But maybe it was fated. She’d been conceived in violence, after all. Maybe that meant she had to leave this life the same way. Was this some cosmic evening out of the scales? Had she never been meant to be born? Was that why the universe saw fit to take her out like this? Or was it some wrong she’d committed in her own life coming back to haunt—
Something big and fast flew at her from the side. More shadow than man. But big. Fully as big as her attacker. A second attacker? Oh, Lord. Were they going to gang-rape her?
Her first attacker grunted as the newcomer barreled into him and Lissa, knocking all of them into a pile on the ground. She rolled clear of the melee of flailing limbs as the two men struggled to untangle themselves.
She scrambled to her hands and knees, sucking air into her oxygen-starved lungs gratefully. Must get up. Run away while they still tried to gain their feet. She must fly like the wind—
But no wind could outrun the wave of psychic power that rolled over her as she panted on the sidewalk. It was as if a great floodgate had swung open and a massive flood of energy clobbered her. The scale of it was staggering. It made the rest of her life look as though she’d been sipping at a trickle of psychic power from a leaky faucet. But this. This was unbelievable. Time had no boundaries; her vision had no limits. Knowledge of all things was right there, hers for the taking.
Something hot and wet and smelling of iron splattered her face, jolting her out of the vision and banging the floodgates of time and power shut. In front of her nose, a fist connected with her attacker’s jaw again. Hard. With a smack of flesh on flesh that spoke of violent intent. Wait. What? The new man had just slugged his partner in crime? Maybe not his partner in crime?
Very belatedly she realized the two men were fighting. The second man was rescuing her! Well, then. That changes things. She pushed to her feet, balled up her fists, waited for an opening...and dived into the fray.
* * *
Max mentally groaned as the woman he’d just rescued leaped into the fracas in a misguided attempt to help him. He could kill this punk here and now if he wanted to, but he was trying hard to keep the guy alive so the police could have a chat with him. The attack on the woman had been too practiced, too perfect, for some amateur lowlife looking to score drug money. This guy was a professional stalker of women.
The woman, however, had different ideas. She seemed hell-bent on killing the bastard and was punching and kicking with all her strength. Although, on second thought, she was probably too tiny to do the guy any serious damage. And it was undoubtedly therapeutic for her to kick the hell out of the punk for scaring her like that.
The stalker finally rolled into a fetal ball with his arms over his head to protect himself from the woman’s fury, which was prodigious now that she wasn’t on the verge of dying.
Max rolled away and pressed to his feet, panting. He jerked his leather bomber jacket back into place and dusted off his jeans, which were torn at one knee. Dammit, he liked these jeans.
“Okay, lady,” he said drily. “That’s enough, or else the cops will charge you with assault when they get here instead of that jackass.”
The woman looked up at him, confused. As if she was just now registering what her feet and fists were doing. “Oh. Oh! Right.” She stumbled back and commenced shaking so hard he could see it from where he stood.
The attacker made a move to jump to his feet and take off, but Max put a hand on the back of the guy’s neck and shoved him down to the ground with casual strength. “You stay right there, or I’ll break your neck.” The punk lurched one more time, and Max increased the pressure. “For real, man. I’ll kill you. Right here. Right now. No compunction.”
The punk subsided.
For good measure, Max went down to one knee, kneeling on the spot between the guy’s shoulder blades and no doubt pressing the stalker’s cheek painfully into the gravel-strewn sidewalk. He glanced up at the woman. “Ma’am, if you’d be so kind as to call nine-one-one. Tell them to send the nearest cruiser. Then tell them to call Detective Bastien LeBlanc and pass the message that Max could use a hand.”
“Is that your name?” the woman asked in a shaky voice close to tears. “Max?”
“Please make the call, ma’am.”
“What is it?”
“What is what? You mean my name?” he echoed blankly. That was a good question. He’d been living under that other name, not his own, for so long, he almost didn’t remember his real name anymore. Not that he had any great fondness for either his real name or his real life. All of it had turned out to be a lie of epic proportions. And he was so caught in this new lie, so deeply ensnared in its tangles, he couldn’t breathe, let alone move.
“Max,” he mumbled. “Call me Max.”
“Max what?”
Damn, she was persistent. “Smith,” he muttered under his breath.
In what little light there was in this crappy corner of town, he made out a faint frown puckering her brow. The sort of frown that said a person didn’t believe what she was hearing and was trying to understand why the speaker would lie to her. An urge to tell her the truth, to tell her his real name, bubbled up from somewhere deep in his gut.
But thankfully a siren’s wail sounded just then, and the woman looked away, relief painted in every sweet line of her face. She was a little thing. She looked like Mary Poppins in that old-fashioned wool coat and those funny curved-heel granny shoes. Her hair was curly, and about half of it remained in a bun at the back of her neck. The rest fell around her face in a wild, sexy riot of curls that fit her face massively better than the old lady attire did.
A police car careened around the corner, and in the glare of the headlights he saw the woman’s curls were dark, dark red. Almost maroon. And she was young, midtwenties maybe. Which he supposed wasn’t that young. It was just the age of his younger sister, who would forever and always be his baby sister, even when she turned old and gray.
Like his sister, the woman trembling in front of him was beautiful in an old-fashioned way. Her skin was porcelain, her lips rosy and full, her eyes huge and dark. Her beauty was soft.
Under any other circumstances but these, he would have registered this woman as ridiculously attractive, walked away from her and then obsessed about her for weeks afterward, kicking himself for not talking to her or at least getting her name and phone number.
It wasn’t that he’d never successfully put the moves on a hot female. But he’d been undercover for so long that he was starting to worry about forgetting how to come on to women at all.
He could not see her figure under that ridiculous coat, but even swathed in heavy wool, she was slight in stature. She hadn’t fought like an athlete. And then there’d been that horrifying moment when she’d started to go into shock. She’d gone limp in her captor’s arms like prey in the jaws of death.
He hadn’t intended to leave his surveillance post. He’d been prepared to let her get robbed, maybe even roughed up a little. But when that bastard had started to drag her away—and, worse, she’d appeared to go catatonic—he’d had no choice but to leave his hidey-hole and act.
She might be the target of his op, but that op did not include watching the damned subject die. He needed her contacts. Her connection to the top leadership of the group he’d spent all these months infiltrating.
It was a huge breach of security protocol to blow his cover like this, to come into direct contact with the person he was supposed to be watching. But what choice did he have? He couldn’t stand by and let that jerk drag her off and do his worst to her. Swearing to himself, he pasted on the bland expression of a casual passerby who was just grateful to have been in