“Yeah. And a shower. I need a shower bad,” she sighed. “Where are we?”
“Other side of Ashland,” he told her quietly. “Come on, I’ll show you where the shower’s at so you can
bathe. I’ll use the other one and get dinner together when I’m finished. It won’t take long.”
He led her to the master bedroom. The heavy wood furniture and spotless appearance gave it an
impersonal feel. He never cared much for the place, but the very fact that it was the opposite of what he
would have personally chosen made it that much safer.
“Go on.” He nodded to the large master bath and its garden tub. “I’ll lay a shirt out for you to wear. I’ll
use the other bathroom.”
She turned to him, her eyes heavy lidded, weariness dragging at her, and she was still the most beautiful
woman he had ever laid eyes on. He lifted his hand to smooth his fingers over her cheek, staring down at
her, longing for her. Only the fact that she was worn to the bone, tired and hungry, kept him from putting
her on that big, unused bed and pounding into her.
She pressed her cheek to his fingers, a smile lifting the corners of that pouting mouth.”
“Take your time.” Callan bent to her, his lips whispering over hers in a gentle kiss. “I’ll go ahead and
start supper after my shower. I’ll come up for you when it’s done.”
“I love you, Callan.”
His heart broke. He felt it shatter, the pieces slamming into his soul as she stared up at him, her eyes
slumberous, her body filled with need, her life in more danger than she could know, and still she
whispered those words to him.
He closed his eyes, wanting to block the site of it from his mind, from the beast that howled out in
misery.
“No,” he whispered, shaking his head. They were already bound, forever tied together in their need for
each other, in the danger that stalked them. This burden he could not face.
She felt his fingers on her lips. They trembled. He opened his eyes and saw the tear that fell from one
eye. It eased over her cheek, bleak and lonely as it made a track through the dust and grime on her face
from their run through the mountain.
“Yes.” Her voice shook as she fought more tears.
He wanted to scream out at the injustice of it. At the laugh fate was having on him. In one hand lay all his
dreams. In the other lay his death.
He pulled her to him, crushing her against his chest as he fought his own tears, the cries of the beast
suffering within him.
“I just wanted you to know, Callan, even before the mating, I loved you. When you were just a picture,
a story, a man I couldn’t stop dreaming about.” Her words pierced his heart. “I don’t want us to die
without you knowing that I love you. That I loved you even before you touched me.”
Callan shuddered. His arms tightened around her, his face burying in her neck. His lips pressed to the
small wound there where his teeth kept going during the height of their passion.
“When I first saw you, you were standing in that greasy parking lot of the station, wearing those damned
jeans and that shirt that flashed your stomach,” he said hoarsely. “My cock damned near came out of my
jeans, and my heart bled. Because I was looking at the woman I would have taken for my own, if my life
were my own.”
His life wasn’t his own, but she was. Nature had taken the choice from him. And it would kill him if he
failed to protect her. Callan knew the chances of protecting her were growing slimmer by the day. The
Council knew about her now. They knew about the mating.
He pulled back, unable to bear their touch any longer, unable to bear the uncertain future staring him in
the face. Damn their souls to hell, Merinus was better off dead then risking her life this way. She didn’t
have a chance. Eventually, they would get her. Just as they always captured him. Eventually. He turned
from her, heading for the bedroom door.
“Bathe,” he whispered, his voice tight, the ache in his soul nearly strangling him. “I’ll have something to
eat soon.”
He heard her sigh behind him. A lost, aching sigh that speared through him, hurting him more than he was
already hurting. She was so innocent. Too damned innocent for the horrors awaiting them. How could he
assure her safety? What could he do to keep the degradation and pain he knew she would suffer from
her future?
Go in as she asked? That question haunted him. He could bear the humiliation, the tabloid stories and the
judgments against him. He could risk the chance he would be branded sub-human for her safety. If it
brought her safety. If her brother had been the one to betray her, then it wouldn’t. But, if his other