Law enforcement. She felt a shaft of fear invade her chest, and the cheetah inside her stirred. Her skin came alive, itchy, uncomfortable, and she fought the urge to change. She swallowed and tried to calm her nerves.
“What the hell just happened?” he demanded.
She looked at him in confusion.
“Your eyes. They changed. Just for a moment, but I’m not crazy.”
Automatically, she closed them and turned her head away. He reached out, curled his fingers around her chin and tugged until she faced him again.
“Open your eyes,” he said.
Reluctantly she obeyed. His thumb stroked over her jaw as he stared intently at her. The chill she’d long fought waned, and she was unsure of whether it was because of his touch or his gaze. She felt warmed by both. The rough pad of his thumb scraped across her skin, sending a shiver racing down her neck that contrasted the heat that bloomed under her flesh.
“It was the cheetah, wasn’t it? You were about to change.”
There was a bit of wonder in his voice, as if he were still coming to terms with what she was. Slowly, she nodded.
“When I feel frightened or threatened, the cheetah stirs within me. It’s a protective instinct.”
His brow furrowed. “What frightened you?”
“You’re a cop,” she said in a low voice. “You’ll want to take me in. Turn me over to some government agency for testing.”
He gave her a fierce frown. “That’s not true. The only way I’d take you in is if you’ve broken the law. So far, all I know is that you were being hunted by poachers. That makes you the victim, not a perpetrator. Is there something you want to tell me?”
His eyes were expectant, piercing, like he could peel back her skin and see inside. It made her uneasy.
“They took me,” she said simply. Her breath caught and hovered as she relived the terror of that day.
“Took you? How?”
She trembled, and his hand slid from her chin to her shoulder. Warm, comforting. Without thinking, she leaned further into his touch, wanting to be closer but afraid all at the same time.
“I won’t let anyone hurt you,” he said soothingly.
Sincerity reflected in his warm brown eyes. The hard lines of his face contrasted the softness in his gaze. He was a man accustomed to harshness, of doing what it took to get the job done. While he was doing his best to put her at ease, she could well imagine how quickly he could turn, how unforgiving he could be with a criminal.
His other hand rasped over his short hair in a gesture of frustration. He was losing patience with her. Again, she felt the tingle of awareness as the cheetah rose and sought to take over. She shrank away from his touch, hoping to better control the urge to shift. She had been the cheetah for so long that her human form felt alien.
Duncan swore and snatched his hands away from her. He placed them on the edge of the couch and stared directly at her.
“Aliyah, I won’t harm you. In your place I’d be scared, too. I wouldn’t trust anyone. You’ve been through hell. I want to help you. What can I do to make you believe that?”
The simple sincerity in his voice broke through the prickle of fear skirting down her spine. She took a deep breath and sagged. She hurt. She glanced down at her wound, frustrated to see that it was not yet completely healed. Staying in her cheetah form for so long had been physically demanding.
“It hurts,” she said. “I’m unused to it. I don’t normally take this long to heal. I’m not sure what to do to help it.”
“Is there nothing you can take that will help? Do pain relievers not affect you?” he asked in a concerned voice.
She shrugged. “I do not know. I’ve never had to use them. We heal naturally and at a much faster rate than normal humans.” She shivered again as another chill took over.
Duncan moved forward, his hands gently pushing her more upright. She glanced at him in confusion as he settled on the couch beside her. When he wrapped his arms around her, she panicked, not because she feared him, but because raw awareness gripped her as his warmth bled into her body.
“You’re cold,” he said.
He tucked the blanket carefully around her, making sure he didn’t jostle her leg.
She relaxed against his body and let her head fall back against his chest. Weariness pulled at her. Her body ached.
Remembering she was supposed to be providing him answers, she opened her mouth to speak again. She was momentarily sidetracked as his arms tightened around her chest and he rubbed his hands up and down her arms.
It felt good. So good. And she told him so.
His hands paused in their movement for a moment, and she could feel the slight catch in his breath. Could he feel it too? This pull between them?
“What were you going to say?” he murmured.
She searched her cloudy brain for what exactly she’d intended to tell him but was coming up blank.
“You said they took you. Who took you? And how?”
She shrank further into his arms, and he started sliding his hands up and down again in a soothing motion.
She searched her mind for what she could safely tell him without divulging too much.
“When I was younger, my parents moved us to Africa. As a child, I spent more time in my animal form than the other young of my kind. My parents feared I would be discovered. As I grew older, it became easier to control my shifts, and so we moved back to our home in Alaska.
“I had returned to Africa for a visit. It had been too long since I ran with the other cheetahs.”
She closed her eyes as she conjured the memories of racing across the savannah, the wind in her face, the dry, parched earth pounding underneath her paws. There, she’d been free. Truly free. And ironically enough, it was where her freedom had ended.
“I was netted and then sedated by the poachers. They shipped me back to the U. S., and I was quartered with other exotic animals. For weeks I was kept in a cage, and then, finally, they turned me out to hunt.”
A light shudder worked its way over her shoulders, and Duncan’s hands tensed against her skin.
“So that’s their set-up? They import animals to hunt here in the States?”
She nodded. “They charge exorbitant fees for trophy hunts. Instead of taking the hunter to Africa, they bring Africa to the hunter.”
Duncan stiffened in anger. She could feel the rage radiating from his body.
“Son of a bitch,” he swore. “God only knows how long they’ve been pulling this shit in my mountains. I fucking hate poachers.”
Then as if fearing he’d frightened her, he relaxed his grip and turned her chin so she could see him in her periphery.
“I’m sorry.”
She offered a faint smile. “They make me angry as well. What they do is not honorable.”
“They could have killed you,” he said hoarsely. “They tried to kill you.”
“You saved me.” She shifted in his arms so she could see him better. Then she reached up to touch his cheek with her hand. “Thank you.”
Their gazes connected and locked.
“I don’t understand what you are,” he said. “If I hadn’t seen it, I’d never believe it in a thousand years. And yet, you are a cheetah. How is that possible?”
She dropped her gaze then turned away once more, settling her back against his chest.
“I don’t know the answers to your questions. I only know what I am. How is not so important is it?”
He sighed in frustration, and she wilted just a little more. She was so tired, she physically ached. She needed rest. It would help in the healing.
“I need to sleep,” she said. “I’ve not slept a full night since I was taken by the hunters.” And for one night, she wanted to feel safe. Indulge in the soft comfort of a bed instead of a cold cage.