Authors: Susan Krinard
to remember how he had come to be there, and why. His senses told him it was not long after
sunset—of which day, he did not know—and that his fur bore the scent of dried blood.
Blood from the nearly mortal wound he'd received at Sim Kavanagh's hands. A wound that
would have killed an ordinary wolf. Or man.
Only his inhuman werewolf nature had saved him. Somehow he'd dragged himself into deeper
shelter where no passerby could chance upon his apparently lifeless body. There, his driving
instinct for survival had taken command, drawing him into a deep, healing torpor.
He might have died. He was still extremely weak, and desperately thirsty. He wasn't sure he had
the strength to Change, even if he wished. But he lived.
He lived. Not since childhood, when the whole family was together and life seemed full of
wonder, had he felt such unexpected, spontaneous happiness. "Right" and "justice" and
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"revenge" were meaningless human words that he cast aside with a snap of his jaws. He
wanted to point his muzzle to the stars and howl for joy, to leap and dance like a foolish colt.
Dancing was beyond his ability. He banked his jubilation and concentrated on the simple act of
standing. After two tries, he managed to do so without losing his balance. His muscles groaned
and protested; the shoulder where he'd taken the bullet worked like an old dog's. Taking small
and uneven steps, he followed his nose to the trickle of a streamlet winding down from the
mountains.
He drank for several long minutes, glorying in the pure taste of clear water. Slowly the
dreamlike rapture faded. As he lay beside the brook, purpose returned to his thoughts. Almost,
almost he ignored it. There was a part of him that wanted to remain a wolf and never return to
the world of duty and discipline that he'd made for himself.
Wasn't this world just as real? He could live, not for some abstract notion of justice, but for
moments like these. For the freedom to run at will and think no further than tomorrow, with
nothing to prove and beholden to none—not Cole, not his father's memory, not the rule of
man's law. Not even to himself.
But the habit of years was too strong.
He was Weylin Arthur MacLean. That meant something, more now than ever. A MacLean didn't
give up just because it was easier or more pleasurable. He didn't run away from responsibility.
He had work to do.
He pulled himself to his feet and concentrated on his goal until the last, tattered remnants of
temptation slipped away and his mind was clear again. His first task was to find his modified
saddlebags. They were where he'd left them before Kavanagh's attack, undisturbed even by
animals.
It might have been wiser to wait and heal another day or two before Changing. But many days
might have passed, each one robbed from his pursuit of Tomás; he must return to the haunts of
men to regain his bearings and hear the latest news.
If he'd lost the chance to follow Kavanagh to Randall, he had gained one advantage he hadn't
possessed in the past. He had faced death and survived. Father, Kenneth, Cole— all of them
had stood face to face with their own mortality, fighting for what they believed. He'd never
been part of that brotherhood. Deep in his heart he'd been ashamed of that lack, of not
knowing how he would face the moment when it came. If he'd prove a true MacLean in the
end.
That doubt was gone. He was worthy. He could stand in Cole's presence without wondering if
his choice, his way, was right.
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In the pack was plain clothing to cover his human body, and money enough for a fully equipped
mount. The nearest village of any size was less than ten miles distant. There he'd find what he
needed to resume his hunt, this time as a man. But he knew he could take either form as it
suited his purpose, without hesitation or apology or forgetting who and what he was.
Gathering all his strength, he stood alone beneath the light of a thousand stars and willed
himself to Change.
Night was well advanced by the time Tomás rode Delfin into the plaza at El cañon del Rito de las
Lagrimas. He hadn't slept since the previous night; Sim had sent him to a village many hours'
ride from the cañon, but when he'd arrived in the late afternoon, the man he was to meet was
nowhere to be found. He'd lingered a full night and half the day before turning for home.
Sim was not one to make such mistakes. If he said there was a man seeking El Lobo's aid against
cruelty and injustice, that man must exist. But no one in Canada del Rocoso had known
anything of him.
Tomás consoled himself during the wasted journey by flirting with the señoritas and enjoying
the obliging hospitality of people who claimed El Lobo as their hero. They did not constantly
waver between welcome and rejection, nor question his methods and motives. They did not
leave him torn between laughter and insanity. Among them, he never doubted what he felt and
what he wanted.
Not like that last encounter with Rowena, when he was damned by the certainty that he had
gone beyond the borders of mere wanting and entered a deadly, alien territory he'd avoided all
his life. A country fraught with perils and traps and bottomless pits into which he would fall and
continue falling for all eternity.
He was expert at roaming no-man's-lands where others dared not stray. He'd walked many
perilous borderlines before meeting Lady Rowena Forster, and had always chosen to stay free
of allegiance to any but himself. No one, not even Sim, had traveled the whole journey at his
side.
Then the lady held out her hand and beckoned him across that final line. He had very nearly
taken the irrevocable step from Wanting to Caring.
He dismounted in front of his casa—Rowena's, now—and leaned against his horse's warm
barrel. "There are times, my friend," he said, "when I'd rather be a horse than a wolf. The
stallion has many mares, and each one knows she'll never be his only amor. Nor has he any
wish to confine himself." He sighed and slapped the gelding's neck. "Not that you'd know of
such things. I'm beginning to think you and I have a little too much in common." He led Delfin
toward the stable, noting that no lights shown from any of the houses. Why should there be?
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"Do you suppose she has found life unbearably dull in my absence?" he asked. Delfin nickered,
doubtless longing for his grain and a good rubdown. Tomás was thinking less of food and a bath
than what he was going to do about Rowena.
He could let her go. The thought had come to him more than once, never so strongly as during
that last conversation. His intent to use her to humiliate and injure Cole MacLean had lost its
savor somewhere along the way. He didn't believe that MacLean would give him what he
demanded in exchange for her release.
So Rowena would remain. And though he would find satisfaction in her realization that Cole
was a faithless rogue, who then would be responsible for her? Though she would eventually
give herself to him, what would come after?
No future. Rowena believed in such laudable ambitions as marriage, children, law and order,
proper etiquette, and a settled life. Such things were real to her. His reality lay in the moment,
and in knowing there was no certainty, no permanence in the world.
He should take her back—back to the world she knew. If he did not, she would suffer. Her
suffering might be more than he could bear.
He paused at the stable door and pressed his face to Delfin's soft muzzle. "Am I not noble, to
think of her welfare at this late hour?" he said. "Or is it myself alone I think of?" He laughed.
"You see what's become of me. She's like a poison in my blood. Si, mi amigo—the sooner I get
rid of her, the better I—"
"Huuuuh!"
Delffn tossed his head. A small shadow slipped around the corner of the stable and stopped
before him. It reached out to catch his sleeve with unmistakable urgency.
Esperanza.
She opened her mouth, and the same hoarse sound emerged. Not a word, not yet, but more
noise than she had made since they'd found her at Los Milagros. "Sssuuuh—"
He dropped Delfin's reins and grasped the girl's shoulders. "Esperanza! Can you speak?"
Her hand flew to her throat. Her face was smeared with dirt, her clothes torn as if in some
recent struggle. His stomach tightened with the foreknowledge of disaster.
"What is it?"
"Rrruuu—eee—nahh," she gasped.
Rowena.
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He let her go and ran across the plaza. Rowena's door swung open at his first touch. He plunged
into the bedchamber, only to find the sheets rumpled and cold. Her scent was the barest trace
in the stale air.
Esperanza waited for him just outside, her eyes shining with anxiety. He touched her shoulder
in passing and strode to the door of Nestor's casa. His knock went unanswered. Nestor was not
within.
One by one he visited the other houses, Esperanza at his heels. His people welcomed him and
sleepily answered his questions with puzzlement and concern.
No, none of them had seen the lady Rowena since the evening before last. Why? He himself
had left a letter saying that she was sick and must not be disturbed while he was gone. Enrique
had found the letter on the door to her house this past morning. No, Nestor was not here; they
had heard he was called away the night before to see a dying relative in a village some miles
distant.
Something was very much the matter. Tomás cursed too softly for the curious children to hear
and reassured his men with a few casual words. False words; Nestor was gone without a clear
explanation; Rowena hadn't been seen in a full day; and Esperanza—
"Ssseee-" The girl tugged on his sleeve, forcing him to look at her again. "Sseeemm."
Sim. His blood became ice. "Sim Kavanagh?" he said, grabbing her hand. "Speak to me,
Esperanza. Where is Rowena? Did Sim—"
She nodded. "Sseeem. Took—" She pointed toward the trail that led up the cliffs to the mesa
above. "A… way."
Sim had taken Rowena out of the cañon.
Only a few times in his life had he known the fell emotions that claimed him in that moment.
Rage was uppermost among them—rage and despair and overwhelming fear. The roots of his
hair stiffened, and his lips curled in a snarl.
Sim had betrayed him. Sim had taken Rowena. Sim had stolen his mate…
And he would kill to reclaim her.
He flung back his head, ready to howl out his challenge. Esperanza snatched her hand from his.
"Nooo," she moaned. She slapped her hands over her ears as if to block out some unbearable
noise. "Nooooh!"
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The sheer terror in her voice stopped him. His vision cleared to find her crouched on the ground
at his feet. Several of the older children watched the drama from the sidelines, half in
fascination and half in fear. Their fathers and guardians had far more sense.
"You, ninos!" he said sharply. "Go back to your houses. Enrique, see to Delfin. Vamos!"
If ever they thought to disobey, it was not now. They ran inside, and the casa doors remained
firmly closed behind them. Tomás caught his breath and knelt beside Esperanza.
"Come," he said. "I will not hurt you."
She looked up, hands still pressed to her head. "Help—"
He lifted her easily and supported her slight weight. "Si. Rest easy, muchacha.." Though she was
dirty and afraid, her face bore no bruises or the marks of blows. Yet he was sure that she had
personal knowledge of what had become of Rowena, and how. Sim had done far worse than
ignore his commands about bothering the girl.
He had warned Sim about it again, yesterday afternoon— at the same time Sim told him of the
man in Canada del Rocoso who required his help. That man hadn't been waiting for him
because Sim had invented him. He'd doubtless found a way to lure Nestor from the village at an
appropriate time, and written the letter that supposedly came from Tomás. Only a few in the
village could read, and none could distinguish his handwriting from any other's. No one would
be looking for Rowena.
Had Sim underestimated Esperanza?
Tomás cupped the girl's chin. "I am sorry I did not protect you and Rowena from Sim," he said.
"Can you forgive me?"
She nodded, a heartbreaking gravity replacing fear and panic.
"This time I will make certain he does no further harm. Do you know where he was taking the
lady?"
Her lips moved but formed no coherent word. He didn't require her answer. "Cole," he