Kingpin Bear (A Paranormal Shape Shifter Romance) (The Agency Book 4) (4 page)

BOOK: Kingpin Bear (A Paranormal Shape Shifter Romance) (The Agency Book 4)
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Chapter Four

Nadia

More people emerged from a canvas-lined tunnel. Most of them shot her a curious look, followed by surprise washing over their faces as they saw the ruin of her car and the garage door.

“Okay, let’s go!” the big man, Jared, shouted. “Howlers, you two first, get out of here.”

Two people smaller in stature than the huge men Jared’s size that had been hanging in the cavernous space with her jumped into a truck and took off, tires screeching as they flew through the hole she had created with her entrance.

“We’re good to go in here,” a woman said, the same one who had been present when Nadia first regained her wits.

“You two, scram,” he said, pointing to two more large men. They were the size of his friends, but stood slightly aloof from them, as if they didn’t entirely belong. They nodded instantly at his orders however, moving to a large white pickup and following the first vehicle out.

“Bravo, you and your lady are next,” he said.

“We’re staying,” the woman said, but Jared shook his head fiercely. “This is my jurisdiction now, Omega. Get your rear in motion.”

The woman balled her hands up angrily, but she didn’t fight it.

“Omega?” Nadia asked softly.

“You don’t need to know their real names,” he said firmly, then turned back.

Everyone else had mounted up. He thrust his index fingers up in the air, twirled them around and pointed at the exit. The other trucks all rolled out.

“I think we did it,” he said. “We’re up next.”

Nadia nodded, looking around one last time. Something on the wall caught her eye.

“Hey, I think I recognize that place,” she told Jared, pointing to the wall covered in what looked like blueprints. To the right was a picture. It looked almost identical to—

She stepped closer to take a better look. “Yes, that’s where they sent me this morning!” she said.

Jared looked at her sharply, and she tried not to wilt under his gaze. He knew she was hiding something.

Does he know?

Nadia pushed the thought from her mind. She couldn’t afford to dwell on that just now. For the moment Jared was treating her nicely, and she didn’t want to risk ruining that by getting into that topic just yet. It would have to wait until she felt a little safer. Part of her mind—okay, most of her mind–was still rebelling against what she’d done this morning.

Now she was contemplating leaving town, starting over again with a brand-new life somewhere else, all with the people she had just met? She didn’t know any of their names besides Jared!

Her eyes flicked over his lovely features once more, noting the strong jaw, day-old stubble, and in the middle of it all, two piercing eyes of a glacier blue that seemed to reach out and see into her soul, no matter how hard she tried to guard against it.

The whole thing was crazy. She still didn’t know if they were terrorists or not. The same hunches that had guided Nadia away from the men this morning told her that they weren’t, and that despite knowing them no more than a handful of minutes, she could actually trust these people. If they gave her their word, they would see it through. It was a weird feeling—one she wasn’t entirely sure she could describe to anyone around her if they asked—but it rang straight and true within her. It had never failed Nadia in the past, even if she wasn’t sure how it worked.

Perhaps I’m not entirely human. Maybe I’m part shifter?

It wasn’t the first time the thought had run through her brain, but as far as Nadia knew her parents had been completely human. If they weren’t, they had hidden it well from her.

“This is where you escaped from this morning?” Jared said in a deep voice full of suspicion.

She nodded. “Yes. Yes, I’m positive.”

He frowned. “What can you tell me about their security?”

Nadia thought frantically, trying to get her brain to replay the morning’s events. “I’m not sure about video cameras or things like that,” she prefaced. “I wasn’t paying attention to them. But there were two large men,” she looked him up and down, trying not to lose herself in the ripples of his muscles, “not as big as you, but still large and intimidating. They were in the basement, guarding the elevator to the lobby.”

Her eyes closed as she thought back to the lobby. “In the lobby, on the ground floor, there were five… no six. Six men that I could see in plain sight, but I did not explore everywhere. There were at least two places obscured from easy vision that could have hidden more, for all I know.”

“Anything else?” he asked, his gaze unwavering as he looked at her.

“No… wait, yes. When the elevator opened, there were two more men in it, and that was only one of four elevators. So there could have been as many as eight more men hidden inside them, just waiting to come out,” she said, standing up straight and flashing him a smile, proud of herself for recalling all of that.

“Good to know,” he said, then pulled a lighter from his pocket and lit the paper-covered wall on fire.

“What are you doing?” she cried out.

“We’re leaving,” he said. “Can’t let them know what we’ve been up to.” Behind him, the flames rolled up the highly flammable paper, quickly erasing any hint of what might have been there.

Nadia saw more flames begin to emerge from the tunnel that led deeper into the warehouse.

“Oh,” she said in a small voice.

“Time to go,” he said, his voice once again the surprisingly pleasant tenor she had encountered when ramming the door upon entry.

His big—and very warm!—hand enveloped hers and tugged her back toward the final remaining truck. That must be their ride she surmised. Jared pulled the door open for her.

“Thank you,” she said politely, shocked that despite the obvious hurry they were in, he would stop and take the time to open the door for her.

Jared simply nodded and hurried around to his door, flicking the engine to life before he’d even seated himself. The truck shot forward and she fiddled with her seatbelt, the connector clicking into place just in time.

“Shit!” he said angrily and slammed on the brakes.

“Who are they?” she shouted, trying not to turn it into a scream as he threw the truck into reverse and gunned it back inside, just ahead of a stream of big black SUVs entering the parking lot.

“Bad guys. Lots of them,” he said with a grunt, slamming the brakes once more and bringing the truck to a halt. “Ride’s over. End of the line,” he said, bailing from his seat.

She followed suit and looked for him.

A shadow crossed over her as he vaulted himself clear over the truck bed, landing next to her.

“Come on!” he said, his hand once more enveloping hers.

She struggled to keep up as he led her deep into the warehouse. Around them the smoke was getting thicker, making it hard to see. She tugged her hoodie up over her mouth, trying to filter out the fumes. It would be just her luck to die from smoke inhalation after getting this far.

“Where are we going?” she asked as he began to slow.

The area they were in was dark; not much light reached them there. Racks of crates surrounded them, rising high into the sky. She wondered what they contained, if anything.

“Here,” Jared said, crouching down and plunging his fingers into the ground.

Nadia was left dumbfounded for a moment, until she heard the sound of metal dragging on concrete, and realized there was a hole in the ground.

A moment later, she saw the outline of a large circle of something in his hands.

“A sewer,” she said, not bothering to hide the disdain in her voice at the idea of going for a swim in sewage.

“Storm drain actually,” he said.

His head snapped around at something she couldn’t hear.

“Go,” he said. “There’s a ladder on your side.”

“Where are you going?” she asked, tentatively reaching forward to try and find said ladder. Her fingers encountered a cold steel rung just below the lip of the opening.

Footsteps sounded from nearby, and wordlessly Jared tensed his legs and flung himself at the man. Nadia could only make out shadows as she lowered herself into the drain, until only her head was visible above.

Jared was the bigger of the two, but the pair fought in near silence. The only sound was that of flesh hitting flesh with enough force that she thought they both should have been beaten to a pulp much easier.

Her protector—could she really call him that?—finally overwhelmed his foe. There was a loud
snap,
and then the attacker limply fell to the ground. Jared stepped over him and came back. His body language seemed to tell her that he was frowning at her, but Nadia couldn’t stop staring.

“Is he—?” she began to say, but couldn’t finish her sentence.

“Why are you still here?” Jared growled, all kindness gone from his voice as he crouched down in front of her.

“But did you…”

“Nothing that he wouldn’t have done to me if our positions had been reversed,” Jared said angrily, then jabbed a finger. “Down. Now,” he ordered.

Something in his voice changed, and that same something reached out and practically slapped her into motion. Before she even knew what she was doing, Nadia was halfway down the ladder, and seconds later her feet hit the bottom. She paused for a second, but sounds above her forced her into the water. Thankfully it was only ankle deep and she scrambled out of the way.

Moments later Jared dropped through the hole. His legs flexed as he hit the ground and water splashed up everywhere, including across her.

Nadia stood and sputtered for several seconds, but his hand taking hers once more snapped her out of it almost instantly. The bolt of electricity awakened her nerves all over again, and suddenly she was running down the sewer with him, unseeing in the dark, trusting that he would warn her of any obstacles. Despite all that, she knew she wasn’t moving fast.

They hadn’t gotten too far before the sound of loud splashes echoed down after them. Shouts followed, and even as they ran on, the noises never seemed to go away.

Their pursuers were gaining on them.

“We’re moving too slow,” Jared growled, coming to a halt. “Okay, give me a moment, then climb on my back, okay?”

“What?” she asked, not entirely positive she’d heard him.

“When I’m ready, climb on my back and hold on tight. Understood?” He grabbed her shoulders, his face level with hers. She could feel his warm breath wash over her.

“I… I guess?” she said.

“Just do it,” he commanded and stepped back.

Nadia couldn’t hear anything, but she suddenly felt like there was something extremely large nearby.

A low, animalistic growl filled the sewer, coming from right near her.

“A-A-Are you ready?” she asked, swallowing nervously.

An affirmative-sounding grunt emerged from Jared’s throat. At least, she thought it was his throat. It didn’t sound entirely like him.

“So, climb on your back now?”

There was an exasperated sound.

She reached out tentatively, then yanked her hand back as she encountered thick fur, and lots of it.

Another growl, this one sounding impatient, and slightly louder than before.

“Right, climb on your back,” she said with a small laugh, and reached forward again.

She felt the fur, patted a rough outline, her nerves ratcheting even higher as she realized just how big he was.

“You’re a shifter,” she said suddenly, realizing what had happened.

The noise that emerged from his throat wasn’t overly polite.

“Sorry, I didn’t know that!” she said, feeling more confident now. She bent her knees and launched herself upward as best she could, using her arms and legs to push her up onto his back.

Jared didn’t wait for her to get settled before he lunged forward.

Nadia yelped and clung tightly to his thick fur as he flowed forward and across the ground. For a bear—she was fairly positive that’s what he was—he moved with a grace she would never have thought possible. Either way, they moved much faster this way than if she had remained on foot.

It was only then that she realized he had been moving at a slower pace so that she could keep up, intentionally putting himself in harm’s way, so that she wasn’t left behind. If Jared had wanted to, he could have left her and made good his escape. But he hadn’t. Instead he’d stayed with her, until it was finally too late and he was forced to make a decision. Even then he had made that decision with her in mind, doing his best to ensure that the pair of them reached safety, not just him alone.

Once more she was thankful for the hunch, the gut feeling that had driven her to seek him out, and to trust him. He was actually one of the good guys, despite what the news was saying.

Thinking of that brought a whole new set of fears, worries, and guilt.

She hadn’t known! If she had, Nadia told herself she would have done things very differently. But until that morning she’d been a mindless drone, not thinking for herself. Now she thought she saw clearly, though there were still a few things she was either unable to see, or had purposefully turned a blind eye to.

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