Game of Destiny Chapter 7-1 I walked down the street of the small town. The plan had been to stop at the diner to have lunch on the road back from a meeting 18 Strange a new alliance. That was almost four days ago, and I was still here. The reason was waiting for me as I turned towards the lake. She stood waiting where she told me we would meet. There was a paper bag on the table that smelled delicious.
âYouâre here,â I said as I stopped in front of her, just a little too close. Just to see how she reacted.
Said I would be,â she told me and looked up at me. Whoever this woman was, she had a good upbringing. She had mastered the art of looking up at me without meeting my eyes. Locking eyes with an pha was seen as a challenge if you werenât his mate or a close friend.
âSo you did. I thought I might need to eat a couple more meals in the diner to persuade you. You seem to have a stubborn streak,â [ pointed out. Point in question, she hadnât moved back despite me being in her space. Most wolves would have backed up the second an Alpha moved into their space. Unless they themselves were one. And if it was one thing I knew about this intriguing little.wolf, she was no Alpha. I had scented her as a wolf the moment I stepped into the diner. That had been a surprise. I kept a close eye on any rogues and migrating wolves close to my pack. Yet this woman had never pinged on our radar.
âGetting tired of Richâs cooking?â she asked. I chuckled. She was funny.
Not at all. Iâm considering staying until I have tried everything on the menu. That would take me a week or two, I think,â I said.
She huffed.
âWell, no need as Iâm here. So why am I here?â she asked.
1 want to get to know you,â I said, deciding to go with the truth. She looked surprised, then her wall came back up and I couldnât read her. It was part of what made her frustrating, and a curiosity.
âWell, I could refuse. But you would just use your Alpha sniffer and find me and keep dropping by my work. So letâs do this,â she said. For the first time since I had walked up to her, she averted her gaze and looked at the paper bag. She took it and climbed up and sat down on the table, resting her feet on the seat. âCoffee, black she told me as she fished a travel cup out of the bag. I sat down next to her, offering her the comfort of adding as much space between us as possible.
âYou remembered,â I told her and smiled.
âitâs hardly the most complicated way to have your coffee. She fished out another cup and placed it next to her. Next thing that came out of the magical bag was pecan buns and I had to swallow a couple of extra times not to drool. Itâs important to keep a small amount of dignity when you are an Alpha. âHere, my landlady made them this morning. I need breakfast to get me through this conversation.â
âThank you,â I told her and took one of the mouth watering pastries from her.
âWhat do you want to know?â she asked and took a sip of her coffee.
âYouâre not a rogue?â
? I asked, and just as soon as the words left me, could have kicked myself. The raised eyebrow on her face showed she thought it was an idiotic question. She didnât have the slightly sweet, sickening scent that all rogues had to them. The smell of decay.
No, Iâm not. Iâm a lone wolf,â she confirmed and took a bite of her breakfast. I hummed, feeling a little foolish after the question.
âWere you born one?â I asked. Most werewolves stayed in packs. It was an ingrained need in us. But there were those that ventured outside the system. Either from being dissatisfied with the system, from a need to be alone, or feeling it was the only way. Sometimes wolves like that had mates and reproduced, their pups then didnât get an automatic membership into a pack and ended up being lone wolves as well. There were even the odd occurrences of rouges having pups. The pups didnât become rouges like their mother, they became lone wolves.
1/2 Chapter 7.1.
âNo, I left my pack... There was a pause as she seemed to count. âFour years back,â she salil. It surprised me. She looked so young.
Chapter Comments Rudite POST COMMENT Heâs a considerate alpha. Sounds like his pack is not like her pack. Looking forward to where this goes.
VIEW 1 COMMENT 2/2 Game of Destiny Chapter 7-2 âyou left when you were around fifteen?â I asked. She laughed.
âFighteen,â she corrected me, and I got another surprise. I had not pected her to be twentyâtwo years old. Only two years younger than me. She had been raised in a pack, she had lived in one most of her life. I wanted to know why she chose a life isolated, surrounded by humans instead of by her own kind.
âWhy did you leave?â I asked. She glanced up at me.
âYou are asking a lot of personal questions, Alpha, offering no information in return,â she pointed out. Her accusation was fair.
She had been more than gracious with answering my questions. But now she didnât want to expose herself further without getting something back. I had to respect that.
âWhat do you want to know? I asked.
âWhy are you here?â she asked.
×× I was on on my way home f from a meeting with two Alphas Alphas from other packs. I just stopped to d to get some lunch,â I said.
âAnd your pack is close by?â she asked. It showed she had been raised in a pack that took pride in teaching their young the right manners. She knew not to outright ask where my packâs territory was. That was considered a challenge.
Yes, itâs about half a dayâs drive from here,â I said.
âThere shouldnât be any packs out here,â she told me. I smiled. She had done her research.
âIf you would have told me that two years ago, I would have said you were right. We are a new pack. We established ourselves out here just because the packs are far enough apart that we didnât feel squashed and they didnât feel threatened by us,â I told her. She nodded, then took a deep breath and looked at me, as if to find an answer to a question she had. I couldnât help but to study her. She was a beautiful wolf. The way her deep green eyes shifted with her emotions was fascinating-
âIâm latent,â she said and took a deep drink from her coffee. It appeared every word out of her would surprise me, I thought.
âAs in you you donât have a wolf?â I asked.
âYeah, like I donât have a wolf,â she said. There was an undertone I couldnât pinpoint. Bitterness? Hurt? Both would be understandable.
âYou smell of wolf,â I said. She smiled a sad smile.
âThat may be the case. But Iâm twentyâtwo and I havenât shifted.â I wanted to tell her that there was still time. It wouldnât be a li But shifting this late would be highly unlikely, and I didnât want to give her false hope when she clearly had accepted her faith.
âIs that why you left your pack?â I asked.
âIt was the root of all the reasons I left,â she answered.
âIâm sorry to hear that.â I didnât know what else to say.
Are you going to tell me why we are doing this?â
âI told you, I want to get to know you,â I told her.
âYes, you did. You just didnât tell me why I hadnât, and I wondered if now was the right time to tell her. She was skittish, and I had 1/2 Chapter 7-2 a feeling she would bolt if Listowed too quickly. Hut she had asked a raight in the point question. She deserved an answer.
âI want to invite you to join my pack, 1 told her. She looked at me I was insane.
âYou did hear the part about me being latent, right?â she asked.
âI did. There is no issue with my heating.â I said.
âMaybe not your hearing, but you obviously have some issues,â she said, then her eyes grew bigger when she realized she had said it out loud. I threw my head back and laughril.
âYou are not the first one to tell me this,â I admitted.
âListen, I donât know why you want me in your pack. But Iâm doing the on my own. I have made myself a new life that I like.
âDonât you miss the pack life? Being around your ownot having to hide who and what you are? Donât you celebrations?â I asked her, and I saw longing in her eyes before she looked away. She stared out over the lake.
miss the full moon âMaybe, but that life is not for me,â she said. There was something deeply sad in the way she said it. The Alpha in me wanted to pull her into my pack, to give her the comfort I knew only a pack could offer. I instinctively knew she needed it.
pack.
âBefore you turn me down, why donât you come for a visit? Take a couple of days off work and come to the pack. Itâs a but itâs a good one. If you give it a chance, I promise I will never step foot in this town if you turn my offer down. I will even make it out of bounds for the rest of the pack,â I offered.
âI donât know,â she hesitated.
âThe moon will be full in three days. Come and celebrate it with us. She looked at me with those deep green eyes and I knew she stood on the very edge of accepting my offer.
Chapter Comments Rudite POST COMMENT Heâs a considerate alpha. Sounds like his pack is not like her pack. Looking forward to where this goes.
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