Winterâs wind cooled my face but not my temper. A faint howl echoed in the distance followed by another further off. How great would it be to just change what I was and run free? No. Instead, I was stuck at the Quillsâ in my own personal hell. What would Dad say about all of this? Heâd lecture on promiscuity then ask if Iâd spoken to my mother lately.
Sighing, I brushed the snow off of a bench and sat. I was who I was. Not a product of my upbringing but of my experience and the personal decisions made because of those experiences. People, whether human or not, werenât just food. Each life mattered regardless of birth or background. Why couldnât the Council see the same thing I did? We were all connected. People who knew people who knew people. Every time I heard a human say, âitâs a small world, isnât it?â I was reminded of those connections. Yet, people with influence and power tended to forget that.
Was it fear that kept them rigidly holding to their beliefs that only their way could be the right way? Heaven forbid I be allowed my differences or be shown any acceptance because of them. My thoughts ricocheted back at me. Was I being the stubborn one? Was I unhealthy? I wished that everyone would stop telling me what to do and let me figure it out on my own.
I kicked at the snow at my feet and looked up at the stars.
âWhat are we looking at?â
The voice, so close to my ear, made me jump.
Swiveling, I glared back at Fenris.
âWhat are you doing?â
âCreeping around in the dark. Thatâs what we werewolves are known for. That, and chasing girls dressed in red.â
I glanced down at myself.
âIâm wearing green.â
âI thought you might want to go change for me.â
His humor in the face of my troubles irritated me.
âDo you ever take anything seriously?â
His expression sobered.
âYes. Whatâs wrong?â
âI have an insane, sex-obsessed mother, and sheâs staying here. I hate my life and wish I had my mark so I could just leave this place.â
He stepped over the bench and sat beside me.
âIâm sorry,â he said quietly.
âDonât be. None of itâs your fault.â
âFault doesnât matter when someone I care about is hurting. Want to talk about whateverâs going on?â He bumped me lightly then stilled and sniffed.
I glanced at him.
âIs that you?â he asked, leaning in and sniffing again.
A flash flood of heat consumed my face when his nose almost touched my chest. He inhaled deeply. He didnât pull back when he tilted his head to look up at me.
âWhat is that smell?â he asked.
I could barely think with his face so close to mine. Dirty thoughts filled my head, and my pulse skipped several beats.
âEliana?â he said softly. âWhat happened?â
I planted my palm over his face and pushed him away. He chuckled and sat again.
âOne of my many problems happened. You know about the goblin at Meganâs. Well, he arrived with a brownie. A fourteen-month-old brownie who canât stop touching himself and makes me dream of skunks making babies.â
Fenris snorted a laugh, which he quickly smothered with a swipe of his hand.
âPlease, continue.â
âItâs far from funny. He saw me naked in the shower more times than I care to recall.â
âNaked?â
âVery.â
âLucky little flitter.â
âMore than you know. This last time, I hit him with water and he fell right between myâ¦well, he was so excited by it he exploded.â
Fenris arched a brow at me.
âExploded?â
âYes. Itâs as dirty as it sounds. Thatâs what you smell. He just keeps going. He thinks we made a baby and is saying the most ridiculous things now. I just canât anymore. He needs to go. So does my mom. Either the goblin needs to talk, or Megan needs to find the killer because Iâm two seconds from losing my sanity.â
âIt canât be that bad.â
âMy mom made me breakfast in bed.â
âSee? Thatâs motherly.â
âBreakfast was two naked boys tucked in with me when I woke up.â
He exhaled heavily and looked out at the trees. We listened to the distant howls, and I wondered if he could understand what they were saying.
âIâll make you a deal,â Fenris said finally. âIf I can find a happy home for your pocket pool playing pixieââ
âBrownie.â
ââyou repay me by showering me with your undying gratitude.â
I stared at him for a moment. His brown gaze, while still filled with humor, held mine with complete sincerity.
âWhat exactly are you asking for?â
âI want a hug a day until Megan gets back,â he said.
âHugs?â Hugs were dangerous. They were full-body contact, usually front to front. I could feel my hunger stir just at the thought of all that touching.
He shrugged slightly.
âWhat can I say? Itâs in my nature to like affection.â
âAre you making a canine joke?â
âAre you thinking of petting me?â
My vision sharpened, and he grinned.
âNo. No petting,â I said, blinking in an effort to return my vision to normal. âWhile I appreciate the offer to help, hugging is too dangerous. For you, not me.â
âI disagree. I think you hugging me could help us both. Iâd get my daily dose of affection, and youâd be doing something that would appease your mom enough to get her back on your side instead of Adiraâs.â
âHugs arenât going to appease any of them. Itâs gone way beyond that. Give me a real reason why you want a hug, and I might think about it.â
He studied me for a minute.
âBecause you hate your life and think no one cares. You need to remember your mom, Adira, and the Quills arenât the only people in your life. You have friends. And Iâm willing to remind you of that for as long as it takes until Meganâs here to remind you herself.â
He nudged me then stood.
âCome on. Letâs get you back inside before you freeze.â
We walked the path back toward the house. Before we reached the door, I groaned.
âI forgot to feed the goblin.â
âDonât worry about it. Iâll take care of him before I start looking for the brownieâs new home.â
âYouâre going to start tonight?â
âSure. Just be ready to pay up tomorrow.â
The sound of my phone pulled me out of a deep sleep.
âHello?â I answered groggily.
âGet out of bed, beautiful. Your meat-beating brownie issues are solved.â
My sluggish brain struggled to process what Fenris was saying.
âMy what?â
âI found your brownie a new home as promised. Meet me at the marshes in thirty minutes, or weâll miss our chance.â
I looked at the time on my phone, saw that it wasnât even six in the morning and that Fenris had already hung up.
He couldnât be serious, could he? How had he found a family overnight? Had he slept? Had I? Momâs party had kept me up until close to three. My eyes felt gritty like I needed at least another two hours. But thirty minutes barely gave enough time for me to drive to the marshes.
My eyes, which had closed again, flew open, and I scrambled from bed.
âPiepen, get dressed. We need to hurry.â
He sat up in his drawer, his shaggy hair wild around his head.
âIs it the baby? Is it time?â
âWhat? No. Get dressed.â
He flopped back onto his pillow.
I rushed to the closet, threw on some clothes, and was out the door with a naked Piepen and a handful of brownie clothes two minutes later.
âIâm going to freeze my bells off,â he said when we reached the garage.
âI think you mean balls, and they wouldnât be cold if youâd gotten dressed like Iâd said.â
âNo, I mean bells. They make beautiful music when Iââ
âDonât want to know, Piepen. Just get in and get dressed.â I tossed his clothes into the back seat with him and hurried to pull out of the garage.
He bombarded me with questions as we drove. Wisely, I didnât say much.
âYouâre making me nervous,â he said, landing on my shoulder. âWhy wonât you tell me where weâre going? Are you going to lock me in a cage and eat my wings?â
âNo. Iâm going to do the opposite so you can truly be happy.â
âI am happy. Iâm with my woman whoâs carrying my baby. What more could a man want?â He stepped closer to my cheek and stroked a hand over it. âWell, I could think of something,â he said, lowering his high-pitched voice pseudo-seductively. âHow about you pull over and I make you really happy?â
âStop touching me, brownie, or youâll find out whatâs itâs like to be a mosquito.â
âSomeoneâs cranky. Probably because you missed your dose of vitamin P.â
I flicked him from my shoulder. He squealed indignantly but recovered in the air just before hitting the passenger seat.
âKeep this up and Iâm going to leave,â he said.
âCome back here so I can flick you again.â
âYouâre being mean.â
And I felt a fair share of guilt for it under my annoyance. However, I wouldnât apologize for my behavior. Any hint of affection from me, and the brownie would never leave.
A sullen silence filled the car, and I watched for the marshes. Piepen didnât say anything when they came into view. More than likely, he didnât know what they were. I glanced at him in the mirror, and my guilt grew. His clothes werenât that warm. Would he be okay out here? Brownies didnât have heated homes like we did. Or pillow beds. I started to worry that my need to get rid of him would be what killed the poor little thing.
His gaze met mine as I put on the blinker.
âPulling over so we can make up?â he asked.
My worry went out the window.
âNope.â
He frowned at me and watched the road. When I reached the parking area, I saw Fenris. He stood by the reeds, wearing nothing but a pair of jeans. Steam rose from his torso. I tried not to stare at the ridged expanse. I tried to tell myself that he had to be freezing like that. But mostly, I just imagined what it would be like toâ
âStop staring,â Piepen said, flitting in front of my face so I had to slam on the breaks.
He yanked up his shirt and pointed at his belly.
âIf you want abs, you can look at mine.â
The passenger door opened before I could swat Piepen.
âEverything okay?â Fenris asked.
âNo, but it will be. Where are they?â
I opened my door and got out, shivering despite my jacket. Piepen followed, staying close to my head.
âWhere are who?â he asked.
âYour new family,â I said.
His eyes rounded.
âNew family? Youâre my family.â
âHello, Piepen,â a female voice said, drawing our attention to the reeds in front of the car.
An older couple, both with their wings, hovered just within the brown stalks. Their grey hair and creased faces worried me a bit. Hopefully, they werenât too old to handle Piepenâs energy.
âIâm Madeline, and this is my husband, Marshal. Weâd like to give you a home and a family.â
Piepen looked at me, shock and dejection showing on his little face.
âWhat about our family?â
âWe donât have a family, Piepen.â
âThe baby,â he said stubbornly.
I had to take a slow breath before answering.
âFor the last time, there is no baby.â
âHow do you know?â He looked at the older couple. âI gave her my very first magic dust.â
They both made sounds of awe as if heâd done something special instead of disgusting.
âItâs a special gift to receive,â Marshal said. âYouâre marked for life for certain.â
I thought of the stain still on my stomach and really hoped it wasnât permanent. Hopefully, the lifespan he was talking about was theirs.
âHow long ago did it happen?â he asked.
âYesterday,â I said.
âOh, youâd be entering your second trimester then,â Madeline said. âEnough for someone with good ears to hear a heartbeat.â She looked at Fenris.
I did, too. He was standing there with his hand loosely over his mouth as if he was seriously following the conversation. I knew better. The tramp was laughing his butt off.
However, with all attention on him, he managed to remove his hand without showing a hint of his amusement and walked over to me.
âIâll take a listen,â he said in all seriousness before dropping to his knees in front of me.
He reached up and slowly unzipped my jacket.
âSo I can hear better,â he said.
It didnât matter the reason. All I saw was a man on his knees before me, undressing me. My eyes went black, and hunger clawed its way to the surface, fierce and demanding.
âWorship me, wolf,â I said.
Fenris looked up at me, a hint of a smile showing on his lips.
âWhat exactly does that entail?â he asked, playfully.
I liked playful.
âStop hitting on my woman,â Piepen yelled.
I bared my teeth and started to look up at the little gnat who needed to die.
Fenris grabbed my hips, commanding my attention.
âBefore we work out the details of this worship you want, I think we should check to see if youâre carrying another manâs child.â
He set his ear against my lower belly. My hunger craved more. It demanded his lust, and his completeâ¦
Obedience.
I closed my eyes, realizing Iâd slipped again, and pulled my thoughts back to the moment. Fenris was helping me. Piepen needed to go. And stress was making me act weird. Nothing more. I wasnât hungry; I was tired.
My hunger stirred to contradict me.
âNo heartbeat,â Fenris said, standing. âSorry, Piepen.â
I hurriedly rezipped my jacket.
âWe can try again,â Piepen said, flying close to me. âDonât give up on us.â
I rolled my eyes and struggled to find the remnants of my shredded patience.
âThere is no us, Piepen. I took you in because Megan asked me to. Now Iâm asking you to leave, willingly, so you can live a happy life with your own kind. Thereâs a brownie girl out there who is as desperate to make little brownie babies as you are. Go find her and be happy.â
His little eyes watered.
âThis isnât you. Youâre upset that Iââ
âYouâre right. This isnât me. Iâm not the type of person who gets so angry that I close someone in a drawer or threaten to rip their wings off. I brought you here to keep you safe. From me. Please. Just go with them.â
Hurt flitted across his features.
âYou didnât mean it, though,â he said.
âYes, I did. I was that angry.â
His wings wilted a little with defeat.
âCan I come see you some time?â
âHow about I come see you? Itâll be safer that way.â
He nodded sadly and turned toward the old couple. I didnât feel a twinge of sorrow as they led him away. Only relief.
âStill want to be worshipped?â Fenris asked when we were alone.
âShut up, and get in the car,â I said.
âYes, maâam.â
He got into the passenger seat and grinned at me as I buckled. I knew he found the whole thing amusing. I didnât. It was my life, and Piepen had nearly destroyed it.
I knew the thought wasnât entirely fair as soon as I had it. Piepen, alone, wasnât responsible for my out of control spiral. The adults in my life had a fair share of blame with all their meddling, too. Although, without their meddling, I probably wouldnât have started talking to Fenris and would still be stuck with Piepen.
Glancing at Fenrisâs bare chest, I tried to decide which of the two creatures would have been the safer option.
âWhere are the rest of your clothes? Iâll drop you off there.â
âMy clothes are in the Quillsâ garden. But Iâd rather you drop me off at the cabin. You can bring the clothes to school tomorrow, or I can swing by afterward to pick them up.â
My fingers tightened on the steering wheel at the idea of him stripping down to almost nothing so close to the Quillsâ house.
âThank you for your help,â I said, trying to control the direction of my thoughts. âI donât think I could have survived another day with Piepen.â
Fenris chuckled.
âFor such a small guy, he had a lot of feeling. My nose was close to bleeding.â
âBrownies live intense little lives. How did you find Marshal and Madeline?â
He grinned.
âI sat in the parking lot and howled until someone came to talk to me.â
âThe power of annoyance.â
âI prefer to call it persistence. Did your night go better after I left you?â
âNot really. My mom stayed up until 3 a.m., having an orgy two doors down from mine. I didnât get much sleep. And no doubt, sheâll probably be awake by the time I get home and will have some new way to torture me ready. Got any ideas for how to get rid of her?â
âNot really. But youâre welcome to hang out at the cabin with me for a while.â
I sighed.
âIâm looking for more of a permanent solution.â
He considered me for a moment.
âI can smell your exhaustion. Just under three hours of sleep isnât enough. Take a nap at the cabin. Things might look better afterward.â
âYou didnât get any sleep at all. Iâm not going to take over your cabin again.â
âWe could share.â
I shook my head before he even finished talking.
âToo dangerous. My guard is down when I sleep.â Obviously, my guard was lacking when I was tired, too.
âAnd what do you think will happen?â he asked.
âWith the way you smell, probably the worst thing possible.â
âI canât read your mind. Whatâs the worst thing possible?â
âThat Iâll feed from you.â
âI was thinking murdered in my sleep by a sex-crazed brownie because I took his goddess away from him, so Iâm not sure how a feeding would be the worst thing possible.â
âIâm not Piepenâs goddess, and feeding from you would be horrible.â
He tapped his knee with his thumb.
âIf I smell good, I assume Iâd taste good. Iâm struggling to connect the horrible.â
âHorrible for you. Why are we even talking about this?â
âBecause youâre tired and need a place to crash, and youâre being stubborn.â
âYou donât understand what a feeding could do to you. You saw how obsessed Eugene was after an almost feeding. Youâd be a mindless slave if I fed from you.â
He snorted.
âItâs not funny.â
âIt kinda is. You already almost fed from me twice. Have I acted any differently around you? To you?â
âWell, no.â
âThen why are you worrying? We both know that different creatures have different levels of susceptibility to each other. My kind does the whole fated mates thing, right? So maybe you canât persuade me because my genetics just arenât interested in anyone whoâs not my mate.â
Hadnât Mom said something similar in the restaurant? Not that I was considering feeding from him, I quickly told myself. It would just be nice to know I wouldnât hurt him if I did slip.
âBut what if youâre wrong?â
âI donât think I am. You canât hurt me, Eliana. Trust me.â
I sighed and thought of a nap in his cabin with him still there. My hunger slithered under my skin, more responsive than it was the day before. Maybe it was because I was tired. That just made sleeping at his cabin more dangerous.
My brain was saying no, but my eyes were saying yes with each tired blink. When I reached his road, I knew Iâd need to sleep before driving home even if it was just in the car.
I parked and cut the engine.
âI can see youâre going to say no. What kind of friend would I be to let you drive home like this?â
âThe kind that let me drive here.â
âCome on, chicken. I promise not to bite.â
My insides went hot at the thought of Fenris biting, nibbling his way up my leg.
âYouâre right. Iâm too tired to drive. Or fight you. Can I borrow a blanket and just sleep in the car for a bit?â
He laughed and got out, walking around the car to open my door.
âNot a chance. Come on. Everything will be fine.â
I got out and waited for him to close the door.
âIf you ever want, I can take your car somewhere to get this fixed,â he said, pointing to the bubbled paint. âJust let me know when youâre ready to be without it for a few days.â
I nodded and tiredly followed him.
My gaze was glued to his back. The play of muscles as he walked mesmerized me as I listened to the crunch of his feet on the snow.
âHow are you not cold?â I asked.
He looked over his shoulder at me.
âWhat can I say, Eliana? Iâm hot, and all the girls are in awe.â
I rolled my eyes at him.
âHot or big-headed?â
He grinned.
âThey usually go hand in hand, donât they?â
He opened the cabin door. This time, in the daylight, I could see the room and closed the door as he went to light the fire. He had flames within a few minutes then crossed the room and pulled back the blankets.
âIn you go,â he said.
I looked at him then the bed.
âI donât think thatâs a good idea. You take the bed. Iâll take the chair by the fire. Iâll be warmer.â
He shrugged. âSuit yourself.â
I watched him crawl into bed and turn his back to me. Within seconds, his breathing evened out.
Exhaling slowly, I went to the chair and closed my eyes.
Once again, I was in the woods surrounded by cakes. They smelled so good. Better than the ones I made with Ashlyn. My mouth watered, but I didnât eat. I was too afraid of what the sleeping me would do to Fenris.
My hunger grew as I walked, clenching at my stomach so painfully that I whimpered.
âTake what you need,â the forest rumbled.
I shook my head and kept walking. The hunger didnât ease.
âStop denying yourself,â the forest said. âI exist only for you. Take what you need. There will always be more.â
A cake dropped in front of my face, brushing my nose, flooding my senses with its sweet scent.
I knew I shouldnât, but I took a bite. Then another. Warmth surrounded me, blanketing me in comfort as I ate deeply of every sweet possible. I gorged myself until I thought Iâd burst. Then the forest disappeared. The warmth didnât. It stayed with me while I slept deeply.
When I woke, I was in the bed, tucked under the blankets. I looked around the room warily. Fenris was gone, though.
Confused, I got out of bed and checked my phone, which was in my purse still by the chair. Five hours had passed. I rubbed my face and stretched, wondering how long Fenris had slept before heâd left. I frowned and glanced at the chair then the bed. Had he moved me when heâd woken up?
âHey, sleepyhead,â Fenris said, opening the cabin door.
A cold wind stole into the room with him.
âHow did I get in the bed?â I asked.
âYou walked to it and crawled in,â he said. âAre you hungry for human food? I ran to my house and grabbed some stuff.â He lifted a brown paper bag that had a wet spot in the middle.
I glanced at the teeth marks in the paper.
âSorry. I shifted and ran with it. I didnât want to leave the fire for too long. You were cold.â
âWere you in the bed when I crawled into it?â I asked, not letting him distract me.
He grinned.
âOnly for a little while. You hog the covers.â
I studied his eyes, looking for any trace that Iâd done something I shouldnât have. They looked the same, though. No haunting earnestness. Just the ever-present glint of humor.
âI could maybe eat something,â I said. âAs long as it isnât anything sweet.â
The idea of eating anything sweet just then turned my stomach.
âNot sweet. I made sandwiches.â
We sat in the chairs by the fire. I was one bite away from finishing the best ham and cheese sandwich Iâd ever had in my life when my phone rang.
Seeing it was Megan, I answered.
âEliana, you need to get to Elbner,â Megan said as soon as I answered. âTell him I know his master was Zayn Sias. I know Zayn was the one responsible for all the creatures who died with a smile. Tell Elbner Iâm making it common knowledge. Once you do that, you should be able to take him to the Council as a witness. Got it?â
âYes. Zayn Sias. Got it. Thank you.â
I hung up and looked at Fenris with growing hope.
âMeganâs figured out whoâs doing the killing. I need to get to the goblin and deliver him to the Quills. Once he confirms Mom didnât do it, Iâll be free again.â
âIâll go with you.â
âNo. Itâs okay. I got this.â
I grabbed my purse.
âThanks for letting me sleep here. Youâre right. It did make things better.â
I ran from the cabin, excited to get back into my car. I was almost free.