Part 13 (1/2)

Chapter Eleven.

Kelsey Bennett. The intruder had called her Kelsey Ben nett! Her mind whirled-why would he call her by Jared's last name? They weren't married yet; besides, she'd never seen the man before in her life.

He studied her, taking a step closer, an expression of mingled hatred and fascination on his dark features. Kelsey fumbled to grab a bath towel from beside the sink, bunching it in front of herself protectively, but then it slipped, revealing the soft curve of her b.r.e.a.s.t.s before she could secure it again.

In reaction, the man arched an eyebrow suggestively, but made no comment.

A silvery scar divided the black hairs of that right eyebrow, creating a sharp furrow before the mark sliced upward across his forehead, vanis.h.i.+ng somewhere in the black, wavy hair atop his head. That scar had to be important-she knew it, though the reason why seemed to float just beyond her grasp.

”To think that Jared couldn't protect you,” he observed in a hushed voice-a threatening one. Had Jared tried to stop this invader on his way into the bedroom suite? Was Jared out in the hall, hurt? ”To have failed you, of all people, sweet Kelsey.” He shook his head, clucking his tongue. ”The man always lacked wisdom, but this? It surprises even me.”

”Let me out!” she cried, giving him a serious shove in the chest, but he didn't even budge at the impact of her frame against his. He released a low chuckle, but that was all. She had to get past this guy, whoever he was, and into the bedroom. Again, she lunged at him, but this time he caught her wrist in midair, and the towel gave a small lurch, dropping low. He gazed downward, a l.u.s.tful expression on his face as he examined her.

”Stop it,” she spit. The adrenaline was rus.h.i.+ng so furiously throughout her body, she felt light-headed and dizzy.

”You don't like that?” he asked, clearly enjoying this game with her.

Grabbing a brush from the counter, she hurled it at him, but he easily deflected her makes.h.i.+ft weapon with his forearm.

”Kelsey Bennett, I'm not going anywhere,” he said, releasing a throaty laugh at her expense. ”Not with a show like this one to enjoy. G.o.d, you always were quite the spitfire, and I admire that in a woman.”

Once more, she searched past him, wis.h.i.+ng Jared would return. Was he injured? She tried feeling for him within their new bond, but only emptiness echoed back across their separation.

She turned on their enemy. ”What have you done to him?” she demanded. ”Tell me where Jared is.”

The man said nothing, but took a step closer. He possessed a pantherlike gracefulness, giving the impression not of movement as he circled inward upon her, but rather a kind of fluidity-and this despite his towering height. He was Jared's size, perhaps even taller, with the same exquisite dark eyes and rich-colored skin. Gauging by those looks, he had to be Refarian-at least based on what little she already knew of that species' physicality. Few of their kind seemed to be fair-skinned or light-haired.

”What do you want?” she demanded, raising to her nearly six feet of height and staring him in the eye.

The man did not reply, but instead acted as if he had all the time in the world, his sinister gaze roving the length of her barely concealed form. First her legs, then upward toward her hips, the hooded eyes registered every detail. Then his gaze trawled even farther upward, lingering. Invading. Provoking. Still he said nothing.

”You have no right to be here!” she said firmly, working to seize control of their interaction.

”On the contrary,” he purred, leaning languorously against the marble countertop. ”I have every right. In fact, I'm more than a little ent.i.tled, my dear.”

”Jared will be back any minute,” she told him, trying to sound forceful, but her words only came out raspy and shrill. The stranger smiled, a smug look coming over his features as she wrestled to readjust the towel.

He folded powerful arms across his chest. ”Don't bother with that on my account,” he offered, again lifting one eyebrow almost as if to taunt. ”Besides, my business isn't with Jared.”

”Who are you?” she tried again, feeling her hands tremble as she clutched the towel close.

”You may call me Marco,” he drawled, ”though I'm surprised you don't know me.” He studied her, shady eyes narrowing.

”I've never seen you before in my life.”

”Well, Kelsey Bennett.” He shook his head, releasing a slow, rumbling laugh. ”It's been far too long for me.” He gave her one last appraising look. ”Far too long. But trust me, I'm more than pleased to see you again.”

From the bottom of the stairs Scott heard his commander cry out, a pained, raw sound, the sort, he rarely heard from Jared, or indeed from any soldier off the battlefield. Springing to his feet, he hit the comm b.u.t.ton on his forearm, signaling the highest distress code among their ranks. ”Jared!” he shouted, and another wounded howl of agony rang out from the steps below. Scott stumbled, taking the steps three at a time until he tumbled to the bottom, and there in front of his bedroom, forearms braced against the door frame, Jared Bennett stood bathed in the clean blue light of an energy field.

”Commander!” Scott cried again, pulling up fast. His gaze darted to the bedroom's interior, but he could see nothing-and then back to Jared, who appeared uninjured. ”What's happened? What's going on here?”

”They have her,” Jared rasped, his voice eerie in its quiet. He stood dangerously close to the undulating energy field, attempting to look past it into the room. ”I can't see anything. But they have her; I feel it.”

”We have to get you to safety, Commander.” Any of their enemies might be here, but that blue swirling helix was the telltale sign of only one: the Antousians. ”Sir!” Scott barked again, wrestling with Jared, who shrugged him off as he would a small insect.

Scott did not back down. ”We must secure you,” he demanded, but Jared wouldn't budge, instead moving even closer against the undulating bands of energy. ”You are in danger, my lord!” Scott shouted at his friend, but Jared seemed to be in a kind of shock, immovable.

”They took her,” Jared repeated, his voice a dull whisper. ”My mate-they have her.”

”Sir, please,” Scott begged, wrestling with Jared. ”She may still be inside. We must get you to safety. Your protection, sir, is paramount. You know that!”

Jared turned to him, and for a long moment their eyes locked, silent intention pa.s.sing between them. Scott knew what would happen next, felt it ripple across the surface of his perception before Jared actually made his move.

Jared glanced away from him, and then with a seamless, fluid gesture, s.h.i.+fted form, converting to pure energy. Scott took a staggering step backward, Jared's heat almost singeing his skin before he had time to process his king's powerful change.

Jared's fierce form rose toward the ceiling, expanding, towering, filling the area outside the bedroom doorway. A loud roaring sound-like a great freight train bearing down on the hallway-hummed through the air as Jared hurled himself at the banded doorway, blue sparks shattering in a bright arc around them. On the stairs, Scott heard the approaching thunder of footsteps, and quickly recognized his comrades' voices in the din of soldiers' cries: Anna, Anika, Thea, others. Still facing the doorway, he lifted one hand to halt them as they arrived, and they lined up just behind him.

Scott's own weapon was c.o.c.ked and ready, and he knew that the soldiers behind him were heavily armed as well. All watched-all waited, breath held, as over and over Jared launched his full D'Aravnian form against the power grid. Scott felt his friend's pain shooting through the air around them. Smelled the blistering sparks of the Antousian bands, sizzling off of Jared's own power-which had to hurt, no matter how much energy was banked within Jared at the moment.

A secondary unit of soldiers came pounding down the steps. ”There's nothing, Lieutenant Dillon,” the lead officer reported from behind him. ”No sign of any penetration here, sir. No sign of unauthorized entry.” It seemed impossible: How could Antousian forces have broken into Jared's quarters, the most secure place in the whole compound? Antousians were plenty skilled at subterfuge, but there were too many inuitives in this cabin who would have sensed them. Besides, no one would've gotten past Scott's honed sensory perceptions. He could sniff out any Antousian who came within half a mile of them; at least something good had come of his mixed heritage.

Jared released a high-pitched wail as he flung himself yet again at the barrier, this time twining his energy with that of the Antousian force field, pressing, pulsing, joining his blazing swath of power with that of his enemies. Just behind him he heard Thea gasp, whispering Jared's name, her voice stricken. She of all people knew what this desperate bid to dissolve the field was costing their king. In front of them all, Jared's magnificent golden power battled with the blue, nestling in, burrowing, becoming one with the swirling helix.

Scott had watched Jared destroy enemy armies in this form, moving over them like a hushed kiss, taking their life that easily. But when raw energy met another kind of raw energy-well, that was another story altogether. Scott swallowed hard, unexpected fear seizing him. For a moment, the familiar color of Jared's power faded, matching that of the Antousian bands of blue energy.

”We have to stop him,” Thea hissed, low enough that others wouldn't hear, but perceptible to Scott's heightened hearing.

”What's he trying to do?” he asked her, his eyes never leaving his king.

”He thinks he can rupture the field with his own power,” she said, grasping Scott's arm like a vise.

”Can he do that?” he asked, feeling her grip tighten. ”Is it really possible?”

”Maybe,” she said, ”I'm not sure. But we've got to stop him, Scott. Now.”

”Or what?” he asked, watching the dynamic surge of energy in the doorway brighten unexpectedly. ”Or this is going to kill him.”

Outside in the hallway, Kelsey heard noise, scuffling. Shouts. Then a roaring sound that she recognized as coming from some sort of weaponry-something meant to blast open an entry to Jared's room.

”You won't be able to fight them all off!” she insisted, pressing against the bathroom door, but she needn't have struggled so much. This time, Marco let her slip past him and into the main bedroom.

”Try if you want to,” he called out after her, ”but they won't hear you.”

She fled toward the hallway door. She had to get to Jared! But as she reached it, bands of flas.h.i.+ng energy circled in a serpentine pattern within its frame. She could not see past the barricade into the hallway, and it gave off visible sparks, even without her touching it. Grabbing her jacket, she hurled it against the force field to test it. The smell of melting nylon filled the air as the jacket sizzled, then collapsed in a blackened heap on the floor. Behind her, Marco ambled into the room with the same kind of relaxed cowboy's pace she'd observed earlier. He seemed to feel no fear or need to rush, and clearly he wanted her to know it.

”We're locked within a suspended dimensional zone,” he explained matter-of-factly. ”Not a soul can hear you, Kelsey.”

”Jared!” she screamed, trying to reach him through the s.h.i.+mmering blue boundary.