had seen every woman of his pack in
naked human form dozens of times. The
thought of Maralee without clothes was
somehow different. Perhaps it was
because it wouldn’t be natural for her to
appear before him without clothes.
Despite her physical interest in him, he
knew she was inexperienced. He was
likewise
inexperienced
in
human
expressions of physical intimacy. She had
seemed aroused by his attentive cleaning
of her wound and breast, and yet she had
not thought enough of him to clean his
wound properly. She had used a wet
towel, as if the taste of him was unsavory.
He had used the healing powers of his
saliva on her wound. Why hadn’t she done
the same for him? He didn’t understand
her, but she intrigued him.
When all sounds coming from the
bedroom ceased, he turned and went to his
desk beneath the window. The moon was
large and bright, but not full. His pack was
free of its madness for the time being and
if he fulfilled his obligation, they would
escape its curse forever. Nash lit
additional candles and selected several
books from the shelf. He’d accomplished
nothing all day. Sweet Maralee was far
too distracting to allow him to work. It
was impossible to believe she was the
same woman who had so viciously
slaughtered his brother. Had that really
only been the night before? It didn’t seem
real, as if it were all part of an alternate
reality. Cort would be scratching on his
door any minute now to ask his little
brother to accompany him on a midnight
hunt.
Nash sighed, and sat down at his desk
with a book. There would be no midnight
summons at his door ever again.
He forced his concentration to his
work. Nash had puzzled over these thick
volumes for almost a century now, and
still the answers were no clearer to him
than when he’d been named the pack’s
Guardian as a pup. Now that Nash had
their mortal enemy under his protection,
perhaps he would gain a sudden
understanding of the words written by the
last Guardian who had lived five hundred
years ago.
Nash opened the first volume, and
touched the crumbling, yellowed title
page. In neat print, the title
Of Immortality
and the Curse
was scarcely discernable.
The ink had faded. Nash had spent many
long years recopying the words in this
book to preserve them, but the general text
did not interest him tonight. Instead, he
wished to examine the random notes
written in the margins. At one time, they’d
been nothing but an annoyance.
He flipped several pages into the old,
hand-written manuscript to the description
of the curse. Nash knew the story well.
One of his species, a chieftain named
Burl, had captured a powerful sage. The
sage had been a philosopher and wizard
who had procured, in his vast knowledge,
the secret of life. For reasons undisclosed
—Nash was certain torture had played a
part—the sage had worked a spell of
immortality, granting eternal life to Burl
and all of his descendants.
Upon his release, the sage worked a
second bit of magic—a curse that would
drive the pack to insanity beneath the full
moon. Humans would hunt them as
monsters rather than allowing them the
peaceful eternal lives they desired. Only a
Wolf beneath the constant protection of the
crescent moon would be free of the Full
Moon Curse, and only that one, ordained
Wolf Guardian, could break the curse.
Unfortunately, though Nash had been born
with the white mark of the crescent moon,
he had no idea how to break the curse.
Each of the Wolf Guardians, grand total of
two in the pack’s long history, had studied
the words of the sage religiously. Neither
Nash nor the guardian before him had
come close to breaking the five hundred
year old spell.
Nash squinted, trying to read what was
written in the margin alongside the
description of the curse. The words were
faded and in places not visible at all. As
far as he could tell it read,
Silver poisons
..ld’s soul. The Guard... ..st find l… in
the ..r. of the ..emy. True form is of ..e
..ver.
Nash sighed forlornly. How was he
supposed make sense of faded garble? It
seemed like a warning, but he was already
quite aware of silver being a poison. The
sage had not tried to hide their weakness
to silver from them, but the embittered
man had not been so open with
information concerning the curse.
Two things were made clear in the
text. Only the Wolf Guardian could break
the curse and once broken the Wolves
would lose all they had garnered. But
even what they would lose was unclear—
their lives, immortality, humanity, their
dual existence? Maybe he shouldn’t even
try to break the curse. The outcome might
be worse than the curse itself. Still he had
to try. They expected it of him. He must
have been born beneath the protection of
the crescent moon for a reason, and he
would do everything within his power to
see his duty fulfilled. Even befriend the
enemy.
Nash searched the familiar volumes
for more clues, hoping to stumble across
something related to the Wolf Hunters and
if they had anything to do with breaking
the curse. Something had always teased
Nash’s subconscious about their role in
the curse, but he found little specific
information. He marked several pages to
peruse more carefully when it wasn’t the
middle of the night and his thoughts
weren’t diverging every few minutes to
the warm body sleeping in his bed. It was
well after midnight when he returned his
books to their shelves, banked the fire in
the grate and snuffed all the candles in the
house.
He went to his room, careful not to
wake Maralee who slept on the far side of
the pallet. Nash typically slept naked, in
his Wolf form, but tonight he left his
undershorts in place and climbed into bed
with the beautiful young woman who
interrupted all coherent thoughts. Her
small body was warm and comforting
when she turned over in her sleep and
cuddled up against him. He tensed,
wondering how she would respond if he
used his tongue to clean her body from
head to toe, concentrating most of his
attention somewhere in the middle. Would
she allow him to taste a sample of that
glorious scent beckoning from between
her thighs? His groin tightened at the
memory of her delicate, lust-inducing
fragrance.
“I can’t let myself think like that,” he
murmured to the sleeping Maralee.
Sleeping with the enemy was one thing,
sleeping
with her, something else entirely.
“Self-control,” he said, and inhaled
deeply to catch her delightful, foreign
scent in his sensitive nose.
The dream was forever the same. Maralee
always awoke just when the terrifying
growl of her memory sounded behind her,
but tonight she did not wake. Tonight she
relived the terror of fighting for her life
for the first time.
Six-year-old Maralee, trembling with
a mixture of grief and fear, turned to
look at the Wolf behind her. Her father
lay dead at her feet behind her on the
porch. She could not be certain which of
her blood relatives had fallen to this
particular enormous black beast, but it
had killed at least one of them. Its bared
teeth were stained with blood. Its muzzle
glistened with the substance.
The sword was heavy. She had to grip
it with both hands and use all of her
strength just to keep it from dragging on
the ground. The Wolf seemed unaware of
the weapon. It lunged for her and
Maralee lifted the sword in the same
instant. It impaled itself and dropped
lifeless at her feet.
Inexplicably, the sword in her hands
lightened, and was comforting instead of
horrifying. She was no longer six, but
twenty-one, with years of Wolf-slaying
experience. Nash materialized amongst
the bodies of the fallen Wolves. He
stared at her as if appalled by what
she’d done. He moved closer. A black
Wolf replaced him, still approaching.
Maralee took a step backwards, but Nash
replaced the Wolf again. A look of
devastation
twisted
his
handsome
features.
She wanted to hold him, to take the
pained look from his eyes, but he ignored
her. He bent down, lifted the body a dead
Wolf and disappeared again. Within the
same instant, he appeared directly in
front of her. She lifted her arms to reach
for him, but instead of embracing him,
she drove the point of her sword into his
chest. She knew what was happening, but
she couldn’t stop. She forced the blade
slowly into his heart. His golden eyes
transfixed her. She didn’t stop pressing
forward until the blade was buried to the
hilt, protruding from his back. He
blinked and she tore her eyes from his to
look down at her hands. It was apparent
why she hadn’t been able to stop driving
the sword deeper. Nash’s hands covered
hers, and he was forcing the sword into
his own body.
“With my spilled blood, this curse
doth die,” he whispered.
Maralee sat up with a startled cry. A
hand touched her in the darkness and she
gasped.
“It’s me,” Nash said, sleepily.
“What’s wrong?”
She knew it had only been a dream,
but that didn’t stop her from collapsing
against him. She kissed him; missing his
mouth, her lips brushed his chin. She
kissed him again, higher this time, finding
his lips in the darkness. Her kiss was long
and deep, as she pressed her body up
against his and wrapped her arms around
him. She filled her hands with his warm
flesh to reassure herself he was alive. She
hadn’t killed him with her sword. He was
here with her now. He wasn’t dead. He
wasn’t.
Nash broke her desperate kiss. “You’d
better slow down,” he said. “I don’t think
you realize what you’re doing.”
“Oh, Nash,” she whispered, hugging
him closer. “I had a horrible dream.”
He gave into her need for comfort. He
wrapped his arms around her and stroked
her hair with one hand. “Do you want to
tell me about it?”
“No, it’s too terrible. I don’t want to
think about it.” She squeezed her eyes shut
and willed the horrific images to leave
her.
“It was just a dream,” he murmured
drowsily, planting a brotherly kiss on her
forehead. “Go back to sleep and have
pleasant dreams from now on.”
Her dreams were never
just
dreams.
They either reiterated her past or
prophesied her future. It had been that way
for as long as she could remember. Nash
hadn’t been there the night her family had
been murdered so maybe, just this once,
she’d had a dream not based in reality.
She hadn’t killed Nash. She wouldn’t. It
wasn’t as if he were a Wolf so she had no
reason to kill him.
Maralee could never fall back to sleep
after her ritualistic nightmares, but the
warmth of Nash’s body beside her and the
comfort of his hand in her hair soon had
her eyes blinking drowsily. “Thank you,”