Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
bewildermentâsomething had happened, and he didnât know what it was. He just knew heâd screwed up somehow. He had no idea how it had gone so badly wrong.
I didnât want to know what he was feeling because it only made me stupiderâand more vulnerable.
âI have to go in,â I told the stick in my hand because I couldnât look up at Adamâs face just then. If Iâd looked at him, I think I would have run, and heâd have chased me. Some other day, that might have been fun. Tonight, it would be disastrous. So I moved slowly.
He didnât follow me as I walked to my door but said from where he stood, âIâll send someone over to stand guard.â
Because I was the Alphaâs mate. Because he worried about me. Because of Tim. Because of guilt.
âNo,â he said, taking a step closer to me, telling me the bond was stronger on his side at that moment. âBecause I love you.â
I shut the door gently between us and leaned my forehead against it.
My stomach hurt; my throat was tight. I wanted to scream or punch someone, but instead I clenched the walking stick until my fingers hurt and listened to Adam get in his truck and back out of my driveway.
I looked down at the walking stick. Onceâmaybe stillâi t made all the sheep its bearer owned have twins. But it had been fashioned a long time ago, and old magic sometimes grew and developed in strange ways. It had become more than just a walking stick with agricultural applications. Exactly what that meant, no one really knewâother than it followed me around.
Maybe it was a coincidence that the first time Iâd felt like myself since walking into the bowling alley was when Iâd grabbed it in Adamâs truck. And maybe it wasnât.
Iâve had a lot of fights with Adam over the years. Probably inevitable given who we wereâthe literal as well as figurative Alpha male and . . . me, who was raised among lots of dominant-type males and had chosen not to let them control me (no matter how benign that control might have been). Iâd never felt like this after a fight, though. Usually, I feel energized and cheerful, not sick and scared out of my skin.
Of course, usually the fight is my idea and not someone using the pack bonds to play with my head.
I could be wrong, I thought. Maybe it had been some new kind of nifty reaction to my run- in with the not-so-dearly-departed Timâas if panic attacks and flashbacks werenât enough.
But, now that it was over, the voices tasted like the pack to me. Iâd never heard of pack being able to influence someone through the bonds, but there was a lot I didnât understand about pack magic.
I needed to shed my skin, free myself for a little while of the pack and mate bonds that left too many people with access to my head. I could do that: maybe I couldnât get rid of everything, but I could shed my human skin and run alone, clear my head for just a little bit.
I needed to figure out for certain what had happened tonight. Distance didnât always provide me with solitude, but it usually worked to weaken the bonds between Adam and meâand also between the pack and me. I needed to leave before whoever he decided to send over to guard me arrived, because they certainly wouldnât let me run off on my own.
Without bothering to go to my bedroom, I stripped. Setting down the walking stick took more effort, which told me that Iâd already convinced myself that it had served to block whoever had been influencing me.
I waited, ready to pick up the walking stick again, but there were no more voices in my head. Either they had lost interest because Adam was gone and theyâd succeeded in their efforts. Or else distance was as much of a factor as I believed. Either way, I would leave the stick behind because a coyote carrying such a thing would draw too much attention.
So I slid into my coyote-self with a sigh of relief. I felt instantly safer, more centered, in my four-pawed form. Stupid, because Iâd never noticed that changing shape interfered with either my mate bond or pack bond in the least. But I was willing to grab onto anything that made me feel better at this point.
I hopped through the dog door Samuel had installed in my back door and out into the night.
Outside smelled different, better, clearer to me. In my coyote skin, I took in more information than the human me. I could scent the marmot in
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