Blackblood Bear (A Paranormal Shape Shifter Romance) (The Agency Book 2)
Page 17
“Shut up and sit down, shifter boy,” she said with a smirk. “It’s time you saw how a real professional drives.”
Chapter Seventeen
Shay
“Cut us loose,” she ordered, and Justin leapt to obey, ripping the ropes apart instead of taking the time to untie them. In a second they were free and she fired up the quad-linked engines.
The noise was loud, but the power that thrummed through the cockpit where she sat brought a grin to her face. It had been too damn long since she went fast.
“Sit down. Here we go!” she crowed and gunned the engine.
Water spewed out in a fifty-foot-long tail behind them as the rear of the boat dipped into the water, the bow rising high above them. Seconds later they were whipping across the harbor in pursuit of the other speedboat.
Shay didn’t have much training with speedboats, but her pursuit of going fast had taken her onto the water several times before. The huge engines on the back had to be putting out four hundred or more horsepower a piece, judging by how fast the forty-foot-long craft sped ahead. It was a monster, and she howled in delight as the wind whipped her burgundy hair free of its pony tail, flicking it out behind her sharply.
“You’re crazy!” Justin shouted from his seat.
She turned to look at him and laughed. He was hunched over in his seat, bracing his arms against the body of the boat as it thudded across the small waves in the harbor, his knuckles white from gripping tightly.
The exhilaration was the only thing keeping her going just then, and she knew it. That blow from Cronin had hurt, and all she had wanted to do before the engines sprang to life was lie down and go to sleep. Now though, she was back in her element, and she used her skills ruthlessly to close the gap between them and Cronin’s craft.
It was obvious he wasn’t as comfortable at these speeds as she was. His boat was going slower than hers, and he wasn’t able to get it skipping across the tops of the waves the way she was.
“Get ready!” she yelled as they began to pull alongside him.
“Ready for what?” Justin yelped back.
“Well, one of us has to go over there and kill that sonofabitch,” she said over the wind. “And that’s not my specialty. I got you here. Now get over there and kick his damn ass!” she ordered.
Justin gave her a strange look, his head tilted slightly to the side.
“I think I’m in love with you,” he shouted, standing unsteadily as the nose of their boat caught the rear of Cronin’s.
Shay’s jaw dropped, and she almost fell behind Cronin as he pushed his throttle down some more after noticing how quickly they were gaining.
Her eyes narrowed at the challenge and she pushed them closer and closer.
“I love you too,” she said, relief blossoming inside of her at finally being able to speak the words, to sum up everything that she felt between them into one sentence. It may have been too soon for many, but for Shay, it felt like she should have said it days ago.
Justin grinned, making her heart do a double-beat, and then he crawled over the glass and onto the bow of the boat. Unlike smaller boats, the top of this one was covered, providing him with no easy way to get up there. But Shay knew what she was doing, feathering the throttle up and down slightly as they bounced along, keeping it as steady as possible between waves until the nose of her boat was halfway up alongside Cronin’s.
She watched as Justin blew her a kiss and then launched himself across the distance. The other man was sharp though, and Shay gasped as he killed the throttle almost instantly in response. Instead of Justin landing in the cockpit with him, he hit the windshield glass and tumbled along the front of the boat, almost ending up in the water before he found a grip and slowed his slide.
Cronin grinned and then gunned the boat.
Justin flew down the length of it toward the rear this time, still unbalanced.
That was Cronin’s first mistake, however. Justin grabbed him as he went by, stopping his motion. The pair went down, fighting as the boat continued to surge through the harbor. Shay watched—having kept pace as best she could—as the boat surged forward without a pilot, currently aimed at the opposite shore.
Hurry up, Justin. Finish him and stop the boat, or get clear!
The two battled each other, opening cuts with practically every blow. Her heart raced as she watched them go at it. Gray was obviously some sort of superhuman as well. She wondered if he was a shifter like Justin, or just one of the ones who had taken the serum that he had told her about.
Justin landed a solid blow, spinning Cronin around, though he took a vicious shot to the ribs in return.
Shay shouted in terror as Cronin landed on the controls. The boat spun away from her far too quickly.
The hard spin at such a high speed caused the boat to flutter. Then abruptly it upended itself, flinging both men free as massive propellers emerged and spewed a haze of water everywhere as they spun freely, unencumbered by the denser water.
She watched as the pair went skidding over the water before settling into it. Although she was in a fast-moving boat, Cronin was now between her and Justin. Cronin was swimming for him quickly, intent on finishing the dazed shifter off.
Shay growled. “Oh no, you don’t,” she raged and slammed the throttle down.
Cronin looked over his shoulder as she approached. He must have known that she would reach Justin first, because he broke off and began to head for shore.
Shay spun the wheel and followed him, the nose of her boat pointed right at him. There was just enough time for her to see the shocked realization cross his face, and then she ran him over. The boat thudded as he was run under the hull, and she whirled in time to see the wake turn dark red as blood discolored it.
“That’ll teach you to hit a woman,” she spat and hauled back on the throttle, easing the boat into a slow turn that put her on a course to Justin, who was looking at her wide-eyed.
“Little faster please,” he said, looking warily at the water around him as she putted over to him.
“Why?” she asked as she came alongside and he hauled himself in, rocking the boat as he went.
He hesitated.
“Are you afraid of water?” she asked with a frown, killing the throttle entirely. The boat slid to a halt, rocking gently with the waves.
“No,” he replied quickly. Too quickly. “Just sharks,” he added in a smaller voice.
Shay laughed loudly and threw herself into his arms. Behind them, the other boat slid beneath the waves, the propellers still spinning, sending it speeding into the depths in some sort of odd Viking funeral.
Before she realized it, she was crying, huge sobs racking her body as Justin held her tight.
“Hey, it’s okay,” he said, his fingers caressing her cheek softly as he kissed the top of her head. “It’s over now. It’s okay.”
She shook her head. “No, it’s not. J is still out there.”
She felt him tense under her. “How do you know J?”
“He was in the yacht that left at the start of the fight,” she said, resting her head on Justin’s chest.
“Damn,” the big shifter whispered, but he didn’t get up. Instead, he just held her tight.
“Justin,” she said, relishing the way his name rolled off her tongue.
“Yes?” he answered, his voice happy but tired.
“He’s not human.”
“Who isn’t?”
“J,” she replied “He’s something unlike you, or the Agents, even Cronin, the man you just killed. He’s... more powerful. There’s something about him, it’s scary. More so than anything I’ve seen yet.”
She could feel him frown.
“Justin?” she said again.
“Yes my love?”
“I think I’m going to pass out now,” she wearily as the last of the adrenaline fled from her body.
A second later, she followed through with her last comment as blackness washed over her.
Chapter Eighte
en
Justin
Two Days Later
The only command from Madison following the desperate fight at the pier had been to take some time off and recharge. She had set a date and time for a command meeting, and told everyone to make themselves scarce until then. They had all needed the time off after the events of the previous days, and he had been glad for that. It had given him and Shay a lot of time to spend together, which he had used to help her heal, both physically and mentally, from what she had gone through.
He regretted that it had delayed this particular meeting, but his mate was in a much better state of mind now than she had been after first waking up after fainting.
A mental roar of delight came with the fact that he had acknowledged that she was his mate. Justin knew many of the legends of his people spoke of them having to bite the woman to make her his mate, but it just didn’t work that way. It was his bear that would—and had—chosen a mate for him. His human side took longer to realize it, but once his bear saw “the one,” that was it. He would never be with another. For him, that was Shay.
“There’s someone you need to say hi to,” he said as she slid off the back of his bike.
“Oh, and who is that?” she asked, doffing her helmet and looking around the cavernous garage of the warehouse. They had converted it into the new base of operations for the Underground after their previous one had been exposed. Justin liked it better than the club anyway. It was much more private here.
“I think that he means me,” a voice said, emerging from behind one of the trucks.
Shay spun, the helmet falling from her hands as she made eye contact with the newcomer.
Justin smiled, snagging it out of mid-air and placing it on the seat next to his own.
“Father?” she asked in an unsteady voice.
“Hi,” he said lamely.
“Father!” she shouted, and flung her arms around him as Justin watched.
He saw the older man’s eyes water, and he turned away to give the pair their privacy, even if he could still overhear what they were saying.
“You’re alive!” she said excitedly. “I was so worried about you. Then when I found out...” her voice died there, the excitement suddenly gone.
“I know,” he replied, and Justin heard the disappointment with himself in those two words. “I made a bad decision, and I’m sorry. To both of you.”
The Sentinel turned as Charles raised his voice slightly, not realizing that Justin would have heard him anyway.
“You are forgiven,” he said solemnly. “Whatever happened was in the past. When confronted with the reality of what you were doing, you did the right thing. To me and my team, that shows great conviction within you. Everyone makes bad decisions sometimes. It’s what makes us good that allows us to forgive that.” He smiled. “Just don’t do it again,” he said in a lighter tone.
Charles echoed the look of amusement. “Is your boyfriend always that philosophical?” he asked Shay.
She giggled. “No, he usually has trouble with three-syllable words, actually. But we’re working on it.”
Justin felt his jaw drop at the jab. “First I’m called shifter boy, now she’s arguing that I talk like a child. She must feel confident in my feelings of affection toward her.”
“Then prove me wrong,” she joked as Justin came up alongside her, leaving her sandwiched between him and her father.
He paused. “No.”
“No?” she said skeptically.
He sighed theatrically. “Let me put it to you in a way you might understand. I am disinclined to acquiesce to your request.”
After a moment of shocked surprise Shay burst out into laughter, leaning her head on his shoulder as she shook. Her father chuckled politely.
“I don’t even know what we’re talking about anymore,” she said, pulling him tight against her.
“Me neither,” he replied.
“So, what are you going to do now?” she asked her father as Justin steered them toward the command room.
Charles hesitated for a moment, then plunged ahead. “I think, if Madison will let me, that I’m going to join the Underground.”
Shay nodded firmly. “Good.”
“Good?” both Justin and Charles echoed the question at the same time.
“Yes,” she said, looking at both of them. “It means we’ll get to see more of each other, which I think is sorely needed.”
“We will?”
“You will?”
Justin and Charles looked at each other, then at her.
“Yes. I’m going to be joining too,” she stated firmly, then stopped and looked at Justin, pointing at him to ensure he didn’t speak. “You guys need a good driver, and that’s going to be me.”
He felt his jaw drop at the strength in her voice. She had a point. Shay was a damn good driver. Better than any of the other Sentinels, that was for sure. But she wasn’t a shifter, or even a half-breed that could accept the Extremis serum.
“I don’t know,” he said. “I won’t argue that your skills behind the wheel would help us. That would be a lie. But you would be extremely vulnerable in a fight, and you have to admit that,” he said. “We can’t guarantee that you would be able to avoid one.”
Shay frowned. “You have other humans on your team, Justin. They go into danger willingly. If they’re willing to stick up for what’s right, who are you to deny me doing the same?”
“I agree,” a new voice said as they walked inside.
Justin glared at Madison, but she just shrugged it aside. “You know I’m right,” the leader of the Underground said. “She will be a big help to us, and it is her decision.”
“I know,” he grumped.
“But you don’t want to see me in harm’s way, right?” Shay said, letting go of her father for the moment to hold him tighter.
Justin nodded.
“You can’t protect me from everything,” she told him.
“I can try,” he said immediately, but he knew that was a flimsy argument, and so did she.
“I know you can, and I love you for it,” she said, kissing his arm as she pressed her forehead to him briefly. “But this is my choice. You have to let me make it.”
He frowned, having realized as soon as she spoke that this was coming. “Fine, but you’re going to be armed with a tranq gun at all times, and you will practice every day until you’re an ace marksmen with it. No argument.”
Shay grinned. “I can do that. Only if you know a good teacher though. One who can, ah, teach me proper posture and, umm, positioning. One who can maybe help me earn top marks through after-class lessons?” she said with a wink.
Justin glanced around the room as the others chuckled or cat-called him. He felt his cheeks heat a little, and knew he was probably blushing.
He was saved by Charles clearing his throat. The reminder that she had just said all that in front of her father made Shay burst into bright shades of red.
“Okay,” Madison said, gesturing at the seats surrounding the table.
Justin noticed Charles hesitated, looking up at her. The leader of the Underground just returned his stare and nodded, gesturing once more at the seats, giving him her approval to stay.
“I hope everyone has had a productive few days off,” she said, pausing when Connor conveniently cleared his throat. She arched an eyebrow as chuckles ran around the table, then continued as if her mate hadn’t done anything.
Justin leaned back, one arm draped over Shay’s shoulder as they began to recap everything that had happened.
Finally he felt at ease; with himself, who he was, and what he was being called upon to do in this chapter of his life. He still didn’t enjoy killing others, but he was no longer tormented by nightmares about it either. What little sleep Shay had allowed him to get over the past two days had been peaceful and enjoyable.
Of course, the time spent awake had been just as pleasurable he thought, a wicked grin spreading across his face.
THE END<
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This concludes Book 2 of The Agency series. I hope you enjoyed it as much as I did. Although this story is over, there are more adventures to be had. Sign up for my newsletter to be the first to get your hands on the next adventure:
Silver Bullet Bear (The Agency book 3) due out September 7th.
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About the Author
Amelia Jade
Amelia Jade loves to write the stories of tall, growly shifter men and the women who come to love them. Living out in the backcountry near the mountains, she keeps her own alpha male close by to keep the bears away and keep her warm. In her downtime (which is rare), she loves to read science-fiction with a dash of fantasy. You can often find her curled up in front of the real wood-burning fireplace, her nose firmly buried in a book or her favorite e-reader. The cold can’t bother her there!