Chapter 1
Female.
Mark Robertson’s nose twitched, and he moved to explore the scent.
Fertile.
He pursued, the spice of her as sharp as a hook.
A sound grated on his nerves and his hackles rose in irritation. The female was here and he was already thick with the drive to mount her.
Close.
He would hunt her, and she would succumb.
Part of him was uncomfortable with that predatory a thought.
It disliked the absolute ruthlessness with which he would claim his mate.
But that voice was tiny and uninteresting.
When it came to mating, there were no limits.
Offspring was imperative. Taking a female urgent.
He would hunt this female unto the ends of the earth.
If only the damned noise would stop.
He blocked out the sound, refocusing on the female, but she proved elusive. The scent was there, the draw undeniable, but he had to wake to find her.
Wake.
He did, though the struggle to consciousness was hard. He’d been dreaming, he realized. And someone was making a noise that pounded in his temples. The grizzly part of him wanted to obliterate the sound with his claws. The man in him barely had the wherewithal to comprehend it was the door buzzer.
He shoved to his feet, his movements lumbering and awkward. He banged into a desk and howled in rage, the sound waking him enough to open his eyes.
Home.
He was in the place bear and man coexisted in relative peace, but the sound was forcing him to leave it. That didn’t bode well for whatever idiot was leaning on the buzzer. He inhaled, pulling in the scent of humming electronics, stale coffee, and fertile female.
Well, at least that part had been real. A woman stood on his doorstep, which made her easy prey.
He stumbled to the stairs, climbing angrily out of his basement den.
The raw buzzer sound ate at his control and each moment it continued made his teeth bare with fury.
The man in him prayed it was the female, otherwise the grizzly would kill it.
This was his most dangerous time, when bear and man fought against each other for control.
It made the animal unpredictable and the man insane.
The clamor paused, giving him a split second of relief. And then it began again, the renewed racquet even worse because of the brief respite.
He had no dexterity to manage the locks.
The bear tried to rip the door open, but it was steel reinforced and would not budge, though God knew he tried.
The frustration nearly undid him, but the man took control.
He slammed his hand down twice before he managed to twist the deadbolt unlocked.
The chain was harder, requiring more focus, and his higher cortex was recruited to handle the fine manipulation.
Higher cortex was controlled by the man, forcing the beast back into sullen bitterness.
This was why he layered a dozen locks on his door, the man gloated. So it would require higher brain function to open and thereby save whatever idiot thought she could wake him. The bear remained silent, biding its time until the man managed the locks. And when the task was done, the bear attacked.
It surged to the fore, hauling on the doorknob with all its strength. It still required the man to grip the knob, but beyond that, the grizzly was in control. Worse, it was whipped into a frenzy by the buzzer and the female.
Still the door would not open.
He roared in frustration. The grizzly wanted to rear up in fury, but since the man was already standing, this merely reinforced his upright position.
And with that a large yellow sign came into view.
It was a black arrow on a yellow placard, the color so bright it hurt his eyes even in the semi light of the front alcove.
It took the man to understand it. And it took another eon of that relentless sound for the man to establish control. That, of course, was why the newest lock and sign were there. It could only be managed by a man. The bear would destroy it, thereby trapping him indoors forever.
But he was a man still. At least enough so that he could control himself.
So he beat the grizzly back, forcing it into a tight compartment of his mind, where it clawed at its cage.
The arrow pointed to a keyboard hung on the wall.
To open the door, he had to type in six numbers and four letters.
The animal had no prayer of remembering the sequence, but the man could do it, though he fumbled it twice before managing it on the third attempt.
The door unlocked with a loud thunk of electric magnets shutting off. Then he twisted the knob and hauled the heavy thing open.
The first thing he did was slap her arm away from the buzzer.
He tried to modify his strength so as to not break her arm, but the grizzly demanded violence for the assault on his ears.
She gave a squeak of alarm, but it wasn’t a cry of pain, so the man in him was reassured.
And while she stood there, her mouth open in shock, he took the time to use all his senses, orienting himself to the world outside his den.
It was afternoon on a Michigan summer day.
The sky was overcast, which was a blessing on his eyes.
It also kept the air from being too hot.
His home, , a rustic cabin that belied the expensive electronics that kept his basement a hum of activity, edged Gladwin State Park.
But that was behind him. In front of him was a woman, lush and fertile.
He cared little for her coverings—crisp linen pants and a polyester blouse.
What he focused on was the scent of her body and the flush on her cheeks.
The animal in him smelled for disease and found none.
He also evaluated the power in her body, the width of her hips, and the full, lush roundness of her breasts.
The grizzly pronounced her exceedingly healthy to carry young.
The man liked the sight of her cleavage and the length of her legs.
Neither cared that her mouth hung open in shock, though they noted the quick tempo of her breaths.
“Uh, hello,” she said. There might have been more words, but he didn’t have the brain function to process sentences yet and even if he did, her voice drowned out the sounds of the forest. He had been asleep for a while and he needed to be alert for predators.
He would brook no interference now that the fertile woman had presented herself at his door.
So when she kept speaking, he growled at her.
Low and guttural. She snapped her mouth shut on another squeak, which he found strangely funny.
He sniffed the wind, finding the usual mix of civilization and woods.
Nothing of note except for this woman, whose scent mixed feminine musk with citrus. Oddly appealing.
So he turned his attention back to her, mentally dissecting the smell: shampoo, deodorant, and her. He liked her, and he felt his organ thicken in desire.
The grizzly inside him pushed fiercely against his cage. If he took this woman now, she would conceive his young. He could overpower her here, rip off her coverings, and release his seed inside her within moments. The grizzly wanted it with a fierceness that alarmed the man.
So he forced himself to turn away, heading for the one thing that helped most when his control balanced on a knife’s edge. It required him to turn his back on her, but he forced himself to do it while he lumbered to the kitchen and the acrid scent of cold coffee.
He found it on the counter. A banged-up metal mug that waited for situations just like this.
He grabbed it and swallowed the cold brew, praying it would work one more time.
It would push the brain cells into life and thereby suppress the animal a little more.
Then he could live for another day as a man instead of a beast.
He heard her follow him. She wasn’t in the least bit quiet as her sandals slapped on the hard tile of his front hall. He heard her draw breath, probably to speak, and he whipped around to glare at her. He was not human yet. She would wait until he was. Anything else was too dangerous for her.
But when he spun around to growl at her, he was struck again by how pretty she was.
Not her scent, but her features. Round face with a pert nose.
Large brown eyes and curly hair pulled into a messy bun.
She wore makeup, though lightly, and she’d chewed off any hint of lipstick.
She had a light brown mole near her right ear just above her jaw, and he wanted to lick it to see if he could detect the change in texture with his tongue.
And then there was her mouth, soft and red.
She was biting her lower lip on one side.
It was an endearing, human sight that made the man happy.
The grizzly didn’t care about such details.
Minute shifts in expression on a human face meant nothing to it.
But as long as he could see the flash of a white tooth as it tugged at her lower lip and know she was uncertain, he knew he was still a man, even if he couldn’t form actual words just yet.
He needed more caffeine, but the metal mug was empty. Fortunately, he knew the next steps by heart. It was a complicated process, but that was part of the plan. The more he used his brain—even to fire up an expensive espresso machine—the better for everyone.
So he did. He turned on the machine, pulled milk from the refrigerator and honey from the cabinet.
He did everything by rote, while each motion reinforced the human side of his personality.
He ground the beans, measured out the espresso shots, and filled a large mug.
Without conscious decision, he added chocolate and whipped cream, then drizzled the honey across the top before offering it to her.
A gift for the woman who would be his mate.
No.