Tori studied the Colorado River. Picturing her body floating in the water, unconscious, wound to the head, wasnât comfortable.
She dragged her eyes away to look at Oliver. âSo this is where the hikers found me?â
They were just outside of Buchanan Lake Village. There was nothing in the area but parkland. No buildings. No businesses. Nothing.
âAccording to the police report that Jobs pulled up.â Oliver walked beside Tori. He placed his hand on the small of her back. Warmth penetrated through the material of her clothes to her skin. âLetâs walk up the stream. See if we find anything.â
Tori nodded.
When Oliver had suggested that morning that they search the area where she was found, she was totally on board. She hated days of no progress. She wasnât sure if this would help, but she was willing to give it a try.
Not that she was completely concentrating on her surroundings. Her mind was busy thinking about Oliver. About the questions that had been bugging her.
Tori shot a sideways glance his way. âDid you meet Adrien when you served?â
Oliver ran a hand through his hair. Was it just her, or did he appear uncomfortable? âYeah. We were part of a government project together.â
âWhat was the project?â
âTo work on our recovery and learn how to train more efficiently.â
She stepped over a large rock, feeling Oliverâs hand slide to her elbow. She already felt a trail of goose bumps scattering across her skin from the simple touch. âDid the project achieve its goal?â
Oliver took a few seconds to answer. âIt helped improve our recovery time and training. Yes.â
Why did he sound so uncomfortable talking about it? âHow did Adrien become your enemy?â
He brushed a hand over his frustrated expression. âTori, I think we should concentrate on our surroundings. Me talking will only be a distraction.â
He didnât need to be speaking to be a distraction. âIf I was unconscious in the river, how would I remember any of this?â
âWe donât know how long you were in the water. If we find the point where you fell in, you may remember.â
âShot in.â
Oliver frowned. âWhat?â
âI didnât fall in, I was shot into the water.â No memories needed to know that. âOr pushed in after I was shot. Tossed in from the riverbank.â
His jaw tensed. âFine.â He turned and studied her head. âHowâs the wound, by the way?â
âItâs fine. Almost healed.â Luckily, it hadnât been too severe to begin with.
âSorry.â Oliver looked ahead again but the frown between his brows remained. âI should have asked earlier. Checked in.â
She lifted a shoulder. âIâm not your responsibility.â
He looked like he wanted to say something else, but didnât.
Tori sighed. The man wasnât forthcoming with his emotions, that was for sure.
The next ten minutes passed in silence. Nothing around her ignited any memories. Maybe Oliver was right. Maybe she was too distracted.
âI donât think this is going to work.â Tori negotiated her way around a bush. Oliver helped by pulling the branches aside. âThe doctor said that memories are fragile. My mind will remember when itâs ready and thereâs no point in trying to force anything.â
She kicked a stone and watched it ripple across the river.
âWeâre not trying to force anything.â Oliver stepped in front of Tori as the bank between the trees and water grew narrow. âWeâre giving your brain a little helping hand.â
Tori scoffed. Her brain felt like it needed a bit more than a helping hand. It needed a memory card inserted.
âThereâs a chance it could take me years to remember who I am.â Jeez, if anything was going to depress her, it was that.
âIt wonât.â
The guy was always so damn confident, wasnât he?
Tori studied his body from behind. His tight shirt stretched over his muscled back. His shorts showed enough leg to prove there wasnât a shred of fat there.
What had it felt like to be with himâ¦to touch him?
âThat weekendâ¦was I different?â
She distinctly heard the sigh from Oliver, but he didnât stop walking. âYou were the same butâ¦a bit different, yeah.â
âDifferent how?â
âEvery so often, when you thought I wasnât watching, a contemplative expression would cross your face. A frown here and there. At the time, I thought it might have been work stress. Or stress from other parts of your life.â
At the time. âNow youâre not so sure?â
âNow Iâm not so sure.â
He didnât even try to hide his distrust this time.
âDo you think a bad past can be forgivable?â
He held a branch up for her to duck under, then he picked up his pace. âSome.â
Some. Not all. He didnât need to say that last part.
So, she just had to hope she hadnât been intending to kill the guy. She didnât feel like a killer. As in, she hadnât had the urge to hurt anyone since waking in the hospital. That was good, right?
Oliver was now a fair few yards in front of Tori. No worries, buddy. You go ahead.
Was he trying to avoid more conversation? The idea frustrated her, and she stopped walking. He kept moving, fueling her irritation. Was it so terrible that she wanted answers about his past and whether she was forgivable?
Given the circumstances, he seemed pretty damn unreasonable. It was like he wanted to help her, but only on his terms. Well, that didnât quite work for her.
When he was a good hundred yards away and didnât look close to stopping, Tori huffed out an annoyed breath and finally started to move forward. Immediately, her foot slid off the edge of a large rock, her ankle rolling and pain running up her leg. Crying out, Tori tumbled sideways, right into the river. Her entire body dropped under the water, the chill sweeping through her system.
She was only under for a second before a hand latched onto her upper arm, ripping her clear out in one tug. She landed on the river embankmentâstaring at Oliver in shock.
Tori didnât pay attention to her cold limbs or the throbbing pain radiating from her ankle. Oliver had just run more than a hundred yards in under a second.
That wasnât normal. Not even close.
âJesus, Tori, are you okay?â
Was she okay? No. She wanted to know what the hell was going on. âWhat are you?â
His body went unnaturally still. âWhat?â
âYou were way ahead of me. You shouldnât have been able to pull me out of the water so quickly. And last night, the speed you had to use to get to meâ¦that wasnât normal either.â
Oliver remained still. Studying her. Probably thinking of an answer that would pass for the truth.
She wasnât in the mood for lies. She needed at least one certainty in her uncertain world right now.
At the sound of a body hitting water, Oliver whipped around to see Tori sink below the surface of the river.
He was beside her in seconds. Crouching, grabbing her arm and yanking her from the water. His jaw clenched. This was his fault. He could kick his own ass.
He inspected her body. âJesus, Tori, are you okay?â
He shouldnât have walked so far ahead. Heâd done it because touching her, even just her back, had been wreaking havoc on his system. Hell, heâd been moments away from yanking the woman into his arms. Distance to calm himself had felt necessary.
He hadnât counted on the possibility of her falling into the damn river.
âWhat are you?â
Oliver went still at the question. âWhat?â
Anger crossed her delicate features. âYou were way ahead of me. You shouldnât have been able to pull me out of the water so quickly. And last night, the speed you had to use to get to meâ¦that wasnât normal either.â
Heâd given himself away. Last night, and just now, heâd been careless. So anxious to save the woman, heâd put all his energy into protecting her rather than his secret.
Not that he would ever choose differently.
He debated over what to tell her. What kind of answer she would accept. âI was a Navy SEAL, Tori. Weâre trained to be fast.â
Her eyes narrowed before she started pushing to her feet. Oliver grabbed her arm to help, but Tori yanked it away, almost falling over again in the process. He could have maintained his hold, but didnât want to bruise her.
âI really appreciate your help, Oliver, but what you donât seem to realize is that Iâm putting my entire trust in you. Making myself vulnerable.â
Oliver opened his mouth to tell her he would never hurt her, but she continued before he could.
âIn my dream, Adrien told me he was more than human. Deadlier than any species on Earth. He showed me his strength. Are you like him?â
She knew? âWhy did you keep that from me?â
âThatâs not an answer.â
Tori turned and began to walk back the way they came. No, not walk, limp back the way they came. He studied her ankle, noticing for the first time how swollen it was. Slight bruising was already visible.
Jesus Christ.
âToriâ¦â He reached for her arm, but again, she pulled it back so hard that if he didnât let go, he was certain sheâd injure herself. âYou canât walk on that. Iâll carry you.â
She didnât stop. She didnât even turn her head. Stubborn woman.
âI donât want anything from you but the truth. And donât tell me what to doâI lost my memory, not my ability to think for myself.â
âCould have fooled me,â Oliver muttered loudly enough for her to hear.
Immediately, Tori spun around and limped back to him. He had to clench his fists to stop from grabbing her and lifting her off her injured foot.
She poked her finger at his chest. âDonât. You have no idea what itâs like to lose all your memories! To lose yourself. Iâm trying to piece things together, and right now, Iâm asking if youâre like Adrien. I know I should have told you about him earlier. I know you donât have to tell meââ
âI am.â
âNo. Youâre not. Iââ
âNo.â Oliver took hold of her wrist, sure that she was about to break her finger with her aggressive poking. âI am like him.â
Christ, his team was going to kill him. But the woman already knew. Confirmation or not, she knew.
âYou are?â
âYes. And so are the guys who run Marble Protection with me.â
Some of the fight left her eyes. âHow is that possible?â
âThat project I told you about? It was actually a cover for something else. They gave us drugs that altered our DNA and turned us into the ultimate soldiers. Iâm faster and stronger than I should be. I heal faster. I see in the dark. I hear more than I should.â
With every word Oliver spoke, Toriâs eyes widened. âYou donât look any different than a normal person.â
Oliver grimaced. âIt didnât change our appearance.â What did she expect? Purple veins popping out of his arms and horns on his head? âWhy didnât you tell me about Adrien?â
She wrapped her arms around her waist. âWhen I woke up, I was so fixated on Charlie and the fear of running away. Thenâ¦I donât know. I guess I was scared at what you might say. Scared at what it meant. Then when I saw how fast you were last nightâ¦â She shrugged. âI just wanted you to confirm it for me.â
Thatâs what heâd thought. It was probably why she was taking it so well.
âDid you roll your ankle on purpose? To see what I would do?â
Tori rolled her eyes but there was a ghost of a smile on her lips. âIâm not that desperate. If it came to it though, I might have attacked you to test how fast your reflexes were.â
âAh, yes. That might have worked. Except for the fact that even without my super-strength and speed, Iâm pretty damn fast and strong.â
She lifted a shoulder. âMaybe I am too.â
She wasnât altered. He knew that. âYou took the information really well.â It wasnât every day you found out someone had altered DNA.
The small smile slipped from her lips. âMaybe it wasnât the first time I found out.â
There was a beat of silence. It felt heavy. He didnât say anything because there was nothing to say. She wasnât talking about finding out when Adrien attacked. She was talking about finding out before that. Before she met Oliver.
Sighing, she glanced over Oliverâs shoulder. âDo we keep going?â
âYouâre soaking wet and your ankle needs ice and elevation. I can see youâre already struggling to stand. So no.â
She looked down and studied her foot. âItâs not too bad.â
âI forgot to mention, one of my super powers is that I can spot a lie. Can I carry you back to the car?â
If she said no, he was fully prepared to throw the woman over his shoulder. She wasnât walking on that thing. No way.
She shrugged. âOf course you can. Youâre the strongest species on Earth.â
Shaking his head, Oliver lifted Tori into his arms, liking the way she snuggled into his chest way too much.
âAre you? The strongest species on Earth?â
Oliver began walking toward the car, not caring that his shirt was getting drenched. âNo idea. It hasnât been tested.â Tori leaned her head on his chest. His heart gave a strange kick.
âSo, Adrienâs an enemy because he was part of the project?â
âYes. His team is helping our former commander, Hylar, keep the project alive. Hylar is the co-creator of Project Arma.â Theyâd just killed the other co-creator, Sinclair. But Tori didnât need to know every dirty detail.
She touched her hand to his chest. âI can hear the pain in your voice. Iâm sorry.â
His feet slowed as he glanced down at her. Real empathy showed in her eyes. It was an empathy he was certain couldnât be faked.
Yet again, he was hit with the thought that this woman couldnât have been fighting for the wrong side. Not intentionally.
âThank you.â