LOGINWendy’s POV
This guy could be leading me straight to some sort of… lair. For all kinds of nefarious purposes. As much as I might fantasize otherwise, those purposes are unlikely to be giving me multiple orgasms and an engagement ring, so I need to get my head on straight. If we turn off onto any road smaller than this one, I’m turning around and going back the way I came. Hopefully there’s enough gas to get me to some outpost of civilization. But he doesn’t lead me down a smaller road. He stays on this one, wreathed as it is in fog, bordered on either side by black forest, until it finally begins to widen. Pine trees give way to cypress and low, wind-stunted oaks. Ferns spill onto the shoulder, damp from salt spray. The stranger’s truck slows, then turns right onto a well-lit stretch of coastal highway. No lair in sight. Across the road lies the ocean. Waves pummel the shore. Moonlight glimmers on dark water. The sight of it hits me all at once. There’s salt in the air and space to breathe. My grip on the wheel loosens. For the first time in hours, the vise in my chest eases. I’ve made it. Thanks to the mysterious stranger. We drive slowly, giving me enough time to scan my surroundings. On the left is the beach. To the right, narrow lots cling to the hillside. Golden lamplight spills through the windows. We pass beach homes, restaurants and wine tasting rooms, one bed and breakfast after another. So this is Redwood Grove. The edge of civilization, the final frontier of the continent. Fog drenched and chilled, more like the Pacific Northwest than the hot and sunny parts of California most people think of. This is the last location Dad had in his planner. Ironclaw HQ, 1337 Eucalyptus Lane. D.R. Riven. It’ll be my first stop tomorrow morning. My rescuer’s truck slows in front of one of the bed-and-breakfasts. A weather-beaten wood sign flaps in the wind. Stillwater Pines. Despite the fact that it’s tourist season, the parking lot is mostly empty. Not a great omen. I park and get out of the car, rubbing my arms against the lingering chill. My accommodations-to-be are… not promising. The paint on the shingles has flaked to bare wood. A patio light buzzes as moths flicker around it. Half-rotted wooden steps sag as I make my way up to the front door. I steel myself. You’re tough, I tell myself. You can do this. A rat skitters across the side of the building. Oh hell no. Maybe I can’t do this. As much as I don’t want to, I have no choice. Ever since I quit my job at Neuroworks, my savings cushion went from pancake-flat to just about nonexistent. All my money has gone to paying the mortgage for Dad, along with every other bill I can float, while he’s been putting all his savings towards his newest invention. Even this crappy motel is more expensive than I can afford for long. I glance back at my rescuer. The stranger, I remind myself. As in, stranger danger. As in, encounters like ours are more likely to end in true crime than true love. But he led me to safety. That has to mean something, right? His truck idles on the side of the road. I get the sense he’s watching. Maybe stalking, maybe doing the chivalrous thing and making sure I get inside. I fight the urge to run to him, to ask him to take me away from here. But I don’t. Chivalry has its limits. Stalking might be a more promising prospect for me. As I open the door to the reception, my hand shakes with some combination of caffeine and nerves. My legs still ache from so many hours in the car, and I nearly trip across the threshold. A woman in her seventies sits at the check-in counter, her eyes on a TV playing an old Twilight Zone rerun. The show’s familiar, eerie theme music sounds tinny in the small room. Beneath the stink of her cigarette smoke, it smells of mildew. “Hi,” I say as I approach the front desk. “I have a reservation. Wendy Harp.” The receptionist’s disinterested gaze flicks to me. “You’re late. Check-in ended an hour ago. Come back in the morning.” I didn’t exactly expect a rosy reception, but this is… not great. But I can’t spend the night in my car. I just can’t. It’s freezing out, for one thing. Well, not literally, but for a born and bred San Diego girl it might as well be subzero. For another thing, I don’t want to get cited for sleeping in my car. Most importantly, I don’t want to have my car broken into while I sleep so I can be murdered by a whole other man. One who probably doesn’t even have a handsome, scarred face or a sexy voice to compensate for his psychopathy. I don’t plead any of these cases to the receptionist. I already know she wouldn’t care. “I’m sorry,” I say. “I got lost on the way to town.” “Not surprised.” She stubs the cigarette out on an ashtray. “Thought maybe one of the wolves got you. Full moon last night, y’know.” “Wolves?” “This is a shifter town, girly. Don’t you know?” Bloodshot eyes sweep down me. Her lip curls. “Shifter town. Right.” No, I did not know that. It’s not the kind of thing that appears on tourist guides. Wolf packs are as private and cloistered as secret brotherhoods. They don’t advertise themselves to outsiders. I don’t know much about how they operate, or how integrated they are with the human population, but from what I’ve heard, life in the wolf packs is savage. Brutal. Only males carry the wolf gene, and it turns them into testosterone-laden cavemen. At least that’s what my ex-boyfriend always told me. Ben also told me wolf packs are made up of filthy hovels. That shifters spend their days fighting each other or assaulting the poor women they’ve imprisoned with them. Raping them, permanently scarring them with their bite marks. The stories he told were so repugnant, spoken with such hatred. I’m sure Ben told me those stories to strike fear into my heart, to warn me off any curiosity about them. The same way you would tell a child about the monster in the lake to scare them away from going in the water. I’m not a child, even if I realized too late that Ben treated me like one. And I’m not going to let over-the-top stories about barbaric packs or hungry wolves out to get me scare me away from here. Digging in my pocket for the last of my cash, I find a twentydollar bill and put it on the desk. “Maybe a late check-in f*e would make up for the inconvenience.” The receptionist snatches the bill with fingers stained yellow from nicotine. After digging around under her desk for a moment, she slides an old-fashioned metal key my way. “Room 14.” When I reach the door, she calls out, “If you see a rat in there, just let him out the door. He’s roach control around here.” I repress a shudder as I open the door. Only to find my rescuer, the mysterious stranger, staring right back at me.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 POV“You can’t stay here,” he says. His eyes scan the lot, sharp and alert, seeming to track some danger I can't see. I’m unreasonably relieved to see him. He’s still a stranger, still very possibly dangerous, but I have the inexplicable feeling he’s on my side.I try to play it cool. Try
Wendy’s POV“Headed to Redwood Grove?” he asks at last.I nod. “Just got into town today. Tried to get to town, I guess.”I bite back the question on my tongue. Don’t suppose you’ve seen a man in his sixties with short-cropped grey hair, probably wearing a Star Trek t-shirt and white socks with san
Wendy’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 c
Wendy’s POVI’m lost. Hopelessly, scarily lost. And not just because I’m running low on peach rings and energy drinks.I stopped to refuel just south of San Francisco, thinking I’d have more than half a tank of gas by the time I got to my next, and hopefully final, motel of this road trip.The suga







