Psy & Changelings 01 - Slave to Sensation
best.â
âNine.â
He couldnât afford to let the Psy think of him as weakâthey respected only the coldest, cruelest kind of strength. âNine and a promise of another million if all the homes are presold by the time of the opening.â
Another silence. The hairs on his nape lifted again. Inside his mind the beast batted at the air as if trying to catch the sparks of energy. Most changelings couldnât feel the electrical storms generated by the Psy, but it was a talent that had its uses.
âWe agree,â Sascha said. âI assume you have hard-copy contracts?â
âOf course.â He flipped open a binder and slid across copies of the same document they undoubtedly had on their screens.
Sascha picked them up and passed one to her mother. âElectronic would be much more convenient.â
Heâd heard it a hundred times from a hundred different Psy. Part of the reason changelings hadnât followed the technological wave was sheer stubbornness; the other part was securityâhis race had been hacking into Psy databases for decades. âI like something I can hold, touch, and smell, something that pleases all my senses.â
It was an innuendo he had no doubt she understood, but it was her reaction he was looking for. Nothing. Sascha Duncan was as cold a Psy as heâd ever metâheâd have to thaw her out enough to gain information about whether the Psy were harboring a serial killer.
He found himself oddly attracted by the thought of tangling with this particular Psy, though until that moment, heâd considered them nothing but unfeeling machines. Then she looked up to meet his gaze and the panther in him opened its mouth in a wordless growl.
The hunt had begun. And Sascha Duncan was the prey.
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Two hours later, Sascha closed the door to her apartment and did a mental sweep of the premises. Nothing. Located in the same building as her office, the apartment had excellent security, but sheâd used her skills at shielding to ring the rooms with another level of protection. It took a lot of her meager psychic strength but she needed to feel safe somewhere.
Satisfied that the apartment hadnât been breached, she systematically checked every one of her inner locks against the vastness of the PsyNet. Functioning. No one could get into her mind without her knowing about it.
Only then did she allow herself to collapse into a heap on the ice-blue carpet, the cool color making her shiver. âComputer. Raise temperature five degrees.â
âComplying.â The voice was without inflection but that was to be expected. It was nothing more than the mechanical response of the powerful computer that ran this building. The houses sheâd be building with Lucas Hunter would have no such computer systems.
Lucas.
Her breath came out in a gasp as she allowed her mind to cascade with all the emotions sheâd had to bury during the meeting.
Fear.
Amusement.
Hunger.
Lust.
Desire.
Need.
Unclipping the barrette at the end of her plait, she shoved her hands into the unfurling curls before tugging off her jacket and throwing it aside. Her breasts ached, straining against the cups of her bra. She wanted nothing more than to strip herself naked and rub up against something hot, hard, and male.
A whimper escaped her throat as she closed her eyes and rocked back and forth, trying to control the images pounding at her. This shouldnât be happening. No matter how far out of control sheâd gone before, it had never been this bad, this sexual. The second she admitted it, the avalanche seemed to slow and she found enough strength to push her way out of the clawing grip of hunger.
Getting up off the floor, she walked to the kitchenette and poured herself a glass of water. As she swallowed, she caught her reflection in the ornamental mirror that hung beside her built-in cooler. It had been a gift from a changeling advisor on another project and sheâd kept it despite her motherâs raised brow. Her excuse had been that she was trying to understand the other race. In truth, sheâd just liked the wildly colorful frame.
However, right now she wished she hadnât held on to it. It showed too clearly what she didnât want to see. The tangle of darkness that was her hair spoke of animal passion and desire, things no Psy should know about. Her face was flushed as if with fever, her cheeks streaked red, and her
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