A green highway department sign for a scenic overlook popped up on the roadside and Alex swung the SUV onto the horseshoe-shaped pull-off. Bob hopped out behind him and quickly relieved himself in the bushes. Alex filled the dog’s bowl with kibble and another with bottled water. The doctor wolfed down a cold meatloaf sandwich then the two climbed back in the vehicle.
It’s pretty up here, huh, Bob?
Smells good too, the dog answered.
Tall, skinny pine trees lined the two-lane highway as it wound its way through the hilly North Country.
What’s that? Bob asked.
A big buck stepped onto the road in front of them and Alex stopped to let it cross. Deer, Alex answered. His mouth began to water even though his belly was full from the sandwich. Alex’s muscles twitched as he imagined chasing down the deer, sinking his teeth into the thick neck, lapping up the spurts of blood, then tearing off hunks of hot flesh. He shook his head to clear away the images and watched the huge animal trot into the trees.
Alex brought the SUV back up to speed and Bob wiggled between the seats and sat in the passenger position. The dog’s thoughts were a simple laundry list of things he saw—bird, squirrel, tree, squirrel, rabbit, squirrel. And when Alex reached out to scratch the Lab behind his silky black ear, I love you, man.
Love you too, buddy, Alex telepathed.
The GPS indicated a turn and Alex eased onto the county road to Talbot. The next directive was for a dirt road and Alex was beginning to wonder if he was on the right track when he drove over a rise and saw the carved wood sign for Luna Farms. In the lower right corner was an inscribed inverted triangle with a spiral filling the center. Alex turned onto the paved drive and his stomach lurched. Bob wondered what was wrong.
“Almost there, pal,” Alex said.
The road led through the forest for a mile before opening onto a neat farmstead. Alex pulled the SUV to a stop in front of a two-story house and stepped out. Bob followed him onto the front porch. Alex noticed a line of fur rise along the Lab’s spine and felt the hair on his own neck respond in kind. I don’t like it here, man.
Alex reached down and patted the dog’s head. Easy, bud. It’s going to be okay. I’m right here. Alex pounded on the door then tried the bell. There was no answer.
He sensed Sergei before he saw him. Alex wheeled around and saw an impossibly tall man stride between two outbuildings. Sergei Markov wore overalls that barely covered his calves and enormous lace-up leather boots. He was smiling, but Alex detected the strain rolling off him.
“Hello, friend,” the Russian said with a heavy accent.
Alex felt his hips tilt forward. If I had a tail it would be between my legs, he thought. His involuntary submission infuriated him.
Alex stepped off the porch and met the farmer on the driveway. He extended his right hand, but found it impossible to hold Sergei’s gaze. Sergei accepted the handshake and Alex understood that it was okay to look up.
“You’ve come a long way, looking for answers I suppose,” Sergei said.
Alex felt Bob’s heavy body quivering against the backs of his legs. Sergei leaned to one side to see the frightened Lab.
It’s all right, dog. No harm will come to you here, the big man soothed wordlessly with the same timbre and accent as his spoken voice.
Bob’s tail thumped against Alex’s calves and he tentatively slunk in front of Sergei and dropped his head. Sergei petted him and Alex could feel the animal’s fear drain away.
Follow me, Sergei instructed wordlessly.
The three walked up the porch and through the home to a huge farmhouse kitchen. Sergei pulled a pair of short glasses from the glass-front cupboard and set them on the table. They were etched with the sign of the werewolf. He motioned for Alex to take a seat and for Bob to go lie down by the back door. The giant reached into another cupboard and pulled out a cut crystal decanter filled with amber-colored liquid. They sat quietly for several minutes, sipping the whiskey. Alex strained to hear Sergei’s thoughts but only Bob’s fretting came through.
“It’s rude to probe the head of a brother,” Sergei finally said.
Alex felt his tailbone tingle at the chastisement. “I apologize. I was able to hear you calm Bob outside, so I just thought—”
“You were able to hear me because I allowed it.”
Alex fought to sit still, but couldn’t calm his fidgeting. Can you hear my thoughts?
“Yes, I can hear your thoughts because you allow it. You will eventually learn to shield them from our kind.”
Alex looked up from his glass. “Our kind? There are more of…us?”
“Many more. Most came to this way by a bite. Few choose it as you have.”
“I didn’t exactly choose it. I just wanted to stop being afraid of women and the next thing I knew…”
Sergei’s deep rich laughter filled the kitchen. “Ah, friend, you wished to understand women? That is what fear is, isn’t it—just the unknown? You will not understand them—ever, but you will become stronger than your fear.”
The whiskey and the unique camaraderie worked their magic and Alex’s tension began to unwind. He took a deep breath. “So how long will this last? What am I supposed to do now? What will happen at the full moon? Am I going to turn into some kind of a monster? Will I—”
Sergei held up an enormous hand. “Slow down, friend. I know this is a lot to take in, but I will give you the answers you seek. You will be my guest here while you learn then you will join the rest of us in Talbot. We are a community. We are a pack.”
“The whole town is made up of…people like us?”
Sergei laughed again. “Not the whole town. There are twenty three of us here—twenty four now with you. We live quietly because we have a strong set of laws and a strong leader. The humans do not know we even exist.”
Alex felt his gaze pulled down to the tablecloth. “And you are the leader—the alpha?”
“I am the alpha. But really I am merely the peacekeeper. This is neither a dictatorship nor a police state—and you may look at me. I ask compliance, not submission.”
Alex glanced up and huffed out a breath. “This is surreal. How did so many of you end up here?”
“Much the same way you did. We just found each other. The pull of the pack is strong. There are packs like ours all over the world. Little communities pop up. Some are peaceful and some are not. You are lucky that you were called to this pack. We are not savages. You will like it here.”
Alex shook his head. “Wait? What? I can’t… I mean, I’ve got a life back in Minneapolis. My home and my friends are there. My business is there. I can’t just pack up and—”
But you will—because you must.
The force of Sergei’s command caused Alex to wince.
“But why?”
“Because if you do not, many will suffer.”
Chapter Eight
Present
In the three years since his change, Alex had never shifted in front of a human. He’d been careful to quench his constantly raging libido according to the lunar calendar, and made sure to keep his other powers under wraps. Never once had he been in danger of being found out, until Gwen Chaney stumbled into his life and complicated everything.
From the moment he kissed her, he felt his self-control unravel and knew nothing would ever be the same.
Still shaking from his encounter with her, Alex hurtled wildly through the forest. The sun had set hours ago, but he could see every detail of every tree as if it were broad daylight.
He was on Sergei’s front porch before he even realized where he’d been headed. The giant held open the door and wordlessly invited Alex in with a sweep of his long arm. The smell of alcohol wafted out into the night air.
“Join me for a drink,” Sergei slurred.
Alex followed him through the house, flopped into the kitchen chair and buried his face in his hands. He heard Sergei rummaging through the cupboards and the clinking of crystal. The smell of the freshly pou
red whiskey teased his nose and Alex found the drink without opening his eyes. He downed it in a single gulp, opened his eyes and held out the glass for a refill. The pack master was staring at him. “I needn’t ask what’s upset you, friend. I can smell her sex on you.”
There was no mistaking the disapproval in Sergei’s voice. Alex thought he also saw anger in the alpha’s eyes and felt his tailbone tingle at the admonishment. “Nothing happened. I stopped myself.”
Sergei nodded. “Good.”
The alcohol had begun to soothe him and Alex sipped at the third drink. “I started to shift,” he said, somehow ashamed at the admission. “I wanted her so badly, but I stopped because I could feel it coming. It’s never happened outside of the moon week. I didn’t even know it was possible.”
“Well now you know,” Sergei said, then stood and walked to the sink. He leaned against the porcelain and stared out the window. Alex stared at the alpha’s broad back. “What the hell happened to me back there?”
Sergei turned and crossed his arms over his chest. “Nothing but high emotions, my friend. Fear, anger, love, hate, lust—any of these, if strong enough, can cause a shift outside of moon week. It seems the human has confused you. You must have no more contact with her.”
The Russian sat down and poured himself another drink as if the matter were now closed. Alex sensed that Sergei was probing his mind. He tried to shield his thoughts, but a strange panic rose in him.
No more contact with her? As terrifying as their last encounter had been, he couldn’t wait to be near her again. Her pull was inexplicably strong. Now that he’d had a taste of Gwen Chaney, there was no going back. Cutting off contact with her was not an option.
Sergei looked up from his drink and glared at him. “You would disobey your alpha?”
Alex fought the urge to drop his gaze. Instead he met Sergei’s stare. “I’m sorry. I’m just so…drawn to her. What if I just steer clear until she knows about us and is settled in as consort?” Sergei leaned forward, clearly trying to assert his dominance over Alex. “No. This attraction you feel to her made you lose control and that we cannot have. Did your reaction tonight not teach you anything?”
“I’m not going to hurt her!”
“It is too dangerous. I forbid it.”
Alex stood so abruptly that the chair clattered to the floor behind him. “She’s meant to be mine. I can feel it. I want her!”
The words had barely left his lips when Alex found himself pinned against the kitchen wall, Sergei’s corded forearm pressed against his throat. The alpha’s eyes flashed and Alex trembled as the giant shifted in an instant, the seams of his clothing ripping from the force. The fur pricked under Alex’s skin and his own transformation overtook him.
Sergei took a step backward and the two squared off, circling each other with growls and snaps. You will do as you’re told, Alex. The pack needs a human consort and I will not have you frighten her away—or worse—because of your selfishness!
Despite the alpha’s rage, Alex felt his own confidence swell. The base of his spine no longer tingled under Sergei’s glare. In a flash of understanding, Alex was able to construct an impenetrable wall around his thoughts.
The confusion on Sergei’s face was unmistakable. Alex felt the change as the Russian quickly raised his mind shield, but his physical cues gave him away. Deceit.
Though Alex could only guess at what the alpha was hiding, it was clear that the situation had to be diffused before it got out of control. Alex’s body shuddered as he shifted back to his human form, then Sergei followed suit.
This time, when Alex looked at the floor, it was a conscious effort to calm the alpha, not an involuntary response of submission. Neither spoke as their breathing slowed. Alex raised his eyes and noticed Sergei fidgeting with the shredded remains of his shirt.
Sergei righted the kitchen chairs and sat down. “Have a seat, friend,” he muttered. Alex settled in across the table and studied Sergei. His shoulders were slumped and he seemed to be focused on the tabletop. He looked exhausted. “I apologize, Sergei. No disrespect intended.”
With a wave of his hand, Sergei looked up. “Ach, we must put that behind us now. It seems this situation has confused us all. Put it out of your mind, friend. She is not meant for you.”
Sergei refilled their glasses, downed his in one gulp and poured himself another. “Before John Chaney, the only other human consort I knew was the one who guided me back in Russia. Both of these men had the mystical about them, but nothing like this new one. She is different, yes?”
Alex nodded. “And off limits?”
“I believe it is best for you to keep your distance,” Sergei said. “If she were not so important to the pack, I might allow the match, but these things rarely end well. Werewolves and humans—even special humans—are not meant for lasting relationships.” Sergei’s head bobbed and Alex thought the whiskey must be catching up with him.
With a wry chuckle, Alex shook his head. “So I met her a few years too late. Story of my life.” Alex was well aware that his words made it seem that he had given up. Until he figured out his next move he would have to tread carefully.
Sergei shrugged, then leaned heavily on his elbow and seemed to struggle to keep his eyes open. “Ach, some make it work for a little while, but the differences are just too great. Some take more desperate measures,” he slurred.
Sensing that the alcohol had weakened Sergei’s defenses, Alex concentrated on cloaking his thoughts and keeping his body language neutral. “Okay, this sounds interesting. Go on.”
“One must become like the other. There is a legend—it is really just a line from an old Russian poem—that says that werewolves like you, the ones who choose it, can break the spell by drinking rainwater from the footprint of a true wolf under the full moon. No one really believes that it works.”
Alex shook his head. The storybooks and the internet were full of ridiculous fiction about how to become a werewolf, or how to kill one. He suspected this cure was just more of the same fantasy.
“And the other way?”
“If she were to become one of us. And that I will not allow.”
This new information raised new questions—and possibilities—and Alex needed some time to think things through. “You know, I think I’ll head out of town for a few days, maybe spend moon week with that pack just north of the Twin Cities.”
Sergei nodded and took a swig directly from the decanter. “Good idea, friend.” He swayed in his chair then laid his head on the table and was snoring within minutes.
* * * * *
A Week Later
In the week since the cougar attack, the swelling in Gwen’s ankle had gone down and the only reminder of the sprain was an occasional ache and a fading bruise. She’d used the injury as an excuse to mope around the cabin rehashing her strange night with Alex.
Her body tingled every time she remembered the kiss they had shared and the feel of his warm fingers probing between her legs. Alex’s obvious excitement had fueled her own lust and she’d wanted him to take her—hard.
Every nuance of the encounter was seared in her memory—his ragged breath, her thundering heartbeat, the feral quality of his touch, the rock-hard length of his shaft and the way he’d teased her opening with his cock head.
If only she could forget the way it had ended. Not only had he bolted out of the cabin in the middle of the most pussy-wetting make-out session she’d ever experienced, he’d avoided her ever since.
The morning after, he’d had his veterinary technician drop Jezebel off and give Gwen instructions on how to clean the dog’s wound and administer the antibiotics. Kelly had extended apologies—supposedly on her boss’s behalf—but Gwen had had the distinct impression that the pretty brunette was just trying to spare her feelings.
“Call me if she shows any signs of infection,” Kelly had said. “Otherwise, I’ll drop by in a week and take out the stitches. It should take only a couple of minutes.”
On her return house call, Kelly had snipped away the little black threads and given Jezebel a clean bill of health. “And how are you doing?” she’d asked.
Gwen had wanted to say that she was confused, angry and embarrassed. Instead she had just smiled and said she’d be doing the cha-cha in no time.
Within minutes of Kelly’s departure, Gwen was lounging on the couch, flipping through a magazine. A nudge at her elbow interrupted her brooding. Gwen reached down and stroked the stubbly regrowth of fur around Jezebel’s scars.
“What are you saying, Jez—enough of the private pity party?”
Gwen tossed the magazine on the coffee table and stood. “How about we go poke around town and see how this joint has changed since the last time I was here? Wanna go for a ride?”
The dog’s entire body twisted when she wagged her tail. Gwen grabbed her keys, some cash and her debit card and led the way to the car. Stepping from the shadows of the porch, she blinked against the bright morning sun and realized that she’d barely left the cabin in a week. She tilted back her head and let the rays warm her face. Her mood instantly lifted.
Once inside the Jeep, Gwen cranked the radio and rolled down the passenger side window so Jezebel hang her head out in the cool fall breeze. As they neared the tiny business district, Gwen spotted a Garage Sale flier flapping on a telephone pole. “Are you up for a little treasure hunting, Jez?”
Gwen followed a series of hot-pink signs through an older neighborhood on the edge of downtown and stopped in front of a neat ranch-style house set back on a deep, manicured lot. It seemed the entire town of Talbot had turned out for the sale. Dozens of people milled about the lawn and huddled around long tables full of secondhand goodies.
The shoppers had gathered in small groups, laughing and chatting, and the atmosphere seemed more like a social get-together than a garage sale. She noted that several of them had beers in their hands despite the early hour. Their easy camaraderie was contagious and Gwen thought she could get used to small-town living.
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