Myths & Magic: A Science Fiction and Fantasy Collection

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Myths & Magic: A Science Fiction and Fantasy Collection Page 50

by Kerry Adrienne


  Chelsea, a well-endowed blonde, swung by the bar and hefted her full tray. She arched an eyebrow, and her grin was wicked. “The hot guy’s back.”

  Sofia leaned to look past Chelsea’s shoulder. “Where?”

  “He sat down in your section again. That’s three nights running. Maybe he’s got a thing for you. He’s not alone this time, though.”

  Stefan jerked his head in their direction. “Go get their order. I’ll have this one filled by the time you get back.”

  Sofia grinned. She leaned over the bar and kissed him on the cheek. “I’m moving you up to the head of the line.”

  Stefan snorted. “I should be so lucky.”

  As she returned to her section and to the three new customers who had claimed a large circular booth, Sofia tugged down her white shirt to cover more of her bare midriff. She blamed her fluttering pulse entirely on the dark-haired, leanly muscled man whose steady green-eyed gaze seemed to take in everything, from the small mole just over the left side of her mouth to the fact that her manicure was slightly chipped. His mouth was firm and unsmiling, which was a shame. A smile would have gone a long way toward making his rough-hewn features more attractive.

  She inhaled deeply and fixed a warm smile on her face. “What can I get for you, gentlemen?”

  “I’ll have a Kahlua coffee martini,” one of the man’s companions said in a reedy voice. Sofia placed him somewhere between fifty and sixty years old. His tweed jacket was too large for him, and his large brown eyes darted from side to side behind the large frames of his eyeglasses. He was definitely not typical nightclub material.

  “Me too,” the third man squeaked. He seemed slightly younger, but cut from the same cloth. If Sofia mentally merged her geeky video game-playing neighbor with her overweight accountant neighbor, and then aged him thirty years, she would have expected him to resemble those two men. They seemed like professors or scientists, grossly out of place in a nightclub.

  How different they were from the man who stared intently at her. He did not belong in a nightclub either, but that was because she could imagine him in military fatigues, toting a machine gun with easy expertise. He looked dangerous enough for that impression to fit.

  “And you?” she asked.

  “Water.”

  “No vodka tonight?” She smiled. “Sodas are complimentary for designated drivers.”

  “Water’s fine.”

  Sofia resisted the urge to roll her eyes. Couldn’t he be friendlier? A smile wouldn’t crack his face. At least he had not sounded irritated, though his indifference was insulting. Then again, she was not in the market for another guy, so what did it matter what he thought of her?

  She straightened. “I’ll be right back with two martinis and a glass of water.”

  Stefan arched his eyebrows when she returned to the bar. “No hot date, huh?”

  He had always been good at reading her mood. Sofia shot him a dirty look. “When do real men give me the time of day?”

  He pressed a hand to his chest and managed a passably good impression of pain. “You wound me, baby. What do they want?”

  “Two martinis and water.”

  “Boring.”

  Stefan was often right, but not that time. Sofia’s eyes narrowed. From her place at the bar, she watched the man scan the club while his two companions sat in silent and apparent discomfort. Something was not quite right, but she could not place her finger on it.

  She had remembered what he ordered.

  Kyle Norwood gritted his teeth. Damn it. Observant people were dangerous.

  It probably did not matter, though. She was just a waitress, one of the regulars he recognized from his prior two visits. Many of Zanzi-Bar’s customers and employees were regulars, a fact that made the nightclub a perfect place for a drop. He did not want to be surprised by hostile parties or unexpected enemies. It had happened on more than one occasion, and the last time had left scars, physical and emotional.

  “Where are they?” A thin voice, its tone whining, interrupted his thoughts.

  Kyle glanced over at Alvin Smith. The lanky professor was one of the leading minds on genetic manipulation. He and his counterpart, Bert Reynard, were scientists at Proficere Labs, a research facility that prided itself on work so innovative and so cutting-edge that it would have been illegal if only the authorities knew what to make illegal.

  Kyle would typically not have taken them on as clients, but it was not his call. Zara Itani, his boss and the owner of Three Fates, an agency of mercenaries, made those decisions, and she tended to skim close to criminal behavior. Her close connections with the government allowed her to escape without repercussions, most of the time.

  As long as she extended the same courtesy to her employees, he would be happy to take on any job she offered. Zara paid well and did not micromanage. One could not hope for much more in a boss.

  He continued his scan of the club, mentally checking the employees against the employment records he had downloaded from Zanzi-Bar earlier in the week. Once he confirmed that they were all longtime employees, he moved on to the customers. The three men at the bar flirting with the male bartender were regulars; he had noticed them the prior night. Young professionals occupied some of the tables in the other sections. Unless he missed his guess, and he rarely did, he pegged them for lawyers or bankers. They looked just uptight and miserable enough.

  Four students in University of North Carolina sweatshirts and jackets, their backpacks sprawled in untidy heaps beneath their chairs, occupied a table in his section. The waitress stopped by their table and chatted while unloading their drinks from her tray. Laughter, warm and infectious, exploded before subsiding into muted chuckles. The students were regulars too, judging from the waitress’s easy conversation with them.

  What was her name? He frowned as he searched his memory of her employment records.

  Sofia…Sofia Rios. She had begun working at Zanzi-Bar several months prior, typically for three or four nights a week.

  Several minutes later, she reluctantly wound down her conversation with the students and headed toward his table. She set two glasses of martini in front of Alvin and Bert, and slid a glass of water toward Kyle. “That will be twenty-two fifty, including tax.”

  Kyle pulled a couple of bills from his wallet and tossed it on the table. “Thanks. Keep the change.” His gaze darted to the entrance as three men strode into the club. They were built like wrestlers and looked like thugs despite wearing tieless suits. One of them he recognized; the thick black mustache was a point of pride for Luis Sanchez, chief lieutenant in Rue Marcha, one of Colombia’s most vicious drug cartels. “We’re leaving,” Kyle said, his tone flat.

  “What?” Alvin asked. He followed Kyle’s gaze. “But he’s here, Kyle.”

  Kyle’s eyes narrowed. “He’s your customer?”

  Alvin nodded.

  “Do you know who he is?”

  Bert’s lips pressed into a thin line. “He’s the man who agreed to our price.”

  Only then did Kyle take a closer look at one of the two men who accompanied Sanchez. The man matched the photograph the scientists had shown Kyle previously, but Sanchez’s presence was hardly coincidental. Damn. He would need all of the devil’s luck to get out of this mess.

  Sofia cast a quick look at the three men who had just entered the club. Zanzi-Bar attracted a wide range of clientele, including gangsters looking to move up the food chain. The three men would not have overly alarmed her if not for the reaction of the man in the booth, the one called Kyle. He looked up and met her gaze. The slight upward motion of his chin told her to leave.

  She did not need to be told twice. With slow, careful steps, she backed away from the booth.

  Motion flickered in her peripheral vision. Two UNC students shot to their feet and spun around, automatic pistols in their hands. “IGEC agents. You’re under arrest.”

  Sofia’s eyes flared wide. What was the International Genetics and Ethics Council doing in a nightclub
in Chapel Hill? Why were they pointing their weapons at the innocuous geeks instead of the suited gangsters or the man, Kyle, who so obviously exuded danger?

  The men in suits reached into their jackets, the motion so smooth it was practically instinctive.

  Kyle lifted the edge of the small table and flung it, drinks and all, in the direction of the three thugs.

  Sofia ducked, shrieking, as bullets laced across the room. She dropped to the ground and rolled into the cover of the circular booth. The two scientists huddled beside her. One of them, hands trembling, opened a steel briefcase.

  It wasn’t a briefcase but a cooler. A pale blue florescent light activated as the case opened. The light glowed softly over test tubes filled with translucent liquid tightly packed among cooling crystals. A mini disc, encased in a thin jewel case, was nestled in a bed of Styrofoam.

  The scientist ignored both test tubes and mini discs. He reached for a circular metal tube, two inches long and no thicker than a toothpick. He wrapped his fist tightly around it and lunged from the booth. Gunfire cut him down two feet from the door of the bar.

  He screamed, writhing as a pool of blood formed beneath him.

  Oh, God. Ducking beneath the spray of bullets, Sofia leaned out, grabbed his feet, and dragged him back into the booth. His gaze was panicked, and his breath came in quick shudders. Blood bubbled out, mixing with the spittle leaking from the side of his mouth. He reached up, his fingers like claws, raking her shoulders as he fought to breathe. In his eyes, terror supplanted panic.

  Sofia leaned over him and raised his head to elevate the pressure off his punctured lungs. She flinched as a sharp pain pierced her bicep, but it vanished instantly. He died moments later, his final breath escaping in a rattling wheeze as his eyes rolled up in his head.

  Gunfire faded into smoky silence. Stunned, Sofia looked up. One gangster was dead, and the other two had fled. Three of the IGEC agents were down. One sprawled unmoving across the floor, blood leaking from a bullet hole in the middle of his forehead. The other two groaned softly, injured. The remaining scientist cowered as the last IGEC agent slapped electric handcuffs on him, but there was no sign of Kyle or the cooler.

  Chapter 2

  Kyle walked, his pace no faster than those of the college students teetering unsteadily out of the bars and clubs on Franklin Street. The steel cooler felt heavy, a burden that stood out, stiff and formal, in a collage of scruffy backpacks and classy handbags. Training contained the urgency that dogged his steps as he wove past cheerful and belligerent drunks, leaving behind the violence that fractured Zanzi-Bar.

  He squeezed his eyes shut and gritted his teeth. Willpower wrapped tight spirals around the vibration of cold anger.

  What the hell were International Genetics and Ethics Council agents doing at the club? Its field agents exceeded the U.S. Marshals in the scope of its operations, and its activities spread like tentacles across the globe.

  Why was the council interested in a simple research transaction?

  Unless, of course, there was far more to the research than he realized.

  His knuckles whitened as his grip tightened on the handle of the steel cooler.

  Bert Reynard swore that the transaction was just the result of a genetic screen. Kyle, too, had scanned the research transcript and found nothing more than a jumbled mess of four letters—A, T, G, and C—adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine, the four nucleobases that interlinked into a sinuous coil to create deoxyribonucleic acid, DNA, the double helix of life.

  And that was where he had screwed up. In a world transformed by the Genetic Revolution, he had underestimated the power of DNA—the blueprint of life—to drive men to violent acts inspired by greed or fear.

  In fact, he had more than screwed up. He had not fully understood the research transcript, and he had made the mistake of taking a scientist at his word. Those intellectual types, those doctors and scientists, could not be trusted. Doctors had killed his mother with their insistence on unproven drugs.

  He was enough of a realist to acknowledge that his mother would have died anyway—liver cancer spared few victims—but the drugs had killed her, not the cancer. She had died clawing at his chest, pleading desperately for help. Her eyes were wide with terror as she fought to breathe through the viscous phlegm that blocked her air passage. She had not even realized that blood was spilling from her every orifice. The autopsy confirmed that her internal organs had ruptured. Cancer did not kill her; the drugs did.

  The doctors denied it. To defend themselves, they held up her scribbled consent, indicating that she had understood the risks of the experimental drugs.

  Risk. Hell, no one had understood the risk, not until his mother died.

  Kyle grimaced, shook off the past, and refocused on the present. Was anything missing from that cooler?

  He stepped into a convenience store and brushed past its browsing patrons as he headed toward the restrooms nestled in the back of the building. The small room stank of hastily mopped up vomit and urine, but the glaring florescent lights reflecting off the dirt-stained white tiles were exactly what he needed. He lowered the toilet cover, set the cooler on top of the lid, and punched in the security code on the lock.

  The contents of the cooler glowed pale blue under the light.

  At first glance, everything seemed in place. The mini disc, the test tubes—both decoys—were untouched.

  His green eyes flashed over the contents of the cooler yet again. His breath caught.

  The microchip injector was missing.

  He slammed the cooler shut. Damn it!

  His hands clenched into fists, and he paced the tiny length of the restroom. If Bert had taken it, the microchip would be in the hands of the IGEC by now—hardly ideal—but the IGEC, at least, had a reputation for scrupulously playing by its excessively thick rule book.

  But if Alvin had taken it…

  Alvin Smith was dead. Was the microchip embedded in his corpse or was it still encased in its injector, perhaps lost in the debris and aftermath of the fight?

  He jerked to a stop. The tracking code for the microchip had to be around somewhere.

  He reopened the cooler and tore through its contents. A white card imprinted with an unlabeled data matrix code was tucked into the lining of the cooler. He pulled out his smartphone, scanned the image, and then hit the “Track” button. A map flashed onto the screen of the smartphone. A red dot blipped. It moved.

  Kyle ground his teeth. The microchip tracker was live; it had been activated by body heat. Could the cartel—? No, Kyle was certain the Rue Marcha did not have the microchip. Alvin had not made physical contact with them.

  The waitress.

  Damn it. She was the only one who had come close to Alvin. She had held him as he died.

  He had to go back for the microchip and get it out of the waitress, one way or another.

  Sofia released her breath in a soft sigh of relief when the medics and police officers finally left the club, taking with them the bodies of the deceased gangster, the IGEC agent, and the scientist. She slumped down in a chair, looking up only when she felt someone crouch beside her.

  “Here.” Stefan placed a steaming mug in her hands. The lightly fragrant scent of chamomile wafted toward her. “Drink. It’s good for you.”

  She laughed, the sound catching on a sob. “I didn’t even know the bar carried teas.”

  “We don’t. I thought you could use one and sent Harry to a store for it.” He tugged up a chair, turned it around, and straddled it. His blue eyes searched her face. “How are you doing?”

  She huffed out her breath. “I’m tired of answering the same questions over and over again. Yes, he’s been here for the past three nights. No, he was alone prior to tonight. No, I didn’t see him before that. No, I don’t know his name. No, he paid cash. Ugh!” Sofia forced herself to relax her two-handed grip lest she shatter the mug. She lowered her gaze. “I’m tired, and I’ve just learned that you don’t learn enough from a semeste
r of nursing to know what to do to help a man who’s been shot in the lungs.”

  Stefan shook his head. “There’s nothing you could have done.”

  “Maybe not, but he died in my arms, and I couldn’t do anything except watch.” In her mug, the tea bag bobbed in response to her frenetic thoughts. She stared down absently at it until she realized that Stefan was staring at the same.

  The tea bag stopped moving. She looked at Stefan, her brown eyes wide and a lump of fear clogging her throat. “I…”

  A faint smile tugged up a corner of his mouth. “It’s all right, Sofia. I’ve always known that you were the one telekinetically sweeping the ice chips off the countertops when my back was turned.”

  “You did? You don’t mind?”

  “Why would I?” He sounded perplexed.

  “Some people don’t like mutants.”

  “I’m not one of those people.”

  She relaxed enough to smile. “That’s good, because I’m not much of a mutant. Other telekinetics can hurl cars and create physical shields thick enough to deflect bullets. I got the short end of the stick. I have as much telekinetic power as I have strength in my finger and thumb.” She pressed them together in a pincer grip. “It’s scarcely enough for carnival tricks.”

  “It’s good enough to clean up ice chips.” Stefan leaned forward and placed a brotherly kiss on her forehead. “Come on. I’ll walk you home.”

  Home was a brownstone house five blocks away. As she marched up the ice-slicked stairs to the door, Sofia wondered if Stefan would ask to come in and ruin a perfectly good friendship by trying to push it to the next level, but she need not have worried. He bid her good night in a polite though perfunctory way and continued down the road. He did not try to come in; he did not try to kiss her; he did not hug her; heck, he did not even shake her hand.

  Sofia opened the door and slipped in before the warm air inside the house could escape. She closed the door, leaned back on it, and wondered why she felt so insulted. Perhaps because Stefan was, in spite of his occasionally lewd humor, an intrinsically good guy—the kind of guy she should spend more time trying to hook up with.

 

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