Raised From the Flames

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Raised From the Flames Page 17

by Raina Wilde


  "What happened?" Evita finally asked after she made him some tea and they were sitting on the couch.

  "It's a long story and you wouldn't believe me," he answered.

  "Try me," she replied.

  "I'm a shifter," he said.

  "A what?" Evita asked.

  "A shifter. I shift from human to bear. I can always shift when I want to, but sometimes it happens when I don't want it to. Especially when there are... disturbances nearby," he said.

  Evita laughed, "What kind of disturbances?"

  Shane shrugged, "Something as simple as a pack of coyotes passing through. Loggers on my land have done it..." he said, "hunting season," he laughed ruefully. Then he looked her in the eye and said, "A beautiful woman I want as my mate."

  Evita set her cup of tea down. For some reason this made her angry.

  "Are you hitting on me?" she asked, but there was an edge to her voice.

  "It's a little too late for that," Shane replied with a laugh. Now Evita was seething.

  "If you're well enough to sit here with me in my living room, I think you're well enough to leave," she said and stood up. Shane stood up and walked after her, a little wobbly at first but after a few steps he found his strength.

  "You don't believe me?" he asked.

  Evita balked at him. "Of course I don't believe you, it's ridiculous."

  Shane sighed and ran his fingers through his hair.

  "Can you go into your bedroom?" he asked.

  Evita's mouth dropped open. "To do what?" she demanded, her hand on her hip.

  "Watch me through the window," he said, and he walked toward the front door.

  Evita, against her better judgement, went into her bedroom and sat on her bed. After a few seconds she watched Shane walk around the side of the house and stand a few feet from the windows. Suddenly his shoulders began to broaden and he dropped to his knees as if in pain, and Evita gasped. She was about to bolt out the door to help him when she saw his hands transform themselves. His palms blackened and extended, his fingernails sharpened to points, and a mass of fur suddenly spread over his skin like a rash, sprouting and splitting the surrounding skin. His face was still human, but barely, and Evita watched in part horror and part fascination as it morphed into the face of a bear. He roared in pain and power, now completely bear, his pants ripped and bloody, left on the ground. The bear sat back on his haunches and licked at its fur. Then it stood on its hind legs and waved its paws at Evita in a friendly and comical way. She laughed nervously, covering her mouth.

  Suddenly, headlights swooped into the yard, illuminating Shane, who was now a bear. Evita watched as Isaac, the bear biologist, leaned out of the truck window and fired a shot at Shane.

  "No!" she screamed, running for the door. She heard another gunshot and started to cry. Then she heard the bray of dogs and she knew that Isaac had released a pack of hunting dogs eager to hunt Shane down and tear him limb from limb.

  Evita grabbed a tranquilliser and her own handgun from the locked cabinet in the basement operating room. She loved animals but was under no delusions about the power they had when they were scared and injured. She still bore the scars on her arm where a dog with a broken leg had lashed out at her. The gun was just for precautions. Just incase. But she needed it now.

  When she got back outside the pick-up truck had taken off down the road, but she still heard the bray of dogs in the distance. She hoped Shane had found somewhere to hide, but before she worried about him she needed to get Issac off his trail. Clutched in her hand was the tracker she took out of Shane's shoulder. She knew she was as much a target of Isaac's wrath as Shane, because right then she looked like a tagged bear on any equipment Isaac had in his truck.

  Evita spent the next four hours hiking through the woods, occasionally hearing the far off bark of dogs, but she was unsure if they were Isaac's dogs or if she was so far into the woods that she had crossed into a different town, about to pop out into someone’s backyard.

  Finally she saw what she knows is a bear den. She kicked debris at it, hoping there was a bear inside that would come out. A thought crossed her mind that perhaps all bears were really humans. And maybe a lot of humans were infact bears. The thought made her shiver. Finally she heard a snuffling from the den entrance and a medium sized black bear emerged. She aimed her tranquilliser and shot at it. It roared back in anger, and then turned tail and ran. She spent the next 20 minutes tracking it, and when she found it it was fast asleep.

  "I'm so sorry," she whispered to the bear as she cut a small incision into the shoulder. She didn’t know what kind of wrath this bear would face from Isaac, but at least it would buy Shane some time. She sewed the tracker into the bear, and then took the tranquilliser dart out of it's shoulder.

  She hiked back to her house, the forest silent, and Evita exhausted. She collapsed on the couch when she was inside and fell asleep with her boots on. She woke several hours later and heard a noise on the front steps. She looked outside and didn’t see anyone, but there was a hand carved wooden bear sitting on the steps. She lifted it up and found that it was a piggy bank with a note inside.

  The note was from Shane. Inside, he confessed that he loved her, and that nothing could keep them apart. But he needed to get out of town for a while. Tears sprang to her eyes as she read it. Shane had gone to Canada for a few months, and he told her to do everything she could to get Isaac out of town. She sat on the front steps and cried into her hands, both from relief and from sadness that Shane had left town.

  Finally she lifted herself up, took a hot shower, made a pot of coffee and started cultivating her plan for getting Isaac out of the picture, and getting Shane back in her life.

  #

  A few months later she was in Quebec hiking up a mountainous trail. Three days earlier she had received a postcard from Shane. It didn't say where he was, but she recognised the view. The only time she had been on the east coast growing up was a trip to Quebec. Her French class spent all year fundraising to take it, and they had spent two days in Quebec City and a day hiking La Mauricie National Park. Now she was three hours into a hike along the Deux-Criques trail, one of the most demanding, and picturesque, in the park. But it was the only clue she had to where Shane could be.

  Finally she reached the first lookout point and stopped to rest. It was late in the season, and this far north it could start snowing at any time. She had a feeling Shane might be doing what all bears do in the winter, hiding somewhere and hibernating. She just hoped that she could find him in time, although she wasn't sure exactly how.

  She started hiking again; the days were short now and she had to keep moving to make progress before dark. There weren't many other hikers on the trail, and she hoped that if she had any chance of seeing Shane, it would be now, when the trail was empty and the tourists had dwindled for the season. She had spent the past few months thinking about Shane and getting lost in her work. Isaac had disappeared from town, and any attempt she made at contacting him at the university was met with stony silent professionalism. They weren't at liberty to say where he was, just that he no longer worked for them.

  When she got to the second lookout point the sun was even lower in the sky. She worried about being out on the trail late at night. She was only halfway along, and didn't like the idea of spending the night in a tent. Far off in the distance the sound of coyotes echoed off the mountains. She shivered. Usually coyotes only called at night, unless they were desperately hungry. She began walking again, and after she heard the coyote call twice more she realised they were getting closer. A knot of dread grew in her stomach. If she had been back in Maine she would have had a gun with her, but out here, in this foreign country, she only had her flashlight and a club.

  After a half hour the trail descended into a heavily forested area. The path was littered with pine needles and they were soft under her feet. However they silenced any noise she had been making before, and the thick forest around her was eerily quiet. She quickened her pace, e
ager to get out of the darkness of the forest. Then she heard the snap of a twig to her right. She stopped, heartbeat pounding in her ears, and strained her eyes to look through the trees. She couldn't see anything. Evita pulled the flashlight from an exterior pocket of her pack and shined it into the trees. On her second sweep the light caught on two glowing yellow eyes. And then two more to the left. She heard a low throaty growl behind her. She turned to see two more coyotes emerging from the trees. Their lips were drawn back in a snarl and they were hunched low to the ground. She knew if she tried to run they would catch her easily, being known to sprint over 40 miles per hour, and leaping 13 feet. Usain Bolt on his best days could only run 28 miles per hour, and Evita knew she was no Usain Bolt. She closed her eyes and, for one of the only times in her life, prayed. She prayed that either something or someone would interrupt what was happening—or for the coyotes to make her death quick and painless. The more logical part of her brain knew both of those things were unlikely to happen. Fear began to build inside her.

  Then, from the forest stretching out in front of her came a crashing sound. She was frozen in fear, thinking it was the rest of the pack. However a long low growl made the four coyotes surrounding her start to back away. Their snarls gave way to whimpers, and all but one of them fled to the cover of the trees. Evita watched as an enormous black bear emerged from the trees. One coyote stood its ground, growling and snapping at the bear. They circled each other, with Evita in the centre. She stood, frozen in fear, watching the animals eye each other, ready for a fight.

  Then, with a quickness she had never seen before in her life, the coyote turned and charged at her. She screamed and raised her arms. The only thing she remembered before passing out was a searing pain as the coyote sunk his teeth into one of her arms.

  #

  Evita woke in a hospital to the reassuring steady beep and whir of machines. There were hushed voices around her, and when she opened her eyes she saw a nurse attending a patient beside her who was hidden by a curtain. She turned her head to the other side and saw Shane. He was slumped in a chair beside her bed, sleeping. She reached out and touched his leg.

  "You're awake," he whispered, and smiled at her.

  "What happened?" she asked.

  Shane looked up at the nurse in the room and then back down at Evita. She knew he couldn't tell the truth when there were other people in the room. Finally the nurse left, and Shane kept his voice low.

  "You were on the trail, and the coyotes surrounded you. Do you remember that?" he asked. Evita nodded.

  "And I came out, and..." he trailed off. Evita nodded again to say she remembered that much.

  "One of the coyotes charged. I think he could tell I was protective of you and did it to spite me. He got your arm pretty bad. I pulled him off and..." Shane didn't finish, and Evita wasn't sure she wanted him to.

  "When they were gone I changed back, into a human, and just a few seconds after I did some hikers came around the bend. They were running, they must have heard you scream. I was naked," Shane laughed. "I made up some story about how I was bathing in a stream nearby when I heard the commotion. I think they bought it." Evita laughed, but the movement hurt her whole body.

  "Isaac is gone," she said after a moment.

  Shane nodded, looking at his feet. "He'll be back," he said, and when he looked up at Evita his eyes were pained.

  "We'll be ready," she whispered.

  Shane looked doubtful. The doctor bustled into the room, interrupting them. Shane squeezed her hand and left the room.

  Three weeks later Evita was finally released from the hospital. She hadn't seen Shane since that day she woke up, and she figured he had chosen to keep hiding. When she got home her house smelled stale and unused, and she threw all of the windows open and spent the afternoon cleaning. Her arm was still tender and wrapped, the doctors said it might not ever be the same. For now field-work was out of the question, she would have to hire an assistant. She was to keep office hours to a minimum and only handle small animals as to not exert too much pressure on her wound.

  After the house was clean she sat on the back porch with a steaming cup of tea and a book. It was Halloween, and the leaves had mostly fallen from the trees. She didn't expect any trick-or-treaters since her house was so secluded, but she had a bowl of candy ready regardless. Evita lost herself in the novel with a wool blanket pulled up to her shoulders. She had been on the porch for an hour when she heard a noise at the door. She got up and grabbed the bowl of candy, expecting a group of children in costumes. When she opened the door she saw a large figure with a bear mask on. She gasped and stepped back, still skittish from the encounter with the coyotes. But the bear had begun to laugh. He pulled off the mask and it was Shane, smiling down at her.

  "You scared me half to death!" she cried.

  "Oh, wouldn't want to do that," he replied and stepped inside. He pulled her in close for a kiss, tenderly holding her so he wouldn't hurt her arm. She looked up into his eyes and kissed him, so deeply and passionately it was as if her life depended on it. He picked her up easily and carried her to the bedroom, where he gently undressed her, kissing her skin as he exposed it. She shivered at the touch of his lips. He lay her down on the bed, drinking in the sight of her. The way Shane looked at her, with such love and longing, took Evita's breath away. In that moment she knew they were tied together for eternity. He pushed inside her and she gasped with pleasure. Shane gently made love to her, holding and caressing her body until she screamed and writhed in pleasure. Afterward, they lay tangled in the blankets, sneaking kisses between hushed whispers about what each of them did in those few months they were apart.

  "So you're staying?" she asked finally.

  "Do I have a choice?" he replied with a smile.

  "No," she said, and kissed him.

  "Well, that's settled then," he kissed her back.

  They lay in bed together in the darkness, Evita happier than she had ever been, but still apprehensive at the thought that Isaac might return. She thought of the gun tucked away in her bedside table, and knew she would do anything—anything—to keep Shane in her life. She snuggled closer to him, and felt his arms wrap around her. She closed her eyes and slept.

  THE END

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  About the Author

  By day she is a loving wife and a respected working mother. But when the sun sets and the shades are drawn she becomes Raina Wilde, the devilishly naughty romance writer with an insatiable appetite for lustful tales.

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