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Liz Maverick - Crimson Rogue

Here you can read online Liz Maverick - Crimson Rogue full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2006, publisher: Love Spell, genre: Science fiction. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Liz Maverick Crimson Rogue

Crimson Rogue: summary, description and annotation

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Overview: Crimson City is a paranormal action romance series matching fabulous kick-ass heroines with the sexiest, toughest heroes from the five sentient species on Earth.Its passionate, intense, action-packed, apocalyptic, totally out-of- the-box,and yet still, at heart, deeply and darkly romantic. Crimson Citys got it all vampires, humans, werewolves, mechs, and demons, making for one of the biggest, baddest paranormal show-downs the romance genre has ever seen.

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Chapter One Someone was definitely following him but Finn made a point not - photo 1
Chapter One Someone was definitely following him but Finn made a point not - photo 2
Chapter One

Someone was definitely following him, but Finn made a point not to look over his shoulder. He didn't have to; he could tell. Picking up the pace, he pulled his jacket closer around him and cut across the street.

It happened no more than once a month, but it wasn't something a guy really wanted to get used to: Someone would figure him out or at least think they had figured him out. And it wasn't just the B-Ops teams. They were the least of Finn's worries. He could track them on his black-market scanner, even tap into their comms and listen to them talk on the job.

It was the rest of themthe bounty hunters. And every time he found himself in this position, there were only two questions he had to ask himself. Whoever was after him, did they work for the humans, the vampires, the werewolves or the demons? And the second question was: Do they know what I am? Being robbed was one thing. Being revealed, something else entirely.

The longer Finn lived in the heart of CrimsonCity, the more experience dulled his once razor-sharp instincts. There were so many sensations and emotions competing for his attention. When he'd first hit the streets and slipped the Grid, he could hardly think for himself.

The Grid was the network that served as the technological backbone of CrimsonCity's enforcement matrix; it was how the Ops teams communicated. OpsCrimsonCity's human government's intelligence agency. Part FBI, part CIA, part Special Forces, they were the ones who handled everything. The Grid was how their Battlefield division out on the streets connected to the intelligence division behind the walls of the base. It was how they supported their comm devices, how they linked up the computer systems and how they controlled their mechs. Having escaped the Grid, Finn might be a wanted man, but he wasn't traceable and no one could tell him what to do.

Everything had been instinct, programming, training. Everything he was supposed to know had been drilled into his head and body so many times that he'd never thought he could escape. But then he'd found himself in the middle of a veritable war zone instead of the antiseptic calm of the Ops barracks. It had been an assault on the senses and then he'd grown to appreciate it.

He'd spent most of his first free days rotating through the city's bookstores, attracting little notice as just another member of the city's large homeless population; then, rather quickly, he'd begun to assimilate to the new world. He wasn't living any longer on the few fragments of thought that some faceless organization allowed. Maybe that made him a weaker soldier, but it made him a better man.

"Drop your bag, put your hands on top of your head, walk into the alley, turn around and face the wall."

Finn froze in his tracks. Hell . He let the strap of his bag slip off his shoulder and slide down his arm. His satchel hit the sidewalk with a dull thud. He could just whip around and have done with it, or he could give the man a chance to be mistaken. "You've got the wrong guy," he said.

"I don't think so. Move it."

Finn stayed where he was. "You've got the wrong guy," he repeated more forcefully. "Understand?"

Something blunt jabbed between his shoulder blades. Finn stumbled forward into the alley, pulling his hood up around his head more securely while raising his gloved hands. He heard the clink of the brass links on his bag's strap as the man picked it up and moved behind him into the alley.

And so it goes . CrimsonCity was more of a jungle than ever, the prospect of some kind of peacereal peacefar off on the horizon. The most anyone hoped for these days was less bloodshed.

With the kind of detachment that came from experience, Finn lay down on the ground at the end of the alley on his stomachtoo slow, of course, for the bounty hunter's taste. A boot came down predictably on his back, shoving him into the slime, but allowing Finn to hide his hands underneath his body without attracting attention. Finn turned his head to the side, listening as the hunter fumbled with his equipment. Handcuffs, probably. Rope, perhaps.

It was more the simple lack of trust than a predisposition to hate that made the streets of CrimsonCity so very unpredictable these days. Which, in a roundabout way, was what had brought both Finn and the bounty hunter to this moment. In a world of "us" and "them," the lines of safety and inclusion were becoming muddy. Terrible things were happening. And rather than band together, the human, vampire and the werewolf inhabitants pulled even further apart, the vampires escaping into their old-world opulence and endless luxuries atop skyscrapers in the highest strata of the city, the werewolves burying themselves in a technological wonderland in the strata belowground, and the humans locking themselves indoors at street level.

Of course, maybe they were smart to do that. Urban unrest was the least of what CrimsonCity's citizens had to fear. There were also the demons who had broken through from Orcus to launch an offensive on the city. It had taken three government agencies to put it down, and not before a hell of a lot destruction had been wreaked.

How, in the middle of a problem of that magnitude, anybody could care about one failed experiment like him was hard to understand. But they did care.

A sudden weight came down on Finn's back as the bounty hunter knelt on top of him. Good. Now the man was close enough for him to do something about it.

"Hello? Can you understand me? I said, take off your glove or I'll put a bullet in your head."

"I can't move," Finn pointed out.

The bounty hunter shifted a bit, freeing up Finn's right hand. Finn squeezed his eyes shut, working to control his anger, and brought his hand to his mouth to pull the leather glove off using his teeth.

The bounty hunter grabbed him by the wrist. There was a silence. Then: "Holy shit. Holy shit ! That's what I thought I saw. You are the one."

The hunter pressed Finn's arm back down on the ground above his head. Finn squeezed his eyes shut, working to master his rage. He didn't want to do it. He always gave them an out. Maybe this time, the guy would take it. "I'm going to beg here, okay? Please. Please, let me go. You've made a mistake. I don't know what you think you see, but you've made a mistake."

The hunter leaned over him, his mouth up to Finn's ear. "You're the biggest score in town. You're the Holy Grail. Do you even know how much you're worth?"

Finn frowned. He hadn't heard anything about that.

"Ops just increased the reward money. Those guys still want you, man. After all, you're what started this mess, yeah?"

They started this mess, I just couldn't stop it. But nobody controls me anymore. Nobody . "I'm a human being like you. Have a little mercy."

"I wouldn't know exactly what to call you, but you're definitely not human."

Finn's temperature instantly spiked, and wrath swept through him unfettered. "Son of a bitch . I am human."

The hunter snatched the hood off Finn's face, grabbed him by the hair and wrenched his head back, then ran the muzzle of an automatic weapon across the thin metal at Finn's temple. "My god." A greedy laugh burst from his mouth. "No dice, metal man. You're going down, and I'm the one who gets to take you."

With faster-than-normal-human reaction time, Finn whipped out his left arm, grabbed the hunter's ankle and pulled the man's feet out from under him. The hunter yelled in terror, releasing an arc of bullets into the air as he lost control and was slammed back down to the pavement. Finn rolled to one side of the alley; the hunter rolled the opposite way. Each man stared at the other as the shower of metal slugs rained down between them. As the last slug hit the ground, the two men sprang forward, the hunter going for his weapon, Finn going for the hunter and slamming the man's face into the cement.

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