Psy & Changelings 01 - Slave to Sensation
women . . . metallic stink . . . the Council . . . psychopath . . .
In the hours since sheâd spoken to Nikita, sheâd used every electronic means at her disposal to secretly surf the human-changeling Internet. The murders had been reported. However, instead of being front-page items in major newspapers and magazines, theyâd only gotten serious attention on fringe sites nobody really took seriously. That didnât change the fact that the killings had occurred and been noticed.
Before mysteriously disappearing.
The killer is Psy and your Council knows it.
Dorianâs angry words reverberated in her head.
âNo,â she whispered aloud. He had to be wrong, had to be driven by emotion rather than logic. The Psy didnât feel rage, jealousy, murderous fury. The Psy didnât feel. Period.
Except that she was a living, breathing rebuttal to that statement.
âNo,â she said again. Yes, she felt, but a serial killer? Nobody couldâve hidden such a huge flaw in the Silence Protocol. Nobody had that much power.
They are Council. They are above the law.
Her own words returned to haunt her. Was it possible . . . ? âNo.â She stared at the blank wall in front of her, unwilling to believe so quickly that her mother was guilty of aiding and abetting a murderer.
Nikita might not feel maternal emotions but Sascha felt a childâs. Her mother was the sole constant presence in her life. Sheâd never met her father, her grandmother had been distant, and she had no cousins or siblings. Not that it wouldâve meant much if she had had them. They wouldâve been as cold as the woman whoâd borne her.
She had to find out more information.
Decision made, she began to code in a call from the communication console. Then she cut it off. Enriqueâs too-focused interest in her had made her wary of being monitored. Picking up a black leather-synth jacket to throw over her jeans and black shirt, she headed out to her car.
It was only when sheâd almost reached the DarkRiver building that she started thinking.
It was two in the morning. No one would be there. Certainly not the man she wanted to talk to. Her hands clenched on the wheel as she parked the car in the deserted lot and dropped her head back against the seat. Sheâd come here acting on instinct, seeking Lucas.
Lucas.
Sitting there staring at the darkness, she kept thinking about the way his eyes had gone cold as heâd told her that the Psy had a âmetallic stink.â Tears rose perilously close to the surface. Why had she indulged herself with those dreams? They were impossible, even if she didnât have the threat of rehabilitation hanging over her head. And they had been a conscious indulgence.
Sheâd given herself those moments hidden deep in her subconscious to explore her needs, her hunger, and had been fully aware of what was happening. Aware of the way Lucas felt under her fingertips, his skin so hot, so alive. Aware of every sound heâd made, every flash of those amazing eyes. Aware of his every demand, his every need.
Lies. All of them. Sheâd made up his reactions as sheâd made up everything else. It had been her fantasies that had driven those dreams. How pathetic was it that sheâd imagined him holding her, imagined him caring . She slammed her palm against the manual steering wheel and opened the door. It slid smoothly back, allowing her to swing her legs out and take a breath of night air.
Getting out, she leaned against the part of the hood closest to the driverâs-side door and stared up at the sky. Diamonds on velvet, thatâs what it looked like. She knew the clarity wasnât thanks to the Psy. It was humans and changelings, particularly changelings, whoâd fought pollution, fought to keep their world beautiful.
She owed them a portion of her sanity.
Even when she was forced to lock herself into the cage of the Psy world, the shimmering night sky gave her beauty that no one could take from her. No one could damn her for staring up at the sky.
Something moved to her left.
Sascha spun around but all was silent darkness, the hedge lining the side of the parking lot blocking her line of sight. Heart thudding so hard she could feel every vibration, she sent out a cautious psychic probe.
And brushed up against something so hot and alive that she felt burned.
She withdrew immediately. A few seconds later, a hand touched her
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