Bayou Shadow Hunter. Debbie Herbert
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Название: Bayou Shadow Hunter

Автор: Debbie Herbert

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежные любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9781474046299

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ think I’d need lessons.”

      â€œHow else did you expect to learn to control your gift?”

      â€œI thought... I thought...” She sputtered to a stop.

      â€œI never said it would be easy.”

      â€œYou never said it would be hard, either.” She rubbed her temples. “Just how long will these lessons take?”

      â€œHard to say.” He folded his arms and considered. “Could take weeks, could take months. That is, if you can follow my teachings. Not everyone can control their energy.”

      Annie sat on the sofa and took a deep breath. “Okay, there are a couple of things troubling me about what you just said.” She held up an index finger. “One, your people can guard against leaking their energy, making it difficult for me to hear their auras. So I can’t guarantee I’ll be able to pinpoint this person.”

      She held up a second finger, but Tombi interrupted, “Let me take your objections one at a time.” He sat across from Annie, their knees almost touching. Warmth radiated from her slight body, and he clamped down the passion she aroused as he cleared his throat. “After a night chasing shadows, we gather back at the campsite and fill each other in on the night’s events. We’ll eat a light meal and then go to our tents and sleep until the heat of the day drives us out. Usually about noon.”

      â€œI don’t see what this has to do with—”

      â€œI’m getting to that,” Tombi promised. “Stay alert while they sleep and walk around the camp. See if you hear anything suspicious then.”

      Her brow creased and then cleared. She nodded. “They must let down their guard during sleep.”

      â€œExactly. Now what’s your next objection?”

      â€œYou said you would teach me what you could. What the hell does that mean exactly? First you claimed you could cure me of this gift. Now it sounds like you’re waffling.”

      â€œNo waffling.”

      â€œThen are you saying I’m unteachable? I can assure you, that’s not true. Not at all. There’s nothing wrong with my intelligence.”

      Tombi raised a brow and regarded her silently.

      She had the grace to look sheepish. “Sorry. Touchy point with me. I was teased unmercifully in grade school because I had to be taught in a separate room one-on-one with a teacher’s aide. The music from all the other students made it impossible for me to concentrate in a regular classroom.” She took a shuddering breath. “They used to call me Crazy Annie.”

      That must have been tough for a sensitive girl. “Kids can be cruel. I promise I wasn’t making a comment on your intelligence. What I meant was that I’ll show you how I block my energy. It’s a skill my parents taught me, so it stands to reason that, with the right training, you can do the same.”

      A wistful sadness shadowed her eyes.

      â€œYou don’t think you can do it?” he asked gently.

      She bit her lip. “Oh, it’s silly. But what I was really hoping is that you’d arrange for a shaman to remove it. You know, something quick and easy.”

      He fixed her with a hard stare.

      Annie flushed. “I know. That’s awful of me. I just want to get on with my life.”

      â€œMeaning what? What would you do without your special hearing ability that you can’t do now?” Annie was hard to understand. He could control his senses to some degree, yet it didn’t change who he was, or his purpose in life.

      She threw up her hands. “You can’t laugh.”

      At his steady wait, Annie admitted, “I want to be a librarian.”

      â€œThen do it.” He shrugged. “Now. No one’s stopping you.”

      â€œEven in a library, the noise gets to be too much after a while. There’s more peace and quiet there than any other public place, but it still grates. I can’t see me working as a librarian forty hours a week.”

      Annie stood and walked around the small den, picking up stray items and straightening stacks of books and magazines. “And it’s more than wanting to work a full-time job. I’d like to have friends, a family, a social life.”

      â€œThe music is that disruptive for you?” It might be hell for Annie, but this extraordinary ability could only be good for his hunters. And he would try to help her control her gift.

      Eventually.

      Once he’d gotten all he could from her. Duty first, always.

      For the first time in days, a surge of hope fueled a fire within him. “Then what do you have to lose by helping me?” he asked. “I’ll make sure no harm comes to you.”

      She carefully placed a book back down on a coffee table. “I really, really, really hate snakes,” she said, dead serious. “So you’d better protect me like you promised.”

      â€œI will,” he vowed. “With my life.” This he could say with no guilt or deception.

      Annie picked up a picture of her grandma and bent her head over it. Her long, wavy hair covered her face, but her shoulders shook, and he knew she wept. Surprisingly, it made him long to put his arms around her and kiss away her tears. He hardened his heart—this wouldn’t do at all.

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