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    Beneath a Rising Moon

    Page 20
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      eyes. “Seems to me the rangers haven’t a clue.”

      Her tone was as amused as her look, and he raised an

      eyebrow. “You don’t seem all that sorry about it.”

      “The murders?” Iyona snorted softly. “I personally

      think it should be you Sinclairs being taken out, not the

      fools who choose to dance with you.”

      Betise had said much the same thing. Maybe it was a

      speech she’d learned from her mother very early in life.

      But if that was the way she felt, why had she wasted more

      than half her life attending dances? “You have a problem

      with my family?”

      Her look was scathing. “Yeah. All you Sinclairs are

      nothing but a pack of lying bastards.”

      Again, that was something he’d heard Betise say more

      than once. But then, Neva had called him a bastard more

      than a few times these last couple of days, and with good

      reason. He frowned as he thought of her, and he had to

      control the sudden urge to get up and go find her. He’d

      promised not to go back until dusk. If he wanted to undo

      the mess he’d made of everything and start making

      amends, he couldn’t break that vow.

      And the mere fact that he even wanted to make amends

      surprised the hell out of him. She was his for the rest of

      this moon phase. He could rightfully lose himself to the

      pleasure of her body until the full moon finally rose and

      forced them all into wolf shape. But he wanted more than

      just that. He wanted to know her. Wanted her to smile at

      him the way she’d smiled at her friend in the diner.

      He wished he’d met her under more normal

      circumstances, and beyond the time of the rising moon.

      Maybe then he wouldn’t have destroyed any chance he

      had with her.

      At that moment pain flashed, rising from his hip and

      spreading upwards like a flame, until his whole body was

      encased in agony. Then as quickly as it came the sensation

      faded, leaving only fear and a cold churning in his gut.

      He fought the sudden urge to leave this stinking house.

      It was crazy. Neva was safe at home. Besides, she had a

      weapon more formidable than teeth and claws, and could

      undoubtedly defend herself against most attacks.

      He rose and began pacing the small room. “What has

      my family ever done to you?”

      Iyona snorted. “Your lot wrecked my life.”

      “You’ve never danced at the mansion.” Though he

      wasn’t sure why he was so certain. Iyona was old enough

      to have been dancing long before he’d ever started.

      “There’s more than one pack of Sinclairs isn’t there?”

      she bit back. “You must have bred like damned rabbits in

      the early years.”

      Her words sent alarms off somewhere in the back of

      his mind. He stared at her for a moment, then asked, “I

      gather from that statement that you spent some time over

      at the Bitterroot reservation?”

      The smile that touched her lips sent a chill down his

      spine. “No. But I wish I had been. I would have enjoyed

      watching your lot burn.”

      He sensed no lie, and yet he suspected she was doing

      just that. “If you feel that strongly, why invite a Sinclair

      into your house?”

      She snorted again. “Because this is my daughter’s

      house, and she seems to have a passion for your lot.”

      And yet, she’d wished them dead not all that long ago.

      Or was that merely an aftereffect of exchanging heated

      words with René? He was definitely going to have to speak

      to his brother when he got back to the mansion, if only to

      uncover what sort of game Betise was playing. Especially

      given the fantasy she had of being a long time lover of his.

      Outside the house, a door slammed shut, then a

      shadow whisked past the windows. Two seconds later the

      back door opened, and Betise appeared. Her smile became

      a look of surprise and quick excitement when her gaze

      met his.

      “Duncan,” she said, voice warm. “What a nice—”

      “I’m here to ask a question,” he said quickly. “Nothing

      more.”

      Annoyance and perhaps a flash of anger flitted through

      her grey-green eyes. She stripped off her coat and gloves

      and tossed them on the back of the chair. “Let me guess.

      You discovered my lie. Surprise, surprise.”

      “Then why bother lying in the first place?”

      She shrugged and sat down. “You seemed so damn

      enamored with the virginal Neva, and I guess it just pissed

      me off.”

      Her tone had much the same effect on him as nails

      down a blackboard. He shoved his hands in his pockets,

      half wishing he’d never come here. “What does it matter

      to you if I’m enamored with her? You and I shared one

      dance, nothing more.”

      Something flashed in her eyes. Something more than

      anger. Something almost crazy. She yanked off her boots

      and tossed them into the corner. “I knew you’d race back

      and question her. Wish I could have seen her expression.”

      He wished he hadn’t. Wished he’d resisted the urge to

      voice his doubts. Wished he’d simply trusted her. “I

      thought you and Neva were friends.”

      She glanced at her mother, and the two shared a

      strange sort of smile. “Acquaintances more than friends,”

      Betise said. “We chat at the diner and the hair salon, but

      it’s nothing deeper.”

      And of that, he was extremely glad. He’d hate to think

      that Neva hung around with someone as unsavory as

      Betise. “So what did you hope to gain by lying?”

      She raised an eyebrow, amusement touching her thin

      lips. “What do you think?”

      “If I had any idea, I wouldn’t be asking.”

      She stared at him for a moment, eyes so bright they

      were almost otherworldly. “You really don’t, do you?”

      He glanced at Iyona, saw the same, almost maniacal

      look in her eyes, and frowned. Something was going on

      here, something he didn’t understand.

      “Told you,” Iyona said, voice shrill. “They’re all no

      good.”

      “Seems that way, doesn’t it?” Betise’s voice was flat,

      dead, and something in his gut clenched. The house might

      be cold, but these two could have frozen hell itself.

      “Look,” he said, meeting Betise’s gaze. “You and I

      shared one dance, nothing more. I have no idea what game

      you’re playing, but if you don’t stop your lies, I’ll have you

      banned from the dance.”

      Iyona snorted. “That’s a typical Sinclair response.” Her

      voice was so full of venom he could almost smell it.

      He glanced at her. With her thin arms crossed, angular

      hips resting against the bench and eyes narrowed, she

      really did remind him of a snake. Neeson might not have

      any idea who was behind the animosity being directed at

      his pack, but he certainly did. And he had a suspicion

      he’d better find out why.

      He pulled his gaze away from her, concentrating on

      Betise. “I’m warning you now, stay away from
    my

      brothers.”

      “Who made you pack leader?” she spat. “You can

      hardly control your own damn actions, let alone your

      brothers.’”

      Which might have been true enough in times past, he

      supposed, but not nowadays. Control was the one thing

      he never lost—except, perhaps, when it came to Neva.

      The itchy feeling that something was wrong with her

      not only remained but was growing stronger. He had to

      go. Had to.

      “I’m speaking for my father,” he said curtly. “Watch

      your step, or you’ll never take another inside the mansion.”

      “René owes me. I want him to fulfil his promises,

      nothing more.”

      “René makes no more promises than I do.”

      “Not even to the virginal Neva?”

      “Not even.” Yet the words tasted sour on his lips. If

      ever he could have made promises with someone, it might

      have been Neva. “But while we’re on the subject of Neva,

      quit telling her tales about you and me. There is no you

      and me. There never has been.”

      Her eyes glittered, but he wasn’t sure if it was tears or

      merely the light catching the silver in her eyes. “You lie.

      Look into your heart, Duncan.”

      “I have looked into my heart.” And up until this moon

      phase, he’d thought it incapable of any sort of emotional

      depths.

      “Bastard.” Her soft voice was filled with hatred.

      “So I’m beginning to believe,” he muttered and turned,

      walking out of the house and away from its crazy

      occupants.

      He stopped on the veranda and watched the storm.

      The snow had eased, but the wind hadn’t, and the day

      was still bitingly cold. Not the sort of day you wanted to

      be out in.

      Not the sort of day you wanted to find yourself

      unconscious in.

      For one second, he froze. Then he swore and dove into

      the storm, running as if the hounds of hell were after him.

      He didn’t feel the tempest blowing around him. Didn’t feel

      the cold. Didn’t even feel the pavement pounding under

      his feet. All he could feel was an odd sort of numbness,

      creeping slowly through his body, as if his strength was

      being sucked away by an unknown force.

      Only it wasn’t truly unknown. It was Neva, siphoning

      his strength to bolster hers.

      He’d never truly feared before, but he did now. For

      her.

      For them.

      Because if she could do that, then this thing between

      them went far deeper than he’d thought, far deeper than

      just a moon dance.

      Wouldn’t it be the mother of all ironies if, in a matter

      of days, he’d managed to destroy the one thing he’d spent

      half his life searching for?

      More than eight blocks separated Betise’s house and

      Neva’s. He crossed them in record time, slowing only as

      he reached her house. He opened the gate, then hesitated,

      looking at the windblown whiteness to his right. She wasn’t

      home. She was down there, somewhere.

      He didn’t question his certainty. Didn’t dare. He swore

      again, a growl of sound the wind quickly snatched away,

      and hurried forward. The sullen gleam of a streetlight

      became visible, indicating that he was approaching

      another road. He stopped on the corner, glancing to his

      left.

      And saw her huddled against the curb, looking like

      little more like a brightly-colored bundle of snow-covered

      rags than a woman. His gut twisted, and for a second he

      couldn’t seem to breathe. Then he was beside her, stripping

      off his gloves and slipping his fingers under her woolen

      ski mask, feeling for a pulse. It was there, nice and steady.

      He checked her ears, then her fingers and her feet. All

      were well covered. All were warm. Relief slithered through

      him. Hypothermia didn’t appear to have struck yet.

      He stripped off his coat, then his sweater, rolling it

      lengthways and carefully placing it around her neck. As

      improvised cervical collars went, it wasn’t the best, but it

      was a hell of a lot better than risking moving her without

      it. He carefully turned her over. No blood. That might be

      good. Might be bad.

      “Neva?” He lightly tapped her cheeks. Her color was

      good, and he could feel the warmth of her skin through

      the mask.

      Her eyes fluttered, and a smile touched her lips. A

      carefree, easy sort of smile that did strange things to his

      heart’s rhythm.

      Neva?

      She giggled, and he raised an eyebrow in surprise. It

      sounded for all the world like she was drunk. Are you

      okay?

      Okay? No. Perfect? Yes.

      Her words made him smile. She was perfect, in almost

      every way imaginable. He picked up his coat and tried to

      wrap it around her, but she slapped his hands away with

      a laugh. It was such a carefree sound he almost laughed

      with her, despite the concern swamping him.

      What happened? He managed to avoid her hands and

      finally wrapped the coat around her.

      A truck happened. Clipped me.

      She seemed to be moving all right, and he could no

      longer sense pain in her mind. Still, he’d better get her to

      the hospital, just to be sure.

      No. Take me home. Please.

      Her mind speech was a little indistinct, yet he could

      smell no alcohol on her breath. You need to go to the

      hospital. There might be internal injuries.

      No! Her words might be slurred but the alarm in her

      voice was clear and forceful. I’m okay. My parents are there.

      I can’t talk to them yet.

      She touched a gloved hand to his cheek, her bright

      eyes catching his. Her pupils were slightly dilated, but

      not with desire. He suspected she’d been drugged. But

      with what? And could he risk not taking her to the hospital

      when she might have been overdosed?

      “Please.” Her voice was soft. Imploring. “Just trust me

      and do as I ask.”

      He closed his eyes and took a deep breath. He was a

      fool for even risking a compromise, but he opened his

      eyes and said, “I’ll take you home and check you over. If I

      think you should go to the hospital, you’ll go, okay?”

      Her relief slithered through him, flame bright. “Okay.”

      He picked her up, cradling her close. She rested her

      cheek against his shoulder and sighed almost contentedly.

      “Home, James,” she murmured, in a ritzy sort of way.

      Her warm breath caressed his neck and breathed life

      into the embers of desire. Moons, simply holding her felt

      so good. So damn right.

      He kicked open her front gate and hurried up the steps.

      Her front door was unlocked, and he shook his head,

      unable to believe any woman living alone in this day and

      age could be so trusting. Even a relatively small town like

      Ripple Creek had its fair share of creeps.

      And she had probably cast him as one of them.

      He pushed the thought away and headed up the stairs

      to her bedroom.
    Thankfully, she’d left the heat on, and

      the house was warm.

      “I like your thinking,” she said, as he placed her on

      the bed. “No better way to warm up a cold body than a

      good bout of sex.”

      He squatted in front of her and carefully took off her

      boots, then her woolen socks. Her feet and toes were warm.

      “You know this for a fact?” he asked, glancing up with a

      smile.

      She sniffed and lifted her nose, her expression haughty

      but green eyes twinkling. “I have been told,” she said in

      the best impression of snobbery he’d ever heard.

      “Extreme physical activity is not good for someone who

      might have hypothermia.” He rose and unwound his

      makeshift collar, then undid her coat and discovered

      another one underneath. No wonder she was so warm.

      “I haven’t got hypothermia.”

      No, thankfully she didn’t. He tossed her coats to one

      side and started undoing her shirt. “But you have been

      hit by a car, and you’re probably under the influence of

      some sort of drug.” He doubted she’d be in such a playful

      mood otherwise. Not after what he’d said only an hour or

      so earlier.

      She touched a finger to his face, running it gently down

      to his lips. It was a touch that burned right down to his

      soul.

      “How about we try some extreme physical activity right

      now?” Her voice was low and so damn sexy heat shot to

      his groin.

      He ached to do just that. It might still be the afternoon,

      and the moon might be on the other side of the world, but

      right now he wanted her as fiercely as he’d ever wanted

      anyone during the moon’s rush. But as much as he wanted

      her, he didn’t want to take advantage of her. Not any more

      than he already had. Her shirt joined her coats, followed

      quickly by her bra.

      “See anything you like?” She leaned back, all but

      thrusting her wonderful breasts in his face.

      Everything. But he resisted the urge to bury his face

      in her bountiful flesh and twined his fingers through hers,

      gently tugging her upright. “Where did you go after I left?”

      He released her, but she swayed slightly, and he quickly

      touched a hand to her waist to steady her.

      She wrapped her arms around his neck and gave him

      a happy sort of smile. “What does it matter?”

      He kissed her nose, then began undoing her jeans.

     


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