In the Crossfire (Bloodhaven) Read online




  In the Crossfire

  Title Page

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  About the Author

  In the Crossfire

  A Bloodhaven Novel

  by

  Lynn Graeme

  Copyright

  In the Crossfire © 2014 by Lynn Graeme

  All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

  This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, locations, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, locales, or events is purely coincidental.

  License Notes: Thank you for downloading this book. This book remains the copyrighted property of the author, and may not be redistributed to others for commercial or non-commercial purposes. If you enjoyed this book, please encourage your friends to download their own copy from their favorite authorized retailer. Thank you for your support.

  Chapter One

  There was a cat on the grounds.

  Liam Whelan lifted his head, recognizing the familiar scent. With an inward sigh, he switched off the power sander he’d been using and set it down.

  The light coating of sawdust on his skin shimmered beneath the afternoon sun as he straightened away from his workbench. The work area was connected to the side of his cabin, partially shaded by the overhang. Beyond that, past the small dirt clearing directly in front of the cabin, was a mass of bushes and thickets he hadn’t gotten around to taming yet.

  He strode to the edge of the clearing, wiping sweat away from his brow. He scanned the bushes in search of the intruder.

  On the bright side, Liam thought dryly, she wasn’t one of his former packmates. The last thing he needed was for one of those wolves to find him.

  His ears pricked at the rustle of leaves. From the corner of his eye, he saw the top of a shrub quiver.

  Bingo.

  Liam walked over and looked down at where his visitor was hiding.

  Through the thick bramble, wide eyes blinked up at him. She was still in cheetah form, dark tear-mark lines bisecting her furred, tawny face. Two more blinks, then she rested her head on top of her paws.

  Liam sighed. He glanced around but couldn’t see any articles of clothing about. He returned his gaze to hers.

  “Clothes?” he asked brusquely.

  She shook her head, the movement causing the leaves to whisper around her. Liam narrowed his eyes, but she merely stared back, still retaining that innocent look.

  Shifters might have more relaxed standards on nudity compared to humans, but Liam drew the line at having an unrelated fourteen-year-old female shift in his presence without a stitch in sight. If anything, it was bound to make her aunt give Liam the side-eye, and Liam already felt a fool around the woman as it was.

  He glowered down at the cub, then turned around and stalked off, bypassing the workbench and entering his cabin.

  It was a dark, tiny space, with the front door opening directly into the kitchen. There was no separation between the kitchen and bedroom areas, the latter of which consisted of a twin bed—extra-long to accommodate his height—as well as a rickety dresser left behind by the cabin’s previous owner. The bathroom was only big enough for a toilet, a sink, and a shower stall. A window barely bigger than Liam’s head, letting in a bright patch of sunlight on the bare kitchen floor, provided the only source of light in the cabin.

  Wolf eyes didn’t require much light, however, and Liam navigated his way easily to the back. He yanked out a T-shirt and a fresh pair of boxers from the dresser, then returned outside.

  She hadn’t moved from her spot. Liam dropped the clothes right on top of her head.

  He returned inside the cabin and started searching for his phone. He vaguely remembered having flung it against the wall last night, after waking up from a particularly bad episode. He finally found it half-buried in a box of butterfly hinges in the corner.

  Tapping the screen to make sure the damn thing still worked, he began dialing. He went to retrieve his forgotten mug of coffee from the kitchen counter. Two and a half rings followed before the other line picked up.

  “Saba.”

  Isobel Saba—Council agent, Liam’s landlady, and star of all his secret fantasies—sounded her typically cool self, if a touch preoccupied. Her voice, naturally low, curled into Liam like winter smoke from the mountains of his youth.

  He barely suppressed a rumble as his wolf sat up to attention. Down, boy.

  He could hear a cacophony of yells and thuds in the background. Isobel appeared to be answering his call in the middle of combat. Somehow, Liam wasn’t the least bit surprised.

  “It’s Liam,” he mumbled, then cleared his throat. “Liam Whelan.”

  A pause. “I know who you are, Liam. Is something wrong?”

  So many things. But he merely scrubbed a hand over his face and muttered, “Naley’s here.”

  Silence. Then Isobel swore profusely, not all of it in English.

  “I’m going to skin her mother alive.” A loud thwack! echoed over the line. “What do you mean, she’s there? You mean there-there, with you?”

  He grunted an affirmative. He poured out a glass of milk that thankfully hadn’t expired yet.

  “She can’t have forgotten her access code,” Isobel muttered. Liam recalled that Naley was programmed into Isobel’s security system, fully authorized to enter her home in her absence. “Let me speak to her.”

  “She’s … changing.”

  “What do you mean, changing? Hang on, why isn’t she calling me herself?”

  Liam rubbed his head and drew in a deep breath.

  “Liam?”

  “No phone.”

  Isobel sighed. “Liam, I know you tend to speak in shorthand but this would be one”—thud—“occasion”—thump—“in which a little more explanation”—thwap—“would really be appreciated.”

  He was always clumsy with words around this woman. “I gave her some clothes to change into. She had nothing on her.”

  A stumped silence, followed by another sigh. “She shifted.”

  Liam didn’t say anything. He figured his silence served as sufficient confirmation.

  He rifled through the cupboards until he found an open box of cheese crackers. “I’ll give her my phone. To call you.”

  “Thanks. I’ll try to get home as soon as—” Isobel cut off abruptly. “Lewski, what’re you doing?”

  Liam heard a bellow from her end of the line. His hackles rose. “Isobel?”

  “Fu… . One sec, Liam.”

  A series of thumps and grunts reverberated. Liam heard the sharp snap of breaking bone, then a muffled scream. Not Isobel’s, thank the devil.

  “Head down, Lewski!” she yelled.

  Liam flinched at the deafening blast of a gun. His grip tightened on his phone. “Isobel?”

  No answer.

  He paced the confines of the kitchen, the muscles between his shoulder blades drawing tight and tense. He wanted to demand answers, ask what was going on, but knew better than to distract Isobel in the middle of battle.

  She’s a Council agent. She can handle this.
r />   She can handle things better than you ever could.

  The familiar black sensation began to claw up Liam’s throat. He glanced down at the scars raking up his arms, disappearing into the sleeves of his T-shirt. He gritted his teeth as he strove to calm himself.

  The war was long over. He’d left that life behind.

  “You still there?” Isobel asked.

  He tilted his head back to stare at the ceiling. He willed away the suffocating feeling that was already looming far too close for his liking. “Was about to ask you the same.”

  “Sorry ’bout that. You, stay down.”

  It took a moment for Liam to figure out she had aimed that last sentence at someone else. A sound akin to a brick wall collapsing told him that the person had either acceded to Isobel’s request or received a very physical encouragement from her to do so.

  “As I was saying,” she continued, “I’ll try to get back as soon as I can.”

  Right. They were talking about Naley. Liam scratched his brow, trying to think of something else to say.

  Isobel misread his lack of a response. “Are you angry?”

  “No.”

  “Ah.”

  “I’m not.”

  “I see.”

  Liam scowled. “I’m not.”

  “I may be slightly delayed.”

  “Take your time,” he growled.

  “Really?”

  She didn’t have to sound so bloody surprised. It wasn’t as if he was a complete recluse.

  Though with his luck, she probably thought him half-mad anyway. Likely expected him to bite Naley’s head off at any minute for daring to invade his privacy.

  No, that was a lie. Isobel was incredibly protective over her niece. She didn’t even use Naley’s name while on-duty—including, as in her current situation, while battling opponents—in case those around her ever saved that knowledge for later.

  If Isobel truly thought Naley was at risk while in Liam’s company, she’d have her blade to his neck and her claws around his balls so fast he wouldn’t even feel her kicking him out of the tricity area. The fact that she didn’t demand Naley hightail it out of there was … promising.

  “Do what you have to do,” Liam muttered. “We’ll be fine.”

  The loud crack of fist connecting with jaw split the air. Uncontrolled blubbering ensued.

  “Well, thank you.” Isobel sounded doubtful, but seemed to take him at his word, at least for now. “I really appreciate it. Tell her I’ll be back soon. And to call me.”

  Liam only grunted.

  “I’ll make it up to you, Liam. I know how you must hate this.”

  What Liam hated was that she felt like she had to make it up to him at all. He hated that it was his own doing, his own reputation as a hermit and recluse in the first place, that made her think he’d flip a lid at the imposed presence of an innocent young girl.

  He hated that he didn’t have the words necessary to convince her he didn’t used to be this much of a freak. He hated that he couldn’t get back to being that person, the old him, again. He didn’t know if he’d even recognize the old him. That man was a veritable stranger now.

  “Don’t mention it.” Liam wrestled with words for a moment, then managed, “Get home safe.”

  Smooth, Whelan.

  There was a bemused pause. “Always. I’ll see you later.” Louder, she snarled, “Lewski, I’m gonna kick your ass. And I told you to stay down.” Thunk.

  Liam hung up and rested his hands on the kitchen counter. Very slowly, he released a long breath, trying to unkink the muscles bunching up at the back of his shoulders.

  He tried not to think of Isobel putting herself in harm’s way. Or, knowing Isobel, throwing herself in harm’s way with an ululating war cry. This was a day in the life for her.

  Liam was very aware danger came hand-in-hand with Isobel’s job. As a Council agent, she could be anywhere within Bloodhaven or the tricity area on any given day, doing anything from mediating between feuding bear clans to liaising with shifter and human communities. Usually, however, it involved leading raids against extremist shifter factions. That took up a significant amount of her time. Some nights, when Liam prowled the property in wolf form, he’d see Isobel coming home to only two or three hours of sleep before heading back out again. Sometimes he wouldn’t even see her for days.

  The lack of free time was the main reason Isobel let him live in the cabin on the northwest side of her fifteen acres of land. Liam saw to the property’s upkeep in exchange for a break in the rent. Not that the rent itself was very much, but then again, neither was the cabin. The arrangement worked out well for both of them.

  And if he lusted after her in private, well, that was his business and no one else’s.

  By the time Liam emerged outside with his coffee, the glass of milk, as well as the box of cheese crackers tucked under his arm, a young girl—now in human form—was leaning against his workbench. She wore the T-shirt and boxers he’d left for her, along with a sheepish expression.

  Naley Saba had grown taller and more coltish since the last time he’d seen her. Her hair was a mass of riotous curls, haloing her head like an ebony cloud. Her skin was two tones darker than Isobel’s, and she shared her aunt’s hazel eyes, tilted up at the corners, though hers were much more expressive. Less guarded.

  Liam set the items down on the workbench, then used his foot to push a stool in her direction. Naley waited for him to take the opposite stool before sliding onto the proffered seat.

  “You’re not mad, are you?” she asked.

  Apparently she, too, expected him to be close to a raging rampage.

  Liam could feel Naley’s stare. He kept his own gaze steadfastly averted. Instead, he just sipped his coffee and peered at the woods beyond.

  He didn’t say a word. He had a hard enough time knowing what to say to adults without having to deal with cubs and juveniles.

  After a minute, Naley reached for the box of crackers. As she stuffed her hand inside, Liam contemplated going inside again to get her a paper towel. Her fingers were already turning bright orange as she crammed the cheese crackers into her mouth.

  She was obviously hungry, he noted. He eyed the incomplete cabinet doors still waiting by the power sander, resigning himself to the fact that they would just have to wait a little longer for completion.

  “Where’re your clothes?” he asked gruffly. It occurred to him that he’d better retrieve her belongings from where she’d stashed them.

  She gulped down a swig of milk. “At school.”

  Liam frowned. He was pretty sure Naley went to school in Bloodhaven. And since Isobel’s home was located an hour’s commute from the city, and there were no public transit routes that came this way… .

  Liam set down his mug. “Did you run here all the way from your school?”

  Naley said nothing. She shot him a guilty look.

  Liam was on his feet again, cursing silently as he returned to the cabin. It didn’t matter that Naley was a cheetah; by all accounts, she was still a juvenile. Running for over an hour would’ve expanded more energy than her young frame was capable of, and seeing that it was late afternoon now, she’d done so on an empty stomach.

  Come to think of it, cheetahs weren’t built for prolonged runs. They simply didn’t have the stamina. Jesus, she has to be exhausted.

  Liam hadn’t gone for groceries this week, and so had very little in his fridge. He ended up piling several slices of bread, a bowl of leftover shredded chicken, and mayo on a piece of plywood. He checked for anything resembling vegetables, but the one tomato lingering in the crisper was beginning to develop its own terrain, so that was a lost cause.

  It wasn’t going to be the most appetizing sandwich. She’d deal.

  He used the plywood as a tray to carry the items out, remembering at the last minute to grab a butter knife and tear off a paper towel as well. He set them all down in front of Naley.

  She blinked at the selection before her, then
glanced up at Liam.

  He folded his arms and glared. “Eat.”

  Naley looked like she wanted to say something, then evidently decided against it as she picked up a slice of bread and began slathering it with mayo and then the chicken. She took a bite and grimaced, but continued to chew.

  Liam reclaimed his seat. He drummed his fingers on the workbench, thinking. He really had to get more food.

  “You know your aunt’s access code?” he asked abruptly, remembering Isobel’s words earlier.

  Naley hesitated, then nodded.

  He stared. “So why didn’t you go directly to your aunt’s house?”

  She shrugged.

  Liam studied the girl, perplexed. He knew she couldn’t be afraid of Isobel. Anybody who’d seen the two of them together could instantly tell how much Isobel doted on her niece, so whatever Naley was feeling right now, it wasn’t fear. Nor could she be shy; she’d visited her aunt often enough in the past. Isobel’s house was essentially her second home.

  Naley toyed with her sandwich. This time it was she who avoided his stare.

  “You want me to leave?” she asked in a voice brimming with feigned indifference.

  Liam frowned.

  Naley sneaked a glance at him, then narrowed her eyes. Liam didn’t know how to respond, so he narrowed his right back at her.

  The corner of her mouth twitched, but she quickly composed herself. She pondered for a moment.

  “I wanna hang out here,” she rephrased. “Please,” she added, suddenly remembering her manners. Or maybe she was remembering what grown-ups preferred to hear when dealing with requests.

  Liam picked up his mug and took a sip. He waited until Naley began fidgeting, then slipped his hand into his jeans pocket to pull out his phone. He slid it across the scuffed-up surface of the workbench toward her.

  “Only if you call your aunt.”

  “But you’ve already talked to Aunt Iz.”

  He raised an eyebrow. Naley sighed and reached for the phone. Then she studied the plate before her.