“Go change your clothes, Maralee. I’ll be
okay in a minute.”
She didn’t even think to argue and
obeyed him immediately, going so far as
to lock the door of the water closet while
she washed the mud from her hands and
out of the knees of her pants. When she
garnered the courage to return to the living
area, Nash seemed to be back to normal.
He glanced up from his reading, grim but
no longer angry.
“If you feel like it, you can start
looking through one of the books written
by the last Wolf Guardian,” he said to her,
nodding in the direction of the bookshelf
beside his desk. “Perhaps a different point
of view might wring some meaning out of
his words.”
He trusts me,
she thought happily.
“All right.”
She took a book from the shelf and
settled into the comfortable chair in the
corner. She tucked her legs beneath her
and opened the book. As she read, she
realized the Wolves had an entirely
different perspective on the curse. The
way their immortality was obtained was
barely mentioned, instead the first Wolf
Guardian seemed to think they had been
treated unfairly in being cursed by the
cruel sage. Never once did the author
mention the sage was his father, and he
never even alluded to being half-human. It
was no wonder Nash had been so
astonished. The anti-human tone of the text
made Maralee wonder how Nash could be
so open to her.
“Do you feel this way about humans?”
she asked, after she had read a
particularly scathing passage about human
ignorance.
Nash glanced up from his reading. “I
always thought it strange that the last Wolf
Guardian was so embittered towards
humans,” he commented. “I think I better
understand why he felt that way now.”
“Is it so bad? Being half-human, I
mean.”
He didn’t answer her question,
probably because she wouldn’t want to
hear the answer. “At least I know why I’m
sterile now. I’m like a mule. A mix
between two different species that has no
right to create a new life to carry on my
blood; a malformation that goes against
the laws of nature. I’m surprised such a
travesty of life was allowed to be born.”
“What are you talking about?”
He shook his head, and said, “Never
mind.”
“It’s not like you to feel sorry for
yourself.”
He
laughed
derisively.
“You’re
wrong,” he said. “You just don’t know me
very well. It’s just like me to feel sorry
for myself. Somebody has to.”
“What do you have to feel sorry
about?”
she asked, her ire sparking.
“You’re healthy. You have a family who
adores you and a woman who believes in
you enough to give up her entire life to
stay beside you.”
He stared at her for a long moment.
“You’re right,” he said finally. “I don’t
have any reason to feel sorry for myself. It
could be worse. My pack could realize
that I’m half human.”
“Nash!” she admonished. “Your pack
respects you. Even I can see that.”
“You can’t even imagine how quickly
that would change if they found out the
truth of my parentage. They’re barely
tolerating me since I brought you, a human,
an outsider, into the village. Why do you
think they attacked me when we came
back from Sarbough?”
“I don’t know,” she admitted. “But
they stopped didn’t they?”
“Only because I’m the only one who
can break this curse. If they knew why,
they wouldn’t even bother with me. This
is why the sage gave his son the power in
the first place. I can’t even imagine how
things must have been for the last
Guardian. It’s hard to believe the pack
allowed him to live among them. It’s
obvious they didn’t accept him, and I
would suffer the same fate if my people
knew about me. Do you understand what
I’m saying, Maralee? I would never
survive as a human and I don’t belong
here either. I’ve always felt a bit outside
the loop. I just thought it had something to
do with my reclusive personality, but it’s
because I don’t fit. Anywhere.”
“That’s not true, Nash. You fit, you
belong, with me.”
He sighed. “If only it were that easy.”
“Why isn’t it?” she asked him
brusquely. “Aren’t I enough for you?”
He laughed. “You know that you’re
more than enough for any man,” he said.
“Though we fit together, together we fit
nowhere.”
She wasn’t willing to accept his
words. She felt like he was trying to
convince himself they would be better off
apart.
“Nash, what are you saying?” she
forced herself to ask him.
He gave her a reassuring smile. “That
I think too much for my own good. Let’s
live impulsively together for as long as
we are able.”
The book slid off her lap and onto the
floor as she stood up. “It doesn’t matter
where,” she said. “I want to be with you
forever.”
“I can’t see beyond tomorrow at this
point,” he murmured, lowering his eyes so
he didn’t have to see the hope radiating off
her. She was still so young and optimistic.
She tended to forget how merciless the
world could be.
“I can see it,” she said. She moved to
his side, tilting his face up so he was
forced to look at her. “Yes, there it is,”
she said. “It’s forever I see in your eyes.”
He rose from his chair to kiss her,
because no matter what life threw his
way, she always seemed to make him
believe everything would turn out for the
best in the end. The end of his torment,
however, was nowhere in sight.
Because their supplies were running
low, Maralee and Nash headed towards
Sarbough the following morning. The
weather was uncommonly warm for
March. It wasn’t long before Maralee was
carrying her cloak draped over one arm
and Nash had removed his long coat. As
the ground was saturated from the rapid
snowmelt, their boots were caked with
mud. Maralee tilted her face towards the
gentle rays of sun filtering through the bare
branches above and smiled. Just the
thought of warm weather and spring’s
renewal of life made her happy. Even
Nash’s dark mood didn’t dampen her
spirits.
“We should have asked Carsha and the
twins to come along,” Maralee said,
thinking that they could have made an
adventure out of their simple shopping
excursion.
“They weren’t home.”
“Oh, where did they go?”
“To visit the Northwood pack,” he
said. “My mother came and told me this
morning while you were getting dressed.”
“Northwood pack?”
He nodded. “Our pack is referred to as
the Southwood pack. We separated from
the Northwood Wolves about two hundred
years ago during the time when my
grandfather was the alpha male. We’ve
been flourishing, but the Northwood isn’t
doing so well. That’s why they are so
eager to welcome Rella and the children
into their pack.”
“Oh,” Maralee said flatly, realizing
that they were probably visiting Rella’s
potential new mate. “I wonder why she
decided to go visit him all of a sudden.
She seemed to want some time to consider
her options yesterday.”
“Was that before or after she kissed
him?”
Maralee glanced at him, surprised by
his level of distress. “If I didn’t know
better, I’d think that you were jealous.”
He paused and looked down at her, his
temper flaring. His temper had been on a
short fuse since he’d seen Rella with that
man the day before. “Why would I be
jealous? I’m just worried about her, about
the children and about…about me.”
He didn’t have to explain any further.
Maralee knew that the very idea of not
seeing his nephews and niece was eating
him up inside. Perhaps the thought of
losing Rella was distressful to him as
well. He didn’t explain his feelings to
Maralee, so she could only guess what
was going through his mind. “There has to
be a way to keep her with our pack.”
Nash grinned at her. “
Our
pack?”
“I
mean
your
pack,” she said,
flustered. “Isn’t there anyone in your pack
who would take her and the children?”
“The problem is she’ll always be
thought of as Cort’s mate. No one would
want to disrespect his memory by taking
her as a mate. This is what usually
happens in the rare occurrence that a
young Wolf’s mate is killed. We have
taken in a lot of widows and widowers,
but I can’t remember the last time it’s been
the other way around.” He didn’t feel the
need to remind her that the Hunters had
been the ones to make Wolves widows
and widowers.
“So no one in your pack will take them
in?”
“Sometimes…”
he
murmured.
“Sometimes another member of the same
family will take in a widow, such as…
such as a surviving brother.”
Maralee’s heart skipped a beat.
“You?”
His arm slipped around her waist as
they walked together and he kissed her
forehead. “Don’t worry, Maralee, Rella
and I talked about this and I decided I
wouldn’t ever be able to think of her that
way.”
“Even if it means keeping your family
together?” she blurted. She felt as if he
was slipping away from her even though
he was holding her tightly.
He nodded tersely and as she looked
up at him. She could see the regret in his
eyes as he stared into the distance.
It’s
because of me
, she realized.
I destroyed
their family and now I’m the one that’s
continuing to push them apart.
She
hadn’t realized she stopped walking until
Nash stumbled against her.
“Sorry,” he murmured, steadying her
with his hands. “Why did you stop?”
She looked up at him, her heart
thudding heavily in her chest. What if
loving him and making him happy meant
letting him go? Freeing him so that he
could be where he belonged, not with her,
but with his family.
“Maralee?” he asked. “What’s going
on in that head of yours?”
She grinned and hugged him. “I was
just trying to think things through for a
change.”
“And what are you thinking through?”
he asked, rubbing her back as he drew her
closer.
“What I should have for breakfast.”
He chuckled, and touched her face so
that she would look up at him. When she
did, he kissed her gently. “That seemed to
be taking an awful lot of concentration,”
he commented with a crooked grin.
She groaned and pulled his head down
for another kiss, this one deep and
lingering. When she broke away, flushed
and panting, she said, “You know what
that smile does to me.”
“What?” he teased. “This smile?”
He smiled at her crookedly again and
she shuddered with her sudden need for
him.
“I think I just decided what I want for
breakfast,” she said, grabbing him for
another kiss.
He chuckled again. “It’s nice to be
wanted,” he said. “We’ll have to take a
room at the inn.”
“Really?” she asked him breathlessly.
He hadn’t made love to her the night
before or that morning. She’d been
concerned about his sudden lack of desire.
He nodded, smiling at her obvious
delight. “If you’d like.”
Her answer was to take him by the
hand and tug him at a brisk walk towards
Sarbough. There were two inns in the
village, but when they reached the
outskirts of the town, Maralee headed
directly for the Smithy’s.