Scratch the Surface (Wolf Within) (21 page)

BOOK: Scratch the Surface (Wolf Within)
13.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“You’d better get boots,” he said to me, as the wind tried to tear the words away.

Fuck that. I had my balance again and a good sense of the ice and I was down the stairs in an instant. Once on the sidewalk, I bent my head against the blasting wind, and trudged forward. My Chucks slipped a little on the ice beneath the snow, but I didn’t fall.

Murphy followed me. The Timberland boots I’d given him had soles that gripped much better than my Chucks. They were also waterproof. My Chucks, of course, were not.

Fucking piled-up snow made it impossible to push the wrought-iron gate open more than three or four inches. It was certainly not enough to let me out. Murphy tried to help but I was impatient. The ornamental fence was low enough to climb over. Murphy held his breath, clearly expecting me to skewer myself on the sharp spikes.

I didn’t. I fell on my ass but was up before Murphy could make it over the fence to help me. He fell too. I didn’t help him. I walked away.

It was frigging cold. Every breath seared my lungs and particles of ice formed on my eyelashes, while the wind scoured my cheeks.

I pulled my scarf over the lower part of my face. It smelled like wet wool with a faint undertaste of J’adore perfume.

“Four parts Dior, six parts unique Stanzie,” I whispered. I couldn’t even begin to count how many times Grandfather Tobias had said that to me. A hundred maybe? Five hundred? Never again though.

In the far distance snowplows ground their gears as they scraped the snow from the street. Flashing yellow lights pierced the gray afternoon darkness. The snow swirled down and I could hear it hitting my shoulders. I pulled up my hood and bulled through drifts up to my knees. Nothing as ephemeral as snow would beat me.

Murphy was my shadow, a second skin, doggedly trailing me, breath pluming white as he struggled to breathe the frigid air.

A siren wailed a few streets to the south. Ambulance? Police? For a terrible moment I thought the whole world knew I was a murderer and the police were out to arrest me. Put me behind bars where I would surely die. I didn’t want to be confined. I didn’t want to be trapped or muzzled or chained. I wanted to be free.

I wrapped my arms around my head and tried to block out the sound of the siren. Idiotically I thought if I couldn’t hear it, they couldn’t find me.

“Stanzie.” Murphy’s gloved fingers touched my arm. He didn’t grab or restrain me, but still I whipped my arm away from him.

“Where are we going?” he asked me, letting his hand drop to his side. His black pea coat was dusted with snow and the ends of his gray scarf fluttered grimly in the winter wind.

He’d worn that same scarf the day we’d gone to the Eiffel Tower. We’d sat together on one of the wooden benches, shoulders brushing, as we read file after file filled with deaths and accidents that had befallen young members of the Great Pack. This was before we’d known about the conspiracy.

Snow sifted down into his eyes and he wiped it away with his gloved hand.

I took that opportunity to start walking again without answering him because I didn’t know where we were going. If he’d asked me two weeks ago I would have thought I’d known but today, right now, in the middle of a snowstorm, I had no fucking clue.

A bus shelter loomed ahead out of the snowflakes. The buses weren’t running of course, so there was nobody there.

The bench inside was scratched full of graffiti. The remains of someone’s lunch lurked beneath it along with hard lumps of frozen gum.

Graffiti and scratches made by bored kids with nothing to do while they waited gouged the plastic windows.

An empty condom wrapper was stuck to a piece of gum and pressed to the back window. It was an odd statement but a deliberate one. Who in the hell would try to have sex in these temperatures? But then again, an empty condom wrapper did not prove there’d been sex.

Why did I have to think such stupid nonsense anyway? Maybe my guilt was destroying my goddamn sanity.

My feet were blocks of ice attached to my ankles. I sat on the bench before I fell. Beneath my wet jeans, my skin crawled with clammy goose bumps. My cheeks burned and a dull ache made my head throb. Even my goddamn earlobes hurt.

Murphy sat next to me, his hands jammed into his pockets. He shuddered against the wind, which tried its damndest to get inside the shelter, and partially succeeded too.

“If you want to take the bus, I think we’ve got a long wait,” he predicted and I ignored him. I wondered if Grey and I had ever waited for the bus at this particular stop and concluded we had not. There were more places in the world where we hadn’t been than where we had. This was just one of them.

We sat there in icy silence.

A snowplow scraped past, lights flashing yellow and white, muted through the plastic but enough to make me shut my eyes until it was past.

I stole a look at Murphy, at the way he sat so patient and still.

“Thank you,” I said, making him startle upright on the bench. I grimaced. “I know I’m being terrible. I can’t seem to help it, and I know that’s no excuse, is it?”

His eyes were very dark as he turned his face to stare at me. For a moment I thought he wasn’t going to say anything but then he did. “Stanzie, I swear to you on the Great Pack, on my ancestors, on everything that I hold most dear and sacred, I had nothing to do with Sorcha’s death. Nothing. And the only involvement I have with the conspiracy is trying to end it.”

I could smell his sincerity and beneath that, his fear. Fear of what? That I wouldn’t believe him or that I’d sniff beneath the sincerity and find the rot that might exist?

“You didn’t tell me the truth about Sorcha,” I accused, my throat aching with the pain of such betrayal that I could barely breathe. It wasn’t just his betrayal, it was everyone’s.

“I never lied. I told you the truth about how I felt about her. The only thing I didn’t exactly say is that she didn’t feel the same way back. That wasn’t lying.” His mouth twisted and he took a deep breath, as if preparing himself to face something brutal. “Don’t you understand? I was ashamed to tell you. I knew how much Grey and Elena loved you and I was ashamed to tell you that it wasn’t like that for me. All I ever hear from you is Grey and Elena, Grey and Elena. I was jealous and ashamed and I don’t know, Stanzie, I don’t think it has to ruin everything between us, does it?”

“Grey and Elena probably hid secrets from me too,” I said bitterly and he sighed. “They’re not who I thought they were either. They can’t be.” I gave a ragged little laugh and saw him clench his gloved fists.

“You’re going to let that old man poison what you had with them, aren’t you? You’re going to let that old bastard win.”

“It’s not a question of winning or losing, it’s a question of reality. Of perspective, Murphy. Nobody is who I thought they were. Not you, not Allerton, not Grandfather Tobias, not anybody. Why should Grey and Elena be exempt just because they’re dead?”

“If I’d had anything half as special as you had, I’d fight for it. I’d never let anyone tear it down with their bullshit scare tactics and propaganda. Jesus Christ, they loved you. Do you know how lucky you were to have had that? I’ve never had that. I’d give anything to have that.”

He was such an impossible liar. If that’s what he really wanted, why did he push me away every time I tried to get close enough to give it to him? He didn’t want it. At least not from me.

At that sobering thought, I jumped to my feet and plunged out into the snow storm. No sense in freezing to fucking death just because the world was full of liars.

Murphy followed me probably because he had nowhere else to go either.

* * * *

The warmth of the foyer was like a wet kiss when I staggered through the front door of the safe house. I gasped aloud and tore off my snowy outer garments. My Chucks were ruined, and I kicked them aside, curling my lip in disgust.

Murphy stamped snowy footprints onto the welcome mat and I followed his gaze to see Allerton and Kathy Manning emerge from the front room. They both had wine glasses in hand.

“Stanzie, you look frozen. Come upstairs and I’ll run you a bath,” ordered Kathy. Damn. The last place I wanted to go was upstairs where Grandfather Tobias’s dead body presumably remained, but she was a Councilor and I was weak, tired and very cold, so I did what she said and left Murphy behind without a backward glance.

While she fussed with the tub, I shed my clothes, kicking them into a corner of the bathroom by the shower stall. The second the tub was full I sank beneath the concealing vanilla-scented bubbles. The hot water stung my cold skin and I welcomed the pain because it drove away some of the fogginess that clogged my head.

I thought she’d leave me in peace, but instead she picked up my discarded clothing and deposited it neatly into a wicker hamper.

“I’ve got some chicken soup in the freezer. I thought I’d heat that up with some of the bread I just baked and we’d have that for dinner along with a salad. Will you eat that, Stanzie?”

I made a rude face at her. “Why the hell are you so hung up on food? You’re skinny as a rail but all you do is cook.”

She merely smiled at me.

“And does anything make you stop smiling? Jesus, it’s like living with the Cheshire fucking Cat, I swear.”

“I know you’re grumpy, dear. Would you like some brandy? And maybe some chocolate? I always like brandy and dark chocolate when I take a bubble bath. It’s so decadent somehow.”

“Chocolate?” A shudder of revulsion twisted my spine. “I am never going to eat, drink, or hopefully, smell chocolate ever again.”

“How about a cookie then? I have some sugar cookies left.” The bitch was unfazed. I nodded. Anything to get her the hell out of the bathroom so I could bathe in peace.

Smiling, she drifted out of the room and I scooped up a fistful of bubbles and water and threw it after her, timing it so she didn’t see. It landed nowhere near the door or her body and didn’t do the slightest bit of good at dispelling my foul mood. If anything, it intensified it.

She was back all too goddamn soon with brandy and a plateful of cookies. She handed me the glass of brandy and waited for me take it and a cookie before she retired to the sink, where she perched on the counter and nibbled hers. So much for being left in peace.

“Does your bond mate know you’re sleeping with Allerton?” I asked in my nastiest voice, hoping to drive her away. All she did was smile at me as if I were a petulant child who needed a nap and continued to nibble at her cookie.

I took a huge swallow of brandy and it burned like hell on the way down. Had the coniine burned when Grandfather Tobias swallowed it? I set the glass on the side of the tub and squeezed my eyes shut so I wouldn’t cry. I was damned if I would cry in front of Kathy Manning.

“He knows,” she answered me when she finished nibbling her cookie. She was like a goddamn mouse, nibble, nibble, nibble. She couldn’t even take a proper big bite. I’d finished my cookie in three bites. I never nibbled at anything.

“He’s got his own mistress,” she continued as she contemplated the cookies left on the plate before selecting a Christmas tree-shaped one. Again with the nibbling. I could feel my blood pressure skyrocketing so I averted my eyes in the vain attempt to distract myself. I could still hear her, though. Her little sharp mouse teeth nibble, nibble, nibbling away.

“Sounds like a great relationship,” I remarked and she laughed to herself.

“We’ve been bonded nearly thirty years, Stanzie,” she answered. “Things get a little...”

“Boring?” I finished for her. My tone was belligerent because I was secretly terrified. Would Grey eventually have gotten bored with me after thirty years? Was Murphy already bored after only two months? It wasn’t fair. It was not fucking fair. I hated the world at that moment. Everything on earth could go fuck itself.

“I was going to say predictable, but boring will do, I suppose,” she mused. “So you do things to liven it up. Matt and I compare notes and that usually turns us on and we’re all over each other. I thank my lucky stars for meeting Jason. He’s brought me back to being close to Matt again. I didn’t realize how much I’d missed him until after I started sleeping with Jason.”

“Do I want to hear this?” I was relatively certain I so fucking did not.

“You asked.” She extended the plate of cookies and, despite myself, I took another one. Treacherously sweet. Just like the woman who’d baked them.

“When did you start sleeping with Councilor Allerton?” I stuffed the whole cookie in my mouth to shut me the fuck up but it was too late.

Other books

Fixated by Lola De Jour
Street Love by Walter Dean Myers
Thaumatology 101 by Teasdale, Niall
Coyote Blue by Christopher Moore
Cry of the Hawk by Johnston, Terry C.
Dear Departed by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Running in Fear: Abandoned by Trinity Blacio
Flying the Storm by Arnot, C. S.