Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
age. But time is their enemy anyway. After just so long, one wolf told me, nothing matters anymore and death looks better than living another day. Samuel was very old.
The Marrok, Samuelâs father, had taken to calling me once a month to âcheck on things,â he said. For the first time it occurred to me that he hadnât been checking on me, but on his son.
âHow long have you felt this way?â I asked, inching my way up onto his bed, slowly so I didnât startle him. âDid you leave Montana because you couldnât hide this from Bran?â
âNo. I want you,â he said starkly moving his arm so I could see that his eyes had changed back to human grey-blue.
âDo you?â I asked, knowing that it wasnât completely true. âYour wolf might still want me, but I donât think you do. Why did you leave the Marrok to come here?â
He rolled away, giving his back to me. I didnât move, careful not to crowd him. I didnât back away either, just waited for his answer.
Eventually it came. âIt was bad. After Texas. But when you came back to us, it went away. I was fine. Until the baby.â
âDid you talk to Bran about it?â Whatever it was . I put my face against the small of his back, warming him with my breath. Samuel would see suicide as cowardice, I tried to reassure myself, and Samuel hated cowards. I might not want to love Samuelânot after the way weâd once hurt each otherâbut I didnât want to lose him either.
âThe Marrok knows,â he whispered. âHe always does. Everyone else believed I was the same, just like always. My father knew something was wrong, that I wasnât right. I was going to leaveâbut then you came.â
If Bran couldnât fix him, what was I supposed to do?
âYou left the pack for a long time,â I said, feeling my way. Heâd left the pack shortly after I had, over fifteen years ago. Heâd stayed away for most of those fifteen years. âBran told me you went lone-wolf in Texas.â Wolves need their pack, or else they start to get a little strange. Lone wolves were, in general, an odd bunch, dangerous to themselves and others.
âYes.â Every muscle in his body tensed, waiting for the blow to fall. I decided that meant I was on the right track.
âItâs not easy being alone, not for years.â I scooted up a little until I could wrap myself around him, tucking my legs behind his. I slipped the arm I wasnât lying on around his side and pressed my hand over his stomach, showing him that he wasnât alone, not while he lived at my house.
He started to shake, vibrating the whole bed. I tightened my arm, but I didnât say anything. Iâd gone as far as I was willing to go. Some wounds need to be pricked so they can drain, others just need to be left aloneâI wasnât qualified to know the difference.
He wrapped both of his arms over the top of mine. âI hid myself from the wolves. I hid among the humans.â He paused. âHid from myself. What I did to you was wrong, Mercedes. I told myself I couldnât wait, I couldnât take the chance that another would take you from me. I had to make you mine so my children would live, but I knew I was taking advantage of you. You werenât old enough to defend yourself from me.â
I rubbed my nose against his back in reassurance, but I didnât speak. He was right, and I respected him too much to lie.
âI violated your trust, and my fatherâs, too. I couldnât live with it: I had to leave. I traveled to the far corner of the country and became someone else: Samuel Cornick, college freshman, fresh off the farm with a newly minted high school diploma. Only on the night of the full moon did I allow myself to remember what I was.â
The muscles under my hands convulsed twice. âIn med school, I met a girl. She reminded me of you: quiet with a sneaky sense of humor. She looked a little like you, too. It felt like a second chance to meâa chance to do it right. Or maybe I just forgot. We were friends at first, in the same program at school. Then it became something more. We moved in together.â
I knew what was coming, because it was the worst thing I could think of that could have happened to Samuel. I could smell his tears, though his voice was carefully even.
âWe took precautions, but we werenât careful enough. She
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