Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
said.
âI am not a prize,â I muttered.
I knew they both heard me, but all he said was, âSamuel has always been the competition. I prefer him here, so at least Iâm competing with a flesh-and-blood man, and not a memory.â
âIf youâre going to talk about me behind my back,â I told Adam, âat least do it where I canât hear you.â
They must have followed my request because I didnât hear any more of their conversation. The shower was still going, so I sat down in the middle of Jesseâs roomâpulled a bottle of nail polish out from under one hipâand then took the opportunity to pull myself together. Adam was right; this had gone on too long.
Samuel had been behaving himself like an angel, for the most partâand Adam had been likewise. But it seemed to me that Adam had been more restless than usual and his temper more uncertain.
That was troubling news because Adam had a hot temper, worse even than most werewolves. Otherwise, Samuel had told me, the Marrok would have used Adam more heavily as one of the spokesmen for the werewolves. He had the looks and the speaking abilities for it. Adam had attracted some attention from the press anyway because he was doing some consulting and negotiating in Washington, D.C. His control was very, very good, but when he lost it, he went berserk and the Marrok wouldnât risk it.
I was pretty sure that Adam would have exploded over Jesseâs bruises anywayâbut maybe heâd have regained his control better if he hadnât already been on edge.
Jesseâs door opened and Honey came in, shutting the door behind her. Honey was one of those people who can make me feel grubby, even when Iâm wearing a perfectly presentable T-shirt. She could have been a recruitment poster model for the trophy wife. She intimidated me in an entirely different way than the werewolves usually did, and it had taken me a long time to get over it.
She stepped gingerly over the usual teenager mess that Jesse had scattered on her floorâJesseâs room looked even worse than mine usually did, which made it pretty bad.
âYouâve got to do something, Mercedes,â she told me softly. As long as the rest of the pack was downstairs, they wouldnât hear us. âThe whole pack is restless and short-temperedâand Adam almost lost it today. Pick someone, Adam or Samuel, it doesnât matter. But you have to do it soon.â She hesitated. âWhen Adam declared you his mateââ
For my safety, he said, and he was probably right. Timber wolves will kill a coyote in their territoryâand werewolves are every bit as territorial as their smaller brethren.
âHe didnât ask me,â I interrupted her, with heat. âI wasnât there and I didnât find out about it until it was done. It wasnât my fault.â
She shook her mane of honey-colored hair and crouched down beside me. If she could have seen the floor, I think sheâd have been sitting like I was, because she was technically lower in the pack (thanks to Adam declaring me his mate), but she was too fastidious to sit on a pile of dirty clothes.
âIâm not saying it is anyoneâs fault,â she said. âFault doesnât change what is. We can all feel it, the weakness in the pack. It is allowed for you to refuse him absolutely, and then things will return to normal. Or accept him, and things will change another way, a better way. But until thenâ¦â She shrugged.
It was easy, even for someone like me who was around them all the time, to forget that there was more to the magic of the werewolves than their change. I think itâs because the change was so spectacularâand the rest of the magic is the packâs business and affects no one else. I didnât consider myself packâand until Adam had made his claim, no one else had either.
My foster father told me once that he was always aware on some level of all the other pack members. They knew when one of their own was in distress; they knew when one died. When my foster father committed suicide, it took a while for them to find the body, but theyâd all known when to go looking. Iâd seen Adam call his pack to him with more than the sound of his voice and had seen them heal him of silver damage that should have killed him.
I hadnât realized that there might be more to Adam declaring me his mate than the
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