About Face (Wolf Within) (20 page)

Read About Face (Wolf Within) Online

Authors: Amy Lee Burgess

BOOK: About Face (Wolf Within)
12.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Paddy stood at the stove over a pan of frying bacon while Murphy whisked eggs in a white ceramic bowl on the granite countertop.

“Take over.” He handed me the whisk so he could have his turn in the shower. Quarters were tight in the galley kitchen, but I didn’t think he had to brush quite so much of his damn body against mine as he squeezed past.

I stared after him for a second and then turned to the eggs. The mouthwatering scent of bacon nearly drove me to my knees, but I gamely began to whisk.

“Liam said you shifted and your wolf was fantastic.” Paddy flipped several slices of bacon over in the pan and gave me a grin.

“So what,” I snarled and his grin faded.

“Jaysus, woman, isn’t this what you wanted? Your wolf to be normal and you and Liam back together?”

I grimly beat the damn eggs into a froth.

“You did tell me you came here to make it up with him. I’d say shifting proved you made up with him considering you can’t shift without having it off with each other. People who aren’t together don’t screw, do they?”

“You’re so fucking eloquent, Paddy.” I brandished the dripping whisk, and he ducked, obviously recalling the many objects I’d thrown at his head since we’d met each other.

“Why are you here?” I looked around for a frying pan so I could scramble the eggs, and Paddy prudently backed away, his gaze fixed on my hands, presumably so he’d know when to dodge.

“Can’t a man have breakfast with his best mate?” He ripped off a few sheets of paper towels and arranged them on a plate to soak up the grease from the bacon.

“Are either of you going to tell me anything about how we’re supposed to save your sorry ass, or I am just here to scramble eggs and be emotionally manipulated?” I dumped the eggs into the heated frying pan, and they hissed against the bubbling butter.

“Is that how you feel? Manipulated?” Paddy’s expression was sympathetic, and half of me wanted to fling myself into his arms and sob into his chest while he murmured horrible things about Murphy into my ear and told me it would be all right. The other half of me snorted in derision and continued to stir the eggs.

“You know what that bastard said to me?” I shook the spatula I used to stir the eggs at Paddy, and he flinched but held his ground. “He told me he had no idea I loved him and that if he had, he’d never have left me behind. Can you believe the fucking gall? As if it wasn’t apparent I trailed after him like a lovelorn idiot?
You
saw it, didn’t you?”

“Yes,” he agreed warily. “I wouldn’t call you a lovelorn idiot, Stanz, but the way you felt about him was clear. Every time someone would bring him up at the tribunal, your face got all funny and wistful and hurt and we all knew. He’s the idiot. Never seeing what’s right before his eyes.

“I know it’s my fault what happened between you and I’m sorry. I’m not sure what to do to make it better, or even if I can, but if you want me to take his sorry ass out back and thrash him, I’m your man, okay?”

“Why is it that your first answer to any problem is a fight?” I rolled my eyes, but there was a secret part of me that felt absurdly cheered at the idea Paddy would kick Murphy’s ass for me.

“Because it’s a damn good fix to most things that are broken.” Paddy crunched a piece of bacon between his white teeth. “And because I love a good fight, of course. The smell of blood is better than coffee, to my mind.”

“Barbarian.” I turned back to the eggs and rescued them before they could burn.

I set the pan on a cold burner and moved to the refrigerator so I could get milk for the coffee. The carton was on the door beside a glass bottle of unopened ketchup. I froze, and a huge lump rose in my throat.

“You don’t know me at all if you thought I’d come after him.” I turned around with ketchup in one hand, milk in the other. Paddy saw my expression and stopped laughing.

“Why’d you tell him I’d come after him? You shouldn’t have done that.”

“You’re here, aren’t you?” He reached to shut the refrigerator door behind me.

“Because Allerton sent me.”

“Bollocks.” Paddy followed me to the table with the plate of bacon. “You wanted him back. You still do. And he wants you. So why not go for it? Stop fighting. Stop playing the blame game, and just move on.”

“Easy for you to say. You weren’t the one left behind. You don’t have to live in the shadow of—”

“If you say ‘a dead woman’ or ‘Sorcha,’ I’m out of here.” Murphy stood in the bedroom doorway. His dark eyes sparked with anger. “The only one who gives a shit about that woman anymore is you, and I swear you use her as a shield half the time, a bludgeon the other. I’m through trying to convince you she doesn’t matter to me anymore.
You
do. You don’t want to hear it, maybe because you’re guilty about loving somebody after Grey and Elena, or maybe because you think you’re not good enough because of all the things that have happened to you.

“I could fucking kill Jonathan Archer and all of Riverglow for casting you out of your pack. You let them take every last shred of self-worth you had and flush it down the toilet. You know why you can’t take a frigging compliment? Because you don’t think you’re worthy. And everything you do, you’re screaming for people to listen to you, to look at you, and when they do, you push them away.

“You have to figure yourself out…before we really do give up on you. Nobody likes to beat their brains out against a brick wall forever.”

A dreadful silence descended over the room. I stood there with the bottle of ketchup in my hand, Paddy with the plate of bacon. Murphy took a deep breath before he grabbed his leather jacket and slammed out the front door.

 

 

Chapter 11

 

“Classical music’s for practicing your technique, woman, not for a night in an Irish pub.” Declan Byrne managed to roar his criticism so loud everyone in the pub broke off what they were doing—and many of them had been listening to me play Mozart on the harp—to stare.

From his perch on a bar stool, Paddy made a rude gesture behind Declan’s back, but I didn’t grin as he’d no doubt intended. The Mozart had been an attempt to cheer myself after a brooding day in Murphy’s apartment watching movies with Paddy and Fee.

We’d fled to An Puca in search of food, and the lure of the harp had proved too much for me again. Maybe I could play out my melancholy and confusion, but no, Declan Byrne had showed up and decided to be an asshole. Or perhaps, as I was beginning to suspect, that was his default setting.

“I exhausted my repertoire of sprightly Irish pub tunes the first night I played. Not much call for them at WASP-y New England weddings and upscale business receptions. Go figure. You’re so bored, Declan, you take over.” I smothered my regret with irritation and stepped off the platform onto the sticky pub floor. If I ran this place, somebody’d be out with a mop more than once a week or whatever Paddy’s cleaning system might have been. The way he kept his desk organized, I wondered if the pub even owned a mop.

“Boo, Declan, you bastard. Some of us were enjoying the Mozart,” yelled a pretty brunette with warm, sherry-colored eyes. “Hey, Stanzie, you ever hear the one where Mozart was Pack?”

I grinned, cheered despite my irritation with Declan and my humiliation at Murphy’s hands.

“If all the ones I’ve heard about famous people being Pack were true, there’d be no Others left.”

“Just the stupid ones. No, wait, that’s all of them,” deadpanned the brunette’s companion, a gorgeous young man in a dark shirt that molded to his muscular arms and chest. God, why did Irish men have to be so sexy?

A raucous roar of laughter went up around the pub, and I tried not to let it bother me as I picked my sticky way to the empty stool beside Paddy at the end of the bar.

“You’re frowning.” He slid his Guinness in my direction. I tried to catch Alannah’s eye to get my own, but she developed an urgent need to wipe the other end of the bar clean with her dirty bar rag.

“This whole pack makes fun of Others?” I gave in with a sigh and took a sip of Paddy’s Guinness. Of course, the minute I did, Alannah flew down to our end and drew Paddy a new one. Me, she ignored. Probably a good thing because who knew what she might have accidentally deposited in my glass. Flinging myself on her bond mate’s back like a silent assassin had probably not been the best method of kick-starting a friendship with her.

Paddy chuckled as he took a healthy swig.

“In our whole lives she’s never treated me this good.” He gestured toward Alannah who sent me a glowering look through lowered red eyebrows before she turned to take someone’s drink order. “She’s two years older than me, right? And that’s made her act all superior until, of course, I sweep Alpha out from underneath her. Suddenly, nothing in the world’s too good for her little half brother.”

“Well, maybe if she and Declan were making deals with the devil in back alleys like you, they’d be Alpha now.”

Paddy winced, all the good cheer erased from his expression. I wished I’d bitten my tongue. I thought again of Faith’s dream and the man with different-colored eyes who needed my help. Some help I was.

“You really believe we should be kept to minimum-wage jobs and only the Alphas of our packs ever having their hands on real money?” I was honestly curious.

Paddy took a deep breath as he considered his reply. “Anyone in Mac Tire who needs money has it. We all contribute from our minimum-wage jobs. Not all of them are minimum-wage either.”

“I’ll bet that Andrew Brody went to med school but doesn’t practice medicine except within the pack. He might even have a low-paying job somewhere to make ends meet, since I’m sure no one in the pack pays him for services rendered.”

“You’ll not be advocating Pack pay for medical benefits like the frigging Others?” Paddy’s eyes snapped with outrage.

“Of course not. He spends his life paying back his med school expenses by donating services to the pack,” I replied. “Doctors are just one example. Mac Tire must have at least one lawyer to deal with your real estate operations. I mean, that
is
how you invest most of your money, right? In land?”

“Liam took you to our compound,” Paddy said. “You’ll know that’s not cheap to upkeep. The castle’s a safe house, so all the packs in the UK and Ireland contribute, and the Councils, but most of the land is ours. With a dearth of forests in Ireland, we need all the land to run in we can find. A place for our wolves to howl and not scare the damn natives. There hasn’t been a wolf in Ireland for centuries, and that’s because Others wiped them out trying to eradicate us.

“What’ll you have us do, Stanzie? Go right back to that? Just when we’ve built ourselves up to a decent world population, you want us to step forward and announce our existence to the very people who nearly exterminated us?” Mouth twisted with bitterness, Paddy took a swig of beer.

“We’re not in Dark Ages anymore,” I said. “Others are not the superstitious, witch and werewolf-hunting peasants they used to be.”

“Don’t you believe it,” lectured Paddy. “Others haven’t changed in anything but fashion, architecture and technology. Beneath the skin, they’re still the same terrified, torch-waving mob waiting to rip apart anything that’s different.”

And we’re different, that’s true, Paddy.

“You really want us to take over the world? You think Pack First is a grand idea, do you?” Paddy stared at me as if he didn’t know me.

“No,” I denied. “I just want us to be able to get decent jobs without being murdered for them. All Elena was trying to do was design fun games for people’s computers. She wasn’t trying to take over the fucking world. And neither was Grey or any of the other men and women who have been killed the last few years.”

“You buy into one part, you buy into it all.” Paddy’s gaze bored into my face—penetrating and uncompromising. “Which is why there’s no excuse for what I’ve gotten myself into. I know that. I’m trying to fix that. But just because I’m fighting, doesn’t mean I’ve shifted allegiance to the other side. Have you?” He pointed a long, accusing finger at me.

“What do you want with a high-paying job you need a college education to get? You play the most beautiful music I’ve heard in a long time. You don’t need college for that. You don’t need a high-powered executive position to play. You don’t even need to play for Others for money. You give back to the pack, Stanzie. Tonight I’m appointing you Mac Tire’s bard. Declan Byrne be damned.
He
can play when
you
give him leave. You own that harp and that stage. And you can do a damned sight more for this pack by playing your tunes than you can being a fucking Advisor.”

“Not true,” I argued. “I’ve done a lot of good as an Advisor.”

“Have you now?” He shook his head, mouth tight. “And what have you got for it? Hauled up in front of a frigging tribunal for protecting that poor girl in the only way you had left to you. Nightmares from seeing your former Alpha’s brains splatter all over the ceiling when she shot herself in the head because of you and your Advisor job. Putting an old man to death as the Hand of the Council. An old man who loved you. Not saying he didn’t deserve his death, Stanzie, but you didn’t need to be the one to serve it to him in a cup of hot chocolate.

“Jason Allerton is no hero in my book. If you truly belonged to me the way I want you to, you’d be bard for Mac Tire and first in line for Alpha come the elections and you’d leave your Advisor days behind you for good.”

“You can’t make me give up being an Advisor.” I gripped the edge of the bar so tightly my fingers went bone white. I’d fought too hard to get where I was to give it up, even for my Alpha.

“No, I can’t,” he agreed. “And I wouldn’t even if I could. Everyone gets to choose what they want to do in my pack. But I can tell you what I’d wish for you, can’t I?”

“Sure.” I forced my fingers to relax their death grip and flexed them to restore circulation. He was being reasonable thankfully.

“Ah, this fucking conversation’s too deep for a light night out at the pub. Forget it, Stanzie. Just think about what I’ve said, okay? I’m not asking you to give up a damn thing, just think a little about my perspective. Fair enough?”

Other books

Never Blame the Umpire by Fehler, Gene
Writing Home by Alan Bennett
Fool's Flight (Digger) by Warren Murphy
Meri by Reog
Claiming of a Sex Demon by Jaye Shields
1972 - A Story Like the Wind by Laurens van der Post, Prefers to remain anonymous
The Aftermath by Ben Bova