m not going to torture you.”

Raze lifted an eyebrow. “All right.”

“It’s too bad about Vinnie, though. She would’ve been a welcome addition around here.” Jax’s gaze gave nothing away.

Raze grinned. “You are so full of shit. No way would you torture a woman.”

Jax slowly nodded. “Yep. You read me right. I mean, I would torture a woman if I absolutely had to, but in this case, I don’t even know what you’re hiding.”

Raze lost his smile. “So?”

“So one word from me, and Tace will work her over until you give me what I want.” Jax’s voice remained almost pleasant, but a thread of heat wove through the tone. “He’s not right, and he’ll do it.”

Raze studied the man. “You wouldn’t.”

“I would.”
Absolute conviction showed on Jax’s face. The white scar along his jaw seemed to stand out in warning. “Two months ago, and Tace would’ve been in here arguing with me to let you find your way. After Scorpius? He’ll torture her in ways I can’t even imagine, I’m afraid.”

A ball landed in his gut and exploded. “Don’t do this,” Raze hissed, struggling against the bindings, which held tight. If he had to kill both Jax and Tace to save Vinnie, he’d do it.

“Then tell me what I want to know. Where’s the letter?”

Raze stilled. “Letter? What letter?”

Jax sighed heavily and strode for the door to open it. “Tace?”

Tace poked his head in, surveyed Raze, and then nodded. “Yeah?”

“It’s time for that talk with Dr. Wellington,” Jax said, his gaze remaining on Raze.

“Tace, don’t even think about it,” Raze growled. “I’ll take your head off myself if you even give her a slight scare.”

Tace’s gaze remained steady, and his eyes had turned a darker blue lately. “You can’t frighten me with threats. Nothing scares me since Scorpius. That part of me, the part that feels, well, doesn’t. Sorry.”

Raze jerked against the straps, but they held tight. He wasn’t the first soldier to require restraints during the Scorpius fever. “Even after Scorpius, you’re not a guy who’d torture a woman.”

Tace gave a crooked smile. “I’m not sure, but I think we’re about to find out.”

“Wait a minute.” Raze stopped fighting.

Jax snorted. “Too late.”

“For what?” Raze gently tested the restraints this time. No give.

“For you to convince us that you don’t care about the
good doctor. That she’s not your concern, yada, yada, yada,” Jax said. “You already showed your true reaction.”

Which was exactly why Jax had hit Raze up when he’d first awoken from fighting for his life. There just wasn’t time to think things through. “You’re a real prick,” Raze said slowly.

“Yes,” Jax said.

Raze eyed both men. “I have no plans to harm Vanguard or its people. My mission is my own, and believe me when I tell you two things. The first is that although I do genuinely like Vinnie, my loyalty and focus are elsewhere. I’ll sacrifice her for my mission.” At one point that had been the absolute truth. Now he wasn’t sure, but he kept doubt off his face.

“And second?” Tace asked.

“If you touch Vinnie, if you harm her in any way, I’ll make sure you do feel again. And Tace? You’ll wish to God you didn’t.” Raze meant every damn word.

“Where’s the letter you mentioned?” Jax asked again.

When the hell had he told Jax about the letter? Raze shook his head. “I have no clue what you’re talking about. If I said something while delirious, there’s no truth to it. You have to know that.”

“Go, Tace,” Jax said softly. “Come back in an hour.”

“Wait.” Raze tried to rear up. “Give me a couple of hours to figure things out. Just to let my brain start working again.”

Jax shook his head. “Sorry, buddy. It’s now or never.”

Raze paused. “Why?”

Jax shrugged.

Shit. “Where’s Dr. Harmony?” Raze asked, his chest swelling.

“She’s inner territory at the main hospital,” Jax said.

Raze stopped breathing. Jax had sent Lynne inner territory
because she would’ve stopped any harm from coming to Vinnie. “She won’t forgive you for torturing a woman.”

Jax grimaced. “She’ll forgive me, but it ain’t gonna be easy for a while.”

“You’re that confident of your woman.” Raze shook his head, going with the only ace he had. “She’s a healer, Jax. No way will she be all right with you harming Vinnie.”

“Then she’ll have to get herself all right,” Jax said simply. “The world has changed, and the rules are gone. She’s my life, and she agreed to that, so there’s no going back. Like I said, it ain’t gonna be easy, but at the end of the day, she’ll still be in my bed.” He opened the door wider. “You could have that with Vinnie, if you do the right thing here. Don’t you want that?”

“If Tace touches her, I’m coming after you.” Raze would’ve threatened Lynne, but Jax would just shoot him right then and there, which would screw up his mission for sure.

“Of that I have no doubt.” Jax followed Tace out and shut the door.

Raze yanked against the restraints. The idea of the sweet blonde being physically tortured because of him filled him with a rage he’d never experienced. Nobody could harm her soft skin. She’d been through enough, damn it. He had to get free before Tace reached Vinnie. He just had to.

Vinnie waited in the large gathering room off Jax’s office—the same room in which she’d given her lecture the other day. She sat in the same chair, her focus on the door.

Tace Justice strode inside and tossed two books on the table. The medic looked long and lean in ripped jeans with
a button-down green shirt covering his wide chest. “Look what I found.”

She gasped and reached for the books.
Sociopaths
and
Perceptions
by Dr. Vinnie Wellington. “Where in the world did you find these?” She held the treasured volumes to her chest. The second she’d finished the first book, she’d dedicated it to her father. He would’ve been so proud had he lived long enough to see her books on a shelf. God, she missed him.

Tace pulled out a chair and dropped into it. “Raiding party hit a library on the west side early this morning. They brought back the entire reference section for our doctors, and your books were included.”

She rubbed the weathered binding of
Perceptions
. “We have to get the rest of the books. Literature, romances, thrillers. They matter, too.”

“Agreed. A group is heading back tomorrow.” Tace rested his elbows on the table.

“How’s Raze?”

Tace tapped the tabletop. “Raze is awake and doing better.”

Vinnie pushed away from the table.

“You can’t see him yet.”

She faltered. “Why not?”

“He and Jax are having a chat,” Tace said, his gaze never leaving her face. The medic seemed to overwhelm his chair in a way he hadn’t just a few days ago. Was he getting bigger? More muscular?

“A chat between Raze and Jax right now doesn’t sound good.” Vinnie stood.

Tace leaned forward and suddenly took over the atmosphere. “Please retake your seat, darlin’.”

The Texas twang held a hint of threat. A new one. Vinnie didn’t move. “Excuse me?”

“I need
you to sit. Now.”

She studied him. Rugged face, deep blue eyes, black cowboy hat. Superior fighting shape. While she could make it to the door, he’d catch her before she reached the infirmary. If he chased her. His expression showed quite clearly that he would.

He nodded. “You know how animals, the predatory kind, always chase prey? I mean, even if they’re not hungry at the moment, but prey is there and runs? Instinct makes them give chase.”

Her stomach rolled over. She sat.

“Thank you.”

“Do you think you’re a predator?” she asked gently.

He stilled and then broke into a smile. “Ah, sweetheart. You’re shrinking my head right now.”

Well, maybe. “Seriously. Do you have the urge to, ah, chase people?”

“Not usually, but if you’d run when I told you to sit, I would’ve taken you down three steps before you reached the doorway.” He leaned back, almost appearing relaxed. “It’s instinct, and it’s new, but it’s there.”

They’d have to explore that issue later. Her head ached. “Is Jax hurting Raze?” If so, she’d have to get past Tace somehow. She needed to start carrying a weapon.

“No.” Tace drew imaginary circles on the table but kept his focus on her face. “I promise.”

She studied his body language as well as his voice inflection. He seemed to be telling the truth. “Then why do you want to keep me here?” she asked.

“Jax needs to find out why Raze is here helping Vanguard,” Tace said. “In fact, supposedly there’s a letter Raze composed in case of his death. Any idea where he would have hidden it?”

She slowly shook her head, her mind reeling. “Maybe
Raze just wants to help. Maybe he’s looking for a place to call home.”

“That’s you, not him,” Tace murmured. “You’re the one wanting to set down roots.”

Her mouth opened and then closed. “Aren’t you?”

“Hell, sweetheart. I’m just trying to keep myself from becoming a Ripper. I don’t give two squawks where I am when I do that.” He glanced toward the light coming through the doorway. “It’s midafternoon. Guess I won’t scout today.”

“How long are you supposed to keep me here, and why do you think Raze will talk to Jax?” Something wasn’t adding up.

“You need to stay here for the afternoon, and I know Raze will talk to Jax because he doesn’t have a choice if he wants to be released.” Tace held up a hand when she began to argue. “Plus, and here’s the rub, Raze
wants
to talk to Jax. He’s definitely on a mission, but he wants to belong, and he needs to trust somebody. Jax is a good guy and Raze knows it.”

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