Charmed Wolf Aimee Easterling (free children's online books .txt) đ
- Author: Aimee Easterling
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âA decade here with a family I love is worth an eternity in Faery,â Viola answered without hesitation. She fell onto her knees, tears streaming down her cheeks. âPlease. I beg of you....â
Ryderâs sword wavered. But it was Lupeâhard leader of the Samhain Shiftersâwho dropped down beside the crumpled fae and lifted her head. âThereâs no need to beg. Viola, we accept your binding.â
The words had power. I felt them flowing out of the fae, curling around all of us just the way Runeâs persimmon curled around me. I could feel....
Erskine cleared his throat. Running one hand through hair that refused to release its tangles, he squeezed his eyes shut for a split second then opened them wide.
Heâd come to a decision. âIâd also like to offer my true name as a promise of my own good behavior. I amââ
Rune spoke over him before yet another powerful name could be unleashed into this gathering. âErskine is my brother. He doesnât need to provide his true name. I vouch for him.â
Ryder punched Rune on the shoulder, harder than was really appropriate. âYou have a brother?â
âYes.â Rune didnât tack on half the way he had when introducing Erskine to me. âA brother who recently proved that âfaeâ can be short for âfaithful.â That no part of ourselves is dark unless we make it so.â
âAw, dude, thatâs sweet.â Ryder grinned so big his subsequent words lacked all sting. âAlthough, as your friend, you shouldâve told me.â
For once, Rune responded in kind to his ribbing. âYouâre saying, you wanted to be brought home to meet the family?â
âWell, I mean, maybe after a few more dates.â
âThe point,â Lupe interrupted, sounding like herself again, âof the Samhain Shifters is that we arenât friends and we arenât a pack. And, as Butch told me this morning, he had already decided to step down from that role.â
âNo!â Athenaâs cry would have made me jealous if the womanâs arm hadnât been wrapped around another manâs waist. She clung to the ugly shifter whoâd threatened my pack the last time I returned from Faery, her grasp suggesting his presence was her anchor during the riptide of Runeâs leave-taking.
The ugly shifter, on the other hand, twisted his face until it appeared even uglier. âGood for you, Butch.â
Oh, that expression was a smile. Heâd leapt to a conclusion I couldnât quite wrap my brain around.
Only...maybe I was getting there. I lifted my chin and tried to act as brave as Kale had been during the last twenty-four hours. âButch,â I said, hoping his eyes would find mine but scared they wouldnât.
Persimmon was suddenly so strong I could have choked on it. Instead, the sweetness drew me forward as Rune replied. âYes?â
âThe Guardian is gone, so our bargain is gone along with her,â I said, working my way around to the point I was afraid to make but more afraid not to make. âSo I donât need a Consort. And I donât need a Beta.â
âDoesnât sound good for you, man,â Ryder said in the loudest possible stage whisper.
Rune ignored him. Instead, he lifted my hand to his lips. The faint brush of skin against skin made me shiver. âWhat do you need then?â he asked, his breath warming away my goosebumps.
I swallowed then told him. âI need you.â
THE BOND THAT EXPLODED into being between us had nothing of duty about it. It was all heat and persimmon and joy.
The kiss that came afterward was a promise of everything Iâd never dared dream about. I only realized Iâd started climbing up Runeâs body in search of that everything when Ryder admonished us. âGet a room.â
I blinked, astonished to find drizzling rain and shifters and fae and children still there around us. Rune, on the other hand, smiled as warm as the sun coming out. âI think I will. Can I borrow your bike?â
This time, Ryderâs punch was joyous. âI thought youâd never ask.â
Accepting the keys from his friend, Rune pulled on gloves and kicked the engine into roaring life. I hopped up behind and grabbed hold as he asked: âWhere to?â
âPack central.â
The destination might have been the wrong oneâmy duty once again calling. But Rune didnât protest. Instead, he nodded once, then wind whipped cold against my face.
The frigid slap lasted for only a second however. After that, I dipped my chin into the shadow of Runeâs back and was as warm as if Iâd cuddled up to a furnace. And, for a time that felt as endless as a Faery summer, I drifted in that haze of connection and joy.
Then the bike screeched to a halt. Weâd passed the unmanned gatehouse and reached our destination faster than I wanted. The vast hole in the earth where the Whelan mansion used to stand greeted us. That, plus a mass of shifters who approached with fear and relief on their faces.
âAlpha! Youâre back.â
âWhere did you...?â
âWhat should we do about...?â
I cut them off with a wave of my hand, removing my helmet and handing it to Rune as I dismounted. Because just as a man had to find that perfect middle ground between hardness and softness, so did an Alpha.
And I was still Alpha...for the moment, at least.
âIs everyone present and accounted for?â As I spoke, I let my gaze drift across the assembled faces. A few children played in the periphery, but everyone else was watching. Waiting. Ready for me to lay down the law.
So I did, just not in the way they expected. âFor three generations,â I told the shifters Iâd spent my life ruling without explanations, âour pack has been under the spell of the fae. The Guardian wasnât a guardian. She was a parasite. And she turned the Alpha of this pack into a weapon to carry out her will.â
I only realized I was pacing when I ended up face to face with Willa. The older womanâs nostrils flared as she considered me. âThat mistake has been corrected,â she pointed out. âItâs time for us to
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