She didn’t move. “Wyatt’s here.” A faint line appeared between her brows. “I heard him. We can find him.” Her words came faster. “We can stop him.”
She wasn’t moving. Fine. He’d move her. Cain lifted her into his arms and carried her the hell out of that place.
“But Wyatt—”
“He’s not here.” The guard had vanished. He’d damn well better stay gone. Actually, the whole place looked empty as Cain headed back for the garage. No guards. No bodies. The place was as quiet as a tomb. But he was catching dozens of scents in the air, scents that told them just what Wyatt planned next. “This place is about to explode. It’s wired—I can smell the damn explosives.”
The bastard was still experimenting. Probably watching with video cameras to see just how much fire Eve could handle.
An alarm was beeping somewhere. Understanding hit. No, that wasn’t an alarm.
It was a countdown.
His hold tightened on her, and he raced down the corridor. No guards—they’d sure cleared out fast.
The SUV waited for them, just where he’d left it. Only the gate leading back outside had been locked, trapping them inside.
“Cain?” Eve’s worried voice.
He flashed her a smile. “We’re getting out.”
He could smell the fire again. The smoke. Wyatt’s latest fire had already started.
He put her in the passenger side. Rushed around the vehicle. Jumped in and gunned the engine. “Hold on.” He jerked the vehicle into reverse.
For an instant, Cain stared at that heavy gate. Then he smiled. His hand lifted, hanging outside of the driver’s window, and he tossed a ball of flames right in the middle of that gate, weakening it. Then he pushed the gas pedal all the way down to the floorboard. The SUV lurched backward and crashed right through the gate.
They made it outside with a scream of metal and tires. Cain spun the car forward and didn’t slow down, not for an instant. He kept the gas pinned to the floor and drove as fast as he could.
Right then, Wyatt didn’t matter. Nothing mattered but getting Eve away from there.
Cain knew exactly why the freak scientist had been testing her. He knew what Wyatt wanted her to do.
You just had to see how much fire she could handle, didn’t you?
Wyatt had wanted to make sure that Eve was strong enough for a deadly job.
She’d survived the flames. Come away without even a mild burn. And Wyatt had seen it. He’d seen everything.
Wyatt had just proved to himself—and to Cain—that Eve could be a very, very dangerous woman.
A woman who could kill a phoenix.
CHAPTER TEN
“I . . . didn’t expect you to come after me.” Eve’s voice.
Soft. Hesitant.
Cain turned away from the window and glanced back at her. This time, he’d picked the hiding spot. No more holes-in-the-wall. He hated those places. Instead, they were inside a luxury cabin on the top of the mountain—one that would let him see when any unwanted guests were coming. They’d driven hell-fast and hard to get to this refuge. Normally, the drive would’ve taken three hours. They’d made it to the place in less than two.
It was a cabin that he owned. This one and half a dozen others, scattered all around the Southeast. He liked to keep his options open.
And he liked to have a safe place to crash when necessary. The cabins couldn’t be traced back to him. He’d made sure of that.
Eve rocked forward on her heels. “Wyatt was counting on you coming. He wanted to trap you.” Her laugh was weak. Rough. “I was his bait, too. Seems everyone wants me to be bait.”
“That’s not what I want.”
She stared into his eyes. “What do you want?”
You. He hadn’t gotten her out of his system yet, not even close. But he looked away from her. Showing her how hungry he was for her . . . was one bad idea. She already had enough power over him. “I want to make Wyatt pay for what he’s done.” Death for death. Wasn’t that a fair enough exchange?
It was in Cain’s book.
“Cain . . . how can—how can you die?”
The question was the last he’d expected from her, and every muscle in his body tightened as he went on full alert. “I can’t die.” A lie. “Not really.” He forced a smile as he walked toward her. She was still just wearing the shirt he’d given her. She smelled of smoke and fear and woman. “I just come back, again and again.”
Her gaze searched his. Then she took a deep breath. “If you’re going to keep lying to me, how am I ever supposed to trust you?” Eve turned away and headed for the stairs. “Everything and everyone can die.”
True enough. The trick was to strike at the right time, and in the right way.
She was halfway up the stairs, and after all she’d been through, he shouldn’t have his eyes glued to the bare expanse of her legs.
He did, though. The woman’s legs were perfect. Sexy. Long.
Eve paused and her fingers trailed over the banister. “Sometimes I see you looking at me”—her shoulders fell—“and I can’t tell if you want to make love to me or if . . .”
She didn’t say more.
Helpless, he walked toward the stairs. Toward her. “Or if what?” A grandfather clock ticked slowly in the other room. Too loud in the silence that fell between them.
Her head bent. She studied the banister like it held the secrets to the universe. It didn’t. “If I were all-powerful, able to come back again and again—come back stronger with each death—I wouldn’t fear anything or anyone.”
He didn’t. He didn’t fear a damn thing.
“But even Superman had his Kryptonite,” she said, voice sad. “No matter how strong . . . everyone has a weakness.”
She was hitting too close to the truth for him.
“Weaknesses can make a person angry. So angry . . .” Eve glanced over her shoulder at him. Her bright gaze caught his. “And sometimes, when you look at me, I see that anger.”
Cain forced himself to speak. “The fury that I carry isn’t about you. It’s not for you.” There was just too much rage inside his beast. He’d never be able to fully control it.
Did he even want to?
“Wyatt was testing me.”
Yeah, Cain f**king knew that. Sick prick.
“He wanted to see how much heat I could handle.”
Cain saw the whisper of fear cross her face.
“I’d never . . . I’d never been in fire that hot. When the flames came at me, I thought I was going to die.”