Psy & Changelings 01 - Slave to Sensation
togetherness.â
âWhat about with the men?â Sascha asked, the seeds of understanding blooming in her mind.
âThey go for night runs, fight each other to test their skills, and occasionally get together to play poker or watch a game. It works.â She gave a mystified shrug.
âSo a kiss is nothing special to Lucas?â Her idiocy where this one male was concerned kept surprising her into hurt. Heâd said it was an experiment. Perhaps heâd wanted to know what it was like to kiss a âhunk of concrete.â
Tamsyn cocked her head to the side and gave Sascha a probing look. âInside the pack, itâs special because it tells us he cares for us, that heâll die for us.â
Sascha nodded, feeling worse and worse.
âBut outside the pack? The only women Iâve known Lucas to kiss outside the pack are the ones he wants in his bed.â The door shut behind the grinning healer.
Saschaâs cheeks flamed. Lucas wanted her in his bed. In spite of her vows to not let him reach her, she was aroused to fever pitch. Concentration went out the window. Dreams intertwined with reality and she remembered his kiss in the forest as she remembered his far more intimate kiss in her dreams.
It was the prosaic sound of an engine getting closer that brought back the world and reminded her what she was meant to be doing. Taking a deep breath, she sat down cross-legged on the floor and started to recite a mental exercise so demanding, it succeeded in driving everything else from her mind. Ready, she took the first step out into the Net.
The world opened.
In front of her was an endless starry sky. Each star was a mind, some strong, some weak. Her star was at the center of this universe because she was the entry point. The PsyNet was spread across the world but if she wanted find a particular mind, all she had to do was think of it and it would appear in her field of vision, something like a link on the human-changeling Internet. However, similarly to a link, she had to have a starting pointâknowledge of what the mind felt like, looked like.
There was her motherâs blazing starâa cool, pure brilliance. Over there were some of the Psy who worked in the Duncan empire. But she didnât want to speak to anyone today. What she was interested in were the dark spaces between minds, the spaces where information floated, controlled into order by the NetMind.
She allowed her consciousness to flow out, letting data filter through her as if she were doing nothing more than catching up on the news. The NetMind brushed past her and kept going, not alive, not dead, but sentient in a way the world had never known. Still young, it was the librarian of this vast archive.
It wouldâve been easy to become sidetracked by the endless streams of data, but despite her free-floating appearance, she was being very choosy, her senses tuned to a fine point. This was about murder . . . and the greatest lie that had ever been perpetuated by a race upon its own kind.
Lucas returned a few minutes after five to find Sascha and Tamsyn standing in the yard.
âThe juveniles?â the healer asked the second he got within earshot.
Sascha looked up, face drawn. âAre they all right?â
âThey were already on their way back by the time I tracked down their whereabouts.â
âThey heard?â Tamsynâs relief was obvious.
Lucas saw Sascha frown as she realized that something was going on beneath the surface. It had been inevitable. She was too smart to miss much. âThey were stopped by a SnowDancer patrol and told to haul ass back home.â
âWere your packmates injured?â
He shook his head. âThey treated the kids as if they were wolf pups.â That was very unusual. When theyâd first decided on a truce, Hawke had put out the word that the leopards were allies, but letting them pass without trouble and doing what the soldiers had done was something entirely different. Lucas had been alpha too long not to understand the implied message, but it was an offer he couldnât accept without considerable thought. âTheyâll be home by nightfall.â
Tammy smiled. âIâll leave you two to catch up.â
He waited for Sascha to ask what was going on but she shook her head. âDonât trust me.â She rubbed at her eyes. âMy mind is vulnerable as long as Iâm uplinked to the Net.â
He had far more
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