“Jim mentioned you were having a problem with blocking those,” Grey said with a chuckle as he nudged me back. “Go. We’ve got this.”
The man on the ground wasn’t moving. Two against three were poor odds. For them.
I turned and ran back down the alley, going in the direction I’d been heading. Michelle’s scent continued to tease me in spots and disappear in others. Five blocks further, the scent of her blood grew stronger at an intersection. Just two buildings to the left of it, I saw a motel and a rusted-out car parked in front of one of the rooms.
Jogging across the road, her scent only became clearer. Blood smeared the back panel of the car. Her blood. I moved toward the motel room door and heard the low murmur of a man’s mocking voice.
Rage filled me. Thrusting my arm forward, I ripped the strike plate and bolt from the jam and the door flew inward. A man stood midway between me and Michelle. Her ankles were zip-tied to the chair and her hands bound in her lap. A smear of blood across her cheek stood out starkly against her pale face.
I shifted my attention to the man and let my claws come forward.
He loosened his stance to a semi-crouch and rolled his shoulders. Spotty patches of fur erupted from his skin and the tips of his increasingly pointy ears. One leg started to transform, the thigh shortening while the foot elongated.
He had no control over his change.
I let my canines emerge and my mouth extend just enough to use them.
“Your mistake was her blood,” I said as I lunged at the man who’d taken my Mate.
I grabbed the mutt by the shoulders and pulled him in for a head-butt. As he staggered back on his uneven legs, I lashed toward his chest. He leapt out of the way, but not fast enough. Red lines marked where I’d raked his skin.
We circled each other. He eyed my stance and feinted a few times, trying for an opening that didn’t exist. I saw the moment he realized he wasn’t going to walk away. He snarled and came straight at me. Ducking under his swing, I slashed the skin of his exposed sides with my claws. Four bloody furrows erupted. The man swore. His control slipped further, and his feet fully sprouted claws and fur. Desperation lit his eyes, and he glanced at the door.
“They aren’t coming,” I said, striking again. Swipe after swipe, my nails sank deep into his skin. One strike brought me close enough that I could smell Michelle on him. I lost it and sank my teeth into his shoulder. He howled in pain.
“People are coming,” Michelle said.
I nodded, blocked the weak swing he made with his left forearm, and drove my fist into his face. There was a satisfying crack as the man’s head whipped back.
“Tell Blake she’s mine,” I said as his eyes rolled back into his head and he fell.
I turned with a burst of speed and slammed the door shut on the three men who were halfway across the parking lot. The latch wouldn’t hold, but there was a bolt lock above it that still worked. I shoved it into place and turned toward Michelle.
Her hands were darker than her arms, the zip tie too tight. The force of ripping through it with a claw would likely hurt her more. Outside, someone started pounding on the door. The distant wails of sirens reached me. We didn’t have much time. She was already so hurt, though. I swore and knelt beside her. Leaning forward, I gently used my teeth to separate the plastic.
The mutt on the floor behind me groaned.
“Hurry, Emmitt. I think he’s waking up.”
The pounding on the door stopped, and the sirens grew louder. The plastic band popped free, and I moved to the ones around her ankles. Unable to take the same time to remove them gently, I used a claw. Michelle winced, but said nothing.
I stood and pulled aside the faded, blue curtains covering the back window. There was nothing but swamp and trees back there. But for how far?
Michelle stood and moved beside me as I slid open the window. I popped out the screens just as the sirens died. Before I could offer her my hand, she turned and shuffled toward Frank. It was the first look I had of the back of her head. Dried blood caked her hair. I