Read Superlovin' Online

Authors: Vivi Andrews

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal

Superlovin' (8 page)

Darla wished he would look up so she could see the fierce glint in his darker-than-sin eyes again, but Lucien stared down at his clenched hands.
What would it be like to know those hands would always protect you?
Mirabelle hadn’t known what a great deal she had.

“I knew something was wrong, but I…shit, I loved the project I was working on. We were really making strides. So I told myself it was all in my head. Until the emails stopped coming.”

Lucien’s knuckles were white with strain. Darla instinctively reached to put her hand over his, but tucked her hands back into her lap before he could see the comforting gesture. He wasn’t likely to appreciate her touch, considering that same hand had tried to pummel him to pieces only the day before. She shouldn’t have to keep reminding her body they were adversaries, but her instincts were undecided on the subject of Lucien Wroth.

“When I realized I hadn’t received an email in three weeks, I flew home the next day, but she’d disappeared. She wasn’t on campus. She’d dropped out of school and moved out of the dorms. I wouldn’t even have known where to start looking, but she left a note for me in my loft.” He snorted. “It was practically a manifesto. Talking about the
cause
and finally claiming justice. She said she knew this was the reason she’d been born with the ability to turn invisible.

“I spent weeks scouring old papers and watching every news story, looking for patterns, trying to find evidence of what she’d done so I could track her down and talk some sense into her. I never expected her to get caught. Hell, I didn’t think anyone
could
catch her. I was so sure she was in hiding, I almost missed the article. A few inches on page six about Demon Wroth’s daughter being connected to a break-in at a bank. A break-in where the paper reported nothing had been taken. I couldn’t find any record of an arrest, but they must’ve caught her because she wasn’t listed anywhere as a most wanted. With her abilities and our history, I knew she had to be held at Area Nine.” He shrugged, the jerky shift of his muscular shoulders far from casual. “You know the rest. She wouldn’t tell me what she took from the bank, and she wouldn’t tell me what this Kevin prick is up to, but it has to be something big or your buddies at city hall wouldn’t be making such an attempt to cover it up.”

“Not everything is a conspiracy, Wroth. Maybe she didn’t get what she went in for.”

“She got it.” His tone brooked no arguments. “I need you to find out what it was.”

“I don’t see how—”

“Call your friend the mayor.”

“I
know
how to get the information. I just don’t see how that’s going to help us figure out what this Kevin guy wants. Shouldn’t we be looking for his hideout? Evaluating potential targets?”

“You wanna do it your hero way, that’s fine. But we’re doing my way too. Call the mayor.”

“I didn’t agree to help you yet, Wroth. If we’re going to have a partnership, it’s going to have to be more than you issuing orders and just expecting me to fall in line.” She was
not
a wilting violet, and the sooner he got that through his head, the better.

Lucien studied her, his eyes unreadable. A muscle in his cheek jumped. “
Please
,” he ground out.

Darla pursed her lips, tempted to push him again until he acknowledged their equality, but she reached for her phone, because honestly it was a good idea. “Fine. But we’re going to have to work out a chain of command if we’re going to be collaborating.”

She thought he muttered something about liking the current chain of command just fine, but she pointedly ignored him, pulling up the mayor’s number on her phone.

Five minutes later, she disconnected the call with a frown.

“The mayor just lied to me.” Shock sent ripples through her brain, and she couldn’t keep it out of her voice.
What the hell have we stumbled onto?

The mayor had told her there was no break-in. He’d told her Demon Wroth didn’t have a daughter. He’d told her to take a few days to recover after her recent encounters with DemonSpawn, that the city could do without her for now. The entire time his voice had been too smooth, too forceful, with occasional wobbles and wavers the average ear wouldn’t catch.
Never lie to a girl with supersenses, Mayor.

It wasn’t the first lie. What if the statement of condolence to the widows of Lucien’s victims hadn’t been a mistake? Could city hall actually be framing Lucien Wroth?
Why?

Lucien opened his mouth, but she held up her hand like a stop sign, the gears in her head spinning frantically, and scrolled through her contacts until she hit pay dirt.
Kim Carruthers, intrepid reporter.

Darla would owe her the exclusive of a lifetime, but if anyone knew about the latest conspiracy theory, it would be Kim. The woman was a bloodhound—and her very public on-again-off-again relationship with Captain Justice gave her a soft spot for supers.

“Carruthers,” Kim answered brightly on the fifth ring.

“Kim, it’s Darla. I need a favor. Strictly off the record.”

There was the slightest hesitation. “I can’t kill the DemonSpawn decimation stories, Darla. I don’t have that kind of pull.”

Darla cringed.
Would that story never die?
Admittedly it had only been a couple days, but still. “It isn’t that. I need the dirt that isn’t fit to print on a break-in a few weeks back.”

“The bank vault?” Kim asked, an odd edge to her voice.

Darla straightened in her chair, coming to attention. “That’s the one. What’ve you heard?”

“Darla, honey…”

“I’ll owe you.”

“I’ll collect,” Kim warned.

“I would expect nothing less. What’ve you got?”

The noise of the newsroom faded in the background, as if Kim were sneaking away to somewhere more private. “Nothing firm. The official report is nothing was taken, but the one print they found was rushed through the system and Demon Wroth’s daughter just up and vanished when they linked it to her.”

“I know that already.”


Do
you?” Kim asked with interest. “Well. In that case, maybe you know this too. They
say
nothing was taken, but Trident Labs has a safety-deposit box in that vault, and several calls were made between the bank and Trident’s execs on the morning after the break-in. The old man himself was even spotted entering and exiting the bank that morning.”

“Edward Calder? He went in person?”

Across the table, Lucien jerked to attention. “Trident’s involved?
Shit
.”

“Look,” Kim continued, “the rest is just speculation, but if I was Edward Calder and I had accidentally created a weapon that was almost impossible to use and completely impossible to destroy, I might just put it in a safety-deposit box to keep it from falling into the wrong hands.”

Darla’s breath whooshed out of her. “Apocalyptum? You think that’s what was stolen?”

Lucien paled.

“I can’t be sure,” Kim said hurriedly, her voice lowering as someone called out her name and noise rose in the background again. “It’s just a crazy theory. But if I were a super looking into crazy theories, I would definitely also pay attention to the break-in at Nightwing Manufacturing last night. And I’d probably take a good long look at page three today.” Darla heard another voice ask Kim who she was talking to, and the reporter gave a sassy retort before whispering into the phone. “I’ve gotta run, D. Good luck. I want some good dirt for my exclusive.”

When her phone beeped to signal the end of the call, Darla met Lucien’s eyes.

“Apocalyptum.” The word was a horrified exhalation. “
Fuck
.”

Chapter Ten

The End of the World As We Know It

 

“It might not be that,” Darla said, before Lucien could run with the End-of-the-World idea, desperation rushing the words. “It’s just a theory.”

“Even as a theory, it’s pretty damn scary.”

She couldn’t argue with that.

Apocalyptum, also known as the Doomsday Rock, was a byproduct Trident had tripped across in their experiments to create tools for superheroes to use in self-defense. Harder than diamonds, the highly volatile substance could only be triggered by someone with superstrength, but once it was activated, the blast made a nuclear explosion look like a cherry bomb.

Those with superstrength also inherited a certain imperviability to pain and damage—otherwise every time they punched through a wall would be agony. Making a hit was also your body
taking
a hit, so supers with strength were built tougher and sturdier than others. The single experiment done to trigger just a few grains of Apocalyptum had nearly killed Captain Justice. A full bomb made out of the stuff could take out a city—and whatever super triggered it.

“The call last night was for a break-in at Nightwing Manufacturing. Kim thinks it might be related.”

He frowned in concentration. “Do you know what was taken?”

Darla shook her head. “They hadn’t done an inventory yet when I was there, but they build mostly tech stuff, I think. Laptops, tablets, that kind of thing.” Lucien rubbed a hand over his permanent five-o’clock shadow, his expression slowly darkening as his mind worked furiously. “Wroth? Does that mean something to you?”

“Someone who knew what to grab could put together a bomb that looked like an innocent computer. If they knew what they were doing.”

“But they’d still need someone with Strength to trigger it, wouldn’t they? If it was Apocalyptum?”

Lucien nodded, but she could see she barely had half of his attention as he puzzled over the possible uses and applications. “Did your friend have anything else?”

“Page three.” Darla slipped into the living room to grab her unread paper. She returned to the kitchen to find him still lost in thought. She resumed her seat, flipping the paper open. The headline at the top of a small article at the bottom of page three screamed
Anonymous Threats Against Super Summit. DemonSpawn Suspected
.

Darla cursed softly. Lucien glanced up, and she turned the page to face him. He didn’t even flinch at being accused of anonymous threats.

“That’s it.” He tapped the article with apparent satisfaction. “Nearly a hundred supers gathered in one place and Kevin with the one substance that has the ability to destroy them all. Shit, that only gives us three days to plan.”

Ignoring for a moment the fact that Lucien didn’t even appear to be
bothered
by being accused of all manner of villainy in the papers, Darla countered, “That can’t be the real target. It has to be a decoy or he never would’ve tipped his hand.”

“With any other target, you’d be right, but these are heroes we’re talking about. Consider the unmitigated arrogance of your kind. Anonymous threats will just bring out
more
heroes.”

Darla considered letting it slide, but… “My
kind
?”

“Goody-goody heroes who think they’re invincible.”

He said it so simply. As if it was the most obvious thing in the world. Darla fantasized about punching him in the face.

“Being
heroic
and standing up to evil isn’t something to mock.”

“Evil is relative. It isn’t this absolute concept you like to throw around to excuse your actions. Virtue, wickedness, we all have both sides in us. Like a spectrum.”

“And on the spectrum, some people are good and
some
are evil,” Darla countered.

“You know I’m right,” he declared, his cockiness making her teeth ache from clenching so hard. “You wear a black supersuit, just like a villain. You can’t tell me that isn’t a nod to the wickedness in you.”


Excuse
me? My suit isn’t a nod to anything except the fact that I look hot in black, thank you very much.”

“Oh please, you’d look hot in anything.”

Darla blinked, startled by the compliment issued in such a scornful way, and Lucien plowed on.

“The suit is black, just like that naughty bustier you wore for the
Maxim
spread—”

Her face flamed. “It was a
magazine
. The pictures were artistic.”

“They were fucking hot, but that’s not the point. We’re all in the middle. Even you, princess. People just don’t want to see the grey area. It’s easier to polarize things. Especially when you’ve got the press screaming
heroes
and
villains
because it makes a more exciting story.”

“The press didn’t make you break into the Crypt, Lucien.” She shoved away from the table and went to stand at the counter, unable to sit still any longer.

He rose with her, pacing in the tight space. “You can’t deny history is written by the victors.”

“So you’re saying if your father had succeeded, he would be considered a hero?” she asked, incredulous. “The man who tried to poison an entire city?”

“It wasn’t poison!” Lucien snapped. “Yes, he tried to put something into the water supply and some heroic idiot stopped him—probably your father—but it wasn’t going to hurt anyone.”

“Did you just call my father an idiot?”

“Way to focus on the salient points, princess.”

“Your father was a
villain—

“Says who?” He loomed over her angrily. “The spin doctors in the press? How can you not see the gap between what they say is true and what actually happens? Perception isn’t reality. Don’t you ever look beyond the surface of things?”

“This from the man who wanted to condemn me for wearing a black uniform.”

“You’re absolutely right. Your suit has nothing to do with who you are. You probably didn’t even pick it.”

She wanted to throw his mocking back in his face, but the truth made it impossible to meet his gaze. She
hadn’t
picked out her own suit. She’d wanted something bright and playful and fun. Her parents had overruled her, citing her need to blend in to the night sky. That villains wore black had never even come up. It was just accepted that no one would ever mistake Darla Powers for a villain.

“Have you ever made a single choice for yourself?” Lucien pressed. “Your name? This apartment? Or did Mommy and Daddy arrange it all for you?”

Other books

A Distant Father by Antonio Skarmeta
Better Than Chocolate by Amsden, Pat
RELENTLESS by Lexie Ray
Under a Painted Sky by Stacey Lee
Nightlord: Orb by Garon Whited
Caressed by Night by Greene, Amanda J.


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024