Authors: Loribelle Hunt
His answer was a growl, and he moved lightening fast, behind her before she could think. Inside her before her eyes even registered the move. He rammed in and out of her, faster and harder, and her pussy wept in welcome. Holding her hips in a grip firm enough she knew she would have bruises, he took her, no control left. It was animalistic. Wild and wanton. She loved every minute of it, and they collapsed, coming together, to the bed. He rolled off of her and pulled her back to his chest.
“You okay?”
She smiled, but couldn’t force herself to move. “Perfect,” she whispered. She was way past perfect, and she fell asleep listening to the sound of his chuckles.
Chapter Seven
Clint got up and answered the soft knock on the door without disturbing Ellen. He scowled at Anthony. “What?”
He jerked his head in a motion meant to convey,
follow me.
Clint stepped out into the hall and pulled the door quietly shut behind him.
“Got something you’ll want to see.”
Clint followed him downstairs, noting the quietness. “Where is everyone?”
“Guarding our guests.”
Anthony armed the alarm system, and they both stepped out the back door. “What guests?”
The other wolf’s expression darkened. “You’ll see.”
He wasn’t comfortable leaving Ellen alone in the house. He could go overprotective and anal, but he knew she wouldn’t stand for it. Plus, he was positive Anthony wouldn’t lead him off the property.
They stripped, shifted quickly, and were racing through the woods in moments. Clint smelled them before he saw anyone, but was surprised to see five humans waiting in a clearing. Judging by the scent, there should only be one or two. How had they hidden so much of their scent?
He shifted and approached, watching them suspiciously.
The oldest one stepped forward. Clint would guess the man was in his mid forties, but there was nothing old or feeble about him. His expression was hard. His body appeared to have the lean, powerful strength of a predator. He moved like a soldier and had the bearing of a leader.
“What are you doing here?” Clint asked. “You know you’re not welcome.”
The other man smiled, but it was far from friendly. “We’re hunting for one of ours.”
He’d hesitated the barest fraction over
hunting
, and Clint knew he’d chosen it on purpose, substituting it for another word.
“You won’t find him here,” Anthony answered. He let the wolf color his voice. “But you will tell me who the fuck you are.”
It was a threat, and the humans recognized it. As one, the four flanking the leader lifted their rifles and covered all the werewolves in the clearing.
The leader lifted his hand, but didn’t turn around. “Stand down,” he ordered. Slowly, reluctantly, they did.
“I’m Julian. I belong to an organization that doesn’t have a name. And despite being human, I’m the same thing you are. A Hunter.”
“Then you should know not to enter a werewolf’s territory without permission first,” Clint said.
Julian nodded. “It seemed faster this way.”
Faster maybe, but it was the death wish approach.
“Who are you looking for?” he asked, though his gut told him it was the same human he was hunting.
“His name is Robert. His wife was killed by a rogue a couple of years ago. We took him in. Trained him.”
Anger filled Clint. They’d actually trained this wannabe killer and then let him loose?
“He’s fixated on your mate,” Julian went on.
Anger became fury. The man knew too much about his people, and he knew next to nothing of theirs. “I’m more than capable of assuring the safety of my mate. Leave. We’ll take care of your rogue for you.”
“No.” Julian shook his head. “This one is ours to deal with. It’s against even your own rules.”
Clint crossed his arms over his chest to keep from lunging forward and grabbing the man’s throat. Remembering Ellen’s words. She didn’t want him to be the one that killed the man stalking her. That thought made his wolf snarl its outrage. “If we let you have him, what’ll you do to him?”
“Take him back. Try him. Probably execute him.”
He looked over and met Anthony’s gaze.
Anthony shrugged. “Why not? It’s their mess, not ours.”
He was leaving the decision to Clint, since Ellen was his mate. Clint struggled with the need to exact vengeance, his need to protect his mate, and his need to make her happy. She didn’t want him to kill this human. He wasn’t sure if he had that kind of restraint.
Something nudged at his consciousness, an urge to return to her immediately, and he swiveled to look back in the direction of the house. “She’s not alone,” he told Anthony, shifting as he ran.
He knew the others were behind him, including the humans, but he didn’t pay any attention to them in his desperation to get to her. He paused long enough at the back door to pull his jeans on and entered quietly, turned the alarm off, and used the wolf’s stealthy abilities to hunt.
* * * * *
He couldn’t delay any longer. He’d seen Julian drive through town with his squad early that morning and knew the man was here to stop him. He hid from sight easily, sneering. Their esteemed leader claimed there were two factions of wolves warring with each other. That one side wasn’t the same brutal killers who had killed his Maggie. Even if that were true, it didn’t matter. They were animals. One day they’d all turn on the humans they considered prey.
His mission was clear. They had to be stopped. And Julian, with his extensive files, training, and arms, had unwittingly given Robert the means to do it. This wasn’t the first household he’d targeted, and it wouldn’t be the last. He had a long list to work through. But first, he would kill the female werewolf and her four companions.
He’d put his original plan into motion and found the diner’s deliveryman. When charm and a hundred bucks didn’t convince him to let Robert take the delivery out to the mansion on the edge of town, he’d knocked him out and left him tied and gagged in the trunk of his car.
He’d almost cackled yesterday when the woman didn’t recognize him, but restrained himself. She would soon enough. The male werewolves were suspicious now. One of them had gone into town to pick up their catered order. Robert found it easy to slip into the gate after the returning vehicle without being seen. Then he snuck in the house and hid when she walked out with the garbage. Now he just had to wait for the right moment. For the others to return.
* * * * *
When Ellen awoke, she was alone. The house felt quiet, forlorn, abandoned. She knew that wasn’t possible, but the lost feeling stayed with her as she showered and dressed.
No one was around when she went downstairs, when she entered the dining room. There was no way Anthony was letting any strangers on the property, so Asa had volunteered last night to pick up the delivery from the diner. The food was set up so she knew someone was around. Were they hiding? Avoiding her? She was known for her temper. It made her wonder when the other shoe would drop and what it would be. Shrugging, she decided she might as well be well-fed first.
When she finished, she took the leftovers to the kitchen and stacked them in the fridge. Then grumbling under her breath about men making useless housekeepers, she took the overflowing bag out of the garbage can. Frowning, she disengaged the alarm and carried it outside. The bigger can was behind the garage. She dropped the plastic bag in.
As she returned to the narrow sidewalk that led back to the kitchen, that prickly sensation on the back of her neck returned. Increasing her pace, she looked around but didn’t see anyone or anything out of the ordinary. She almost blew off the uneasy feeling, but her back was a stinging memory of what had happened the last time she’d ignored her gut instincts.
She almost ran the last few steps and slammed the door shut behind her, throwing the deadbolt and turning to reset the alarm. The feeling of being watched, stalked, didn’t diminish. Goosebumps pimpled her flesh, and she shivered, though it wasn’t cold in the house. Where the hell was Clint? Not to mention, everyone else?
She knew Anthony was running extra patrols on the grounds, but someone should be inside. She searched the downstairs, and then the upstairs. Clint’s cell phone was plugged into its charger and left on the nightstand. He had to be out in wolf form. Grabbing her phone, she dialed as she walked down the hall. No answer from Anthony. She tried the other Hunters while walking down the stairs. Nothing.
Dread increasing with each move, she stepped off the stairs and into the foyer. Everything seemed to happen in slow motion from then on. Her office door, near the front of the house, swung open, and crazy dude entered the foyer. He held the butt of a rifle in his right hand, the barrel leaning against his shoulder, like a soldier on casual guard duty.
Her mind screamed at her to run and lock herself in Anthony’s office. It was just a few feet away. But her legs refused to cooperate with the order, and she froze at his grin, the unhinged look in his eyes. Where the hell was Clint? How was she going to get out of this?
He swung the rifle up, fitting the butt to his shoulder and looking down the barrel at her. The insane smile never left his face.
“We’ll just wait for the others to return.”
He would kill her in front of Clint. Probably kill Clint while he tried to save her. The rage and sorrow at the knowledge was a tearing pain in her heart. There was no way she would let that happen. No way.
“I’m not what you think I am,” she said.
The rifle jerked in his hands.
“No one here is what you think.”
“Lies. I’ve heard them all before, werewolf,” he sneered.
“I’m not a werewolf. There are no female werewolves. It doesn’t pass to our DNA.”
His finger curled around the trigger. “Shut up!”
She held her hands up, arms spread in a placating gesture. He really was insane. No point trying to reason with him. “Sure. Can I sit down at least since we’re waiting?”
Just let her get to Anthony’s desk.
He made a downward motion with the rifle. “Right there. On the stairs.”
Well, shit
. She couldn’t exactly protest, or he’d realize there was something she wanted from the other room. She sat on the third step, feet on the floor, her muscles quivering with the need to
move
. Before she could formulate a plan, Clint came up the hall next to the stairs. He was barefoot, dressed only in jeans. He looked calm and in control, but she saw the murderous look in eyes. Not stopping to consider how the human man in the room would react, she rushed to her mate.
He pushed her behind him as other people came in the room. The Hunters she knew, but several she didn’t. They were dressed all in black combat gear and armed to the teeth. They spread out through the foyer and, though no one made an aggressive move, the feeling of menace rose.
“Robert,” said the one she presumed was the leader. “Put down the rifle.”
So, crazy dude had a name.
“No fucking way, Julian,” he spat. “I’m done doing it your way. I’m taking all these bastards out.”
“You know we aren’t going to let you do that.”
She felt the muscles in Clint’s back clench, knew he was finished listening to a negotiation between these two strangers and was going to attack.
* * * * *
Clint saw Ellen sitting on the bottom step when he entered the foyer. He noticed her trembling. Smelled her fear. It enraged him as nothing else could. Before he could attack the human holding her hostage, she leapt up and ran to him. He ignored the urge to skim her body with his hands to make sure she was unharmed. He stepped in front of her, and she set her palms on his bare back.
She needed to leave so he could execute the threat, but before he could issue the order, the others came in. He narrowed his eyes at the file of humans. This was
his
death, damn it. They were speaking to the man, distracting him, and his muscles bunched in preparation to propel him forward.
He froze when Ellen stroked him, begged him not to attack, and then seemed to change her mind. The shots rang out before he could act. The best he could do was take her to the ground and shield her with his body, terrified that she was hurt. Knowing he’d never survive without her.
* * * * *
Two shots rang out. Clint turned and dove onto her, taking her to the ground and shielding her body with his. It knocked the wind out of her, and she had to force breath into her lungs.
“Are you okay?” His eyes were wild. “Ellen?”