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Hybrid: First Rare Wolf (Rare Wolves Book 1)

Page 9

by K J Carr


  My eyes went to his collarbone, and I saw the small tattoo there, my gaze sharpening. I reached up and traced the lines – úlfur. Wolf.

  I only knew one other person with that tattoo, in that location.

  Except… he had green eyes and black hair. And he had gone to war. He had been presumed dead, after an explosion had taken out his whole unit. But… Could it be?

  “Shane?” The word was only a breath on my lips.

  He saw the question in my eyes. Heard it in my voice.

  He nodded, swallowing hard. “I couldn’t tell you, Holden. I had returned battered and broken, but I wanted to see you. I needed to see you. By the time I could find you, you had married Thomas. I couldn’t disrupt that relationship. I am not that selfish. So I stayed away.”

  I cupped his cheek softly, my fingers exploring the skin there, traveling along that faint scar line. My body swayed closer to his, his fingers tightening on my waist. “Your eyes. They are not green, though. How…?”

  He dropped his head slightly, his gaze flicking to my mouth and then back to my own eyes. “The explosion. I am told that there are times, when someone goes through extreme trauma like I had, physical attributes can mysteriously change.” I could detect a bitterness to his voice. “For me, it was my hair and eyes. They both went silver. The doctors couldn’t quite explain it, except to mention that there had been similar cases in the past.”

  A sob broke free from my lips as I wrapped my arms around him tight, pressing myself close against him. “Shane! I had been so angry when they had told me you had died in action. We had had little time together, before you told me you had to leave, that you were being deployed. But you didn’t come home. You didn’t return to me.”

  I couldn’t tell him I had felt something for him, something deep. That the news of his death had hit me hard. That I had almost died.

  I had been sitting on a bridge in the town I was living in, looking down at the swiftly flowing water, wondering if drowning would be painful, when Thomas had come along. He had talked me down off that wall and then talked me out of the mental abyss that I had fallen into.

  Leaning forward, I touched my lips to his skin, tasting him. We had only kissed before he had been deployed. There hadn’t been time. But now… Thomas was gone, and we were here together. Could we just pick up again?

  I wondered if there was anyone in his life.

  Shane’s arms came around me, holding me tight. He kissed the top of my head and rubbed my back. I could feel the dampness of his skin from his shower and smell the slight scent of the coconut scented soap he had used. And felt his desire for me build against my hip, with only the towel separating us from each other.

  A towel. Nakedness. The pups. What was I doing?

  I stepped back, my hands dragging on his skin as if they were reluctant to let him go. He released me, his eyes hooded.

  “We need to talk. You have to tell me what happened to you.” I cleared my throat. “I would like to know.” I quickly ran my eyes over his body, this time noting the scars that had marked his frame, including a long, ragged one that ran from one side of his chest around to his belly button. I wanted to touch it, trace it, but I clasped my hands tightly, twisting them and massaging them in front of me.

  He smiled, recognizing this was me distancing myself from him. “Okay. Take a shower. Let me get dressed. Perhaps we can have Max start the puppy games so we can talk.”

  I felt his withdrawal, realizing that I had triggered it, and mourned his distance. Too much stretched between us. We needed to talk. To figure out where to go next.

  I nodded. “Okay. Yes. Mmm… let me take that shower and get dress. Can you feed the pups?” I knew I was babbling, but I couldn’t stop.

  Shane reached out and gripped my shoulders. “Holden.” He started to say something, but then changed his mind. “I will feed the pups and talk with Max. Don’t worry. Take your time.”

  I wondered what he had intended to say.

  He walked away, leaving so much unsaid between us.

  A thought occurred to me. “Why were you in this shower? Why didn’t you use the other one?”

  He chuckled, stopping at the doorway. “Max and I had jogged over here. He was in that one. I figured I could get a shower before you woke up. Guess I was wrong.” He slipped out into the hall, leaving me to think about that.

  They had jogged over here. I didn’t even know where he lived. His house must be close to the compound, though. Who was this Shane? We would have to take things slow.

  Staring after him for a moment, I shook my head before walking into the steamy bathroom. A little of me thrilled. This Shane was my Shane, and he was alive! Without knowing it, I walked with a little bounce in my step, hoping that warfare hadn’t changed my friend too much. Because I had missed him terribly.

  I rushed through my shower and dressed in jeans and a t-shirt, leaving my feet bare because I was too impatient to pull on socks and find my sneakers. I strolled into the kitchen, searching for Shane.

  I found Max.

  He looked up at me and grinned. “Good morning, Holden.”

  “Where’s Shane?”

  I knew I was being blunt, but I had so many questions.

  Max handed me a mug of coffee and came around the kitchen island. “He got a call about something he needed to take care of. He is hoping to return soon. He told me you just realized that he was the boy you knew in college who had gone off to war.”

  I turned and studied the doctor. This man probably knew how badly my friend had been hurt.

  “Yes, I have. I saw his tattoo. I had always admired that one, and I knew no one else who had that word, úlfur, for a mark.”

  Max’s eyes appeared to go yellow for a moment and then returned to his normal brown. I shook my head, wondering if I had seen what I thought I had. Had a wild beast peered out of his eyes? No, this was Max.

  Max moved towards me, gesturing at the couch in the living room. He waited until I took a seat in one of the over-sized chairs before he sat near me on the couch.

  “Please forgive him for not telling you. He came back a changed man. He had been lost in the war zone. Even his family had thought he had died over there. When he returned, he had more healing to do. When he finally searched for you, you were married. He had returned more withdrawn than he had been before.”

  “Shane had been extroverted. He was always pulling me out to bars and parties because he said I spent too much time in my head.” I whispered out loud softly, not knowing the man could hear every word.

  Max rubbed a hand over his mouth. “War changes people, Holden. They return different from who they had been. They have trouble coming to peace with what they saw and experienced over there. They grieve for friends they had lost. Once they return, those around them have trouble realizing that the person who returned to them is now different. Shane’s hair and eyes changed. His personality also changed. He is a darker, more serious person than he was before. One thing that hadn’t changed, though, was his loyalty to his friends and family.”

  Max stood up, looking behind me. I turned and saw that Shane had entered the room, his eyes moodily watching us. His task must have been taken care of quickly.

  Max kept his eyes on his friend while he continued. “Back already? The pups and I are going to play games. You two talk. This conversation is way overdue. Take your time.”

  He left through the glass doors, walking out onto the deck and yelling for the three pups, who came running towards him for the game.

  I turned back around, staring straight ahead, my hands gripping the arms of the chair. Shane sighed and moved to sit in front of me on the coffee table, his hand trailing down my arm before leaving it as he sat.

  “Holden.”

  “You should have told me.” I couldn’t meet his eyes. “I had the right to know.”

  “And what would you have done? Left Thomas? Rip my heart out again by giving me hope that we could have had something together only to return to him?
What would telling you have done? You thought I was dead. So, I stayed dead to you.”

  I sat there, tears gathering in my eyes. Those words, while bitter, were also true. “There were times, even when I was lying beside Thomas, that I missed you so much, Shane. You were more than just an infatuation. You were my friend. I missed my friend.”

  He reached out and put a hand on my knee. “And I missed mine. I kept up with you, watching your career grow. I made sure Thomas treated you well. He loved you, Holden, and I think you loved him. I was happy for you. You definitely didn’t need my broken self in your life.”

  I chuckled weakly at that. “We are all broken, Shane. Did you know that I met Thomas when I was contemplating jumping off the bridge near the campus? I waited a week after I found out you were dead. I couldn’t see my way to continue on without you. So, I had climbed onto the wall and was staring at the water when Thomas found me. He talked to me, he gave me hope and compassion, he helped me down off that wall. He knew that there was someone else. He knew. He helped me through therapy and the deep well of depression I had fallen into. He waited for me to get well.”

  I shifted my eyes to look at him, tears now streaming down my face. He was staring back, his own tears falling.

  “I..I..I am glad he was there when I couldn’t be.” He choked out, rubbing his cheeks briskly.

  “He didn’t replace you, though, Shane. No one could replace you. I had to learn that there was room in my heart for him, along with you.”

  He nodded. “Do you think we might start again? As friends first? Then perhaps as more?” His voice was hushed, as if he was afraid of my answer.

  I nodded. “I would like that. I think we already have started. Here. With the pups. But you have to tell me what happened to you. Tell me what would cause your eyes and hair to change so drastically that I couldn’t recognize you on sight.”

  His eyes dropped for a second, before lifting to meet mine. “I can, but even now, so many years later, I am trying to piece it all together. Right after the explosion, I couldn’t remember much. Some people discovered my body and helped me heal. Saved my life, before returning me to the base. The medics patched me up enough to discharge me with honors before sending me back here. Back home. Max had to do the rest. I am not one hundred percent healed, even now, but I am not as broken as I was when I first returned.”

  I slid forward, my knees intertwining with his as I pulled him into a hug. “Welcome home, Shane. I have missed you so very much.”

  He laughed and hugged me back. He turned his head and kissed my cheek, before pulling back slightly.

  “Hey, Holden?”

  “What?”

  “Want to go play with the puppies?”

  I laughed; my voice joyful. I stood and rubbed my eyes, before wiping the traces of tears from my cheeks. “Yes. Yes, I do.”

  I started for the glass doors, Shane following me.

  Chapter 14

  Shane

  Secret number one was out between us. She knew I had returned and had searched for her. She knew that I was her friend. But there was an even bigger secret still between us, one that had always been between us, that I wasn’t sure how to broach with her.

  Max had told me that lycanthropes rarely mated with humans, but my wolf always knew that Holden was the one for us. We had seen her in that lab and had sat up and howled. He wanted to claim her before we had left, but I thought we had time.

  But we hadn’t had time. How can I tell her now? Now she was on Pack land, she would find out my secret. The pups or Max might show her lycanthropes exist.

  I wished that Holden had been a lycanthrope. She would have been a glorious wolf, given how she had jumped in front of Soren when Tessa had come into the compound. In fact, there were many times I had almost forgotten she wasn’t a wolf, because her instincts had been the same as one. It was because she had studied them so much, had interacted with them so often, that she had taken on many of the lupine aspects.

  I couldn’t explain what had changed my hair and eyes. This had been something that I learned was common to lycanthropes who experienced extreme trauma. A Pack found me soon after the explosion, which was the only reason I still lived. That Pack had nursed me back to health. By the time I had returned to my unit, my body had healed but something had changed my hair and eyes.

  I had then discovered that everyone else in my unit had died that day. My Command declared me dead with them. There just hadn’t been enough pieces for anyone to identify individuals. So, they had declared everyone dead and our next of kin had been informed.

  They discharged me with honors and had returned to my Pack, a broken wolf. Max had treated me, both mind and body, and I had recovered enough to rise to become Beta for the Pack. But I had never forgotten Holden, my mate.

  And here she was, seeing me, again. After thinking I had died.

  I walked out to the deck and watched Max, her, and the pups play a game of tag. Max and the pups had slowed things down to a more human speed, allowing Holden to play since there was no way she would have been able to catch them if she had been ‘It’. I smiled, watching as she tagged Lexi and then scooted away, her laughter filling the air.

  My wolf whined. Holden happy was something we craved. I wasn’t sure why my mate was a human, but I decided I didn’t care. I liked who she was as a person. She just was it for me.

  Betta ran up on the deck, sliding to a stop, her nose touching me, before she ran off. Invitation to play initiated. I grinned evilly, noticing where Max was standing somewhat closer to the deck, watching Holden and Soren, and leaped.

  Max turned his head right before I landed on him.

  “It!” I ran off and Max just shook his head.

  It didn’t take long before Holden and the pups were flopping to the ground, tired from the game. Max and I sat on the deck stairs, watching them and the forest beyond.

  “Why don’t we see if we can bring in a submissive, Shane? A true one, not Tessa. I was thinking perhaps Maggie, since she is so submissive it is almost painful.” Max kept his voice low, not wanting the pups to hear us.

  I hesitated. “The pups are higher on any ladder than she is.”

  Max nodded. “So, they shouldn’t feel threatened by her coming here. She wouldn’t hurt Holden. In fact, she may just cower in a corner.”

  I felt uneasy, protective of the young wolf as her Beta. “Is it okay for her, though? I don’t want her traumatized either, Max.”

  “It will be good for her. Maggie is good around humans and puppies. The bitches in the Pack recommend her for new pups. Your pups need to meet other wolves. They need to discover that living in a Pack is not horrible. That other wolves – adult wolves – will not reject them. I think it will be a win-win. Besides, I think Holden will instinctively know she is submissive and will react accordingly. The pups will follow her lead. I sometimes think she is part wolf herself.”

  I glanced at my friend. Interesting that Max shared my belief about her.

  “Do you think…?” Hope peeked through my eyes.

  Max shook his head. “I have never heard of a human-wolf hybrid. At least not in the northeast here. If one existed, we would know. Things like that don’t stay quiet.”

  My shoulders slumped. “You are right. It must be her interest in wolves. She has always been interested, so much so that her parents moved into the city to keep her from roaming the woods to search for them. She knows more about our natural brothers than we know.”

  I glanced over to Holden, who was cuddling the pups. “And she loves pups. She always has.”

  Max heard the longing in my voice, but ignored it, thank goodness.

  I mused over the idea and then agreed. “Okay. Let’s invite Maggie here. As a wolf. We will let the pups and Holden know beforehand, so it does not startle them. And we can see what happens.”

  Max turned away, pulling out his phone. I could sense he had waited until his back was facing me before he grinned. I wasn’t sure what he thought was amusi
ng.

  Then I frowned. Holden was the piece of a puzzle I couldn’t get to fit. I would keep turning it until I figured this out.

  Holden

  I wasn’t sure where Max had found the young female wolf, but he came into the compound via the new back gate, the wolf collared and leashed. I watched her, observing the way the wolf held her head low, eyes toward the ground, her body almost slinking. This was either a very submissive wolf or an abused one.

  The pups clustered around me, their stances protective, but they didn’t make a move. I knew they were wary after the other female had attacked us. But Max had explained to them he was bringing this wolf, and they seemed to understand him. He vouched for her, explaining what he was doing before he brought her in. And they trusted him.

  I just wasn’t sure why Max thought telling the pups beforehand made a difference. Except these were very intelligent pups and probably picked up on his tone, if nothing else.

  Shane was at our backs, up on the deck, watching silently. I absently noted that he was acting like an Alpha wolf – observing and ready to respond in case anyone was hurt in this exchange. But my focus was mainly on the other wolf.

  Max let the female off the leash. She instantly dropped to the ground and whined. My heart stuttered. I slowly moved towards the bitch, ignoring the pups who followed at my side. Sitting down cross-legged in front of her, I held out my hand.

  “Does she have a name?” My voice was soft and gentle, since I didn’t want to startle her. Lexi leaned against my legs, while Betta dropped to the ground next to me, ready to attack if needed. Soren sat near my back, off to one side. No one could approach me with the pups on the watch.

  Max smiled, observing the positions the pups had taken around me.

  “Maggie.” He kept his voice low.

  “Hey, Maggie.” I crooned, my hand out in front of me, still.

  Maggie looked at my hand uncertainly and whined again. She didn’t look like she wanted to be in this position, but she didn’t leave either.

 

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