comfortable in the pack.
âI know,â Adam said.
âIt would help if Darryl werenât so cute,â Samuel said casually as he crossed the living room to stand beside Adam.
Technically, he should have stood behind him, since Adam was the Alpha, and Samuel was a lone wolf, outside the pack hierarchy. But Samuel wasnât just any lone wolf, he was the Marrokâs son and more dominant even than Adam if heâd wanted to push matters.
âI dare you to say that to Darryl,â I challenged.
âDonât.â Adam smiled, but his voice was serious. Though he spoke to Samuel, heâd never looked away from me. To me he said, âSamuel says youâre going to need an escort to the vampire seethe sometime in the near future. Call me and Iâll find someone to go with you.â
âThank you, I will.â
He touched my sore cheek with a light finger. âIâd do it myself, but I donât think it would be wise.â
I agreed with him wholeheartedly. A werewolf escort would serve both as a bodyguard and a statement that I wasnât without friends. The Alphaâs escort would turn it into a power play between him and the vampiresâ leaders with Stefan caught in the middle.
âI know,â I said. âThank you.â
I couldnât stay in that room with both men one more minute. Even a human woman could have drowned in the testosterone in the air, it was so strong. If I didnât leave, they were going to start fightingâI hadnât missed the way Samuelâs eyes had whitened when Adam touched my cheek.
Then there was the need I had to bury my nose in Adamâs neck and inhale the exotic scent of his skin. I looked away from him and found myself gazing into Samuelâs white eyes. He was so close to turning that the distinctive black ring around the outside of his pupils was clearly visible. It should have scared me.
Samuelâs nostrils flaredâI smelled it, too. Arousal.
âIâve got to go,â I said, properly panicked.
I gave them a hasty wave as I scuttled out of the house, hastily pulling the door shut behind me. The relief of having a door between me and both men was intense. I was breathing hard, as if Iâd run a race, adrenaline pushing the pain of the sorcererâs attack away. I took a deep breath of the morning air, trying to clear my lungs of werewolf, before heading out to my car.
I opened the Rabbitâs door and the sudden smell of blood made me step abruptly back. The car had been parked where I always left it: Iâd forgotten that Stefan must have used it to bring me back home. There were stains on both front seat coversâboth of us must have been pretty bloody. But the most impressive thing was the fist-shaped dent on my dash, just above the radio.
Stefan had been upset.
Â
I pulled into my garage and parked at the far end of the lot next to Zeeâs old truck. Never trust a mechanic who drives new cars. Theyâre either charging too much money for their work, or they canât keep an old car runningâmaybe both.
VWs are good cars. They used to be cheap good cars; now theyâre expensive good cars. But every make has a few lemons. VW had the Thing (which at least looked cool), the Fox, and the Rabbit. I figured in another couple of years, my Rabbit would be the only one still running in the greater Tri-Cities.
I let the Rabbit idle for a moment and debated going in. Iâd stopped at the nearest auto-parts store and picked up seat covers to replace the ones Iâd had to throw away. Judging from the sick looks Iâd gotten from the clerk, my battered face wasnât going to be drumming up business for me anytime soon.
But there were four cars parked in the lot, which meant we were busy. If I stayed in the garage, no one would see my face.
I got out of the car, slowly. The dry heat of late morning wrapped around me and I closed my eyes for a moment to enjoy