Bound to the Bear Read online

Page 3


  They watched as Cecilia’s expression shifted into a bleak realization that they were both crazy. Her eyes grew dull and her mouth pulled into a tight frown. Her gaze darted to the front door, obviously gauging the distance and wondering if she could make it out before he tackled her or Mother shot her. Her odds weren’t looking too good.

  Meanwhile, Mother obviously read the expression right off Cecilia’s face.

  “Ah hell. Why’d you bring a blind person into this fight? She can’t fix anything she won’t see.” “Blind” was Mother’s word for people who weren’t in on the shifter secret. People who were too set in their own way of thinking to even consider anything supernatural.

  “We have to convince her. I figured Sam might as well help with that.”

  Mother gaped at him. “Sam? Sam?” She waved the shotgun wildly at the barred basement door. “Sam is trying to tear out of here to get—”

  “To the river. I know. We’ve got to stop that. It’s not safe yet.”

  All shifters in their first change had an irrational need to get back to the place of their clan birth. For much of the Michigan grizzlies, that meant Gladwin state park. A whole grizzly pack protected the area just for that reason. But for the Detroit bears, wolves, and some of the cats, it was the River Rouge. Different spots, but all pretty close to one another. For the most part, this happened in the spring and every shifter helped watch for the young. There were even special cabins set up for kids who were expected to pop.

  This was summer, though, and if it weren’t for the Detroit Flu, Sammy would likely have had another year before going grizzly.

  “I told you not to drink the water,” Hank grumbled.

  “Didn’t. But the stupid kid forgot coffee was made with water. Had one of those damned expensive coffees as a birthday treat and bam: fur, snout, and me blocking the basement door. Thought I could handle it but then the howling started.” She jerked her head outside. “Howling and roaring. Finally quieted down and then you brought—”

  Another roar cut through the room, and the hair on Hank’s arms shot straight up. He was well versed in grizzly howls, and this youngling was on the verge of wild panic.

  “I’ve got to go in there,” he said. He motioned with one hand for Mother to move the kitchen table aside.

  “Are you crazy?” Cecilia gasped. He still had her pinned against the wall, but he would need to release her soon. He turned to look at her, wondering just how the hell he was supposed to deal with a panicked doctor on the run while safely taking down a young shifter.

  There was only one way, and damn it, he just didn’t see how it could possibly turn out well. But he really had no choice. So with a quick glance at Mother silently telling her to keep her head, he hauled Cecilia over to the bannister. Good thing he had a full stock of zip ties. He lifted her bound wrists and used another zip tie to latch her to the bannister.

  “Please don’t do this,” she begged.

  He wanted to believe that she meant Please don’t risk your life by facing down an angry grizzly, but he knew better. She was begging him not to restrain her.

  “Please, I’ll listen. I’ll do whatever you say.” She looked over at Mother. “My name is Dr. Cecilia Lu. He’s abducted me from the CDC—”

  “Save your breath,” Mother interrupted. “You’re stupid and blind. Sit there with your eyes open and learn.”

  He sincerely doubted that anyone had ever called Dr. Cecilia Lu stupid. Certainly not an old black lady living near the projects, but he had to give Dr. Lu credit. She didn’t turn huffy or pompous. Instead, she buttoned her lip and waited for another opportunity to escape.

  One problem down. Now he turned to Mother. “Please don’t shoot her. She’s blind right now, but—”

  “Yeah, yeah. What you gonna do about Sammy?”

  He grimaced. “The only thing I can do. Talk bear to bear to calm things down. But once things are quiet, you gotta do the rest. Talk like a person—”

  “I know what to do. You just…” She gestured vaguely with the tip of her shotgun. “Just be careful. We got a brand-new TV down there.”

  And right there was why he liked Mother. Angry wolves outside, kidnapped doc inside, and him about to face down a new grizzly. And what did she care about? Her new TV. He knew she was really saying, Don’t get killed, but sentiment had never been her way, and that’s what made him smile.

  “Got the cable hooked up and everything?”

  She grinned at him. “Looking forward to next year’s Super Bowl.” Then she set the shotgun down. “You can come to the party if you don’t break it.”

  He nodded at her once, accepting the invitation. Then he leaned down and hauled the kitchen table out of the way. Next came the couch, but the noise set Sammy to growling. And the scratches on the door were getting louder. He doubted the thing would hold out much longer even though the door was solid oak. He knew because he had bought and installed it himself in anticipation of this moment.

  Mother looked worriedly at the door, her expression tight. “I’ll open it. Better hurry.”

  He nodded and pulled off his shirt. He’d learned how to strip out of his clothes in under three seconds and he didn’t take much longer this time. Shirt, shoes, pants, underwear. Everything off and set neatly on the couch. Then he turned full frontal to Dr. Cecilia Lu.

  Her eyes were wide, her expression shocked. Then he said slowly and clearly for her benefit. “I’m a shifter. I turn into a black bear. I’m going to do it now.”

  Mother cut in. “So pay attention, girl. Open your eyes.”

  Chapter 4

  List of possible explanations for what she was seeing:

  She was asleep on the lab table and was having one hell of a bad dream.

  She was so exhausted, she was hallucinating.

  She’d caught the Detroit Flu and was hallucinating.

  She’d hit her head, and this is what happened when one had brain damage.

  A zillion other explanations burst through Cecilia’s brain, all of them equally plausible and way more likely than a man being able to turn into a big black bear. That just wasn’t possible, and 100 percent of her brain rejected it out of hand.

  And that’s what finally convinced her to really look at what she was seeing. Because as a scientist she prided herself on exploring all the possibilities. Had aliens abducted the deli guy at her local grocery store? Absolutely possible until she saw evidence of a different explanation. Nessie lived in Loch Ness and came up occasionally to help boost tourism? Unlikely but possible. Big Foot, fairies, even ghosts and all other paranormal activity? She’d consider them along with a dozen more likely explanations.

  But suddenly shifters were 100 percent impossible? Even though she watched a man thick with bulging muscles and zero body fat face her straight on and start to sprout fur. There might have been a golden glow. She didn’t know. It was too fast for her brain to process. But she absolutely saw sleek black fur, a lengthening muzzle, and bright brown eyes flow wider on an expanding face. She watched as he dropped to all fours. As hair—er, fur—rippled down his back into a short, rather cute little tail. And those narrow hips and his tight, manly ass thickened and spread until she saw the rounded back end of a bear.

  But even as she was looking—and maybe screaming a little—his sweet brown eyes remained the same. Sure, they’d flowed outward on a bone structure vastly different than a man’s, but they had the same calm expression, the same color, and the same steady resignation that had been on the man. As if he was doing his best by her but sincerely doubted it would work.

  And then she was looking at a big black bear with liquid eyes and a long pink tongue.

  And yet she was 100 percent sure that she was hallucinating? That was bullshit because nothing was ever 100 percent certain in science. Nothing.

  Which meant…

  Oh hell. Shifters existed.

  She blinked and looked at her environment with a new perspective. Everything appeared the same as it had a second
ago. Big black bear in front of her. Wiry black woman with a shotgun to the left. A wolf’s howl that came from outside, echoed over and over by at least six other voices. Had she been hearing that for a while and just now noticed? How could she not have heard that?

  Mother stepped to the basement door and whipped it open.

  The bear was ready, but so was whatever was on the other side. With a sudden roar, out leapt a grizzly bear. It had light brown fur, sharp white teeth, and a powerful paw that shoved the door into Mother. Or at least it would have if the woman hadn’t leapt onto the couch and out of the way.

  The creature started barreling toward the front door, which is when the black bear—Hank?—caught it on the side. He rammed it with his head, and the grizzly went tumbling. Unfortunately, it went tumbling straight at her. Or maybe not straight at her because it rolled into the wall about four feet away. But damn it, in this tiny house, four feet was too close. Plus, it was pissed as hell as it scrambled back onto all fours and roared.

  The sound cut straight through Cecilia and had her climbing up the bannister as far as her tied hands could go. The black bear looked at her, and she would swear she saw concern in his eyes. Concern. From a bear. But then he focused on the grizzly as he opened up a mouth as big as a truck and roared right back.

  Think logically!

  Her brain tried to tell her that. Her brain tried to tell her that this entire situation was illogical and therefore impossible. She gave her brain the finger and kept her gaze on the fight. But she did allow it to tell her that the black bear’s mouth was in no way the size of a truck. It would, however, feel like a truck had dropped on her if that mouth ever managed to clamp its massive jaws on her.

  Strangely enough, the black bear’s roar was more impressive than the grizzly’s. It was deeper, more sustained, and it didn’t hold that same note of I’m going to eat you in it. Maybe because Hank wasn’t facing her but was squaring off with the grizzly. Or perhaps because it sounded more like a parent telling a child to chill out. Hadn’t she heard her father growl that way at her and her brothers more than once? It was the grumble of a parent who was about to bring punishment. And Cecilia straightened up out of reflex, as much as she could while wrapped around the top of the bannister.

  The grizzly—Sammy?—snapped back. A loud click of its jaws followed by another roar, but it wasn’t as ferocious as before. And it held a note of confusion. And was she really interpreting bear roars? While one of them was inches away from her? Hank was close enough that she felt the heat from his side; she could’ve reached out and stroked the inky black fur if she weren’t tied up. Instead, she tried not to whimper in alarm when Hank blew out angry breaths and bared his teeth.

  Sammy bared right back. Sharp white teeth, flared nostrils puffing in and out, and a small pink tongue that was licking its chops…and then hanging out as it panted. Just like a winded dog. In fact, while Cecilia watched in shock, the grizzly collapsed backward onto its haunches and panted. Just sat there breathing hard, and no wonder. It had been roaring and clawing at that basement door for who knows how long.

  Outside, the wolves howled again. Closer this time. One sounded like it was freaking next door. The grizzly heard it. Sammy’s head snapped up and it pulled its teeth back in a growl. The black bear’s ears twitched. The ear nearest Cecilia seemed to twist back toward the front door, but Hank remained steadfast in squaring off with the grizzly. He grunted, low and kind of rolling, deep in his chest. Not a growl, but not really a grunt either. A grumble? Like a cranky grandfather?

  Hank lumbered forward. No other way to phrase it on a beast his size. He thudded forward until he was muzzle to muzzle with the grizzly. And when he was near enough to take a big bite of the creature, he extended his long pink tongue and groomed the creature’s face.

  Lick, lick, and then a nuzzle.

  At first the grizzly was having none of it. It growled and turned its face away. Damn, if that didn’t look just like a toddler coming out of a tantrum. Cecilia could almost hear the words, I don’t wanna. But Hank persisted. Nuzzles, licks, even a thick paw stroking against the grizzly’s side.

  And wow, just watching that had Cecilia softening. It was beautiful, seeing one bear comfort the other. One big, black, and powerful. The other golden brown and frightened. Truthfully, it was the gentlest thing she’d ever seen. And the idea that it was Hank—the huge black man with a scar who had abducted her—made her entire mind twist in confusion. He’d slammed her face into the seat of his car, he’d zip-tied her twice, and he’d even flipped her over his shoulder and dragged her inside here where he’d turned into a beast.

  And yet he was also gentle and fatherly as he nuzzled a frightened grizzly. She felt the tenderness as surely as if he were nuzzling her. As if that long pink tongue were stroking up her neck and side. It wasn’t sexual, but it was sensuous. In her mind’s eye, she felt the heat of his tongue, the wet scrape of it and the reassurance in it as he groomed the grizzly. And she felt the push of his face against her in a way that begged her to curl her fingers into his ruff and sink deep into the softness of his fur.

  Incredible. And it relaxed her enough that she climbed down from her awkward place on the bannister. She perched on the edge of the stair and watched in a surreal kind of envy as the grizzly continued to settle beneath Hank’s ministrations.

  And then Hank looked up. The grizzly whined at the loss. So did Cecilia, though she didn’t voice it aloud. Hank lifted his dark face and turned to Mother. The woman was still on the couch, though she was sitting there much the way Cecilia was on the stair step. She had her feet under her and the shotgun in her lap, but at Hank’s look, she set the weapon aside.

  “Okay, Sammy. I’m coming over. It’s me, Mother. You know who I am.” She took two steps forward. Then suddenly she snapped out an order. “Say something when I’m speaking to you, child!”

  The grizzly’s head pulled back and it barked out an “Eep.” That’s what the sound was. An eep of startled response, except really deep. And then it opened its mouth wide. Cecilia heard its breath come in and out a couple of times, as if it were trying to talk but couldn’t figure out how.

  So Hank did a kind of long bark. It wasn’t a short burst of sound like a dog’s. More like a rolling symphony of sounds that were guttural and yet had enough tones in it to make it sound like conversation. Weird, but amazingly reassuring because it sounded just like an adult teaching a child how to speak. Especially when he did it again. Once, twice, and then waited patiently as the grizzly tried again.

  The next sound was almost funny. The grizzly grunted but it came out very much like a bark. Short, low, and more like a surprised gasp than anything else. And then the grizzly did it again. And again. Its eyes widened, and it looked straight up at the bear with a kind of look-at-me expression. In response, Hank gave it a long lick with his tongue and a bump with his nuzzle.

  Was that the bear’s form of a fist bump? Had to be because the grizzly did it right back this time. No longer terrified and suddenly as much like a happy puppy as a three-hundred-pound bear could be.

  Until another set of wolf howls cut through the air. Everyone’s head snapped up, including hers. She’d begun to relax on the steps, but suddenly she tensed along with everyone else because those howls were really freaking close.

  Cecilia didn’t know what to do except to look longingly at Hank’s clothes. Somewhere buried in his pants was the Swiss army knife that would cut her free. And now that she heard those wolves outside, she sure as hell wasn’t running out there. Meanwhile, Mother was stepping forward with her own stern tone.

  “All right, Sammy, you’ve had your fun. Time to turn back now.”

  Cecilia frowned as she looked at the woman. She’d set aside her shotgun and stood there in front of both bears with her hands on her hips and her legs spread wide. She looked calm but stern, like a mother telling a child it was time to turn off the video games. Her brow was arched, and she looked like she was counting in her head. Def
initely a by-the-count-of-three-please look.

  Everyone looked at the grizzly. Hank’s big bear head, Cecilia from her place on the stairs, and even the grizzly looked down at itself. Time to change back? Like into a human?

  Again, Cecilia’s mind tried to express that it was impossible, but that was a small, shrinking portion of her mind. The rest was eagerly anticipating the sight. Just where would all that mass go? What about the fur? What would Sammy look like as a human?

  And they all waited.

  And waited.

  Then Mother lost her patience.

  “Now!” she snapped. Loud enough that everyone except Hank jumped: Mother from the force of her demand, Cecilia because she was startled, and the grizzly because the child had probably been conditioned to respond to that tone from childhood.

  It worked. The huge creature shimmered as she jerked to respond to Mother. There was a golden glow to the transformation, but it was gone in the blink of an eye. The grizzly’s golden brown fur seemed to disappear into it and reform into a young black woman. Her pale brown body had a sturdy frame, a sweet face, and neat braids of black hair tucked against her head. And her liquid brown eyes sparkled with triumph as she grinned up at Mother.

  “I did it! Mother, I did it!”

  “That you did, little girl,” Mother said, her tone filled with pride.

  Then she looked at the big black bear and threw her arms around him. “Hank, I did it!”

  Hank chuffed in a note of clear pride, and his long tongue licked her neck. She was completely naked, but no one seemed to notice. Cecilia only did because her medical mind was cataloging the girl’s body and seeing no deformities, no scars, and nothing different from a human girl of approximately sixteen years. If anything, she—

  Crash!

  The explosion of sound and glass caught Cecilia completely off guard. As did the stinging cuts from the shattered window. She would have screamed. The sound was startling enough. But by the time she drew breath, every part of her had seized up in terror. Because there, leaping into the center of the living room was the largest dog she’d ever seen.