The fuel gauge read below empty when she finally saw the neon display of a huge petrol station that obviously catered to truckers. Tamara pulled the car into a shadowed glade, crept into the back, and tugged a sleeping bag over Lars. She kissed his furred face, but he didn’t stir. “We’re stopping for petrol,” she whispered into his ear. “Not that you’d be fussing, but you must remain hidden.” He might have pushed his snout against her face, but the motion was so weak, she could have imagined it.
Her eyes felt hot and gritty as she maneuvered the car back onto the roadway. Everything from finding the car’s petrol filler to counting out unfamiliar money from Lars’ wallet taxed her overburdened brain. At some level, she knew she was running on sheer nerves, but she had to keep going. Had to get Lars to Garen. She choked back the edges of hysteria. Who the hell treated shifters? Sure and not emergency rooms. Not veterinarians, either.
She kept her mind voice calm, soothing, and called Lars’ name.
“I am still on this side of the veil, fraulein. I heard you on the phone a while back. Excellent call. Garen is a good man. Solid.”
“Hush, love. Don’t be trying to talk. Just hang in there.”
Dawn was breaking, illuminating jagged mountaintops with shades of pink, when she pulled into farm country at the outskirts of Idaho Falls. She hadn’t had any further conversations with Lars, but the steady sound of his breathing filled her with hope. The cell phone jangled. When she uncrimped her fingers from the steering wheel to answer it, she understood how close to the edge she was.
“I see the car,” Garen said without preamble. “Take the next exit, turn right, and drive to the end of whatever road you’re on. I’ll rendezvous with you there.”
She dropped the phone back into the console and ferried the car off the highway. “You hear that, my sweet, my love. Garen’s here. You’re almost safe.”
“No, liebchen, we’re almost safe.”
She was so shocked to hear his out loud voice, she almost plowed into a parked car. “Oh my God. When did you shift back?”
“Only a few moments ago. I was too weak until then. Had to get the bullet out first. Then my cat took more time than I would have liked to heal the damage.”
Tears coursed down her face. It was hard to breathe around the thickening in her throat. Lars was alive. He’d made it. Somehow, she ferried the car to a stop at the end of a deserted road, slammed on the parking brake, and got out. She yanked open the back door and stopped dead. Blood. There was so much blood. How could he still be alive?
“It looks worse than it is. Happened while my cat extruded the bullet.” He got out of the car shakily, and she wrapped her arms around him, never wanting to let go. Tamara tried to talk, but she was beyond words as she ran her hands up and down his body, trying to reassure herself he was whole.
“You’re naked as a newborn babe. We have to be finding you something to put on.”
“If that means I have to let go of you, I can skip it.” His voice was a husky growl as he nuzzled her ear.
Tamara leaned her head against his chest, savoring the steady beat of his heart beneath her ear. She reluctantly disengaged herself and rummaged in the back of the car. Thank all the fucking saints his clothes weren’t soaked with blood. She handed him things and helped him dress.
She’d just steadied him while he stepped into his shoes when the whump-whump of chopper blades descended toward them. One moment the helicopter was in the air, the next it had settled to the ground in a cloud of dust. A man emerged, bent low against the prop wash, and ran toward them. A woman exited the chopper right behind him, an imposing looking rifle slung over one shoulder. Once clear of the spinning rotors, she shouldered the gun and moved it in a slow arc. Tamara understood it had to be Miranda covering her mate—and them.
Garen wrapped his arms around both of them. “Not bad for a dead man.” He clapped Lars on the back.
“As one much greater than I once said, the rumors of my death have been greatly exaggerated.” Lars leaned into Garen; Tamara caught the barest glimpse of the depth of their relationship and it warmed her.
“I’d love to catch up,” Garen said, his blue eyes twinkling in a face with strong, severe bone structure, “but we can do that once we’re airborne. Clear everything out of the rental car.” He pulled a watch cap more firmly over longish salt-and-pepper hair.
“Sure and I’ll take care of that,” Tamara said, casting a concerned eye at Lars.
“Can you walk to the chopper?” Garen asked Lars.
“Of course.”
“Then go. Your woman and I will clear the car.”
Lars rubbed his cheek against Tamara’s, turned, and walked slowly toward the helicopter. When he got to Miranda’s side, she left her sentinel post to help him.
“Now you know he’s safe, move quick. We need to get out of here,” Garen said.
Tamara scrambled back into the car, gathered everything that belonged to them, and tossed it outside into a pile. Once she was done, she scooped up an armload, carted it to the helicopter, and went back for more. Between her and Garen, they were done in just a few trips.
Garen grabbed her arm and pushed her toward the helicopter. “Time to go.”
“But the keys? What should I do with the keys?” She dangled them in his face. “It’s bad enough the back seat’s all bloody.”
“Lock up. Keep the keys. If luck is with us, the rental agency will only have to do a bit of cleanup, but I suspect they’ll find the SUV either torched or full of bullet holes.”
Tamara ran back to the car, slammed the doors, and hit the clicker. Remembering Lars’ phone, still buried deep in the console, she unlocked the car, retrieved it, and sprinted for the helicopter. Fear bit deep; her legs shook. Garen’s words had served as an unpleasant reminder that the world she knew was gone. Poof, evaporated like mist on a morning bog. By the time she got to the chopper, everyone was inside but her. She pulled herself up the metal steps and moved out of the way so Miranda could shut and latch the door.
Miranda shoved black hair with white-blonde streaks over her shoulders and half lifted Tamara into a seat. When she struggled with the seatbelt because her hands shook so badly, Miranda fastened it for her. “There now.” The tall woman’s voice was low and soothing, her blue eyes kind. “Everything will be fine.”
Tamara tried to thank her, but all that emerged was a jumble of Irish. The world tilted and spun. Part of it was the helicopter lifting off, but part of it was her body finally having reached a breaking point.
“Aw, crap.” Miranda’s voice seemed to be coming from the bottom of a deep well. “Damn if she’s not going to faint.”
“She has every right,” Lars said, pride shining in his words. “Even though she was scared out of her skin, she took care of business and killed two of the men who attacked us. Not just killed, shredded them.”
“You hear that?” Miranda squeezed her shoulder. “You were a hero today. Strong work!”
Darkness swirled closer and closer. She heard Garen murmur, “Sounds like you’ve found yourself a keeper,” just before everything faded away.
Chapter Thirteen
“Goddammit!” Lars bent over Tamara. Anxiety soured his stomach. He reached a tentative hand and smoothed tangled, dark strands back from her face. “Liebchen. Come back to us. We are safe now.” Despite his earlier words, having her unconscious rattled him.