Edge of Dawn Page 0,34
not apology. “And now you count me in that number too.”
“I never wanted us to be enemies, Kellan. You’ve done that, not me. You’re making certain of it right now, and only you can change that fact.”
She watched him, waited for him to tell her it was all a terrible mistake and he would fix it. That he loved her, still, and somehow, together, they would find a way through this dark trap that was closing in on them with sharp, lethal teeth.
But he didn’t say any of those things.
“I’ll ask you to remember what I said about trying to escape or attempting to interfere with my operation. I don’t want this to be any harder on you than it already is, Mira.”
She steeled herself to the remorse in his voice, focusing instead on the fact that nothing she’d said had convinced him to change his mind. He was lost to her, as much now as he had been eight years ago.
“Spare me your pity, Bowman. I don’t need it. I don’t need anything from you.”
He looked at her for a long moment, then conceded with a vague nod and left her alone in his room while he stepped out and summoned his rebel troops for a strategy meeting.
It was after midnight and no one had heard from Mira. Word out of D.C. was Lucan was pissed over her neglect to check in from her assignment, but when Nathan heard she was out of contact all day, he’d a cold suspicion that something was terribly wrong. Which was why he had assembled his team that same night and headed to rural western Massachusetts, where Jeremy Ackmeyer lived.
What they’d found at the reclusive scientist’s home was a whole lot of bad news and trouble.
The moonlit lawn was scarred with deep tire gouges and shattered headlight glass. Burned rubber had left the paved driveway streaked with black. Half a dozen spent casings littered the ground from what Nathan could only guess was Mira’s Order-issued 9-mm.
No sign of her or her vehicle.
No sign of Jeremy Ackmeyer.
“Nothing’s tossed inside, but we do have signs of a struggle,” Elijah drawled. His face was grave in the darkness as he and Jax rounded the front of the house and approached Nathan near the open garage bay. “Whoever they were, these guys knew exactly what they came for, and they wasted no time getting the hell out once they had it.”
“And now they have Mira.” Nathan’s voice betrayed none of the fury that seethed inside him at the thought of one of the Order’s own having fallen into apparent enemy hands. That it was Mira, a female as close to him as any family could be, made his blood run cold and quick in veins.
“Hey, Captain,” Rafe called to him grimly from across the side lawn, where the worst of the skirmish seemed to have taken place. “You’d better have a look at this.”
Nathan walked over, his nostrils filling with the chemical stench of leaked fuel and vehicle fluids. Another scent drifted on the warm night air too—faint and fading, the lily-sweet perfume of Mira’s blood.
Small droplets stained the grass and torn-up ground. Nathan hunkered down on the fouled lawn, brushed his fingers over the drying splatters of the Breedmate warrior’s blood at his feet. Mira had been injured, but he would bet all he was that she hadn’t gone down without a fight.
“She must’ve dropped this in the scuffle,” Rafe said, holding a slender, hammered-metal object out to Nathan.
He didn’t have to look to know what it was.
One of Mira’s treasured blades.
Nathan took the hand-tooled dagger from Rafe’s grasp. The carved hilt was rough against his fingertips. He turned it over in his palm, reading the words that graced each side of the intricately crafted weapon: Faith. Courage.
He knew Mira had no shortage of the latter. As for the other, he was certainly no fair judge of that. Nathan operated on logic and strength, skills he’d mastered as a child being reared in a madman’s assassin ranks. Faith was as elusive to him as magic. In his worldview, it simply did not exist.
But he knew hope. And through his cool logic, he knew a colder fury. He felt it build inside him as he slid Mira’s beloved dagger into his weapons belt.
She would survive; he knew that. She would fight the bastards who took her today—whoever they were, whatever their reasons—and her courage would keep her alive, long enough for the Order to reach her.
And when