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Kenny (Shifter Football League Book 2)

Page 109

by Becca Fanning


  "Isn't that – " she started.

  "Jacob Tyrell," Colby said. His hands on her shoulders, he turned her slightly so she looked up into the stands again. "Look at their faces. Are they waiting for him to win?"

  The people closest to him were a mixed bunch. There were all ages, all weights, both sexes, and everything from the misplaced hipster to the crinkly skinned western resident. Most of them were watching, hands tense, expressions rapt. But a handful of them –

  "They're waiting to see him fall. They're waiting for him to get hurt."

  Colby nodded. "And look up there, just over to the left, the man in shadow of the woman with the hat." He didn't have to say which hat. It looked like a confection.

  "What about him?"

  "Look at his shirt," Colby said.

  She squinted, staring up at the man, who turned just then and glared at her, giving her a good view.

  The shirt was stained, not in the cleanest condition. But what appalled her was the image. Set against the tan cotton were a pair of silkscreened gold eyes – and a big international circle and slash symbol.

  No shifters.

  Colby drew her back into the shadows of the chute. Even just his hand on her arm made her hot. She could feel the heat coming off him. She trembled, wanting him. He smelled musky, like an animal. The hand that held her could easily span around her upper arm at least twice. A little breathless, she looked up at him, trying to remember what she wanted to know.

  What she wanted to feel. Other than his lips on hers.

  "Jacob's here. Owen. Holden's out looking. Eddie's riding. So far, our clan's intact. But shifters are vanishing. No trace left behind." Serious gold eyes stared into hers.

  "Why isn't it in the news? Surely every population isn't as rigid and unwelcoming as this one." She waved her hand at the rodeo crowd back and behind them.

  "It's spread through the clans. The others don't want it out. Weres don't exactly court the spotlight."

  She gaped at him, then gestured back at the arena. "Don't court the spotlight? What do you call what Jacob is doing? What do you call what your whole family did in West Texas with the pigs? Everyone heard about that little stunt."

  A grin flickered across his face. "Yeah, that was a good one."

  She rolled her eyes. "I'm going to write about this."

  Instantly he shook his big, shaggy head and again she saw a ripple of bear, there and then gone. The scent of musk increased. "Holden says no and Owen is holding to that line."

  She made a moue with her mouth. "That's nice. Doesn't concern me. I found out about it. No one warned me off."

  "I am." He put one hand on her shoulder and she froze.

  Did he mean to hold her there against her will? Testing, she shrugged the hand off. He instantly released her.

  Good.

  "Look, keeping things a secret? Doesn't solve anything. I'm going to write about this. I can write about it with your help or I can write about it by piecing together what I can." She stared up at him, challenging.

  Colby looked around as if somebody might come save him. Finally his shoulders slumped and he said, "Fine."

  She pulled her phone out before he could change his mind and tapped the recording app. She might not care for digitals, but it was light and easy and fast. "Tell me about the disappearances. Are they from different families? Different weres? When did they start? What do you think is happening to the shifters who vanish?"

  If she'd expected him to be nonplussed by the onslaught, she'd have been disappointed. As it was, she'd expected he could hold his own.

  "Quite honestly, Miss Gemma, I think the shifters who are vanishing are being killed."

  * * *

  Chapter Four

  "It started a couple years ago, slow at first," he said.

  They'd found a deserted backstage type corner with an ancient table and decaying chairs. She held the phone easily in her hand, directed at Colby.

  "The first disappearances were friends. From a close clan. They don't rodeo, but they work the west, mostly alpine areas, ski lifts and the like. They're fantastic skiers," he added, and she thought she might know who he meant but didn't slow down to make certain.

  "Pretty much an entire family vanished, the Carsons and then the Pinions, one after another. At first it just felt like shifters going under the radar, living mainstream lifestyles."

  "I thought most did." She watched his eyes, the way they lit when they looked at her and darkened with worry when he looked past her, relating the story. The way his hand held her free hand, fingers playing over the knuckles gently, as if he wasn't aware what he was doing.

  As if it felt normal for him to touch her.

  There was nothing normal about it for Gemma. Every touch sent lightning bolts through her body, heat racing through her.

  "Pretty much. But there's always something. Civil rights are still struggling. There's still lots of attention on the people caught up in the struggle. There always is. Races will always look askance at each other and maybe that's not a terrible thing. Maybe our differences are what makes it dangerous for us to be 'separate but equal' but maybe our differences are what make us who we are."

  "That's where I get confused with diversity speeches," she said while taking a note. She'd taken her hand back from him and missed the contact, but wanted to be certain she transcribed everything. "If we say we are all alike with no differences between us, then we lose things from our cultures, don't we? And if we admit our cultures are different, we're accused of not being diverse in our viewpoints."

  None of which she'd meant to say. But in the next instant, he said it for her. "Bigotry is never going to go away. Not completely. I think we as people we can get better. Just not completely healed."

  She'd passed some kind of test, because when he said that about we as a people, she hadn't blinked.

  Of course she hadn't. She had grown up around weres. On her father's ranch. He'd employed cowboy shifters, big bears with gold eyes who kept the coyotes at bay and the rustlers farther off. Who rode the cattle drives and worked the ranch. She'd known them, grown up with them, watched her father lose his ranch when one was accused of murder and he'd gone to bat for the man. Gone to court for him.

  Her father, the champion. He hadn't just lost the case. He hadn't just seen the shifter jailed for a crime he didn't commit.

  He'd lost his ranch. Almost lost his life. Because the angry crowd had come in the night, no different than a lynching, and set fire to the ranch.

  They'd gotten out in time. They'd saved the animals, saved themselves, and possessions weren't important after that.

  But Gemma had seen hard faces of neighbors, of good old boys, of cowboys from neighboring ranches. She'd seen the bears shift, berserker rages driving them, seen them plow into the people setting the fire.

  Her father had rebuilt. The bears had actually come back.

  Gemma hadn't.

  She didn't realize she was crying until he wiped her eyes.

  Colby tilted her head up to his and kissed her cheeks. Her back was against the wall of the chute in the shadowy underground behind the arena stands. Colby stood in front of her, one hand propped at her head level on the wall of the chute. He looked down into her face, his eyes a hot gold of lust.

  Her hands went up and tangled in his hair. Her body flamed. She wanted him here and now, didn't want to wait. She'd thought, after the drink, after the interviews, they'd go somewhere. Together. She didn't want to wait.

  There was nowhere here to be together. Maybe the tiny office with its saddles and stenches? It seemed too far away.

  "You're not crying for just the vanished." His voice was a deep rumble, almost a growl, but he didn't sound angry. More comforting.

  "I'm crying for the vanished," she said. "And because of the people who make shifters vanish. Those people who hurt what they don't understand."

  "What do you understand?" His voice was deeper still, honey laced with guttural edges.

  "Th
at I want you. I – " She broke off, and screamed.

  In the stands, the crowd roared as something happened in the arena. The roar masked the sound of her scream.

  Colby shuddered under the blow, already turning to face the men behind him. She saw three wooden baseball bats raised, three men dwarfed by the size of the shifter.

  Because he was changing. Turning toward them, Colby grew. He rippled and changed, this time the change warping her vision, changing every bone and sinew. Taller, broader, the golden brown hair of a grizzly erupted from his back as his denim button-down ripped apart at the seams.

  His hand had already left her. Gemma watched, horrified, as the giant paw with the five thick, ripping claws flashed out at the closest of the men.

  Gemma knew how to take care of herself. She'd taken a black belt in Taekwon Do and she carried a concealed weapon ever since she'd left her father's house.

  But the savagery of the attack left her frozen, cringing against the wall as the bats flew at Colby.

  He was more than a match for them. The first two bats he snapped in half. The third he hurled into the darkness of the under-arena space. Enormous paws fastened around the closest man and flung him at the gate. The man struck the wall and slid, gasping for air but not dead, maybe not even harmed.

  Colby was already reaching for the second. Gemma scooted back out of the way. If she could stay out of it, she'd make it easier for him. She yanked her phone up, hit camera, then watched, amazed, as Colby sent a stunning blow at the second man, but left him winded, barely bleeding from a scratch.

  He wasn't hurting them. He wasn't trying to kill them. He was fully animal but he maintained control.

  Until Gemma stumbled back another step, pocketing her phone. She backed directly into the arms of the third man.

  She'd never even seen him move. Gasping, she drove an elbow toward his ribs, but he moved easily. His arm crooked around her neck. Automatically, Gemma dropped her chin into the V of his elbow, giving herself breathing room. Her hands went up to either side of her face, grabbing his arm. She'd bite, she'd kick, she'd –

  Freeze, when the gun cocked, directly beside her ear.

  "Beast!"

  It wasn't the word. It was the sound of the gun that made Colby stop moving.

  "That's good. That's a good dumb beast." The man behind her stank of cologne and beer and gun oil.

  Gemma retched.

  "What's the matter, little girl? Don't like humans anymore?" He jammed the barrel of the gun into her temple.

  Gemma rocked with the force of the blow. The world slid away and back again.

  Colby slid away and back again. Almost human. She saw his cheekbones and lips emerge from the fur and the black outlined mouth. She saw the fury in those golden eyes, saw the fur turning back to hair.

  She wanted to beg him not to. The man would kill him. He was only waiting until Colby wasn't a bear. That much she was sure of.

  Colby was too. She thought. Because he went halfway back to man, his hands emerging from paws, held up before him, placating.

  The man with the gun laughed. The gun swung toward Colby.

  In the split second Gemma saw Colby look directly into her eyes. His meaning was clear. Don't move. Let me do this.

  In that same second, he moved. The gun swung toward him. The man's trigger finger whitened under pressure.

  Colby surged away from the man.

  Colby the bear moved faster than the man, spinning out of reach of the gun.

  The muzzle flashed. The world rocked with concussion of sound.

  The man holding Gemma flailed, trying to bring the weapon to point at her again.

  He never got the chance. Giant paws grabbed him, talons sliced into his forearm, his shoulders, his chest.

  His throat.

  The man who had attacked them slumped to the ground. Red gore splattered the black version of the No Shifters t-shirt.

  The shifter stood over him, human again, holding Gemma.

  "We have to get out of here," she said, when she could speak again. The shivering had started the same moment he stopped asking if she was all right.

  The same time he'd stopped kissing her.

  Only seconds had gone by. But people would be coming.

  "Come on," Colby said, and took her hand.

  No sign of Owen when they went through the arena and the underground structure. They kept away from the bodies, left the dead man crumpled in a little used storage area. The other two men had fled.

  They found Owen getting ready to ride. He came out of the locker room and nearly ran into both of them.

  "What's happened?"

  There was blood on Colby's shirt. Colby wasted no words telling Owen what happened.

  "It doesn't tell us much we didn't know," Owen said, when he put down the phone. He'd called someone, though Gemma couldn't imagine who, to collect the body. A report had come back instantly that the man wasn't identified or recognized. Now Owen paced, furious, full of energy. "The shirts, the symbols – we knew what they meant."

  Colby said, "Now we know at least some of them are actively doing something about the No Shifters policy." His voice was bitter.

  Gemma suddenly stood and reached into her back pocket. The men stared at her. She held out her phone. "I've got photos." She hoped. She'd been shooting fast and pretty freaked out.

  "Good," Owen said and Colby took her phone, turned it on, scrolled.

  "I know this guy," Owen said. His voice was the distant of someone trying to remember where they'd seen an actor before. "Good job." He looked at both of them. "You look beat. Gemma, you mind if Colby runs you home? I'd just as soon you're not alone tonight. On the ride," he added. "Cole, take her car, so she doesn't get broken into and they don't get her address."

  Gemma shuddered. "Do you really think -- ?" But Owen had already turned away, back on his phone.

  She turned to look at Colby. "Do you mind?"

  He gave her a grin had had already forgotten the bloodshed. Or at least put it aside for the time being in favor of more important things. He smelled muskier than before. "I'd be honored to drive you home."

  They didn't make it that far.

  There wasn't any reason to rush out of the arena. The events were going on for hours. The two men who'd attacked them had fled. The third was being taken care of. No one was going to call the police. No one was looking for Colby.

  There were no sticky questions to avoid.

  Just heat, rising between them. When they left the office where Owen paced, on the phone with Holden by then, Colby held his hand out and she slipped hers into it. He coiled his fingers against her palm, making her lightheaded.

  They stopped just out of sight of the office. He pinned her to the wall. His mouth came down over hers, hot as his hands were. His tongue traced her lips, then slid between her lips. She met it with hers, tasting the animal scent there. But when her hands traced his face, he was all male. All human.

  Her hands continued up, into his hair, knocking his cowboy hat off onto the dusty concrete floor. His hands slid up from her shoulders, along her throat, cupped her face, tangled in her hair and removed the clip, throwing it down after his hat.

 

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