Sentinels: Alpha Rising. Doranna Durgin

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said, “I ate your sausage and oatmeal. I hope you expected that.”

      His stomach grumbled. But he knew better than to start the day with the pastry treats Faith left around—not with the wolf prowling so close to the surface, itching for a hunt.

      The wolf grew surly on carbs.

      Holly gave him an uncertain look; only then did he realize he hadn’t said so much as good morning. Too lost in the static of his thoughts...and in his wolf’s response to her. It’s not real, he reminded himself, and said, “I hope you found everything you needed.”

      “Actually, I need a number of things,” she said, her eye wandering to and clearly catching on Horace, the full-size fiberglass horse model at the front of the store. She visibly shook off the sight of Horace’s current dress mode—makeup applied to mirror Faith’s—and returned to her thoughts with determination. “Depends on how long I’m going to be here—here, at your place, and here, in New Mexico.”

      He lifted one shoulder. “Couldn’t tell you.”

      She rolled her eyes. “Oh, come on. Surely you don’t want to continue sleeping wherever you clearly didn’t actually sleep last night.”

      So much for any impression of invincibility. He said only, “I was perfectly comfortable.” Probably she wasn’t ready to hear that the wolf slept where he would, and that last night’s barn had been a luxury.

      “Well, I’m not comfortable here, so if you can manage to give me some idea of how long this whole thing will take, I’d appreciate that.”

      The answer was only the same. Lannie didn’t repeat himself.

      She looked like a woman hanging on to her temper by a very thin margin. She spoke with a snappy precision he knew to remember. “Fine. I need clothes. I need more than the three ounces of shampoo that were in my travel kit. I need feminine products. And I want a bike. Do you want details, or do you just want to hand over your credit card?”

      Lannie said, “A bike?”

      “Yes. I bike. Therefore I need a bike.”

      “There’s a bike shop in Cloudview,” he said. A bike shop, good hunting territory, and...Holly’s brother. Seeing him—realizing that she could see him—might go a long way toward settling her resentment.

      And seeing him immersed in his Sentinel nature might go a long way to helping her accept her own.

      “Cloudview?” Holly crossed her arms under her breasts, emphasizing both toned arms and modest but perfectly formed curves; Lannie found himself standing straighter. “What’s the catch?”

      Faith opened the front entry just long enough to sing out over the bells. “Hay’s here early! Javi’s late!”

      Lannie allowed a faint grimace. “That,” he said, “is the catch. Twenty tons of hay to unload first.”

      Holly didn’t hesitate. “Then I’ll go get my gloves and help.”

      Lannie did hesitate. She hadn’t come here to heave two-string orchard grass.

      “Look,” she said. “I work for a living. I’ll go insane all that much faster if you don’t give me something to do while I’m waiting for whatever magical things you people want to see happen.”

      Magical. Yeah, something like that.

      He reached under the counter for the stack of mismatched work gloves and dropped them on the glass. “See if anything here fits.”

      Holly quickly selected snug gloves of leather and stretchy backing—one an alarming pink, one blue—and tugged them on, flexing her fingers to settle them.

      Lannie led the way to the barn overflow, filling his lungs with a deep, surreptitious breath and letting it out slowly—letting the restless wolf fill his skin, trying to appease the other in him until he had that time to hunt.

      Holly wasn’t far off his shoulder. She muttered a faintly singsong “Stop that...” and startled the wolf away.

      Lannie barely stopped himself startling, too.

       You weren’t supposed to see it.

      All in all, Holly Faulkes was far more Sentinel than she knew.

      * * *

      Javi arrived only a few moments into the unloading, allowing Lannie to step back and inspect the bales, approve the load and meet up with the trucker to handle paperwork.

      “New hand, eh?” The man moved efficiently to wind and stash the webbing straps that had secured the semitruck’s load, and then came to stand beside Lannie as he scrawled his signature without bothering to prop the clipboard against the truck. “Have to say I approve.”

      Lannie gave him a hard glance. The man was twice Holly’s age, his admiration frank but at a distance. Lannie’s initial irrational irritation faded; he glanced up to where she worked the truck—strong and confident and more graceful than thou while she was at it, braced in perfect balance over the hay bales. She’d already figured out the rhythm of the work, the perfect combination of leverage and muscle to make the bales sail down in quiet arcs to a thumping impact. Her face had flushed pleasantly with the exertion, and from the looks of it, she was only just getting warmed up.

      In the end, Lannie said only, “She’d eat you alive.”

      “You, too, buddy,” the man said, affably enough. “Best watch yourself, if it’s like that.”

      It wasn’t like that. She was his job, and his response to her was no more real than ever in the opening stages of creating pack. But that wouldn’t keep him from responding, and it wouldn’t keep him from watching her. Appreciating her.

      Beautiful, he thought—and then drew a hard breath when she jerked to a stop, turning to stare down at him.

       Best watch yourself, Lannie Stewart.

      He handed over the paperwork and put himself back to work. The familiar rhythm of it warmed stiff muscles and tugged as much against the duct tape as it did against his healing side. For long moments, he let go of his thoughts, giving over to the muted conversation of familiar teamwork, the occasional grunt of effort, Faith’s giggles in the background when she lost her grip on a bale and it went pinwheeling off into the yard. When the truck sat empty and swept, the driver pulled away to leave them to the stacking...and eventually that was done, too, and Holly stood beside Lannie looking flushed but relaxed, mismatched gloves tucked away in a back pocket.

      Her song trickled through to him, complex and self-confident and, at the moment, devoid of the resentful edge.

      “Three hours,” Faith said. “Not our best time, but decent.”

      “Thanks to Holly,” said Javi, his eye already gone worshipful when it turned to Holly.

      “Yeah,” Faith said, older and wiser by not very many years, her back propped against the towering stack of hay and out of the sun. “You don’t wanna go there. Just say thanks again.”

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