Page 3 of Bear of the Deep


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"End of the week." Her eyes brighten with hope because she can tell I'm weakening, can sense that she's found the argument that might actually work. "If I can present evidence of ecological damage and endangered species being affected, I might be able to slow them down. Maybe stop them entirely. But to get that proof, I need someone who can show me where to look for it."

The irony isn't lost on me. She wants to save the whales and stop the dredging, which means she wants to protect the same waters I've sworn to guard. But accomplishing that goal means taking her close to secrets that could destroy everything if exposed. She's both potential ally and potential threat, and I'm not sure which possibility worries me more.

She's right about one thing. The corporation has to be stopped, and I can't do it alone.

"One trip," I say before I can talk myself out of it. "Tomorrow morning at dawn. Dress warm and bring your equipment, whatever you need to document what we find."

Her smile transforms her face from merely pretty into radiant, alive in a way that makes my bear rumble with an interest I've never felt before. "Thank you, Mr. Hale. You won't regret this."

"Grayson." The correction comes out without conscious thought. "If we're heading out on the water together, you might as well call me Grayson."

"Isla." She extends her hand, and I take it without thinking.

Her palm is soft against my callused fingers, warm despite the cold morning air, and the contact sends a jolt of electricity racing up my arm. My bear surges to full attention, suddenly very awake and very interested in this woman who stands on my dock like she has every right to be here. The sensation is so strong and so unexpected that it takes conscious effort not totighten my grip, not to pull her closer and investigate the strange energy passing between our joined hands.

I've touched hundreds of people over the years, shaken hands with fishermen and merchants and the occasional bureaucrat from the mainland. None of them ever made my bear react like this, like he's found something he's been searching for without knowing he was looking.

I release her hand and step back before I do something foolish, putting distance between us that feels necessary for reasons I don't want to examine.

"Dawn," I repeat, my voice rougher than before. "Don't be late. And Dr. Calder? Isla? If you want to set foot on my boat again after tomorrow, you'll do exactly what I say when I say it. These waters don't forgive mistakes, and neither do I."

"Understood." She nods once, crisp and professional despite the lingering warmth in her eyes. "Thank you for giving me a chance."

She turns and walks away down the dock with the confident stride of someone who believes she's won, someone who thinks she knows what tomorrow will bring. Her hair catches the wind off the Sound, dark strands whipping around her face, and she doesn't look back even once as she heads toward the shore road.

I watch her go and try to convince myself that I've made the right decision.

The weight of the Warden's Tower seems to press down on me even from here, its weathered stones holding centuries of accumulated duty. My ancestors built that tower on the cliffs above the hidden cove for a reason, positioning it where they could watch the approaches to the deep places from both land and sea. Every Hale since has understood that we are guardians first and fishermen second, that our boats and our nets are covers for a more important purpose. We watch. We protect. Wekeep the old truths buried beneath waters too deep for human diving.

My father died fulfilling that duty, lost to a storm that came up faster than any natural weather should have. He'd gone out to investigate reports of strange lights in the water near the deepest trench, and he never came back. I was nineteen years old when I inherited the tower and the responsibility that came with it, and I've spent every year since learning how heavy that burden truly weighs.

Tomorrow, I'll take her to the outer channels, show her enough of the truth to satisfy her research and support her case against the development. Enough to help stop the dredging without exposing what really lies beneath these waters. I'll guard the deep places the way my father did and his father before him, the way Hales have done for generations stretching back beyond memory.

That's the plan. Simple and contained and safe.

But even as I tell myself these things, I know the world's foundations have moved beneath my feet. When she stepped onto my dock, the current changed. I felt it happen, felt the water respond to her presence in ways it shouldn't respond to an ordinary human. The tide pulled toward her like iron filings toward a magnet, and beneath the waves, something stirred in recognition.

The ocean is calling to her. Not in the metaphorical way poets describe when they write about the sea's beauty, but in the literal, bone-deep way it calls to those of us who carry old blood. The way it calls to shifters and sea witches and the other supernatural creatures who have made these waters home for centuries.

She doesn't know what she is. That much is obvious from the way she talks about the ocean as something to study rather than something to answer. But her blood knows, even if her mindhasn't caught up yet. The selkie legends mention bloodlines that can lie dormant for generations before waking, and I've heard Moira talk about how certain people carry traces of the old magic without ever realizing it.

If the ocean is calling to Isla, then she's not just a scientist poking around where she doesn't belong. She's connected to these waters in ways that could threaten everything I've sworn to guard.

Or she might be the key to saving it.

I turn back to the catch that still needs processing, to the nets that need mending and the boat that needs maintaining. There's work waiting at the tower too, the endless upkeep that comes with holding a centuries-old fortress against time and weather. All the mundane work that keeps my hands busy while my mind races. There's fish to clean and ice to replenish and equipment to check before tomorrow's trip.

I also need to radio Declan about the corporate threat and see what Rafe's sources have picked up about Maritime Development Corporation. The brotherhood needs to know what's coming, needs to prepare for the possibility that our sanctuary is about to come under siege from enemies who wear suits instead of tactical gear.

But my bear won't settle back into dormancy. He paces beneath my skin with restless energy, his attention fixed on the shore road long after Isla disappears from sight. He's caught her scent now, catalogued it somewhere deep in our shared consciousness, and I know with terrible certainty that forgetting her won't be possible.

The ocean doesn't give up its own. And despite every instinct screaming otherwise, I think Isla might be exactly that—claimed by these waters long before she ever set foot on my dock.

My bear has caught her scent. Catalogued it. Already thinking of it as something worth fighting for.

Tomorrow, I find out if that instinct will save us or destroy everything I've sworn to guard.

CHAPTER 2