Viper stared at him with those slitted yellow eyes, and Nate fought a shudder. He’d always assumed the reptilian effect was caused by contacts, but now he wondered if they were implants, like the fangs. Cosmetic surgery performed by amateurs struck Nate as a terrible idea, but, like many terrible ideas, it was popular in Debasement.

“Time to go,” someone said from behind Nate, and a hand clamped down on his shoulder. “Let go of Viper, unless you want to lose fingers.”

In a bar in civilized society, Nate might not have taken that threat seriously. Here, he knew the bouncer was dead serious. Nate wasn’t here as the Chairman Heir of Paxco; he was just some anonymous Basement-dweller, and if Angel’s staff wanted to torture or even kill him, the law wouldn’t bat an eyelash.

“Please tell her I need to talk to her,” he said a little desperately as he let go of Viper’s arm. “There’s money in it.”

The bouncer yanked on Nate’s arm, practically dislocating his shoulder, and Nate stumbled forward. He tried to turn and say something else to Viper—he wasn’t sure exactly what he could say that would persuade the man to convey the message—but the bouncer was having none of it. Another joint-torturing yank propelled Nate away from the bar, and oblivious patrons filled in the space he’d just vacated, hiding the bartender from view.

CHAPTER SEVEN

Nadia slept almost ten hours Monday night and woke on Tuesday morning feeling much more like herself, the lingering weakness of her battle with the flu gone. Remembering that Nate had promised to come by and check on her, Nadia examined her day planner, hoping she didn’t have too much free time. If she could keep herself bouncing from one obligation to another as much as possible, she wouldn’t have time for more than a brief visit from Nate, and maybe she could avoid having him tell her anything she didn’t want to hear.

The morning would be her most vulnerable time. Mornings were when she did her individual schoolwork and studying. Some days, she had a tutor, but today wasn’t one of them. She had plenty of homework to do, but when Nate was a student, he’d considered all homework optional, and he’d expect her to feel the same way. Fortunately, he almost never stopped by in the morning—yesterday being a big exception—and she had two hours of classes scheduled for the afternoon, followed by a meeting of the Teen Charity League, which was little more than a glorified social club for Executive teenagers, but which did manage to fit in some actual charity work here and there. That should account for most of the daylight hours, and then tonight her mother was putting on a dinner party, which always seemed to entail a lot of fussing and chores, despite the fact that all the real work was done by the servants.

After examining her calendar, Nadia felt secure in her armor, and she tried to forget about all the pressure sitting on her shoulders. She spent the morning studying, crossing her fingers that Nate wouldn’t interrupt. She got her wish, though her concentration wasn’t up to par. She breathed a sigh of relief when afternoon rolled around and it was time for class.

That relief evaporated when she arrived at her first class and discovered that Chloe hadn’t come, but Jewel and Blair had, even though they rarely showed up two days in a row. Jewel bragged that she and Cherry had been invited to a private dinner at the Chairman’s mansion, going on and on about what she would wear and how she would style her hair and how honored her family was. If the boasting was designed to make Nadia entertain uneasy thoughts that the Chairman was rethinking the marriage arrangement, she unfortunately succeeded.

Naturally, the story of Nate’s rebirth as a Replica was still front and center with the press, and they were constantly replaying things like Nate’s altercation with the reporter—and Nadia’s ignominious exit from the security station. In retrospect, she figured she should have left with her head held high, lack of makeup and inelegant attire notwithstanding. The effort to hide from the cameras just made her look guilty. Jewel found ways to slip references to the footage into conversation as often as possible. The day before, Nadia had come out the winner of their verbal sparring, but not today.

To make her victory that much sweeter, Jewel went out of her way to make demands of Dante, always during class rather than during breaks, so that he would have to leave the room and miss key parts of the lesson. And in yet another attempt to prove she was an obnoxious bitch, Jewel ordered him to carry her bag down to the lobby for her when class was over. Nadia could have countermanded that order—he was supposedly her family’s servant, not Jewel’s—but she wanted Jewel out of her sight as soon as possible, so she bit her tongue instead of arguing.

Nadia was pissed off enough about Jewel’s behavior that she didn’t immediately leave the schoolroom, instead fixing herself a cup of tea and taking a moment to enjoy being blissfully alone. In a little more than an hour, she would have to face Jewel again at the Teen Charity League meeting, and she needed to regroup first.

The solitude lasted for maybe one or two minutes, and then she heard footsteps approaching. Dante must have fled Jewel’s presence at a downright sprint to be back so soon. Nadia wished she’d hurried back upstairs, not wanting to be trapped into conversation with him.

Her heart skipped a beat when she saw not Dante but Mosely standing in the doorway to the schoolroom, arms crossed over his chest, unblinking eyes pinned on her. Nadia froze, trapped by the malice in his gaze. She didn’t want to know what he was thinking as he looked at her like that, but it made her feel naked and vulnerable and very, very alone.

Not that she was alone, of course. She was in her own home, and even if there was no one in sight, a scream would bring half the household running to her aid. Until they saw Mosely, of course. No one could protect her from him.

“What do you want?” she asked sharply. “If I had anything to say to you, I’d have called.”

Perhaps snapping at Mosely wasn’t the wisest course of action, but it was either snap or cower. Acting normal around this man just wasn’t possible, not when she was so acutely aware of what he could do to her.

Mosely made a tsking sound with his tongue, closing the door behind him and moving closer. Nadia had to fight an instinctive urge to take a step back. This was her home, and she would not retreat from a bully in her own home.

“I’m disappointed in you, Miss Lake,” Mosely said with a frown. “Surely you don’t think I’m unaware that Nathaniel visited here yesterday. And yet I haven’t heard from you. Do we need to have another discussion about your duty to your state?”

Nadia cursed herself. She should have sent word to Mosely about Nate’s visit even though she hadn’t learned anything. She should have known he’d expect regular updates from his unwilling spy.

“I didn’t have anything to report,” she said. “I was still pretty sick when Nate came by yesterday, and we didn’t talk much.”

Mosely stepped even closer, and this time Nadia couldn’t help moving backward. She didn’t want him close enough to touch her. His lips curved into a pleased smile, and she wished she’d had the nerve to hold her ground. Nothing pleased a bully more than seeing his prey’s fear.

“What you’re telling me,” he said, “is that you had an opportunity to question him about his plans, and you chose not to do so because you had a case of the sniffles.”

“It was the flu!” she snapped, once again letting him see that he’d struck a nerve. She took a deep breath, letting it out slowly and looking away so she didn’t have to see Mosely’s baleful stare. She spent half her life putting on a public face and hiding her true feelings. She could endure public verbal sparring sessions with the Trio without ever letting on when their words hurt her; she could pretend she and Nate were in love—and in lust— when they were nothing more than good friends; she could set all her own needs and wants aside for the sake of following protocol and protecting her family. Why couldn’t she put on a brave face for Dirk Mosely? True, he was physically dangerous to her—and to those she loved—but she was an Executive, damn it. The face she showed to the public was never the real her, and she should be putting on the same front for Mosely that she put on for anyone else.

“I don’t care if it was bubonic plague,” Mosely said while Nadia was still trying to regain her composure. “Time is of the essence, and you don’t seem to be treating your mission with the proper sense of urgency.”

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