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Clawed (Were-Soldier Warriors Book 1) by Kym Dillon (9)

Jessica looked up with surprise when she heard running water.

"There's a river ahead?" she asked, and Marcus smiled at her.

"A river has fish in it, and in most cases, a river provides us with a clear-cut way towards a village. It does me no good to smell civilization if I can't cross a gorge to get to it..."

In less than an hour, they had reached a wide river that was racing along swiftly. Jessica couldn't resist running her hands in the cold fresh water, splashing her face briskly. The water from the still pool in the gully felt like a beloved memory more than something that had happened the day before, and the water on her skin was like a blessing of some kind.

Jessica watched in bemusement as Marcus stalked out to the shallows, his trouser legs rolled up fastidiously. He didn't look like he felt the cold of the water at all. He peered into the surface of the water, facing upstream, and just as she was getting ready to ask him what he was doing, his hand shot into the roiling water, faster than she could see.

In a moment, there was a flopping wild fish in his hands, alive and desperate to escape.

To Jessica's surprise, Marcus brought the fish to his lips. For a moment, it looked as if he was whispering something to it, and then with a flash, it was out of his grasp and back in the water. Marcus nodded with satisfaction and made his way back to shore.

"Did... you and the fish have a good conversation?" she hazarded, and Marcus grinned at her.

"Fish don’t converse, Jessica, get real," he said, and she smacked his shoulder with the back of her hand gently.

"How would I know? It seems like you talk to everyone else..."

Marcus chuckled at her words.

"Fair enough. I suppose it’s has been a strange new world that I’ve dropped you into, hasn't it? That fish... hmmm. Let's call it a long-shot. There's a chance that it can transport a message for me, get us some help, tell someone where we are or at least let them know where we've been..."

"So that means that there is also a chance of something else happening?"

He grinned at her with real humor, and she wondered again at his spirit and his heart that could keep them going when she was all but ready to stop and to collapse from sheer weariness.

"There's also a chance I did nothing beyond confuse a very nervous and now-traumatized fish," he said gravely.

For some reason, that made Jessica laugh, and once she started, she couldn't stop. She sat down on the ground, covering her face and shaking her head. Marcus waited patiently for her sobs of laughter to subside, but when they showed no sign of doing so, he simply sat down next to her.

Eventually, the hilarity left her, and Jessica shook her head, looking at him with a fond smile.

"Whatever life with you is like, Marcus," she said, "it is definitely not dull."

*

Jessica would never have said that life in the jungle, trying to walk away from a plane crash, was dull, and it wasn't, but over the next few days, she found it surprisingly peaceful. Despite her fears and Marcus's, his enemies made no appearance again, and even if she twitched whenever the underbrush shook, there were no wild snake women to emerge and try to kill her again.

Their days settled into a pattern, long walks interspersed with breaks, and at night, Marcus would string her up in the trees to sleep.

"Like a ham you want to keep away from the bears," she said a little ruefully.

"You are at least as valuable to me as a Virginia ham," he responded gravely. "Although there is one big difference."

She eyed him through the dim twilight. Once she was safe, he would descend and hunt. In the morning, by the time she woke up, there was often food cooking, and though she found that she was hungry more often than she might have wished, she was not starving.

"One big difference between me and a large chunk of roasted salted pork? This I have to hear."

The look he shot her was sharp with more teeth than she thought she had seen. There was something hungry about it that shook her a little, but instead of repelling her, it drew her in. She would have called it animal magnetism if she didn't want to be too pat, but there it was.

"Well, if you were a ham, I would have been nibbling you along every stop this trip."

"Well, I think you know all you need to about eating me," she muttered with a hot blush. The words brought to mind pictures of his skilled mouth venturing low on her body, teasing out sensations that she had never thought she was capable of. Right now, once again, Jessica could tell that that was exactly what was on Marcus's mind. If they were on the ground, there was no telling what they might be doing together right now. Jessica was growing to trust the hammock to carry her weight, but she didn't think that she would trust it to handle her weight and Marcus's at the same time, let alone if they tried something more energetic than just sleeping.

Marcus laughed as if he could read her mind, and then in a dizzying display of athleticism, he hopped onto a nearby branch to lean in and give her a kiss. It didn't matter that she was dozens of feet up in the air, or that there was really nothing between her and the hard ground. The kiss warmed her, and when he pulled away, she only sighed with regret.

"Be good," he said with a wink. "I'm off to hunt. Possibly I’ll bring you wild fowl of some kind for breakfast."

Then he was gone, and no matter how hard Jessica listened, she could never hear more than the softest thump of his panther's body hitting the ground.

The rattling pack of testing and sampling equipment reminded her of the dire nature of her mission, but otherwise, there was something almost idyllic about their trek. She missed the comforts of her life before less than she thought she had, and there was a tiny part of her that suggested that perhaps she would not mind doing this forever.

Jessica pushed that thought down whenever it came up. It was ridiculous. She wasn't in Africa to get a boyfriend, dammit. She was here to save lives, and a distraction like Marcus certainly didn't have a place in her world, not really.

When she looked ahead to a time when she would have to split her path from his, it made something in her heart tear, but she ignored it. She was a woman with a mission, and from what he had told her about his sword, he had a mission of his own.

Our paths are the same for the moment. We should walk together as long as we can and then... then it will be over."

That morning, she was not thinking of missions or anything more important than navigating the steep path in front of them without falling and breaking an ankle. Jessica was trying to find the best way to descend the slope, Marcus below and watching her intently, when she heard a soft buzzing roar.

"What the hell," she murmured, but there was more exasperation than fear in her voice. The swarm of mosquitoes seemed to rise up around her like smoke, sudden and thick, and she clamped her mouth shut to avoid swallowing any.

"What's the matter?" Marcus asked, suddenly concerned, and she waved at him to tell him she would be right down.

She wasn't overly worried. She was inoculated against the worst of what mosquitoes had to offer, and mosquitoes were typically sluggish during the day, uninterested in even the most easy-going of hosts. She concentrated on climbing down towards Marcus, who seemed to be getting more agitated by the moment.

It was true that these mosquitoes were more aggressive than she was used to. They seemed intent on following her, on trying to alight on her limbs. Of course, they were still incredibly light and fragile insects, and a single swipe of her arm knocked a good half-dozen spinning away.

She knew that she had not gotten off Scot-free. She had suffered at least a small handful of bites, but that was a small price to pay for getting through the jungle of Tanzania, she figured.

"All right, I'm ready to go," she said once she had made it to level ground again. "Did you get bitten at all?"

Marcus was still looking up the path where the pests had come from, and he shook his head.

"Not at all."

"Lucky," she said with a grimace. "I guess you're one of those people who don't really draw mosquitoes."

"That's not it," he said.

She might have questioned Marcus more, but then they were back on the trail. He had told her that they were getting close to some of the human habitations he could smell. Their scents were present all the time rather than just when the wind was right, and though she knew that rushing would be worse than dawdling, Jessica couldn't stop herself from walking just a little faster, hoping to get to a place where she could discharge her mission, offer the help that she had.

"Hey, wait, you're walking really fast," Marcus said, and Jessica glanced back at him with humor.

"Oh, are you wearing out a little?" she teased.

"That'll be the day when a little human female can best me," he retorted, quickening his pace to match hers. If Jessica had been paying attention, she might have noticed that there was a flash of concern that went through his eyes, but she was too intent on the path ahead.

When twilight began to close in, Jessica groaned in frustration.

"God, we're never going to get anywhere," she said, gazing into the deepening shadows with irritation. "I don't suppose you've got eyes that can see into the dark and that you can just... I don't know, keep leading us, can you?"

Marcus shot her a look that was distinctly unamused.

"I can, but I won't. If I led you into that, you'd probably fall and twist your ankle after only dozen steps. Just because I can see a clear path doesn't mean that you can."

Jessica felt as if she might cry with frustration as she set her pack down.

"I hate this," she whispered. She felt as if her entire body was covered with sweat and grim. She would have paid an easy ten grand if she could just push her way out of her skin. "I can't stand this."

"I'll be honest, I'm not too fond of it myself," Marcus said grimly.

To her surprise, he came to sit next to her, taking her hand in his. For a moment, she thought he might kiss her, and then she shocked herself with the sudden and intense anger at the thought.

If he tries to kiss me, I'm going to slug him, she thought grimly, and then she was shocked at herself. Even when the trail was at its worst, she had not gotten angry at Marcus's touch. There was bright and shiny aggressive layer of glass between herself and the rest of the world, and right now, she was realizing how very foreign it was.

Marcus nodded as if he could hear her thoughts.

"Your pulse is up, and your skin is burning. You look a bit as if you want to bite my head off."

"I wouldn't," she protested, but he shook his head.

"If it would make you feel better, I would let you bite the hell out of me," he said. "As it is, I'm worried. I think those mosquitoes gave you something nasty."

"I know about every disease that incubates between here and South Africa," she protested, "and I've been inoculated against..."

"You don't," Marcus said, and she was feeling far too worked up to hear the worry and the raw fear in his voice. "Jessica, I need you to sit down and to take several deep breaths..."

When had she gotten to her feet? Jessica knew that he was right about the pulse because right now, she felt as if she had run a marathon. Her body was drenched with exhaustion, but there was a nervous energy that vibrated through it, making her shiver with a need to be away from here, to be moving, to be acting.

"Let's keep walking," she said, almost begged. "I want to keep walking, I mean, the sooner we find people, the sooner I can rest, right? I want to keep going..."

She didn't wait to hear Marcus's response. Instead, she spun away from him, intent on starting down that trail with or without him. She did not think of the dangers of the night or the uneven terrain, all she knew was that if she didn't keep moving, she might die...

Marcus's hand around her wrist felt like an iron manacle, and she cried out at how cold his grasp was. It nearly hurt, but even as she tugged, he refused to let her go. Her exhausted mind crossed over from panic into rage, and she spun towards him.

There was a torrent of poison on her mouth that she was ready to unleash on him, but then her vision swam as if she was underwater. It felt like the ground was falling away, and somehow, her feet had stayed with it as her head was catapulted towards the clouds. She was moving fast, her stomach roiling with unease as she went, and all that was stable in the world was Marcus, watching her, his face pale and worried.

"You... you might be right..." Jessica got out, and then she collapsed.