About Face (Wolf Within) (4 page)

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Authors: Amy Lee Burgess

BOOK: About Face (Wolf Within)
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“I don’t know.” I took another sip and watched as his gray eyes filled with both compassion and exasperation. “What about Faith?”

“Have you seen her?” he said and then laughed. “She’s not shifting again until after the twins are born. She says it’s too uncomfortable.”

There was no medical reason to avoid shifting during pregnancy, but most women did prefer to avoid it after they got bigger.

“Why don’t you go with someone who you know will be a good hunt partner,” I suggested.

His seductive mouth twitched. “That would be you.”

“We may be good Advisor partners, but I don’t know about hunting, Scott.”

“Well, I do.” He put his hand on my arm, and the weight of it was so soothing I wanted to melt.

“You smell good, you know that?” I didn’t mean to say it, but the words escaped me anyway. He did. He smelled like Pack.

“Faith got me this new cologne. Made me wear it tonight.” Scott rolled his eyes.

“Pussy,” I said and he grinned.

“Hey, if it gets you to agree to hunt with me, I’m fine with it.” He gave my arm a squeeze. “At least give it some thought, Stanz, okay?”

I nodded, but I was pretty sure I wouldn’t do it.

“You’re going to have to do it sometime,” was his parting shot before he walked away. “Why not do it with a friend who understands?”

“I thought you were such a dick when I first met you.” I shook my head in amazement.

Laughter was his only response.

I turned back to the bar and squared my shoulders. Maybe Scott was right. Hell, he was. I had to face my wolf. If the worst happened and she wouldn’t come out, Scott would be the only one to see it. And he understood. He was Alpha of Mayflower. He knew how my father’s pack bond had dominated the pack for thirty years and made everyone who’d activated the bond into slaves. I’d run from my birth pack and never activated the pack bond. It had remained an invisible wall between my psyche and my wolf. The reason she’d been childish and stubborn and so different from everybody’s wolves was because she couldn’t get past the pack bond.

For years I’d let her do whatever she wanted. I’d never tried to reach her. I hadn’t known about the pack bond. I’d just thought she’d been different and hadn’t wanted to force her to be like other wolves because I didn’t think she could.

Then I’d met Murphy and he convinced me she could be changed. From the start my wolf had adored his wolf. For him, she’d tried to change, but had been so frustrated because of the unactivated pack bond. The more we pushed, the more she suffered. She’d been so mad at me and her circumstances. She refused to come out the last time I’d tried to shift. But there was nothing holding her back now. Scott was right.

If we hunted together, she’d come out, she’d be normal. And what the hell would that be like? Even if she did look for Murphy’s wolf and he wasn’t there, she could handle it as a normal wolf. After all, I was handling it as a normal human.

I snorted and drank more of my damn beer.

* * * *

“Can I talk to you?” Jason Allerton approached the dessert table at the same time I did. Neither of us was aware of the other until we both reached for the same piece of cheesecake.

When I spoke, he let his hand drop away in an indication I should take the cake.

“Please?” I added when he didn’t say anything.

Behind us the dance floor was full of couples moving sinuously under flashing strobe lights. Faith’s laughter rang out above the music as she and Scott danced together and he whispered crazy, naughty things in her ear.

Alan hadn’t left the floor since the music started. He’d had a different partner for nearly every song, including me once. He was full of confidence, brimming over with excitement.

“I’ve met more people tonight than I have my entire frigging life, Stanzie,” he’d confided to me as we’d danced together.

“Found a hunt partner?” I’d teased, and he blushed.


She
asked
me
,” he whispered, awestruck, as if the thought of it was too weird to be possible.

He’d changed so much from the frightened, sheltered boy he’d been when I’d visited Mayflower two months ago.

“Who’s initiating your wolf?” I’d asked him and he’d grinned.

“Dorothy. Can you believe it? She asked me if she could. She remembered when I’d asked her and she’d turned me down because of the pack bond. But there is no pack bond now, so she asked me. It’s going great, Stanzie.”

I remembered I’d told Scott about Alan’s preference for a teacher and wondered if he’d had a hand in Dorothy’s recent offer. I suspected he had. He was a good Alpha.

The slice of cheesecake was the last one. Bright red strawberries decorated the creamy frosting, and I could smell their juice above all the other desserts. My mouth watered at the thought of sinking my teeth into one of the plump, ripe berries.

“Not tonight.” Jason’s voice was cold, as if he didn’t even know me and I was some stranger who wanted an audience when he had better things to do. Right now better things to do translated into what dessert should he choose now that he couldn’t have the cheesecake.

“Take it.” I pushed the cheesecake in his direction. “I bet you’re getting it for Wren. Cheesecake’s her favorite. She never got it much. Paul preferred chocolate cream pie.”

He pulled his hand back from the piece of chocolate cream pie he’d selected and I walked away.

* * * *

I needed air so I pushed open the reception hall door and walked out into the salty breeze.

A wooden deck overlooked the sandy beach. Moonlight streamed down upon the glassy black waves and made a path of shimmering silver.

A woman stood by the stairs that led down to the sand and gripped the rail, her head bowed. She had pixie-short brown hair highlighted with streaks of dark gold and wore a nude-colored sheath dress with a black colorblock hem and black Jimmy Choo pumps. Diamond drop earrings glittered from her earlobes.

She’d taken off her ceremonial robe and looked small and vulnerable as she huddled against the rail.

“Kathy,” I whispered and she swung around guiltily as if she’d committed a crime instead of gazed at the ocean.

“I did the right thing.” She made no pretense that I hadn’t caught her almost in tears. “But it’s still hard to watch the way he looks at her. He used to look at me that way.”

Before I could stop myself, I went to her and put my arms around her. The strength of her return embrace hurt, but I held her as she buried her face in my neck and we rocked together.

Our eyes were wet when we drew apart, but some of the wild sadness had lifted from her face.

“It would never have worked.” Her tone was conversational as she slipped her shoes from her feet and waited for me to do the same thing. We left them on the deck and descended the wooden stairs to the rough sand.

In common accord, we moved toward the black expanse of the restless ocean, which muttered secrets to itself that grew louder as we approached.

“He wanted me and Matt to leave Darkhunt and join Silverlake. I would have had to leave the New England Regional Council. He told me he believed I would be appointed to the First Western Regional Council, but he couldn’t guarantee it. He knew damn well Matt wouldn’t leave Darkhunt. He was counting on that, counting on us severing the bond. He had no real interest in a triad but was willing to compromise on that for me. His exact words. Can you just hear him saying it, Stanzie? The colossal gall of the man.” Kathy linked her arm with mine as we turned parallel to the ocean and continued to walk. We left bare footprints in the wet sand behind us.

“The First Western Regional Council is bigger and more influential than the New England one.” I spoke before I thought as usual. Kathy just laughed.

“Do you really think I would have been appointed? As Jason Allerton’s bond mate I would have had two strikes against me as the Council leaned backward to avoid making it seem as if they took orders from Jason and the Great Council. And the third strike would have been that I knew absolutely nobody in the region. How exactly was a stranger supposed to swoop in and become a Council member?”

“You could have pitched it as a fresh perspective that wasn’t jaded with knowledge of the packs in the area.”

Kathy laughed again and skipped nimbly over a slimy string of seaweed.

“I probably could have done that,” she admitted. “But I have a life here. Should I give it up for him? Where was his compromise?”

“Matt.”

“Who would never have come. Ah, I do like talking with you, Stanzie. You make me feel much better and reinforce my conviction that I did the right thing.”

“I’m not his Advisor anymore,” I blurted and was forced to stop dead when she dragged me to a halt. “I quit because I was so pissed at him for bonding with my mother. And he let me.”

She forced me to tell her the whole story, and her blue-gray eyes grew darker and darker with every word. By the end of it she wanted to charge back to the reception hall and confront him. I grabbed her by the arm. It was like trying to hold back a whirlwind.

“I thought you’d laugh at me and tell me what an idiot I was.” I hung on grimly to her arm, even though she’d stopped her struggle to break free.

“You are an idiot,” she said. “But so is he. Does everyone around you eventually lose their minds, Stanzie? First Liam and now Jason.”

When I heard Murphy’s name, I let go and turned around so I could continue pacing along the shore. Kathy heaved a frustrated sigh, caught between returning to blast Jason and lecturing me.

She chose the lecture. I knew she would.

“Now it’s more vital than ever you get your butt to Dublin and fix things with him. Do you know that exasperating man has changed his phone number? I tried to call and give him a piece of my mind and got some strange man in Revere instead. I suppose it makes sense that he wouldn’t have his American phone number anymore now that he’s gone back to Dublin, but it’s still very annoying not to be able to get in touch with him. What did you do anyway, Stanzie, to provoke Liam into bolting for Ireland?”

“You know, that’s just like you to take his side of it and not mine,” I snapped over my shoulder. “Why does it have to be something
I
did and not something
he
did?”

“He’s the one who left.”

“That’s just stupid,” I said, which only made her smile one of her Kathy Manning patented smiles that always sent me sailing over the edge of my temper. “For your information, I didn’t do anything except possibly give him shit because he didn’t stay with me during the tribunal. And everybody, including you, you hypocrite, told me over and over he was wrong and I was right about that. So what? I’m not allowed to get mad at the bastard? Ever? Or he’s justified in walking out on me? That’s not fucking fair, is it?”

I tried in vain to modulate my damn voice, but it was impossible. The goddamn ocean amplified it and sent it shrieking back at me until I wanted to block my ears.

Kathy’s smile never faltered. “When he walked out, what did you do? Stand there and let him?”

“I don’t want to talk about it.” I knew I sounded sullen and moody, but fuck it.

“Of course not,” she said with an annoying-as-hell little laugh. I flipped her the bird, then stomped off. This time she didn’t follow.

* * * *

Brooding alone in my room sucked. Dissatisfaction seethed within me until I wanted to punch something. Instead I pulled on a pair of sweats and a t-shirt and scrubbed the makeup from my face. Then I paced the confines of the little motel room that had become mine by default. Lauren’s things were gone, only mine were left, and in two days I would drive back to Boston alone.

I couldn’t sustain my fury but self-pity only annoyed me. I didn’t know what to do with myself. So when someone knocked on my door, I sprang to open it with a small cry of relief.

I braced myself in case it was Kathy, but when I opened the door, I saw Faith and Scott instead.

She looked tired but determined, and he had a grin I didn’t altogether trust.

“Can we come in?” Faith asked, and I stepped away from the door.

Their bond pendants winked in the overhead lights. I was supposed to wear mine since it was a Regional. Ever since I’d broken the clasp of my silver chain, I’d kept it in the small pewter box Murphy had given me the night we’d bonded in Paris. A hundred million years ago it seemed, although it had barely been nine months in reality.

“Look, if you came to talk me into shifting with Scott tomorrow night, save your breath. I’ll do it, okay?” Up until I said it, I hadn’t known what would fly out of my mouth. But once said I could not take it back, nor did I intend to.

Shifting was another step I needed to take to reclaim my life, and I damn well was going to take it.

“Whoa.” Scott’s face filled with pleasant surprise, and his cocky grin became genuine.

Faith took my hand. “That’s great, Stanzie, but it’s not what we came to discuss.”

She examined my face as if I were under a microscope. Her scrutiny exposed my rawness. I was not at all sure I wanted to hear what she had to say.

“You need to go to Dublin.”

For a wild moment I almost laughed. Of all the things they could have said to me,
this
was what they’d come to say?

“I had this dream,” began Faith, and a blasting shock of coldness permeated my bones.

“Murphy? Was it about Murphy?”

Faith dreamed the future sometimes. Not often, but there had been enough episodes during my childhood where Faith confidently predicted what would happen and it had that I’d learned to pay attention whenever she said,
I had this dream—
because inevitably what she dreamed came to pass.

Once she dreamed our pack mate Darren would get caught robbing someone’s house, and three nights later the homeowner walked in unexpectedly, and Darren had barely escaped before the police arrived.

Another time she’d dreamed Samantha, her father’s bond mate, would have a baby boy and name him Alan and he would have blond hair and blue eyes. Eight and a half months later, she had.

I always tried to be skeptical about Faith’s predictions. For instance, the law of averages demanded that cat burglar Darren’s luck run out at least a few times. That it had a few nights after Faith said it would didn’t definitively prove she was precognitive.

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