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Authors: Lisa Renee Jones

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BOOK: Danger That Is Damion
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Dorian stared at Michael for several tense seconds before focusing on Damion. “If you do not wish me to save her, then you must save her yourself.”

Damion went icy inside. “What does that mean?”

“Do the blood exchange, or she will die,” Dorian said. He glanced at the television and back at Damion. “Did you know that Skywalker isn’t his real name? It’s Luke.” And then he turned and focused on the movie.

Damion sat there, stunned into silence by this confirmation that Lara was his Lifebond, something he’d tried to avoid.

“How do you know that, Dorian?” Damion ground out between his teeth.

Dorian shrugged. “It’s logical. You call someone Skywalker—it’s a nickname for Luke.”

“I’m not talking about Skywalker,” Damion said. “I’m talking about Lara.”

“Things come to me,” Dorian said. “And no, before you ask, I don’t have any more to tell you. I just know that without you doing the blood exchange with her, Lara will die.” He turned back to the television, dismissing Damion and the problem, as if it were nothing but a mosquito he’d just swatted and killed.

Damion could feel both Caleb and Michael watching him, and he knew they both understood the silent message in Dorian’s claim, the message that had Damion quaking from the inside out. Lara was Damion’s Lifebond.

“I’ll have Sterling look into any record of a ‘Luke’ in any of the government databases,” Caleb said. “It sounds like you need to go deal with Lara.”

Silence stretched heavily in the air, as Damion struggled with what he was feeling, what he was thinking, with the trust in Caleb’s eyes, the confidence that Damion would do the right thing where Lara was concerned. For the first time since serving under Caleb as a Renegade, Damion wasn’t sure he deserved that trust. He’d brought Lara here against orders. If she turned on them, he’d be responsible.

“I’ll deal with Luke and Lara myself,” Damion said finally.

Caleb gave him an assessing stare, but asked no questions. “Understood.”

Damion inclined his head, and then walked toward the door and into the hallway. Michael followed him, and they stepped onto a moving sidewalk side by side.

“So she’s your Lifebond,” Michael said. “That explains a lot.”

“Says Dorian,” Damion amended. “And I don’t trust Dorian and his motives any more than I trust Adam, no matter how much Caleb might.”

“You’re not wrong about her,” Michael surprised him by saying.

“You can’t know that.”

“She’s with Cassandra. If I didn’t think you were right about her, do you really think I’d let that happen?”

Damion cut him a sideways look. “Don’t trust me when it comes to Lara.
I
don’t trust me when it comes to Lara. I’m not objective.”

“You don’t have to be,” he said. “You know her. She’s your Lifebond.” He said the words as if they were not only proven fact, but some sort of profound answer to every question Damion might ask from that point onward.

As much as Damion wanted Michael to be right, he reminded himself he had to be objective about Lara. Anything that occurred as a result of her presence or involvement with the Renegades was his doing, his responsibility, which meant he needed to find out Lara’s true identity, and he needed to find out now.

***

 

After traveling from the coffee shop to a separate operational wing of the city, Lara met several of the female Wardens, and now stood in a conference room where maps and sticky pins tracked abductions. “It’s incredible what you’re doing here,” she told Cassandra and Becca. She discreetly pulled out a leather chair from around the long, rectangular table and sat down, trying to hide the growing pain in her head.

“It’s not enough,” Cassandra said, as she and Becca sat down as well. “Not when you think about what these women endure in those sex camps. We don’t save them all, but it’s better than doing nothing. For those women who are unable to leave here because the Trackers can find them, it gives them something to live for.”

“Like me,” Lara said softly. “The Trackers can find me as well.” She was a prisoner here, no matter how she looked at it. If Lucian had always been able to track her, then she’d simply been on a leash that she hadn’t known existed. Now, she was on another leash, because even if she could leave Sunrise and wanted to, she’d be hunted all too easily by too many potential enemies to count. Powell was no more what he’d seemed than the Renegades were the demons he’d painted them to be. He’d made her the Renegades’ enemy, and she wasn’t sure she could change that, no matter how much she might want to.

“You should have the ability to shield yourself,” Becca said, drawing Lara back into the conversation. “It makes sense to me that you can’t. But I’m not buying the idea that because you’re female you’re incapable of such a skill. Both myself and Cassandra can shield ourselves from the Trackers.”

Cassandra didn’t look quite as convinced. “I couldn’t until Michael and I completed our blood bond, and even then, it took me some time. You had unique abilities develop even before you Lifebonded, Becca.” She looked thoughtfully at Lara. “Still, since you’re GTECH, whatever is causing your headaches could be interfering with your shielding ability.”

Her voice softening, Cassandra continued, “Lara, listen. I know you don’t know who to trust or what to believe. I even understand why. We’re the good guys though. I really want to convince you of that.” Becca held up a finger. “I have an idea.”

The next thing Lara knew, she’d talked to an FBI agent in Nevada and an army sergeant named Ryker who knew Sterling well, both by way of Skype, and both well informed about the Renegades and the Wardens.

“So,” Becca said. “Now do you believe us when we say we’re the good guys?”

Lara nodded, emotion balled in her chest. “I do.” Which made her one of the bad guys. What had Powell involved her in? What had Powell made her do that she might not even remember? And, oh God, what if the scenario was even worse? What if she was blaming Powell, when the truth was that she willingly, knowingly, without coercion, had done bad things—maybe even really bad things?

“So take the CT scan,” Cassandra encouraged. “What if there’s something planted in your brain that we need to surgically remove?”

Lara’s gaze snapped to Cassandra. “Planted in my brain?” She shook her head. “The GTECH body destroys foreign objects.”

“Typically, yes,” Cassandra agreed, “but maybe my father came up with a way to prevent that from happening.”

Her father. Cassandra had just said “her father,” as if she was completely certain Lara was working for Powell. Lara wasn’t sure how to respond. She wasn’t ready to admit Powell was involved, because she wasn’t sure what role she played in this nightmare. All she knew was that she had to know who she was, and what she’d done, before they did—
before
Damion
did
.

“I’ll do the CT scan.”

Chapter 19
 

An hour and a half after heading to the Sunrise Hospital, Lara had been poked, prodded, scanned, and thus far, given a perfect bill of health. As much as Lara would have liked to be happy about that news, it did nothing to give her back her memories, nor did it stop the flashes of images in her mind or the growing throb in her temples.

“A few more minutes,” Cassandra said, sitting on the medical stool beside the leather hospital chair Lara currently occupied. A portable machine set between them, wires attached to the pads stuck to Lara’s neck and forehead, to test her brain wave activity. So far, the test had been uneventful and painless, at least on her end. She couldn’t see the monitor, and based on the tension she felt radiating off Cassandra, she was pretty sure she didn’t want to.

Lara closed her eyes, willing the images into her mind, desperate for answers when that strange tingling sensation on the back of her neck started again. Lara opened her mouth to mention it to Cassandra, in case it affected the test readings, but before she could speak, Cassandra stood up. “One second. Michael is here. Let me tell him what’s going on, and then we should be able to wrap this up.”

Lara frowned. “How do you know he’s here?”

“The Lifebond mark on my neck is like an early alert system,” she explained. “It tingles like crazy when he’s nearby.” She opened the door and stepped out into the hallway, leaving Lara gaping behind her with the implications of what she’d said.

Damion stepped inside the room and shut the door. Their eyes locked and held, and the room shrunk. There was something new in the air between them, or maybe she imagined it—maybe it was simply her knowledge of what the tingling on her neck might mean. Either way, big, broad, and lethal, he stole her breath and set her heart racing. The tingling faded to a warm caress across her entire body. Could this man be her Lifebond?

He sauntered toward her. “What happened to calling me if you needed to go to the hospital?”

“I was afraid you’d talk me out of it.”

He grabbed the rolling stool Cassandra had just occupied and slid close. Lara remembered the cabin, remembered him doing the same then. She remembered every second with Damion, so why couldn’t she remember the rest of her life?

“Seriously,” he said, those hazel eyes of his probing hers, “what changed your mind about the testing?”

You. I don’t want you to hate me.
“It’s that women’s prerogative thing.”

“Lara,” he said softly.

“I’m tired of not knowing, but so far, this hasn’t worked out how I’d hoped. There is no easy fix. My memories won’t return with a snap of the fingers.”

“I’m back,” Cassandra said, entering the room. “Okay, Lara. We can unhook you now, and you can head out.”

“What about the results?” Damion asked, rolling backward so Cassandra could get to the machine.

Cassandra didn’t look up at his question, busying herself by pulling the pads from Lara’s forehead. “Kelly and I are going to talk them over.”

Lara knew avoidance when she witnessed it. Gently, she shackled Cassandra’s wrist. “They aren’t good, are they?”

Cassandra stopped what she was doing and turned so that she could speak to both of them. “Look. I don’t want to jump to conclusions here. For a human, the results aren’t good. In fact, they’re downright unsustainable. But you aren’t human, Lara. Sleep and time can do wonders for GTECHs, and since we didn’t test you before the three-day snooze you took, we don’t know if you are better or worse. So Kelly and I both agree that you should try to sleep another eight to twelve hours, and then let me re-run the test to see if there are any improvements.”

“What exactly do you think was done to her?” Damion asked, taking the words right out of Lara’s mouth. “What are we up against here?”

Cassandra pressed her hand to her forehead and then pressed her fists to her waist. “Okay. I wasn’t going to talk about this until I did some more research, so let me preface this by saying it’s pure speculation,” Cassandra replied. “I did read a couple of studies on a sophisticated army brainwashing program when I was at Area 51. Which means my father had access to them as well. The end result of those tests wasn’t good, which is why the techniques weren’t used.” She held up a hand. “But
those
studies were done on humans, not GTECHs.”

“Brainwashing,” Lara said, in stunned disbelief. “You think I was brainwashed?”

“Speculation,” she said. “That’s all this is. But yes. It seems logical and a way around the GTECH’s ability to destroy any inserted object or device. However, the miracle of the GTECH body is that it evolves and adapts. My theory is that your mind is trying to heal itself and undo the artificial memories.”

“Artificial memories,” Lara murmured, staring at the ground. That was why she couldn’t remember her family. They weren’t real. But Skywalker was. Skywalker was real and he was dead. And Sabrina was responsible. Powell was too.

“You could easily heal from this, Lara, and even get your memory back,” Cassandra continued. “We’re gathering a scientific team to game-plan ways to stimulate the healing process under such unique circumstances.”

Lara didn’t look at Damion. She couldn’t. She felt as if her heart had lodged in her throat. She pulled off two pads from her skin and sat up, somehow finding her voice. “Thank you for trying, Cassandra.” She turned to face Damion, and she knew what she had to do. She knew that no matter what the consequences to her, she had to stop Powell from doing this to anyone else. She had to stop him from hurting the Renegades. “I need to talk to you.”

Someone knocked on the door and it opened. “I’m supposed to get some blood from Lara,” Emma said, appearing in the entryway.

“No blood,” Lara said to Damion. “No more. I
need
to talk to you.”

He glanced at Cassandra and Emma in a silent plea for privacy, and they quickly departed.

The instant the door shut, Lara started talking. “It’s Powell. I’m part of an all women’s team of GTECHs called ‘Serenity.’ Counting me, there are—were—seven of us, but Powell was planning to grow our numbers. He said he was aligned with the government—that he
is
the government. That all GTECHs are the enemy. Lucian is Powell’s personal bodyguard, and the only male GTECH I ever knew to exist in our operation. Sadly, considering I was taking orders from the man, I know little to nothing more about Powell and the operation. At least, not that I remember. We both know my memory isn’t exactly golden at present. Bottom line here is that Sabrina and Lucian know I’m with the Renegades, and Powell will worry that I’m spilling his secrets, which is why I’m saying all of this now. Every second that passes gives him more time to escape before you can get to him.”

BOOK: Danger That Is Damion
8.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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