Werewolves Rule (The Rule Series) (20 page)

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Authors: K. C. Blake

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BOOK: Werewolves Rule (The Rule Series)
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She shrugged.
 
“Watching you eat, it’s an old habit.
 
I know you don’t remember, but you used to love the meals I’d prepare for us.”

Feeling uncomfortable, he shifted in his seat.
 

Isobel sat in his brother’s chair and picked a cracker off the tray.
 
She ate like a dainty lady of the Victorian age.
 
She nibbled on the cracker, taking her time.
 
Her tongue snaked out to lick her lips.
 
Her lowered eyes lifted, looking straight at him.
 
A silent invitation was sent.
 

Jack swallowed.
 
Feeling out of his depth, he searched for a way to reject her without making her mad.
 
Isobel wanted him.
 
She hadn’t been lying when she’d told Silver she wanted him for herself.
 
Now he was alone in his house with her.
 
Trapped.
 
After years of dealing with
Summer
he should be able to find an escape hatch.
 
Isobel wasn’t the first girl who couldn’t take no for an answer.

Blanca strutted into the room.
 
She stopped in the center of the floor and hissed at Isobel, full-force.
 
Spit sprayed from the little cat’s mouth.
 

Isobel growled in reply.
 
Her dark eyes flashed gold.
 
She slowly rose to her feet, eyes never straying from the feline.
 
Even though she’d almost killed Blanca, she seemed to be afraid her.
 
“I think I’ll go now.”

“Okay.”
 
He walked her to the front door.
 
It was hard to keep the smile off his face.
 
He needed to give Blanca a treat for getting rid of the werewolf.
 
Still, he couldn’t afford to make an enemy of Isobel.
 
She wasn’t through teaching him to use his new power yet.
 
“Are we practicing again tomorrow?”

“If you want.”

He nodded.
 
“I do.”

She picked the time and place.
 
He watched her go until the barn obscured her from view.
 
Silver came to mind almost instantly.
 
Memories flooded his head, one more painful than the next.
 
Silver should be the one teaching him to suck souls.
 
Not Isobel.
 

He wondered why Isobel had left in such a hurry.
 
She hadn’t been afraid of Blanca when she’d attacked her and tried to kill her.
 
Maybe she’d been worried Blanca would change because of her presence and reveal things about the werewolf to Jack.
 
Didn’t matter.
 
As long as Isobel was gone, he was happy.

Jack fed the cat before going upstairs.
 
When he opened his bedroom door, his jaw dropped along with his heart.
 
His mattress had been flipped.
 
He ran to his bed.
 
His hands searched in vain.
 
The magic rock was gone.
 
Someone had taken it.

Not just someone.

Isobel.

His eyes went to the window.
 
Isobel was working with Jersey, and he’d been an idiot to leave her unattended in his house.
 
While he had been sitting on the sofa, exhausted, she’d been rifling through his bedroom.
 
No wonder she’d been in such a hurry to leave.
 
She’d probably thought Blanca had seen the flipped mattress and was going to rat her out.

Jersey had won.

Unless he could somehow trick Isobel and get the rock back or learn how to suck souls out fast, Jersey was going to kill him.
 
Then he would go after Silver, and she wouldn’t have a chance.
 
Somehow Jack had to get that rock back before it was too late.

******

Chapter Sixteen:

MORE REVELATIONS

Jack watched old movies by
himself
until it got close to dawn.
 
He went outside on a whim, sat on a plastic porch chair with a cup of hot cocoa, and waited on the sunrise.
 
The sky seemed to hold at least a million twinkling stars.
 
It was beautiful and peaceful.
 
The horizon was painted with a variety of pastels.
 
His mind drifted back to his time with Cowboy, Lily, and
Summer
.
 
Minutes before sunrise they would be dragging themselves home after a long night of clubbing.
 

His heart twisted painfully, missing them.

Jack closed his eyes and took a deep breath.
 
He could smell the heat of the oncoming sun.
 
It lightly burned the inside of his nostrils, but it was a pleasant sensation.
 
He used to dream about watching the sun come up.
 
Now he could get up early every morning if he wanted to, and he could savor every moment just in case Jersey killed him in the end.
 

Billy’s car roared up the driveway and parked next to Jack’s pretty blue sports car.
 
Although Jack had wanted time alone to enjoy the sunrise, he was glad to see Billy home in one piece.
 
Instead of strolling into the house, Billy sat on the chair next to him and said, “Didn’t expect to see you up this early.”

Jack grunted in response.

“Have you talked to Silver?” Billy asked.

“No.
 
Why?”

“Just wondering how mad she is at you.”
 
Billy shook his head and chuckled.
 
“Man, you don’t know anything about women.
 
I thought vampires were supposed to be chick magnets.
 
What happened to you?”

Billy was just teasing him, but Jack wasn’t in the mood.
 
“Whatever.”

“Teenage girls all over the country would be so disappointed.
 
They watch those movies and read those books with the brooding vampires that want to bite them but vow to die for them instead.
 
Why don’t you sparkle?”

Jack turned halfway around in his chair, prepared to let his brother have it, but Billy was laughing so hard that he fell out of his.
 
His butt landed on the concrete.
 
That made him laugh even harder.
 
He was carrying on like a schoolgirl at a slumber party.

“You are such a jerk,” Jack said, his own mouth rising at the corners.
 

They laughed for a few minutes.

Billy wiped his eyes with the backs of both hands while he tried to stop.
 

“Did you see any action tonight?” Jack asked.

The laughter died.
 
All business now, Billy stood up with a scowl on his face. “I’ve been staking out a house full of werewolves.
 
There are at least ten of them coming and going at all hours.”

“You shouldn’t be hanging around there by yourself.
 
One of them could smell you.
 
Take the Reigns with you next time.”

“How did I ever survive without you here to tell me what to do?”
 

Billy went inside, and Jack followed.
 
Going straight to the kitchen for a quick snack, Billy grabbed some stuff out of the refrigerator and took it to the bar.
 
He slapped a sandwich together in record time.

“I’m serious, Billy.
 
If one of them figures out
you’re
nearby, they could be on you before you know they’re coming.
 
They’ll rip you apart.
 
You need help.”

“Yes, mommy.”

“Don’t get smart with me.”

Billy took his sandwich and cold beer to the living room.
 
He grabbed the remote, switched on the television, and collapsed on his favorite chair.
 
Jack stood in the doorway, hands on hips.
 
Short of manually turning off the television and yelling at his brother, there wasn’t anything he could do.
 

In seconds Billy had the sports channel on.
 
There was a scoreboard on the screen, highlighting the best games of the day.
 
Billy devoured his food and watched the news while Jack waited.
 
He forgot all about the sunrise.
 
There were more important things on his mind now.

It seemed like forever until Billy was done eating, but it was probably no more than ten minutes.
 
He finally flicked the television off.
 
Stretching in the chair, arms over his head, he arched his back and his gaze drifted to the doorway.
 
A scowl drew his brows together when he noticed Jack staring at him.

Billy sighed.
 
“Guess we’re not done arguing, huh?”

“No, we’re not done.
 
Thanks for noticing.”

“I’m sorry I called you mommy.
 
You’re actually more like a nagging wife.”

Jack dropped onto the couch.
 
“I’m glad you brought that up.
 
How is Mary, by the way, and why haven’t I met her yet?”
 
Although he was worked up over it, worried for Billy, he tried hard to keep the volume down.
 
“She’s stalling.
 
You do get that, don’t you?
 
I’m right about her.
 
She’s a werewolf, a vampire, or a shifter.
 
She’s something supernatural, and you’ve got to know that by now.”

“Mary is a very busy woman.
 
She’s been working long hours.”

“If you won’t introduce me to her, maybe I’ll go to the hospital and find her.
 
I’ll take some silver and holy water with me.
 
Then we’ll see who’s right about her.”

Billy jumped to his feet and jabbed the air between them with a rigid finger.
 
“You are not going anywhere near her.
 
Do you understand me?
 
You screwed up your love life.
 
Don’t mess with mine.
 
You are not going to show up at her work and make a jackass out of yourself.
 
She won’t want to be with me anymore if she thinks insanity runs in my family.”

“If you don’t want me to go, I won’t.”
 
As soon as Billy began to relax, Jack added, “But you have to bring her here during the daytime.
 
I want to see her.
 
If I don’t meet her in the next few days, I’m going to the hospital.”

“Keep butting into my love life, pal, and you will go the hospital... by ambulance.
 
You get me?”

“I’m not afraid of you.”

“Then you’re a bigger idiot than I thought you were.
 
I’m serious.
 
Mind your own business or else.”

Jack bit back an angry retort.
 
Fighting with Billy wasn’t getting them anywhere.
 
He was going to have to approach the problem some other way.
 
Somehow he was going to meet Mary.
 
Maybe he’d ask Silver how to approach the woman without scaring her off—if she wasn’t a creature—and without turning Billy homicidal.
 
That would give him something to talk to Silver about at least.

Billy headed for the stairs, ready for bed.
 
He stopped in the doorway and said, “Oh yeah.
 
Forgot to tell you.
 
I saw a friend of yours, I think.”

“A friend?
 
Who?
 
Where?”

“I saw a vampire with long, white hair tonight.”

Jack leaped off the couch so fast that he struck his shin on the coffee table.
 
Pain shot up his leg.
 
Grimacing, he hobbled over to Billy.
 
“Where did you see him?
 
Did he see you?”

“He was hanging out with the werewolves at that house I told you about.”

 
If that one werewolf hadn’t told Jack he’d found out about him from Blaine, Jack wouldn’t believe it.
 
Blaine had always been such a snob, especially when it came to werewolves.
 
Now he was hanging out with them, trying to use them to kill Jack.
 
What was the world coming to?

******

As evening arrived, Jack found himself outside of Silver’s house.
 
A silent voice called to him, beckoning with a seductive siren song.
 
He couldn’t resist it.
 
Since losing Silver, he didn’t know what to do with himself.
 
He didn’t know which way to turn, which way to go.
 
Somehow he had to make her understand about Isobel.
 
He had to fix it so she’d want to be with him again.

But he couldn’t make her love him.

Jack watched the house from the field.
 
He didn’t want to be seen, especially not by Silver’s parents.
 
If he caught sight of her, he planned to approach with caution.
 
The last time he’d seen her, she’d wanted to take his head off.
 
No reason to make her mad enough to try it now.

A cool breeze disturbed his hair.
 
He hunched down behind overgrown grass, wondering how long he should wait for her.
 
He wasn’t feeling very well.
 
Air seemed to get harder to find by the second.
 
Breathing through his mouth, he waited.
 
The house remained still, no one coming and no one going.

Jack wished he had thought to bring binoculars.

Nearly an hour passed without a sign of life anywhere.
 
The sun had nearly disappeared.
 
Only a fraction of light remained, enough for him to see movement in the bushes near the porch.
 
A shadowy figure emerged.
 
Jack didn’t have to get close, didn’t have to use his nose to know it was a werewolf.
 

The werewolf went up the porch steps, and it peeked through the windows.
 
It tried the doorknob.
 
After a few minutes it jumped off the porch and ran behind the house.
 
The front door popped open and Andrew Reign stepped out with a rifle in his hands.
 
When he didn’t see anything, he went back inside.
 
The door closed.

Jack used vampire-speed to get behind the house without being seen.
 
He stopped at the edge of the house and peeked around the corner.
 
The werewolf had vanished.
 
Jack had a bad feeling about this.
 
Where had it gone?
 
What was it up to?

A voice behind him said, “Tell me something.
 
Do you always spy on your friends?”

The English accent gave away the intruder’s identity.
 
Jack turned to find Ian Carver.
 
The new acting-principal of Jefferson Memorial stared at him with an accusing glare.
 
“Why are you spying on the Reigns?”

Jack didn’t know whether to lie or tell the truth.
 
His mind stopped working.
 
He just stood there, mouth open, nothing to say.
 

Carver didn’t have the same problem. “Since you are out here sniffing around Silver’s home, I assume you have those reports finished.”

“Yes, sir.”

Carver’s face relaxed into an easy grin.
 
“Well, I’m bloody glad to hear it.
 
Keep up the good work.
 
Only ten more reports to go and you’re home free.”

“I’ll do whatever I have to in order to graduate on time.”

“Glad to hear it.”
 
Carver slapped a hand on his back but didn’t remove it.
 
Instead, he grabbed a piece of Jack’s shirt and used it to steer him around the house to the front porch.
 
The man was a lot stronger than he appeared.
 
Carver added, “It would be a shame for you to leave without a pleasant hello to the Reigns.
 
Don’t you agree?”

Carver pushed the door open without knocking.
 
He only released his tight grip on Jack’s shirt once they were inside the family home.
 
Andrew came out of the kitchen, a towel between his hands.
 
He finished drying them before tossing it to a nearby chair.
 
“What’s going on?”

Carver replied, “I caught this young fellow sneaking around outside.”

Jack braced himself for Andrew’s infamous anger to explode.
 
Silver’s father had never liked him.
 
He was going to go ballistic.
 
Jack looked around for the man’s shotgun.
 
Now that he was in a new house, where did he keep it?
 
Behind the door?
 
Under the sofa?

Before Andrew could say a word, his wife entered, wearing a pleasant smile.
 
“Jack is welcome here anytime.
 
He knows that.”
 
Andrew gave her a dirty look and she reminded him, “It was Jack who gave us this land.
 
It was a very generous gift.”

“Doesn’t mean he should be skulking around like a common thief,” Andrew said.

“What’s going on?”
 
Silver asked the question from the top of the staircase.
 
All eyes went to her.
 
She smiled.
 
“Jack.”
 

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