Chapter 20
The empathic-reversal echo, lifted straight from the history of their ancient severance, crushed them with the weight of a physical blow. Reaching for the completion of the bond flooded them both not with simple joy, but with the exact, sharp memory of the original separation.
A searing, ice-cold agony ripped through Flash's side, the phantom bite of a silver Tumi entering his ribs. Shock snapped through him, but even as he realized what she had done, his love for her surged. At the same instant, he caught Lechuza’s thought, the jarring impact of steel driving into flesh, the sickening lurch of a blade meeting bone, her hand had delivered.
Severance's final, cruel gift turned their moment of perfect connection into an agony of shared severing.
Flash screamed out, a sound of pure agony, his hand flying to his side over his ribs. When he pulled his fingers away, they were stained red. He looked down through the translucent blue light and saw his old scar splitting open, weeping dark, phantom blood across his skin.
Her eyes met his, hollow, dark, and heavy with the shattering grief of what her ancient self had done to protect the world, accidentally taking his life.
Then her head dropped, her body moving to adjust. With a trembling hand, she pushed his away, her soft mouth scoring his skin like a burning brand.
He cried out as she firmly kissed his scar, pressing her lips reverently against the illusion of his pain.
The insubstantial font flickered once, twice, and then vanished. The blue glyphs dimmed, turning back to cold, dead stone. The bubbling water sank back into the earth, and the glade fell utterly silent.
The Veil whooshed shut.
They lay there in the damp grass, their chests heaving, surrounded by the cold and the dark of a forgotten forest. They had done everything right.
They had reunited across five centuries of blood and ash, given each other the total surrender that the past had violently stolen from them, carried every broken piece of their souls back to this clearing, and the font had recognized them. It had reached for them.
She knew who she was.
He knew who he was.
But it had stopped on a wound they couldn't even name.
He could feel her in his bones, in the blood that raced through his veins, in the pleasure still pulsing in his spent cock, the silence of the glade a suffocating, unbearable weight for her.
There was no enemy here to fight, no enemy to control.
The obstacle wasn't Vargas or Severance.
The damage lived inside her bond, woven into the very fabric of their love.
For him, the cold stone of the font was a monument to a failure he couldn't joke his way past, a defeat that no quick wit could fix. But her mouth on his scar, the way she kissed him, she offered that connection, and he stayed in it, bathing in the light of her compassion.
They held each other, staring at the dead basin in despair. It knew them, it had reached for them, and it had found a barrier buried in the deepest part of their union, closing off the final twist of the key. In the deep quiet of the cloud forest, there was absolutely no answer.
* * *
The Eyrie's bay door stood open to the desert night, rusted metal groaning on tracks that hadn't moved in decades, or so the camouflage suggested.
Krait leaned against the corrugated wall just inside the threshold, her knife spinning in lazy, glinting circles around her index finger, the blade catching the sodium light from the perimeter lamps in rhythmic flashes.
Spin. Catch. Spin. Catch. The motion centered her, kept her hands busy while her eyes did the real work.
She'd been watching them for three hours.
Tex and his team, playing the cooperative allies, following every breadcrumb laid out for them.
The warehouse in Tucson. The dead drop in Nogales.
The "intel" about Lechuza crossing into Mexico at a cartel-controlled checkpoint.
Each lead was carefully manufactured, each one requiring the SEALs to mobilize, to burn fuel, hours, and patience.
Each one, she'd noticed, ended in the same convenient absence. She was just here. She must have moved on. We'll catch her at the next location.
She pushed off the wall.
Tex stood at the center of the hangar floor, consulting a tablet with Bondo, their voices low, operational. They hadn't heard her approach. They never did, until she wanted them to.
"You've been leading us around by the nose long enough."
Tex's head came up first, flinty blue eyes, SEAL-trained reflexes snapping to threat assessment.
Bondo shifted his weight, hand drifting toward his sidearm.
Behind them, Shark and Dagger went still where they'd been checking gear near the server rack.
Only Brawler moved toward her, direct, unsubtle.
Krait didn't look at him. She kept her gaze locked on Tex, the knife resuming its orbit around her finger, casual as a coin flip.
"All this time," she said, her voice carrying the slight sibilance that made some targets shiver, "we’ve been chasing manufactured shadows. Did you think we wouldn't notice the pattern? Komodo notices patterns before they fully form. It's rather his specialty."
Tex's jaw tightened. "We're working the leads you provided, Vale. Same as you."
"Same as us." She laughed, low and humorless.
The silence stretched. Outside, the desert wind scraped sand against the hangar's steel, the sound of a world slowly wearing itself down.
"You want to protect her," Krait continued, softer now, almost sympathetic.
She understood loyalty, had felt its hooks in her own flesh more than once.
"I comprehend the impulse. She's one of yours now, in some fashion.
The…Veil has touched us all." She glanced at the faint shimmer she could see around Tex's shoulders, the spectral suggestion of a stallion's mane.
"But she's also compromised. Accused of six unsanctioned kills that carry her signature.
Evidence that holds up to scrutiny even our kind can't dismiss. "
"Evidence can be manufactured," Bondo said, his voice gravel-rough.
"Indeed." Krait's lips curved, not quite a smile.
"Innocence can be performed. Which is which, Chief Petty Officer?
That's the question Komodo and I are tasked with answering.
" She stepped closer to Tex, close enough to smell the coffee on his breath, the honest sweat of a man who'd been running hard.
"But I can't answer it while I'm chasing ghosts through the Sonoran Desert.
While you're burning daylight for a reason we don’t know about. "
She gestured toward the hydraulic lifts that housed workstations.
Toward the server room hidden beneath the maintenance pit.
Toward the tactical gear and weapons caches that transformed this rusted husk into a fortress.
"Where is she?” Tex just stared at her. “Why are you protecting her when your mission is to help us capture her, and you’ve done nothing but conceal the knowledge?
” Krait asked, and she didn't need the confirmation in Tex's eyes to know. "What is happening with this energy that’s driving us, won’t let me sleep, and hammers at every part of the vow I made?”
“Have you contacted Langley?”
“No. We don’t need them to know anything right now.” She shifted her shoulders as her own ghostly apparition slithered around her. She inhaled deliberately, theatrically. "Do we?"
Brawler and his feral-looking K9 had reached her periphery now, massive, his hand on his weapon. Krait didn't turn, but she let him feel the shift in her stance, the coiling readiness that made her more dangerous than her blade. The dog watched her every move.
"Step back, Reaver," Brawler growled. Beast growled low in his throat.
"Or?" The knife spun once, fast, a silver blur.
She caught it by the handle, blade pointing down her forearm, ready for the upward cut that would open a man's throat before he could finish his next breath.
"You'll shoot me? Sic your dog on me? After you've worked so hard to keep your little secrets?
" She finally looked at him, letting the phantom overlay show in her eyes, the serpent's ghost coiled around her human frame, scales rippling with patient menace.
"I don't think you will. If you were going to escalate, you'd have done it already.
You're stalling, same as you've been stalling since before the briefing. I want to know why. Komodo and I are done with this charade. We’re forcing the issue. "
Komodo emerged from the shadows near the bay door, silent as his namesake, his leather duster moving like liquid shadow. He'd been there all along, waiting, watching, calculating the angles. His dark eyes found hers, and she saw the minute nod. Proceed.
"Here's what happens now," Krait said, her voice dropping to conversational warmth that was somehow worse than her threat.
"We stop the theater. You take us to her, or we stop pretending cooperation and begin active containment.
" She looked at each of them: Tex rigid with command, Bondo furious and trapped, Shark calculating exit strategies, Dagger burning hot at the edges, Brawler and Beast barely restrained violence.
"I've been patient. I'm not patient by nature, Lieutenant.
I'm efficient. And this—" She gestured at the empty hangar, the false leads, the exhausted men. "—this is inefficient."
"Lead us to her," Krait said. "Or tell us why you're protecting a woman accused of breaking our edicts. But decide now. Komodo's patience is thinner than mine, and we’re ready to do what’s necessary. We won’t leave your team intact."