Blaze of Secrets (Asylums for Magical Threats) (20 page)

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Authors: Jessie Donovan

Tags: #To avoid persecution, #the Feiru will do anything to keep their elemental magic a secret from humans—even lock away their children for life. Few know about the experiments going on inside the prison system for magic users, #but that is about to change…, #FICTION/ Romance / Paranormal

BOOK: Blaze of Secrets (Asylums for Magical Threats)
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Chapter Twenty

The flat was within walking distance of the pub, but Jaxton had opted to take the bus since he could use all of the human witnesses he could get, and the bus had at least five of them.

Millie’s rapid nose twitching had signaled that there had been trouble inside the pub. Their code wasn’t sophisticated enough to say exactly what kind of troublemakers she’d spotted, but with the shadow-shifter’s earlier warning about others coming to retrieve Kiarra, Jaxton wasn’t taking any chances.

Besides, it’d given him the perfect excuse to get Kiarra out of the pub.

Even he was ashamed of the way he’d acted, and Millie’s words about Jaxton needing to be the

commander he should be still echoed inside his head. It was his duty to protect Kiarra, but not in such a way as to draw attention. If he had approached the situation with a calm head and had treated Kiarra like a normal recruit, respecting her intelligence, he wouldn’t be as worried about their safety right now.

Kiarra shifted her leg and accidentally brushed it against his. He looked at her reflection in the window and decided to stop fighting the attraction between them. The longer he did so, the greater the chance he’d compromise everyone’s safety in the future. He wanted her, and once both of their tempers had cooled,

he’d find a way to let her know.

Kiarra caught his eye in the reflection and raised an eyebrow in question. Luckily, he was a master of

keeping secrets. “We’ll get off at the next stop.”

Neither one of them said a word as they disembarked, and Jaxton guided Kiarra down a maze of streets

and alleys; he wasn’t going to risk a tail.

Ten minutes later, satisfied that no one was following them, he turned up the alley to his flat and went up the stairs. Jaxton quickly checked the security, found it untouched, and proceeded to do a quick sweep of the house with Kiarra in tow. For once she understood the necessity to stay quiet and not ask questions.

Flat secured, Jaxton switched on the light in the living room and turned to face Kiarra. She was waiting with her arms crossed over her chest. He couldn’t read her expression, but knew she wanted the promised

explanation, so he gave it to her. “Millie spotted some troublemakers inside the pub. We don’t know if they were after you or not, but it was best to play it safe and get you out of there.”
Until he settled things between them, he was still her trainer, and he needed to reprimand her as one. “It would’ve been a lot easier to slip away if you hadn’t made such a scene.”

Kiarra re-crossed her arms under her breasts. Jaxton forced his gaze to stay on her face as she said, “I made a scene? First you bark off the men, then you start dragging me out the door. All you had needed to do was tell me that there was danger and I would’ve gone quietly, but no, instead you decided to keep me in the dark. If we’re to work together, you need to treat me as a member of your team, not a child to be looked after.”

“All I recall doing is protecting you. If that’s treating you like a child, then so be it.”

Kiarra let out a sound of frustration and crossed the small space between them to stand in front of

Jaxton. “There is protecting and then there is belittling. Would you ever forcefully pull one of your men out of the pub? Or take away his drink? Of course not, you would let them make their own decisions, or at

least consult with them.” Kiarra narrowed her eyes and raised her face closer to his. “I am not twelve years old, Jaxton Ward. I was imprisoned for fifteen years, but I assure you I can make decisions on my own and face the consequences.”

“Can you really, Kiarra? Any more alcohol and that randy ginger bloke could’ve coaxed you to do

anything. What if he’d raped you? Or murdered you?” Jaxton grabbed Kiarra’s chin and tilted it upwards,

forcing her gaze. “The world is different now, and until you learn how it works, I won’t stand by and watch

you put yourself in harm’s way.”

Kiarra jerked her chin free of his hand. “Sure, until you get what you want, then you’ll just pass me

along to someone else and forget I even exist. I may be naïve about the world outside, but I won’t be your tool. I’m tired of people only using me for their own personal gain and tossing me aside when it’s

convenient. You’re little different than the AMT staff in that respect.”

She turned, and Jaxton growled as he grabbed her wrist. “Don’t compare me to them.” He tugged and

turned her to face him again so he could take hold of her shoulders.

Kiarra didn’t struggle, but gave him a cool look. “Let go of me, Jaxton.”

“Not until you acknowledge that I’m different.”

As they stared at each other, Jaxton knew he was being irrational. Kiarra was saying things in anger, and deep down, he knew she probably didn’t mean them. But for some reason, he needed to hear her

acknowledge that he was different than the AMT guards and researchers.

He didn’t want to use and dispose of her; he wanted Kiarra’s help, as well as all of the things she could offer in the future.

Most of all, he wanted to tell her that as soon as she’d mentioned passing her off to someone else, a

resounding “not bloody likely” had gone through his head. There was no way in hell Jaxton was going to

toss her aside.

She wasn’t quite sure how they’d devolved into yet another argument, but Kiarra had hit a nerve, and

while she knew Jaxton was nothing like the AMT staff, Kiarra was too fired up to back down. Instead,

she’d use the opportunity to get some answers. “Since you claim to be different, answer me this: what will you do with me once we find the information you’re looking for?”

Jaxton said nothing at first, but just when Kiarra was trying to think of how to keep a grip on the

situation, the corner of Jaxton’s mouth rose and he said, “My sister seems to think I should ask you

questions rather than just assume answers. So, what would you like to do once we finish with Sinclair?”

Kiarra blinked. She hadn’t expected that response. “I want to continue working with DEFEND and help

the first-borns. I have a lot of information that could be useful.”

“If we succeed with Sinclair, finding the leak that we need, then that is quite possible.”

She felt a glimmer of hope in her chest, but a question nibbled at the back of her mind. “What if Ty

succeeds in capturing me? What will you do then?”

Jaxton’s eyes narrowed. “Who is Ty?”

Her calm and collected façade slipped. Jaxton was volatile enough tonight; she didn’t need to add fuel to the fire by telling him about Ty. But he tightened his grip on her shoulders and growled, “Kiarra? Answer me. Who is Ty?”

She’d never told anyone about her experiences with Ty, and it weighed heavy on her heart. But she was

still wary of trusting another person to not use her past against her.

Yet Jaxton had told Kiarra about what had happened with Garrett, and if she confided in him as well,

she knew something inside of her would shift. She resisted it, because of what Ty had done to her, but from everything she’d learned about Jaxton, he was different. The relationship he had with his brother and sister told Kiarra more about Jaxton than he would probably ever realize. From the evidence she’d seen so far,

Jaxton would’ve stood up for Kiarra whereas Ty’s ambitions had taken precedence.

But she wanted to hear the answer to her question before taking such a giant leap of faith. “First, answer my question. What would you do if he captured me?”

“I’m tired of this game, Kiarra.”

Kiarra raised an eyebrow and forced herself to remain patient. Jaxton was unaware that his answer

would dictate how she viewed him from this point forward.

Jaxton relaxed his grip and sighed. “After seeing what they’ve done to you, both physically with the scars and emotionally, I would never allow you to go back and rot inside the AMT. I can’t promise to move heaven and earth to get you out, but I would bloody well try as hard as I could.”

Jaxton’s eyes were sincere, and she liked that he hadn’t given her some hyperbolic answer such as never

sleeping until he found her or conquering armies to free her. To her, the simplicity spoke of honesty, and she believed that he would try to rescue her if she were captured. No matter how difficult it might be for her talk about it, if Ty did succeed in finding her, Jaxton needed to know about him.

Kiarra took a deep breath and said, “Ty Adams was the researcher assigned to me. He developed a

formula that, after he injected me for years with different prototypes, eventually succeeded.

“His formula is the reason I can’t gather fire. I was his first success story, and invaluable to both him and his superiors. They see me as central to erasing all elemental magic and allowing
Feiru
to fully integrate with the human world.”

Jaxton remained silent and studied her face. Kiarra tried to keep her emotions hidden, but Jaxton

must’ve seen something, because he asked, “What else did he do to you?”

For most people, ten years would’ve been more than long enough to get over a former lover. But Ty

had done something much more than break her heart. He had broken her spirit.

Kiarra felt a brush of fingers on her cheek, and unaware that she’d closed her eyes, opened them. She

was afraid that she would see pity in Jaxton’s eyes, but all she saw was concern and kindness.

So many people in the past few days had been kind to her. Between their kindness, memories of Ty, and

the effects of the alcohol, she felt overloaded. Her vision began to blur, and she tried to blink away the tears. She did not want to cry in front of Jaxton.

Jaxton stroked her cheek again and asked, “Is he related to the scars on your back?”

Jaxton hated to see anyone on the verge of tears, but it was so much worse with Kiarra. She’d been

strong for so many years inside the AMT, was still getting stronger by the day, and Kiarra’s display of

weakness and vulnerability unleashed a mixture of feelings. While he wanted to hunt down Ty Adams and

make him pay for Kiarra’s pain, Kiarra needed him right here, right now.

He continued to brush Kiarra’s cheek, and she slowly started to lean into his hand. She still hadn’t

answered his question, so he cupped her cheek and tilted her head up toward his eyes. He was gentle, yet firm, when he asked, “Is he?”

Their faces were inches apart, and Jaxton could feel Kiarra’s breath on his chin. Kiarra’s cheeks were

flushed, her breathing fast. When she started to speak, it took every bit of his self-control to focus on her words and not to look at her lips.

“Yes. Ty and I were together about a year. But once the guards found out about our relationship, Ty

tossed me aside. I was accused of seducing him, even though he was the one to start it, and I was punished accordingly.”

“Bollocks.”

Her eyes widened. “You don’t believe me?”

“I believe that a spineless worm of a man used you for his own selfish purposes—but, pet, there is no

way you could’ve seduced him.”

“And why is that?”

He smiled, determined to make her do the same. “Because you’d be bloody awful at it.”

Kiarra looked at him a second before she smiled and ran her hand up his chest. The touch, combined

with the look in her eyes and her sweet scent filling his nose, sent blood to his groin. He knew it was wrong to take advantage of her current vulnerability, but before he could tell Kiarra to go up to bed, she leaned in close and whispered in his ear, “Is that a challenge?”

Chapter Twenty-One

Gio’s mobile phone rang and he pushed the accept button. “Yes.”


I’ve confirmed her last known location, but we just missed her.

The caller was a member of the retrieval team he’d sent after Kiarra, a hired man named Dominik. “Was

she alone?”


No, two people were with her, but only the man accompanied her out. I can bring in the other person

if you want to question her about the first-born.

“Go ahead. We’ll see what we can get out of her. Split up the work, and send the others out to question

people on the street. The target is not far from Grassmarket.”


Will do.

The line went dead. Gio looked back to the tracking program on his computer and kept an eye on

Kiarra’s location.

He’d accepted his father’s mission and taken over Kiarra Melini’s retrieval operation. The previous

person in charge, Ty Adams, had been reluctant to cede control, and had made his case for why he should

stay in charge—Kiarra was Adams’ prized subject, and after handling her for years, he knew her quirks and fears better than anyone.

But all Adams had been ordered to do was write a detailed behavior profile and pass on the information

to Gio.

Even without the report, Gio had arrived in Edinburgh and met with his team. During their first

briefing, he’d learned that a prototype tracking chip had been placed under Kiarra’s skin a few months ago in case she ever escaped or was kidnapped. While the signal occasionally shorted out, probably due to

being in a tunnel or some such place, it was working now.

He was still uncertain of how he felt about tracking down Kiarra. He’d been young when she’d gone off

to the AMT, and while he’d seen Cam once or twice after their parents had died, the concept of having

siblings was foreign to him. He considered James Sinclair’s house staff to be more family than either one of his sisters by blood.

But Kiarra was an escaped first-born and a risk to everything his father was trying to accomplish. If the general human population found out about elemental magic, his father and other prominent anti-Article I

proponents predicted that humans would round up the
Feiru
and put them into special camps, not unlike what had happened in World War II.

At least until humans thought of a way to exploit them for their own gain.

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