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The Drafter

Page 106

   


Bills eyebrows were raised, and Allens hand slipped from hers in a silent rebuke. Shed probably just hurt her case for returning to active duty, but she didnt care.
Just forget I said that, Peri said as she lifted her paper cup of hot milk and caffeine. Im fine. Im happy. See? She took a long drink, trying to minimize her anger while in front of three psychologists, her boss, and Allen.
You are not fine, Sandy said, and the man at the bar nodded in agreement. But moping around here isnt doing you any good. You need to go do something.
Breath catching, Peri looked up. Is she serious?
Allen beamed. See, Bill? Sandy thinks its a good idea. We need to get out of here. My cast comes off today. Give us something. I can do my physical therapy in the car.
Anticipation coursed through her as she looked at the faces around her, the first shed felt in months. It felt good, so good.
Hold up. Bill raised a thick hand. Nothing happens until I hear Frank and Sandy tell me shes good to draft.
Peri stifled a shiver when Sandy glanced at Frank, and when Frank nodded, Allen made a fist, pumping it once. Yes-s-s-s! he said softly.
Theres been minimal change in Peris state these last few weeks, Sandy said. I think the only way to shake things loose is to let her go. My larger concern is Allen.
Allen looked up, shocked, as he pushed his glasses back up his nose. Me?
Yes, you. Sandy pointed an accusing finger at him. You need to let go of the shared past you and Peri have. Your reactions are confusing her, causing more trouble than her missing memories. If you dont treat her as if shes trustworthy, she never will be.
Allen seemed to shrink down into himself under their hard gazes. Its harder for me than you. Im with her all the time.
Franks hand twitched, and Sandy reached to still it. The man at the bar turned his back to them, and Peri wondered if more was being said than it seemed. Allen, you are holding her back, Sandy said. Peri is highly intuitive, and she knows youre not accepting her. Now, are you going to admit you have a problem and work with her to overcome it, or are you going to sit there and blame her for everything? Shes trying. Are you?
Miserable, Peri wondered if this was why she hadnt felt accepted. Her anchor was sitting right next to her, but if he didnt trust her, then he wasnt there at all.
Im sorry, Allen said, and a lump swelled in her throat when he pulled her into a hug. Peri, Im so sorry. Shes right. Ive been treating you as if youre suddenly going to remember everything, and it just doesnt work like that. Peri let her head thump into him, breathing his scent andletting go of her fears. Give me a chance, he whispered. I just need some time.
Peri was smiling as he pushed back, but she dropped her gaze when he looked at her lips as if he was going to kiss her. Not in front of Bill, Frank, and Sandy!
Okay, she said, feeling as if something had shifted. Everything seemed possible now. It had to get better.
Ahh, hell, Frank said. Give them something, Bill. Something that involves sun and very little clothing. They need to get out and find themselves.
I just wanted to hear you say it. Bill reached behind his coat for a red-rimmed, short-life tablet and an envelope sporting Optis logo. Where are we going? Allen said as he took them.
Bill smiled at Peris clearly eager expression. Finally. Let me know if youre comfortable. Forgive me if it looks too easy, but Opti can survive you taking cream-puff tasks for a while. Besides, your knee is going to need several weeks of rehab.
Must be first-year stuff, she thought, leaning to look when Allen peeked past the flap to see boarding passes, then punched his Opti code into the tablet. It lit up, the small countdown at the top showing they had seventy-two hours before it scrambled its motherboard, destroying any electronic evidence of their task.
Come on, Frank. Sandy stood to pull him into her wake. Let the professionals get to work. She grinned at Peri. Its good to see you where you belong, honey.
Peris smile froze as Sandys last word echoed in her mind. Sandy had called her honey before, but it hadnt been nice. Suddenly Peri realized Sandy had noticed, and she forced her expression to brighten until Sandy turned away. Jeez, am I that paranoid? Frank and Sandy were good people. Shed known them since her first days in Opti.
First drink is on us when you get back, Frank said. Knock em dead, Peri.
She took a breath to answer, hesitating when the guy at the bar slid from the stool to leavehead down as if depressed. Peri stifled a shiver, not knowing why. Small, positive noises came from Allen as he looked everything over. This is nice, he said. Bill, well take it.
Bill stood. Ill leave you to it, then. Peri, do you want us to move your things to Allens while youre gone?
Sure, Peri said, vowing that she was going to make this work. The cold fact was that drafting came with the risk of losing memories, and it was only a matter of time before you lost a large chunk as she had. She had survived. Her relationship with Allen would, too. Yes, please, Peri said, leaning over until she bumped Allens shoulder and cast him a significant look. He gave her a preoccupied smile. At the bar, a flash of light intruded as the blond man left.