Holding her felt right. He wished she
would allow it more often. “It’s obviously
something or you wouldn’t be so upset.
You can tell me anything,” he whispered.
“As a friend, as your doctor.”
She shuddered, and then gasped, “I’m
not pregnant.”
He released her immediately and
stared down at her with his mouth hanging
open. She turned into the corner and
sobbed against the wood-paneled wall,
clinging to it for support. When he
recovered from his initial shock, he
touched her shoulder.
“You wanted…you wanted to be
pregnant?”
“No,” she whispered. “Yes. No! I
don’t know. I thought maybe I was
pregnant after you suggested it. I was
terrified and thrilled at the same time.”
She turned to look at him, her eyes and
nose red. Large tears were welling up in
her eyes and trailing down her cheeks. “I
know I should be grateful, but this morning
when I discovered I couldn’t be with
child, I felt as if my heart had shattered.”
Jared reached into his pocket and
pulled out his handkerchief. He dried her
eyes. She took the cloth from him and
blew her nose.
“You’re still young, Maralee. You
have plenty of time to have children.”
She shook her head. “I don’t have any
business being a mother.”
“That’s not true,” he said. “I’m sure
you’d make a wonderful wife.”
Eyes wide, she looked up at him. He
didn’t regret his slip.
“And mother,” he added.
“You’re too good to me, Jared,” she
said. “It makes it hard for me to keep
rejecting you.”
He smiled, though his heart was
aching. “I can wait. I’ve always been a
patient man.”
She lowered her eyelids, shielding her
remarkable gray eyes from him. “Exact
opposites,” she murmured.
He knew she was thinking about
him
again—the man who’d broken her heart.
The man whose children she wanted to
carry within her womb. Jared wondered
what the man was like. He wondered if
there was any way he could be more like
him so Maralee might be swayed in his
direction. Perhaps he was being too
patient with her. Perhaps he should be a
little bolder. Maybe his hesitance was the
only thing keeping them apart.
“Maralee?” he murmured and she
looked up at him in question.
His gaze drifted to her lips. What
would she do if he kissed her? His heart
thudded wildly at the thought.
“What is it, Jared?”
He leaned closer, his eyes still trained
on her soft lips, his blood pulsing through
his body thick and hot. He closed his eyes
and… drew away with a heavy sigh.
I’m
such a coward
, he thought. He wouldn’t
risk destroying her fragile trust, no matter
how much he wanted to taste her kiss.
“Are you feeling well, otherwise?” he
asked, climbing to his feet. He ran a hand
through his hair and turned to stare down
at his medical bag.
“You worry too much,” she said.
“Allow me to get dressed and I’ll join you
for breakfast.”
He glanced at her and she smiled. He
felt an odd sense of relief at seeing her
tears
had
vanished.
“That
sounds
wonderful. I let everyone think that I come
here to visit you, but I’m really after
Phyllis’s fabulous home-cooked meals.”
“Your secret is out.” She used the wall
for leverage as she climbed to her feet.
His eyes raked down her body, taking
in the swell of her breasts and the curve of
her hip beneath her nightgown. He stared
at her bare feet and trim ankles for a long
moment before he picked up his medical
bag and moved to leave. So lovely. So
lost. It was a combination he could not
resist.
“I’ll wait for you,” he said.
Forever, if
that’s how long it takes.
“I’ll be right down.” She crossed the
room to the chest of drawers where she
began to remove clean clothing.
“Don’t take forever.”
The sky was clear as Maralee glanced out
the
window—clear,
indigo,
and
brightened by the full moon. Although the
blizzard had finally passed, the bitter cold
prevented the snow from melting. It had
drifted to cover the first floor windows of
some buildings. The world was frozen.
Ice covered every surface. Sparkles on the
surface of the snow glittered like earth-
bound stars.
Maralee had already packed most of
her belongings into her knapsack. It sat
upon her bed waiting for her departure the
following morning. As she gazed out the
window, she pulled her leather gauntlets
on over her long-sleeved, white blouse
and secured them around her forearms and
wrists. Turning into the room, she swung
her cloak around her shoulders and tied
the laces beneath her chin. She reached for
the sheathed sword on the dresser and
fastened it to her belt. She pulled the
sword, loving the resonating sound it
made when freed of its sheath. The blade
was sharp and shiny, just how she liked it.
She returned the sword to its sheath and
left her room.
The Smithy’s were already asleep, so
the inn was silent. She took care to tread
lightly so she would not wake them.
Maralee stepped out of the inn’s front
door. She closed the door silently behind
her, not even jangling the welcome bell.
She descended the four steps to stand in
the lane and glanced in either direction.
Breath pluming, exposed flesh stinging
in the biting wind, the lone figure turned
up the fur collar of her cloak and started
through the dark village, heavy boots
trudging through thick snow banks. It was
an uncommonly quiet night. The orb of
white above reflected off the heavy
blanket of snow, giving the town a surreal,
lighted glow even though it was
approaching the midnight hour. It was
quiet now, but Maralee knew that within a
few short moments the Wolves would
arrive and so the huntress watched, and
waited, and kept her sword at ready.
She slowly made her way through the
village, hand resting on the hilt of her
sword, to the place where she had seen
the Wolves emerge from the forest four
weeks before. She had met Nash on that
night, but she shoved thoughts of him
aside. She was getting better at denying
him the chance to rule her life in his
absence. She told herself she didn’t want
him to step out of the shadows. She didn’t
need to hear his deep voice say it was a
dangerous night for a stroll. She wasn’t
longing for the sight of his gorgeous,
crooked smile or the smell of tobacco and
oiled leather. She wasn’t.
She passed a narrow alley situated
between two adjacent houses. A rustle
came from the darkness. She paused and
gazed into the shadows, but saw nothing.
After a moment, she decided she was
hearing things and moved on, continuing
towards the forest.
The howling began deep in the woods.
She was surprised when what seemed like
hundreds of answering howls shattered the
still of the night. A shiver raced down her
spine as the chorus of howls grew closer.
She unsheathed her sword, standing ready
at the crossroad to the forest. She couldn’t
figure out why her heart raced. She wasn’t
afraid. Something felt wrong, but what?
Her hand shook when the first set of
amber eyes emerged from the forest at the
far end of the road. The Wolf growled,
lowering its head in warning. Another
Wolf appeared, followed by another and
another. There were too many for her to
count—more than a hundred of them, in
any case. Something was wrong.
Maralee’s entire body trembled.
Something was wrong.
Her eyes fell on a small Wolf cub near
the front of the enormous pack—a dark
gray pup with a barrette in the shape of a
row of small daisies fastened to the fur
above one ear.
“Carsha,” Maralee realized in a rush
of breath.
These other Wolves, the monsters,
were Nash’s…people.
No, it couldn’t be true. She wouldn’t
allow it to be true. She shook her head in
denial, her hold on her sword slackening.
The Wolves came closer. She couldn’t
move, had no will to fight, even at the cost
of her own life. She couldn’t take her eyes
off Carsha who was growling and snarling
—a madness in her eyes beyond the
child’s ability to control.
Maralee lowered her weapon. The
Wolves skirted around her, flooding into
the wide crossroad, surrounding her,
blocking any escape she might attempt.
She didn’t try to get away. She was trying
to understand.
Why had Nash let her live instead of
avenging his brother’s death? She
wouldn’t have blamed him. She had
slaughtered his brother right in front him.
Nash had known his brother’s death
would leave behind a widow and three
fatherless children. Yet rather than ending
her life, he had locked her in a shed. The
following day, when she had stumbled
upon his village, he had showed her
hospitality, his humanity, his capacity to
love. She’d glimpsed his wildness as
well, but he wasn’t a monster, despite
what she had called him. She had
convinced herself that he was an oddity of
nature, rather than accepting what she had
known in her heart. He was as much a
human as she was. Maybe more.
Unlike her, he wasn’t a murderer
pretending to be a hero.
Surrounded by Nash’s brethren now,
she couldn’t deny it any longer. She was a
murderer. She was a slayer of people.
People who had families, dreams, lives.
People who were much different than she,
yet the same. She killed them without
mercy to fulfill a destiny that was as bleak
as endless winter months. The spring
would never come for her. Nash had been
her solitary spot of bright color, a brilliant
crocus blooming in the snow. She had
discarded him as if plucking him from a
fragile stem, taking one glorious sniff of
his fragrance and tossing him aside to
wither. She had been such a fool.
As she stood there, having so many
untimely epiphanies, she remembered the
two young boys in her dream. The pair she
liked to think of as her and Nash’s sons.
She remembered their words. It was as if
they spoke to her now in the moments
before her inevitable death.
“I have to stop this. I can’t do this
anymore!” she cried into the night.
She tossed her sword far beyond reach
into a snow bank.
The Wolves surged forward as a unit.
She was barely aware of the fangs sinking
into her throat as she fell backwards…
backwards…slowly as if in some dream.
A long, low howl carried into the infinite
darkness, well beyond the moment she
answered the blissful beckoning of
nothingness.
As Nash’s howl carried above the
threatening growls, the Wolves paused.
They turned in his direction, listening. All
Wolves were attentive except the one with
Maralee’s fragile throat in her mouth. His
mother.
Nash had watched Maralee as she
made her way through the village. He had
wanted her to give him a reason to save
her. When she had tossed her sword aside,
he knew she was the woman he thought
she was. The woman he had fallen in love
with, not the murderer fate had destined
her to be. The Wolves had moved more
quickly than he anticipated. His hesitation
might be her end.
Nash moved to stand over Maralee
and his mother. He knew he couldn’t force
Stacia away from Maralee. If Stacia made
any sudden moves, she’d rip out
Maralee’s throat.
Return to the village
, Nash howled.