
A 2010 Fresh Fiction Favorite Read!
Being a mechanic is hard work. Mercy Thompson, for instance,
just spent the last couple of months trying to evade the
murderous queen of the local vampire seethe, and now the
leader of the werewolf pack - who's
maybe-more-than-just-a-friend - has asked for her help. A
book of fae secrets has come to light and they're all about
to find out how implacable - and dangerous - the fae can be. OK, so maybe her troubles have nothing to do with the job.
But she sure could use a holiday ...
Excerpt Chapter One
The starter complained as it turned over the old Buick’s
heavy engine. I felt a lot of sympathy for it since fighting
outside my weight class was something I was intimately
familiar with. I’m a coyote shapeshifter playing in a world
of werewolves and vampires — outmatched is an
understatement.
“One more time,” I told Gabriel, my seventeen-year-old
office manager, who was sitting in the driver’s seat of his
mother’s Buick. I sniffed and dried my nose on the shoulder
of my work overalls. Runny noses are part and parcel of
working in the winter.
I love being a mechanic, runny nose, greasy hands, and
all.
It’s a life full of frustration and barked knuckles,
followed by brief moments of triumph that make all the rest
worthwhile. I find it a refuge from the chaos my life has
been lately: no one is likely to die if I can’t fix his car.
Not even if it is his mother’s car. It had been a short
day at school, and Gabriel had used his free time to try to
fix his mother’s car. He’d taken it from running badly to
not at all, then had a friend tow it to the shop to see if I
could fix it.
The Buick made a few more unhealthy noises. I stepped
back from the open engine compartment. Fuel, fire, and air
make the engine run — providing that the engine in questions
isn’t toast.
“It’s not catching, Mercy,” said Gabriel, as if I hadn’t
noticed.
He gripped the steering wheel with elegant but
work-roughened hands. There was a smear of grease on his
cheekbone, and one eye was red because he hadn’t put on
safety glasses when he’d crawled under the car. He’d been
rewarded with a big chunk of crud — rusty metal and grease—
in his eye.
Even though my big heaters were keeping the edge off the
cold, we both wore jackets. There is no way to keep a shop
truly warm when you are running garage doors up and down all
day.
“Mercy, my mamá has to be at work in an hour.”
“The good news is that I don’t think it’s anything you
did.” I stepped away from the engine compartment and met his
frantic eyes. “The bad news is that it’s not going to be
running in an hour. Jury’s out on whether it will be back on
the road at all.”
He slid out of the car and leaned under the hood to stare
at the Little Engine That Couldn’t as if he might find some
wire I hadn’t noticed that would miraculously make it run. I
left him to his brooding and went through the hall to my
office.
Behind the counter was a grubby, used-to-be-white board
with hooks where I put the keys of cars I was working on —
and a half dozen mystery keys that predated my tenure. I
pulled a set of keys attached to a rainbow peace sign
keychain, then trotted back to the garage. Gabriel was back
to sitting behind the wheel of his mother’s Buick and
looking sick. I handed him the keys through the open window.
“Take the Bug,” I told him. “Tell your mom that the turn
signals don’t blink, so she’ll have to use hand signals. And
tell her not to pull back on the steering wheel too hard or
it will come off.”
His face got stubborn.
“Look,” I said before he could refuse, “it’s not going to
cost me anything. It won’t hold all the kids” — not that
the Buick did, there were a lot of kids — “and it doesn’t
have much of a heater. But it runs, and I’m not using it.
We’ll work on the Buick after hours until it’s done, and you
can owe me that many hours.”
I was pretty sure the engine had gone to the great
junkyard in the sky — and I knew that Sylvia, Gabriel’s
mother, couldn’t afford to buy a new engine, any more than
she could buy a newer car. So I’d call upon Zee, my old
mentor, to work his magic on it. Literal magic — there was
not much figurative about Zee. He was a fae, a gremlin whose
natural element was metal.
“The Bug’s your project car, Mercy.” Gabriel’s protest
was weak.
My last project car, a Kharmann Ghia, had sold. My take
of the profits, shared with a terrific bodyman and an
upholsterer, had purchased a ’71 Beetle and a ’65 VW Bus
with a little left over. The Bus was beautiful and didn’t
run, the Bug had the opposite problem.
“I’ll work on the Bus first. Take the keys.”
The expression on his face was older than it should have
been. “Only if you’ll let the girls come over and clean on
Saturdays until we get the Bug back to you.”
I’m not dumb. His little sisters knew how to work — I was
getting the better of the bargain.
“Deal,” I said before he could take it back. I shoved the
keys into his hand. “Go take the car to Sylvia before she’s
late.”
“I’ll come back afterward.”
“It’s late, I’m going home. Just come at the usual time
tomorrow.”
Tomorrow was Saturday. Officially, I was closed on the
weekends, but recent excursions to fight vampires had cut
into my bottom line. So I’d been staying open later and
working on the weekend to make a little extra money.
There is no cash in battling evil: just the opposite in
my experience. Hopefully, I was done with vampires — the
last incident had nearly gotten me killed, and my luck was
due to run out; a woman whose best talent was changing into
a coyote had no business in the big leagues.
I sent Gabriel on his way and started the process of
closing up. Garage doors down, heat turned to sixty, lights
off. Till drawer in the safe, my purse out. Just as I
reached for the final light switch, my cell phone rang.
“Mercy?” It was Zee’s son, Tad, who was going to an Ivy
League college back East on full scholarship. The fae were
considered a minority, so his official status as half-fae
and his grades had gotten him in — hard work was keeping him
there.
“Hey, Tad, what’s up?”
“I got an odd message on my cell phone last night. Did
Phin give you something?”
“Phin?”
“Phineas Brewster, the guy I sent you to when the police
had Dad up on murder charges and you needed some information
about the fae to find out who really killed that man. .”
It took me a second. “The bookstore guy? He loaned me a
book.” I’d been meaning to return it for a while.
Just . . . how often do you get a chance to
read a book about the mysterious fae, written by the fae? It
was handwritten and tough to decipher, slow going — and Phin
hadn’t seemed anxious to get it back when he’d loaned it to
me. “Tell him I’m sorry, and I’ll return it to him tonight.
I have a date later on, but I can get it to him before that
.”
There was a little pause. “Actually, he was a little
unclear as to whether he wanted it back or not. He just
said, ‘Tell Mercy to take care of that thing I gave her.’
Now I can’t get through to him, his phone is shut off.
That’s why I called you instead.” He made a frustrated
noise. “Thing is, Mercy, he never turns that damn phone off.
He likes to make sure his grandmother can get in touch with
him.”
Grandmother? Maybe Phin was younger than I’d thought.
“You are worried,” I said.
He made a self-deprecating noise. “I know, I know. I’m
paranoid.”
“No trouble,” I said. “I ought to get it back to him
anyway. Unless he keeps long hours, he won’t be at the store
by the time I can get there. Do you have a home address for
him?”
He did. I wrote it down and let him go with reassurances.
As I locked the door and set the security alarm, I glanced
up at the hidden camera. Adam would probably not be watching
— unless someone triggered an alarm, mostly the cameras ran
all by themselves and simply sent pictures to be recorded.
Still . . . as I started for my car, I kissed
my hand and blew it to the tiny lens that watched my every
move, then mouthed, “See you tonight.”
My lover was worried about how well a coyote could play
with the wolves, too. Being an Alpha werewolf made him a
little overbearing about his concern – and being the CEO of
a security contracting firm for various government agencies
gave him access to lots of tools to indulge his protective
instincts. I’d been mad about the cameras when he’d first
had them installed, but I found them reassuring now. A
coyote adapts, that’s how she survives.
Phineas Brewster lived on the third floor of one of the
new condo complexes in West Pasco. It didn’t seem like the
sort of place where a collector of old books would live —
but maybe he got his fill of dust, mold, and mildew at work
and didn’t need it in his home.
I was halfway between my car and the building when I
realized that I hadn’t brought the book when I got out of
the car. I hesitated, but decided to leave it where it was,
wrapped in a towel on the backseat of the Rabbit. The towel
was to protect the book — in case I hadn’t gotten all the
grease off my hands — but it worked okay to disguise it from
would-be thieves, which seemed unlikely here anyway.
I climbed up two sets of stairs and knocked on the door
marked 3B. After a count of ten, I rang the doorbell.
Nothing. I rang the doorbell one more time, and the door at
3A opened up.
“He’s not there,” said a gruff voice.
I turned to see a skinny old man, neatly dressed in old
boots, new jeans, button-down Western shirt, and bolo tie.
All he was missing was a cowboy hat. Something — I think it
was the boots — smelled faintly of horse. And fae.
“He isn’t?”
Officially all the fae are out to the public and have
been for a long time. But the truth is that the Gray Lords
who rule the fae have been very selective about which of
them the public gets to know about, and which ones might
upset the public – or are more useful posing as human.
There are, for instance, a few Senators who are fae posing
as humans. There is nothing in the Constitution that makes
it illegal for a fae to be a Senator and the Gray Lords want
to keep it that way.
This fae was working pretty hard at passing for human, he
wouldn’t appreciate me pointing out that he wasn’t. So I
kept my discovery to myself.
There was a twinkle in the faded eyes as he shook his
head. “Nope, he hasn’t been home all day .”
“Do you know where he is?”
“Phin?” The old man laughed, displaying teeth so even and
white they looked false. Maybe they were. “Well, now. He
spends most of his time at his store. Nights, too,
sometimes.”
“Was he here last night?” I asked.
He looked at me and grinned. “Nope. Not him. Maybe he
bought up some estate’s library and is staying at the store
while he catalogs it. He does that sometimes.” Phin’s
neighbor glanced up at the sky, judging the time. “He won’t
answer the door after hours. Closes himself in the back room
and can’t hear anyone. Best wait and go check at the shop in
the morning.”
I looked at my watch. I needed to get home and get ready
for my date with Adam.
“If you have something for him,” the old man said, his
eyes clear as the sky, “you can leave it with me.”
Fae don’t lie. I used to think it was can’t lie,
but the book I’d borrowed made it pretty clear that there
were other factors involved. Phin’s neighbor hadn’t said he
was working at the store. He said maybe. He didn’t say he
didn’t know where Phin was, either. My instincts were
chiming pretty hard, and I had to work to appear casual.
“I’m here to check up on him,” I told him, which was the
truth. “His phone is off, and I was worried about him.” And
then I took a chance. “He hasn’t mentioned any of his
neighbors — are you new?”
He said, “Moved in not long ago.” Then changed the
subject. “Maybe he left the charger at home. Did you try the
store phone?”
“I only have one number for him,” I told him. “I think
that was his cell.”
“If you leave your name, I’ll tell him you stopped in.”
I let my friendly smile widen. “No worries. I’ll run him
down myself. Good to know he has neighbors who are watching
over him.” I didn’t thank him — thanking a fae implies that
you feel indebte, and being indebted to a fae is a very bad
thing. I just gave him a cheerful wave from the bottom of
the stairs.
He didn’t try to stop me, but he watched me all the way
out to my car. I drove out of sight before pulling over and
calling Tad.
“Hello,” his voice said. “This is my answering machine.
Maybe I’m studying, maybe I’m out having a good time. Leave
your name and number, and maybe I’ll call you back.”
“Hey,” I told Tad’s answering machine. “This is Mercy.
Phin wasn’t home.” I hesitated. Safely back in my car, I
thought that I might have overreacted about his neighbor.
The better I know the fae, the scarier they seem. But it was
probable that he was harmless. Or that he was indeed really
scary — but it had nothing to do with Phin.
So I said, “Met Phin’s neighbor — who is fae. He
suggested calling the store. Do you have the store’s number?
Have you tried calling him there? I’ll keep looking for
him.”
I hung up and put the Rabbit in gear with every intention
of going home. But somehow I ended up on the interstate
headed for Richland instead of Finley.
Phin’s mysterious call to Tad and the suspicion I felt
toward Phin’s neighbor made me nervous. It was a short trip
to Phin’s bookstore, I told myself. It wouldn’t hurt to just
stop by. Tad was stuck on the other side of the country, and
he was worried.
The Uptown is a strip mall, Richland’s oldest shopping
center. Unlike its newer, upscale counterparts, the Uptown
looks as though someone took a couple of dozen stores of
various styles and sizes, stuck them all together, and
surrounded them with a parking lot.
It houses the sorts of businesses that wouldn’t thrive in
the bigger mall in Kennewick: nonchain restaurants, several
antique (junk) stores, a couple of resale clothing
boutiques, a music store, a doughnut shop, a bar or two, and
several shops best described as eclectic.
Phin’s bookstore was near the south end of the mall, its
large picture windows tinted dark to protect the books from
sun-damage. Gilt lettering on the biggest window labeled
it: BREWSTER’S LIBRARY, USED AND COLLECTIBLE
BOOKS.
There were no lights behind the shades in the windows,
and the door was locked. I put my ear against the glass and
listened.
In my human shape, I still have great hearing, not quite
as sharp as the coyote’s, but good enough to tell that there
was no one moving around in the store. I knocked, but there
was no response.
On the window to the right of the door was a sign with
the hours the shop was open: ten to six Tuesday through
Saturday. Sunday and Monday hours by appointment. The number
listed was the one I already had. Six had come and gone.
I knocked on the door one last time, then glanced at my
watch again. If I skirted the speed limit, I’d have ten
minutes before the wolf was at my door.
My roommate’s
car was in the driveway, looking right at home next to the
’78 single-wide trailer where I lived. Very expensive cars,
like true works of art, shape the environment to suit
themselves. Just by virtue of being there, his car made my
home upper-class — no matter what the house itself looked
like.
Samuel had the same gift of never being out of place,
always fitting in, while at the same time he conveyed the
sense that here was someone special, someone important.
People liked him instinctively, and trusted him. It served
him well as a doctor, but I was inclined to think it served
him a little too well as a man. He was too used to getting
his way. When charm didn’t cut it, he used a tactical brain
that would have done credit to Rommel.
Thus, his presence as my roommate.
It had taken me a while to figure out the real reason
he’d moved in with me: Samuel needed a pack. Werewolves
don’t do well on their own, especially not old wolves, and
Samuel was a very old wolf. Old and dominant. In any pack
except his father’s, he would be Alpha. His father was Bran,
the Marrok, the most überwerewolf of them all.
Samuel was a doctor, and that was more than enough
responsibility for him. He didn’t want to be Alpha, he
didn’t want to stay in his father’s pack.
He was lone wolfing it, living with me in the territory
of the Columbia Basin Pack, but not part of it. I wasn’t a
werewolf, but I wasn’t a helpless human, either. I’d been
raised in his father’s pack, and that was close to being
family. So far he and Adam, the local pack’s Alpha — and my
lover — hadn’t killed each other. I was moderately hopeful
that would continue to be the case.
“Samuel?” I called as I rushed into the house. “Samuel?”
He didn’t answer, but I could smell him. The distinctive
odor of werewolf was too strong to be just a leftover trace.
I jogged down the narrow hall to his room and knocked softly
at the closed door.
It was unlike him not to acknowledge me when I got home.
I worried about Samuel enough to make myself paranoid. He
wasn’t quite right. Broken, but functional, I thought, with
an underlying depression that seemed to be getting neither
better nor worse as the months passed. His father suspected
something was wrong, and I was pretty sure the reason Samuel
was living with me and not in his own house in Montana was
because he didn’t want his father to know for certain how
badly broken Samuel really was.
Samuel opened his door, looking his usual self, tall and
rangy: Attractive as most werewolves are regardless of bone
structure. Perfect health, permanent youth and lots of
muscle are a pretty surefire formula for good looks.
“You rang?” he said in an expressionless imitation of
Lurch, dropping his voice farther into the bass register
than I’d ever heard him manage. We’d been watching a
marathon of Addams Family on TV last night. If he was
being funny, he was all right. Even if he wasn’t quite
meeting my eyes, as if he might be worried about what I’d
see.
A purring Medea was stretched across one shoulder. My
little Manx cat gave me a pleased look out of half-slitted
eyes as he stroked her. As his hand moved from along her
back, she dug in her hind claws and arched her tailless butt
into the air.
“Ouch,” he said, trying to pull her off, but she’d gotten
her claws through his worn flannel shirt and was hooked onto
him tighter than Velcro — and more painfully, too.
“Uhm,” I told him, trying not to laugh. “Adam and I are
going out tonight. You’re on your own for dinner. I didn’t
make it to the grocery store, so the pickings are meager.”
His back was to me as he leaned over his bed so if he
managed to unstick the cat, she wouldn’t fall all the way to
the floor.
“Fine,” he said. “Ouch, cat. Don’t you know I could eat
you in a single bite? You wouldn’t even —ouch — even
leave a tail sticking out.”
I left him to it and hurried over to my own room. My cell
rang before I made it to the doorway.
“Mercy, he’s headed over, and I’ve got some news for
you,” said Adam’s teenage daughter’s voice in my ear.
“Hey, Jesse. Where are we going tonight?”
Thinking of him, I could feel his anticipation and the
smooth leather of the steering wheel under his hands —
because Adam wasn’t just my lover, he was my mate.
In werewolf terms, that meant something slightly
different for every mated pair. We were bound not just by
love, but by magic. I’ve learned that some mated pairs can
barely perceive the difference . . . and some
virtually become the same person. Ugh. Thankfully, Adam and
I fell somewhere in the middle. Mostly.
We’d overloaded the magic circuit between us when we’d
first sealed our bond. Since then it had proved to be
erratic and invasive, flickering in and out for a few hours,
then gone again for days. Disconcerting. I expect I’d have
gotten used to having the connection to Adam already if it
were consistent, as Adam assured me it should have been. As
it was, it tended to take me by surprise.
I felt the wheel vibrate under Adam’s hand as he started
the car, then he was gone, and I was standing in my grubbies
talking to his daughter on the phone.
“Bowling,” she said.
“Thanks, kid,” I told her. “I’ll bring back an ice-cream
cone for you. Gotta shower.”
“You owe me five bucks though ice cream wouldn’t hurt,”
she told me with a mercenary firmness I could respect.
“You’d better shower fast.”
Adam and I had a game, a just-for-fun thing. His wolf
playing with me, I thought, because it had that feel: a
simple game with no losers was wolf play, something they did
with the ones they loved. It didn’t happen often in the pack
as a whole, but among smaller groups, yes.
My mate wouldn’t tell me where he was taking us — leaving
it for me to discover his plans by whatever means necessary.
It was a sign of his respect that he expected me to be
successful.
Tonight, I’d bribed his daughter to call me with whatever
she knew, even if it was just what he was wearing when he
walked out the door. Then I’d be appropriately dressed —
though I’d act astonished that we matched so well when I
hadn’t a clue where he was taking me.
Play for flirting, but also play designed to distract
both of us from the reason we were dating instead of living
together as mates. His pack didn’t like it that his mate was
a coyote shifter. Even more than their natural brethren,
wolves don’t share territory well with other predators. But
they’d had a long time to get used to it, and were mostly
resigned — until Adam brought me into the pack. It shouldn’t
have been possible. I’ve never heard of a non-werewolf mate
becoming pack.
I set out clothes to wear and hopped into the shower. The
showerhead was set low, so it wasn’t hard to keep my braids
out of the full force of the water as I scrubbed my hands
with pumice soap and a nailbrush. I’d already cleaned up,
but every little bit helped. A lot of the dirt was
ingrained, and my hands would never look
fashion-model-tended.
When I emerged from the bathroom in a towel, I could hear
voices in the living room. Samuel and Adam were deliberately
keeping it soft enough that I couldn’t hear the words, but
it didn’t sound like there was any tension. They liked each
other just fine, but Adam was Alpha and Samuel a lone wolf
who outpowered him. Sometimes they had trouble being in the
same room together, but evidently not tonight.
I started to reach for the jeans I’d laid out on my bed.
Bowling.
I hesitated. I just couldn’t see it in my head. Not the
bowling part — I’m sure that Adam enjoyed bowling. Throwing
a weighty ball at a bunch of helpless pins and watching the
resultant mayhem is just the kind of thing that werewolves
love.
What I couldn’t see was Adam telling Jesse he was taking
me bowling. Not when he was trying to keep it from me. The
last time all she’d been able to do was tell me what he was
wearing when he left the house.
Maybe I was just being paranoid. I opened my closet and
looked at the meager pickings hanging there. I had more
dresses than I’d had a year ago. Three more.
Jesse would have noticed if he’d dressed up.
I glanced at the bed where my new jeans and a dark blue
T-shirt summoned me with their comfort. Bribes can go both
ways — and Jesse would find it amusing to play double agent.
So I pulled out a pale gray dress, classy enough that I
could wear it to all but the most formal of occasions and
not so dressy that it would look out of place at a
restaurant or theater. If we really went bowling, I could
bowl in the dress. I slipped into the dress and quickly
unbraided my hair and brushed it out.
“Mercy, aren’t you ready, yet?” asked Samuel, a touch of
amusement in his voice. “Didn’t you say you had a hot date?”
I opened the door and saw I hadn’t gotten it quite right.
Adam was wearing a tux.
Adam is shorter than Samuel, with the build of a wrestler
and the face of . . . I don’t know. It is
Adam’s face, and it is beautiful enough to distract people
from the air of power that he conveys. His hair is dark, and
he keeps it short. He told me once that it is so the
military personnel that he has to deal with in the course of
his security business feel comfortable with him. But these
last few months, as I’ve gotten to know him better, I think
it is because his face embarrasses him. The short hair
removes any hint of vanity, and says, “Here I am, let’s get
down to business.”
I would love him if he had three eyes and two teeth, but
sometimes his beauty just hits me. I blinked once, took a
deep breath, and brushed off the need to proclaim him
mine so I could pull my mind back to interactive
mode.
“Ah,” I said, snapping my fingers, “I knew I’d forgotten
something.” I ran back to my closet and snagged a sparkly
silver wrap that dressed the gray up appropriately.
I came back out to see Samuel giving Adam a five-dollar
bill.
“I told you she’d figure it out,” Adam said smugly.
“Good,” I told him. “You can pay Jesse with that. She
told me we were going bowling. I need to find a better spy.”
He grinned, and I had to work to keep my face annoyed.
Oddly enough, given his face, it wasn’t the beauty of
Adam-with-a-smile that delighted me when he grinned — though
he really was spectacular. It was the knowledge that I’d
made him smile. Adam was not given to . . .
happiness or playfulness, except with me.
“Hey, Mercy,” Samuel said, as Adam opened the front door.
I turned to him, and he gave me a kiss on the forehead.
“You be happy.” The odd phrase caught my attention, but
there was nothing odd in the rest of what he said. “I’ve got
the red-eye shift. Most likely I won’t see you when you get
back.” He looked up at Adam, meeting his eyes in a
male-to-male challenge that had Adam’s eyes narrowing. “Take
care of her.” Then he pushed us out and closed the door
before Adam could take offense at the order.
After a long moment, Adam laughed and shook his head.
“Don’t worry,” he said, knowing the other wolf would hear
him through the door. “Mercy takes care of herself; I just
get to clean up the mess afterward.” If I hadn’t been
watching his face, I wouldn’t have seen the twist on his
lips as he spoke. As if he didn’t like what he was saying
very much.
I felt suddenly self-conscious. I like who I am — but
there are plenty of men who wouldn’t. I am a mechanic.
Adam’s first wife had been all soft curves, and I was mostly
muscle. Not very feminine, my mother liked to complain. And
then there were those idiosyncrasies that were the aftermath
of rape.
Adam held out his hand to me, and I put mine in his. He
had gotten very good at inviting my touch. At not touching
me first.
I looked at our clasped hands as we went down the porch
stairs. I’d thought that I was getting better, that the
involuntary flinching, the fear was leaving. It occurred to
me that maybe he was just getting better at working around
my fears.
“What’s wrong?” he asked, as we stopped beside his truck.
It was so new there was still a sticker on the rear-seat
window. He’d replaced his SUV after one of his wolves had
dented in the fender defending me — followed by a separate
incident when an ice elf (honking huge fae) who was chasing
me, dropped the front half of a building on it.
“Mercy — ” He frowned at me. “You don’t owe me for the
damned truck.”
His hand was still holding mine, and I had a moment to
realize that our fickle mate bond had given him an insight
into what I was thinking, before a vision dropped me to my
knees.
It was dark, and Adam was at his computer in his home
office. His eyes burned, his hands ached, and his back was
stiff from so many hours of work.
The house was quiet. Too quiet. No wife to protect from
the world. It had been a long time since he’d loved her — it
is dangerous to love someone who doesn’t love you in return.
He’d been a soldier too long to put himself deliberately in
danger without a good reason. She loved his status, his
money, and his power. She’d have loved it better if it had
belonged to someone who did as she told him.
He didn’t love her, but he’d loved taking care of her.
Loved buying her little presents, loved the idea of her.
Losing her had been bad, losing his daughter was much,
much worse. Jesse trailed noise and cheer everywhere she
went — and her absence was . . . difficult.
His wolf was restless. A creature of the moment, his wolf.
There was no way to comfort it with the knowledge that he’d
have Jesse back for the summer. Not that he derived much
comfort from that either. So he tried to lose himself in
work.
Someone knocked on the back door.
He pushed back the chair and had to pause. The wolf was
angry that someone had breached his sanctuary. Not even his
wolves had been brave enough these past few days to approach
him in his home.
By the time he stalked into the kitchen, he had it mostly
under control. He jerked open the back door and expected to
see one of his wolves. But it was Mercy.
She didn’t look cheerful — but then she seldom did when
she had to come over and talk to him. She was tough and
independent and not at all happy to have him interfere in
any way with that independence. It had been a long time
since someone had bossed him around the way she did — and he
liked it. More than a wolf who’d been Alpha for twenty years
ought to like it.
She smelled of burnt car oil, jasmine from the shampoo
she’d been using that month, and chocolate. Or maybe that
last was the cookies on the plate she handed him.
“Here,” she said stiffly. And he realized it was shyness
that pinched in the corner of her mouth. “Chocolate usually
helps me regain my balance when life kicks me in the teeth.”
She didn’t wait for him to say anything, just turned
around and walked back to her house.
He took the cookies back to the office with him. After a
few minutes, he ate one. Chocolate, thick and dark, spread
across his tongue, its bitterness alleviated by a sinful
amount of brown sugar and vanilla. He’d forgotten to eat and
hadn’t realized it.
But it wasn’t the chocolate or the food that made him
feel better. It was Mercy’s kindness to someone she viewed
as her enemy. And right at that moment, he realized
something. She would never love him for what he could do for
her.
He ate another cookie before getting up to make himself
dinner.
Adam shut down the bond between us until it was nothing
more than a gossamer thread.
“I’m sorry,” he murmured against my ear. “So sorry. F —
” He swallowed the obscenity before it left his lips. He
pulled me closer, and I realized we were both sitting in the
gravel driveway, huddled next to the truck. And the gravel
was really cold on my bare skin.
“Are you all right?” he said.
“Do you know what you showed me?” I asked. My voice was
hoarse.
“I thought it was a flashback,” he answered. He’d seen me
have them before.
“Not one of mine,” I told him. “One of yours.”
He stilled. “Was it bad?”
He’d been in Vietnam; he’d been a werewolf since before I
was born — he’d probably seen a lot of bad stuff.
“It seemed like a private moment that I had no business
seeing,” I told him truthfully. “But it wasn’t bad.”
I’d seen him the moment that I’d become something more
than an assignment from the Marrok.
I remembered feeling stupid standing on his back porch
with a plate of cookies for a man whose life had just gone
down in the flames of a nasty divorce. He hadn’t said
anything when he answered the door — so I’d assumed that
he’d thought it stupid, too. I’d gone back home as fast as I
could without running.
I had had no idea that it had helped. Nor that he saw me
as tough and capable. Funny, I’d always thought I looked
weak to the werewolves.
So what if I still flinched if he forgot and put a hand
on my shoulder? Time would fix that, I was already a lot
better: daily flashbacks to the rape were a thing of the
past. We’d work through it. Adam was willing to make
allowances for me.
And our bond did its rubber-band thing, which it did
sometimes, and snapped back into place, giving him access to
my thoughts as if my head were clear as glass.
“Whatever you need,” he said, his body suddenly still as
the evening air. “Whatever I can do.”
I relaxed my shoulders, burying my nose against his
collarbone, and after a second, the relaxation was genuine.
“I love you,” I told him. “And we need to talk about me
paying you for that truck.”
“I’m not — ”
I cut off his words. I meant to put a finger against his
lips or something tender like that. But I’d jerked my head
up in reaction to his apology and slammed my forehead into
his chin. Shutting him up much more effectively than I’d
meant to as he bit his tongue.
He laughed as he bled down his shirt, and I babbled
apologies. He let his head fall back against the truck door
with a thump.
“Leave off, Mercy. It’ll close up quick enough on its
own.”
I backed up until I was sitting beside him —
half-laughing myself, because although it probably hurt
quite a bit, he was right that his injury would heal in a
few minutes. It was minor, and he was a werewolf.
“You’ll quit trying to pay for the SUV,” he told me.
“The SUV was my fault,” I informed him.
“You didn’t throw a wall on it,” he said. “I might have
let you pay for the dent — ”
“Don’t even try to lie to me,” I huffed
indignantly, and he laughed again.
“Fine. I wouldn’t have. But it’s a moot point anyway,
because after the wall fell on it, fixing the dent was out
of the question. And the ice elf’s lack of control was
completely the vampire’s fault — ”
I could have kept arguing with him — I usually like
arguing with Adam. But there were things I liked better.
I leaned forward and kissed him.
He tasted of blood and Adam — and he didn’t seem to have
any trouble following the switch from mild bickering to
passion. After a while, I don’t know how long, Adam looked
down at his bloodstained shirt and started laughing again.
“I suppose we might as well go bowling after all,” he said,
pulling me to my feet.
Start Reading SILVER BORNE Now
 Mercy Thompson
Our Past Week of Fresh Picks
|