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Ocean Light (Psy-Changeling Trinity) by Nalini Singh (45)

Chapter 45

We’re heading to Ryūjin. Apply for leave.

—Edison Kahananui to his brothers Armand, Teizo, Tevesi, and Taji

“I HAVE TO go.” Kaia’s voice twined around Bo in the darkness, the sadness in it tempered by the warmth of who she was at the core: a caretaker.

. . . all that girl knows how to do is love.

Bebe was right; love was at the core of Kaia’s psyche. Which made her terrible loss as a child even harder to think about. From “the three Lunatics” to a single lonely girl. Rolling them over so that she was below him, Bo nuzzled at her nose in the way she’d done to him when they were alone and in bed, and he silently called himself a selfish bastard for being unable to let her go even when he knew the scars that marked her.

“Are you sure?” he asked with another nuzzle.

Her smile was a glow. “I have to wake up in a few hours to bake pastries. I promised the children.”

And his Kaia was a woman who kept her promises. “I’ll walk you to your room.” Rising to his feet, he held out a hand and tugged her up. Then, bending, he scooped up Hex and placed the mouse in his front pocket.

When Kaia slipped her hand in his and swung their clasped hands back and forth, Bowen’s blood surged with a youthful joy he hadn’t felt since before that bloody day in the barn. He felt old more often than not. A man burdened with a thousand worries, his entire adult life spent attempting to put humans on the chessboard on an equal footing.

No longer disposable pawns but opponents worthy of respect.

Bo didn’t regret the choice. He’d taken on the task with open eyes and a passionate heart. He would split his veins to keep the Alliance strong. It was as much—more—a part of him as the mechanical heart that beat in his chest.

But every dream, every ambition, had a price. He’d become an adult too early. Had never chased girls or stolen a kiss in the rain or snuck out at night to throw pebbles at a crush’s window. While other boys did exactly that, Bo and Cassius had hounded Bo’s father for information about the Alliance and picked up after-school jobs so they could pay for hand-to-hand combat training. They’d also pitched in with hard physical chores around his parents’ small farm far more than was expected, doing everything in their power to become stronger.

Neither one of them would ever again be an easy target.

But in all that drive, all that coldly burning anger, Bo had buried a part of himself so deep it had taken a siren to awaken it. That part was young and painfully hopeful and scared.

Bo could control many things, but not the chip or the compound.

“Why so quiet, Tall, Dark, and Handsome?” Kaia’s smile was mischievous as they left the habitat, her onyx eyes dancing. “Plotting something nefarious?”

“Always.” Bo rubbed at his jaw like a B-movie villain, felt the scrape of stubble against his skin.

Dropping his fingers from his jaw, he ran the back of his knuckles across Kaia’s cheek and down her throat. “I need to shave,” he murmured. “I’ve marked you.”

A whistle sounded down the connecting bridge to habitat one.

Kaia’s eyes jerked that way, as did Bo’s.

It was Mr. Dead Clams—currently wearing gray coveralls with a station logo on one breast, and carrying what looked like an engineer’s tool kit. “Putting the moves on our favorite chef,” he said when he got closer, good-naturedly enough for someone who’d struck out with Kaia himself.

“Good luck, man.” He slapped Bo on the back of one shoulder as he passed, his midnight skin gleaming blue-black under the simulated moonlight. “I wouldn’t want to be you when Edison and the others find out.” A glance at Kaia. “Did you warn him?”

“About what?” Kaia said with a scowl.

Walking backward down the corridor, Dead Clams called back, “You’re a cruel woman, Kaia Luna, but you make the best pierogi in the universe.” And to Bowen, “Watch your back. They hunt as a pack.”

Bo hadn’t needed the warning; he knew what it was to be a protective older brother—he’d run a background check on every single man Lily had ever dated. He’d also had more than one talk with said men. The last time Lily had found out about the latter—back when she was sixteen—she’d threatened to brain Bo with her softball bat. Not that it had stopped him. He’d just gotten sneakier about checking up on the men who wanted to lay hands on his baby sister.

Kaia had grown up with her cousins; they might as well be her brothers.

She rolled her eyes now. “I don’t know what Junji is going on about. Mal, Eddie, and the others wouldn’t dare interfere in my private life. It’s hardly as if they’re monks.”

Oh, shit. Mal and the others clearly had sneaky down pat.

Junji was right: Bo had better watch his back.


•   •   •

DESPITE the warning, Bo was still taken by surprise midmorning on the fifth day following Junji’s caution. He was running on the track in the central habitat when he found himself surrounded by five sleekly muscled men with brown eyes that ran the gamut from a near-hazel to close to black, brown skin both darker and lighter than his, and damp black hair that went from slick straight to thick and curling.

The odd droplet of water gleamed on the skin of more than one. All five wore blue jeans, and T-shirts of various shades that stuck to the dampness of their bodies, their feet bare.

“Kaia’s cousins, I presume.” The family resemblance with Dr. Kahananui was startling despite the range of their looks. “Where’s Mal?”

“Busy,” said the biggest one, his voice quiet. “He gave me his blessing to beat you twice if necessary. Once for me. Once for him.”

“Nothing political, you understand,” said the one in the tight black T-shirt whose hair was actually combed rather than just towel-dried and left at that. “This is about family.”

The five of them began to herd him toward a quiet part of the habitat; the section was drenched in shadow as a result of the trees that shaded it. All five Kahananui males moved with a predatory grace that said they’d had training, but Bo was a security specialist—he could’ve extricated himself ten times over. However, he decided to allow this to run its course. If the roulette wheel in his brain stopped at the thin five percent wedge, then he’d have to deal with Kaia’s cousins the rest of his life.

Might as well start things off on a good footing if he could.

Having been backed into a corner, he leaned up against the transparent wall. “Bowen.” He held out a hand. “And I happen to think your cousin is the most fascinating woman I’ve ever met.”

All he got in return were gimlet stares and folded arms.

Dropping his hand, he attempted another tactic. “I have a sister, too,” he said, in case Malachai hadn’t already shared that information. “I understand the protective instinct, but it’s not necessary here.”

A kind of a rumbling sound from the cousin closest to him, one of two in white T-shirts. “Kaia doesn’t know how to protect herself from men like you.”

“Men like me?”

“A human who sees her as a trophy or a curiosity. A notch on his bedpost to boast about—that time I bedded a mermaid. A fucking human fantasy.”

Bo straightened up from his relaxed position, his shoulders squared. “First of all, Kaia’s too fucking smart to be taken in by the kind of asshole you’re describing. And secondly, speak like that about her again and I’ll rearrange your nose until you forget it was ever straight.”

The cousin in question took a step forward, his feet pressed up against Bowen’s shoes. “Do you really believe you can take me, human?”

Bo slipped past the other man, twisted his arm behind his back, and kicked out his knees to send him slamming into a kneeling position before the dark-haired male knew what was happening. “I could’ve twisted your head back to snap your neck,” he said quietly, “but Kaia likes you.”

He released the man. “You are not getting in the way of my courtship.” The continued hunt for the traitor within the Alliance combined with Dr. Kahananui’s tests and scans and recalibrations sucked up most of his time, but he’d talked Kaia into a dance in the kitchen late last night, after which they’d gone swimming in the otherwise deserted pool.

He’d been her sous chef one day, learned why her cousins called her Cookie.

Another day, he’d joined in while she babysat the “minnows.”

She went swimming in the black while he was in the lab, so they’d have as much time together as possible. But she still mischievously refused to confirm her animal, laughing and telling him he had to figure it out from the clues. “I have faith in you, security chief.”

Her playful words had hurt him—because he couldn’t honor the deeper faith she showed in him, not in the way he wanted to honor it. He couldn’t make any promises until he knew if he’d be whole at the end of the experiment, but he could show Kaia what she meant to him. She’d have that if nothing else. She’d know it hadn’t been a waste or a mistake but a brilliant, blinding moment of joy.

He’d permit no one to obstruct the memories of happiness he wanted for her.

Not even the five men who stared at him with eyes gone obsidian. Inhuman.

The one he’d taken down reached up to massage his abused shoulder, but it was the quiet and watchful one with a scar along his jaw and the pale brownish-hazel eyes who said, “He could look after Kaia.”

Bowen’s blood cooled. “Are you worried about a specific threat? Give me the details.”

Kaia’s cousins grinned.

A second later, he was being hugged, the back of his shoulder slapped—a little too hard by the cousin he’d taken down—and his hand shaken.

“Kaia has a soft heart,” the quiet one said afterward.

“Marshmallow soft,” added the one with the combed hair as straight as Lily’s and the black T-shirt. “Don’t bruise it.”

“Or we’ll beat you dead,” the remaining three said in concert.

Bo knew Kaia was far stronger than her cousins realized. The same no doubt applied to Bowen and Lily. But Bo would be running security checks until he was dead—and Kaia’s cousins would protect her to their last breath. “Did you just swim down?” he asked now that the formalities were over.

One of the younger three thrust his fingers through hair that was straight and thick except for a curl at the edges. “Had to. We got word that you were putting the moves on Kaia.”

“I’m starving,” another added. “Let’s go raid the kitchen.”

Bo finally got their names on the way to the kitchen: Edison, Armand, Teizo, Tevesi, and Taji. Last name Kahananui. Middle name Suzuki. The latter came out when they commented on the genesis of his name and asked about Adrian Kenner—Mal had apparently mentioned that connection at some point.

Because of course the other security chief had ferreted out the information.

“Mal’s not big into signs and omens,” Edison said in a measured way that was already becoming familiar. “But it meant something to him and Miane and the rest of us that you were a direct descendant of Kenner’s.”

Bowen hadn’t known until right then that his ancestry had helped BlackSea decide to trust him. It made the current state of suspicion and dangerous doubt even more troubling. Bowen silently reaffirmed his vow to fix what was fractured, returning the Alliance and BlackSea to the path they’d been following before Hugo’s dossier and Bowen’s chilling realization that Alliance Fleet ships had indeed breached BlackSea’s borders.

Setting aside that deeply problematic truth for this moment when he was getting to know more of Kaia’s family, he said, “Suzuki a family name?” He was curious of everything about his siren.

“Dad’s surname,” Armand shared. “He took Mom’s surname since one of her sisters decided to be a Lunatic and the other a Rhys.”

“Kahananui is way more awesome,” Tevesi said. “Suzuki Kahananui is even better—both names go all the way back to the founding of BlackSea. Girls are always like, wow, that’s such a cool name, tell me more. And boom, I’m in.”

All five brothers grinned in agreement.

“We have Suzuki cousins, too,” Armand added. “All much older than us, since Dad’s the baby of his family. Seven brothers and sisters.”

“Is he the one who brought in the fertile gene?” Bowen joked.

“He takes total credit,” Teizo confirmed with a grin. “Mom keeps pointing out he couldn’t exactly reproduce by himself, but Dad’s all ‘La-la-la, I can’t hear you, I’m the maaaaan.’”

The five cracked up in a booming bass of laughter.

By now, Bo had them all separated in his head.

Edison had the scar on his jaw and a presence that shouted his big- brother status.

Armand was the one who’d found a comb and the time to fold up the short sleeves of his black T-shirt to better show off his biceps and the intricate tribal tattoo that circled his upper left arm. He was also the one with razor-blade cheekbones fit for a catwalk model.

Teizo, Taji, and Tevesi were each unique in personality, but had faces and bodies so similar that . . . “Triplets?”

“Identical.” Tevesi bumped fists with the other two.

Bo looked from one to the other. “You have a freckle on your left cheekbone below your eye.” He switched his attention to Teizo. “You have a tooth that’s just slightly out of alignment.” Last was Taji. “And you have a small mark on the side of your neck that’s probably a childhood scar.”

“Fuck it,” Taji muttered. “You’re just like Mal.” A glare.

Armand shrugged. “He’s always been Kaia’s favorite.”

“Speak for yourself, asshole,” one of the triplets muttered. “I’m her favorite.”

The entire atrium went dead silent when Bo walked in with the five brothers. Clearly, they’d all expected him to end up at least a little bloody. He was happy to see that, Alden aside, the others looked relieved—Oleanna and KJ even sent him discreet thumbs-ups.

An odd twisting in his chest.

It was good to know Ryūjin’s residents liked him enough to worry about him—and respected him enough to leave him to deal with the Kahananui brothers on his own.

“Sera, my darling, my delicious cupcake, where are Attie and Kaia?” Armand lifted Seraphina off her feet to her shriek of outrage.

One of her emerald green heels fell to the floor.

Slapping him on the chest, her nails polished a matching green, the assistant station commander said, “Attie’s in her lab and Kaia’s making a very sensitive soufflé, you pest. Wait thirty minutes before bothering her or she’ll serve you deflated soufflé as punishment.” But Seraphina couldn’t keep up the stern tone when brother after brother picked her up for a cuddle and a kiss on the cheek.

It was as obvious as the nose on his face that the six had a relationship that permitted such familiarity. Changelings, he’d come to see, were more careful about skin privileges than the outside world realized—they never took physical contact for granted or treated it as anything but a cherished gift.

Seraphina’s laughter was husky and as open as her affection for the Kahananui brothers. “Menaces, all five of you,” she said. Then she grabbed Edison’s face and planted a kiss on his lips that had steam coming out of the man’s ears.

Other clanmates hooted and hollered, while his brothers stamped their feet and let out a set of piercing whistles that sounded strangely familiar to Bowen’s ears.

Sliding her foot back into her lost high heel afterward, while quiet, intense Edison stared at her like he’d never before seen her, Seraphina turned her formidable attention on Bowen. “Since you survived them, I’m beginning to believe that you, too, are a menace.”

Bo smiled slowly. “Mahalo.”

Scowling when Edison rumbled a question at her, Seraphina turned to respond. But Bo didn’t hear either question or answer: his head throbbed.

Once.

Twice.

Sharp spears of electric sensation down his arms.

Sudden numbness in his fingertips.

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