Authors: Susan Krinard
At least that was what she believed.
Now, as the train approached the Kansas-Colorado border, she occupied herself in gazing out
the window at the passing scenery as if it fascinated her. Tomás knew from experience that her
goal was more to avoid him than observe the landscape.
He settled back in his upholstered seat and studied her out of the corner of his eye. Even near
the end of a long train journey she managed to keep herself stiffly upright, her back seldom
touching the seat. For the past several days she'd remained detached, regal, unfailingly polite
and distant as the moon.
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
Page 21 of 275
The fact that they shared a berth in the sleeping car had done little to encourage her to speak
to him, except to inquire further about her brother. Fortunately, he knew just enough to hold
her at bay. And her long silences gave him every opportunity to recall in detail what she'd been
like in England.
Of course he'd known her then under different circumstances, when she'd been forced to
extremes by her elder brother's expectations. And "know her" was too presumptuous a phrase.
He'd left England before her escape to America.
Here, at last, she considered herself safe. Safe to be the proper human lady. Safe from the
werewolf heritage she refused to accept, because Cole MacLean had convinced her that he
shared her revulsion for the shapeshifter's way.
Tomás laughed silently. How well MacLean had deceived her. He'd revealed only that side of
himself he wanted her to see.
And what had she revealed to MacLean? That took a bit of imagination. The lady was scarcely
an exhibitionist, either of form or feeling. If she ever let that gorgeous hair fall about her
shoulders, Tomás was not privileged to see it. Each night she retreated behind the curtains of
her lower bunk and, for all he knew, slept fully clothed, corset and all.
But in the long, idle hours traversing the civilized East, changing trains in Chicago, and setting
out at last across the open plains, he amused himself with quite a contrasting vision.
Lady Rowena Forster. How shocked she'd be if she knew what he was thinking.
In his imagination, she was no statue but a soft and passionate woman. She was neither prim
nor proper. Instead of the close-fitting basque and corseted skirts, she wore a white
embroidered blouse, short-sleeved and loose about the shoulders. The faint outline of her
nipples lay like a shadow beneath the cloth. Her skirt was full and richly colored, falling just to
her ankles. Her feet—currently shod in dainty boots—were bare.
She looked at him, her eyes laughing. There was fire in her cheeks, the fire of a woman on the
brink of arousal.
Ah, yes. Now her eyes were becoming heavy with sensual invitation. Slender fingers brushed at
hair that was unbound and disheveled as a gypsy's. She bent toward him, and her breasts
pushed against their loose confinement.
"Tomás," she whispered.
Her lips were lush and moist, half parted. He moved to seize her in his arms, but she backed
away with a teasing smile. With a twist of her hips she unbuttoned her skirt and tugged it down
until it fell in a puddle at her ankles. Her legs were long and shapely. Only the long camisa
covered her, ending at her upper thigh.
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
Page 22 of 275
Her motions then were deliberately seductive. She ran her hands over the pliant cotton of the
camisa, molding it to her body. Slowly she began inching the blouse up over her thighs, her
hips, her waist. The curls that guarded her womanhood were as golden as her hair. She lifted
the bunched fabric above her breasts, revealing taut nipples of dark rose.
With a final dramatic gesture, she pulled the blouse over her head and flung it away. Moonlight
caressed her curves like a hungry lover.
Tomás knew she was about to Change, and when she did, she would deny him what she'd so
clearly promised. He lunged toward her. She skipped back, showing her teeth in challenge.
"Catch me," she said. "If you catch me, I am yours."
"Mi flama," he said, matching her smile. "You'll surrender to me—"
"Are you unwell, Mr. Randolph?"
Tomás started out of his pleasurable dream to the sight of Lady Rowena's deep blush. He
became aware of two things at once: that he was profoundly aroused and uncomfortable, and
that he'd been staring at her hard enough to draw her away from her implacable examination
of the countryside.
But no. It couldn't be his stare that produced that color in her cheeks and brought such alarm to
those cool eyes. He shifted in his seat and recalled his fantasy. If she had been privy to his
musings, she might have reacted so. The way any ordinary woman not made of ice would do.
Was it possible that she had guessed his thoughts?
"Mr. Randolph?" she said, a little catch in her voice.
He considered possible answers. Alas, I am quite unwell, my lady, but you have the cure to my
illness. Shall we repair to the baggage car?
"I was merely admiring the scenery and became… distracted," he said. "You seem disturbed,
Lady Rowena. May I fetch you some water?"
She looked away sharply, her hand at her collar. "I am just eager to reach my brother."
"Of course," he said. To see her truly eager about anything would be most gratifying. But her
brief moment of vulnerability had passed. Once again he was left to watch her pretending she
didn't notice him. He sighed and attempted once more to summon up the wanton lady of his
imagination.
But she had fled, bound up in her corsets and confining skirts. What will it take to transform
you, my Lady Ice? If a kiss were enough, MacLean would have tried it. He'd never buy the wares
without testing them first.
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
Page 23 of 275
The image of MacLean kissing Rowena shattered Tomás's lazy amusement. For an instant he
saw, too explicitly, his enemy invading his waking dream, standing between him and the Lady of
Fire. It was MacLean who seized her in his arms, MacLean who covered her body with his own.
Demonio. Cole would never have her, Fire or Ice. If anyone were to quench that fire or melt the
ice, it would be El Lobo.
The small hairs tightened on the back of Tomás's neck, and he found himself on his feet,
standing over the lady in question. His fingers were curled to grab her in full view of every other
passenger in the car.
And she was staring up as if at a monster.
Something within him snapped. The grim, jealous creature that had possessed him let go, and
he fell into his seat again. In the same moment Rowena virtually leaped from her place and slid
past him.
"If you will excuse me," she said, "I must…" Her sentence went unfinished. She hurried away
down the aisle, past the curious and pointed gazes of her fellow travelers.
Tomás met the stares one by one until every voyeur found something better to do, and then
had a good laugh at his own expense.
Ay, Dios! He could hear Sim Kavanagh's voice now: "Caballero, if you're going to lose your head,
never do it over a woman."
His head was still in place, but his mind was another matter. Or perhaps a more southerly part
of his anatomy was to blame.
He relaxed and closed his eyes. Why fight it? Rowena was hardly his kind of woman, nor had he
ever been required to beg for a lady's favors. In this case it might actually help to imagine her as
his Lady of Flame, lest reality douse the very first ember. She'd take her own life rather than
admit to a werewolf's passion.
If MacLean managed to steal her back before Tomás was finished with her, he was likely to
discover his privates frozen between the sheets.
His mouth twitched between a smile and a frown. Let that horse be saddled when he caught it.
And catch it he would. There was nowhere for Rowena to go until they reached La Junta, which
should be in a handful of hours. The end of the journey, and the beginning of a new one. Lady
Ice was in for quite a surprise.
For the first time he noticed that she'd left something of herself behind in her haste to escape.
The white satin fan lay half open and forgotten on her seat, absurdly delicate. A careless move
could crush it.
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
Page 24 of 275
It's an unusual marble statue that needs cooling, he thought. Or were you just beginning to
thaw? On impulse he snatched up the fan. The pristine folds carried Rowena's unique
fragrance.
There was no denying that she owned an intoxicating natural perfume under all her feminine
armor. Lady Ice would never let him near the source of that bouquet, but the Lady of Fire…
He moved to her seat to stretch out his legs and was idly fanning himself when he registered
the first hint of an entirely different scent.
Danger. It rose above the odors of someone's recent meal, bodies closely mingled, and ever-
present smoke. His body snapped to attention before his mind could focus. The porter who
obstructed his view of the aisle came level with his berth, and he recognized the man who
stood at the opposite end of the car.
They called him lucky, the men who followed him. But no luck of his brought Weylin MacLean
to this train on the very day that would see the start of the MacLeans' ultimate humiliation.
It was beyond belief that Weylin had tracked him to and from New York. He was sure that the
younger MacLean had never set foot in the city; he'd have acted immediately if he knew Tomás
was on board. He couldn't have recognized Lady Rowena.
That was as far as Tomás's luck held. At any moment Weylin would catch his scent and look
across the car, and then there'd be hell to pay.
The Randalls had already paid their debt to hell.
Lady Rowena would know nothing of his sudden alteration in plans, but that would be
remedied soon enough. He tucked the folded fan in his coat. Enjoy your freedom while you can,
my Lady Ice. This is not good-bye, but simply adios.
He rose casually, taking the porters arm and using him as a shield to block Weylin's view.
"There's a man at the other end of the car," he said. "Tall and light-haired. It's very important
that you don't let him come any further into the car. If you do, there will be trouble. Do you
understand?"
The porter blinked and nodded. "Don't let him come in."
"Excelente. And now I will be going." He patted the man's arm and started for the rear of the
car.
He didn't know what drew him to glance back as he reached the door. Weylin looked directly at
him and stilled in midstep. His gray eyes narrowed. The porter hurried to confront him, but
Tomás didn't wait to witness the outcome of such an unequal contest.
Once A Wolf – 19th Century Werewolf 02
Page 25 of 275
He had long since determined the most convenient exits for a possible hasty departure. No one
saw him jump from the train, more cleanly than any human could manage, and roll among the
prairie grasses unhurt. He stripped out of his fine suit of clothes, and Changed.
The world changed with him, becoming a place of myriad smells, sounds, and sensations that
only un hombre-lobo could appreciate. Warm wind ruffled his brown coat. He nosed the pile of
discarded fabric as if it were the bleached skeleton of another life, left for some wayfarer to
discover.
On four feet he began to run—not the steady ground-eating lope of ordinary travel, but a dead
gallop that would see him to La Junta before the train arrived.
Rowena stood on the railroad platform in La Junta, Colorado, her trunks at her feet, and uttered
a very ladylike curse.
The dusty town bustled, oblivious, all around her. This was the railhead, the end of the line
while tracks were being laid across the empty prairie to the somewhat more established town
of Trinidad, near the New Mexico border. So she had been told.
She'd also been told that the next single-car passenger train to the end of the line, a few miles
northeast of Trinidad, would not depart until dawn tomorrow morning. And there was no
telling if Trinidad was to be her final destination.
She remained in ignorance of such details—including where in this Godforsaken place she
might find a dish of fresh tea, not to mention her brother—because Mr. Randolph had
disappeared. Once the train had reached the station she'd fully expected him to turn up,
apologizing for his dreadful manners.
He had not, and she couldn't account for her inexplicable reaction toward him a few hours ago,
or his peculiar behavior afterward. Certainly she'd caught him staring at her—it wasn't the first
time—but until that moment when he'd looked ready to pounce, he hadn't given her legitimate
cause for concern. She'd been the one to ignominiously flee from him, as flustered as a