“We intend to feed our powers through that individual’s uplink and scramble a couple of the major lines of communication. It’s going to be fairly rough—secondhand sabotage depends upon the Gradient of the mind being used, and our guy’s scarcely 4.5.”
Sascha knew they were talking about mind control, something that was both illegal and immoral. “If you do that, we’re no better than them.”
Judd looked across at Hawke and back to her. “We’re only going to use the link to the Net. Neither of us has any interest in scanning the drug-addled mind of our volunteer. It’s your choice.”
Sascha struggled with the ethics of breaking one rule to uphold another; Brenna’s life against the invasion of a mind. What decided her were the painful shadows she glimpsed around Hawke. He was dying each second his packmate was held in enemy hands, the alpha heart of him shredded by the twin talons of guilt and grief.
“Volunteer?”
“Money talks. He doesn’t even care what he’s volunteering for.” Hawke nodded at Judd to continue.
“The break will be minute—we can’t risk anyone tracing us through the other’s mind. It’s the same reason none of us can play your role. The instant they even suspect we’re alive, they’ll hunt us down.”
“A minute break should be enough. The flow-on effects will ripple through the Net for some time,” Sascha said, frowning in thought. “The killer should detect the changeling nature of my psychic scent before everyone else calms down and starts to wonder what’s wrong with me.
“Even then, they probably won’t immediately understand—most Psy have never seen inside a changeling mind. There’s no reason it shouldn’t work.” Unless everything went to hell and the first ones to become aware of her were the Councilors.
Her hand tightened on Lucas’s, fear a tight knot in her stomach. She didn’t want to die, didn’t want to leave this man she’d discovered after twenty-six years of loneliness. But neither could she steal an extra few days to love him with Brenna’s death weighing down her conscience. Her mother was part of the horror and she had to save at least one life.
Even if no one could save her own.
The unfairness of it threatened to make her shatter—how dare she be shown this glory only to have it snatched from her grasp? Except, of course, the glory had never been meant to be hers. Fed by the poison of Silence, her mind’s collapse had begun long before she’d met her panther.
“Kitten.” Lucas’s voice was a purr against her ear. “Stop hurting.” Before she could comment, he did something that mere days ago would’ve shocked her utterly. Pushing back his chair, he lifted her into his lap. The casual display of strength reminded her of the differences between them, the surprises, the things she’d never get a chance to fully explore.
Having no desire to fight the embrace, she put her head against his shoulder and breathed in his scent. Lucas might try to stop her but she knew she was going to go through with this. Death was certain—it was just a case of how she’d make her final exit. So for now she’d live her life to the emotional zenith. She’d touch and laugh and be publicly held.
“Though we’re the wrong gender to appeal to the killer, Walker and I have both tried to think of a way we could implement your plan, since we’re already out of the Net,” Judd said, watching the way she lay trustingly in Lucas’s arms. “Unfortunately, it’d involve letting them know that at least one of us is alive.”
“Which would make them suspicious about the deaths of the others,” Sascha completed. “I understand, Judd. Don’t feel guilty about putting the lives of the children first. I’d do the same.”
“The Psy don’t feel guilt.” Judd’s eyes were cool.
Despite the urgency of the situation, she wanted to smile. “Of course not.”
Lucas kissed the tip of her nose and the gesture was so playful, she could do nothing to hide her smile any longer.
“My Psy does.” Laughter flickered in his eyes but his arms held her tight.
Hawke looked at the two of them. “And we’re not going to lose her.”
Lucas locked gazes with the wolf. Sascha didn’t understand the depths to which predatory changelings would go to protect their mates, didn’t understand that she owned him in a way no one else ever would. “No, we’re not.”
“They refuse to believe I can’t survive outside the PsyNet.” Sascha shook her head. “Tell them.”
“She’s correct,” Walker said. “She needs to have another psychic net in place to link to when she drops out. If she doesn’t, she’ll die of a kind of psychic starvation in a matter of minutes.”
“Even if we could somehow figure out a way to get her out of the Net, she’d be a prisoner like Toby and Sienna.” Judd pointed to her eyes. “We can alter our appearance and go out into the world, but you can’t hide cardinal eyes.”
“She won’t be hiding.” Lucas had no intention of burying Sascha in any way—she’d spent too much of her life buried already. “My mate is going to stand by my side.”
SLAVE TO SENSATION
Nalini Singh's books
- Enslaved: Eternal Guardians series
- Cast into Doubt
- Lord Tophet
- Melting Stones
- Promises to Keep
- Stone Cold Seduction
- The Stone Demon
- The Totems of Abydos
- Touched
- Towering
- Untouched The Girl in the Box
- Victoria's Demon Lover
- Torn(Demon Kissed Series)
- Satan's Stone
- To Love A Witch
- Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye
- Traitor's Son: The Raven Duet Book #2
- Traitor's Blade
- Stolen Magic
- A Fright to the Death
- Torn (A Trylle Novel)
- Letters to Elise (A Peter Townsend Novella)
- Undertow
- Storm's Heart
- Peanut Goes to School
- Blue Bloods: Keys to the Repository
- HUNT (A Shifters Short Story)
- Hostage to Pleasure
- MINE TO POSSESS
- Indomitable: The Epilogue to The Wishsong of Shannara
- The Long Utopia
- Storm Siren
- In the Air Tonight
- Purgatory
- Halfway to the Grave