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Authors: Kim Harrison

The Drafter (50 page)

BOOK: The Drafter
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Bill watched until her foot was back on the floor. Then he sighed, playing the part of the concerned boss. “You want to explain why you drugged Allen and took a walk?”

Peri pushed off the door and sat in the swivel chair across from
the desk. Best to keep as much to the truth as she could. “Shopping. I want a new anchor. Today. I've tried working with that man and it's not happening. He's slow on locks. I've never
seen
him drive. He won't spar with me, so I only have his word he's good at unarmed combat. All he's done is make waffles and plane reservations! His lousy recon put my memory in jeopardy last night. Forgive me if I didn't want him with me when I picked out some new clothes, because what's in my closet sucks. I don't trust him, Bill. Something is wrong. I can feel it in my gut.”

Bold, demanding, and ticked off. It might work. It might not. A lot depended on how secure they thought their fake memories were.

Bill's almost hidden worry began to dissolve and a knot in her began to relax. “Your unease is simply an artifact of your recent memory loss,” he said, pulling a tissue from the nearby box and coming closer.

“The one that
Allen
can't bring back,” she muttered, forcing herself not to move when he leaned over her, his thick thumb wiping off her excessive eye makeup.

“You've always been slow on defragging your memory,” Bill said soothingly, doing first one eye, then the other. “Don't put this black shit on yourself anymore. You have such a beautiful face. Such a long slender neck.”

“I can't work with him, Bill,” she said, taking the tissue and finishing the job herself. “I drugged him with his own pharmaceuticals, for crying out loud. I don't want him watching my back. He's dangerous, and not in a good way. Who else do you have coming up in the ranks? Anyone who can make a decent cup of coffee? That's a good start.”

Bill settled back into the second chair, the leather creaking. She could practically see him thinking
What a bitch
, but since that's what she was going for, she didn't care. Smiling fondly, he shook his head, his heavy hands laced over his middle. “You were able to bring him down because he trusted you,” he said, and she rolled her eyes. “I think you owe him an apology. But first, I want to know why you took the tracking device out.”

“Because I'm not a dog?” she said loudly. “If I find one again, I'm done. I've managed this long without a proper anchor.” Playing the
wounded drafter, she put a hand to her mouth and stared at nothing. “Maybe I don't need one,” she muttered.

She froze when Bill leaned forward and took her hand. Her pulse hammered, but she stayed carefully passive as he turned her hand palm up and rolled her fingers back. Her scrawl to return to Allen's apartment hid Silas's number. “Mmmm,” he questioned.

“I wanted to be sure I got home,” she said, sniffing as if embarrassed.

“Working without an anchor isn't an option.”

Her head tilted, and she didn't need to fake her anger. “Then give me an anchor who knows his
job
!” she shouted, hoping Allen heard her.

Bill arched his eyebrows. He was seemingly convinced, but about what she wasn't sure. “I'll talk to him.”

Exhaling, she tried to appear confident. “And no more butt bugs.”

“No more butt bugs,” he echoed, and her lips parted at his quick compliance.

“Really?”

Nodding at her disbelief, he reached behind his jacket to the inner pocket. “The alliance knows to look for them now,” he said as he extended a small baggie holding a capsule. “Welcome to the latest and greatest.”

Peri looked without reaching. “You want me to drop my pants and bend over?”

“I want you to swallow it,” he said stiffly. “It's a low-dose radiation marker. It won't harm you, but it will stay in your system for a year. We will know where you are and where you've been. Even those you've been in contact with, to a limited degree. It's experimental, and only a team's handler knows the signature.” He smiled. “You're a ghost, Peri, the first Opti agent to get this. My best deserves the best.”

Radiation marker?
Mistrusting it, she hesitated as Bill encouraged her to take it. It could be anything: drugs to knock her out, poison to kill her. She could wake up in Allen's bed tomorrow having forgotten everything and she'd never know.

“You just happened to have one in your pocket?” she questioned.

He shrugged, not a wisp of guilt. “After your little walkabout this morning, I deemed it was time to take it out of research. You really
cut that tracker out yourself?” he asked, laughing, and she hunched in embarrassment.

“It's not funny,” she said, and after a last chuckle, his mirth ended.

“Take it.”

His tone was flat, demanding. She hesitated, not sure how much he knew or suspected. But realizing it was going to end up in her one way or another, Peri slipped the capsule into her mouth and swallowed.

Immediately Bill's mood lightened. Smiling, he got to his feet, hand extended to help her rise. Her slim fingers looked tiny as they fitted into his, reminding her of him in the gym breaking boards and bringing down men.
My God, his hands are huge
.

“You're my best drafter, kiddo,” Bill said, and she jumped when his arm landed heavily across her shoulders and turned her to the door. “That comes with responsibility. We're not letting you out of our theoretical sight for even an instant.”

Great
, she thought, stomach rolling. If she threw up, would he make her take another? “So do I get a new anchor?”

“No,” he said, and she drew him to a halt before they could leave. “I'll talk to Allen,” he said in a fatherly tone. “Tell him to step it up. You worked well together before. I know you will again. He needs to find closure, too. He trusts you. Let go and trust him.”

Like that was going to happen. “Bill . . . ,” she warned, and he put his hands in the air as if in surrender.

“Okay, okay,” he finally relented. “I'll talk to Sandy and see what we can do. I've got someone in mind, so don't mention this to Allen—just in case we can swing it. Deal?”

Eyeing him, she backed up from the door. “Deal,” she echoed him as her heart pounded in her ears.

“I'm proud of you,” he said softly as he opened the door. “You've come a long way.”

As in a long way in becoming his tool
. “I only want to be my best.”

“You are already that,” Bill said as he ushered her into the living room.

CHAPTER
THIRTY-FIVE

S
ilas's friend's seats at Comerica Park were in the sun, and whereas it was usually too hot, today Silas felt good, the early-spring air still holding the morning's chill. Two hot dogs and bottled waters sat waiting beside him. He'd asked Peri to meet him here, and the thrum of anticipation running through his background thoughts ebbed and flowed with the noise of the crowd as the Tigers tried to bring the inning to a close.

The memory of sitting in these exact seats with Peri was an ache, but that wasn't why he had wanted to meet her here. The crowd itself gave them a measure of protection. The multitude of doors couldn't be locked. Even the park's security that Opti itself would have to contend with helped. But if he was honest, he had wanted to meet her here because Peri loved the game, and he was hoping memories she couldn't recall might help cushion his bad news.

Silas pulled his cap lower, hunching deeper into the hard seat. The chip she'd brought him wasn't the list. He was out of options, mistrusted by the alliance and an enemy of Opti. He was here to tell her to run and never stop.

Brow furrowed, Silas ran a hand over his freshly shaven chin before resettling his sunglasses in a nervous twitch. His eyes roved over the stands thick with orange and blue, the noisy throng excited at the fresh
beginning April always brought. Pulled by a familiar silhouette, Silas's gaze darted to one of the entrances.

God almighty, she looks good
. It was a relief not to see her in those gaudy clothes that Allen must have picked out, more herself in her usual black slacks and a white blouse cut to show off her long neck. The sophistication was a little much for the stands, but the Detroit Tigers hat and sunglasses toned it down, and no one gave her more than a second glance.

His brow eased at a feeling of pride. No longer was she the deadly but anchor-dependent doll that Opti had made of her. Her fiery independence was reasserting itself through the cracks of Opti conditioning and lies—as long as he could keep them from scrubbing her again.

The crowd's noise swelled as she met his eyes. Unmoving on the stairs, she hesitated as if listening to something only she could hear, then scanned the stands for something only she could see.
Please don't run
, he thought as he stood, trying to convince her he only wanted to help. He took his glasses off, pleading with his eyes. Breath held, he waited . . . and finally she decided, head down and expression unreadable as she made her way up the final stairs.

Peri stopped at the head of the row. “Nice seats,” she said, and an anxious need to do something filled Silas.

“They belong to a friend,” he said as he picked up the box of hot dogs and edged down to give her his chair so she wouldn't have to slide past him. Behind them, a man complained about not being able to see, his tirade cutting off when Peri took her glasses off to stare at him.

“You look great,” Silas said, and her expression shifted to one of surprise.

“I went shopping again. This time on Bill's tab and with a vengeance.” Peri sat down, and Silas felt a knot ease. “I'm going to give everything in my closet to Goodwill. You look . . .”

“What?” Silas said, knowing his jacket and jeans were coarse next to her polished sophistication, but where Peri could get away with silk and linen at a ballpark, he couldn't.

A faint smile quirked her lips to erase a worry line. “Content.”

Content? She thinks I look content?
Flustered, he watched as her eyes lifted to the stands, and another level of tension was rubbed out by the announcer's patter and a stanza of music from the organ. It was the sound of summer, and it eased over him like the sun.

“Hot dog with mustard, no ketchup?” he said as he eagerly proffered the box.

“How . . . ,” she started, eyes lighting up as she reached for it. “My diary?” she asked drily.

“Lucky guess this time,” he lied.

“Sure it is,” she said as she took it, startling Silas when her fingers brushed his.

It was how she liked them, and he couldn't help but watch her unwrap it, her eyes closing as she took a bite. Her
mmmm
of pleasure sent a shiver through him, and he warmed when she noticed, eyeing him askance as she chewed and swallowed.

“Me eating a hot dog makes you happy?” she questioned as she wiped the corner of her mouth with a pinky, and he felt himself flush deeper. “You're an easy date.”

“Beautiful woman, beautiful day. What's not to like?” he fumbled, turning his attention to his own dog and trying not to look like a dork.

Peri sighed, but it wasn't a bad sound. “Silas, I'm not stupid.”

He took a bite, glancing sideways at her. “I said you were beautiful, not stupid. Despite what popular media would have you believe, they are not mutually inclusive.”

“I mean, we've done this before.”

Shocked, he turned to face her. “You remember?”

“No, but you do. I've never seen you this relaxed.”

“Funny how not having a gun pointed at you does that,” he said.

“So . . .” She eyed him mischievously. “Were we like boyfriend-girlfriend?”

He choked on his hot dog. “Ask me tomorrow,” he managed, feeling his neck go red.

“I might not remember you tomorrow.” She crossed her knees. “Yesterday you followed me from Allen's apartment,” she said as she
put her dog down and reached for a water. “Knew exactly where to take me so I'd relax and maybe give you something you wanted.”

His mouth went dry; he felt as if everything was unraveling. “It's not like that. I'm not manipulating you.”

“Yes you are.” She tried to open her water, but it wouldn't budge. “You're doing it now. Meeting me at the ballpark. Taking me to Mules. I love Mules. Reminding me of my
favorite
coffee. I'd be angry except I have the feeling that you're doing it for you as much as me.”

“I am not!” he protested, but it sounded lame even to him.

“I'm willing to overlook it,” she said as she gave up on the water and handed it to him. “But I want to know if you're doing it because you want to or because you have to?”

Discomfited, Silas cracked it for her. “What does your gut say?”

She took the bottle back, looking out over the field in silence. “Ask me tomorrow,” she finally said. Sighing, she took a sip of water and set it down. “Howard has good news, yes?”

Silas cringed. He couldn't look at her, angry at himself, at Fran. Peri couldn't have known what that chip was. But even he had to admit the likelihood that Opti was using her even now.

“Not good news,” Peri amended, her eyes empty of recrimination.

“Can't you let me enjoy even half an inning?” he grumbled.

Peri picked her dog back up. “You have until I'm done with this bodacious hot dog. Mmmm, you don't mess with the dog.”

Silas settled back but the mood was broken. For a moment, they were both silent as the art of the game stole over them, of science and muscle, of physics and psychology.

“I remember coming here with my dad,” Peri said, eyes on the field. “He taught me the game from the stands. The original park at the corner. My mom thought the park was filthy, and she didn't like the new boxes either, so that was kind of the end of it after he died.”

BOOK: The Drafter
4.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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