Night of the Tiger. Doranna Durgin

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      Night of the Tiger

      Doranna Durgin

       www.millsandboon.co.uk

      From the moment she sees tiger shifter Scott O’Brien, Marlee Cerrosa can sense his aura of power, his alluring strength, and the gleam of something wild in his eyes. She also feels his returned interest in her—until he learns she’s a prisoner of the Sentinels and an accused traitor.

      Marlee expects him to reject her, but instead he asks for her assistance in tracking down a mole in their base. If Marlee can help him, Scott can offer her redemption—and perhaps even a future together….

      Contents

      Chapter One

      Chapter Two

      Chapter Three

      Chapter Four

      Chapter Five

      Chapter Six

      Chapter Seven

      Chapter Eight

      Chapter Nine

      Chapter One

      Coyote!

      Marlee knew it the moment she saw him, human form or not. The man coming down the Sentinel headquarters hallway was a full-blooded shape-shifter—his eyes sharp, his presence full of strength and purpose and charismatic intensity. He stalked directly toward her, clearly on his way from the tactical dispensary, a heavy gear bag over his shoulder and a frown forming at the sight of her.

      Marlee ducked hastily into the employee gym—the room where she’d been headed in the first place, here in the sleek, clandestine subfloor levels of Sentinel Brevis Southwest, regional operations for the desert climes. She didn’t want to deal with the coyote’s sharp gaze, his questing nature—the sudden bloom of awareness as he realized who she was.

      And he would, because of what he was. What they all were, the full-bloods. Not that it ever showed on the outside, but Marlee Abril Cerrosa knew it in her heart: this man was coyote.

      The gym door closed gently behind her, enclosing her in that familiar cool space—weight machines lining the wall, free weights in an extruded corner nook, and a row of cardio options. Brevis took the fitness of its field and support agents seriously.

      Of course, Marlee was neither. Not any longer.

      Metal crashed from the free-weight nook; a muttered curse followed.

      Marlee found him in an instant, sitting on a weight bench in cutoff sweats and no shirt, the smattering of hair on his chest a dark rusty blond to match unruly hair above. Tiger. Bengal tiger.

      Irritation tightened her mouth. She’d come here in midmorning because so few others ever worked out at this time; she could count on a solitude free of knowing looks and silent accusations.

      And then he stretched, his private disgruntlement turning to a wince as he worked his arm and shoulder, twisting his torso…revealing a splash of scarring.

      Marlee’s irritation gave way to guilt. She’d learned to judge the age of such things—to recognize those injuries from the Core D’oìche attack.

      The injuries she’d caused.

      Arrogance. As if she had such power. As if she’d done more than feed minor pieces of information to the former Atrum Core Prince, Fabron Gausto, or plant a computer virus or two, thinking them to be insignificant and low-level tinkerings.

      No, she hadn’t even known. She’d been taken in by the Atrum Core; she’d been used.

      Sometimes Marlee thought her ignorance made it even worse.

      Oh, hell—the Sentinel had seen her. He didn’t quite release the stretch as he gave her a distracted nod—and then he looked again, sat up a little straighter, seemed a little larger.

      And there it was. That which had always terrified her: the tiger, looking back at her.

      How the field Sentinels ever blended into outside society at all, she didn’t know. How this man could even try amazed her. The gleam of wild in pale hazel eyes, the subdued brown streaks in rusty blond hair tapered short at his nape to obscure them, the barely quiescent aura of power—it all shouted of his otherness. It was an alluring strength, a charismatic strength…but never a comfortable strength. Not for a moment.

      Especially not with his obvious flare of interest.

      Heat prickled on Marlee’s cheeks and neck, tingling down her spine; she had a sudden, uncomfortable awareness of every sensitive spot on her body.

      “I’m sorry,” she finally managed to say. And then, before he could ask why—before he could figure out why—she gave him a reason…if not the true reason. “I didn’t mean to interrupt you.”

      “It’s a big room,” he said, and he was still eyeing her. “Until now, not one of my favorite rooms.”

      Hell, he was interested.

      And Marlee’s body was as treacherous as the rest of her—shifting uncomfortably, so aware of her isolation and her loneliness. Aching to leave before he understood who she was, aching to stay just a moment longer…

      “You must be staff?” he said, finally releasing his stretch—only to reveal another slashing scar across one broad pectoral.

      “Between assignments,” she managed to respond, understanding now why he was here, and how that was her fault, too. She’d seen it before—that first wave of healing field agents sent out too soon after Core D’oìche—so desperate was the situation here at Southwest Brevis, so thin were their agents on the ground. And so great was the need in the field, where the Atrum Core had wasted no time taking advantage, wreaking subtle chaos in their centuries-long quest for power and pushing all the ancient boundaries of their ageless cold-war battlefield with brevis regions around the world. Core D’oìche had merely been another of that power-hungry faction’s strikes against the shape-shifting Sentinels and their mandate to protect the earth and its people.

      And, not ready, the Sentinel field agents had been vulnerable, and so many of them had simply come right back again, newly hurt.

      “Hey,” he said, tipping his head just a little, “don’t worry about it. We’ll come back from this—and we’ll beat the bastards while we’re at it. We always have.”

      Not always. Marlee panicked then, understanding that he’d misread her—he’d thought that she, too, had somehow been displaced by Core D’oìche. He didn’t realize she had instead been one of the bastards.

      But she managed to say, “I’m counting on it,” and didn’t have to fake that truth. It was her only possible redemption, whatever became of her life here. She faced years more of haunting these hallways—simply because she wasn’t someone they would ever dispose of, and she wasn’t someone they

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