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No one knew that secret, precious name.

No one but her.

“Don’t,” she breathed, her voice humiliatingly weak. “That’s mine. Only mine.”

“Holy shit.” The man took another step forward. “Is it really you?”

Keira scrambled backward, her defiance forgotten as she caught the warm, male scent. Pantera. He was like her.

“Who are you?” she rasped.

With a graceful leap, he was standing directly in front of the cell door, his beautiful leaf green eyes serrated with gold, glowing with a stunned joy.

“Oh my god.”

“No.” She held up a hand, her heart racing. She didn’t know what was bothering her. On some level she knew she should be fiercely relieved. This man was one of her people. But there was a part of her that was terrified by his scent. “Stay back.”

He frowned, watching her with a searching gaze. “Keira, it’s me. Bayon.”

Bayon. She silently tested the name. It was…familiar.  He was familiar.

But the confusion in her mind was too tangled to pull out the memory.

“Stay back,” she repeated, her voice harsh. She didn’t understand what was happening, and that was as terrifying as any torture.

“Is it a trap?” He tilted his head to the side, sniffing the air. “Keira, honey, will I trigger an alarm?”

She shook her head, her mouth dry. “You have to go.”

He studied her pale, frightened expression, then without warning he grabbed the bars and ripped the door off the cell.

Keira vaulted onto the cot, her palm pressed to her thundering heart as he ruthlessly moved toward her. He reached out a hand, but rather than grabbing her as she half expected, he ran his fingers over the collar around her neck.

With a hiss he yanked his hand from the metal.

“Shit. There’s something toxic in the metal.” He gave a shake of his head. “I have to find a key. I’ll be back.”

She watched in silence as he ran lightly back down the stairs, leaving her alone.

Mutely she studied the mangled door of her cell, a voice in the back of her head urging her to make a run for it. She could slip out one of the windows, drop from the roof and take off down the road before the…before Bayon ever realized she was gone.

Her limbs, however, refused to move. They felt as if they’d been locked into place by a compulsion she couldn’t understand.

Instead she remained crouched on the cot, her breath a loud rasp as she heard the sounds of Bayon moving through the house. There was a tense wait before he was jogging back up the stairs and returning to the cell.

She hissed as the warm musk of him filled her senses, reminding her of…what?

Something her mind wasn’t ready to accept.

She trembled, shaking her head as he slowly crossed the cell and perched on the edge of the cot.

“Just hold still, Keira,” he urged softly, his gaze never leaving her face as he reached to unlock the collar and remove it. With a grimace he tossed it aside.

Then, his fingers returned to her throat to lightly soothe the flesh that had been rubbed raw by the metal. Instantly she was pulling away, her heart slamming against her ribs at the odd sensations that streaked through her at his soft caress.

“No.” She surged off the cot and pressed against the bars of the cell, hating herself for acting like a fucking mouse, but unable to halt her violent reactions. “Don’t touch me.”

“Okay.” Rising to his feet, he held up his hands in a gesture of peace. “We have to get out of here.”

“Out?” She licked her dry lips. “Where are you taking me?”

“Back to the Wildlands.”

The rising panic flooded through her, closing her throat until she struggled to draw air into her lungs. “No. I can’t.”

Bayon frowned, his fingers twitching as if he was battling the urge to physically force her from the cell.

“Keira, we can’t stay here,” he at last managed to murmur in soothing tones. “Will you come with me? Please.”

Keira glanced toward the door. She wanted out. Desperately. And some part of her understood that this man wouldn’t hurt her.

Still, it took every ounce of her willpower to give a jerky shake of her head. “All right. Just…don’t touch.”

“Okay.” He backed out of the cell, watching her with a carefully controlled expression. “Whatever you need, honey, just tell me.”

“I need space.”

“You got it,” he promised without hesitation. “Follow me.”

She did. But it was at a cautious distance as they crept silently down the stairs and then out a small kitchen with cracked linoleum floors and a pile of filthy dishes on the counters.

Once in the backyard he paused, searching the darkness for any hint of a trap. Behind him Keira trembled, her dulled senses tingling to painful life.

Christ, was this real?

The brush of a warm breeze on her cheek. The grass beneath her feet. The distant sound of a child laughing.

Over the years she’d too often dreamed she was free, only to wake and discovered she was still trapped in her cage.

She couldn’t bear to discover this was just another hallucination.

At last convinced they were alone, Bayon led her toward a gate that had been left unlatched and into a narrow alley that smelled of rotting trash and human feces.

She slapped a hand over her sensitive nose, grimly concentrating on placing one foot in front of the other. Nope. This was no dream. Her imagination wasn’t capable of producing such a foul odor.

Relief surged through her even as her weakness increased with every step. Grimly she refused to slow her pace. She didn’t care if she had to crawl. Nothing would make her return to that prison.

They reached the end of the alley when the Pantera male halted, motioning her to stay behind him as he peered into the window of a derelict garage.

“What are you doing?” she demanded, nervously glancing over her shoulder.

Dammit. Why was he hesitating? Her guards wouldn’t be gone forever.

“We can travel faster in a car,” he muttered.

“No.” She shook her head, a painful flash of memory searing through her confusion. She was hogtied with a hood over her head as rough hands stuffed her into the trunk of a car. There were male voices that sliced through her with the pain of a dagger. “I can’t,” she muttered.

Bayon glanced over his shoulder, his expression concerned. “Why?”

“It’s a cage,” she muttered.

A stark, brutal regret darkened his eyes before he gave a sharp nod. “Then we run.”

Running.

The wind in her hair. The earth pounding beneath her feet.

The stench of the humans fading from her senses.

“Yes,” she breathed. “God, yes.”

Chapter 2

Bayon fought for control.

He was acutely aware of the woman sprinting mere inches behind him even as they moved through the thickening shadows of Melton, the small town several miles north of the bayou where he’d tracked the bastards who’d attacked Ashe. Keira needed him calm. His mind focused on escaping into the nearby swamp before the humans returned to discover she was missing.

Not acting like a raving lunatic who wanted to grasp her by the shoulders and demand to know what the hell had happened to her.

Holy shit.

The memory of the day she’d disappeared was seared into his brain.

Twenty-five years ago, she’d left the Wildlands to visit her human lover and then…nothing.

Her brother, Parish, had sensed she was in distress, but he hadn’t been able to reach her before she’d vanished off the face of the earth.

Eventually they’d had to accept she was dead, and Bayon had secretly gone into a mourning that had matched Parish’s. Only his was worse, because while Parish had received the sympathy of the entire Pantera community, Bayon had been forced to keep his own grief shoved deep inside, pretending as if his life hadn’t come to a shattering end on that day.