trying to get attention for himself that he
never bothered to ensure my happiness.
Stacia thinks I’m here to keep the family
together, but I’m really here because I
want you. I’ve wanted you for a long time,
Nash.”
“But…Cort…”
“Cort’s dead,” she said, her voice
rising with anger. “But I’m very much
alive and I’m still young. Why do I have to
sacrifice my happiness because he’s
dead?”
“Rella, I don’t know what to say,” he
murmured, moving further away from her
to the far end of the sofa, dragging the
blanket with him to cover himself. He’d
never been embarrassed by his own
nakedness before.
“You don’t have to say anything. Just
take me as your mate and everything will
work out for the best. I’ve never made
love in human form before. I wonder what
it will be like.”
He sat there in stunned silence. She
seemed to take his calm for acceptance.
She moved closer to him, reaching for him
in the semi-darkness. He caught her by
both arms and held her at arms’ length.
“This is unacceptable,” he said, more
to himself than to her. He looked her in the
eye then. His heart twisted. “I could
never…Cort was my brother and I am in
love with Maralee. Do you understand?”
“You’re telling me ‘no’.”
“I’m telling you ‘no’.”
“I guess I’ll have to join the
Northwood pack then.” A challenge.
“If that’s what you feel you must do,”
he said. “I’ll miss the kids. I’ll even miss
you, but I have to make a life for myself
and that life must include Maralee.”
Rella was staring at him thoughtfully.
The light of the early morning dawn was
just beginning to edge into the room
behind her.
“You really do love that human
woman, don’t you?”
He chuckled. “Would I admit to it if it
wasn’t true?”
He didn’t expect her to start crying.
Tears began to flow like rivers from both
eyes. “I’m so s-sorry,” she sobbed. “I’ve
been so selfish. I…I should have realized
it sooner.”
“Don’t cry, Rella,” he pleaded. “I hate
it when women cry.”
“Go after her Nash,” she said. “You
deserve to be happy. Don’t give up. Don’t
you dare give up.”
“Never.”
The sharecroppers on Maralee’s
property
lived
in
poverty.
She
remembered a time of prosperity and
harmony, but now nothing remained but
destitution and discord. She and William
had been visiting their homes every day
for a week, and every day Maralee
became more and more desperate for a
solution. She wasn’t the only one Aunt
Bailey had financially destroyed, but no
matter how much she puzzled over it, there
was no clear answer to her troubles or
those of the people who were counting on
her.
“This is worse than I expected,” she
murmured to William as they rode away
from the fourth home they’d visited that
day.
“People want to leave. They want to
challenge your aunt, but they are too
afraid,” he said, keeping his horse in step
with hers.
“Of the Wolves?”
“What else?”
Maralee sighed heavily. “I made a
promise to someone that I would never
kill another Wolf.”
“Why would you promise something
like that?”
“Because Wolves…Wolves are…
people.”
William’s pale brows drew together.
“What do you mean they are people?”
“Nothing.” She sighed. “I just won’t
kill them. I won’t change my mind about
that. I’ll go talk to them. I can’t think of
anything else to do. Even if I’m left with
nothing, at least these people can move on
and find lives for themselves without
having to be afraid.”
“
Talk
to Wolves?” William asked.
“Are you mad?”
“I’m mad as hell,” she agreed. “I’m
also a bit crazy if that’s what you are
implying.”
They rode beside each other in silence
for a long time. The manor house was just
coming into view when William stopped
his horse and Maralee paused beside him,
looking at him in question.
“I’ll go with you,” he said.
Maralee laughed. “Who’s the crazy
one now?”
“I know you don’t want to hear this,
but when you left I promised that the next
time I saw you I wouldn’t let you out of
my sight again,” he said. “I need to know
you’re safe.”
She stared at him in disbelief.
“Don’t look at me like that,” he
demanded. “I don’t expect you to feel the
same way about me. I’m okay with that. I
just want to protect you. You always
seemed so strong as a girl, but I saw you
cry every time you thought you were
alone.”
“You shouldn’t spy on people,” she
said. “It’s twisted.”
“I know,” he agreed. “I just can’t seem
to help myself. I’ve always loved you
from a distance and when you kissed me
good-bye...”
Maralee was beginning to feel uneasy
about the entire situation. She had been
spending a lot of time with him over the
past few days, but her mood throughout the
entire ordeal had been somber and
morose. She didn’t think that she had been
leading him on. She was far from over
Nash. “I hope you aren’t getting the wrong
idea,” she said. “I’m sort of already with
someone.”
“Sort of?” he asked. “Who?”
“His name is Nash,” she said, hoping a
name would dissuade him.
William nodded, accepting her claim
without question. “Lucky guy,” he
murmured and urged his horse forward
again.
Maralee trailed after him, keeping her
horse several lengths behind his so she
wouldn’t have to converse with him. Her
thoughts had moved to Nash in any case.
Keeping busy for the past week had let her
escape her bleak future without him,
though her nights alone in her room were
unbearable. She wondered why things had
turned out the way they had. They’d
overcome so much together, trusted each
other, accepted each other’s differences,
but it still wasn’t enough.
Nash needed the support of his family,
and Maralee needed to be free of her past.
She had to atone for her sins so she could
move forward, but somehow her aunt now
stood in the way of the future she’d settled
on. She had to concentrate on this reality
now. She couldn’t lose herself to regrets
and she was sorely regretting making a
choice for Nash without his consent.
She wondered what he would have
decided to do if she had left the decision
up to him. Would he have chosen her or
his family? Would she have been able to
live with herself if he had chosen her over
the happiness of Cort’s family? Could she
have been selfishly, blissfully happy
knowing that Cort’s children were forced
to live among strangers?
“You’re doing it again,” William said,
drawing Maralee from her musings.
She glanced up and found his face
blurred through her tears. She wiped them
away and attempted a smile. “Sorry about
that. Just feeling sorry for myself.”
“No matter what happens, we will find
a way to take care of you, Maralee. Even
if you lose everything, you still have us to
look after you.”
She wasn’t really worried about her
financial situation, which was dire at best.
His statement did allow her to turn her
attention to the more important issue. What
would happen to the people whom she
was responsible for: the servants, the
sharecroppers and the town’s people? She
wouldn’t fail them. She refused to accept
what fate handed her. She made her own
fate now. Nash had given her that
capability.
“I’ll take your horse, miss,” William
said. “They are probably holding dinner
for you.”
They had pulled to a stop just outside
the stables, though Maralee’s mind was a
hundred miles away at that moment.
William dismounted and moved to hold
her horse steady for her. She glanced at
him and smiled with gratitude.
“Thank you, William,” she said and
dismounted.
“Promise me that you won’t cry
anymore, Maralee,” he said in a tone
barely above a whisper. “It tears my heart
to shreds.”
She lowered her eyes. “I’ll wait until
I’m alone,” she said quietly, for there was
no way she could promise him not to cry.
It was her only outlet now that
slaughtering Wolves was out of the
question.
“Mara—”
Maralee put a hand up to stop his
words. “Just give me some time, William.
I have a lot of things going wrong in my
life right now. If I didn’t let some of these
feelings out by shedding a few tears, I’d
be screaming instead.”
“I apologize,” he said. “I should be
thinking about how you’re hurting instead
of worrying about how it makes me feel.”
Maralee glanced up at him. He seemed
to be struggling to keep himself from
embracing her. “Don’t be ridiculous,
William. You shouldn’t worry about me at
all. I am the mistress of this estate, at least
for now, and I should be strong enough to
bear this burden without getting all teary
eyed every time I think of Nash.”
She bit her lip to stop it from
trembling. She wiped her eyes on her
sleeve, and drew a deep and shaky breath.
“Damn,” she muttered. It didn’t seem to
matter how strong she thought she should
be. Nash was gone. She was weak without
him.
“Thanks for showing me around again
today, William,” she said. She knew she’d
fall apart if she looked at him so she
stared at the gravel beneath her feet. “I’d
like to meet with some more farmers
tomorrow. We still haven’t visited the far
southern boundary. Would you mind taking
me again?”
“If that’s what you want.”
She nodded and turned towards the
house, clutching at the fabric of her jacket
in front of her chest. Why did this hurt so
much? She had made the honorable
decision. What she thought was the
right
decision. Shouldn’t that knowledge give
her the strength to move forward?
When she let herself into the manor,
she heard voices coming from the dining
room. Trayburn appeared from the parlor
and caught her by the arm before she could
move in that direction.
“Go upstairs, Maralee,” he said in a
low whisper. “I’ll bring dinner to your
room.”
“What? Why would you do that?”
Maralee asked, stepping backwards to
remove his hand from her arm. She and
her aunt ate their evening meal together in
terse silence, but she loved watching the
woman squirm uncomfortably in her
presence.
“Your aunt has guests.” His voice was
low. “Unsavory guests.”
“The two men with the golden eyes?”
Trayburn looked surprised. “How do
you know about them?”
“Jean mentioned them when I first
arrived.”
“I’ll skin that Southerner alive!”
“I’m going upstairs to clean up a bit,”
she said, “and then I’ll be down for
dinner.”
“But—”
“Trayburn,” Maralee said firmly.
“You have known me since I was a baby,
but that doesn’t mean you don’t have to
concede to my wishes. I am the mistress of
this manor and you will treat me
accordingly.”
Trayburn met her eyes steadily, as if
he were measuring her worth. After a
moment, he smiled. “Yes, Miss Decatur.
I’ll have a place set for you at the dining
table.”
“Thank you, Trayburn,” she said,
proud of herself for asserting her
authority. She wasn’t a little girl anymore.
She’d left this house a girl, but returned a
woman.
Maralee hurried to the bathroom that
connected with her room and scrubbed her
face and hands. She feared she smelled
like horseflesh, but she was without a