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Originally Human

Originally Human

Titel: Originally Human
Autoren: Eileen Wilks
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normally.
    He was in pain. I was aroused. "Not far now," I assured him. I was going to have to behave myself, that was all there was to it. I glanced at his face, taut and damp with sweat. He looked to be in his mid-to-late twenties—too young to think of me sexually unless I wanted him to.
    Or got careless. I sighed. This was not going to be easy. "I don't have a thing you can wear."
    He stared at me, offended. "I am trying… to breathe. And not bleed. You are… worried about clothing?"
    I glanced down. The deep gash in his thigh had started oozing again, which wasn't surprising. I could see bone. "If we can get to the tree, you can lean against it while I get the door open."
    He grunted. We lurched forward. Getting through the narrow gate was tricky, but we made it and I more or less propped him against the palm. He looked dreadful. A couple more gashes had started bleeding again, which probably meant he was losing control, perhaps close to passing out. He leaned against the trunk, eyes closed, chest heaving. "I liked… lying down better. You have a place… I can lie down?"
    "You can have my bed. We just have to get you there." I hurried to the nearest door—which, with the way my Winnebago was parked, meant the driver's door. I didn't think he was up to trekking around to the other side.
    He was going to make a mess of my leather seat, I thought sadly as I dug in the pocket of my shorts for my keyless remote.
    The lock clicked before I punched it. I froze.
    "What is it?" His voice was low, hoarse.
    I turned slowly, my eyes searching the shadows. "Someone unlocked the door before I could."
    "Oh." He sounded apologetic. "That might have been me. I am wishing very much to be inside."
    "You aren't sure?" My voice may have been a little shrill.
    "I'm not used to this place. The energies are different than… they're different." He paused. "Who are you, and why are you helping me?"
    Suspicion would be natural, even healthy, under the circumstance. But he sounded more curious than wary. I opened the door, quickly shut off the dome light, and returned to him. "My name is Molly Brown. I'm helping you because you're hurt. Also," I admitted in a flash of honesty, "because I've been rather bored lately."
    "You are curious about me." Some fugitive emotion roughened his voice. Disgust? Satisfaction?
    "Very. I'll save most of my questions until I get you inside, but—"
    "I can't answer your questions."
    "You'll have to, if you want my help."
    "I cannot," he said hollowly.
    The despair in his voice tugged at me. I fought to hold firm against it. "I don't want your life history, but I do need to know who you are, where you came from, who's after you and why."
    "I don't know."
    "You don't know who tried to kill you?"
    "I don't know any of it."
    I believed him. I'm a fool sometimes, the same as everyone else, but I believed the crushed bewilderment in his voice. I didn't say anything more, just slid my arm around his waist again.
    "You will help anyway?" That was hope I heard now—and oh, how painful hope can be, in all its uncertainty.
    "Looks like." I sighed over my folly and and supported him the last few feet to my home.

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Chapter 2

    WE got him up the step and into the driver's seat, where he discovered that he liked sitting better than standing, too. But he'd be visible up there, not to mention difficult to work on, so we heaved him onto his feet again and staggered together into my little bedroom, where he fell on the bed and promptly passed out.
    I stood there getting my breath back, and not due to unrequited lust this time. He was heavy. Then I tossed a blanket over him, grabbed a smudging stick and the bucket I kept under the sink, and headed back out. He'd left a good deal of blood on the road. He'd probably also left various magical traces. I wouldn't be able to get rid of all the blood or other traces, but I could make them less conspicuous.
    Twenty minutes later I'd washed most of the blood off the asphalt and tossed dirt on top of what remained to disguise it. I'd smudged all the way around my little lot, quietly calling up what protections I knew. I'm not Gifted, but there are some things even the magic-blind can do, and the sage I used had been prepared and blessed by a Wiccan High Priestess.
    I couldn't help feeling like the little piggy in the straw house, though. I suspected that whoever—whatever?—had clawed up my guest could blow away my puny protections with one big, bad huff.
    He was still out
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