Mine to Possess

Mine to Possess by Nalini Singh Page B

Book: Mine to Possess by Nalini Singh Read Free Book Online
Authors: Nalini Singh
couldn’t even hear him breathe. Her frustrated anger disappeared, to be replaced by a sense of slow horror. She hadn’t meant to tell him, didn’t want him motivated by pity. “Just forget it. It has no bearing on anything.”
    He growled at her again and this time it was for real, a low rumbling sound that made her clutch at the wall, even as something long buried inside of her stirred in wary interest. “Stop it,” she said, pushing at his chest. It was like trying to shift a steel wall. He was hard, warm…beautiful. “Clay.”
    â€œForget it?” His voice wasn’t quite human. “Forget it?”
    She wanted to stroke him, had some mad idea it would calm him. Dropping her hands, she pressed her palms back against the wall. “There’s nothing you can do,” she stated in the face of his aggression. “Remember when I used to get sick as a kid?”
    Black clouds rolled across his face. “I remember.”
    â€œNot that kind of sick,” she said quickly, knowing he was recalling the secrets she’d kept in a childish effort to protect him from her shame. “I used to faint, and sometimes I’d have odd patches of lost memory, when usually I remember everything?”
    He nodded. “But you always remembered those things in a few days’ time.”
    â€œI never grew out of that.” She was referring to the diagnosis of the harried doctor who had performed her mandatory childhood health checks. “It’s gotten worse year by year. When I lose consciousness, I stay that way for longer periods. The memories sometimes don’t come back at all.”
    His eyes went even more impossibly cat. “Who told you you were dying?”
    â€œThree different specialists.” She had gone to them four months ago, after losing most of a day to a fugue state. Things had only gone downhill from there. So much so that, after she found Jonquil, she planned to resign from her position at Shine. “They all agreed my brain’s not working properly. It’s almost as if I have something eating away at my cells.”
    â€œYou see an M-Psy?”
    She shook her head.
    â€œWhy not? They’re no humanitarians, but M-Psy can diagnose things far more accurately than normal doctors.”
    â€œI didn’t want to—they rub me the wrong way.” Her skin began to creep with dread every time she came near an M-Psy. “The other doctors were certain the Psy probably wouldn’t be able to help anyway.”
    â€œWe’ll see.”
    She didn’t bother to argue—she could almost feel her brain dying, step by excruciating step. It wasn’t something anyone could stop. “Our first focus has to be on finding Jon,” she said. On that one point, she would not compromise. “I can wait.”
    The skin along his jawline strained white over bone. “How long before you go critical?”
    â€œIt’s hard to predict.” Not technically a lie. The doctors’ estimates had ranged from six to eight months. None of the three had differed in their actual diagnosis: Unknown neural malignancy with potential to cause extensive cell death. Risk of eventual fatal infarction — one hundred percent . “Even if I knew the date of my death to the day, Jon comes first.” Not even Clay could sway her from that goal.
    He pushed off the wall, temper evident in every rigid line of his body. “Go set yourself up on the third floor.”
    She stayed in place. “Do I look like a dog? ‘Go set yourself up on the third floor,’” she mimicked, dangerously aware she was provoking the leopard.
    â€œYou look like an exhausted, idiotic woman,” he snapped. “Would you rather I yell at you for the next hour like I want to?”
    â€œWhy would you yell?”
    â€œYou should’ve come to me years ago.” He turned from her, hands fisted, and she knew they were no

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