I’m not half-Wolf, both my mother and my
father were Wolves.” His heart was
drumming within his chest. He didn’t
know why he felt such an extreme amount
of upset when he knew the sage was
mistaken about the sign of the crescent
moon. He fingered the lock of white hair
draped across his left eye. “It’s just a
mistake.”
“What’s
a
mistake?”
Maralee
murmured. She wandered from the hall,
looking sleepy and utterly beautiful, but
even her shapely, nude body did not
distract Nash from his irritated musings.
“This book,” Nash growled, shoving it
aside, not sure why he felt such anger
towards an inanimate object.
Maralee paled. “You haven’t been
reading that, have you?”
“I have, but I don’t think this sage
knows what the hell he’s talking about.”
“I agree,” Maralee said eagerly. “We
should just burn the thing and be done with
it.”
Nash gave her an odd look as she
came closer. “I didn’t say that it was
all
garbage,” he said, putting his hand on the
book to protect it from Maralee’s
unexpected desire to destroy it. “Just some
of it.”
“What part?” She was trembling and
pale, staring at the book with a mixture of
trepidation and revulsion.
“The part about…” he trailed off. “I’ll
just go and talk to my mother. She can
prove that the sage is wrong about the
symbol of the crescent moon. Right?”
Maralee stared at him wordlessly. She
looked about ready to collapse.
“It’s not that big of a deal,” he told
her, standing up to give her a gentle hug.
“It’s not like the world’s going to end or
anything.”
“Mine will,” she murmured, hugging
him tightly. “Please, let him be wrong.”
“He is wrong, but would you really
care if I were half-Wolf?” He thought she
was over her bigotry.
“Half-Wolf?” she questioned, looking
up at him. “Is that what you were reading
about?”
He nodded. “Stupid, isn’t it?” he
claimed, though his pulse was still racing
out of control. How could such simple
words fill him with such dread?
She nodded in agreement, looking
relieved. He kissed her and she melted
against him.
“You fell asleep when I was trying to
excite
you
into
a
delirium,”
he
commented, running his hands over her
bare back and shoulders, urging her
closer.
“I’m sorry,” she apologized. “I really
was enjoying it. I was just really, really
tired and you were going sooooo slowly.”
“We’ll see if you can stay awake next
time,” he murmured.
“How about right now?” she purred
huskily.
Tempting as she was, he had to figure
something out before he could relax.
“Later,” he promised. “I’m going to go
talk to my mother, would you mind fixing
us both something to eat?”
She smiled. “No problem,” she
agreed. “Take your time.” She seemed
suddenly anxious for him to be leaving the
cabin. He was accustomed to her
mannerisms enough to notice irregularities
in her behavior.
He glanced at the vulnerable book on
his desk.
“You’re not thinking of burning that
book while I’m gone are you?”
She paled again and pushed him away.
“N-no, of course not. Why would I burn an
irreplaceable book?”
“I don’t know. You seemed eager to
burn it a moment ago.”
She shrugged and headed for the
kitchen, picking up her discarded pants in
the doorway. “I’ll see you in a little
while. I’ll have something for you to eat.”
He followed her into the kitchen and
caught her around the waist, drawing her
back up against his chest.
“Maralee, promise me that you won’t
burn the book while I’m gone,” he urged.
When she didn’t say anything, he
realized that he had discovered her
intention.
“Promise me, Maralee. I’d like to
think that I can trust you, but if not, I’ll just
take it with me.”
She stiffened and then pulled out of his
grasp. “I won’t burn the stupid book,” she
said angrily. “Seriously, I don’t see why
it’s so important to you any way. You said
yourself that there is false information in
there.”
“So you won’t burn it then?”
She turned to glare at him. “I promise
that I will not burn the book,” she spat at
him. “Surely you trust me enough to
believe that I will keep my word.”
He smiled at her gently. “I love you,”
he told her, and she paled again, “and
because I love you, I trust you
completely.”
“I love you too,” she murmured and
fled, still naked, into the cold room.
Nash glanced at the book as he put on
his long leather coat by the door. If she
betrayed his trust, then its invaluable
contents would be lost forever. Perhaps he
should take it with him, just in case her
impulsiveness got the better of her.
“No,” he said to himself. “I trust her.
She won’t burn it if she promised not to.”
He left the book sitting there on his
desk, and departed from the house in
search of the comfort his mother’s words
were sure to bring.
Normally, Nash would have walked into
his mother’s home without a second
thought. He had grown up in this house
after all. He, Cort and their parents shared
innumerable memories in these sturdy
walls, but he hadn’t spoken to his mother
since he’d convinced her to spare
Maralee’s life. He wasn’t sure if she’d
even be willing to talk to him at this point.
He lifted his hand and knocked, stepping
back to wait for her answer. A sudden
urge to light a cigarette drew his hand into
his pocket, but knew that she wouldn’t
appreciate him smoking inside her house.
Stacia opened the door slowly. She
looked terrible. There were dark shadows
beneath her empty amber eyes. Pale and
gaunt, he wondered if she’d eaten or slept
in days.
“Mother, are you ill?” he asked
anxiously.
He was flabbergasted when she burst
into tears and wrapped him in her arms.
“I thought I’d lost you, too,” she
sobbed against his chest.
He touched her hair, his heart panging
unpleasantly. He seemed to have a knack
for making women cry these days.
“Didn’t Rella tell you that I came back
from Sarbough?” he asked, confused as to
why she thought he’d been killed.
“That’s not what I meant,” she
murmured. She stiffened and turned her
back on him, wiping at her tears
impatiently as she went back into her
house and left it up to Nash to follow her
inside.
“Then what?” he asked, stepping into
the house and closing the door behind him.
“You chose a woman over your
family,” she clarified, her moment of
weakness completely gone. “Why are you
here now? What do you want?”
He couldn’t very well admit that he’d
come to ask something of her after that
greeting.
“I just came by to see how you are,”
he said. He noticed the chill in the house
even though he still had his coat on. “It’s
cold in here. Why haven’t you lit a fire?”
“Because my devoted, wood-cutting,
eldest son was killed by your human
friend
.”
Stacia’s talent was her ability to cut
any member of their pack to the quick with
her icy words. Her youngest son was no
exception. Nash stared at her wordlessly
for a moment. Anyone would have gladly
chopped wood for her if she’d asked. He
got the feeling she had been waiting for
this moment so she could wound him in
the cruelest way possible.
“You should have told me,” he
murmured. “I’ll go cut some wood for
you.”
He walked through the house and out
the back door into the small yard where
the chopping block stood. He removed his
coat and lit a cigarette before taking up the
ax and splitting the pile of large logs into
usable pieces. He smoked while he
chopped and found the mix of nicotine and
vigorous, violent activity were a great
outlet for his stress. The methodical
thwunk of the ax striking the wood was
calming as well. After he’d produced a
mountain of split logs, he stacked them
neatly against the back of the house. He
then lit another cigarette and sat down on
the chopping block, slightly winded from
his exertions.
He could almost see his brother
standing there, ax in hand, grinning as he
talked to his little brother while he
chopped wood. How many times had they
interacted that way? A hundred times?
More? Nash tossed his cigarette onto the
soggy ground and rubbed his face with
both hands. As unreal as it seemed, Cort
was gone. Nothing would ever bring him
back.
“Come in and have something to eat,”
Stacia said from the open back door.
“Maralee is waiting for me,” he said,
standing up from the chopping block and
reaching for his discarded coat.
“You can’t even take a minute to talk
to your own mother?”
He realized she was trying to make
him feel guilty for ignoring her, but it was
an effectual tactic.
“I suppose I can stay for a while,” he
agreed. “She knows where I am if she
needs me.”
Stacia smiled warmly at him. “Bring
some wood as you come in,” she said and
disappeared back into the house.
He collected a pile of split logs in his
arms and carried them into the house,
arranging them in the wood box by the
fireplace. He lit a fire, carefully tending it
because the split logs were still a bit wet.
“That’s better,” Stacia murmured,
removing her shawl as warmth spread
through the room. “Come, son. Let’s eat.”
The large, main room of the house was
divided into the living area and the dining
area, both of which were warmed by the
cheery fire in the grate. A meal was
already sitting on the dinner table waiting
for them. Nash climbed to his feet and sat
down at the table.
“Is
that
mutton?”
he
asked
incredulously. He wondered which of his
pack had dared to raid a shepherd’s flock.
He remembered a time in his youth when
he’d been skewered with a pitchfork for
such bad behavior. Cort had been the one
to drag both him and his hard won ewe
home.
Stacia smiled. “I thought you might
appreciate a treat.”
“You’re spoiling me,” he said, not
hesitating in biting into the rare meat. With
Maralee out of sight, he allowed his
instinct to devour to take over him. He
was soon licking the bare bone zealously.
Stacia
grinned
at
his
obvious
enjoyment. “How was it?” she asked,
taking delicate nibbles of her own meat.
“Delicious,” he growled.
Stacia watched him for a moment and
then said, “I thought you’d do the right
thing by Rella at least.”
Nash’s eyes widened. “What?”
“If Rella finds a new mate, we’ll lose
those babies.”
“What are you talking about? Rella
would never prevent us from seeing the
twins or Carsha,” Nash said, knowing it
was his mother’s fear of being left alone
that made her so irrational.
“I thought if you took Rella as your
mate, there’d be no risk of that,” Stacia
said. “There’s been a Wolf from another
pack asking about her. She’s considering
leaving our pack for another.”
“What? Why hasn’t anyone told me of
this before now?”
“You are so preoccupied with that
human it makes little difference what
anyone tells you.”
“That’s not fair, Mother.” He thought
about the implications of Rella leaving
their pack and taking the children with her.
For one thing, the small family would lose