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smile faded, and she frowned. A chill, and then a rush of heat flashed through her.

      Fear.

      She knew.

       She knew because of her mother. Her mother, who had been raised in the Caribbean, who had been the grandchild of—

      To her surprise, the sensation that had overcome her disappeared just as quickly. Her smile returned to her features. There was something so tragically sad about his eyes.

      Looking at her, he somehow knew that she knew. The melancholy air about him deepened. “I would never hurt you,” he said simply. He opened his mouth, as if there might be more explanation, but he repeated, “I would never hurt you.”

      She nodded. She thought about her mother, and the change that had come over her after the death of her father—her increased obsession with wealth and social prominence. She thought about her high-and-mighty—and quickly acquired!—stepfather, and the less-than-honorable way he looked at her when her mother wasn’t watching.

      She thought about the way her mother had spoken to her this very morning.

       We will see you married off, young lady, betrothed today, and that is that. And if you don’t choose among those who are proper, I will choose for you, and you will do as you are told!

      “Miss?”

      “My name is Kimberly Forrester,” she told him. “Kim.”

      “Miss Forrester.”

      “Kim, please,” she whispered.

      “Hardly proper.” And his crooked smile was beautiful; he made her feel as if she were melting into the earth.

      “Neither is this.” She came closer to him.

      Not proper at all. But her life was a sham of obedience, and she loathed the life she had been intended to lead. Women were well-groomed puppets. They followed ridiculous rules. They turned away while “men were men” and lived with the shame and, in time—as she had seen too often—the bitterness and hatred.

      She knew that she wanted something different.

      She wanted life, passion, something real—if only for a moment.

      “Careful,” he warned, looking down at her where she stood, so close. Those eyes of his were pure fire. “I’m not…I’m not the one to give you what you need.”

      “You will never understand what I need, Mr. Fox,” she assured him.

      “Escape,” he said flatly.

      “And can you help me escape?” she whispered.

      “That…but little else. You don’t understand—I can’t, I won’t, I haven’t ever been able to stay near those…those I have loved, or those who touch my soul.”

      She lowered her head for a moment. Loved. Once upon a time, he had loved someone. And he knew what he was. Just like those playing this game here tonight, this game of charm, this charade of decency, he knew how to play the game he must.

      She stared into his eyes. “I want you to help me. Take me away. Get me away from this awful place now.”

      “It’s not so awful,” he told her. “There is a certain honor here, as well. There is loyalty, and many a man here is a good man.”

      “Not one who might be intended for me,” she assured him. “Please. I’ll never look back. And I’ll expect nothing in return.”

      He wanted to stop her. She thought that he might be nearly as seduced as she, perhaps by her appearance, more likely by her boldness.

      Or maybe it was just bloodlust for a willing victim.

      And still, he wanted to stop her.

      “Before the barbecue?” he inquired, his tone light and teasing, and again, she felt that she was desperately in love with just the sound of his voice.

      “Now.” Her voice trembled; so did she.

      He stared back at her.

      “Do you really know what it could mean?”

      “Yes.”

      They were alone. Alone in the late day when the sun had fallen completely at last and the moon was riding high in the sky, and the echo of words and laughter and conversation had faded away.

      He took her suddenly by the shoulders, and his hands were powerful, almost rough.

      “Do you really know what it means?” he demanded.

      “Yes!” she cried.

      He shook his head, angry with her, angry with himself.

      “Don’t you understand? I can’t be there to pick up the pieces. I can’t…I can’t stay. I can never stay. I can never stay long in one place. Don’t ask me this—Go. Go into your ball and marry the proper young fellow and bear fine young sons and—”

      “Live with a man who will despise me in time as I despise him, and fade into the woodwork behind the fabric of charade?” she demanded softly.

      “But you would trade it all—”

      “Yes.”

      Now he wasn’t melancholy. He was tortured, angry…and still beautiful. He seemed to sigh, his eyes meeting hers. He touched her hair, stroking, cradled her skull in his hand and drew her to him. “You may trade your very life,” he told her.

      His lips touched hers.

      And she didn’t care.

       CHAPTER ONE

      Washington, D.C.

      “LET’S DO IT—let’s do this thing now,” Cole Granger’s voice was low and filled with grim conviction as he spoke to his three comrades.

      They had quietly skimmed the stone wall surrounding the prison yard. Earlier in the night, a perimeter had been formed by able-bodied soldiers in the blocks surrounding the area, troops badly needed elsewhere holding the streets around this fortress. But now there were no guards left to stop anyone from entering, those who had been on duty having fled inside amid bullets and blades.

      Not that it would help them.

      This wasn’t a holding cell for the hardened criminal awaiting execution, or even for a pack of murderous madmen. Those incarcerated were guilty only of bowing before a different, Southern power, and they were being held only until the war’s end.

      For several seconds, Cole Granger, Cody Fox and Brendan Vincent remained frozen in place, listening. Strange noises, soft cries, sucking sounds, eerie laughter—punctuated by bone-chilling shrieks and screams—issued forth from within the massive brick facade they faced.

      “Truly, the situation is only becoming worse by the second, gentlemen,” Cole noted.

      Brendan Vincent, veteran of many a battle and even many a war, nodded severely, his handsome and distinguished face set like a rock.

      “Yes. Time to move,” Cody agreed. Cody—who knew exactly what they were up against, who had brought Cole into this strange, other battle that had nothing to do with North or South, blue or gray.

      “Indeed—now.” Cole couldn’t believe he was saying the words, or that they were entering the main prison, that he was holding his breath and about to go into action against a horde of bizarre demons.

      Again.

      Hell.

      Victory, Texas. Things had been going well there—so damned well that maybe they’d let down their guard a bit. But this wasn’t Victory, and Cole still wasn’t entirely sure what he was doing here, except that he’d seen the results of what was commonly known as “the plague.”

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