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(Angelique)
Five years ago, I ran away from my mate.
I was pregnant, terrified, and convinced leaving was the only way to protect my child.
Now I'm twenty-six years old, living in a rundown trailer in a human town that doesn't know werewolves exist. I work double shifts at a diner, hide my scent with herbs, and spend every day trying to give my son the life I stole from him.
Most days, I can pretend we're doing fine.
Today, I can't.
Zack has been running a fever for two days.
He's only four years old, but he's already learned not to complain. He swallows his herb-laced apple juice with a whimper and a shudder, then smiles up at me, wan and trusting, when I tell him what a good boy he is.
My love for him is the only thing strong enough to get me out the door.
As I hold him against my chest, I find myself thinking about the father he'll never know.
The mate I left behind.
For years, I've refused to regret my choice. Regret doesn't pay rent. It doesn't keep food on the table. It doesn't protect a child.
But watching Zack burn up in my arms, I wonder if I was wrong.
My wolf certainly thinks so.
She's been angry ever since I took us away from our pack. Angry that I denied her a mate. Angry that our son is growing up without one. Then I made it worse, never once letting her out to run.
We need our pack. Take us home. Take the pup home.
I ignore her the same way I have for five years.
Home isn't an option.
Not anymore.
I leave Zack with my neighbor Mrs. Acheson, who smells like menthol cigarettes and would lie to the cops for me. I don’t know what I’d do without her help.
I kiss Zack’s hot forehead and tell him to be good. I don't let myself cry until I'm behind the wheel of my beat-up little Miata, where he can't see me break down.
I pull into the lot and see three fancy trucks I don't recognize, parked too close to the door, in that particular sprawl that says we'll move when we feel like it.
Bad feeling. Big one.
My wolf's gone silent, but every other instinct I've got is screaming at me to run.
But rent's due next week, Zack needs a real doctor, and I scraped the last of the herbs into his juice this morning.
We need more.
The dregs I rubbed on my gums won't stop another wolf from smelling what I am.
With any luck they'll stop one from knowing who I am.
Rent doesn't matter if you're dead, a little voice offers, unhelpfully.
Not my wolf, some darker part of my psyche.
The thought terrifies me.
What happens to Zack if I'm not around to protect him?
I sat there for a minute. Two. Weighing options I don't actually have.
I get out of the car and tell myself it'll be fine.
Linda's at the grill, shoulders up around her ears.
"Order for booth six is up. Maria ducked out. Best not to keep them waiting. But be careful, Angelique. There's something dangerous about them."
Fuck.
Linda's human.
She can't smell a werewolf across a room.
But she can feel a predator in one, the way prey always can, even when it can't put a name to the thing.
I tie the apron tighter and pick up the tray.
There are four men at booth six, and they're definitely wolves.
Suits cut to let a body shift inside them.
Pack tailoring.
Cufflinks that would cover my rent and groceries for a year and leave a little over for gas.
Hands that have done damage and slept fine after.
Two of them have their backs to me.
One of those is built like a doorway. The others aren't small, but he's huge.
The scent hits me three steps out and I almost lose the tray.
Their smells are all tangled together, and the collective power of it burns my nose.
Alpha and three Betas.
Under the expensive cologne is the thing wolves never quite manage to bury.
Aggression. Savagery. Primal impulse.
My wolf drops flat to her belly and whines in a way I can't read.
There's fear in it. But there's something else too.
I don't make eye contact as I set the plates down. My eyes stay glued to the table.
"Could I get you anything else?" I ask, topping up their water from the iced pitcher in the center.
"I can think of several things, sweetheart," the smallest of them murmurs smugly.
I refuse to react. Play deaf. Turn to go.
The one closest to me moves so fast I don't see it.
His hand's on my apron strings before my brain can form the word don't.
He yanks hard and I tumble sideways into his lap.
The tray hits the linoleum. His other arm comes around my waist like iron.
He buries his nose in the side of my throat and inhales.
Under his cologne is want.
Hot, ugly, hunting want, and his wolf is right at the surface where I can feel it.
My wolf is snarling and snapping now, done playing dead.
"Hello, little wolf."
I can't breathe.
His hand slides under my apron and skirt, up my thigh, slow, tracing over bare skin.
His fingers stop at the edge of my underwear and hover there. A promise.
The man across from him laughs low, watching with hungry eyes.
The third says, easy and amused, "Don't hog her, brother."
The biggest one, the Alpha, hasn't moved.
The wolf at my throat licks the place where my pulse is hammering.
"What's a pretty thing like you doing all the way out here by yourself?"
His mouth is at my ear now.
Even without his erection pressed against my ass, I'd be able to smell exactly what he's decided.
"No mate-scent on you. Nobody's coming to stop me. I could have you in the back of my truck in two minutes, sweetheart, and nobody in this room would do a damn thing about it. Would they?"
The urge to shift is overwhelming.
But shifting in front of humans is the one law of my old world that doesn't bend.
If he tries to drag me out the back, I'm going to have to break it anyway, because I won't let him-
"Let. Her. Go."
Three words, growled so low they hit like a boulder.
Every wolf at booth six stops breathing.
So do I.
Because I know that voice.
I know it better than my own.
It’s the voice I spent five years running from.
The voice I thought I'd buried the day I faked my death and disappeared, already pregnant with Zack.
But it isn't the same voice anymore.
It has weight in it now.
The kind of weight an Alpha doesn't carry unless something has broken him.
Something terrible.
Something I did.
(Tova)Four. Well on his way to five.I keep landing on it.Zack's age and when Angelique ran.I've turned the numbers over so many times it's gone smooth as a river stone, no edges left to catch on.I told her I’d let it go, but I can’t.She loved him like crazy. Why the hell did she leave?So this morning I'm doing something useful with the itch instead of just scratching at it in my own head.I'm following Maliyah's voice down a hallway like I’m on my way to somewhere else.She's at the far end with Brynn, heads close, the kind of close that screams we’re conspiring.They’re not too far from an open window, so I duck outside and plant myself against the wall nearby, pretending to type on my phone.Everyone knows people who are busy on their phones have no awareness of what’s going on around them.It’s a well-established fact."...and you're certain she’s been getting the full dose every day?" Maliyah's asking in a low whisper."Yeah. I’m putting it in her morning coffee," Brynn say
(Maliyah)My daughter is going to make a beautiful Luna, and with me helping her from the shadows, she will become very powerful.Rene Beck just needs to stop dragging his feet long enough to let her.I sit in front of the mirror in the room they've given me and pull the pins from my hair one at a time, slow, the way I do when I want my hands busy and my mind free to work.Rene Beck stood in a hallway today and called the dead girl mine in front of three of my own.He didn't notice himself say it.That's how I know it's true.A liar chooses his lies. A man who's caught off guard says what's underneath.The wolf is hers, still.After everything.After five years of mourning a corpse that turned out to be a coward who ran instead of dying properly.I should be furious.I find I'm mostly curious.There's a knock, and Victor comes in without waiting for me to answer, which is one of the few habits of his I've never managed to break."You're still awake.""I don't sleep well in other men's
(Angelique)The hallway's full of Myr wolves again.I should've smelled them sooner, but I'm too busy thinking about last night.About Rene’s words and how they nearly broke me in a way that none of his cruelty has managed to.I’m carrying Zack's lunch tray, trying to ignore how insufferably smug my wolf’s been since Rene told me I was safe with him.He’ll protect us. Tell him.Telling him is the last thing I should do.I nearly walk into them before I fully register their presence.Three of them.Strangers, all broad shoulders and unfamiliar scent, blocking the corridor like they grew there."Excuse me."I keep my voice light. Try to angle around them.The tallest one steps into the gap before I can pass."Angelique Pruitt."He says my name like it tastes bad."The dead girl.""I'm not in the mood. Please just let me past.""Nobody asked what mood you're in."A female steps up beside him, sharp-faced, arms crossed."What a selfish bitch. You let your whole pack mourn you. Your stepmo
(Rene)I send Cole to fetch her with two words."Bring her."He doesn't ask which her. There's only one.She comes in still smelling like Tova's wine, chin up, already braced for whatever I am tonight.Smart girl.The box is on the bed, lid already off. Black leather, a small steel ring at the front, polished so it catches the lamp.She sees it and her whole body goes still in that way she has, the way that means she's working hard not to react.I bought it three days ago.Told myself it was about ownership, about making the point with something tangible instead of my mouth for once.I knew exactly what it was about.I just don't say it out loud, not even to my wolf."Strip."She does it without hesitation.It took me several weeks to train it into her and I still get something low and vicious in my chest every time she obeys without question.Mine.The wolf says it like a fact, not a hope.I pick up the collar."Come here."She crosses the room on bare feet.Doesn't look at what I’m
(Angelique)Tova lets herself in with a bottle of wine in one hand and a bag of the orange puffs Zack isn't usually allowed in the other."Tova!" Zack's off the floor like he's spring-loaded."Hey buddy." She tosses him the bag. "Don't tell your mother.""I’m right here," I say dryly."Don't be a spoilsport, then."I should take the puffs away.I don't.Some days you let the kid have the orange dust and the felony, because the other choice is being the only bright spot he’s got and somehow ruining that too.Tova drops onto my bed like she pays rent on it and twists the cap off the wine.Then she goes still.Sniffs.Her eyebrows climb her forehead."Angelique Pruitt.""Don't.""You smell like him. Again.""Tova-""Like him him. Like you've been somewhere you'd have to go to confession about if we had that. You hussy."She fans herself."And here I thought he was meant to be rejecting you. Worst rejection I've ever smelled.""It's complicated.""It's always complicated with you. That's
(Rene)"No more delays."Maliyah says it like she owns my father's study.With him nodding along from his chair, she nearly does.I’ve never been able to understand why he’s always so eager to support her.She was mated to his Beta. Angelique’s father, Theodore Pruitt.That doesn’t explain how oddly close they are."The Warden's gone. The pack's whispering. Every day that drags by makes you look weaker."She folds her hands in her lap."Reject the girl. Tonight. With witnesses present, so no one can argue it later."Kill her. She dares to dictate terms to an Alpha?This is one instance where I wish I could give in to my more bestial urges.The world would be a better place without Maliyah in it.I have to keep reminding myself that attacking her would be equal to declaring war against the Myr pack."I appreciate your concern, but I’ll do it on my own time.""You've had your own time."Her smile is patient and awful."Now you'll have mine."My father adds dryly from his chair, "She's r
(Angelique)When the opportunity presents itself, I don’t allow myself to hesitate.The maid’s phone is sitting on the cleaning cart, beckoning to me.The moment she goes into the bathroom, I snatch it soundlessly.I only have a few minutes and I better make them count.I can warn Parker in less ti
(Angelique)"Sit. I made tea."Brynn's got two cups poured on the little table like we're girls catching up, and the wrongness of it crawls up my neck.We’ve never sat down to tea together in all the years we shared a house."What do you want?""I said sit."She doesn’t raise her voice.Brynn never
(Rene)Cole's been in the doorway ten seconds working up to something, which is nine longer than I've got patience for tonight."What?""Our lookout in the town. The one keeping eyes on the roadhouse."He picks each word like giving me the wrong one could explode in his face."The owner's been aski
(Rene)Brynn comes to the study after dark, walking in without knocking."I heard you wanted to know about the boy," she says. "Who put him in her."I set the pen down.She's been building to something all week, and here it is, dressed up as information I want."I got it out of her this afternoon.







