Mack 'n' Me: The Wolves of Alpha 9 C.M. Simpson (top 10 inspirational books txt) đ
- Author: C.M. Simpson
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He let me jerk my arm out of his hand, again, but he followed as I headed for my quarters. Fortunately, he didnât follow me into the san, and I took the time alone to try and work out what had me so touchy. It wasnât just Mack, or Tens, or jumping off a tall buildingâalthough that last thing had me curling up in a ball on the san unit floor and letting the water wash over me while I tried to shake the memory loose.
I guess I didnât do such a good job, because Mack ended up coming in and hauling me out.
âEasy, girl,â he said, and I didnât have the strength to tell him offâeither the strength or the inclination.
I let him towel me dry, finding comfort in the circle of his arms and the gentle touch of his large, broad hands. When I was dry, and heâd wrapped the towel around me, he pulled me tight against his chest and let me lean into him. We were standing like that, when Doc pulled the door open to see if we were all right.
I turned my head so I could see whoâd opened the door, and watched the Docâs eyebrows hit his hairline as he took us in. His face colored, and heâd taken a step back, preparing to shut the door, when Mack spoke.
âYou wanta keep that open for me, Doc?â
âSure,â Doc replied, his voice gruff with embarrassment, and Mack tried to set him at his ease.
âItâs nothing like that,â he said. âI just donât want to run her into the door on the way out.â
He what? But before I could process that any further, Mack had scooped me up into his arms and carried me out into my sleeping quarters.
Doc let the san unit door close behind us, and then pulled back the covers so Mack could slide me in.
âSleep,â he said. âIâll meet you in the caf for breakfast.â
And then he pulled the blankets up around my shoulders and left with Doc, and I didnât know whether to be relieved or really, really disappointed. Goddammit, Mack!
âI hear you, girl,â he said, his voice rumbling through my implant. âNow, go to sleep. We have a mission to run.â
24âVolunteers
The next morning, I was up and heading out to the caf before anyone thought to page me, which meant I had no warning of what was waiting for me when I walked through the door. The first thing that hit me was the cacophony of smells. The second was the noise.
Voices were raised in three different versions of Gal, and I could hear the clicks, whistles and buzzes of vespis and weaver threaded through that. Add in the happy yaps and whines from the dozen cubs and their human companions, and the caf was not the place I was used to.
A shrill cry of âCutter!â was followed a sharp whistle that cut through the cacophony and I froze. I almost walked right back out the door when I realized all eyes were turned toward me. Instead, I masked my sudden uncertainty, and looked for Mack.
It was no surprise to find he was the source of the whistle, or that he was watching me intently from the other side of the room. Typical. I had to face all my fears in order to reach him. And Tens was standing there at his side, the captainâs cub hanging off one hand, and the cubâs human âsheâ hanging off the other. The other boy had a hold of Mack.
It was for the children more than anything else that I moved across the room, but it wasnât as simple as that. Of course, it wasnât. I was stopped by every single one of the newcomers as I reached them, and my head was buzzing with thank yous and appreciation by the time I came to a halt in front of him. When Mack offered me his arm so he could escort me into the captainâs mess, a small cheer rose from the caf behind me.
I waited until the door had firmly closed behind us, before I tried to speak.
âWhat,â I asked, shock tremoring through my voice, âwas all that about?â
âI told them you were the only reason we picked them up,â Mack said, and I looked up at him.
âTruly?â
He rolled his shoulders in a shrug.
âWell,â he said. âIt wasnât like I could lie, not with the vespis out there.â
Which was true. The wasp-like shape shifters would have detected a lie straight off. It had something to do with a shift in the scent of our pheromones, which was something the damned insects were sensitive to. I drew a sharp breath as I remembered vespis were psi, and I registered what Iâd thought. I hadnât meant to offend anyone quite so soon.
Mack caught my dismay and laughed.
âDonât worry,â he said. âAfter the last time, Iâve put in dampeners. You should be perfectly safe in here.â
He paused.
âBut Iâd watch my thoughts out there, if I were you. Youâve got two vespis, two weavers, and at least one of Odysseyâs psis, and no way to fend off any of âem.â
I opened the door and looked out at the creatures and other folk gathered in the small space. They turned and crowded forward, and I looked back at Mack.
âWhyâd you let me anywhere near the place?â I wanted to know.
âBecause you are the best P.R. the Marie could ever have. Now, every one of those psis in there knows you are the reason I pulled their fat out of the fireâand the sole reason at that. You hadnât asked, and it wouldnât have happened. Iâd a just left them to rot.â
I stared at him, my heart sick with disbelief.
âBut... why?â
âBecause we donât know what weâre heading back into. For all we know, the arach are already staging their little planetary take over, or the rebellion has started, or Odyssey have arrived and shot the shit out of the morally bankrupt assholes in
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