Read Shifter's Claim (The Shadow Shifters) Online
Authors: A. C. Arthur
“Bas,” Rome called to him.
He and Priya were almost to the door when Bas stopped and turned to face the Assembly Leader. He knew that Rome wasn’t finished talking to him, knew that the revelation that Priya knew about them wasn’t finished being discussed, but he’d decided it would be finished for tonight. It had to be.
Kalina had stood as well and moved to her mate’s side quickly, putting a hand on his shoulder as she stood on tiptoe to whisper something in his ear.
Rome cleared his throat a couple of seconds later and continued, “We’ll see you at the press release,” he finished with an obvious frown.
Bas nodded his agreement and led Priya out of the conference room and hopefully out of the line of fire—or was that the position he was in himself? It didn’t matter. All that mattered for tonight was that Priya was safe. That’s all he was going to allow himself to think about.
* * *
“Does he know?” Rome asked as he took his seat at the head of the table once more, clasping his hands together.
“I’ve come to believe that with some male shifters it isn’t so much knowing as it is accepting,” Kalina told her
companheiro
as she stood behind him massaging the tenseness from his shoulders.
The others had filed out of the room with their assignments clear. Jacques would first secure rooms for the Leader and his
companheiro,
then for the visiting guards. Then he would work on the arrangements for the press conference. In the meantime, Nick, X, and Ezra would join Bas’s teams in securing the resort and keeping watch for any new intruders. Jax would remain close to Kalina, most likely standing right outside the door of the conference room. And Kalina would do her best to convince her husband that Priya Drake was now one of them regardless of her human status; it was clear as day the woman was in love with Bas and had offered to help them because of that love.
“She’s a human, Kalina. As long as she knows we exist she has the power to destroy everything we’ve built,” Rome told her.
Kalina sighed. “Or she has the power to take us to that other level you talk about so much. What if she really is our ally, Rome? What if she’s appointed our public relations spokesperson? She could counter all the swirling accusations, and there will be more. You know this as well as I do because the rogues aren’t finished, they’re just getting started.”
He lowered his head then and Kalina knelt down beside him. Running the Stateside Assembly had been a huge undertaking for Rome, a responsibility that everyone assumed he was born to handle. Kalina didn’t for one moment doubt her mate’s ability to lead and she’d vowed, the moment he was elected, that she would do everything in her power to make this job as easy for him as she possibly could. Even if that meant telling him things he didn’t actually want to hear.
She touched a hand to his cheek, rubbed the smoothness there, then let her fingers travel down to the neatly trimmed goatee as she turned his face toward hers.
“Priya is Bas’s
companheiro,
darling. There’s nothing you or I can do about that. Their
companheiro calor
was strong enough to fill this entire room. And I suspect that if the shadows are going to continue to live amongst the humans in so-called harmony, there are going to be more of these unions. As the leader of this tribe you need to be prepared for that. We’re evolving just as every other species on this earth has at one time or another.”
Rome stared at her for what seemed like endless moments before admitting, “This isn’t the first time it’s happened. It’s not the first time a shadow has fallen for a human. But the shifters were much younger than Bas, much less experienced. I didn’t like having to make the decisions I did where they were concerned.”
Kalina held back her surprise because it was just as she’d stated, they were evolving and short of taking them all back to the forest and staying there forever, there was no way this forward movement was going to stop, no matter what complications it imposed.
* * *
“What the hell was that?” Bas asked the moment he and Priya were alone in his suite.
After switching on the lights, Priya moved to the couch and took a seat, feeling almost at home. It hadn’t been long since she’d first been escorted into this space and introduced to this man, and yet, she felt like she’d been here forever, almost as if this was where she belonged. Deciding against this line of thought she reached over to the table beside the couch and retrieved Bas’s cell phone.
“You got a text,” she said, extending her arm and the phone in his direction. “They found Malik.”
Priya had almost forgotten that she had Bas’s cell phone until she was lying across his bed—crying like a four-year-old in Jewel’s lap—when it suddenly vibrated. When Bas had yelled for her to pick it up while they were on the road she’d stuffed it into her bra about three seconds before that madman had grabbed her from behind. It had stayed there until she pulled it out in Jewel’s company.
His text message light was flashing and the next time it vibrated—which was about a minute later—the screen lit up with the name of the person sending the message and the first few words.
Malik Drake is in stable condition.
Priya had pressed every button she could imagine so she could see every message. Luckily, Bas had disengaged the lock feature on his phone the first time he’d given it to her in the truck. Excitement and relief had soared through her as she read. Her brother was alive and safe because Bas had contacted someone he knew. She’d presumed another shifter from some of the terms used, like rogue and scents. She’d heard Bas and Jacques say these things out on the road tonight.
“Thank you so much for all your help,” she said with another relieved sigh. “I didn’t believe you’d be able to do anything to help. Actually, I thought you were just saying that to get me into bed. But you came through, you kept your word, and you saved Malik.” Her smile was giddy and she clasped her hands together to hold in her excitement.
It had taken all the control she could muster to shower and get down to that meeting room as fast as she could, thanks to Jewel for telling her where to go. Once inside, the mood was tense and unsteady. She’d seen Roman Reynolds immediately and knew that running and jumping into Bas’s arms was completely out of the question. Even at this point, she still felt the need to reserve her excitement and any expression of gratitude. Basically because Bas was looking at her as if she’d just killed his puppy.
He’d taken the phone from her hands but he hadn’t sat down. No, he stood just a couple feet away from her, rubbing his thumb over the phone, not checking any of the messages, but looking at her. “So because I saved your brother you think you have to repay me by conducting a press conference on our behalf?”
He didn’t look or sound happy, but that was usually the case with Bas. Priya didn’t know if she’d ever seen a genuine smile on his face, or felt like he had any sense of enjoyment in his life. That thought made her sad because he had everything a person in her position could want—money, power, and respect. He’d never gone to bed hungry, never worn hand-me-down clothes, never had to stay up half the night after working the late shift at the restaurant to study for final exams because she needed that college degree like she’d needed her next breath. He was living the dream and he didn’t seem to appreciate it; that made her about 90 percent sad and 10 percent angry as hell.
“It’s the least I can do,” she told him with a shrug. “That Nivea person said they’d found Malik being held by rogues. That doesn’t make sense to me for so many reasons.”
He nodded as if he’d been thinking the same thing. “You’re wondering, if shifters were the ones behind this all along, then why make you expose us? Why not do it themselves?”
“Right, that’s what I was trying to figure out,” she told him.
“Wrong,” Bas said, shaking his head. “None of this is for you to try to figure out. It’s done. Your brother is safe and the threat is lifted and that’s all. You can go back to your life now. You can move on.”
He’d hesitated at the last words but Priya was already primed with a comeback. “How do you know? I still didn’t do what they said and that seemed pretty damned important to them. Besides, I’d like to know why they chose me. How do we know they won’t just try again? We have to find out who they are and stop them.”
He sat down beside her then. “You reported on the night you saw those eyes in the alley behind Athena’s. That’s probably what made you a prime candidate for them.”
“You’re right,” she agreed. “The first e-mail came the day after that story ran in the paper.”
Bas shook his head then, looking as tired as Priya actually felt. The spurt of energy after finding out Malik was alive was beginning to ebb.
“Look, Priya, you do not have to do anything. Including this press release. I don’t need your thanks. I’m happy enough knowing that you are out of danger.”
And yet he still neither sounded nor looked happy. Her 10 percent angry elevated.
“Because Sebastian Perry doesn’t need anyone or anything, right?” she asked, her voice dangerously quiet. “You have everything you want and yet you would prefer to stay locked up in this desert haven you’ve built, away from anyone or anything that might demand more from you.”
“You don’t know what you’re talking about,” he told her. “You don’t know me.”
Priya shook her head. “You’re right, I don’t. And it was never your intention for me to know you.”
He looked down at the floor then. “We already discussed that this thing between us was never supposed to happen.”
But it had happened and Priya, for one foolish moment, had believed that maybe the dream of meeting a good man and falling madly in love was possible. How wrong she’d been. Bas refused to be a good man, or rather he refused to let anyone believe that he was one.
“We did discuss it,” she conceded. “And I want to thank you for your honesty. But I like to repay my debts. So I’ll do the one press release and then I’ll be out of your way. You can go back to living your solitary life since it seems to be what you want most of all.”
There was more she wanted to say, a pitch for why she felt they belonged together came to mind. But the words would never fall from her lips. Tenacious, a tad bit hyper, and maybe just a little reckless were words Priya felt accurately described her. Desperate and pleading were not.
She stood up then, refusing to say more, knowing it would fall on deaf ears. Bas liked to be in control. He’d told her that before. Sure, she shook him up on a physical level, but that was nothing compared to the way he’d lived his life for so long. Her words wouldn’t change him. She, the poor little human female from D.C. with the drug addict brother and food stamp sisters and mother one sneeze away from a nervous breakdown, was not going to change the enigmatic Sebastian Perry. He’d saved Malik, that had been the one miracle of her lifetime. She was smart enough not to wish for any more.
“I know this is your place but this is my last night here,” she started, her voice much stronger than she was feeling at the moment. “I’d like for you to take the couch, if that’s not too much to ask.”
He sat there with his elbows resting on his knees, his head down for five seconds before it snapped up and his intense gray gaze held hers. He didn’t answer her, simply stared and Priya felt like she was stripped completely bare. Not just naked, but revealed, to this man who didn’t give a damn what was inside of her. She wanted to weep with the magnitude of the mistake she’d made, the error in judgment she always had where men were concerned. It should be a crime to roll craps so many times in one life. But here she was and here he was and no matter what either of them said or did, there was no going back.
“No.”
The sound of his voice startled her slightly and she blinked away the dismal thoughts that had tears pooling in her eyes once again. She breathed heavily, hating the thought of crying over this man, over this situation, after all she’d been through.
“It’s not too much to ask,” he continued. “You go on in the bedroom and get some rest.”
She nodded, didn’t speak, because what was she going to tell him next? That he was breaking her heart? That his absolute control, serious-as-a-heart-attack demeanor was causing her much more pain than that asshole half-cat had when he held that gun to her head?
Priya wouldn’t tell him that. Instead, she walked away, slamming her palm on the control panel once she was in the bedroom. When it didn’t work she slapped her hand on it again and again, until finally there was a click and the door slid closed. Then the tears fell and she gulped heavy sobs to keep Bas from hearing her, from knowing how big of an impact he’d had on her in such a short period of time.
Chapter 28
She opened the door, Bas thought as he watched his bedroom door close. He’d gotten up from the couch, going over to help her when she couldn’t get it to activate. For endless seconds after she was blocked off from him, Bas simply stood there, staring at the smooth panels. To anyone but him there were no visible breaks, no indication that there was a door here. It was his design, assuring his safety and privacy in his own space.
And Priya Drake had opened it.
Finally, he turned away, walking the few steps until he stood in the middle of the living room and looked around. Every control pad in this room was operated on Bas’s command only—his fingerprints, his body temperature, his knowledge, with technology designed by X, per Bas’s specific instructions. When they’d first returned to the suite tonight she’d immediately switched on the lights in the living room. There were no light switches in the room and no control panel to power them, just a sensor located on the sides of each sconce. They were only illuminated by his body temperature, the movement of his hand on either side.
And yet, Priya had moved her hands along each side, turning them on.
Her bags still remained packed but had moved from near the door where they’d been earlier in the day, to closer to the windows where the blinds had been opened. After their return, before leaving her and Jewel in the room, he’d specifically closed them because he hadn’t wanted any cops or other intruders to see inside.