“Well, she’s an unmarried young lady, so I
suppose it is serious, but she’s not ill.
She’s pregnant.”
Pregnant.
The word seemed foreign.
She couldn’t wrap her mind around it.
They weren’t talking about her, obviously.
Her one and only lover had been sterile.
She couldn’t be pregnant. Nevertheless,
her hand moved to cover her abdomen
protectively.
Nash, why didn’t I fight for
you?
she wondered.
Why did I give up so
easily? I had everything when you were
with me. I don’t need anything but you.
Why aren’t you here when I have
something important to tell you? You
would have been so happy to find out
that you were going to be a father.
She sat up on the bed she was laying
upon, startling the two men who were
discussing her condition with worried
looks on their faces. She recognized
Trayburn obviously, but the other man was
a stranger to her. “Is what you said true?”
she asked the unknown man. “Am I
pregnant?”
He avoided her eyes and nodded
slightly. Perhaps they expected her to be
upset or at the very least concerned. Not
elated. But she was.
“I can’t believe it,” she murmured,
climbing from her bed and grabbing
Trayburn in an enthusiastic embrace. “I’m
going to have a baby. I have to find Nash.
I have to tell him.” She released Trayburn
and kissed the astounded doctor on the
cheek before shaking his hand vigorously.
“Thank you, Doctor. There’s no way
you’re mistaken about this, is there?”
“The blood test was definitely
positive,” he told her anxiously, “though
by physical exam I determined you are not
very far along.”
She hugged him again. “Trayburn,
have a horse saddled. I’m leaving right
away.”
“But it’s the middle of the night.”
“I can’t get to him fast enough,” she
said, feeling as if she were weightless
from the happiness bubbling inside of her.
“Miss
Decatur,”
Trayburn
said,
grabbing her by the arms and giving her a
shake. “What are you thinking?”
“I’m thinking about what’s important
to me,” she said, “and about what will
make me happy without any consideration
for anyone else.”
He gave her an odd look. “But Miss
Decatur…”
“Have my horse brought around front.
I’ll be down in ten minutes.” She retrieved
her empty backpack and began to stuff
things inside.
Trayburn and a very confused doctor
left her to her packing. In less than five
minutes, she stood in front of the stables
waiting anxiously to return to her love.
She would do whatever necessary to be
beside him. She could give him what he
wanted. What he needed. She could give
him a family. When William shuffled out
of the stables, yawning widely with a half
asleep horse in tow, she smiled brightly.
“I think that’s the first time I’ve ever
seen you smile like that,” William said.
“I don’t think I’ve ever been this
happy.”
“Where are you going at this time of
night?” he asked. “If you wait a few
minutes I’ll get my horse and come along
with you.”
“I can’t wait, William,” she said,
putting her foot in the stirrup and hoisting
herself up onto the horse.
“When will you be back?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “Maybe
never. Thanks for everything.”
She spun her horse around and kicked
him into a reluctant canter. Just outside the
gates of the Decatur estates, her horse
neighed with fright and stopped short,
tossing his head agitatedly. Maralee clung
to the saddle.
“Whoa, boy,” she called, trying to
calm her spooked horse. “Easy there.
Easy!”
She heard what had spooked her horse
then. It was the threatening growl of an
enormous brown Wolf. The horse was
fighting its bit, rearing as it attempted to
dislodge its passenger. Maralee refused to
fall. She could only think of Nash’s baby,
and how her recklessness might bring him
or her harm. She loosened her hold on the
reins, hoping the horse would calm with a
gentler hand. Unfortunately, the Wolf
charged at that moment and sank its teeth
into the horse’s hind leg. The horse
shrieked in pain, its front legs flailing
madly and Maralee could only hope for a
soft landing as she tumbled from the
saddle to the ground. The horse took off as
fast as his bleeding leg could carry him.
The Wolf turned his attention to Maralee.
Maralee struggled to her feet, her hand
automatically going to her belt for her
absent sword. Finding no familiar hilt to
wrap around, her hand closed into a fist
instead.
“So are you going to kill me, just
because my aunt commands you to?” she
sputtered angrily at the Wolf. He had
lowered the front half of his body to the
ground, his hackles raised and teeth bared
as he prepared to attack. “I know you can
understand me and I know there is as much
human in you as there is Wolf. I don’t hunt
your kind any more. I just want to be left
in peace as you want to be left in peace.”
She might as well been talking to a
wild wolf, as effectual as her words were.
The Wolf sprang towards her and just
before his front paws struck her shoulders
a blur of black fur careened into the
brown Wolf, tossing him several yards. At
first, Maralee thought the other Wolf,
Marc, had come to her aid, but she
glimpsed the shape of a white crescent
moon over his left eye and she knew it
was Nash.
She was torn between the elation of
seeing him and concern for his safety as
the brown Wolf climbed to his feet and a
second black Wolf tore from between the
trees that lined the lane. Before she could
call a warning to Nash, he spun around
and ran straight for her. He stopped, their
eyes meeting for scant seconds in the
moonlight and then he turned around and
presented his back to her. Something was
strapped across his back. A small bundle
of clothes and her father’s sword.
He barked at her and she could only
assume that he wanted her to take them
from him. She removed both the bundle
and the sword and he surged forward
again, landing both paws forcefully on the
other black Wolf and knocking him to the
ground. The brown Wolf joined in the
foray. Maralee watched, horrorstruck, as
the Wolf fight ensued. She couldn’t tell if
Nash was winning or losing. She couldn’t
distinguish the growls or the yelps from
each other. She knew that she had to do
something. She had to help Nash. He
couldn’t fight them alone. She didn’t want
to kill anymore, but she couldn’t see any
other option. Surely if Nash had given her
the silver sword, he expected her to use it.
She drew the sword and tossed the
sheath aside. Its weight was so familiar,
but the feeling of uncertainty in her chest
was entirely new. She took a step towards
the snarling, snapping Wolves and
hesitated. Her moment of indecision
allowed the two minions to pin Nash
down and tear into his throat.
“No!”
She surged forward. Slashed one Wolf
along the side. Stabbed the other in the
shoulder.
Both yelped and then turned their
attention to her.
She stared at them in disbelief.
Neither had succumbed to the silver’s
poisonous affects. She looked down at the
sword in her hand to make sure that it was
indeed her father’s. There was no
mistaking it. It was tarnished from lack of
attention and had traces of fresh blood on
the blade. Distracted, Maralee didn’t even
see the Wolf coming. Huge paws
connected with her shoulders and she fell
flat on her back, the sword flying from her
grasp. She hit the ground with enough
momentum to knock the wind from her
lungs.
“Wait.” She huffed several times
trying to catch her breath as the brown
Wolf stared down at her with malevolent
amber eyes. Nash’s blood stained his
snout. “That sword was s-silver.”
The Wolf melted instantly into his
human form. Maralee was surprised. She
didn’t know any Wolf, besides Nash that
could transform in front of her.
“What did you say?” Jack asked, his
eyes narrowing.
“I just cut you with a silver sword.”
“It can’t be true,” he snarled. “You’re
lying.”
“I’m not lying,” she insisted. “The
curse…” She paused as the enormity of it
settled over her. “The curse must be
broken.”
Marc, still in the form of a black Wolf,
sniffed her sword and howled.
“What did he say?” Maralee asked
Jack, who was still pinning her to the
ground by her shoulders.
“The sword smells like silver.”
“You see. Nash broke the curse. He’s
a Guardian. Do you see the crescent on his
forehead?”
Jack looked at the fallen Wolf lying
several yards away.
“A Guardian?”
“A Guardian is capable of breaking
the curse, correct?”
Jack gazed down at her suspiciously.
“How do you know all of this? How do
you know a Wolf, a Wolf Guardian no
less? You’re a murdering Decatur, aren’t
you? Your aunt has been protecting our
pack by keeping you away, but you came
back to kill us all, didn’t you?”
She shook her head. “Nash is my
lover,” she said, “the father of our unborn
child. By creating a life with a human,
Nash has broken the curse. If you kill me,
our baby will also die. If that happens, the
curse will revert and the poisonous silver
already circulating in your bloodstream
will prove toxic.” She was improvising.
She had no idea if her theory was correct,
but she seemed to be convincing enough to
earn the Wolf’s consideration.
“The curse has been broken?” he said
quietly. “And that is a Guardian? And you
carry the Guardian’s child?” He paused,
thinking, as Maralee watched blood gush
from the wound on Nash’s throat. “Silver
is no longer poisonous, so does that mean
the madness beneath the full moon will
also be gone?”
“I’m sure it must be,” she rushed. “Can
I please go to Nash now? I promise to
leave your people in peace. Surely you
want to tell them the curse has been
lifted.”
The black Wolf, Marc, who had been
listening to their entire exchange, barked
and wagged his tail. Jack melted into his
Wolf form and moved off Maralee. He
stared down at her for a moment, licked
her cheek and darted off towards the
woods to the west of the Decatur estates.
Maralee climbed to her feet and raced
to Nash’s side, dropping to her knees
beside him and leaning over him to check
for signs of life. He seemed to be
breathing but was unconscious and no
matter how much she called his name, or
tried to shake him awake, he didn’t
respond.
“Maralee?” a voice asked anxiously
behind her.
She started and glanced up at William
whose worried face was blurred by the
tears in her eyes.
“Is that a Wolf?” William asked,
eyeing Nash’s limp body nervously.
“We have to get him up to the house.
He’s hurt pretty badly,” Maralee said,
trying to lift him from the ground, but he
was too heavy.
“But…” William whispered. “It’s a
Wolf.”
“Help me, William!”
“Maralee, what—”
“Please. I’m not strong enough to lift
him,” she cried.
William sighed heavily and bent to lift
the limp Wolf into his arms. “He’s
heavy,” he complained, but walked
forward.
“What will I do if he doesn’t pull
through this?” Maralee murmured to
herself. “He doesn’t even know about the