Mag-log inWendy’s POV
“Easy,” he says, holding up his hands. “Just gonna take a look. You wouldn’t be the first to run dry in the middle of the road.” This close, I see it— The scars. There’s a jagged track that goes from his hairline, down his forehead, follows the curve of his eye socket, and bisects his cheekbone all the way to his jaw. There’s another big scar across his other eye, right through his eyebrow. And yet another vertically slicing through his lips. It looks like someone took a knife to his face. It doesn’t look like the desperate, haphazard slashes like you’d get in a fight or accident. It looks like evidence of torture. He must see the shock on my face, because his own expression hardens. The energy drink churns in my stomach. “Okay,” I whisper. “You can take a look.” He nods in acknowledgement. We’re both pretending like I have some power in this situation, when the truth is, I’ve never been more vulnerable in my life. Who is this stranger? And what the hell happened to him? He turns, moving to the back of his truck. He grabs a gas can and a lantern, flicking the old-fashioned flame to life before handing it to me. That's when I notice his hands are covered in intricate tattoos, including his fingers. The hand holding the lantern is inked with a rose. There are more words and symbols I don't recognize trailing down his knuckles. It looks like pictures I've seen of mafia tattoos. Something to denote membership and rank. Achievements. This guy might be in a gang. I swallow down a surge of fear. The moment we touch, his gaze flicks up to me. There’s something intent there, almost searching. I try not to stare at his scars, but it’s impossible. If you stare into his eyes, you must also be confronted by the scars. I wonder if whoever did that to him had exactly that in mind. This close, with the lantern’s light bathing us, I can see the color of those eyes. One is blue, the other a brown so light it’s almost gold. “Heterochromia.” I don’t realize I say the word aloud until his brows draw together and he says, “What’s that, now?” I swallow, embarrassed by the slip. “Your eyes. They’re two different colors. Heterochromia.” “My father called them ghost eyes. Thought it gave me the power to see spirits.” A breeze ruffles his dark hair and I catch a whiff of his scent. He smells crisp and wild and clean all at once, like a forest after a storm. “It’s a gene mutation,” I say. “Nothing supernatural about it.” We’re still grasping the lamp together, neither of us making a move to let go. There’s a flicker in his expression, like he’s remembering something. Like he recognizes me. “You sound so sure,” he says. “I learned about it on the back of a Snapple cap. So it must be true.” He blinks. Processing that I maybe just made a joke. Not a very good one, apparently. He doesn’t smile. “Careful.” He finally relinquishes the lantern. “Lamp gets hot.” “Do you need me to follow you with the light?” “No need.” He crouches by my car, working with effortless efficiency as he fills the tank. Then he checks a loose lug nut and runs a hand under the hood. His movements are deft, completely at ease. No one has ever treated my old little Honda with such care. I really should be embarrassed, standing uselessly while he looks over my car. But I’m too distracted, trying to figure him out. He’s tall and muscular beneath his clothes, so he either spends a lot of time at the gym or does a job that requires physical labor. When his fingers touched mine, his own felt callused. Could he be in construction? Or a mechanic? He certainly knows his way around my car. He rolls up his sleeves. Like his jeans, his shirt is faded but looks soft and clean. The tattoos on his hands extend all the way up his muscular forearms. I can’t quite make out the details in the dim light, but I see there’s a smudge of black grease on his other arm. Mechanic, I decide. I eye the tattoos. Hopefully not a mechanic that belongs to a motorcycle gang. Or organized crime. After capping the gas can, he stands to his full height. Much taller than me. Everything about him is much. His honed body. His bone structure. His voice. He tilts his head as he studies me. “I feel like we’ve met before.” “We haven’t. I would’ve remembered.” I flush. My answer has given too much away. “Are you from around here?” I ask, trying to smooth over how flustered he makes me. “Something like that.” Part of me wants to keep him talking so I can get a better sense of him. He still has that aura of danger about him. But some instinct makes me want to draw closer to him, to know more. I have terrible instincts, I try to remind myself. If there’s a man I’m drawn to, it means he’s bad news. I should be tightening my shoelaces now and preparing to run. Or, at the very least, sending him on his way with the hopes of never seeing him again. Unfortunately, I follow my instincts anyway. “Do you work in town?” I ask, a little breathlessly. God, why did I say it like that? Like it’s a cheesy p**n movie, and I’m about to invite him in to “check my plumbing.” “I do a little bit of everything.” “That’s not an answer.” “No, it’s not.” Okay, I know how to take a hint. This guy doesn’t want to make conversation, which is fine. Totally fine. Preferable, in fact. If I can get out of this interaction with a full tank of gas and minimal to no bloodshed, that’s a win. Things could have gone very badly for me here, and they didn’t. I should be grateful it's not going any further than this. Not disappointed. “Well, thanks for your help. I'll let you get on with your day.” He makes no move to leave. He leans a denim-clad hip against my car like he has a right to it. He’s studying me, just like I studied him. A lingering silence stretches between us. As I search for something to say, I tug at my sweater. I borrowed it from Dad. It’s several sizes too big for me and has a hole in it. My long hair, which I somewhat neatly braided this morning, has begun to frizz hopelessly in the damp cool air. There isn’t much to look at. So why is he staring at me like he couldn’t stop if he tried?Desmond’s POVI try to think of the dullest things I can to calm my raging erection. Spreadsheets. Council meetings. Her ex.The question explodes from me before I can stop it. “Why were you with that shithead? You don’t seem like you’d put up with being treated like that.”She stiffens in surprise at the question before taking a deep breath, her shoulders rounding, almost in defeat. “I’d just started at Neuroworks,” she says. “Ben came into the office one day and started chatting to me. I had no idea who he was. That charmed him, I think.”I scowl. “You charmed him.”I can just see it. Wendy, looking sexy as hell in some little pencil skirt and heels. The entitled little lordling, so used to people falling all over him, encountering… her. Lured in by her beauty, enchanted by her warmth and wit. Maybe she flirted with him in return, maybe she held him at arm’s length.I wonder how desperately she made him work for her attention, her favor. I wonder how long it took her to wrap him a
Desmond’s POV “What you all have here is beautiful. The idea of anything threatening it… of me personally being connected to its destruction…”I stroke my fingers along her scalp. “Nothing is going to be destroyed on my watch. Neither humans nor vampires have managed yet, despite some of their best efforts.”“Vampires?” She shivers. “But they’re one-in-a-million.”“They’re a lot more common than you think. You’ve probably encountered a dozen of them without realizing. They excel at camouflage.”“And vampires hate wolf shifters? Why?” I pause, gathering my thoughts. Do I get into it now, the details of our millennia-long, mutual vendetta with the vampires? The volatile relationship wolf shifters and humans have had over the same time period?I decide to give her the broad strokes, at least. “We both rely on humans to perpetuate our species. Wolf shifters need human mates. Vampires need human blood.”“Ah. So it’s a battle over resources.”“More than that. It’s two cultures, both deepl
Desmond’s POVI must be a glutton for punishment.The water splashes a little as she gets in. “Okay. You can turn now.”The bubbles hide her body from view. She gives me a smile. “You can wash my hair, but I’m taking care of the rest.”“Don’t trust me? Or yourself?”“It’s you I don’t trust. Of course.” She can’t even maintain eye contact while she spouts this obvious falsehood. I’m starting to think she is, in fact, a terrible liar.I pull up a wood stool to the edge of the bathtub and take a seat, close enough to feel the steam rising from the water. My wolf paces under my skin, keyed to the sound of her breathing, the bead of water sliding down her throat. As rain begins to patter against the fogged window, I steel myself for the most excruciating and wonderful moment of self-denial in my life.“Dip your head in the water,” I tell her, my fingers already flexing in anticipation of touching her. She does as I ask, the water lapping softly around her shoulders.I warm the shampoo i
Desmond’s POVI lead her to the bathroom and turn on the taps in the soaking tub. From a glass container, I scatter salt crystals on the bottom. I dig around in my medicine cabinet for the oil I use after a particularly bruising fight and add a few drops to the steaming water.“What is that?” she asks.“Copaiba oil. Anti-inflammatory, antioxidant. I use it after training.”“Is this the new clause in our deal? Am I supposed to be your bathing attendant now?”“The other way around. If you’re sore after this morning, I can help you with that.”Her lips quirk. There’s wash of pink across her cheeks now. “A for effort, but I’m not taking a bath in front of you.”I lean one shoulder against the doorframe, deliberately relaxed, as though every cell inside me isn’t alert to her nearness. As if the vision of her naked body hasn’t been occupying my thoughts and dreams.“It’s nothing I haven’t seen before.” “Yes, and I’m sure you’ve seen plenty of women a lot more exciting to look at than me.”
Desmond’s POVCold fear seizes me instantly.But then I catch a glimpse of chestnut hair from the corner of my eye, and see she’s on the balcony.Nothing happened to her. She didn’t somehow escape or run away. She’s still here. I approach silently, seeing that she’s bent over something. Her phone? The breeze is carrying her scent to me, but not mine to hers. She doesn’t notice me even though I’m just two steps away now. I move quietly against the backdrop of noises that disguise my approach: the scurry of a coyote in the underbrush, autumn leaves rustling in the wind, an owl hooting from the branches of a redwood. I’m not above sneaking around right now. What if she’s texting her ex? Good thing I had a tap put on her phone. If she’s texting him, I’ll know. But her long hair ripples in the breeze, and I see what she’s holding for the first time. In her hands, she has a circle with some fabric stretched over it, and she’s pulling a needle and threadthrough the canvas. Flowers.
Desmond’s POVAfter getting Wendy situated back at Dom Volka—and checked out by Cornelia—I force myself back to my duties. The faster I can deal with the other shit in my life, the faster I can get back to Wendy. As soon as Wendy is out of earshot, I pull Otaktay aside. “You’ve still got eyes on Maurice Harp?”Otaktay nods. “He pretty much just goes to work, home, and back again.”“And his research? Is he wiping away the evidence?”“We still have a tap on his phone from when he was here, but we don’t have access to his personal devices at home.” He gives me a significant look. “We could send someone down there. Hurry the process along.”“No. No need to be heavy-handed unless we have a reason to.”Otaktay accepts my reasoning without question. Which is a good thing, considering it’s not the real reason I have no desire to hurry Maurice along.If Wendy finds out from her dad that he’s held up his end of the bargain, she’ll demand I hold up my end too—meaning, release her.All the progr
Wendy’s POVI follow Cornelia down another hallway. The scent hits me first: rich, spicy, and unexpectedly sweet. Cinnamon?She leads us into a gleaming industrial kitchen, where steam curls off a simmering saucepan. Standing before a pristine commercial range, Lars and Javier are mid-debate, their
Wendy’s POVOver the next hour, Cornelia patiently guides me through all the main rooms. There’s a combat training area, a library, and even a small preschool. Cornelia and I pause before it, watching children play happily inside as they’re supervised by a couple of older women. Cornelia waves to
Wendy’s POVDistantly, I register that this is unnatural. But at the moment, I can’t seem to care. "You're safe with me,” he murmurs again. “You belong here.” His breath feels warm and wonderful against my skin. “You're my mate. Act like it.”Something in me slides into place. My body reacts like
Wendy’s POVI swallow. I should have known it wouldn't be that simple.“What else?” “You’re a flight risk. You will stay at Dom Volka, where I can keep an eye on you.”“What’s Dom Volka?”“It’s the–let’s call it the fortress of my pack.” “Is that where you took me last night?” To sleep in your b







