Free Read Novels Online Home

Midnight Wolf (A Shifters Unbound Novel) by Jennifer Ashley (4)

CHAPTER FOUR

Tamsin waited for Angus to move down the hall before she partly shifted to her fox to slide her slim paw out of the handcuff.

It hurt like hell to do it, because she couldn’t change only one paw—both had to go, and her legs and face started to shift as well. Her injured arm protested, and she spent a moment biting back tears as she resumed her human shape. The fox could move faster, yes, but Tamsin would need her clothes and her money, so human she had to stay for a while.

She followed the sound of Angus’s voice to a room in the front of the house, next to the front door.

He’d hear her or see her if she slipped past the room—a human might not, but Angus was obviously a tracker and it was in his best interests to bring her in. He wouldn’t be careless.

Back door it was.

Angus’s words rang down the hall. “I don’t care if he’s hibernating for the winter. He said anytime. Was that just bullshit?”

Whoever Angus spoke to had him furious. Tamsin couldn’t hear the other voice on the phone at this distance, but no matter—it was clear Angus was calling for backup.

One wolf she could handle. A pack of Shifters cruel enough to give one of their own to Shifter Bureau she could not.

Tamsin crept down the hall to the back door.

That door slammed open, and a man stepped in, talking hard into a cell phone. He was on the short side—at least shorter than a Shifter—with black hair and very black eyes, tatts on his arms and neck, and his scent was . . .

Tamsin stepped back, snarling.

He eyed her in irritation, but his attention was on whomever he spoke to on the phone. “I told you I’d ask. He can be tetchy. His mate can be too—she hates for him to be called out for every bump and scrape, and I don’t blame her.”

“Well, tell him it’s an emergency,” Angus’s voice came from down the hall. “I wouldn’t ask if it wasn’t important. Jaycee will vouch for me.” His tone lost confidence. “Maybe.”

Tamsin swung to look down the hall, then back at the smaller man, who eyed Tamsin up and down. “Yeah, it does look pretty bad. I’ll do what I can.”

A growl came from the far room, and Angus stepped out and glared down the hall. He lowered the phone and bellowed at the smaller man, “What the hell? Why didn’t you say you were right outside?”

A shrug. “I wasn’t. Until just now.” The man nodded in Tamsin’s direction. “What is she?”

“What are you?” Tamsin countered. She did not at all like the whiff of otherworld she caught from his scent.

“Not Fae,” the man said with emphasis. He clicked off his cell phone. “The name’s Ben. Or Gil. Take your pick. Not Fae. Got it?”

He pushed himself around Tamsin—very carefully not touching her hurt arm—and strode down the hall toward Angus.

He left the way to the back door clear, and Tamsin headed swiftly for it.

Ben hadn’t bothered to close the door all the way, and it remained tantalizingly ajar. She heard Ben on the phone again, speaking jovially to whomever they were summoning to keep her here.

Two more steps, and she’d be gone. She could outrun wolf-man and not-Fae dude easily, but if Angus brought in more backup, she’d be in deep shit.

“She’s safer if she stays here,” Angus said behind her. “Seriously.”

Tamsin swung around. Angus wasn’t talking to Ben, who was in the room at the front, still on his phone. Angus’s line of sight was the stairs, but as Tamsin looked wildly at them, she saw no one.

Screw it. Tamsin bolted for the door.

Just before she reached it, the door swung closed and quietly clicked shut. Tamsin grabbed the knob, but the door wouldn’t open. She frantically searched for a bolt or lock that held the door in place, but the deadbolt was undone, the knob turned easily, and no chains were in sight.

She beat on the door with her fist before she told herself not to waste energy. Better to find a window, slide through it—hell, change to fox and climb out through a chimney if she had to.

Tamsin turned to find Angus right behind her, holding the handcuffs.

“Just sit here and wait for the healer,” he said. “Unless you want your arm to fall off.”

Tamsin shook her head with emphasis. “I’m not staying while you call in Shifter after Shifter to keep me prisoner. I’m outta here, wolf-boy.”

Angus snapped the cuff around her good arm, the steel cold. “No. You’re sticking with me, sweetheart.”

The other cuff didn’t go around the staircase this time but around Angus’s broad wrist.

Tamsin glared at him. She focused her energy, partly shifted to fox again, and slid her hand from the cuff. Angus blinked at having a fox face so close to his, and then Tamsin was human again, darting into the nearest room and to its long window.


• • •

Angus followed Tamsin, unlocking the manacle from his wrist as he went. He’d pretty much figured she’d be able to get out of the cuffs, but he’d had to try. Cuffs were psychologically subduing, he’d learned in his bouncer work. Even the drunkest, most obnoxious human could fall down in a blubbering mess once he was cuffed.

Tamsin moved on light feet across the house’s drawing room, dragged back the draperies, and tried to open a window.

It wouldn’t budge. Tamsin screamed between her teeth. Instead of beating on the window as she had the door, she glanced around, grabbed the nearest chair she could lift with one hand, and drew it back, ready to throw it at the window.

Angus wrenched the chair out of her grasp and set it back down. He didn’t think the window would break if the house didn’t want it to, but she could wreck the chair trying.

“Be careful,” he said. “I told you, the house belongs to a friend of mine. She won’t be happy if you destroy the furniture.”

Strictly speaking, Angus had met Jasmine, the young human woman who owned the house, exactly once, when she and her Shifter mate had come out to spend some time in it together last month. Ben was more or less the house’s caretaker in Jazz’s absence, but she’d made it clear it was open to Shifters who needed to use it as a getaway as long as they didn’t damage anything.

Tamsin glared at Angus with wide amber eyes. He saw bald fear in those eyes, her defiant spark fading.

Did Haider know she was a fox Shifter? Was that why he wanted her? Besides the fact that she was a rogue, un-Collared, and had caused a lot of trouble?

Angus would love to shake out of her exactly what was going on, and why Haider was so interested in her. Shifter Bureau kept an eye out for those Shifters they’d missed catching and Collaring, but they didn’t usually single one out to go after with such zeal. And why choose Angus for the job?

Conclusion—Tamsin Calloway knew more than she was telling.

Angus took hold of her uninjured hand in a firm grip, but he tossed the cuffs to a table and left them there.

“You hungry?” he asked. “There’s always plenty to eat in this house. Might be a while before Zander can get here.”

Tamsin tried to hide her flicker of interest. “Zander? Who’s that?”

“A healer.” Interesting that she’d never heard of him, because Zander was Collarless as well. But then, he was a healer, and healers were elusive, reclusive, and sometimes downright crabby. Zander had a mate now, and being asked to leave her side made him even more irritable. “Come on—let’s see what’s in the fridge.”

Tamsin didn’t fight as Angus led her out of the drawing room and down the hall. Only when he started up the stairs did she hang back.

“Why are we going up there?”

“That’s where the kitchen is. Ground floor is for tourists.”

Tamsin drew in a breath as though she’d argue, then she gave Angus a nod and started with him up the stairs.

He didn’t turn her loose until they walked into the big room that was a modern, airy kitchen with retro-looking appliances, a large kitchen table, and a giant walk-in pantry.

“Sweet!” Tamsin exclaimed. She went to the refrigerator and opened it, bending to stick her head in. “Oh, nice. Who lives here? They know how to keep the place stocked.”

She backed out with packaged meat and cheese. She dropped that to the counter, then went back for a bag of lettuce and a large tomato. “All we need is bread . . . Ah, here we go.”

She opened a bin on the counter and pulled out a loaf, set it on a wooden cutting board, and started rummaging in the drawers. Angus put his hand on her wrist before she could pull out a hefty knife. He twisted the knife away from her while she stared at him in surprise.

“How am I supposed to cut up my tomato?”

“I’ll do it.” He pointed at a chair with the tip of the knife. “You sit.”

“Let a hot guy make dinner for me? Sure thing.” Tamsin sauntered to the table and sat down, leaning back in the wooden chair to cross her ankles.

Angus had to turn away from her to start laying out the bread for sandwiches, but Ben had followed them in and now seated himself at the table with her.

Angus had felt Tamsin shaking when he’d taken the knife from her. He suspected that was not only from the pain of her injury, but exhaustion and probably hunger. She had the pinched look of a person who hadn’t had a full meal in a while.

“Don’t let her get up and run around,” Angus told Ben. “She’s hurt more than she lets on. Zander on his way?”

“Yep,” Ben said. “He’s not happy about it, but he contacted Marlo, and Zander will be here soon.” Marlo was a private cargo pilot who covertly flew Shifters around the country. “I told Zander it was your fault—I was just the messenger. Why are you talking about Tamsin like she’s not in the room?”

Angus only growled.

“I’m a rogue Shifter,” Tamsin said to Ben. “We aren’t real people to the Collareds.”

Angus stifled a grunt of impatience. Why couldn’t she be the sullen, crazed, evil woman he’d pictured? He could have dealt with that—he’d have had her tranqued and trussed up in the back of the station wagon and already on his way to the bizarre location where Haider wanted to make the exchange. Haider had told Angus where to meet him with a smirk on his face—glad the man was so amused.

Instead, Tamsin was funny, brave, resourceful, and in serious trouble. Why else would she be running around alone, playing poker for cash when she hadn’t eaten in a while? Now that Angus had her trapped, with her hurt, she acted as if she’d only hit a temporary setback.

Angus had to admire her guts, but he didn’t have a choice other than to turn her in. If Ciaran weren’t involved, he’d be more than tempted to help her get away—hell, he’d have done it by now.

But Ciaran was the stakes, and Angus would wrestle down the Goddess herself to win him back.

Tamsin continued to chatter to Ben, asking him about himself, while Angus made sandwiches with the meat, cheese, lettuce, tomato, onions, and condiments Jazz always made sure were on hand.

This house had become a refuge for Shifters needing to get away from the confines of Shiftertowns for a while. Shifters like Angus weren’t supposed to leave the state they lived in without permission, which they had to apply for well in advance. Couldn’t have Shifters running around where they pleased, in case they all turned violent and ate the entire population of humans, could they? Why Shifters would want to do such a thing, Angus didn’t know, but old fears died hard.

Humans didn’t come to this house, except on planned tours through a tour company, because the house was haunted. Or at least it was very good at giving that impression.

Angus wasn’t sure how much he believed in the house’s powers, but he’d seen a lot of weird things happen inside it. Doors leading to other worlds, things moving around on their own, the doors locking and unlocking at the house’s whim. Downstairs, he’d asked the house to keep Tamsin inside, and the house had complied. Because it wanted to, Angus knew. When it decided to let Tamsin out, there was nothing he’d be able to do about it.

“A gnome,” Tamsin was saying behind him. “How cool is that. Hey, Angus, did you know Ben was a gnome?”

“Or a goblin,” Ben said. “But those are human terms. We don’t call ourselves either one.”

“Yeah?” Tamsin asked in curiosity. “What do you call yourselves?”

“Well, there’s only one of me that I know of now, but the name for our people is Ghallareknoiksnlealous.”

“Oh.” Tamsin went silent as Angus sliced the sandwiches and put them on plates. “How about we stick with goblin?”

Ben chuckled. “Probably for the best.”

“Why is there only one of you?”

Angus carried plates to the table, setting one each in front of Tamsin and Ben before going back to fetch his. Tamsin didn’t look at the sandwich Angus brought her—she kept her gaze on Ben, waiting for his answer.

“Fae killed them all.” Ben picked up his thick sandwich filled with roast beef, ham, and cheese, dripping with mayo. “Or as good as.”

Tamsin stared at him, openmouthed. Ben didn’t notice, focusing on his sandwich.

Tamsin glanced at Angus as he sat down, and he gave his head the slightest shake. Ben might pretend to be blasé about the Fae slaughtering his people and then exiling the few that remained to the human world—Ben had told him the story one day—but he lived in boiling fury about it. Had for about a thousand years now.

Tamsin shot Ben a look of sympathy that he didn’t see and took up her sandwich with her unhurt hand. Her other hand lay curled on her chest, the bandage stark against her cotton shirt.

Tamsin closed her eyes as she chewed the first bite of her sandwich, letting out a tiny sigh of relief. Angus had been right—she was hungry, terribly so, which wasn’t going to help her injury.

What the hell was she doing running around half-starved and evading Shifter Bureau? What had she done that they wanted her so much? Haider said he thought she killed the Shifter Bureau agents, but Tamsin’s small paws couldn’t have made the large claw marks on the men in the gruesome photos Haider had insisted on showing Angus.

Angus’s resolve to simply hand Tamsin over and not get involved was crumbling. That was his problem—he had the habit of getting involved. He wanted to help people and keep them safe, and he couldn’t seem to stop himself.

Meanwhile, Tamsin was enjoying the hell out of her sandwich. She took another bite, eyes closed again as she savored the meat and bread, lettuce and tomato. She chewed slowly, sitting back in her chair, a look of rapture on her face as though the simple meal were ambrosia.

“Mmm.” She made the sound long and sensual. Tamsin swallowed, opened her eyes, and bathed Angus in a warm smile. “Been a while since I was able to sit down and eat. You have talent. Ever thought about being a cook?”

Her eyes were so full of mischief Angus wanted to grin back at her.

He resisted. She was playing him, trying to get him to trust her. The minute he did that, she’d be gone, leaving Angus wondering what the hell happened, and Ciaran at Haider’s mercy.

“No,” he snapped.

Tamsin ate slowly, bite by bite, as though determined to enjoy every ounce of her food. When she finished, she tilted her head back and sucked the last drops of mayo from the tips of her fingers.

“Wow,” she said softly. “That was good.”

Ben snorted a laugh. “Save it, sweetheart. I’m too old, and Angus is unseducible. He’s a bouncer in a New Orleans club. Scantily clad women try to get on his good side every night, the poor guy.”

“A bouncer?” Tamsin opened her eyes and looked at Angus in surprise. “I thought you were with Shifter Bureau.”

“No,” Angus said in a hard voice. “I don’t work for those dickheads.”

“Except tonight.” Tamsin leaned toward him, her red hair falling forward. “Why are you working for them tonight?”

“Because an annoying woman is causing trouble,” Angus returned. He stood up, gathering the empty plates, and stamped with them to the sink.

“Touchy, touchy. Struck a nerve, didn’t I, Ben?”

“Yeah, Angus, I think we need to know what this is all about,” Ben said. “She doesn’t look like a dangerous criminal. And you hate Shifter Bureau. So why are you at odds instead of working together? Talk, both of you.”

Angus clattered the dishes into the sink. “No offense, Ben, but this is none of your business.”

Everything is my business. I’m everyone’s friend, me. Plus I have some useful abilities. Why are you running from Shifter Bureau, Tamsin?”

“Well,” Tamsin said, “I was born in the shack of a rogue Shifter and have been stealing and conning my way across the country since I was three. I’m wanted in twenty-seven states for so many offenses I forget them all. I stay one step ahead of the law with my cunning, and all the cops let me go because I’m a sweet-talker.”

“And all of that is a big fat lie,” Ben said. “I’m as good at detecting them as Shifters.”

“I’ll bet it isn’t all a lie,” Angus said, watching Tamsin. “But I don’t care. We’ll get you healed up, and then I’m done with you.”

Tamsin’s face paled, though she tried to hide her nervousness. “Aw, and I was starting to have a big crush on you.”

“You need to rest.” Angus returned to the table. “There are plenty of bedrooms to lock you in.”

He wrapped his hand around Tamsin’s shoulder and hauled her to her feet.

She stood up readily. “Oh, sweetie, and we only just met.”

“You know, you are really starting to grate on me,” Angus said with a growl. “If you want to save your ass so much, you’ll shut up.”

The look Tamsin shot him was full of fear but also calculation. Her chatter and silliness hid the fact that behind her eyes, she was gauging the situation and running through many plans to get out of it.

Angus needed to hand her over to Shifter Bureau as soon as possible, before he started to help her do just that.


• • •

Tamsin woke hours later, stiff and sore in spite of the soft bed. Her chewed-up arm hurt like hell, but she had to admit the sleep had done her good. Her edge of exhaustion had gone, and the sandwich, first solid meal she’d had in a while, had restored some of her energy.

The faint gray of false dawn touched the window. Tamsin sat up, dragging her hair back from her face. She hadn’t meant to sleep so hard, or even fall asleep at all.

After Angus had shoved her into this bedroom and slammed the door, locking it, she’d searched for any possible exit. The closed window would not budge. Any attempt to break the glass had failed—it was damned good glass. She picked open the door’s lock with a hairpin she’d found in the dresser drawer, but the door refused to open. No fireplace in this room, so no chimney, and she couldn’t find a secret passage anywhere. What self-respecting old house didn’t have a secret passage?

Tired, Tamsin had lain down on the bed to rest before she tried again. The wind outside had been soothing, whispering through the wind chimes, and she’d fallen asleep before she could stop herself.

A key scraped in the lock, and Angus opened the door.

He did so cautiously, as though expecting Tamsin to be waiting behind the door with a cosh, and looked surprised to find her blinking at him from the bed.

“The healer is here,” Angus said abruptly. “Come on.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Mia Madison, Flora Ferrari, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Frankie Love, Jenika Snow, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Michelle Love, Jordan Silver, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Delilah Devlin, Bella Forrest, Penny Wylder, Alexis Angel, Dale Mayer, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

Dragon Protector: A WILD Security Book by Ruby Forrest

Say I Do in Good Hope (A Good Hope Novel Book 5) by Cindy Kirk

Prize (Legacy Warrior Book 1) by Susi Hawke

Mr. Anything: A Billionaire Romance by Emily Bishop

The Frog Prince (Timeless Fairy Tales Book 9) by K. M. Shea

Lover in Hell: A Post-Apocalyptic Paranormal Romance by Dia Cole

by Hamel, B. B.

The Dragon Queen's Fake Fiancé (Dragon's Council Book 2) by Mina Carter

Reclaiming His Omega: M/M Non-Shifter Alpha/Omega MPREG (Cafe Om Book 5) by Harper B. Cole

Hoodoo's Dilemma: An MC Biker Romance by Xander Hades

Sleighed (Severton Search and Rescue Book 1) by Annie Dyer

His Perfect Partner by Priscilla Oliveras

Closing the Deal (Wicked Warrens, #2) by Marie Harte

The Family We Make: An Mpreg Romance (Helion Club Book 1) by Aiden Bates

Good Lies (A Wild Minds Novel) by Charlotte West

Damen (Dragons of Kratak Book 2) by Ruth Anne Scott

Undercover: Secrets & Lies by Jennifer Loren

Wylde Ride by Danes, Ellie, Knight, Lily

The Prophecy: The Titan Series Book 4 by Jennifer L. Armentrout

Ruckus (Sinners of Saint Book 3) by L.J. Shen