Mine to Possess(24)

Surprised by the question, she answered honestly. "Weird, but I like cooking. I used to do it with Pa Larkspur."

"Pa Larkspur?"

She smiled. "Don't be so chauvinistic. He's the best cook in the county. His baskets bring in more money than any others at the picnic auctions."

"Jesus. Baskets? Picnic? Just how country is the Nest?"

"Very." His horrified expression made her laugh. "Clay, you live in a tree. I don't think you should throw stones."

"I guess the corn would provide some cover when grown," he muttered. "Nowhere to climb or create a lair though. Not unless you build a house." He almost shuddered.

She'd never thought about the farm from a predator's point of view. "Well, yeah. But there is one thing you might like."

He raised an eyebrow.

"There are caves." She had spent a lot of time in them as a teenager, pushing away the love the Larkspurs tried to give her. She had never talked back, never created trouble at home. She'd simply disappeared to where they couldn't find her and she couldn't hurt them. "They're deep enough underground that it doesn't affect the farming operation, but the area's riddled with them."

A gleam of interest lit the dark green of his eyes. "They ever been mapped?"

"I didn't find any records when I researched them for a school project," she said, "but there have to be maps."

He laid his arm on the table. "Why?"

"Because" - she leaned forward - "I'm certain the caves are man-made. They're almost like proper tunnels in places."

Interest turned to intrigue, the forest green getting brighter. "Your town have a big changeling presence?"

Catching his line of thought, she shook her head. "A small horse clan, and an owl one - predatory but not particularly dominant. They always used to vote me in as captain when they split us into teams for gym class." And she was no superathlete.

"You're a strong personality," he said, surprising her. "Most nonpredatories would automatically see you as dominant, and as for predatory changelings, they decide according to the individual. Your owl schoolmates must've figured you were tougher than them."

"Huh." But it made sense. The owls had been scholars from a nice family, while she had been very hard-case. "Anyway, the horses and owls can't have dug the caves. They hate being shut in."

"That's it?"

"Yep."

"No snakes?" 

She almost spewed coffee all over the table. "There are snake changelings?"

"Why wouldn't there be?" He refilled her cup. "They're rare, but they exist."

"You think a bunch of snakes created those caves?" She shivered, recalling all those times she'd been alone in them.

"Changeling snakes, Talin." A reprimand. "No more or less animal than I am."

She bit her lower lip, feeling about five years old. But this was Clay, so she admitted the truth. "I can't help it. Leopards are dangerous, beautiful. Snakes are creepy."

"I think the snake changelings would disagree." He leaned back in his chair, a predator at ease in his territory.

She felt his foot touch the rung of her chair, knew it to be a possessive act. But she was having too much fun to call him on it. "Are they as human?" She scrunched up her nose at his scowl. "You know what I mean. When you walk, it's with this feline grace. What do they take from their animal?"

His lips curved again, full, tempting. "Calling me graceful, Tally?"

"I'll call you vain in a minute." But he was graceful, lethally so.

Both his feet touched her chair now. "Snakes are very...other. They tend to scare people on a visceral level, even when in human form. But that makes them no less human."