Authors: Susan Krinard
He thought he had power over her, did he? He thought that with a few caresses he could
undermine the habits and training of a lifetime, that he could unleash the beast with a single
kiss, like a prince awakening a bewitched princess?
The Lady Rowena Forster was not so easily broken— neither with threats nor seduction. She
would teach him that lesson once and for all.
His mouth fitted itself over hers as if it belonged there. She felt his firm masculinity, the heat of
his body, his breath spilling into her mouth as she opened it to draw in a gasp. She didn't fight,
for to struggle would prove he was right.
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
Page 96 of 275
But as his arms came around her and his tongue teased the edges of her lips, she began to
forget her purpose. With an effort she tried to focus on the memory of Cole's last kiss, when his
usually restrained good-bye had become something much more passionate and possessive.
Cole's kiss. It was really no different from this. She could simply pretend it was Cole kissing her
now. Accept it, just as she accepted Cole's liberties with her person as the privilege of a
husband-to-be.
Yes. Remember what it was like when Cole kissed her. How he'd held her, how his lips had
worked over hers and demanded entrance, but didn't push beyond when she resisted.
Before Cole, only one other man had kissed her, her first human beau in England. His kisses had
been chaste. Tomás's kiss was anything but. And as he pulled her closer still, she became aware
that she was not feeling what she'd always experienced in Cole's arms. There was none of the
detachment and sense of obligation she'd believed was a woman's part in such exchanges.
Instead, she found her breath coming short, and waves of heat coursing through her body.
Tomás's hands spread across her back, kneading and rubbing until her spine felt soft as butter.
Her breasts were remarkably sensitive where they pressed against his chest, as if her bodice
and corset and chemise were no protection at all.
None of this had happened with Cole. It was as if a stranger had taken over her body—a
stranger who willingly opened her mouth to accept Tomás's gentle invasion, who began to
tremble with strange excitement when his tongue stroked hers. And this other Rowena did not
wait passively for the kiss to end. She arched her back and responded, returning the pressure of
his lips, her own hands stealing about his broad back.
The other Rowena had been waiting for this moment ever since she met Tomás Alejandro
Randall. Ever since the train and the vivid, shameful, enticing images that invaded her thoughts.
Ever since she had felt the ecstatic jolt of sensation when he'd touched her on the way to Rito
Pequeño, and when he'd stood over her bed in the village and joked of sharing it with her.
It wasn't a joke. His kiss told her so. She had not the slightest urge to laugh.
She felt, absurdly, like crying.
Abruptly he let her go and rocked back onto his knees. The pupils of his eyes were dilated and
his nostrils flared with every breath. She scrambled away, hands flying to her hair as if by
putting it in proper order she could as easily tidy her emotions.
If he had not stopped it first…
"Well?" he said.
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
Page 97 of 275
"Are you asking for my opinion?" she said, fighting to keep her voice level and dispassionate.
She balanced on unsteady legs and found the wall's support. "It was an… interesting
experience."
"Interesting?" He shook his head and laughed. "You are the first woman to use that word."
The nerve of the man. She glared down at him. "I have higher standards than your usual female
companions."
"And Cole, I assume, met those 'standards'?"
Her immediate response was to snap out an agreement, but the words caught on her tongue.
Until now, she wasn't sure she'd ever seen a truly smoldering gaze. His fit the description
perfectly.
"Cole would never treat me as you have," she said.
"Like a clever, spirited, passionate woman?"
He countered her every statement with yet another question, each one meant to bait her. " I
thought this was to be a test of my convictions. As you see, they have not wavered."
"I think you are not being honest, Rowena." He stood up to face her. "It was more than merely
interesting to me."
A warm flush started from the base of her neck. She should be insulted, not pleased, that he
found her kiss more than merely interesting. Kissing was nothing novel to a man such as he. She
was an absolute amateur by comparison.
God help her if she accepted such a compliment. If she allowed herself to think that it might
ever be repeated.
"I don't think it likely that I'll be able to give you a more accurate rating of your abilities," she
said, straightening her skirts with a twitch.
"No?" He slipped up beside her and brushed her ear with his lips. "Here we have a saying: 'Con
el tiempo se maduran las verdes.' It means, 'In time green fruit ripens.' "
"I doubt," she said, refusing to retreat so much as an inch, "that this fruit will ever be to your
taste."
"Only time will tell. And now I think it is time for you to rest." He started for the door.
"You do mean to leave me here."
"Just for one night, while your lodging is being prepared."
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
Page 98 of 275
If she said anything more, he would guess the depth of her unease. She'd be a fool to give him
ammunition. He might even offer to stay with her.
"The furs and blankets are soft," he said, "and the night is warm. Unless there is something else
you require?"
"Nothing that you could provide."
"Then I wish you a good sleep." He opened the door and paused. "If you open your heart,
Rowena, the earth and the ancients will speak to you. Listen, and you may learn how to live."
Tomás came for her the next morning when the canyon was still in shadow and the thickets of
trees and shrubbery along the river rang sweet with birdsong. Rowena tidied herself with the
water and her few personal belongings, determined not to let Tomás see how poorly she'd
slept.
It hadn't been because of the primitive accommodations, or the temperature of the air, or even
the confinement— for the door was latched, she'd found soon enough. She had lain awake all
night, listening for the voices Tomás had promised, half afraid she could hear them calling.
Telling her that she must let go. Give in to that other Rowena. Submit to the wolf.
Surrender to Tomás Alejandro Randall.
But when dawn broke, she was still herself. The figures on the wall had not spoken. She met
Tomás's searching gaze with a raised brow and faint smile.
"Good morning," she said.
"Buenos dias." He looked around the cave room, as if he expected to find some manifestation
of his mysterious ancient voices. "Your casa is ready. If you please?"
She avoided his extended hand, went to the open door, and started down the ladder before
Tomás could offer to precede her. A single horse was waiting at the bottom, side-saddled for
her use; Tomás helped her mount, took the reins, and led the animal onto the path.
Nothing about the canyon would have been familiar to her a week ago—not the red-and-gold
earth and rock, nor the stunted pines, nor the birds that called from the water's edge. She had
little reason to appreciate its sere beauty. And yet she found herself drawn to it against her will
and all recent experience. Spiny cacti unpredictably sprouted fruit and blossoms; wildflowers
clung to the most unlikely crevices; the tall cottonwood trees with their bright, rustling leaves
marched along the stream, towering above undergrowth as thick as any in an English wood.
Birds kept up a ceaseless melody.
"So this is the place you call home," she said.
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
Page 99 of 275
"It has its advantages," he said, glancing up at her. The sun, just clearing the top of the eastern
mesa, gave his skin a rich, warm glow. "Do you like it?"
His eyes were so very striking in this particular light, she observed. Had she noticed the height
of his cheekbones before, or the curling hair behind his ears, or the way his lips…
"You seem overly interested in the judgment of a prisoner," she said hastily.
"Not a prisoner, but an honored guest. As you will see."
And, indeed, as they approached the little village Rowena had her first glimpse of the welcome
awaiting her. In the dusty square formed by the five or six adobe houses, a small crowd had
gathered. At first glance it appeared to be made up largely of children, ranging in age from
babes to gawky adolescents. They darted forward in a flock like eager birds, their arms filled
with wildflowers.
Behind them came the adults. With a start, Rowena recognized the men of Tomás's outlaw
gang: Mateo and Carlos, bereft of their guns and clothed in the simple garments of farmers,
and three others similarly disarmed and dressed. They looked like ordinary villagers. With them
was an older man with a sun-seamed face and hair white with age.
And there was Esperanza. She ran toward Rowena, stopped, and ducked her head shyly.
"I told you she'd be well cared for," Tomás said. He helped Rowena dismount and called out in
Spanish to the crowd of children.
They formed a ragged row before Rowena and began to sing, voices earnest and slightly off-
key.
"They are singing a song to welcome you," he said.
Rowena bit her lower lip, completely at a loss. Children were the last thing she'd expected to
see in a den of thieves. They appeared healthy enough, and cheerful in their singing, but she
was very much afraid this was all a plot to charm her. A plot that was succeeding.
"Did you arrange this?" she hissed to Tomás.
"I told them about you," he said. His mouth quirked in a wry smile. "We do not have many
visitors here."
"Do they believe I am an honored guest?"
"Of course. Do you wish to tell them otherwise?"
Esperanza crept up beside Rowena and took her hand. Moved by the girl's trust, Rowena
wondered that she felt so, so…
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
Page 100 of 275
Needed. Wanted. Accepted, utterly without question. All because of a mute girl, a chorus of
barefoot cherubs, and the winning words of a smooth-tongued scoundrel.
The children finished their song and two of them, a round-faced girl of ten and a sturdy boy
some years older, came forward to present Rowena with a handful of yellow flowers.
"This is Enrique," Tomás said, "and his sister Pilar."
Rowena accepted the flowers gravely. "Thank you, Enrique. Pilar."
Pilar grinned, showing several crooked teeth, and spoke in a whisper.
"She says you're a very beautiful lady," Tomás translated.
"Gracias," Rowena said to the child. "Do they not speak English?"
"They seldom leave the canyon." He beckoned the other children forward. One by one he
named them for her:
Aquilino and Gita, the son and daughter of Mateo, and Miguel, Gertrudis, and Catalina, the
children of Carlos. Gita was the smallest at two or three years, and Enrique the eldest, on the
brink of young manhood. They were wide-eyed with curiosity and bubbling with questions
Rowena couldn't understand or answer.
She had a number of questions herself. "Where are their mothers?" she asked.
"Mateo's wife was very ill and died a year ago. Carlos lost his woman before he joined us.
Enrique and Pilar are huerfanos—orphans."
It explained much. She studied Pilar and noted the ragged hair, undoubtedly cut with the dull
edge of a knife, and the too-large baggy trousers she wore under a boy's shirt. She was every
bit as dusty and unkempt as the boys, whose clothing was streaked with dirt from rough-and-
tumble play. The other girls were in much the same condition. How long had it been since
they'd enjoyed a woman's personal care and instruction, or worn anything resembling a dress?
This was what came of children living among thieves. At Greyburn, Braden's estate in England,
the children of tenants and laborers had been assured of regular medical care, good sturdy
clothing, and a basic education. Rowena had helped distribute charity to needy families. Even at
Rito Paqueno the children had complete families and a stable life. What could these children
expect? The girls, especially, must suffer in such a place.
But Tomás did not seem in the least concerned. He knelt among them and shared a joke that
sent them into gales of laughter. He was hardly more than a heedless boy himself. With a roar
he made a frightening face and raised his arms as if to pounce on any child too slow to escape.