Caleb had never been so frustrated in his entire fifteen years of life. Of all the ridiculous, aggravating, nonsensical things he had ever seen, watching this girl practically kill herself just to bring him what barely amounted to a snack for his wolf body was the worst. He had been ready to start actually howling, and that would definitely have gotten him the wrong sort of attention out here.
He should never have approached her. Not the first time he saw her, when her pale, terrified face struggled so hard to be brave. Not the second time when heâd watched from the trees while she sat waiting to feed himâfeed him! Like he was a dog! Only to then see her shaking quietly as she cried for him when she thought he wasnât coming. It had been nine years since heâd felt anything as miserable as heâd felt in that momentâthe only moment worse in his life being the big one: the crash that killed his parents.
But she kept bringing him scraps of food, day after day. If heâd eaten them as a human, the way heâd been eating all his food out here, it would have actually done some good. But he couldnât very well change in front of her to eat. And he didnât need it, and she did! Winters were always lean. He might be bigger now and need more, but he was also a much better hunter. As his dad had always said, life was a series of tradeoffs.
And heâd traded his comfortable, completely independent, private existence lately for stealing food from a girl! Out of her hand! Bare hands without any fur to protect them that she kept using to do things so she could bring him scraps!
He wanted to howl again, but he couldnât. Because he wasnât in his wolf form anymore. Because no amount of growling or whining or anything seemed to work with her!
Heâd been watching from the edge of the wood, making sure that guy in the truck didnât get near her. Sheâd called him a bad man, and he didnât like the look in her eyes when sheâd said it. It reached something deep inside himâhe might have even growled.
But sheâd barely even come to see him for the past two weeks! Heâd hunt while she was at school and then found himself dancing around the perimeter the rest of the day. Excited. Like a pup. Only to wait and wait and wait, worried something might have happened to her. Worried about the bad man. Worried to the point of howling so much he had to shift to his human form sometimes, just to control it.
And when sheâd finally show up, she always looked ready to fall over. He just couldnât take it anymore.
Never mind how much heâd liked licking her faceâ¦her fingers as she fed him. How much heâd enjoyed her hands buried deep in his fur or stroking him. Never mind how much he was never, ever, ever to shift in front of a human according to his parents. Heâd honored that rule faithfully his entire life.
Until now.
âYou are the most frustrating, stubborn girl!â He paced back and forth in front of her, his hands buried in his hair while he avoided looking at her horrified eyes. âA growl means no! No no no no no! No, do not bring me food! No, do not spend every single day torturing yourself for something I donât even want!â
He had worked himself into a full rage now.
âWolves arenât dogs! We donât want collars or little bowls with our names on them that you fill with food and water!â
He glared at her only to have the air sucked out of his lungs immediately.
She was fighting back tears, and he knew that expression far too well by now. He slid on his knees as he dashed to her and dropped down in one move, hesitating when her body stiffened in fear.
âI didnât mean it like that,â he breathed. âI just meantâ¦I meant I didnât want to take from you. I liked it. And I likedâ¦â He clenched his fists. This wasnât something he wanted to say out loud. It was too humiliating. âI liked you feeding me.â
Her eyes were twin pools of alarm. Confusion. Uncertainty. Hurt. But it looked like the horror might be slipping away a bit.
âI justâ¦â He hesitated but slowly reached his hand out to brush her long bangs out of her eyes, pausing for a moment when she jumped a bit. Her beautiful, warm brown eyes were so huge in her face right now and so often hidden behind her hair. It was so nice to be able to see them fully at lastâthis was something he couldnât do as a wolf. A sigh of contentment escaped him as he brushed them back and kept petting her. âI just didnât want you hurting for me. I hate it.â
Her lips parted, and he blinked at the unfamiliar sensation in his gut. It was uncomfortable, and he shifted his weight, trying to make it go away. It didnât help. He frowned, and her lashes fell as she turned her head aside. A whine scratched at his throat. Look back at me.
âWhatâs your name,â he whispered, his hand still stroking her hair.
Her lashes lifted to look at him briefly out of the corner of her eye before she dropped them again. He did whine then, and her eyes flew back to his. A smile spread across his face, and she swallowed.
âNat.â
His smile turned into a frown. Her parents named her after a bug?
âOr Natty. Or Natalie. I donât really care.â
His gut hurt again, but he knew this pain. Heâd felt it a lot the last two weeks. Althoughâ¦it felt a bit different in human form.
âWhich one makes you happiest?â His eyes felt as soft as his voice as he looked down at her.
She shrugged.
âNone of them. All of them.â
Hesitation stilled his tongue. He wished he could name her. A name that said something about her quiet strength. Her soft, beautiful eyes. The delicate line of her body that she couldnât hide no matter how hard she seemed to try.
The deep, aching loneliness heâd seen in her. Recognized. Because he felt it, too.
âI like Nat,â he breathed, his stomach clenching again when she looked up at him with glistening eyes.
Because he did. He liked her very much.
âIâm Caleb.â
Caleb kept stroking her hair, so happy to be the one to pet her now. Maybe sheâd let him feed her, too. His eyes searched the ground, following the scent of the fallen can. It didnât look as if the food inside had gotten dirty, so he reached for it with his free hand. The Shift had cleaned him, and he grabbed some and held it out towards her mouth. Would she lick his fingers?
Her eyes widened even more, and she leaned her head back into the tree, her neck stiff. A whine escaped him, and he tried again, holding it closer to her lips. Soft whispers of air floated around them as the wind blew, but his body radiated heat, nestling them in a cocoon of warmth. Her lashes fell to the food in his hand before lifting again to stare at him as wide as ever, her brows drawing together.
âEat,â he breathed. âYouâre hungry.â
A small sound came from her throat that he couldnât interpret, and his own brows pulled together and lifted. What had his mother told him to say?
âPlease?â He didnât care for the wobble he heard in his voice, and he was about to clear his throat when she made another soundâthis one more like a groanâand parted her lips.
A smile lit his face, and he carefully slid the small bit between her lips. Their lashes both blinked rapidly as her mouth closed, her tongue grazing the tips of his fingers. The pain in his gut returned, more intense this time, and he withdrew his fingers slowly, watching her swallow.
âI can do it,â she squeaked.
Confusion furrowed his brow, preventing him from arguing, and he handed her the can to sit back and pull his knees up, crossing his arms over them while he watched her. The pain didnât go away, but the intensity level seemed to fall after he put some distance between them.
She ate quickly and wiped her mouth on the back of her hand before pulling a bottle out of her coat pocket and guzzling it down. Her scent had changed slightly. He couldnât quite figure out how, and he wanted to shift again to investigate.
When the water bottle was empty, her hands gripped it while her eyes looked everywhere except at him. Her cheeks were even redder than theyâd been when she showed up, and he wondered if she was too cold now that heâd moved. His body generated a lot of heat when he wanted it to.
He sat back up to lean into her again only to jump a bit when she yelped and scrambled back away from the tree.
âWhat are you doing?â She sounded panicked, and he frowned.
âIâm not going to hurt you. I would never hurt you.â
That sound came from her throat again. A whimper?
âCome back. Youâre cold, and I can keep you warm,â he said, starting to crawl towards her.
The sound she made then was much stronger, but it was her mad scramble away from him as she pushed herself to her feet that let him know what it meant. She really was afraid of him.
Sadness filled his eyes, and he stood to face her, but she yelped again when her eyes fell and covered her face. He frowned and looked down. Itâs not like heâd only half shifted. That wasnât even possible, his parents had said. Not for more than a second or two. He stared down at his body, lean and muscular, with a bit of dark hair on his broad chest and a soft dark line along his abdomen that disappeared into deep dark curls. The large appendage he used to urinate hung low on his thigh, and his legs continued, strong and lean to the ground, the hair increasing again as his gaze lowered. Nothing unusual.
He looked back up to see her still covering her eyes.
âDo Iâ¦look wrong?â His voice sounded far too timid, and he wished he hadnât asked. But her eyes peeked over her hands in surprise.
âNoâ¦â Warm. Reassuring. He relaxed. âButâ¦youâre naked,â she finished in a tiny voice.
A frown touched his lips again. Heâd been naked since she met him. Although his parents had always had the rule that they wear clothes when in human form. It had been so long, he just hadnât really thought about it.
He scratched his head.
âDo you want me to shift back?â
âNo!â
Alarm rang out in her voice, and he hesitated. Was she afraid of his wolf form again?
âI donât have clothes,â he said.
She was the one whining now, her hands back over her eyes. Then her body stiffened suddenly before she began unzipping her coat.
His feet flew to her faster than she could react, and he grabbed her wrists as she yelped once more.
âNo way! Itâs freezing out here, and you canât control your temperature like I can. Just donât look at me if itâs unpleasant.â He frowned down at her wide eyes, keeping her hands pressed against his chest even when she tried pulling them away. They were so cold.
âItâs not unpleasant,â she whispered with a feeble whimper.
âThen why wonât you look at me?â
She swallowed, her eyes locked on his now, and her lips parted as if to speak, but no sound came out.
His gut clenched again, frustrating him. Was he getting sick? He never got sick, but he never went around humans, either.
The scent grew stronger. Beautifully sweet and musky. His own eyes felt like closing now, and he wanted to lean closer and breathe her in. But she wasnât comfortable with him right now. He needed to convince her again that he was safe.
âPlease donât be afraid of me,â he whispered.
A shudder went through her, but she didnât turn away. And her hands were beginning to feel warm against his chest.
âI didnât know it was possible forâ¦what are you?â Her eyes were tentative on his.
âIâm a wolf,â he answered.
âSoâ¦wolvesâ¦can doâ¦this?â Her eyes were wide again, and he laughed a bit.
âNo. I guess Iâm human, too. I donât really know. My parents died before they explained very much to meâor maybe I just forgot.â
Her eyes had grown soft at his words.
âIâm so sorry,â she whispered, and he blinked again, his heart beating harder.
âIt was a long time ago. I was six.â
A deep line formed between her brow.
âAre you on your own?â
He nodded.
âEver since then?â
âYeah. They wanted to put me in foster care. Human foster care. So I ran away to the woods.â
The sound she made was full of pain. Pain for him. And her hands flattened against his chest, causing the pain in his gut to flare up once more. He ignored it this time. His heart was beating too quickly.
âI was in foster care,â she said. âSome families are fine. But yeahâ¦if I could have run, I think I would have, too.â
The pain in his middle was overwhelming now. He didnât think she realized she was stroking his chest, but he was afraid if he moved, sheâd stop. So he stayed very still and let her pet him.
âDid your parents live around here?â
âNo. We were a lot farther north in the hills. I just came down this season for food.â
She grew very still, and he forced himself not to whine when her hands stilled as well.
âSo youâre leaving again?â she whispered.
His chest tightened at the thought. He hadnât thought that far ahead. But once warmer weather set in, he wouldnât be able to stay here safely. The woods werenât thick enough here for him to hide.
A sound of frustration made its way up from deep in his throat. He didnât want to go. Who would look out for her? And how could he take not having her pet him anymore?
âIfâ¦if you wanted toâ¦I mean, itâs not muchâ¦really not. Itâs really terrible. Itâsâ¦itâsâ¦never mind.â Her voice disappeared to nothing, and he pressed her hands harder into his chest.
âTell me.â
Her brows were pulled together and raised as she looked up at him, a shuddering breath escaping her before she spoke in a husky voice.
âWellâ¦if you wantedâ¦you couldâ¦stay with me.â
Stay with her. She meantâ¦in her house. Trailer. Which he couldnât do as a wolf.
Heâd have to live as a human.
He stumbled back from her, dropping her hands at last and shaking his head as his heart pounded against his chest painfully.
No. No no no. He would never live as a human. Never.
The urge to shift was almost overwhelming, and he spun around, pacing back and forth as he tore his hands through his hair again.
What was she thinking? Didnât she understand he was a wolf? He wasnât domesticated! He was wild! Free! How could she think he could ever be pinned up inside that tiny prison? To have to walk around in those hideous things she wrapped herself in. To be trapped.
He would run. The food around here was too scarce anyhowâhe should never have delayed this long. His body bristled, the change pulling at him, stinging his skin when he resisted. Why was he resisting? He was a wolf! The forest was his home! And it called to his blood.
The burning sensation in his gut flowered out of him as he shifted, the release from the agony a wave of pure pleasure that flowed through him as he flew across the ground, racing racing racing away from a face he didnât dare look at again. The scent of pine filled his nostrils, and he breathed it in deeply as he fled, expelling the last remnants of the sweet scent of her.
His paws dug up the earth as he tore through the trees, the power of his body replacing every bit of the softness of his human form. He jerked his head with a fierce snort as he ran. Yes, every bit. There was no room for softness in a wolf. No room for being petted. For having small, fragile hands feeding him. Heâd only felt sorry for her. Nothing more.
On and on he flew through the night, reveling in the crispness of the air, the wind whistling through his thick fur, the glow of the moon shining through the trees and tying him to her in an age old pull far stronger than his pull to her.
His head jerked yet again, his snort even more fierce. He did not have a pull to the girl! She was nothingânothing!
His claws dug into the earth as he jerked to a halt, panting.
Nothing. Just what she believed. That she was nothing.
He looked behind him, an ache inside that had never been there before.
She would have gone back home by now. And the bad man would be back eventually.
A long whine welled up from deep in his throat, the sound carried away on the wind.
She would be alone. All alone. Taking care of her mother. Of herself. Even though she was so delicate. So small.
He took a step back in the direction heâd come from, and a snort overtook him as he shook his head, jumping back. He was a wolf!
But a wolf could protect herâ¦
A whine left him again as he took another step back to her. And another. The sound grew and grew until he could no longer resist, and he leaned back and howled into the moon, the long, mournful tones filling the night sky.
When the last of the feeling disappeared, he lowered his head once more. And began running.