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Authors: Kassanna

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a meaty fist. He lifted his head and gazed at each man. “With the extenuating circumstances, I think

now would be the time to sign off on everything. Jamison?”

Jamison yanked a chair up and set it down next to Percel’s. “Anybody got a pen?”

* * * *

Kiele sat on the other side of Bayou Animaux, chuckling. She ground her cigarette out on a stone

next to her feet. Through the binoculars she spied her dad, Percel. Other than the dusting of white

amongst the red hair, he hadn’t changed much. Her momma apparently hadn’t stopped cooking since

her father’s girth had widened. She looked past her daddy. Loubel combed his fingers through his

blond strands, pushing a lock off his forehead. Colorful tattoos covered both his arms and spread

under his shirt. He always did act first and ask questions later. Loubel was a street fighter who didn’t

care how he won.

She focused on her target, Jamison. It was damn near a hundred degrees and that fool was wearing a

suit, minus the jacket that hung across the back of a chair. He definitely hadn’t changed. Well, he had,

she glanced at his head and wondered if he shaved his head because was going bald. Marree would’ve

had her head when they were younger for questioning anything about that damn Anaconda.

Kiele watched over Marree from the time her Aunt Loretta put her on the bus in Rattler, TX until

she arrived on Sint’s doorstep. Marree had been her best friend growing up and given what she knew

Cheryl could do to a person, she needed to make sure Marree made it to Betaille. Early on in the

Shadow Clan, she didn’t trust the bastards and checked periodically on her family. That’s when she

discovered Marree was pregnant and living with her Aunt Loretta. It was the only time she’d ever

asked her handler for a favor. She asked that they make arrangements for her best friend to be sent to

Betaille and sent a note to Loubel asking that he watch out for the non-shifter.

Marree was the only one who knew the identity of Darcel’s daddy. She knew the woman had never

revealed her secrets. There had to be a way to keep Jamison alive, it was the least she could do for

Marree.

Growing up, Marree was an oddity, being a shifter that couldn’t change forms. One day she was just

there, a reed thin, dirty little girl that walked across the railroad tracks in a torn dress and shoes with

holes in them. Aunt Loretta took her in and when no one came looking for Marree, she simply

continued to stay. Everyone assumed she was an abandoned snake shifter. As a child sometimes when

she got really mad her eyes would change or her skin would ripple but not once had she ever made the

transition into her beast.

Being kids, no one questioned how she just appeared. Marree was quiet with such a gentle spirit

about her. If anyone teased her about her handicap, they’d been right there to defend her. Jamison

could be especially brutal and he was always the one to throw the first punch. His attitude got them

many an ass whooping for fighting. She should have known back then those two were destined for

each other.

A flash caught her eye and she spun on the tree stump, looking for the source of the sparkle. Some

of the bushes on the adjacent bank rustled. Kiele narrowed her eyes and waited. She slipped the

glasses in her bag and stood. Whoever sat in the foliage wasn’t trained very well. A seasoned killer

would know how to watch people without being seen. She turned her head and lifted the binoculars to

watch Marree enter the community center. There was an unknown player in her game. Kiele rose from

her seat.

She pushed through the foliage to the forgotten dirt road she’d been using to get back and forth

from her base position. Kiele circled around to get downwind of the bastard watching her friends and

family. Her phone buzzed and she dug into her pocket to retrieve it.

“What?” Kiele slipped into a copse of trees.

“Why isn’t he dead?” Heinrich’s voice grated in her ear.

“Because I’m thorough. Dude, this is a bad time since I’m trying to do the job I was hired to do.

Reception is spotty, so if this call gets dropped I want you to know it wasn’t me.” She hung up and

stuffed the phone in her back pocket.

Kiele felt the ripple in the air as a bullet whizzed past her head. Son of a bitch was using a silencer.

She took off in a dead run, leaping over a felled tree, and started stripping. Behind a thick dogwood

she stuffed the clothes in her bag and jammed it under an exposed root. Within minutes she became

her boar.

She navigated the marsh, moving forward and doubling back in an effort to lead her shooter deeper

into the swamp. First she would take care of the intruder trying to muck up her plans, then she would

find a way to keep Jamison safe. After that, she’d need to take care of Heinrich. But hey, it was

doable. Actually, that was a short list for her.

Chapter Seven

Marree checked the coyote’s pulse. The thud against her fingers was strong, and at some point

through the long night he was able to shift into his human form. A very good sign. He’d recover from

the venomous bite Loubel inflicted. She grabbed the saline bag intravenously attached to his arm and

added seven cc’s of anti-venom to his drip just to be on the safe side. The way their bodies

metabolized drugs, the original dose had most likely already disappeared from the coyote’s system.

She tucked the blankets around his shoulders before moving into the next room. It would be another

tedious night of watching and waiting. The immediate danger was over and now it was just a simple

case of giving his body time to heal, which would be accelerated given a shifter’s regenerative

attributes. What could drop a human might knock out the numerous species which made up her

community, but it wouldn’t kill them.

She pulled the chair free of her desk and sat down to make notes in Rolo’s chart. A knock at her

door had her glancing back into the waiting area. Jamison stood at the door, his hand poised to rap on

the glass again. With a sigh, she rose. Yesterday she’d made it clear to both him and Loubel that she

didn’t want to see either man for a long time. She dropped her head. Talking to those two was like

speaking to a concrete block.

When she’d arrived at the community center, the men were sitting around a damaged table, buck-

assed naked, signing papers on their knees. A cat shifter was bellowing from his roost on a file cabinet

and the coyote was laid out in a corner, barely breathing. At that point she went into action and

administered the medication which would negate the poison coursing through the canine’s system.

The men continued with their political wrangling as if she wasn’t there. She had to coax the neurotic

Puma from his perch, which took a majority of her time. The poor thing kept changing forms as if he

couldn’t decide on what he wanted to be. By the time the sentry party that was supposedly the

committee’s protection arrived, Jamison was shaking hands with the Alphas of Betaille. And Jac, the

cat, was still threatening retribution from behind Evian’s broad shoulders.

Marree shook her head. Shifter politics were worse than the humans. Loubel immediately caught

sight of the mate’s mark as she directed the sentinels to place Rolo in her truck. Loubel’s tongue

licked the air, and she was too late to stop him as he leapt from his seat at Jamison. They shifted mid-

fall, landing in a heap. The Alpha’s surrounding them smirked as they watched the two men battle it

out. The Volkshire wolves started taking bets instead of moving the coyote’s body as she’d requested.

Her beast prowled across the forefront to her mind and for a moment she thought she could almost

feel her creature pushing for control. She shook her head and the urge was gone. Assholes were still

standing around. At a loss to do anything else, she marched out to her truck and snatched up her dart

gun. She filled the projectiles with a powerful sedative and loaded her weapon. When she stomped

back into the center the men had widened their circle and no one had bothered to stop the writhing

snakes from killing each other. The coyote shifter was being ignored altogether.

Marree lifted the rifle, took aim, and fired. The tranquilizer loaded bullet whizzed through the air

and lodged itself into the dense middle of Jamison’s body. Jamison shifted and looked down at the

feather tipped dart hanging from his belly. Quickly she cocked the gun again and shot the next round.

Loubel dropped from Jamison’s leg with a
thump
and reclaimed his human form, weaving as he

rose to his feet. “You shot me,” he accused, his features etched with disbelief as his eyes widened.

Jamison nodded in agreement.

“Damn right.” She’d swung the muzzle in a half circle and held the gaze of every shifter before

turning her eyes on Jamison and Loubel. “Seriously, you two will play nice or I swear I will put you

both down. And when you come to, remember to leave me the hell alone! Now, who else wants to

sleep for a couple days?”

Loubel and Jamison dropped to the floor.

Percel burst out in gut-shaking laughter. “Dammit girl, I didn’t think you had it in you.” He turned

to Eivan. “You heard Marree, get that old dog into her truck. Wait till I tell Sint about this.”

People rushed into a blur of movement following the gruff orders.

“Go to hell, Percel. I’m still mad at Sint.” She’d pressed her lips together to keep from smirking

and got out of there, leaving Jamison sound asleep.

The tapping resumed and Marree was jarred back to the present. She turned to meet Jamison’s gaze

through the glass. He cocked a brow. If she disappeared into the small surgical suite where Rolo was

resting she could ignore the man. She rubbed her neck and felt the scar tissue left from his bite.

Fucking snakes, arrogant asshole, she huffed as she stalked to the door. No doubt letting him into her

domain was a bad idea. However she knew if she didn’t he would stand there all night.

Marree stared at him with her hand on the lock. He pursed his lips and held up his other hand. When

she still hadn’t turned the deadbolt he shook the bag he clutched.

“Sint sent you something to eat,” he yelled through the glass.

“No thanks. I don’t want n’thing from you or Sint at the moment.” Marree pulled her hand away.

He narrowed his eyes. “Open the door, Marree, or I will bust the fucker in.”

“You’re not faster than a bullet, Jami, and I swear to the Goddess by the time I’m done, you will

wake up in somebody’s circus,” she screamed as she backed away.

“Woman!” He dropped the bag, took off his jacket and wrapped it around his hand.

Glass shattered. Shards rained down on the linoleum floor. Jamison pulled his hand back and dipped

under the metal bar to get into the waiting area. Marree spun on her heel and ran for her office. She

slammed the thin wooden door knowing it wouldn’t be much of a barrier for shifter like Jamison. She

jogged to the second filing cabinet and yanked out the pistol she kept in the top drawer. Marree

grabbed a handful of darts but they slipped through her trembling fingers. She dropped to her knees

and scrambled to retrieve one, but in her haste they skittered across the slick floor. She glanced up.

The molding framing the doorway was ripped from their anchors as the door, knob and lock still

connected slammed into the back wall.

Jamison lowered his leg and tilted his head to the side to stare at her. “You will never put a locked

door between us again, mate.”

She wrapped her fingers around a thin projectile and slid the top back to move the dart into the

chamber. With her arm straight, she rose form her position. “Get it through your thick head. We are

not mates. That train left the station years ago. Just leave. I’m sure the silent alarm has already alerted

Etienne and he or one of his deputies are probably on their way.”

“They can come.” Jamison shrugged.

She waved the gun. “You are such an idiot. Go already.”

“Shoot me because that is the only way you’re going to get rid of me.”

“Don’t damn tempt me!”

He huffed and backed up. His tone softened. “All I want to do is talk. You know better than I do

there is no reversal of a true claiming and this…” he circled his hand, “…has been a long time

coming.” Jamison grimaced. “I’ll even make nice with Loubel. If that is what it takes to make you

happy. We belong together.” He took a step toward her.

She shuffled back.

“Take a ride with me. Remember in college how much fun we use to have sneaking off?”

Marree snorted. “Yeah we took bottles of cheap wine and a blanket. We would watch the stars from

the bed of your truck parked in the desert. I do believe it was on one of those occasions that Karma

was conceived.”

“Want to try and recreate that?” He chuckled.

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