Stray
By
Rachel Vincent
CHAPTER ONE
The moment the door opened I knew an ass-kicking was
inevitable. Whether I’d be giving it or receiving it was
still a bit of a mystery. The smell hit me as I
left the air-conditioned comfort of the Language
building for the heat of another north-central Texas
summer, tugging my backpack higher on my shoulder as I
squinted into the sunset. A step behind me, my roommate
Sammi was ranting about the guest lecturer’s
discriminatory view of women’s contributions to
nineteenth-century literature. I’d been about to play
devil’s advocate, just for the hell of it, when a shift
in the evening breeze stopped me where I stood, on the
top step of the narrow front porch.
My argument forgotten, I froze, scanning the
shadowy quad for the source of the unmistakable scent.
Visually, nothing was out of the ordinary: just small
groups of summer students talking on their way to and
from the dorms. Human students. But what I smelled
wasn’t human. It wasn’t even close.
Absorbed in her rant, Sammi didn’t realize I’d stopped.
She walked right into me, cursing loud enough to draw
stares when her binder fell out of her hand and popped
open on the ground, littering the steps with loose-leaf
paper.
“I could use a little notice next time you plan on
zoning out, Faythe,” she snapped, bending to gather up
her notes. Grunts and more colorful words issued from
behind her, where our fellow grad students were stalled
by our pedestrian traffic jam. Lit majors are not known
for watching where they’re going; most of us walk with
our eyes in a book instead of on the path ahead.
“Sorry.” I knelt to help her, snatching a sheet of
paper from the concrete before the student behind me
could stomp on it. Standing, I took the steps two at a
time, following Sammi to a brick half-wall jutting from
the porch. Still talking, she set her binder on the
ledge and began methodically reorganizing her notes,
completely oblivious to the scent, as humans always
were. I barely heard her incessant chatter as she
worked.
My nostrils flared slightly to take in more of the smell
as I turned my face into the breeze. There. Across the
quad, in the alley between the Physics building and
Curry Hall.
My fist clenched around the strap of my backpack
and my teeth ground together. He wasn’t supposed to be
here. None of them were supposed to be here. My father
had promised.
I’d always known they were watching me, in spite of
my father’s agreement not to interfere in my life. On
occasion, I’d spot a too-bright eye in the crowd at a
football game, or notice a familiar profile in line at
the food court. And rarely—only twice before in five
years—I caught a distinctive scent on the air, like the
taste of my childhood, sweet and familiar, but with a
bitter aftertaste. The smell was faint and tauntingly
intimate. And completely unwelcome.
They were subtle, all those glimpses, those hints
that my life wasn’t as private as we all pretended.
Daddy’s spies faded silently into crowds and shadows
because they wanted to be seen no more than I wanted to
see them.
But this one was different. He wanted me to see
him. Even worse—he wasn’t one of Daddy’s.
“…that her ideas are somehow less important because
she had ovaries instead of testes is beyond
chauvinistic. It’s barbaric. Someone should…Faythe?”
Sammi nudged me with her newly restored notebook. “You
okay? You look like you just saw a ghost.”
No, I hadn’t seen a ghost. I’d smelled a cat.
“I’m feeling a little sick to my stomach.” I
grimaced only long enough to be convincing. “I’m going
to go lie down. Will you apologize to the group for me?”
She frowned. “Faythe, this was your idea.”
“I know.” I nodded, thinking of the four other MA
candidates already gathered around their copies of
Love’s Labours Lost in the library. “Tell everyone I’ll
be there next week. I swear.”
“Okay,” she said with a shrug of her bare, freckled
shoulders. “It’s your grade.” Seconds later, Sammi was
just another denim-clad student on the sidewalk,
completely oblivious to what lurked in the late evening
shadows thirty yards away.
I left the concrete path to cut across the quad,
struggling to keep anger from showing on my face.
Several feet from the sidewalk, I stepped on my
shoelace, giving myself time to come up with a plan of
action as I retied it. Kneeling, I kept one eye on the
alley, watching for a glimpse of the trespasser. This
wasn’t supposed to happen. Strays never got this far
into our territory without being caught. It simply
wasn’t possible.
Yet there he was, hiding just out of sight in the
alley. Like a coward.
I could have called my father to report the
intruder. I probably should have called him, so he could
send the designated spy-of-the-day to take care of the
problem. But calling would necessitate speaking to my
father, which I made a point to avoid at all costs. My
only other course of action was to scare the stray off
on my own, then dutifully report the incident the next
time I caught one of the guys watching me. No big deal.
Strays were loners, and typically as skittish as deer
when confronted. They always ran from Pride cats because
we always worked in pairs, at the very least.
Except for me.
But the stray wouldn’t know I had no backup. Hell,
I probably did have backup. Thanks to my father’s
paranoia, I was never really alone. True, I hadn’t
actually seen whoever was on duty today, but that didn’t
mean anything. I couldn’t always spot them, but they
were always there.
Shoe tied, I stood, for once reassured by my
father’s over-protective measures. I tossed my bag over
one shoulder and ambled toward the alley, doing my best
to appear relaxed. As I walked, I searched the quad
discreetly, looking for my hidden backup. Whoever he
was, he’d finally learned how to hide. Perfect timing.
The sun slipped below the horizon as I approached
the alley. In front of Curry Hall, an automatic
streetlight flickered to life, buzzing softly. I stopped
in the circle of soft yellow light cast on the sidewalk,
gathering my nerve.
The stray was probably just curious, and would
likely run as soon as he knew I’d seen him. But if he
didn’t, I’d have to scare him off through other, more
hands-on means. Unlike most of my fellow tabby-cats, I
knew how to fight; my father had made sure of that.
Unfortunately, I’d never made the jump from theory to
practice, except against my brothers. Sure, I could hold
my own with them, but I hadn’t sparred in years, and
this didn’t feel like a very good time to test skills
still unproven in the real world.
It’s not too late to call in the cavalry, I
thought, patting the slim cell phone in my pocket.
Except that it was. Every time I spoke to my father, he
came up with a new excuse to call me home. This time he
wouldn’t even need to make one up. I’d have to handle
the problem myself.
My resolve as stiff as my spine, I stepped out of
the light and into the darkness.
Heart pounding, I entered the alley, tightening my
grip on my bag as if it were the handle of a sword. Or
maybe the corner of a security blanket. I sniffed the
air. He was still there; I could smell him. But now that
I was closer to the source, I detected something strange
in his scent—something even more out-of-place than the
odor of a stray deep inside my Pride’s territory.
Whoever this trespasser was, he wasn’t local. There was
a distinctive foreign nuance to his scent. Exotic.
Spicy, compared to the blandly familiar base scent of my
fellow American cats.
My pulse throbbed in my throat. Foreign. Shit. I
was in over my head.
I was digging in my pocket for my phone when
something clattered to the ground farther down the
alley. I froze, straining to see in the dark, but with
my human eyes, it was a lost cause. Without Shifting, I
couldn’t make out anything but vague outlines and deep
shadows. Unfortunately, Shifting wasn’t an option at
that moment. It would take too long, and I’d be
defenseless during the transition.
Human form it is.
I glanced quickly behind me, looking for signs of
life from the quad. It was empty now, as far as I could
tell. There were no potential witnesses; everyone with
half a brain was either studying or partying. So why was
I playing hide-and-seek after dark with an unidentified
stray?
My muscles tense and my ears on alert, I started down
the alley. Four steps later, I stepped through a broken
tennis racket and stumbled into a rusty Dumpster. My bag
thumped to the ground as my head hit the side of trash
receptacle, ringing it like an oversized gong.
Smooth, Faythe, I thought, the metallic thrum still
echoing in my ears.
I bent over to pick up my bag, and a darting motion
up ahead caught my eye. The stray—in human form,
thankfully—ran from the mouth of the alley into the
parking lot behind Curry Hall, his feet unnaturally
silent on the asphalt. Pale moonlight shined on a head
full of dark, glossy curls as he ran.
Instinct overrode my fear and caution. Adrenaline
flooded my veins. I tossed my bag over my shoulder and
sprinted down the center of the alley. The stray had
fled, as I’d hoped he would, and the feline part of my
brain demanded I follow. When mice run, cats give chase.
At the end of the alley, I paused, staring at the
parking lot. It was empty, but for an old, rusted
Lincoln with a busted right headlight. The stray was
gone. How the hell had he gotten away so fast?
A prickly feeling started at the base of my neck,
raising tiny hairs the length of my spine. Every
security light in the lot was unlit. They were supposed
to be automatic, like the ones in the quad. Without the
familiar buzz and the reassuring flood of incandescent
light, the parking lot was an unbroken sea of dark
asphalt, eerily quiet and disturbingly calm.
My heart pounding, I stepped out of the alley,
half expecting to be struck by lightning or hit by a
runaway train. Nothing happened, but I couldn’t shake
the feeling that something was wrong. I took another
step, my eyes wide to let in all of the available light.
Still nothing happened.
I was feeling foolish now, chasing a stranger down
a dark alley at night, like some bimbo from a bad horror
film. In the movies, this was where things always went
wrong. A hairy hand would reach out of the shadows and
grab the curious-but-brainless heroine around the
throat, laughing sadistically while she wasted her last
breath on a scream.
The difference between the movies and reality was
that in real life, I was the hairy monster, and the only
screaming I ever did was in rage. I was about as likely
to cry for help as I was to spontaneously combust. If
this particular bad guy hadn’t figured that out yet, he
was in for a very big surprise.
Emboldened by my own mental pep talk, I took
another step.
The distinctive foreign scent washed over me, and
my pulse jumped, but I never saw the kick coming.
Suddenly I was staring at the ground, doubled over
from the pain in my stomach and fighting for the
strength to suck in my next breath.
My bag fell to the ground at my feet. A pair of black,
army-style boots stepped into sight, and the smell of
stray intensified. I looked up just in time to register
dark eyes and a creepy smile before his right fist shot
out toward me. My arms flew up to block the blow, but
his other arm was already flying. His left fist slammed
into the right side of my chest.
Fresh pain burst to life in my ribcage, radiating
in a widening circle. One hand pressed to my side, I
struggled to stand up straight, panicked when I
couldn’t.
An ugly cackling laugh clawed my inner chalkboard and
pissed me off. This was my campus, and my Pride’s
territory. He was the outsider, and it was time he
learned how Pride cats dealt with intruders.
He pulled his fist back for another blow, but this
time I was ready. Ignoring the pain in my side, I lunged
to my right, reaching for a handful of his hair. My
fingers tangled in a thick clump of curls. I shoved his
head down and brought my knee up. The two connected.
Bone crunched. Something warm and wet soaked through my
jeans. The scent of fresh blood saturated the air, and I
smiled.
Ah, memories…
The stray jerked his head free of my grip and
lurched out of reach, leaving me several damp curls as
souvenirs. Wiping blood from his broken nose, he growled
deep inside his throat, a sound like the muted rumble of
an engine.
“You should really thank me,” I said, a little
impressed by the damage I’d caused. “Trust me. It’s an
improvement.”
“Jodienda puta!” he said, spitting a mouthful of
blood on the concrete.
Spanish? I was pretty sure it wasn’t a compliment.
“Yeah, well, back at ‘cha. Get your mangy ass out of
here before I decide a warning isn’t enough!”
Instead of complying, he aimed his next shot for my
face. I tried to dodge the punch, but couldn’t quite
move fast enough. His fist slammed into the side of my
skull.
I reeled from the blow, fireworks going off behind
my eyelids. My head throbbed like a migraine on
steroids. The whole world seemed to spin just for me.
At the edge of my graying vision, the stray fumbled
for something in his pocket, cursing beneath his breath
in a Spanish-like language I couldn’t quite identify.
His arm shot out again. Not steady enough yet to move, I
braced myself for impact. The blow never came. He
grabbed my arm and pulled me, trying to haul me away
from the deserted student center.
What the hell? When confronted by a Pride cat, any
stray in possession of two brain cells to rub together
would take off with his fur standing on end. After what
I’d done to his face, this one should have run screaming
from me in terror. It was because I was a girl, I knew
it. If I were a tomcat instead of a tabby, he’d already
be halfway to Mexico.
I hate it when men aren’t afraid of me. It reminds
me of home.
Backpedaling to keep from falling, I tried to yank
my arm from his grip. It didn’t work. Angry now, I swung
my free fist around, smashing it into his skull. He
grunted and dropped my arm.
I rushed toward the alley and snatched my bag from
the ground. The stray’s footsteps pounded behind me. I
tightened my grip and whirled around, swinging the pack
by its straps. It smashed into his left ear. His head
snapped back and to the side. More blood flew from his
nose, splattering the parking lot with dark droplets.
The stray fell on his ass on the concrete, one hand
covering the side of his head. He stared at me in
astonishment. I laughed. Apparently the complete works
of Shakespeare packed quite a wallop.
To think, my mother said I’d never find use for an
English degree. Ha! I’d like to see her knock someone
silly with an apron and a cookie press.
“Puta loca,” the stray muttered, digging in his
pocket again as he scrambled to his feet. Without
another word—or even a glance—he took off across the
parking lot toward the Lincoln. Seconds later, tires
screeched as he peeled from the lot, heading south on
Welch street.
“Adiós!” I watched him go, sore but pleased. Surely
after that, Daddy will have to admit I can take care of
myself.
Panting from exertion, I threw my bag over my
shoulder and glanced at my watch. Damn. Sammi would be
home from study group soon, and she’d be horrified by my
bloody jeans and brand new bruises. I’d have to change
before she got in. Unfortunately, keeping bruises hidden
from Andrew would be much harder. Dating humans could be
a real pain in the ass sometimes.
Still picturing the intruder’s mutilated face, I
turned back toward the alley—and came face to face with
another stray. Well, face to head-shrouded-in-shadow,
anyway. He stood five feet away, just out of reach of
the pale moonlight, and I could see nothing but the
hands hanging empty at his sides. I knew at a glance
that they could do serious damage, even clenched around
nothing but air.
I didn’t need to smell this stray to know who he
was; his scent was as familiar to me as my own. Marc. My
father’s second-in-command. Daddy had never sent Marc
before—not once in five years. Something was wrong.
STRAY

What reviewers
have said about Stray...
*****
Romantic Times
"Vincent's debut is fast paced and cleverly written, and it
should find favor with fans of the shape-shifter subgenre.
Even those not usually enamored by it could be won over by
the sheer power and clarity of her voice. Plus, some of
those male werecats are choice!"
Reviewed by Catherine Witmer
*****
Romantic Reader at Heart
"...Her first person perspective, dialogue, descriptions,
and even her sound effects are phenomenal (I heard the
noises, I swear it!). ...I really like this book. I think
Vincent has a hit on her hands..."
Reviewed by Shannon Johnson
*****
The Romance Reader's Connection
"All I can say is WOW! Rachel Vincent's story is an
excellent read. Her characters are tougher than nails and
just plain hot! Faythe's character is so concerned with
freedom that she is totally unaware of the big picture, but
it just makes you love her more. She can kick some butt and
go back for seconds.... I can't wait to see what happens
next!"
Reviewed by Lori Sears
*****
Mysterious Galaxy Books
"Rachel Vincent introduces a welcome new voice and
supernatural predator-of-focus to the paranormal romance
genre with Stray. "

What other authors have said about
Stray...
“Stray is thoroughly enjoyable, with no gaps and all go. An
end-of-innocence story in a sometimes savage world whose
social structure is both recognizable, yet very much not
human. Vincent skillfully handles powerful topics through
her character Faythe, who's tough-chick attitude proves that
those born to rule, are going to break a few rules along the
way--and probably a few hearts--and maybe a head or two.
Rachel Vincent is a new author that I'm going to be
watching.”
--New York Times bestselling author Kim Harrison
*****
"A high-octane plot with characters you can really care
about. Vincent is a welcome addition to the genre!"
--Bestselling author Kelley Armstrong
*****
"Well written, fresh, charming, great voice--Buffy meets
Cat People. I loved it, and look forward to much more in the
future from this talented author."
--New York Times bestselling author Heather Graham
*****
"I liked the character and loved the action. I look forward
to reading the next book in the series."
--New York Times bestselling author Charlaine Harris.
*****
“Compelling and edgy, dark and evocative, Stray is a must
read! I loved it from beginning to end.”
--Gena Showalter, acclaimed author of Enslave Me Sweetly.
*****

Now
available
Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Books-A-Million
Borders
Release June 1, 2007

Mira Books
ISBN - 10: 0-7783-2421-4
ISBN-13:
978-0-7783-2421-8

Now available
for preorder
Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Books-A-Million
Borders
Release April 1,
2008

Mira Books
ISBN - 10: 0-7783-2555-5
ISBN-13: 978-0-7783-2555-0

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