Read New Species 03 Valiant Online
Authors: Laurann Dohner
patrolling that area. Put his ass down and secure him if
he tries to leave his territory. Clear?”
Tammy glanced at the guy on the seat next to her.
He had an ear clip-on comm device. Whatever was said
made him look more relaxed. “Good. Tiger out.” He
hooked the radio back to his vest.
“I’m very sorry for all of this. You need to contact us
if there’s anything we can do for you. Our legal
department will be getting hold of you.”
“For what?”
“They just will. When you agreed to work here you
had to sign forms. You know anything that happens here
stays confidential or you could face huge lawsuits so
please don’t go to the press. Our legal department will
make sure anything you need is taken care of so
whatever issues you face, they will make sure you’re well
compensated. That’s all I can do if you refuse to press
charges against him.”
She had signed a ridiculously long confidentiality
contract. She wasn’t allowed to talk about anything she
saw or heard at New Species Reservation. She wasn’t
permitted to sue them for it if she suffered any injures
while being a guest. It was a come-at-your-own-risk kind
of deal but they had put in the clause that they’d pay for
any medical bills if she were injured. Now she knew why.
“I would never talk to reporters.”
Five minutes later Tiger parked the Jeep in front of
her small house and two other vehicles parked behind
them. She’d been escorted home with a full security
detail. She knew New Species were targeted by hate
groups and hadn’t needed to ask why the extra vehicles
had followed them to her home.
She glanced at her home and tried to hide her
embarrassment. The house had been left to her by her
grandmother. It had been in bad shape to begin with and
Tammy had never had the extra money to fix it up. The
porch sagged in spots, making it appear uneven, paint
had chipped off in large sections, and one of the front
windows had duct tape over it where the glass had
broken. It was a small two-bedroom, one-bath house,
but it was all hers. She wondered what the New Species
thought as he stared at her home with a confused look
on his features.
“A re you sure you don’t want to see a medical doctor
or a shrink? We will make him pay if you file a complaint.
We’re harsher than your justice system.”
She shook her head as she undid her seat belt. “He
didn’t hurt me, I don’t want him punished and I don’t
need a doctor. I’m not sure about the shrink part yet but
I’m tough.” She paused. “I just want to forget this ever
happened. Okay?”
He met her gaze, watched her silently, but nodded
slowly.
Tammy climbed out of the Jeep and walked to her
front door, unlocked it, and stepped into the small room.
She turned and noticed that Tiger watched her silently
from the black unmarked vehicle. She firmly closed the
door and twisted the deadbolt.
“Son of a bitch.” She sighed. She headed for the
bathroom and the shower. “I never saw today coming.”
So much for always trying to be prepared. Ha! Man-
beasts with killer kissing skills and the ability to seduce
women. She shook her head. My life just gets weirder
and weirder. Why can’t it ever be normal?
* * * * *
Valiant groaned. His head throbbed and he couldn’t
remember why. His eyes opened to stare at the carpet.
He lay sprawled on his side. He blinked before someone
shoved a big plastic bag of ice in front of his face. It
hovered there. He inhaled and softly growled. It made
his head hurt worse.
Tiger crouched down, still holding out the bag of ice.
“Put that on the back of your head.” He spoke softly.
Valiant grabbed it. His hand trembled a little and he
found the spot where it hurt the most. He winced and
snarled as the bag made contact. His attention fixed on
Tiger.
“A re you all right?”
“What happened?”
Tiger took a deep breath. “It will come to you. Just
stay down when it does.”
The ice helped reduce the haze of pain and he took a
deep breath, allowing the scents inside the room to fill
his nose. Tammy! He tried to sit up but the room spun.
He groaned again, sank back to the floor and bared his
teeth at Tiger.
“Which one of your men crept up on me?”
“Tammy did it. She hit you with a lamp.” Tiger stood
and backed away, putting a safe distance between them.
“She’s safe and off Reservation.”
Rage surged through Valiant and he snarled. “Bring
her back. She’s mine.”
In response, the other Species leaned against the
wall, crossed his arms over his chest, and sighed. “She
hit you to get away, asked to be taken home, but refused
to press charges. You’re lucky, man. She could have had
to press charges. You’re lucky, man. She could have had
you locked inside a tiny damn cell and Justice would have
had to decide if you needed to be put down for good. If
you’re too dangerous to live— Fuck, don’t get me started.
That’s a nightmare concept we never want to have to
face.”
The pain receded more and Valiant sat up without
the room spinning. He glared at Tiger. “She’s mine.”
“I got that.” He sniffed the air. “You had her all
right.” His gaze flickered to the bed and back. “But you
can’t keep her. She’s human. You wouldn’t even pull that
stunt on our women. You know you can’t just claim them
and force them to live with you.”
“She’s little. I could easily keep her here and change
her mind about leaving. I planned to feed her and care
for her.”
“She mentioned you seemed to think she was a pet. I
thought she had read the situation wrong. Humans tend
to see us in a messed-up light but after hearing you talk,
she was dead on. She’s not a pet.”
“I know this.” Valiant frowned, worried that he might
have given her the wrong impression. Regret gripped
him. “Is that why she left? Why she hit me? I’ll tell her
she’s my mate, not my pet.”
“She’s not yours, man.” Tiger pushed away from the
wall. “She wanted to leave. Deal with it. You and I, we’re
not for humans. We talked about this, remember? They
are too fragile, they scare too easily, and you wanted a
Species mate. A feline one.”
“Not anymore. I want Tammy.”
“Too bad. You can’t have her. You talk about our
kind growing soft and how you hate it. You’re the one
who sounds soft right now. Toughen up and face facts. A
human would never get past how we are. A t least not for
guys like us. We’re too in tune with our animal sides. I
just look more human than you do.”
Sadness was an emotion Valiant loathed but it filtered
through him all the same. “She’s not coming back to me,
is she?”
“No,” Tiger’s gaze softened, “she’s not.”
“Leave.”
“I’d rather stay a while to make sure you recover
fully. I’ll make us dinner. We’ll have some sodas and talk.
I heard a few felines you haven’t met yet are being
transferred here. Maybe one of them will be the one for
you.”
Images of Tammy flashed through Valiant’s mind.
“Leave me. I need to be alone.”
“The new felines arrive tomorrow. I’ll pick you up
and take you to the hotel for you to sniff them out.”
Valiant struggled to his feet and his gaze drifted to
the bed where Tammy had been. Her scent still remained
strong inside the room. He moved toward it and tossed
the bag of ice away. He’d rather feel the pain than return
to the numbing state in which he’d existed before he’d
felt all those wonderful things with Tammy. He crawled
onto the bed and lay where she had been, inhaling her
scent.
“Valiant? I’ll pick you up at two o’clock.”
“Don’t bother. Just go. Lock the door when you
leave. I don’t want to meet any felines.”
He breathed in Tammy’s scent, wanted to memorize
it before it faded, and listened to his friend go away. His
eyes closed as his hand gently brushed the comforter. He
couldn’t remember the last time tears had wet his eyes
but they did at that moment. He’d lost her and she would
never return. He’d known peace with her. Happiness.
Hope. A nd now it was gone. She was…lost to him
forever.
Why can’t I just forget Valiant? Tammy felt totally
disgusted with her lack of control over her thoughts as
she lined up the pool cue and the white ball. She glanced
at the red ball and the pocket. Loud music played in the
background. Someone had been in a mood for old-time
rock. A sigh sounded near her.
“Take the shot already, Tam. You know you’re going
to kick my ass anyway.”
She turned her head to grin at her longtime best
friend Tim. The two of them had known each other since
grade school and they were really close. He’d wanted
more than friendship during high school but Tammy
hadn’t returned his romantic feelings. Now years later
they’d settled into a comfortable but strictly platonic
friendship that both of them were happy with.
“I can’t help it if I’m better at this than you are.”
A smile twisted his lips. He appeared to be kind of
awkward but he had a sweet smile and soft brown eyes.
Tim resembled the average computer geek because he
was one. He wore a logo T-shirt and sweatpants and
worked from home as a computer programmer who
made game software. His glasses glinted from the bar
lights.
“I can kick your ass at video games any day.”
“Yes, you can.” She took the shot and sank the red
ball into the corner pocket. “That’s why I’m smarter than
you are and the reason we’re at the bar instead of your
house in front of a game system. I wanted to win.”
He scoffed. “You’re not smarter. I’m just a
gentleman.”
She sank another ball. “Too bad you never bet
money on our games.”
“I make good money but not that good.” He laughed.
“You’d wipe me out of my life savings within an hour
with the way you play pool.”
Tammy winked at him. “You know I need a new
roof.”
Tim’s smile faded as he stared at her. “You do? Why
don’t you let me pay for it?”
Major goof. She’d made a slip. She should have
known better but her mind still remained distracted by
the memory of a pair of cat-eyes the color of melted gold
attached to a body that still made hers heat up at the
very recollection of Valiant. She’d thought about him a
hundred times a day since they’d nearly five weeks
before. She shook her head.
“I was kidding.”
Tim wasn’t buying it. “You were not. Is it leaking
again? Come on, Tam. Let me help you. We’re friends.
Hell, we’re practically family. I know what you make and
its shit. You couldn’t go to college the way I did. You had
your grandma to take care of and I know you’re still
paying off her debts. That house she left you is a death
trap. Let me buy you a new roof. Do you need any other
repairs? I have the money and it’s just sitting inside a
bank account. It’s not as though I have a girlfriend to
blow my money on.”
Tammy sank the black ball. Game over. She frowned
at her best friend. “We’ve had this argument before and I
won’t take your money. Thank you from the bottom of
my heart but I’m not a leech.”
“That’s bullshit and you know it. I’d never accuse you
of that. You always had to do everything for everyone so
let me help you this once. It’s what friends and family do
for each other.”
“I don’t want to fight.”
She walked away from the pool table and moved to
their table. She gripped her beer, peered at the lime
stuck inside it, and took a sip. She rarely drank alcohol
but sometimes she had the urge. She finished off her first
and last beer of the night as she drained the bottle. She’d
felt the need to feel a slight buzz more often since she’d
met Valiant.
“We’re not fighting. I’m trying to reason with you. I
live with my parents and I don’t pay a mortgage. The
house is paid off. I just pay the taxes, which are