Authors: Susan Krinard
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
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Once A Wolf
19th Century Werewolf Series – Book 2
By Susan Krinard
One
New York City, 1878
It really is the most wonderful news, Lady Rowena," the middle-aged matron said, smiling with
benevolent indulgence upon her hostess. "All society is looking forward to the wedding. And as
for short engagements"—she made a dismissive gesture—"everyone knows they are the ideal."
Lady Rowena Forster returned Mrs. Arthur Van Rijn's smile and offered her and her two
daughters another serving of tea. The young ladies accepted with just the right degree of
formal grace.
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"My girls have benefited so much from your tutoring," Mrs. Van Rijn said, observing her
daughters with pride. "I quite despaired of them ever becoming proper ladies before you took
them under your wing."
"It was my pleasure, I assure you," Rowena said. And, indeed, the girls were attractive. But they
would have been accepted in society, polished or not, because of their family's standing among
the aristocracy of New York—the aristocracy which, three years ago, had welcomed Lady
Rowena Forster into its midst.
When Rowena fled her arranged marriage in England, she had gone to the one place where her
brother Braden, the Earl of Greyburn, would never have thought to look for her: America. She
had lived quietly for a time, relying on the generous inheritance she'd received from a distant
relative. But then word had come from England that Braden no longer demanded her marriage
to the American of werewolf blood chosen for her. Though the Cause of preserving the
werewolf race was still his life's work, he no longer forced others to be an unwilling part of it.
All at once Rowena found herself free. She could go back to England, but there were painful
memories there she was not prepared to resurrect. And soon after she came out of hiding, she
found that New York society was only too glad to embrace an earl's sister from England. She
had slipped easily into the routine of a winter Season and summers at Newport or
Southampton. After nearly three years, she was an established member of the elite.
But the social round, and a strong commitment to several charitable associations, was not
enough to fill the vacancy in her life. The husband, children, and normal, human life of which
she'd always dreamed were still denied her.
Until the man she had least expected to meet had come into her circle and offered
companionship, unique understanding, and the answer to her dilemma.
"It's so gratifying that you have decided to settle here in New York," Mrs. Van Rijn went on.
"We should all miss you terribly were you to return to England."
"As I should miss you," Rowena said with a tiny nod. "We shall visit England several times a
year. Mr. MacLean no longer has any need to personally manage his family's holdings in Texas."
"But of course. He would be quite beyond the pale to expect you to live among savages." She
set down her cup and folded gloved hands in her narrow lap. "Mr. MacLean is a true
gentleman."
Yes, Rowena thought. A true gentleman. No one in New York could dispute that, least of all
herself. He was the fantasy of every unmarried woman in New York: immensely wealthy,
handsome, charming, impeccably attired and mannered, a generous patron of favored
charities, possessing the friendship of husbands on the Stock Exchange and blessed with his
family's substantial land ownership since long before the War of Secession.
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The fact that Cole MacLean had lost his arm in the War, fighting for the South, was not held
against him. It made him seem the more dashing to admiring young ladies.
How ironic that those ladies had lost him to the one woman who hadn't wanted anything to do
with him at first. Cole was, after all, the very man her brother had intended her to marry; that
knowledge had made her avoid him assiduously for nearly a year. Then she'd begun to learn
that he was the single perfect mate for her.
Yes, quite perfect.
"I'm sure you have many preparations to make," Mrs. Van Rijn said, rising. "We have imposed
too much on your time."
Rowena snapped out of her musings and stood with a muted rustle of skirts. "Not at all, Mrs.
Van Rijn. Your company, and that of your daughters, is always most welcome." She offered her
hand. "I trust that I shall see you again soon?"
"We will be attending Mrs. Peacocks Farewell Ball," Mrs. Van Rijn said. "We shall see you there.
And then, of course, we will be leaving for Newport." She pressed Rowena's hand. "Your
wedding will be the highlight of the summer Season."
Rowena murmured words of gratitude and exchanged good-byes with the two Van Rijn
daughters. Her parlor maid, Kate, showed them to the door.
Rowena watched from the window until the Van Rijn carriage was lost among the many others
negotiating the busy street, and only then allowed herself a moment to sigh and lean against
the nearest chair. The stream of callers had been endless since the formal announcement of
her engagement to Mr. Cole MacLean. She had been brought up to receive multiple guests with
perfect aplomb, and yet it was almost as if she were eager to be rid of the prescribed rituals
that amounted to little more than pretty words and self-satisfied pretensions.
She shook her head. She must be weary indeed to have such contrary thoughts. Cole would not
appreciate them. He expected her to be the exemplary hostess, a credit to his standing and
situation. When she and Cole were married, life would be much the same, if not more
challenging. She couldn't let herself falter, not even when the children arrived. Children who
would never know of their beastly heritage. Wasn't that worth every sacrifice?
Suddenly aware that Kate was still in the room, Rowena dismissed the girl and climbed the
stairs to her bedchamber. She went at once to the wardrobe and drew out the heavy wedding
gown that had been finished just days ago.
The gown was of white mousseline and silk brocade stitched with pearls, its virginal purity
appropriate in spite of Rowena's years. Few in New York would guess that she had reached the
age of thirty, and no one challenged her complete respectability.
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The dress was beautiful, extravagant, and extremely expensive. Cole had commissioned it from
Worth himself on a trip to Paris. He'd told her that it was essential to display wealth as well as
possess it; to do less would damage his reputation among their peers. Rowena had questioned
him about the necessity for such exorbitance wasted on a gown she'd wear but once. A few
coolly reproving words from him had silenced her on that subject.
She shuddered to remember how she'd behaved with Cole at the beginning. The bad habits
she'd accumulated in a life-time of defying her brother soon became disagreeably apparent.
She reacted to any challenging masculine authority with discreditable spite and sarcasm.
Cole had been the one to point out to her that her manner was overly bold, her speech much
too pointed and hardly fitting for a lady of delicacy and rank. In fact, it smacked of the vulgar
beast she wished to overcome.
He was right. He was always right. It was not his business to change; she must do the adapting.
She had not been forced to marry him; she had chosen, after two years of his acquaintance. He
had given her one final reason above all others to accept his proposal of marriage.
He alone knew what she was. She need never fear that some slip would reveal her shame, or
that her keener senses, however she struggled to keep them in check, might betray her. She
would not be burdened with knowing she deceived some ordinary man who believed that she,
too, was normal.
Human.
Cole was not human. But Braden had been mistaken in assuming him to be a willing participant
in his Cause. Cole had grown to feel the same distaste for his werewolf blood as Rowena. He
wouldn't let his wife stray one step from humanity. He alone could keep the wolf at bay—and
protect her from herself.
A gentle voice sounded deep in Rowena's mind: "But do you love him? Love is the most
important thing in the world."
Of course Cassidy, Braden's young wife, had never spoken those exact words to her, not at
Greyburn in England nor in the girl's letters to New York. But had she been here now, she would
have said something very similar.
Cassidy hadn't lost her innocence in marriage to the earl, or in embracing her werewolf nature.
She still believed that love could solve every problem.
It had no place in Rowena's plans. Once she had hoped to love, but no longer. Love and passion
were too closely entangled. Passion lay close to the animal nature, the uncontrolled wildness
that was the beast. Rowena had long ago decided that she would die rather than foster that
monster within herself.
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Romantic love, anger, yearning, desire: Ardor of any kind was behind her. Her sole desire was
for stability, and ordinary children who would look to her for guidance.
Surely that was enough.
Carefully Rowena restored the gown to its place, as if she could put troubling thoughts away
just as easily. Her uncooperative mind moved to the latest rumor—subtle, generally ignored—
that Cole had engaged in some less-than-honorable business practices.
Of course all men in his position had enemies, those who would look for blots in an otherwise
spotless reputation. Such envious busybodies would speak of dark secrets and hidden motives.
But Cole's only dark secret was his loup-garou blood, and he had renounced that forever.
Rowena sorted through her gowns to choose the one most appropriate for tonight's dinner
party at the Green-wells'. Cole would be there, of course—his last engagement before leaving
on business for Chicago. She would stand at his side as living proof that he had nothing of which
to be ashamed.
She smiled at her own conceit that Cole needed her protection. He was a man who stood
unshakably firm and dignified in the face of his anonymous detractors, and would scorn the
support of a woman. Just as he'd scorn her if she ever suggested such support.
Ringing for Kate, she removed the pins from her hair and studied her face in the dressing table
mirror. In a month, she would no longer be Lady Rowena Forster, but Mrs. Cole MacLean. Her
old identity would cease to exist. Cole made it possible. He made it inevitable.
She shivered and looked away.
The girl entered the alley without hesitation, a plain shawl drawn over her hair and her slender
form wrapped in a nondescript cloak. She paused beside a haphazard stack of crates, searching