Spirit of the Wolf (9 page)

Read Spirit of the Wolf Online

Authors: Vonna Harper

Tags: #Man-Woman Relationships, #Ranchers, #Paranormal, #General, #Romance, #Erotic Fiction, #Erotica, #Fiction, #Love Stories

BOOK: Spirit of the Wolf
5.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
“Why didn’t you?”
Why didn’t you?
“I guess I needed to see you in the flesh. Reassure myself that the pressure isn’t getting to you.” He didn’t so much as indicate he’d heard her, prompting her to continue. “Where are you going? You told the reporter that your cows were all right, but maybe you were just trying to get her off your back. You looked tense the whole time you were on camera.” She paused, gathering what she needed to continue. “That’s what brought me here, wondering if you needed someone to talk to.”
“Talk?” A smile lifted the corners of his mouth but didn’t reach his eyes. “That hasn’t been our priority.”
“No, it hasn’t, but I’d like that to change.” Another pause. “And I hope you feel the same way.”
She had to be mistaken, of course, but was that a shudder on his part? “Cat, right now I’m not sure what I’m feeling.”
“About me?” The question scraped her throat.
“About a lot of things.” Frowning, he pulled his cell phone out of a front pocket and read the display. “Addie’s been calling but not leaving messages. She’s not crazy about cell phones.”
“Maybe she wants you to know when she’ll be back.”
“That’s what I’m thinking.” The way he stared at her, she felt exposed all the way down to the juncture between her legs. “Have you ever been to Antelope Grove?”
Relieved because he hadn’t told her something she didn’t want to hear, she said, “I don’t think I’ve ever heard of it.”
“It’s on my land, the south end. Mostly aspens, moist in spring but dry now.”
Excited by the prospect of getting more than a handful of words from him, she pointed toward where he’d been looking. “It’s out there?”
“About four miles. No road.”
“You have cattle out there? The hand you were talking to about a bull—is that where he is?”
When Matt again fixed his attention on her, his intensity had her holding her breath. “None of my cows are—yet. I’m thinking of moving them there but not until I’ve checked out the area.”
“Because of the wolves?”
“Yeah. I don’t want to put them at more risk than they are now.”
“Then you’re, what, going to be looking for tracks? Maybe antelope and deer carcasses?”
“The possibility’s there.”
A moment ago she’d been hoping to see passion and need in his eyes. Instead, he seemed to be trapped, a man facing something he wished he didn’t have to. It struck her that he might be questioning whether any part of his land was safe anymore.
“Why today?” she asked. “With Beale gone and a stubborn bull on your hands, I’d think you wouldn’t want to add moving the herd—”
“Cat, I get one paycheck a year. It comes when I sell the calves. Their lives mean everything to my livelihood.”
“But you aren’t crazy about going to Antelope Grove. Don’t tell me you are.”
Straightening, he looked down at her. “You know me better than I thought you did.”
Thank goodness for the wind. Otherwise, there might not have been enough air to fill her lungs. “Not well enough, but I’d like to.”
That’s why I’m taking you up on your offer, if that’s what it was, not just because I hope something will happen between us.
9
 
H
e shouldn’t have asked Cat if she wanted to come with him. Damn it, he was a fool for risking exposing himself when he’d worked so hard to present himself as a man who had it all together.
However, the truth was, nothing about him had been together for, what, maybe a month before wolves got to that calf. He’d sensed something. It wasn’t as bad as it had been watching his father splinter into tiny fragments, and yet the helplessness had felt the same.
That and wondering what, if anything, would be left of him once it was over.
Matt occasionally glanced at Cat, who rode alongside him, but mostly he kept his attention on the distance. As usual, Cat had pulled her hair into a single, thick braid, but maybe she’d been in a hurry because a bunch of strands had worked free. He wished he could run his hands over them, not that he needed the reminder of what that felt like.
She’d gotten to him with her comment about sensing his tension during the TV interview, but had he really expected it to be different? After all, the woman had yet to meet a horse she couldn’t work with. Instead of relying on strength and sometimes stubbornness like he did, she got through to horses, even rank stallions, with instinct and intuition.
Her knees were bent with her boots toed into the stirrups. Granted, he couldn’t see her thighs under her jeans, but it didn’t matter because he knew what they felt like wrapped around him. Even more to the point, his cock would never forget what being inside her felt like. Mind-blowing. Mind-killing. Hell and heaven wound together.
“When do you have to be back?” he belatedly asked.
“I’ve arranged for someone to take over for the day.” She didn’t look at him. “If necessary, I can be gone all night.”
Only they hadn’t brought anything except for water and a few granola bars. Just thinking about having to spend the night at Antelope Grove tightened his belly.
“What about you?” she asked. “You’re shorthanded without Beale, right?”
“Yeah.”
She nodded but didn’t press. After the better part of a minute, he relaxed. And went back to thinking about her body, because focusing on the physical—which had been the best he’d ever experienced—was easier than contemplating what she might be thinking about.
Even now he wasn’t sure why he’d asked her to accompany him. Given how he might react once they were there, he should be alone. Alone and isolated and safe in ways he had no words for. Losing out on parents the way he had had done something to him. Either that or he’d been born what the sheriff had called him the other day—a loner.
But even a hermit needed someone in his life. A soft and willing woman body. Heat and urgency. Sex that stripped him stupid.
How deep had she been able to dig?
he pondered as they began the climb to Antelope Grove. She’d never said anything to indicate she’d discovered the holes in him, but Cat could touch a horse’s soul. Surely she’d tried to do the same with him.
His head aching from the kind of questions he usually steered clear of, he risked another glance in her direction. She sat straight and tall in the saddle with her fingers light on the reins looking part and parcel of her mount. If she kept coming to his place like this, he’d suggest she leave one of her horses in his corral so she didn’t have to keep on borrowing.
Some lovers left their toothbrushes at each other’s place. In Cat’s and his world, maybe horses served the same purpose.
“Where’d your name come from?” he asked, surprising himself. “I never asked.”
“No, you didn’t.” She wasn’t looking at him. “My folks named me after my wealthy aunt Catriona. She decided they’d done that hoping to get put in her will, which they did. My folks get off on chasing money. It’s their ultimate high.”
Blown away by what had just spilled out of her, he waited because he sensed she might close up if he pressed. Like he did.
“Anyway,” she finally said, “even before she called their bluff, I hated the name and refused to answer to it. Cat felt right.”
“I like it on you.”
“You do?” Although her eyes were down to slits against the sun, he had no trouble reading her mood. She hadn’t expected that from him. Hell, he hadn’t known he was going to say it. Damn it, today was full of surprises.
“Kind of exotic and wild.”
“And one of the first words I learned to spell. Kind of killing two birds with one stone.”
They laughed together, something he hadn’t done for too long. Although neither of them said anything after that, there was a welcome easiness to the silence. If he could do so without it being awkward, he’d hold her hand.
That’s it. Just hold her hand.
Antelope Grove was at the base of what passed for a mountain on his land. The depression spread out long and narrow for a good quarter of a mile with boulders on the north and a gully to the south. Maybe the second time he’d come here, he’d spotted several antelope eating the sagebrush that shared space with the wild grasses. Santo had told him the area didn’t have a name but he could give it one if he wanted. The hurting boy he’d been had nearly cried at the foreign notion of having something for himself.
This was where he’d come to mourn after Santo’s violent death.
“What is it?” Cat asked. “All of a sudden you tensed. Again.”
Careful. Don’t let her look too deep.
“Something just occurred to me.”
“What?”
Pulling on the reins, he stopped his gelding and turned him so he could face Cat. She did the same.
“I’m just throwing this out,” he said. “Maybe I don’t know what I’m talking about, but Santo was one of the best horsemen I’ve ever seen, good as you.”
Smiling slightly, she nodded. “I appreciate the comparison and the compliment. In other words, you don’t understand how he could have gotten thrown the way he did.”
Answering her nod with one of his own, he tried to shake off the uneasy sensation crawling over his back. Damn it, he’d known coming here wouldn’t be a walk in the park. He should be prepared.
“Exactly. Besides, his mount is one of the steadiest horses on the ranch.” Gathering his thoughts, he continued to meet Cat’s gaze. “We found her more than a mile from Santo’s body, still spooked. The way I see it, the only explanation I have is that she either bucked or reared, maybe some of both, when Santo wasn’t expecting it.”
“Do you want to say it or should I?”
“I started this. I have to finish it. What if his mare spotted a wolf or wolves? No matter that they’d never been part of her existence—self-preservation would have kicked in.”
“And because it had, the only thing that mattered to Santo’s horse was getting away from the danger, starting with getting rid of the load on her back. At the same time, Santo was trying to make sense of what was happening. He was distracted.”
Feeling half sick, Matt kneed his gelding forward because he didn’t want to look into Cat’s eyes anymore. Damn him for not having put one and one together before this.
Only, how could he have?
“Don’t blame yourself,” Cat said as she drew alongside. “Back then no one knew there was a pack around.”
“A pack?” He rolled the word around in his mind. “Cat, what if it was the other thing?”
“Other?” Eyes widening, she clamped a hand over her mouth. “Oh, hell, you’re talking about the big tracks, aren’t you?”
If he said nothing, could he keep the monster-sized wolf behind a locked door in his mind? Tell himself his imagination, or insanity, was getting the better of him?
Even ask himself if what had destroyed his father had latched on to him?
Oh, hell, what if that nameless monstrous thing had the power to reach Cat?
 
Someday, somehow she’d tell Matt how much his silences upset her, and yet would hashing over what they’d touched on make things better?
Closing her mind to the unanswerable question, Cat concentrated on the grove just ahead. Matt hadn’t said anything about there being bunchgrass in addition to the sage, but seeing that didn’t surprise her. What did was the feeling of dread she experienced when a grove where antelope congregated should have filled her with peace. From this distance, the grove was a pastel mix of everything from muted yellow to deepest green punctuated by stark-white aspen trunks. Among the many things she’d learned about this part of Oregon was that the land was perfect for sheltering the creatures born to it.
Hoping Matt was having the same thoughts, she slipped a glance in his direction. Far from looking at peace, every line of his body gave away his agitation. No, he shouldn’t be alone.
Even if he jumped her as he had at her place.
Suddenly appreciative of the rifle attached to his saddle and the pistol at his waist, she again concentrated on their surroundings. Surroundings that were doing a number on both of them.
“Do you come here often?” she asked. “If your cattle aren’t around, I don’t imagine you have much reason.”
“Or the time.”
“Point taken. Not much downtime in this business, is there?”
“None. Calving time’s the most intense, what with so many being dropped in a short period. Winter can be the hardest, especially if the hay runs out.”
“What’s your favorite part, if you have one?”
“Good question. Has to be calving. Having a hand in new life. Seeing those bright eyes open for the first time.”
Listening to him, she acknowledged how rare a conversation like this was between them. There was something rare and different and maybe precious today—if they could keep it going. If nothing happened.
Despite the possibility, she had to admit that she was turned on and had been since she’d gotten out of her truck.
Had he brought protection? Not that a lack had stopped him the last two times they’d had sex. They didn’t have so much as a blanket to lie on.
Did he want the same thing she did? Maybe whatever was crawling around in his mind had come between him and desire.
“I can already feel fall here,” he said, and stopped again.
“Because of the higher elevation?”
“That’s part of it.”
Although she sucked in a deep breath, the air here didn’t feel any different to her. “Only part?”
“There’s something tired about the place this time of year. As if all that sun has drained it.”
His observation shocking her, she slid her fingers over the reins. The horse under her was already relaxing. Unless the mare took it into her head to try to graze, she’d soon fall asleep where she stood. Good. If the instinctive animal could relax, so could she.
Wondering what might alert the mare, Cat openly studied Matt. In contrast to his gelding, with his already sagging lower lip, Matt had risen in the saddle and was looking all around. The hand not holding the reins rested on his pistol.
“What?” she muttered. “Do you hear or see something?”
“No. And that’s the hell of it.”
About to ask for an explanation, she admitted that something was biting at her spine. Tension. The feeling she got on those rare occasions when something woke her in the middle of the night. Maybe she was simply feeding off whatever was bothering Matt. One way to find out was by turning her back on him and imagining two naked bodies rolling around on the grass. The perfect distraction.
Unlike the last two times they’d had sex, today they’d be in sync. They’d move as one, turning onto their sides at the same time, her upper leg hooking over his hip. Sweat would bleed into sweat, her hair sticking to her temples while his danced with each thrust. She’d gnaw on his collarbone, lap at his chest while bracing for his assault. There’d be no howling on his part this time, no mindless masculine attack while she ricocheted between excitement and alarm. Only sex. Fucking. Back to what they’d had before the wolves arrived.
An image of long, tearing teeth and savage yellow eyes pulled her back to Antelope Grove. Her mare had lifted her head and pointed her ears at Matt. Although he was no longer standing in the stirrups, he hadn’t relaxed. There was a resigned air about him.
“What is it?” she whispered. “When we were at your place, I got the impression you wish you didn’t have to come here.”
“Did I?”
Don’t give me that silent-cowboy nonsense.
“Why not? It sounds as if this used to be a favorite place of yours.”
“It was.”
“What changed things?”
Sighing, he dismounted and left the reins on the ground as a signal to his well-trained gelding that he was to stay put. She followed suit. Keeping to her own space would be easier, but if she touched Matt, she might get him to open up. At least he didn’t back away when she brushed her knuckles over his cheek.
“I don’t want you thinking I’d ever say you’re acting crazy but—”

Other books

Unbreak Me (Second Chances #1) by Heather D'Agostino
For Love or Magic by Lucy March
Spoiled by Heather Cocks
Lies & Lullabies by Courtney Lane
No Way to Die by Grayson, M. D.
Sliver of Truth by Lisa Unger
A Walk Through Fire by Felice Stevens