Nothing came out of the rock cave.
“We’re going in,” Diego said.
Xav nodded once, ready. Before they could move, Shane came charging out of the shadows—silent death—and ran straight between the rocks that marked the entrance. Xavier and Diego exchanged a swift glance and ran in after him, weapons ready.
Cassidy was there. She lay on her back on a flat stone, bound hand and foot. Red candles ringed her, all lit, throwing weird shadows onto the ceiling.
“Diego,” she shouted. A warning, not a plea.
Reid dropped on them from above, the man in jeans only. He wasn’t big, but he was wiry, his arms strong as they wrapped around Diego and pinned his firing hand.
Shane didn’t care. He charged, knocking both Diego and Reid to the rocky ground. Several tons of bear landed on them, razor sharp claws coming down.
Reid screamed. Diego felt Reid growing hotter even as he brought his weapon around, saw light filling the cave. The man was about to vanish.
This is going to hurt, Diego thought, just as he stuck his Taser against Reid and pulled the trigger.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
There was nothing like waking up with fifteen hundred pounds of bear on top of you. Diego shoved, but Shane was still out.
He heard another crackle of Taser, smelled more burning flesh, then heard Xav’s voice. “No, you’re staying down.”
“Diego?” That was Cassidy.
Diego slithered and slid out from under the unconscious grizzly and climbed to his feet.
Xavier stood over Reid, Reid out on the floor, his bare torso covered with sweat, blood, and dirt. Cassidy lay naked on the stone, very still, as though afraid to move. Diego limped to her, holstering the Taser he still held and kicking candles out of his way.
Chains wrapped Cassidy’s wrists and feet, and wires ran through those up and down her body to her Collar and then to a Taser. No wonder she didn’t want to move. If she set off the Collar, she’d light up the chains as well.
“I’m sorry, Diego,” she murmured.
“Why are you sorry? Reid did this, not you.”
Diego felt along her Collar for the connections—simple ones, he was happy to find, but Reid would pay for every one of them.
“I shouldn’t have gone back into your apartment without checking it out, first. I knew Reid was still out there somewhere. I should have had Brody come with me.”
Diego gently pulled wires from the Collar. “Don’t beat yourself up, Cass. I’m kind of wondering why you went out the window in the first place. My mom’s chilaquiles aren’t that bad.”
“I’m Shifter.”
Diego finished with the wires and worked on the chains. They were locked in place with small padlocks. A quick search produced no keys, but small locks like these were nothing to a boy who’d been trained to break into cars by age ten.
Diego picked them carefully. “I’m not going to hide you,” he said.
“No, but humans and Shifters don’t mix well. It’s hard on the human.”
“You want to let me worry about that?”
“I’ve seen it happen, Diego. Humans lose their jobs, get shunned by their families. Don’t risk that for me.”
Cassidy was the one bound hand and foot, and she was worried about him.
“Mamita wants to meet you. She’s not going to shun you. As for my career—an ass**le from my office kidnapped you and wrapped you in chains. I’m not the one losing my job.”
The last chain fell from her wrists. Cassidy rose with a groan, but her arms went right around Diego.
Diego gathered her to him as he helped her to stand, then they held each other. Cassidy buried her face in Diego’s shoulder, her embrace strong and warm. Diego was happy to hold her and soothe her, which helped soothe him.
He leaned into her, rubbing her skin, absorbing her warmth. Animals tended to cuddle together for reassurance, and Diego thought they were pretty smart.
A rumble filled the little cave. Shane rolled up from the floor, waking up and fighting mad.
“Easy,” Xavier said. He turned the Taser on him.
Shane opened his mouth and roared.
He’s like a bear waking out of its hibernation sleep. He doesn’t know who we are.
Diego brought out his own Taser again. “Xav, give him a chance but take him down if you have to.”
Cassidy stepped away from Diego. Though her body was covered with dirt, her hair a tangled mess, she stood straight and strong.
Shane swung around to Diego and Cassidy with a long, low snarl. He charged.
Cassidy pushed Diego behind her. “Shane!” she said. “Stop.”
Diego grabbed Cassidy and tried to move her, because Shane wasn’t stopping. The bear’s Collar was going off, sizzling all over the place, but he kept coming.
Cassidy held up her hand. “Shane. Stop, now.”
Shane’s gaze snapped to Cassidy’s. Awareness slammed through his eyes, followed by an oh-shit look. Shane stopped so fast he skidded on the mud, paws shoving over the last of the candles before he crashed into the stone slab and went still.
Cassidy went to him. “Shane? You all right?”
Shane sat back on his bear haunches, shaking his head. Cassidy leaned down and stroked his fur.
Now there’s something you don’t see every day. A gigantic grizzly sitting on the stone floor, splashed with wax and dirt, growling as a beautiful woman petted him on the head.
Shane shifted back to his human form, growling and groaning all the way. “Ow.” Now he was a very large naked man smeared with wax and dirt, with a beautiful woman petting his head.
“You OK, Shane?” Diego asked.
“Yeah.” Shane rubbed his face, gently pushing Cassidy away. “Good shot, Diego. Did you get the shit?”
“He’s still out,” Diego said.
Reid lay motionless, Xavier returning his Taser to him.
“I’ll kill him,” Shane said.
Diego shook his head. “Get in line.”
Cassidy returned to Diego, arms stealing around his waist as though she couldn’t not touch him. “I want to talk to him. How can we keep him from vanishing?”
Eric came through the entrance, shifting as he rose to his full height. He took in the scene and went at once to Cassidy. Cassidy turned her embrace to her brother, the two holding each other tightly for a moment. There was nothing sexual in the contact—just two people who loved each other, happy to see each other whole.
Eric broke the embrace, rubbing Cassidy’s shoulders. “Have Diego and Shane take you home. The Fae is mine.”