Amelia
Iâm a little relieved when Evan goes, to be honest, before Rachel manages to humiliate me by making a full-on pass at him. I guess sheâs grown up enough in the last few months, since I moved into the packhouse, to start noticing boys now. I had assumed sheâd spend our whole visit in her room playing Runescape or Minecraft or whatever sheâs addicted to now, but instead as soon as she laid eyes on the big surfer-looking dude with us she stayed, practically drooling on him.
Evan is such a decent guy, he didnât laugh at her at all, but he was eager to get out of here as soon as he could. He really did seem to want to take a hike though, and Iâm sure that heâll love the forest. Itâs really a magical place. Hm. Maybe Iâll take Dom there after we leave.
The visit is really nice. Dom is super nervous to meet Mom and Dad, I know, but by the time we leave after lunch he seems to have settled in. Christopher has stopped hanging on me and started glomming on to Dom, very excited to hear that heâs a mechanic, and wanting to ask him questions about cars. Chris has posters of sports cars all over his bedroom, heâs been obsessed ever since my parents got him a toddler bed shaped like a car when he was about two years old.
I give Mom and Dad all the details I can about what is going on, and there is honestly so much to talk about that I donât think that they notice at all that I am withholding the one most important piece of information. They have been introduced to my mate, but they donât even realize it. Iâm pretty proud of us for continuing to keep our secret so well.
When Iâm helping my Mom clean up after lunch, thereâs a minute when weâre alone in the kitchen, and she asks me, with a little Mom look on her face, âSo? You like Dom?â
I sputter a little. âUm, is it obvious?â
She laughs softly. âI wouldnât say exactly obvious. But I know you pretty well, Meely, I see the look in your eyes.â
So she sees, but not everything. âYeah,â I admit, âI like him.â
âHeâll be leaving right after New Yearâs though, right?â
I shrug.
âI just donât want to see you get hurt, honey,â she says.
âI know, Mom. But donât worry about me. Iâll be fine.â She has no idea how fine. Iâm looking forward to our week of waiting being over, then everyone will know, and I am sure my family is going to be really happy for me. They already like my mate a lot.
When we are saying goodbye, Chris is making Dom promise to make plans to visit again and maybe take him to a car race. My parents tell him that heâs always welcome to visit, and Rachel glowers because Dom is ignoring her and the cute surfer already left. Poor sis.
When we get back out to the car, Dom exhales loudly. âWell?â he says. âDo I pass?â
I smile as he starts the car. âThey love you,â I assure him. âNot as much as me yet, but thatâs only because they donât know.â
âThink we really fooled them?â he asks, looking at me sideways as he pulls away from the curb.
I shrug. âWell, Mom guessed that I like you, but nothing more than that.â Before he gets too far out of the neighborhood, I say, âHey, would you like to go check out that forest where my Dad sent Evan? Itâs really pretty, Iâd like to show it to you.â
He grins and looks over at me. âThought youâd never ask!â
It only takes a minute to get there and park the car, and soon we are strolling, hand in hand, along the trail, our footsteps muted on the soft, loamy earth, the redwood giants towering over our heads, the forest a living entity all around us.
He seems properly impressed. âThis is amazing,â he says. âIâve spent a lot of time in forests, we certainly have our share at Dark Moon, but nothing like this. Itâs like, an enchanted forest or something.â
I say happily, âI know. Itâs my favorite place.â
We get to a little bridge crossing over a trickling stream, and he stops me in the middle and pulls me to him, giving me a hug that quickly morphs into a kiss. We have to laugh when some other hikers come up, and sort of ahem at us, and we have to move aside to let them pass.
We walk a little further, and I can see him sniffing the air. âEvan came through here,â he says, âbut then I think he left the path.â He frowns into the undergrowth off the path. âThat rebel! Wait until I tell Beta Nolan that he was here violating the rules about staying on the trail!â
I look at him with shock, and he laughs. âIâm kidding. Let him go off trail, I know heâll be careful not to damage anything.â He looks around the forest, taking in the peace and beauty, then says, âAre you ready to go home?â
âAre you really done?â I ask him. âItâs so beautiful here.â
He leans down and strokes his hand over my hair, and across my cheek, and it comes to rest on my shoulder. âNot as beautiful as you,â he says, and suddenly I want to be alone with him. Somewhere hikers wonât come and interrupt us.
Evan
She seems completely docile now that I have caught her. I expect her to shift, or snarl, or fight, or glare, but instead when I let her sit up she sits quietly, her eyes lowered, letting me hold her captive by hanging on to her wrist.
All she says is, âI wonât try to run away. You obviously would just catch me again.â
Pfsh. I donât trust her at all. I keep my right hand firmly wrapped around her left wrist, and she quirks her head in just a little shrug, as if to say suit yourself. Weâre both sitting on the ground, facing each other, on the decaying bed of needles and leaves where she fell. The sky is cloudy, but it isnât raining, or snowing, which is probably lucky for her. She is definitely not dressed for winter weather. Even wolves get cold.
âSo,â she asks me in a quiet voice, with a tinge of fear, âwhat do you want?â
âAnswers,â I demand. âYou attacked our pack. I want to know why. What you were after. Where the rest of the rogues are.â
Her eyes meet mine briefly, with a flash of alarm, then she looks back down. She probably is surprised at this coincidence, that I happen to be one of the people in the pack they attacked. It is strange. Iâm surprised too. Who would have thought Iâd run into her here, after a whole bunch of us couldnât find any of the rogues the other day?
âIâm sorry,â she murmurs. âI didnât want to do it. I didnât even want to be with them. So Iâve left the rogues. Thatâs why Iâm here.â She gestures around with her free hand, the one Iâm not grasping.
I donât really believe her. Rogues always band together to survive. One lone wolf has a far lower chance living on their own than in a group. Wolves naturally live in packs. Thatâs why rogues tend to join together and commit their crimes in gangs. However, there are no scents from other rogues out here, so I know that she is alone for now.
She shrugs again. âI can see you donât believe me. But itâs true. And Iâm not going back to them. Iâll figure something out. Iâm done with them, finished with the stuff they do.â
I snicker. âWhat, youâre going straight? Good luck with that,â I say sarcastically. Once a rogue, always a rogue. Theyâre outcasts, exiles, vagrants, rejected from decent society. Crime is in their nature.
She frowns defiantly. âIâm going to try to find a pack that will take me in.â
I actually bark out a laugh. âThatâs impossible, rogue. No pack would let outcasts join them.â
I see tears spring into her eyes, which she angrily wipes away with her free hand. It makes me feel weirdly bad to see it. Is she actually sad? Or just a really good actor? I still think sheâs trying to work some kind of con here. Itâs what they do.
âIf I canât join a pack, Iâll just try to get a job with the humans. I can work, find some way to earn a living.â
I gesture around at the deserted woods. âThis is where youâre job-searching? Howâs that working out for you?â
She huffs and rolls her eyes. âI have to sleep somewhere. I tried to stay in town with the homeless people, but they seem to have a sort of clique thing going, so I came out here. Iâll go back down there to look for a job after the holidays.â
Huh. Well, that does make a certain amount of sense. Can she actually mean what sheâs saying? It seems incredibly unlikely, but is it possible? Doesnât matter, sheâs a rogue, a criminal, who attacked our pack, and thereâll be a penalty to pay for that. Itâs the whole reason that weâre going to explore the rogueâs cave tomorrow, to try to hunt them down and eradicate them. Itâs why weâre planning a battle. We are going to fight the rogues, scatter them, kill them if necessary.
And here I have one literally in my grasp. It occurs to me that I could just kill her right now, have one less rogue to worry about, one less opponent in the coming battle.
I suppress a shudder. I canât kill this girl. Look at her, all vulnerable and thin and scared and cold. Probably hungry, and lonely. Regardless of what crimes she has committed, she does not look a bit threatening at the moment.
So what do I do with her? Drag her back to River Moon and turn her in? Iâm sure they have holding cells on the property, we could lock her up for interrogation. Iâm tempted to text Beta Nolan and ask for his advice, but itâs Christmas and I know he was looking forward to just spending the day with his kids. And besides itâs not likely Iâd have great service out here in the forest away from town. Iâd hate to only be able to have half a conversation and then have my signal drop.
I think that taking her into custody seems like the best option, but how am I supposed to accomplish that? Drag her kicking and screaming all the way through the forest? Knock her out and carry her? Someone would see me. It wonât be all uninhabited forest between here and River Moonâs packhouse. Humans have 911 - Iâd have cops showing up and arresting me for kidnapping.
Do I just let her go? That would defeat the entire purpose of chasing her down.
I frown as Iâm considering all of this, and she watches me quietly. She can tell that I donât know what to do with her.
âLook,â she says, earnestly meeting my eyes, âI wonât be any more trouble to your pack. I give you my word.â
I snort. âWhat good is the word of a rogue?â Ridiculous.
She shrugs. âI know you donât believe me, but I hated every single thing that they made me do, and Iâm never doing any of it again. I will stay completely away from your pack. Thatâs part of the reason Iâm not sleeping on the streets in Arcata, you all are everywhere in that town.â
âThatâs not my pack, we were just traveling out to visit them,â I say, then wish I hadnât. Why give information to this rogue? I still donât trust that she wonât just bring it back to her old friends and use it for some kind of mischief.
She looks perplexed. âVisit?â she asks. âLike, attack?â
âWhat? No! Just because you rogues only understand violence, doesnât mean real packs are that way.â But then I hear what Iâm saying. We, two respectable, real packs, are currently planning violence, planning to attack the rogues. I frown again.
She looks down, and very quietly says, âI never wanted violence. I tried to not participate, but I just got in trouble for refusing. I couldnât stop them, so I finally left. Iâm sorry theyâre still out there doing stuff like that.â
Hm. I stare at her, in silence, my head spinning with this new perspective. I expected any rogue to be exactly like all the others, violent and dishonest and deceptive. Is it possible that this rogue isnât like that at all?
I still need information. I have an idea. Itâs risky, but if it works, we might get what we need. And if she is just trying to trick me, the worst that will happen is that the rogues will know weâre on to them. Maybe that alone would make them back off. âIf you really mean that, are you willing to help us stop them? We plan to find them and teach them a lesson, at least chase them out of this territory.â
She opens her mouth, closes it, and her free hand goes over it. I see a flash of emotion cross her face, a strange mixture of hope and fear and grief. Then she nods, and says, âWhat do you want?â
âLike I said before. Answers.â