Her Hero Was A Bear: A Paranormal Werebear Romance (Bears With Money Book 5)

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Her Hero Was A Bear: A Paranormal Werebear Romance (Bears With Money Book 5) Page 5

by Amy Star


  The woman’s nostrils flared, and she breathed in, deep and slow, before she observed, “No, you’re telling the truth.”

  For a moment, Melissa couldn’t help but wonder if Mitch could do anything like that, but she pushed the thought away for the time being. She had more important things at hand.

  “What do you need?” the woman asked warily, and she looked as if she was prepared to bolt at any moment if Melissa so much as breathed wrong.

  “A couple of friends and I,” Melissa began, words falling out so quickly it was as if they were tripping over each other like school children, “are trying to find who has been starting the recent rash of fires, and--”

  She didn’t get any further than that before the woman laughed in delight, barking out, “Oh, shit!” as she clapped her hands together once. “I thought I was the only one who noticed!”

  Melissa shook her head quickly, only to need to blow a strand of hair out of her face immediately afterwards, and hurried to continue. “We have a couple ideas about what could be causing it, but no ideas on an actual who. One of my friends—he’s a bear—a were-bear, I guess? I’m just…you know, me, and one of my friends is just a regular guy, but anyway, one of my friends is checking with a vampire, since I guess vampires and fire are a thing.”

  The woman snorted unattractively. “I really doubt your friend is going to get anything useful,” she returned blandly. “I’ve never met a vampire that didn’t get a woody by being a difficult schmuck.”

  Slowly, Melissa tipped her head to one side. “You know,” she began carefully, “if Mitch is

  having trouble with his vampire lead, the vampire might be inclined to cooperate with the proper encouragement.”

  The woman’s dark eyebrows rose towards her hairline, and she grinned, broadly and toothy. “Not a bad idea,” she decided, already shrugging out of her jacket. It was nearly long enough to be a dress. “I can get us there quick as you like, if you tell me where to go.”

  “The old brewery that’s not a brewery anymore,” Melissa replied. “I’m Melissa, by the way.”

  “Sabine,” the woman replied, tossing her jacket to Melissa, who caught it out of reflex. “Figure the vampires go for the smelliest place in the tristate area.” She rolled her eyes, and evidently

  decided that was that, before she transformed right then and there. Her clothing ripped at the seams and burst apart explosively as she abruptly expanded in size and shape.

  Melissa had never seen a dragon before (obviously). She had an idea of what they looked like—considering how consistent they tended to look from one fictional story to the next, she figured there had to be some fact to those ideas—but she had, of course, never actually seen one up close. She hadn’t even known they were real until a few days ago.

  When Sabine’s transformation was finished, and she was standing above Melissa, awe-inspiring didn’t seem to do her justice. She stood about twelve feet tall at the shoulders, standing on two heavily taloned feet, leaning forward slightly as her long tail acted as a counterbalance. She had no arms or front legs, and instead simply had a pair of leathery wings with two hooked claws protruding from both main joints.

  Her head was triangular, tapering to an almost delicate point at the snout, save for the row of spikes along the middle of her snout. It split into two rows just above her eyes, leading back to a pair of horns that had to be a yard long apiece. Her neck was long and serpentine, and when she made a sharp, almost gleeful noise, it became apparent that her teeth were definitely designed for ripping things apart.

  Her scales were primarily a dark, gleaming red, turning copper or gold or orange or black,

  depending on the way the light hit them, and the leathery skin stretched between the fingers of her wings was worn and dark, grey bordering on black.

  Sabine prodded Melissa’s shoulder sharply with the very tip of her snout, jarring her out of her awestruck gawking. Sabine gave herself a shake, head held high as she preened, before she

  lowered herself forwards, until her neck was nearly on the ground and she was leaning on the claws on the joints of her wings.

  Slowly, Melissa stepped forwards, hugging the jacket to her chest. She felt like she was moving in a daze. Like she was going to wake up at any moment and realize that she had been dreaming. She stepped over Sabine’s neck with one leg and paused, and slowly Sabine stood back up,

  giving Melissa time to catch her balance and re-situate herself before she began to spread her wings.

  Melissa had a split second to realize that there wasn’t going to be a slow, gentle takeoff before she flung herself forward, throwing her arms around Sabine’s neck to hang on for dear life, just before Sabine snapped her wings open to their full length and jumped, both feet leaving the ground as her wings pumped downwards. It was like a rocket taking off and a punch to the gut all at once, and Melissa stared at the ground in mesmerized terror as it rapidly got farther and

  farther away with each beat of Sabine’s wings, until they were high enough to rise above the burned skeletons of the trees, and finally Sabine began to fly in earnest.

  *

  Melissa was intriguing. Or at least, that was the word Mitch was going to use to describe her. She was intriguing. He couldn’t say she was wholly unlike any other woman he had ever met; she was her own woman, true enough, but she wasn’t that special. Quirkiness only went so far, and Mitch wasn’t going to start exaggerating quite that much.

  But still, she was intriguing.

  She gave…well, less than a single shit about Mitch being what he was. Or rather, she was interested in what he was in a scientific sense, but Mitch himself seemed to be secondary to that

  interest. Though maybe that wasn’t the best way to phrase it. She wasn’t callous. She liked Mitch well enough when he wasn’t being, in her words, “a raging dickhead.” But even so, she was more interested in learning about new species than she was excited about meeting someone new.

  Mitch rather suspected that if he turned into something a bit less ordinary than a bear, she would be a bit more interested, but even then, he suspected her interest would still be more scientific. He couldn’t say he was especially upset about it. After all, she was intriguing. He was glad to get to know her, regardless. And it wasn’t as if they had known each other long enough to be that close.

  Still, every so often, there were moments when it seemed like they could be close.

  Moments when she all but blew up his phone with text messages demanding that he call her, all so she could practically squeal about everything she had read about dragon sightings that had been brushed under the rug. “And they’re real? They’re all real?”

  “Well, some of them were probably fake or just imagined by drunks or people who were ill or something like that, but for the most part, yeah,” Mitch would confirm.

  Or moments when they were together, usually getting a drink, and Melissa would gush about what it could mean about the world and ecology and paleontology that dragons had been real, once upon a time.

  “But why haven’t we found any fossils?” she demanded one day, after one such bout of frenzied gushing. “If there really were dragon-dragons and not just were-dragons, then why haven’t we found any remains? What happened to them? They would have had to have been apex

  predators. They would have been at the top of their food chain.”

  “Why are you asking me?” Mitch asked, baffled. “It’s not like I was around back then. They went extinct ages ago. Maybe people killed them. Or maybe they killed each other. Maybe they burned their dead to ash. I literally have no way of knowing any more than you do. Hell, were-dragons probably don’t know any more than you do.”

  She groaned and let her head thump down onto one of her arms, folded on top of the table. Mitch patted her shoulder sympathetically.

  It was nice to see her excited, though. It was sort of endearing, the way she always seemed like she was fit to burst whenever something really tickled her fancy. Not quite
infectious, since Mitch didn’t have quite the same passion for the world and its creatures as she did, but endearing nonetheless.

  Not that he planned on telling her that. He was pretty sure she might punch him if he did, and that would make it a little awkward whenever they had to share the stories they had gathered and cross-reference information.

  (“Okay, if we both hear about something weird happening in the same place, that means there’s probably something inhuman there, right?” she asked.

  “Not necessarily. Regular humans are basically pack animals, so they tend to see things that aren’t there if they heard about it before,” Mitch explained with a shrug. “But it is more likely that there’s actually something inhuman there.”)

  On the whole, they weren’t close yet, but the possibility for them to be close was still there. He liked her. He was willing to take a cautious bet that she liked him. And truth be told, he was willing to put up with it if he needed to navigate the occasional bout of zaniness or the occasional flash of temper. She had spirit, and he wasn’t going to complain about that, even if she still hadn’t quite gotten over looking at him like he was a science experiment or a riddle that she was itching to tease apart.

  Baby steps. That was generally the best way to go, and he knew that. And while he wouldn’t say he was a patient man—the opposite was more frequently the case—he was willing to put in the effort to pretend to be one for a while.

  *

  “I’ll look into dragon sightings, and you can look into vampire sightings,” Melissa informed him loftily one evening. And while it sounded like she was making some effort to at least pretend she was assigning them off the top of her head, Mitch knew better; there was no way he was prying the chance to see any sort of dragon out of her hands even if he tried to use a crowbar.

  He didn’t argue.

  Not at that point, at any rate.

  *

  Though the vast majority of people would be disinclined to believe it, most counties had a

  vampire coterie. Sometimes a coterie would span two or three counties in more rural areas, but on the whole, they weren’t exactly rare. Short of setting them on fire or lopping their heads off, they didn’t die, so their numbers did little other than gradually increase. But they looked human, by and large, and tended to only emerge at night, so most people weren’t inclined to assume they were anything but people who were sick or, at the very least, in stark disagreement with the sun. And they migrated with some frequency, so there typically wasn’t time to notice anything off about them.

  Finding them was mostly a matter of listening for strange rumors of people disappearing. The news wasn’t particularly helpful in that regard, since it was entirely possible for people who went missing to turn back up the next day, pale and dizzy but more or less fine, and no journalist worth their salt was going to report on someone presumably getting hammered and showing up the next day with a hangover.

  So, he listened at work, in the corner store, on street corners, or in the bar to catch wind of any unusual disappearances and potential reappearances.

  And of course, he listened with interest at the bar when a pair of giggling women at a table in the corner started having the most fascinating conversation.

  “…and he said everything just went sort of wonky on Hazel Street, and next thing he knew, he was at the old brewery and someone was attacking him, but then the next morning, some police

  officer was shaking him awake on a bus stop bench like some old hobo, so I’m pretty sure he

  just had a bit too much fun at his cousin’s house the night before.”

  Both of them erupted in laughter after that, and Mitch promptly tuned them out. He had enough information to start with.

  *

  If nothing else, looking into the vampire lead gave him something to think about other than how crazy Melissa was, since she was so determined to go charging off into the wilderness to talk to a were-dragon without any sort of backup. Her logic sort of made sense, but even so, a dragon was a dragon, whether it was occasionally human-shaped or not. She wasn’t going to budge, though, and he wasn’t going to tie her up or lock her in a closet or something, and for the most part, he did trust her not to get herself killed.

  He couldn’t do much other than let her go and hope for the best. Vampire coteries moved a lot. Deciding “well, I can just check it out tomorrow” could very well lead to him needing to figure out where they were all over again, and that was a bit more redundancy than he was really interested in at that point.

  It would be a nice distraction, at least.

  *

  Though the brewery had been out of use for at least a couple decades, structurally it was still

  reasonably sound. Sound enough to envision a group of people squatting in it if they didn’t want to be noticed. And it was dark; most of the doors and nearly all of the windows were boarded up, so any natural light that did make it in during the day was minimal and easily avoided.

  It also smelled horrendous. Mitch knew his sense of smell wasn’t as honed as a vampire’s, and the smell was giving him a headache. He couldn’t imagine living there, and he especially couldn’t imagine living there when it had to smell even worse to the occupants. But he supposed the stench was a boon to those who needed the blood of others to survive. If nothing else, it

  probably explained why vampires tended to move around with some frequency.

  Spotting one of them was easy. The place was abandoned, so someone moseying along as if he owned the place stood out. He noticed Mitch as soon as he stepped through one of the side doors, grinding to a halt and staring at him, blinking slowly.

  “You guys live in an old brewery, and there are kids in the group?” Mitch asked incredulously as soon as he realized he had been spotted.

  True enough, the vampire he was looking at looked as if he couldn’t be any older than fourteen. He had olive-toned skin, though it looked as if it had been bled of every drop of blood, leaving him with an awkward gray pallor. His eyes were too big for his face, his mouth a bit too wide, and his nose a bit too long and pointed. He also hadn’t quite grown into his ears, and likely would never get the chance to.

  He had a mop of black hair on top of his head, sticking up in random directions as if he had been running his hands through it, and his eyes were a dark, dark shade of cherry oak, rather than bright red, so he was reasonably well fed at that moment, at any rate.

  He looked a bit stretched out, too tall to reasonably fit within his own skin, with limbs that were too long and skinny, and jutting collarbones and elbows. His clothing was too warm for the weather and looked as if it had been pulled out of a donation bin a few decades back.

  As soon as Mitch spoke, the awkward, gangling, jangling young man bristled like an offended cat, his shoulders rounding defensively as he folded his arms over his chest. “I’m six hundred and seventy-three, you cock,” he snapped, slamming one heel impatiently against the concrete of the floor. “Who are you supposed to be?”

  And then, he paused, nostrils flaring. With a groan, his head fell back so he could sulk at the ceiling. “You’re an animal.” He groaned again, more emphatically that time, as if he was being

  tortured right there on the spot. “At least tell me you’re not a goddamn mutt. I don’t want to have to deal with you pissing on the floor and calling the brewery yours.”

  “Are you this much of a shit to everyone?” Mitch wondered dryly, ignoring the request for

  information entirely for the moment.

  The vampire rolled his eyes and shifted his weight to one side. “I don’t know,” he drawled. “Are you a condescending dick to everyone old enough to have spanked your great-times-twenty-some granny’s ass?” He pitched his voice up to a ludicrous falsetto and shifted back and forth on his feet as he carried on, his hands rising to clutch together against his cheek. “Oooh, there are children in the brewery, won’t somebody think of the children?”

  He snorted unattractively and
let his hands fall back to his sides, his voice dropping back to its normal pitch as he groused, “Fuck all of that; you know exactly what I am. You waltzed on in here like you owned the place. You mean to be exactly where you are because you’re looking for vampires. You know full well we’re all older than we look, and you decide the best way to say ‘hi’ is by being a monumental shit heel?”

  Mitch held his hands up in a pacifying motion. “Point taken,” he replied. “I just need to ask a few questions about some things that have been going on lately.”

  The vampire’s eyes narrowed sharply. “Tell me who you are, and maybe I’ll talk to you.”

  “You can call me Mitch.”

  Again, the vampire rolled his eyes. “Ooh, that’s very descriptive. I’m Jasper. I bet that tells you loads about me.”

  Mitch lifted a hand to pinch the bridge of his nose between two fingers before he rubbed his forehead to stave off the approaching headache with limited success. “I’m a were-bear and a firefighter. I’m trying to see if I can get any information on the recent forest fires. They’re weird as hell. I doubt they’re starting naturally, and I have my doubts about them being started by

 

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