Loyalty in Death
security computer verified her identification, and the locks snicked open.
    She stepped inside, closed the door behind her, and let out a long breath.
    Weapons of violence through the ages were displayed, somehow elegantly, in the great room. Encased in glass, showcased in beautiful cabinets, gleaming on the walls were guns, knives, lasers, swords, pikes, maces. All testaments, she thought, to man’s continued ambition to destroy man.
    And yet, she knew the weapon strapped to her side was as much a part of her as her arm.
    She remembered the first time Roarke had showed her this room, when her instinct and her intellect had been waging a battle. One telling her he could be the killer she sought, the other insisting it wasn’t possible.
    The first time he’d kissed her had been here, in this private museum of war. And another element had been added to her personal battle: her emotions. She’d never quite gotten her emotions back on track when it came to Roarke.
    Her gaze skimmed over a case of handguns, all illegal but for collections like this since the Gun Ban implemented decades before. Clumsy, she thought, with their bulk and their weight. Lethal with their propulsion of hot steel into flesh.
    Taking such impulsive killing devices off the street saved lives, she was sure. But as Lisbeth Cook had proved, there were always new ways to kill. The human mind never tired of dreaming them up.
    She took the rack out of her bag, then studied her choices to find one that would fit.
    She’d narrowed it down to three side arm types when the door behind her opened. She turned, intending to scald Summerset for interrupting, and Roarke strolled in.
    “I didn’t know you were here.”
    “I’m working at home today,” he told her and lifted a brow. She looked a little frazzled, he noted, a bit distracted. And alluring.
    “Do I assume the same for you, or are you just playing with guns?”
    “I’ve got a case, sort of.” She set the rack down, gestured to it. “Since you’re here, you’d be better at this. I need an army-issue blaster, Urban War style, that would fit into this rack.”
    “U.S. Army?”
    “Yeah.”
    “European style’s a bit different,” he commented as he walked to a display cabinet. “The U.S. had two hand blasters during that period, the second — toward the end of the war — was lighter, more accurate.”
    He chose a piece with a long double over-and-under barrel and molded grip in a dull gray. “Infrared sight, heat-seeking directional. The blast can be toned down to stun — which would drop a two-hundred-pound man to his knees and have him drooling for twenty minutes — or tuned up to shoot a fist-sized hole in a charging rhino. It can be pinpointed or scattered to wide range.”
    He turned the weapon over, showing Eve the controls on either side. She held out her hand, testing the weight when Roarke passed the weapon to her.
    “Can’t weigh more than five pounds. How does it charge?”
    “Battery card in the butt. Same principle as a clip on an old-fashioned automatic.”
    “Hmm.” She turned and tried it in the rack. It slid in, settled snug, like a foot in a comfortable shoe. “Looks like a winner. Are there many of these around?”
    “That depends on if you choose to believe the U.S. government, which claims that the vast majority were confiscated from its troops and destroyed. But if you believed that, you wouldn’t be the cynic I know and love.”
    She grunted. “I want to test this out. You’ve got a battery card, right?”
    “Of course.” He picked up the gun and rack himself, walked to the wall, and opened the panel. Frowning a little, Eve got on the elevator with him.
    “Don’t you have to go back to work?”
    “That’s the beauty of being the boss.” He smiled as she hooked her thumbs in her pockets. “What’s this about?”
    “I’m not sure. Probably a waste of time.”
    “We don’t get to waste nearly enough time together.”
    The doors opened to the

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