Read Terry Spear’s Wolf Bundle Online
Authors: Terry Spear
He pulled her into his bedroom and shut the door. “Like what? That you won’t be loved by my people? You will be.”
“Not by everyone.”
“The women who wanted me as a mate?” He laughed and pulled off her sweater and dropped it on a chair. “I’m sorry about Ritka. I never said so before because
I was so upset about Doc. But I really am sorry. She didn’t deserve to die either.”
“I know, Lelandi.” He took a deep breath and slipped her boots off. “This will cause us trouble.”
“Bruin will want to fight you, don’t you think?”
Darien gave her a brilliant smile. “No. Well, maybe. But the outcome won’t be what he’d expect. No. I was thinking about the staffing at the hospital. With Ritka
gone, Carol Wood will insist that she’s hired on at the hospital. I’ve got a real problem with that.”
“I don’t have any nurse’s training, but I’ll do whatever I can to help.”
He placed his hands on her face and tilted her head back. “I’ll send human patients to other hospitals in nearby towns until we get it sorted out. Don’t worry about it.”
She frowned at him. “What happened to Ural? Why was he in the hospital?”
Darien sighed deeply. “I didn’t authorize it, but Uncle Sheridan knocked him out when Ural made a crude comment about one of our female grays.”
“What did he say?”
“She was the shooter.”
“And the sheriff nearly killed him for it?”
Darien lifted her chin and looked into her eyes. “I didn’t authorize it. Uncle Sheridan took it upon himself to knock Ural out.”
“Before Ural revealed who the shooter was?”
Darien stared at her for a minute, then shook his head. “I know what you’re implying, but Ural just pushed Uncle Sheridan’s buttons.”
But had Ural pushed Sheridan’s buttons or did he have something to hide?
“So is Ural all right?”
“He’s fine, back in jail with a swollen cheek, but Silva told us herself she was the shooter.”
Lelandi couldn’t believe it.
“Long story. I’ll tell you later about it.” He pressed her lips with a warm, hot kiss and her whole body liquefied.
“Hmm.” She sighed deeply. He was trying to get her
mind off the problems the pack faced, but she couldn’t quit worrying about it. “What about Nurse Grey?”
“She can handle a lot of the cases—mostly
lupus garou.
But she’ll be shorthanded for anything major. Although we have Matthew now, too.” He unfastened her belt.
“Doctor Weber!”
Darien lifted his head from kissing her throat and gave her a questioning glance.
“He’s a
lupus garou
from my father’s original pack. We have to bring him here.”
“He’s a red.”
She gave Darien an annoyed look. “I’m a red.”
“That’s different.” He kissed her lips, forcing her to kiss him back. She couldn’t resist and probed his mouth with her tongue. “What I mean is he might not want to join a gray pack.”
“He will. I know he will.”
“I’ll send the correspondence offering him a job.” He sighed heavily. “I don’t want you digging into this mess concerning your sister on your own anymore.” She tried to pull away, but he held her firm. “I mean it.”
She glowered at him. “What am I supposed to do?”
He raised his brows and gave her a wickedly provocative look.
“Oh, no, I’m just supposed to be your sexual playmate?”
“Works for me,” he teased. He grabbed handfuls of her hair and touched his nose to the strands. “You smell like the great outdoors, wild and sexy.”
“Hmm.” She licked his lips. “You taste feral and sinful.” With a fever that couldn’t be quenched, she wanted him. She grasped his hand and tugged him
toward the bathroom. “You were going to help me with my shower. Right?”
He wrapped his arm around her and pulled her back tight against his chest. Leaning over her, he rested his mouth next to her ear, and slid his fingers into her jeans, then touched her between the legs. “Hmm, nice and wet.”
“It’s all your fault.” She wriggled against his fingers. Oh man, she’d never make it to the shower at this rate.
His cock had grown rock hard and was prodding her backside. “If I don’t get you into the shower now…” He slipped the lace of the low-cut bra down, exposing her breasts. Turning her around, he leaned down, licked a nipple, and blew on it, sending shivers streaking across her skin. Instantly, the cool air made the nipple pucker. He smiled and licked the other with his tongue in a circle, then blew on it, too.
He tackled her jeans, his breathing heavy, his heartbeat accelerated.
Lelandi unbuttoned Darien’s shirt and slid it down to his elbows, then held him hostage, his chest and shoulders bare. Strong and virile, he was a
lupus garou
in his prime, and all hers. Leaning down, she licked his nipple and gave him the same wisp of breath to tease him. His nipple pebbled, and he groaned low with need.
“Hmm, like that, do we?”
He nipped her chin with a playful bite. Lelandi laughed and licked his other nipple. He shivered and the craving for satisfaction swept her up in the feel of him, his satiny skin, tangy velvet against her tongue. He held Lelandi’s arms tightly and nuzzled her neck with his mouth, and took another deep breath, no doubt
smelling her musky scent of arousal. She tilted her head back, her crotch tingling because he touched her throat so exquisitely.
Whispering in his ear, “I love you,” she licked inside, then nibbled the lobe.
Growling, he swept her off her feet and carried her into the bathroom. He set her down, reached into the shower, and turned on the water. “I want you, Lelandi. Now.”
The feeling was mutual, and they shed the rest of their clothes. She reached for the peach body wash so she could run her fingers over every inch of him with the light sweet scent.
As soon as the water was hot, he lifted her into the tub and sprayed the silky water all over her body, then aimed the pulsating nozzle between her legs. She squealed and laughed.
He soaped her breasts and she flicked her nails over the soft soap coating his nipples. They quickly moved their hands lower, his sweeping erotically between her thighs, while she enjoyed scrubbing his erection and watched fascinated when it jumped in her hands.
He chuckled darkly and hurried to rinse them off. “You will be the death of me.”
“Seems appropriate since you wring out my emotions, too,” she said, kissing his throat.
But he didn’t comment, except to give her a smoldering smile, then lifted her against the tile shower wall, wrapped her legs around him, and thrust deeply into her slippery sheath.
“Adonis,” she moaned against his shower-kissed skin. He was
so
hot.
He smiled. “My redheaded goddess.”
The pleasurable assault of his kisses on her lips, her cheeks, her throat, drove her toward the peak of pleasure while he buried himself inside her. Plunging deep and slow and hard, the tension in his face eased, he let out a tired groan, and a wash of heat filled her. His hot kisses teased her mouth to open for him, his tongue tangled with hers, and her body exploded into a million earth-shattering pieces of pleasure. She collapsed in his arms and wanted to cuddle with him in bed for all eternity. After drying and slipping into bed, they slept.
But their sleep was cut short when Jake hollered from downstairs, “Darien, Uncle Sheridan’s here and so is Chester McKinley.”
N
OT PLANNING ON BEING LEFT OUT OF ANY MORE BUSINESS
concerning her sister, Lelandi nearly leapt out of Darien’s arms and headed for her discarded clothes in the bedroom. “I’m sitting in on this, Darien.” But she wondered what had changed his mind about talking to Chester.
“I guess I have no say in the matter.” He yanked on his jeans, his expression lightly teasing.
“Nope. I’m not a beta wolf.” Lelandi quickly buttoned her shirt.
Darien walked over and rested his hands on her shoulders, his lips pressing against hers. “You’re an alpha for sure. For now, I’ll allow it…as an alpha male.” He rebuttoned her shirt.
“Better put on a sweater or I’ll have to kick Chester McKinley’s butt out of here, because no doubt he’d take a longer look at you than I’d care for.”
She jerked on a pullover sweater and slipped into a pair of jeans. “Despite whatever anyone told you, he was a perfect gentleman.”
“I’ll be the judge of that.” Darien zipped her jeans for her. He lifted her chin and gazed into her green eyes sparkling with fire. “I have no intention of keeping you out of the picture if you’re going to look into this by yourself and put your life in more danger. I understand as an alpha you can’t wait for others to do everything for
you.” He leaned his forehead against hers. “Together, we’ll solve this.”
She threw her arms around him and squeezed tight, her head pressed against his chest. “I love you, you big gray.”
Cheered to see her feeling better, he tousled her hair, then led her downstairs to the living room.
Upon seeing Lelandi, Uncle Sheridan raised his brows in question.
“I’m staying for the meeting,” Lelandi said.
“When women start ruling things, that’ll be the end of life as we know it,” Uncle Sheridan said.
“We’ll improve it, I’m sure,” Lelandi said.
Uncle Sheridan gave her a disparaging look.
Darien couched a smile and sat down with her on a sofa, then motioned for Chester McKinley to get on with the news.
“I know you don’t want an outsider sticking his nose in your business, Darien, but I do this kind of work all the time and what I discover goes no farther than this room. If you want to reveal to your pack what we find, that’s up to you. Nobody will hear it from me.”
“Fair enough. So what’s your plan?”
“Make a list of everyone who would benefit from Larissa’s death and all who had grudges against her.”
Darien rubbed Lelandi’s hand. Although she seemed determined to be part of this, she shivered, and he thought she wasn’t holding up well. But he couldn’t blame her. “We’ve done this.”
Uncle Sheridan handed the paper to Chester.
He perused the checklist and nodded. “Normally a blackmailer continues to milk the victim for all it’s
worth. So there wouldn’t be any reason to kill the victim and get rid of an easy source of income.”
“Unless the blackmailer feared getting caught. What if Larissa had recognized who the blackmailer was?” Lelandi asked.
“Bingo. Of course, it could be there was a killer and a blackmailer and neither had anything to do with the other, but I’m betting they’re one and the same.”
“Why?” Darien asked.
“Thirty years in the business.”
“I’d like more solid evidence than that,” Jake said.
“All right. So we have a shooter who kills the gunman so he can’t talk. And—”
“Silva, the waitress at Silver Town Tavern, says she shot him, although she was only protecting Sam, our bartender, and didn’t mean to kill the gunman,” Darien said.
Glancing down at the checklist, Chester rubbed his beard. “Is she on the suspect list?”
Lelandi frowned. “Of course not. She was friends with my sister and has been my friend ever since I first arrived.”
“Right. And oftentimes a perpetrator is the one you least suspect.”
“She’s
not
a suspect.”
“The thing is, Lelandi, even you are a suspect,” Chester said.
Lelandi’s mouth dropped open, then she snapped it shut. Darien shook his head. “Watch what you say, Chester McKinley.”
After a minute of silence, Lelandi said, “Of course, Chester. I see what you mean. I came here to chase after Darien, but I had to get rid of my sister first.”
“Exactly. My point being that even Darien’s brothers are suspect. Darien himself also, if you want to go that far. What about Sheriff Sheridan? He hasn’t taken a vacation in ten years and then he suddenly ups and goes on one?”
“Wait a blamed minute,” Uncle Sheridan said. “I earned that damned vacation.”
“Not to mention Uncle Sheridan wanted to get out of town before the second annual fair arrived,” Jake said.
Chester raised his hands in conciliation. “I’m saying we can’t look at only the ones we suspect, but those who appear to be above suspicion. Keep an open mind. I have to in this business. But it’s easier for me since I’m not connected to anyone in town.”
“I’m not investigating Lelandi, my brothers, or Uncle Sheridan and if this is the kind of bull—”
Chester raised his brows. “You want solid proof.” He dug around in his jeans pocket and pulled out a bullet and bullet casing. “I found the bullet casing up on the ridge.”
“The shooter’s,” Tom said.
“I found the bullet several feet short of where the dead gunman’s body had lain. Now, what if Silva’s bullet fell short, but someone else fired at the same time? Did anyone hear separate shots fired?”
“Yes. The gunman shot Sam in the arm first,” Darien said.
“But at least two more shots were fired. One that hit the gunman, fatally wounding him, and the other that missed its mark.”
Uncle Sheridan put the bullet and casing into a plastic evidence bag. “I’ll get these checked right away.”
“You might want to ask Silva if she heard another shot fired or anyone moving around near her. Smelled anyone, sensed she wasn’t alone.”
“I’ve already asked her and she said no,” Darien said. “What about Lelandi’s parents?”
Lelandi’s eyes widened.
“Sorry, I meant to mention that first. Her cousin Ural and I had a nice, long chat. He learned your parents were being targeted for termination so that your father couldn’t object to your mating Crassus. Ural moved them to Oregon, somewhere safe, then staged the car accident. When he came back for you, he discovered your pack leader had already posted a guard. So Ural waited until you escaped. He followed you here, discovered your sister had died, and wanted to take you with him to see your parents.”
“Jeez, why didn’t he say so? Do you have any proof they’re alive?” Lelandi asked, her face growing red.
Chester handed her a letter. “Your mother’s handwriting, correct?”
Lelandi’s eyes misted as she read the note. “It is.” She choked up. “My mother says my father wants me to join them, and that they’re with my brother and uncle.”
“You’ll stay with me.” Darien tightened his hold on her hand. “They can live with our pack.”
She shook her head. “Knowing my father, he wouldn’t want to live with a gray pack, no offense.”
“As long as
you
don’t mind…” He watched her, waiting for her response.
“I want to see them. Do they know about Larissa? They must if Ural has talked to them.” She sank into the cushions, looking drained and Darien wrapped his arm around her shoulder.
Sam hollered into the house from the front door. “Sorry for the interruption folks, but there’s a Miss Carol Wood here to see Lelandi. Is she free to speak with her?”
Lelandi closed her eyes, then opened them, so not wanting to talk to the poor lady. First this business about her parents—she couldn’t be more pleased they were safe, but she knew how badly they must feel that Larissa was dead. And Carol—she must be feeling horrible about losing both Doc and Ritka, despite their deaths not being her fault.
“I’m not hiring her at the hospital if she thinks she can win you over and try to get to me.” Darien patted Lelandi’s leg. His chin was down and his eyes were narrowed, conveying a guarded threat.
“You have nothing to worry about.” Lelandi rose from the sofa and the men all stood.
Carol and Sam remained in the chilly foyer waiting for her, Sam’s expression solemn, Carol’s even grimmer. Her vivid blue eyes, wearing a wealth of worry, watched Lelandi, then she turned her attention back to the living room that was hidden from their view in the foyer. None of the men talked and Lelandi wondered if that was making Carol uncomfortable, or if it was the way Sam, as big as he was, continued to chaperone them.
Lelandi took a deep settling breath and reached for Carol’s hand. She didn’t want to make friends with a human. Keeping the
lupus garou
secret precluded that, but she had to know what this was about. “Let’s go to the sunroom. Even though it’s pretty cold out, someone probably started a nice fire. If it’s not comfortable enough, we can find some other spot to sit.”
“I…I didn’t mean to disturb you after what happened, but we have to talk.”
Lelandi led Carol through the living room where the men all stood up from the couches and chairs. “Ladies,” Darien said, his expression hard.
As if he had to warn her not to get too friendly with a human. She gave him an annoyed look back. Carol noticed; her anxious expression didn’t waver.
They walked to the back of the house and Lelandi opened the door to the sunroom. Two men she didn’t know were talking inside, but as soon as they saw Lelandi and Carol they both made their excuses and left the room. Lelandi shut the door and motioned to a couch that faced the fireplace and a floor-to-ceiling window that showed the winter scene outside.
“Unusually early snow,” Carol remarked.
But Lelandi knew Carol wasn’t there for chitchat. She wasn’t sure how to approach a human about human frailties. But she could be a good listener. So instead of saying anything, she sat in the chair close to the end of the pale green couch where Carol perched herself.
Carol spoke low. “I’m sick with worry for your safety.”
Lelandi tried to hide her surprise, but she was afraid she’d failed.
“I…I felt terrible about Doctor Oliver and Nurse Ritka. I…I didn’t save their lives.” Carol quickly brushed away tears.
Lelandi reached over and took hold of her hand and squeezed. “You did everything you could for them. I know you did.”
“Do you believe in fate? That our lives are predetermined? That nothing we do will change our fate? Do
you?” Carol pulled her hand away from Lelandi’s and pushed her fingers through her wind-tousled blonde curls. “I saw Joe Kelly shoot Doctor Oliver.”
“Yes, of course you did.”
“No…no. I saw it happen before it happened. Don’t you see? I have these damned psychic abilities, and what do they do for me? Nothing. I couldn’t save him, could I? I came to stop Doctor Oliver from confronting Joe. But instead I got him killed.”
“No.” Lelandi moved to the couch. She put her arm around Carol’s shoulders and realized how much it was like when she comforted her sister after her mate beat her. Regret filled her with a sense of loss, knowing she could never comfort her sister again. But she wanted to help Carol get through her troubles now. “Joe intended to kill Doc. He told me so.”
Carol pulled a tissue from her pocket and blew her nose. “You’re not safe with them.”
“With Darien and his brothers?” Lelandi had a very bad feeling about this.
Carol’s eyes glistened with fresh tears. “You don’t know what they are. But if you stay with them, they’ll make you one of them.”
Lelandi’s heartbeat did double time, but she tried to keep the panic hidden. If a human learned the truth about the
lupus garous,
Bruin discretely terminated them. A car accident, drowning, whatever it took to make it appear the human had met his end accidentally. But she couldn’t be sure Carol knew about the
lupus garous
either.
“What do you mean?” Lelandi asked as innocently as she could manage.
Carol studied her face for what seemed an eternity. Lelandi’s hands grew sweaty.
“You’re not one of them already, are you?” Carol looked down at the floor as if she was considering something, then her head rose quickly, and she looked at Lelandi’s face again, her own filled with horror. She jumped up from the couch, then offered a fake smile, her body trembling slightly. “I’ve got to get home and feed my cat. I forgot to leave food out for him.”
Lelandi had to stop her from leaving. She had to know the truth. Did Carol realize what they were? With the gentlest of touches, she reached out to Carol. “You’re right, I’m in a lot of danger. I don’t have anyone to talk to because Darien doesn’t want me involved. But I am involved. Will you listen?”
Carol glanced back at the door like a rabbit looking for a quick escape from the little red wolf.
“Carol.” Lelandi resumed her seat on the overstuffed chair next to the couch, trying to put some distance between them so the woman wouldn’t feel so cornered. A secret for a secret? She had to know what Carol suspected. “Someone was blackmailing my sister.”
Carol hesitated.
“Maybe you can help me find out who with your special abilities.” She raised her brows. “I don’t know if this person was the one who killed her or not, but…”
Carol sat down on the couch, leaned forward, and patted Lelandi’s hand. “Do you have any suspects?”
Lelandi’s heart filled with hope that Carol might be able to help her, but she shook her head. “No one that I have any evidence on. But Ritka and her girlfriends hated Larissa. With her out of the way, they had a
chance to…” She almost said mate. She wasn’t used to having a human confidant. Rubbing her arms, she let out her breath. “Darien would be available to marry again. Maybe one of them was the blackmailer. Maybe they thought he’d divorce her if…oh, I don’t know.”
“No,” Carol said with certainty.
“No?”
“All three.”
Lelandi closed her gaping mouth and stared at the petite woman.
“I’m just supposing here, but the three of them were Super-Glued together. If one did it, the others were bound to know. But the others would want a share, too. What would they blackmail her about?”
“She was already married.”
“Oh. You’re a prisoner here, aren’t you?”