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LENGTH: Anthology
SENSUALITY: Carnal

Cover art (c) Alex DeShanks 2007
ISBN: 978-1-60394-114-3
Retail price $12.99
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Discovery: Deep under the Sonoran Desert, Catriona Devane searches for clues in the disappearance of the lead scientist responsible for creating the Praetorians--warriors who are human/animal hybrids.

Max Didion is the captain of the ultra elite squad of Praetorians who guard the scientific facility. A human/cougar hybrid, his heightened sense of sight, smell, and hearing make him a dangerous adversary ... or a fearsome ally.

Rating: Contains explicit sex, graphic language, and violence.

 

Infiltration: When her brother's slip makes Kendra, a strong telepath, a target for the Praetorians, she heads for the hills to hide out in hopes of evading them.

Quinn isn't about to leave his 'little lamb' out in the cold for the Hyenas, though. He might have problems with commitment, but she's his woman, and he means to rescue her, whether she wants to be rescued or not!

Rating: Carnal, adult situations and language, anal sex.

 

THE PRAETORIANS:

DISCOVERY


By


Sherrill Quinn

 

 

© copyright May 2006, Sherrill Quinn

Cover art by Kat Richards, © copyright May 2006

ISBN 1-58608-915-3

New Concepts Publishing

Lake Park, GA 31636

www.newconceptspublishing.com

 

 

This is a work of fiction. All characters, events, and places are of the author’s imagination and not to be confused with fact. Any resemblance to living persons or events is merely coincidence.

 

 

Chapter 1


Catriona Devane crept along the deserted corridor of the scientific wing of The Foundation, a complex deep under the Sonoran Desert. Most people had no idea what lurked under this stretch of starkly beautiful land west of Tucson. They had no idea it housed an ultra-secretive organization that trained people with the powers of telepathy and telekinesis.

The Chosen Ones.

She held her breath and prayed no one would leave their quarters. At two in the morning, most of the staff was asleep, with a lone security guard on duty. Her contact had assured her the man would be distracted from the screens for thirty minutes. Long enough for her to get in and out without being seen.

Glancing at the duty roster as she passed by, she was reminded that today was Friday the thirteenth. Not that she was suspicious or anything. After all, this was twenty-seventy. Science ruled, and there was no room for ancient suspicions.

She tiptoed on, knowing if it weren’t for her latent ability to mask her thoughts, she would’ve never made it past the front door. As a Sensitive, she could block her mind from anything they sent her way. Most people were psychically sensitive to one degree or another, much more so than even fifty years ago.

She swallowed, even though her mouth was dry with the fear of being caught. Were she to be discovered in an area of the complex for which she didn’t have clearance, well.… She’d be in deep doo-doo.

With a capital D.

She could only hope her contact was true to his--or her--word.

She turned the corner and stopped for a moment, trying to calm her breathing. With the Praetorians’ exceptional sense of sound, they were sure to hear her if she went on like this, wheezing down the hallway like a winded racehorse.

Thoughts of the elite security force that guarded the Chosen Ones made her heart thump harder. The Praetorians, hybrid warriors, appeared to be mere humans, but the men’s DNA was spliced with that of various animals. These were men who were naturally tall and strong, but enhanced to be more. Much more.

Hawkmen. Wolfmen. Lionmen. The list of hybrids was astounding. It was rumored that the experiments had begun as much as a hundred years earlier, in a top-secret military installation in Nevada. But, like the Chosen Ones, the Praetorians were kept a secret.

She needed to know why.

A noise from behind made her stop. With a gulp, she turned and surveyed the still empty corridor. When nothing happened, she wiped her sweaty palms on her black jeans and started walking again. Her rubber-soled sneakers made little noise on the floor, but she was so hyped up, the small squeaks she heard seemed to echo loudly.

Her destination was the room at the end, the lab where the biogenetic researchers worked. All other staff was forbidden admittance. From conversations she’d had with other lab assistants, this was the last place Doctor Lexy Harris had been seen, just over a week ago.

If she could prove to the authorities and the public that nefarious scientific experiments--unsanctioned biogenetic experiments--were taking place here, all initially engineered by Doctor Harris, she’d be on the journalistic map. Cat was determined this story would be the one to make her career.

But there was more to it than that. She had a personal agenda, as well, to discover what had happened to her brother. She hadn’t heard from him in nearly five years, but she sensed he still lived. Her contact at The Foundation had hinted that Sean had gotten mixed up in all of this. She needed to find him. She had to know.

This was her first undercover assignment and she was so close to the truth--all the truth--the fine hairs on the back of her neck were standing on end.

Of course, that could have something to do with Max Didion, the captain of the security team here at The Foundation. Every time he was near, her senses went into overload. All she wanted to do was wrap herself around him and drink him in, his smell, the feel of his skin, the heat from his big body.

One kiss. He’d only kissed her one time and she couldn’t get the taste of him out of her mouth. She wasn’t sure she wanted to. It was like holding milk chocolate in your mouth and taking a sip of coffee. A burst of bitter against the sweet.

She wanted more.

She was startled by another noise, this time from behind the door she’d just passed. She stopped and pressed back, palms flat against the wall. Damn. Maybe she wasn’t cut out for this undercover crap. She was about to have a heart attack. The last thing she wanted to do was to get caught and the last person she wanted to catch her was Max.

Uh-huh. You know you want him, a little voice taunted. Any way you can get his big, hard body, you’d take it.

She knew, if he ever found out she was not really a lab assistant but, rather, an undercover reporter, he would be angry. Actually, as she put more thought into it, angry wouldn’t begin to cover it.

Her contact within The Foundation remained anonymous, although she was almost certain it was a member of the elite security team. One of the Praetorians. She was either being used to expose a highly dangerous plot, or set up to be the fall-guy.

Instinct told her it was the former. Her gut twisted at the thought it might be the latter.

She took one last look over her shoulder, then pulled a piece of paper from her pocket. It held the key code for entry to the room. The paper had shown up in her quarters at The Foundation one day, with instructions on how to use the keypad to enter the security combination to the lab. Following the written directions, she punched in the code. When the green-means-go light popped on, she pushed the latch to the door and slipped inside the room. Making sure the door was closed firmly behind her, she pulled a small flashlight from her pants’ pocket and flipped it on.

From what she could see, it looked much like the lab where she worked undercover, but longer, with several examination tables at the far end. She walked down to them, touching one lightly and looking it over. It appeared much like a gynecological table from her doctor’s office, complete with metal stirrups.

The biggest difference was this table also had straps where chest and wrists would be if a person was lying prone. It gave her chills, looking at it. She couldn’t shake the feeling that bad things had happened in this room, that a lot of suffering had occurred here.

Looking around, she spotted a large, metal door to the left. She walked the few steps to reach it. Her fingers went to the latch and she hesitated, pulling her hand back. “Don’t be such a sissy, Cat,” she muttered. Fisting her hand, she rubbed her index finger with her thumb. Before she could lose her nerve, she quickly reached out and opened the door.

Lights automatically clicked on in the small room. There was one table here, with a large metal piece curving over the top. She walked closer and saw the cylindrical piece left room for someone’s head and feet. A portable table with shiny medical implements stood next to another metal door.

This door was about half the width of the others, although just as tall. Cold to the touch, it made her wonder if it was perhaps some type of refrigerator or freezer. With a deep breath, she opened door number three. Frigid air swirled and a woman fell out on top of her. Cat gasped, choking slightly on the inrush of air, and crashed to the floor, flashlight flying out of her hand. Arms and feet flailing as she tried to get out from under the body, she finally managed to push the woman off her. She scrambled to her knees and gingerly turned the body over.

And stared into the dead eyes of Doctor Lexy Harris.

Jumping to her feet, she clapped a hand over her mouth to hold in the scream clawing at her throat. She backed up, unable to take her eyes off the dead woman. When a set of hands landed on her shoulders, she yelled and whirled around.

Max stood there, his tawny eyes dark with anger, his mouth drawn tight. He clamped his hands around her upper arms, tightening his grip when she instinctively fought his hold.

“What the hell are you doing here?” he asked, his voice barely more than a low growl.

Woo-boy. This was the deep doo-doo she’d been afraid of.

Setting her to one side, he barked, “Stay,” and stuffed Doctor Harris back into the small freezer.

“What are you doing?” she asked, grabbing him by one taut bicep. It was rock-hard under the cotton of his t-shirt, and she found her hold turning into a caress. When he turned his head, his eyes darkening to a burnished gold with the stirring of desire, her face heated and she dropped her hand.

“No one can know you’ve discovered the good doctor.” His voice was sarcastic, there at the end, making her wonder just what his relationship had been with Lexy Harris. As captain of the Praetorians, he had been personally responsible for her safety.

Cat studied him for a moment. He was one of the tallest men she’d ever met, easily a full foot taller than her own five-five. He was dressed as he usually was: combat boots on his big feet, camouflage pants and black t-shirt. Several dark brown chest hairs peeked over the edge of the neckline, inviting any red-blooded woman to strip the shirt off and see where all that hair led.

He crossed his arms over his chest. Her breath hitched as the motion pulled the shirt taut across his broad shoulders. His face was expressionless and she realized he didn’t sound too broken up to discover the doctor’s safety was no longer his concern.

Cat’s eyes widened and she backed away from him. Maybe he didn’t sound surprised or upset because he was the killer. Holy crap. She was in a mad scientist’s lab with a murderer.

She turned and sprinted, only to be hauled back after a few feet. When she opened her mouth to scream, Max clamped his hand over her lips and breathed in her ear, “We’re going to my quarters. Quietly, Catriona. I don’t want to knock you out, but I will if you give me trouble. Understand?”

Managing a nod, she kept silent as he slowly removed his hand. She could feel the heat from his big body like a furnace against her backside. And something else, something hard and just as hot as the rest of him, pressing against the small of her back.

 

THE PRAETORIANS:

INFILTRATION


By


Sherrill Quinn

 

 

© copyright August 2007, Sherrill Quinn

Cover art by Alex DeShanks, © copyright August 2007

New Concepts Publishing

Lake Park, GA 31636

www.newconceptspublishing.com

 

 

This is a work of fiction. All characters, events and places are of the author’s imagination and not to be confused with fact. Any resemblance to living persons or events is merely coincidence.

 

 

 

Prologue


Deep under the Sonoran Desert, the leader of The Foundation sat behind his spacious mahogany desk. Victor Bedrosian read the latest reports on what promised to be catastrophic changes to the environment. Other than the light on his desk and the glare from the large plasma screen on the wall to his right, the room was in darkness.

The words ‘global warming’ from a reporter’s voice caught his attention, and he glanced at the vidscreen. With a frown, he picked up the remote and turned up the volume.

“Rain continues to fall throughout the desert southwest,” the reporter said. The damned idiot looked entirely too cheerful to be imparting such dire news. “With the amount of rain we’ve seen so far--at this point nearly fifty centimeters above normal for the year--crops in Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada are in danger of failing.”

Victor scowled and looked down at the paper in his hand. His scientists had said the same thing. Many of the storms had been severe, with hail the size of grapefruits pounding crops into the muddy earth.

The reporter chattered on. “Already the Sonoran Desert is changing to a more tropical environment, putting in jeopardy the well-being of the rare and beautiful saguaro cacti, which only grow in this part of the world. And, with all the excess water, the mosquito population is exploding, which could bring pandemics of outbreaks of West Nile virus, malaria, and other mosquito-born maladies.”

The environmental scientists at the Foundation had been warning of this for decades, and Victor and his people had worked tirelessly to put Chosen Ones--people with strong telepathic abilities and unquestioned loyalty to The Foundation--in the right places to affect change. The goal was to severely curtail greenhouse gases and thereby ensure the inevitable changes were gradual instead of happening with the fierceness that was feared. But he was afraid the damage had already been done.

In the last half-century alone, the Asian Federation had caught up with the North American Federation as the leading producers of carbon dioxide, the primary cause behind global warming. With only thirty years until the end of the twenty-first century, predictions from scientists a hundred years ago seemed to be coming true.

Polar icecaps had shrunk at an alarming rate. Sea levels were up by half a meter, which already threatened to turn cities along the eastern seaboard into swampland. Summers in the Arctic were nearly ice-free. Areas that had been dry were becoming tropical, and tropical forests were strangling under drought.

“This is most unwelcome news,” Victor said.

“Yes, sir, it is.” Hatchet’s voice came from the shadowy recesses of the room. The leather of the sofa creaked, suggesting the man had shifted his position. Victor peered into the darkness, but was unable to see his versatile ... troubleshooter. Hatchet was something of a chameleon, able to blend into his surroundings, becoming everyman so effectively he went unnoticed by all but the most observant. He was efficiently ruthless and completely dedicated to the cause.

The newscast moved on to other items of no particular interest to Victor, so he muted the volume. “We might need to move up the timetable for the replacement of the Prime Minister of the Asian Federation,” he mused aloud. “The manufacturing companies in his jurisdiction are the biggest contributors of greenhouse gases.”

Glass clinked against glass. Even though Hatchet sat in complete darkness, with his telepathic ability Victor had a clear picture in his mind of the other man. He’d just taken a swallow of his brandy and set the snifter back down on the glass-topped coffee table.

“Give the word, sir. We’ll get the ball rolling.”

Victor stood and walked to the bar. He poured himself a straight bourbon. Staring down at the amber-colored liquid, he swirled it around in the glass and contemplated his next move.

The next move of The Foundation, he corrected himself.

He was the sixth man to sit as Chairman of the Board of this ultra-secretive organization. In the eighteen years he’d worked here, he’d seen many public officials deposed and replaced by a Chosen One--someone working for The Foundation who had natural telepathic and, sometimes, telekinetic abilities.

Small and large governments around the world had been realigned in this way in order for the business of The Foundation to be carried out.

To take over the world, make it a better place. Ensure there was a world left to hand down to their children and their children’s children.

It sounded clichéd until he thought about the depths of their success. Of course, no one but a privileged few knew what that meant, knew just how far-reaching The Foundation’s influence was.

How far-reaching his influence was.

Oh, the mysterious members of the Triumvirate were the powerhouse behind The Foundation to be sure, but Victor was the one who made things happen. It was largely due to his efforts that plans had progressed as rapidly as they had.

He took a gulp of bourbon and enjoyed the burn of it going down his throat. He walked back to his desk and tapped the report. “We’ll need to move on this soon,” he said. Looking out into the darkness of the room, he added in a soft voice, “I was impressed with the way you handled our problem with Dr. Harris. Had she been successful in making The Foundation known to the world, our effectiveness would have been severely curtailed. Her rather timely and quiet death prevented any number of difficulties we didn't need. However,” he added, just to be sure Hatchet remembered who was in charge, “I was not pleased that Captain Didion found her. To be honest, I’m still not sure why he hid the body instead of coming forward.”

“You weren’t able to divine his thoughts?”

There was absolutely no inflection in the man’s voice that would give away what he was feeling. Victor frowned. He’d never been able to read Hatchet’s thoughts or indeed even pick up a sense of his emotional state. He didn’t like it, but he was willing to put up with it. There would come a time when Hatchet was no longer necessary, and he’d be taken care of.

For now, though, he was needed. And he belonged to Victor.

“My Praetorians are all Sensitives, to a certain degree. Some are more adept than others. Captain Didion and his team are some of the strongest.” Victor leaned one hip against his desk and crossed his arms. “Now, why do you think Didion didn’t report Harris’s death?”

“I completed the ... assignment in such a way that the blame could easily have been laid on Sean Devane’s doorstep.” Hatchet’s voice remained calm and cool. “Perhaps Captain Didion thought to protect him for some reason.”

“Perhaps.” Victor forced his thoughts away from that puzzle and went back to his earlier discussion. “Before we move forward on replacing Mr. Singh in the Asian Federation,” he said, “I have something else for you to do first. Something somewhat more ... personal in nature.”

“Anything you say, sir.” Leather creaked and then footsteps sounded as Hatchet walked closer. He stopped a few feet away, still mostly in shadow. With his black clothing and hair and swarthy skin, he somehow managed to stay cloaked in darkness. “Just give the good word.”

Victor reached over to another file and picked it up. Flipping it open, he studied the picture of a young African American woman. He stroked one finger over her cream-and-coffee colored face. “I’ll have you yet, my dark-skinned enchantress. You can run, but you can’t hide.”

He sighed. One last look at the picture, then he closed the file and handed it to Hatchet. “Consider the word given,” he murmured. “Take whatever manpower you need. Bring her to me. Alive and unhurt.”

“And if someone’s with her?”

“Anyone gets in your way ... kill them.”

 

 

Chapter One


Quinn O’Rourke paced the confines between the sofa and security monitors in the living room of the cave house in which he and his friends currently lived. While it might be a cave, it had all the modern amenities one could want. Right now, hearing moans, then curses, from one of the bedrooms, he wished they’d thought to soundproof the damned thing.

He clenched his jaw. Goddamned Foundation. They’d screwed with everyone here, from his friend Max Didion, the captain of their team, to the man currently being deprogrammed.

Sean Devane. Max’s brother-in-law.

They were all Praetorians, men who were human/animal hybrids, results of secret DNA splicing that had been going on for at least twenty-five years. Max had been one of the first soldiers to volunteer, believing that having such warriors would help maintain the peace in an ever-increasingly volatile world.

Quinn, on the other hand, hadn’t been fortunate enough to be a volunteer. He’d been forcibly changed, his DNA spliced with that of a wolf. He clenched his jaw against the memories and pushed them aside. There wasn’t time for this maudlin shit.

He looked at Max, who sat on the sofa, one leg crossed over the other, ankle resting on the opposite knee. His friend had a beer bottle in one hand and a folded newspaper in the other.

More cursing came from the bedroom, and Quinn parroted the phrase he heard. “Goddamned son of a bitch. What the fuck is Shepherd doing to him?”

Max looked up and calmly took a chug of beer. “He’s helping.”

“Yeah, sounds like it to me. Fuck.” Quinn prowled the space in front of the monitors, one hand raking through his hair. When several thick strands fell over his forehead, he cursed again. He needed a damned haircut. With a glance at Max, he scowled and continued to pace. “How the hell can you wear your hair that long, letting it flop around in your face? It impedes your vision.”

For Quinn, anything that affected his ability to see or hear or smell clearly had to go. All he had were his enhanced senses. Without them, he was just plain old Quinn O’Rourke, boy born on the wrong sides of the tracks, man who had nothing to offer.

“My wife likes it longer.” Max turned the paper over in his hand. Setting down the bottle of beer, he picked up a pencil from the side table and began working on the crossword puzzle.

“And you always do what she wants?” Quinn snorted. “Didn’t take long for you to be pussy-whipped.” If having a woman made a man soft in the brain, well, count him out. Besides, they always wanted to change you, make you ... civilized. He wasn’t civilized, had no desire to be civilized.

It wasn’t that he didn’t like women. He liked them just fine wrapped around his cock. He just wasn’t interested in forming a lasting relationship with one. Well, not anymore. He’d had his chance, and he’d blown it.

Max shot him a look, one eyebrow raised. “Since when do you have a problem with my wife?”

Quinn grimaced and scrubbed the back of his neck with one hand. Dammit. Having Tynan Shepherd here was working on his nerves and turning him into an idiot. “I don’t. It’s just.... Shepherd's been here for three goddamned weeks,” Quinn muttered, throwing a glare at Max. This sudden soul-searching was Max’s fault, anyway. If the good captain hadn’t gone and fallen in love with Sean’s sister ....

Fuck. Who the hell was he kidding? It was his own goddamned fault. He was the one who’d brought her into this mess in the first place.

“Deprogramming someone who’s been brainwashed takes time, O’Rourke. You know that.” Looking up from his paper, Max frowned. “What kind of bee’s crawled up your butt, anyway?” Quinn tightened his jaw but didn’t say anything. What could he say? That seeing Tynan made him think of Tynan’s sister, Kendra? That the last time Quinn had seen her she’d been sprawled out on his bed, naked, her breasts soft and full, her sweet pussy still swollen and smeared with his come?

Yet something else he’d fucked up. He’d never have touched her if he’d known she was a virgin. Virgins always expected way too much from a man as far as he was concerned. The white picket fence, two point three kids and happily ever after.

He didn’t do happily ever after. It wasn’t in him. The bitch scientist who’d created him had seen to that. Even if every instinct had screamed at him that Kendra was his mate, he hadn’t acted on it. She deserved better than a wolf masquerading as a man.

“You’re starting to brood.” Max’s voice was matter-of-fact as he buried his nose back into his puzzle. “You know how you get when you brood.”

“Fuck off.” Quinn paced back to the monitors and stared, not really seeing them. The skin around the piercing in his perineum tingled and he knew the feeling was psychosomatic, but it still triggered the bundle of nerves there between his scrotum and anus, and he started to get a hard-on.

This was just fucking perfect. Just what he needed to round out his day. A randy prick with nowhere to go.

A noise from behind alerted him to another’s presence, and he turned to see Tynan Shepherd walk in from the back rooms. He looked tired and discouraged. Not a good sign.

Max stood, dropping the paper onto the sofa. “Well?” he asked.

“Yeah. Well?” Quinn walked forward until he stood a few feet from Tynan. “How is he?”

The man sighed. With a weary gesture, he bent his head, rubbing the back of his neck. When he looked back up, his dark eyes appeared drained. “The brainwashing goes deep, guys. This isn’t something that I can reverse with just a few sessions.”

“You’ve had more than a few sessions,” Quinn snarled. He clenched his fists against the urge to wrap his hands around the man’s throat. It wasn’t Tynan’s fault that Sean had been indoctrinated to begin with.

And he sure as hell couldn’t help that he was Kendra’s brother. Quinn ground his jaw as his cock twitched at the thought of her.

“And it’ll take a few sessions more,” Tynan responded in a hard tone. A slash of color rode high on the dusky skin of his cheekbones. He threw up one hand and muttered, “Sorry. This is a difficult one.”

“How so?” Max walked around the sofa and headed toward the kitchen. “Sean and his men were all indoctrinated at the same time five years ago, right? You’ve already been able to successfully deprogram--what?--two of his men? Why is Sean different?”

“It’s his brain chemistry.” Tynan sighed and sat down on the sofa, stretching his legs out in front of him. “Plus, since he’s the captain of the squad, I think they spent more time on him. The conditioning went deeper.”

Max walked back into the living room with another bottle of beer in his hand. He handed it to Tynan, who immediately tilted it to his lips and took a large gulp.

“So, what now?” Quinn scowled at Max for making him fetch his own beer. He walked to the refrigerator for a bottle.

“I’m definitely getting closer,” Tynan responded. He rolled the beer bottle over his forehead. After taking another swig, he leaned forward and set it on the coffee table. “But it still may be several weeks before I make a significant breakthrough. He’s very angry.”

“He has the right to be,” Max replied. His back was to them as he stared at the security monitors nestled in the wall opposite the sofa. His hands clasped behind his back and legs slightly spread in a typical military pose, the set of his shoulders suggested he, too, was angry.

Out of habit, Quinn glanced at the monitors. They showed various areas of the cave compound. No activity, which was a good thing.

“How do you mean?” Tynan asked.

“Sean’s entire unit, including him, didn’t volunteer to be Praetorians.” Max turned toward them. His face was set in hard lines. “At some point, the powers that be decided things weren’t progressing fast enough to suit them. Where there are Chosen Ones, there are Praetorians. And a need for trackers. So military people from all around the world were forcibly enhanced.” He paused, muttering a curse. “Because it wasn’t voluntary, they were also brainwashed to believe in the doctrines of The Foundation. They were, for all intents and purposes, raped.”

Quinn’s jaw flexed. He would not think of the first six months following his own forced enhancement. Caged, drugged, used.... He dragged his attention back to Max and Tynan. It did no good to dwell on the past--he would not go there.

Tynan nodded a response to Max’s statement. Sitting forward, his elbows braced on his knees, he stared at the floor.

“There’s something else, isn’t there?” Max asked.

Tynan sighed. With another sigh, he pushed to his feet. “It’s Kendra.”

Quinn stiffened. Having the man here was bad enough. To have him want to talk about his sister.... God.

“A few days ago, I inadvertently told Victor Bedrosian about Kendra’s abilities.”

What the hell? Quinn stared down at Tynan, felt the man’s fingers scrabbling at his hands, heard Max’s voice as a muted rumble over the roar of blood in his ears. He didn’t remember getting up, much less attacking the other man.

“Quinn, let him go.” Max’s arms came around his chest as he tried to pull Quinn off Tynan. “Let go.”

Releasing his fingers from around the other man’s neck, Quinn jerked away from Tynan and threw his hands up. “I’m okay.” When Max didn’t immediately let him go, he muttered, “Get off. I’m okay.”

Tynan coughed and held his throat. Max touched him on the shoulder. Going into the kitchen, he turned on the tap and ran a glass of water, which he handed to the dark-skinned man.

After he took a few gulps, the deprogrammer wiped his hand over his mouth and dropped down onto the sofa again. Closing his eyes, he leaned his head against the back of the sofa. He grimaced. “I didn't mean to tell him. He tricked me.”

“Bullshit.” Quinn took a step forward, and Max moved in front of him, putting one hand on his chest. Quinn glared at him.

“Stand down, O’Rourke.” Max gave him a little shove, his face hard and implacable. “Now.”

Quinn scowled, but backed up a few steps. He thrust his hands into the front pockets of his jeans. Leaning his shoulder against the wall, he stared toward Tynan with rage churning in his gut. If his little lamb was in trouble because her fucking brother couldn’t keep his fucking mouth shut ....

“Go on, Ty,” Max said and sat on the sofa beside the dead-man-walking.

Tynan let out a long sigh. He sat forward and stared at his hands clasped between his knees. “I still don’t know how the bastard did it. One minute he was asking me for an update on the mental stability of the latest round of recruits, the next thing I knew, I heard my voice telling him Kendra had telepathic abilities.” He surged to his feet with a curse. “God damned son of a bitch.” He looked at Max, then Quinn, bewildered fury in his eyes. “How the hell did he do it?”

Max shook his head.

Quinn wasn’t as sedate with his response. “Does it matter, Shepherd? Bottom line is you betrayed your sister to the enemy. Your sister.”

My woman. Mine.

The fear of her being in danger, the rage at his own stupidity, the fire of wanting to claim his mate roared through him, obliterating any other thought from his mind.

Find her.

Claim her.

“Well, I don’t think there’s any question about how you still feel about her.” Max’s voice came to him through the haze clouding his mind.

When he looked at his friend, the slight grin on Max’s face made him narrow his eyes. “You wanna keep that handsome face of yours, pretty boy?” Quinn asked in a growl.

The grin widened. Quinn clenched his fists against the urge to throw a punch at Max. Since they’d left The Foundation and become fugitives, there was no real chain of command anymore. They acted more as a democracy, but habit was hard to break, and Max had been his commanding officer for almost twenty years. Quinn just couldn’t go around punching his C.O. in the nose.

As much as he might want to.

“Where’s Kendra now?” Max asked, turning back to Tynan.

The deprogrammer rubbed his forehead with one hand and held the other one up in a gesture of confusion. “I’m not sure.”

Quinn trapped another growl in his throat and took a step forward. “You’ve lost her?”

“No. Yes. Maybe.” Tynan scrubbed his hand over his jaw. “I think she’s camping up in Oak Creek Canyon somewhere. That’s where our folks used to take us when we were kids. She’d probably head up there and try to get lost in the wilderness.”

Quinn clenched his fists. The thought of Kendra out there, afraid and alone, made him crazy. He turned a cutting gaze on her brother. “And you just let her go?”

“You know Kendra,” Tynan responded. “What was I supposed to do, tie her to her bed?”

Heat spread through Quinn. He’d had Kendra tied to his bed before. If he had to do it again to keep her safe, he would.

He just had to find her first.

Without another word, he turned and headed toward his room.

“Where’re you going?” Max called out after him.

To get my mate. “To find Shepherd’s damned sister,” he snarled.

 

 

 

 

BOOK LENGTH:

Epic Novel = 100,000 words and up; 400 pages and up (double-spaced)
Full Novel = 80,000-100,000 words; 320-400 pages (double-spaced)
Mid Novel = 61,000-79,000 words; 244-316 pages (double-spaced)
Category = 40,000-60,000 words; 160-240 pages (double-spaced)
Novella = 20,000-39,000 words; 80-156 pages (double-spaced)

SENSUALITY RATING:

SWEET: behind-closed-doors sex and/or very mild love scenes and sexual encounters
SENSUAL: love scenes comparative to most romance novels published today
SPICY: heavy sexual tension; graphic details and more sexual encounters
CARNAL: graphic sex and language; may be offensive to delicate readers; contains many sexual encounters and can include unconventional sex not normally found in romance; may or may not be romance; typically known as erotica

 

 

 

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