X-Ops Exposed
X-Ops #8
Paige Tyler
Pub Date: April 3, 2018
Genre: Paranormal Romantic Suspense
HE LEFT TO KEEP HER SAFE
Believing he’s too dangerous to
be among people, feline hybrid Tanner Howland retreats deep into the forests of
Washington State—with no choice but to leave behind the woman who’s captured
his heart. What he doesn’t know is that she followed him…
SHE WOULDN’T STAY BEHIND
Heartbroken and determined, Dr.
Zarina Sokolov tracks Tanner into the wild. Her presence unleashes Tanner’s
protective instinct—big time. Locals have been disappearing and he is desperate
for Zarina to leave. As the kidnappings escalate, Tanner must embrace the
dangerous instincts he fears so much. But with Zarina at his side, he’ll have
to learn to control his animal impulses, or lose himself—and the woman he
loves—to the beast within.
Amazon | Barnes &
Noble | iBooks | Kobo | IndieBound
Knowing she wasn’t going to get away, Zarina slid to a stop and spun around, ready to shout at the beast that wanted to kill her. She’d seen Tanner let out a roar that could paralyze almost anything crazy enough to attack him, so perhaps she could do the same thing.
But her cry of defiance died in her
throat as she came face-to-face with a gigantic grizzly bear. The beast reared
up on its hind legs, towering over her for one heart-stopping moment before
dropping to all fours and roaring at her so loud, her bones felt turned to
jelly.
She vaguely remembered the store clerk
in town trying to sell her a can of bear repellent. If she wasn’t so terrified,
she’d laugh at the idea. What the heck would a can of pepper spray do to
something this big?
The bear took a step in her direction
with another roar, showing off fangs large enough to bite right through her.
For a split second, Zarina considered
running again, but it would be pointless. She’d never outrun a bear.
Rabbits get eaten.
So instead, she screamed as long and
loud as she could.
The grizzly looked shocked for a
moment, but instead of scaring the animal off like she’d hoped, all it did was
seem to make him mad. Head low, the bear started toward her.
She was going to die.
But suddenly, the bear stopped, a look
of what could only be confusion on its face as it focused on something behind
her. A second later, a roar ripped through the night that shook the ground. She
jerked her head around, almost collapsing in relief when she saw Tanner
standing there in the dark, dressed in jeans and a T-shirt, his eyes glowing
vivid red, fangs bared as he let out a roar that sounded exactly like that of a
lion. Which made sense, because those were the DNA strands blended with his
own.
Zarina stood transfixed. Tanner’s fangs
were longer and looked more terrifying than the bear’s.
The rage and anger on his face must
have been enough to scare the grizzly, because the huge animal gave one more
halfhearted chuff in Tanner’s direction, then turned and scurried back into the
pitch-dark forest.
To her right, she caught movement.
Crap, Tanner was going after the bear. Not because he wanted to hurt the
animal, but because by running, the grizzly had become the prey, and Tanner’s
lion half simply couldn’t stop itself from hunting the animal down now that the
rage had taken over.
“Tanner,” she said softly. “Let the
bear go.”
He stopped like he’d hit a brick wall,
then stood there, unmoving, for what felt like forever, facing away from her
and staring off into the darkness in the direction the bear had run. Not that
it was probably all that dark for Tanner. With his animal-enhanced eyesight, he
could probably see the grizzly’s big, fuzzy rump bouncing off into the woods.
And if his eyes lost the creature, then his keen sense of smell would fill in
the details. Which was a good thing, since she’d have probably been a bear
treat if it hadn’t been for that nose of his.
After what seemed like an eternity,
Tanner turned and looked at her. His fangs and glowing red eyes were gone now,
replaced by a mesmerizing blue gaze and a ruggedly handsome face that had made
her heart almost stop beating the first time she’d seen it. He had a bit more
dark-blond scruff along his jaw and chin now. Actually, a lot more. Maybe it
was because she’d grown up in a cold-weather environment where the opposite sex
went all caveman in an attempt to stay warm, but she wasn’t usually a fan of
facial hair. On Tanner, though, it looked incredibly scrumptious.
His T-shirt clung tightly to his chest
and shoulders, showing off all the muscles he had upstairs, while his jeans
fought to contain thighs that looked poised to tear their way out at any
moment. Had he actually gotten more muscular since he’d been out there?
Zarina almost ran to him right then so
she could throw her arms around him and hold him tight for the rest of the
night. But she didn’t, because she knew he wouldn’t be ready for that. Not
after she’d showed up in the forest out of the blue and almost gotten eaten by
a bear.
But damn, it was hard.
Tanner looked better now than when he’d
been living in the dorms at the DCO complex. He had been put up there since the
agency’s covert agents had found him out here all that time ago. Even the
stress lines that had been etched into his features had completely faded. It
almost made her sorry she’d come out here to disturb the serenity he seemed to
have found. But she couldn’t stay away, not with the way she felt about him.
And especially not when she could finally help him.
“What are you doing here, Zarina?” he
asked bluntly.
So much for him sweeping her into his
arms and saying he was happy to see her. Clearly, he wasn’t. She tried not to
let that hurt too much.
“I’m here to help you,” she said,
equally blunt.
She’d learned a long time ago that
dancing around a subject wasn’t the way Tanner did things. It wasn’t the way she
did, either, so that was okay. She didn’t bother mentioning that his
disappearance had caused her more sleepless nights than she could count and had
nearly driven her insane with worry. That would have been emotional blackmail,
and she wasn’t going to do that to him.
His jaw flexed. “I don’t need any help.
I’m doing a good job of controlling my hybrid impulses all on my own.”
She looked pointedly in the direction
the grizzly had run. “It doesn’t seem like it to me.”
Tanner flinched, and she immediately regretted
her choice of words. Dammit, she was out here to help him, not push him further
away.
“I haven’t lost control in the two
months I’ve been out here,” he said through clenched teeth. “Not until you
decided to do something stupid like wander through the middle of a grizzly’s
territory by yourself.”
Zarina wanted to point out that she
hadn’t planned to be out here this late and that there was no way she could
have known she was in a bear’s territory. But she bit her tongue and focused on
trying to defuse the situation.
“I’m sorry I made you lose control
again,” she said. “But I’m here to make sure it doesn’t happen again…ever.”
She waited, expecting Tanner to ask her
what she meant by that, but he didn’t. Instead, he stood there regarding her
and looking way better than any man should considering he’d been camping in the
woods for two months. She had met plenty of guys who couldn’t pull off his
level of masculine perfection after primping in front of a mirror for an hour.
That was one of the other things she’d learned about Tanner. He didn’t have to
work hard at being so amazing. It came naturally to him.
After another minute of silence, Zarina
accepted that if they were going to talk, she was the one who would have to get
the conversation started. “I finished the hybrid drug antiserum that will
return your DNA back to what it was before Stutmeir’s doctors experimented on
you. You can be a normal human again.”
She waited for some reaction—relief,
doubt, elation. Something. But Tanner looked as interested as if she’d told him
it might rain tomorrow.
“I’ll never be normal again,” he
finally said quietly.
“Yes, you will.” She stepped closer,
anguish coursing through her when he immediately took a step back. “I worked on
the antidote every minute since you left. It will work. It will keep the beast
from ever slipping out again.”
“I don’t want it, dammit!” he shouted,
making her jump. He cursed and ran his hand through his hair. “I’m sorry,” he
said, his voice softer. “For yelling at you. And for making you come all the
way out here and hiking halfway across the Wenatchee Forest to find me. But I
don’t want the antidote. Just go home, okay? Leave me out here where I can’t
hurt anyone.”
Zarina’s heart tore in two at the pain
in his eyes. She had no idea why he was turning down her offer, but she wasn’t
leaving without him.
“I’m not going home,” she said,
standing her ground and leveling her gaze at him.
Having this conversation would have
been a lot easier without holding a flashlight. Then she could have folded her
arms to emphasize her point.
“Then you’d better have a lot of books
on that e-reader of yours, because you’re going to get bored damn fast waiting
for me at whatever hotel you’re staying in.”
“I’m not going to a hotel,” she told
him. “I’m staying out here.”
Red flared in his eyes but faded just
as quickly. “Like hell you are.”
“I’m not leaving,” she said firmly.
“You can run off into the woods—we both know I can’t keep up with you—but I
still won’t leave. I’ll keep walking all over the forest looking for you.”
His eyes flickered red again, and he
muttered something under his breath she couldn’t catch. “You irritate me like
no one else on the planet, do you know that?”
“Yes,” she replied, even though it was
a probably a rhetorical question. “So, which way to your camp?”
Paige Tyler is a New
York Times and USA Today
bestselling author of sexy, romantic fiction. Paige writes books about hunky
alpha males and the kick-butt heroines they fall in love with. She lives with
her very own military hero (a.k.a. her husband) and their adorable dog on the
beautiful Florida coast.
Website: https://paigetylertheauthor.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PaigeTyler
No comments:
Post a Comment