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The BEAR Gene: A Gripping Paranormal Romance (WereGenes Book 2) Page 11
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“What? Say that again! I’m sorry, but I can't quite hear you!”
Though she’d never specifically said anything about it, I’d noticed that Marie could be slightly hard of hearing sometimes. Unfortunately, this seemed to be one of those times, because I could hear her just fine, even above the rising and falling wail of the siren, despite the fact that, at times, I wondered if numerous rock concerts during college hadn't left me with slight hearing loss.
Or, I reasoned, Marie might simply be trying to get me back up to the house by making me walk closer to her in order to make myself heard. But if that was the case, I had no intention of falling for it.
Feet rooted firmly in place, I cupped my hands to my mouth and just yelled even harder this time. “Please listen! Everything is completely under control! I have a plan, and I’m going through with it! Please just get down to the basement!”
“Just come on and get inside with me, Samantha! We need to get down to the basement right now!”
“No!”
“Just get in here!”
“I said no, Marie! I will not!”
“Yes! Yes, you will! Come up here right now!”
“No!”
Now I was really beginning to feel like I was having a teenage fight with my mom. Maybe even a toddler tantrum.
Seemingly exasperated, Marie had dropped her hands from her mouth, but she now picked them back up and shouted at the top of her lungs again. “Would you just get your tail up here right now? I can't even hear you!”
I took a slow, deep breath and let it out equally as slowly, fighting a toddler-style meltdown, or at least a good stomp of my foot.
“Samantha, please! The house will be the Bloodborn bears’ first target if they’re able to get past Chief Wallace and his men! So, just get up here! Right this second!”
I took another deep, slow breath, filling my lungs deeply for the loudest, most forceful shouting I’d probably ever done in my life. “No! I am not coming back up to the house, Marie! I am not! You get your own self down to the basement! This second! And I apologize for shouting, and I apologize for sounding so harsh, but I need to do this! I have to try to help in the battle in whatever way I can! So, I'm leaving right now! Goodbye and go back inside!”
I knelt and grabbed my bag full of knives, intending to whip around and continue down the driveway without another glance at Marie, but as I rose, I couldn’t help but see her out of the corner of my eye. With her longish gray bob swinging, she was making her way down the golden oak porch steps. Frowning, she appeared to be muttering to herself, seemingly just as irritated and exasperated at me as I was at her.
Now I couldn't even make an attempt at stifling a groan; I just outright groaned, not that Marie could probably even hear me. I certainly didn't want her following me into danger, but I wasn’t about to head back to the house with her, either. I didn't even intend to get close enough to where she could possibly drag me in. Even though she was around sixty, being that she was a larger woman than I was, I knew she could probably do it.
“Marie, go back! Please just do it! Just go back to the house!”
Now storming down the driveway toward me at a rapid clip, it didn't look at all like she was going to.
“Oh, Marie…god dammit all.”
Exasperated beyond my limit, I hadn’t even bothered shouting that time. It was obvious further shouting was completely pointless. I’d more like sighed or whimpered my words, feeling miles beyond frustrated. Marie seemed to be done shouting, too, and besides, we were now almost within plain loud talking distance. Still striding toward me with her face fixed in a motherly sort of scowl, as if ready to scold me good, she was probably only twenty or twenty-five feet away from me now. In fact, she might have even been a little closer than that when I saw an onyx black form creep out from behind a large evergreen not ten feet to her left.
CHAPTER 13
“You get the hell away from her!” Brandishing the butcher knife I’d grabbed, I took a few rapid steps toward Marie and the Bloodborn bear, who'd instantly frozen at the sound of my voice. “Do you hear me? I mean it! You get away from her!”
Marie had done the opposite of freezing at the sound of my voice. Instead, she’d jumped a mile. However, she was now frozen, or at least her body was anyway. But ever so slowly, she was turning her face to her left with her mouth open and her expression a mask of terror. When she saw the Bloodborn bear with his glowing red eyes, she jumped again, yelping out some words that sounded like Oh, God, no.
I glanced from her to the bear and realized that I recognized him based on a description I’d heard. Unless there were other Bloodborn bears with similar specific characteristics, which I thought unlikely, I was face-to-face with Gerard Blackthorn himself. His eyes, although the same glowing red as other Bloodborn bears, were fringed with fur just slightly lighter than the rest of his fur. It was actually a shade bordering on reddish itself. As far as the fur covering the rest of his body, it was all onyx black, except for a distinct patch of something like brownish-gray on his left shoulder. It was said that he’d been slashed once in a battle, and the fur had never grown back in the dark black shade it had been before.
The thing that most convinced me that this bear was Gerard, though, was an almost human-looking sneer on his face. Polly, who’d glimpsed him once while running to safety during a battle, had told me that it was unmistakable, uncanny in its human resemblance. So, I felt confident that it had to be him. And the way that he was surveying me, with his eyes glinting in the bright morning sun in a way that seemed hungry, told me that it definitely was.
Forcing myself to continue being brave despite a sudden trembling that was nearly making my teeth chatter, I took another few steps forward, although this time slowly, still brandishing my butcher knife. “I'm not kidding! Do you hear me? You get the hell away!”
He wasn’t quite close enough for me to throw the butcher knife at him with any degree of certain accuracy. However, if he lunged at Marie, I was prepared to let my knife fly anyway, because I really wouldn’t have much of a choice then. I would just have to try my best to save Marie’s life. If I could be fast enough to throw my knife before Gerard got to her, that is.
I didn't need to be faster, though, at least not right that moment. This was because within a blink, Gerard shifted into human form and stood maybe a dozen feet away from me with a gun drawn, pointed at Marie. He was dressed in boots, faded battered jeans, and a dark t-shirt, which was the same as Reed’s usual uniform. To my irritation, I couldn’t deny that Gerard was handsome, too, though really, he was nowhere near approaching Reed’s level of handsomeness. Besides, even though I knew in my brain that Gerard was handsome, I couldn’t really see him that way. From what Reed and others had told me about him, he was a murderer of innocent men, women, and children, as well as a person who obviously delighted in terrorizing people just for the fun of it, which made him only disgust me. I could only see him as some sort of an evil subhuman. Not that it even mattered in the least how I saw him. The only thing that mattered to me at present was that he didn’t hurt Marie.
Although he still had his gun pointed at her, he didn't make any moves to do that right then. Instead, he just stood right where he’d shifted, smirking at me.
“You must be Chief Wallace’s new lady friend, or whatever you are. My spies have told me that he’s been shacking up with someone. How exciting for you.” Gerard grinned at me, actually moving one of his eyelids in the hint of a wink. “Now, I should tell you that I’m no stranger to the activities of the NSMP, and I know all about what they do. I also know that the biological weapon my fellow Bloodborn bears released months ago greatly weakened all the bears here in Somerset, exactly as we’d planned. Additionally, I know that a baby born to a supergene woman could help all the Somerset bears with their little weakness problem. So, I think I have a pretty good guess who you are, and why you’re here.”
Though very similar in tone, Gerard’s voice wasn't as deep as Reed’s,
but there was something else different about it, too, that I couldn’t quite put my finger on. Maybe it was just a clear edge of malice, despite the bizarre, almost friendly tone he was speaking with, which was definitely not amusing me. In fact, his casual manner while he continued to point his gun at Marie was making my blood begin to boil, feeling like lava joining the adrenaline that was already coursing through my veins, which was actually helping me maintain the strength needed to hold my butcher knife aloft.
I didn't directly respond to what Gerard had said, but I did speak to him. “Leave this property and this village. Right this second.”
He grinned again, clearly amused, although the movement of his mouth was accompanied by a loud snort. “Leave this property, or else what? You'll try to poke me with your little paring knife?”
“It’s obviously a butcher knife.”
And it was actually one of the largest I’d ever seen in my life.
“And as far as what I could do to you with it, it won’t be a ‘poke.’ I'll stab you through the eye with it.”
Gray eyes glittering in the fiery light of the sun, Gerard feigned terror theatrically, pulling his hands up to cover his cheeks. “Oh, my. Well! I have to say, I truly am so very scared.”
I was truly getting so very pissed off by the bizarre madman I was facing.
“Do you want to test me, you asshole? Do you want to see if I can stab you through the eye with this thing?”
Immediately, as if he’d been just hoping and waiting for an invitation to test me, Gerard began creeping closer to Marie, who seemed to have been frozen solid, like a statue, with her mouth closed and her eyes wide as dinner plates.
Arm shaking with the strain my muscles were under, although I really barely even felt it, I lifted the butcher knife aloft. “Stop. Don’t take one more single step, Gerard. And, yes, I know exactly who you are.”
I almost really wanted him to take another step. I wanted to attack him by hurling the butcher knife. I wanted to bury the point of the knife deep within his eye socket.
However, to my surprise, he stopped in the theatrical tiptoeing he’d been doing, which was a very bizarre movement for a man who was very well-built and well-muscled. I couldn't tell if he’d stopped because I’d told him to, or because an increase in the thunder-like roaring and growling could be heard coming from the direction of the tall hill to the west. It seemed that the fight, which now looked to be mostly going on near the base of the hill, was quickly intensifying. With my focus on Marie and Gerard, I’d honestly forgot it was even going on.
Not seeming concerned about me or my knife in the least, Gerard turned away from me for just a split second to glance at the hundreds of tiny, distant, dark figures engaged in the fight. Then, in some grotesque imitation of friendliness, he smiled at me, revealing teeth that were somehow unexpectedly white and straight.
“Nothing like the roar of a battle going on, is there? Hopefully, maybe Chief Wallace is already dead by now. Wouldn’t that be nice? It would be for me, anyway. One less thing for me to deal with when I get over there. First, though, I need to figure out what I’m going to do with you. Knowing that you’re surely a supergene woman who could help different shifter groups with her spawn, I was honestly just going to kill you outright. Although now I’m thinking that I want to keep you alive a while longer…maybe long enough to take you back to Blackbrook with me and spend a few days with you. I may even keep you alive a while after that. Who knows? Maybe it’s the way you’re brandishing that knife, but there’s something kind of hot about you, even beyond your body and face. This old bag, though...” Gerard glanced at Marie before looking at me again, smiling. “Well, as long as I’m here, might as well remedy her of the misery of old age. Why not?”
At this point, several things happened within a second or two. Gerard shifted into bear form and began charging at Marie, growling. She made a bloodcurdling scream, falling back on her rear. Instantly, I yelled, hurling the butcher knife at Gerard with all my might, since we were still separated by about ten feet. However, to my horror, my aim was slightly off. Or, maybe even more than that, Gerard was too fast. I missed one of his eyes, but I didn’t miss him completely. The knife caught him in the side of the head, seeming to connect hard, before glancing off.
Immediately, Gerard went down, hitting the grassy green ground not two feet from Marie. With his glowing red eyes nearly as wide as hers, he just remained prone on the lawn, motionless, as if stunned, while bright crimson blood began flowing from a wound caused by my knife. But then, to my horror, after a moment or two, he slowly turned his head to look at me, snarling.
With my heart hammering in my ears, at least ten beats for every siren wail, I threw another knife from my bag at Gerard, yelling, just as I’d done before. But at that moment, Gerard leaped to his feet, giving his head a quick shake, as if coming out of a daze. And very unfortunately, this action made me miss him. The knife actually didn’t even come within inches of him.
With my already-rapid heartbeat accelerating further still, I fumbled around in my bag for another knife, yelling at Gerard while I did so.
“Last chance to get the hell away from here!”
I hadn’t even really meant to say the words that I had. Even in my state of quickly rising panic, I realized that my threat sounded pretty idiotic in light of the fact that I was facing a large shifter bear that thus far, I hadn’t been able to do more than wound.
Eyes narrowed, Gerard began lumbering over to me, and I gave it one more shot, releasing a knife with as much force as I could muster.
“Get back!”
Again, the words I’d spoken had just seemed to burst right out of my mouth, despite the fact that I knew that yelling threats probably wasn’t going to help my aim. My aim currently didn’t even matter anyway, because Gerard ducked a split second before the knife would have got him in the eye.
He was maybe five feet away from me now, and I tried one last time, throwing a knife I’d just pulled out of my bag.
“Go!”
This one connected with the side of his face, slicing him. I saw fresh blood flowing from the wound as I began to walk backward and away from him, already reaching in my bag for another knife with my hands trembling. It was becoming a problem that I couldn’t get the knives out fast enough, or at least not fast enough to keep Gerard at bay for good. Maybe he wouldn't kill me if I couldn’t hold him off, but I had the feeling I was about to be hurt. Maybe I would even be accidentally killed. Or maybe I’d be dragged off to Gerard’s village, Blackbrook, where he could slowly torture me and teach me a lesson about throwing a knife at him even a single time.
I knew one thing for sure. I wasn’t going to turn and run, though, even though I was currently walking backward. For one, I knew it’d be pointless to try to outrun Gerard while he was in his bear form. For another thing, turning to flee just seemed outright cowardly, and despite my fear, and despite feeling as if my heart was now beating so fast it might explode, I didn’t want Gerard to see me as a coward. If he was going to hurt me, he was going to have to hurt me right to my face.
Resisting the urge to turn my walking backward into jogging or running backward, I suddenly realized that at least during the attack that was likely soon about to happen, Marie could be saved. She could run to the house if I helped give her a chance to.
Unable to pull my gaze from Gerard, who was still lumbering toward me, alternately snarling and snapping his mighty jaws, I could really only see Marie out of the very corner of my eye, but I knew she was still on the ground, probably still shocked motionless by everything that had already happened. So, to spur her to action, I shouted, just praying she could hear me above the still-pealing siren.
“Marie, get up and go! Go run to the house!”
“But I can’t!”
Wondering exactly why she couldn’t, I glanced up at her for just a quick fraction of a second, but that fraction was enough to see what was happening over in her direction. Dark shapes that I just k
new were Bloodborn, at least two of them, were lumbering out from the tall evergreens bordering each side of the driveway. One of them moved quickly to begin circling Marie, blocking any path of escape.
That’s when it kind of all really hit me. I could be killed. Marie could be killed. Polly at the coffee shop, with her dreams of finding love again someday. All the friendly, boisterous kids who’d come to story time at the bookstore could be killed. Most important to my heart, Reed could be killed. And if he were killed and I was kidnapped, I knew the best I could probably personally hope for myself would be to live as some sort of sex slave to Gerard, which might make death preferable.
With these thoughts, my anger was back in an instant, pushing away my fear. My anger actually felt like some living force moving through me, making me throw another knife before I even really realized what I was doing.
“Leave her alone!”
This knife I’d aimed at the Bloodborn who’d started circling Marie, and very thankfully, I met my target, hitting the bear in the side of the head. In addition to my anger, my good aim seemed to be back. And not just back, but back completely. Immediately after the first knife I’d thrown at the bear near Marie, I threw another at his head, making him immediately fall to the ground.
Not a second later, Gerard was flying through the air, coming right at me, with a thunderous roar so loud it hurt my ears. Not having spent much time in the wild, or around shifters, I hadn’t even really known that bears could leap. Then again, I hadn’t known I could actually battle them with knives and do real damage.
I didn’t waste any time trying to inflict more damage to Gerard, and not a moment too soon. When he dropped from the air to the ground with a knife stuck in the side of his neck, he was so close I could see sunlight glinting on the tips of his bared, razor-sharp teeth.
After that, I began throwing knives as easily as if it were something I'd done nearly every day of my life, like tying shoes. The direction of my throws didn't even have to be very precise. Just the "general direction" was fine. My aim was that on fire, and so was I. My aim seemed to have a way of connecting with the bear I wanted to take down, no matter what.