Tom Silver stared at the woman. She was too a wolf. He
took
another deep breath of the cinnamon-filled air, of the
woman’s sweet scent of red wolf… and something else.
Coyote.
She was petite like a red wolf, but more than unusual
because she wasn’t all wolf. He’d never met a wolf-coyote
mix before. Never heard of a coyote shifter. Now he
wondered
if the coyotes he’d seen that dared encroach on their
territory were shifters, not just plain old coyotes.
He immediately thought of the Native American legends
of
Coyote, the trickster god, full of mischief, a thief,
wily,
and sneaky. And a shape-shifter. Maybe that’s where the
tales had come from, based in part on the truth, just as
werewolf tales of old were.
The lady’s hair was a mass of shiny, dark red curls.
Her
eyes were a clear blue-green, her skin ivory except for a
pale smattering of tiny red freckles barely visible
across
the bridge of her nose and cheeks. She was a busty little
thing. The sweater was form-fitting—the style that showed
off a woman’s curves. And she had them in abundance.
He glanced at Bertha. She gave him one of her warmest
matchmaking smiles.
Tom barely avoided shaking his head.
“This is Elizabeth Wildwood from Canyon, Texas.
Elizabeth, meet Tom Silver.”
“Thank you for taking me to the resort,” Elizabeth
said
quickly, her expression wary, her heartbeat ratcheting up
a
couple of notches. She looked as astonished to learn he
was
a gray wolf as he was to learn what she was. She must not
have known Silver Town was wolf-run.
He smelled a tangy scent on her that revealed her
concern. If she worried that he intended to hit on her,
she
needn’t bother. A woman who lived much closer to home
would
have appealed more.
He let out his breath and said to Elizabeth, “Are you
ready to go?”
“Yes, um, let me wash my hands real quick.” Elizabeth
leaped to her feet. Without waiting for him to move out
of
her way, she brushed past him to get to the kitchen sink.
His gaze lingered on the formfitting black ski pants that
revealed her shapely ass and legs. Fur-topped snow boots
reached to her knees, and her aqua sweater zipped up to
her
chin.
The fact she was a shifter sure would be a wolf draw.
At
least he thought so, as pretty as she was. Bertha raised
her
brows at him, her smile fixed. Why hadn’t Darien filled
him
in? Tom had thought she might be a non-shifting human who
had lupus garou roots, and that’s why Darien had said she
was part wolf. From what Tom understood, wolves were just
as
attracted to those non-shifters as to full-blooded lupus
garous. The eager males might not be put off by
Elizabeth’s
wolf-coyote heritage.
Elizabeth grabbed a parka off her chair, pulled it on,
then snatched up a backpack, and he led her to the front
door.
“Have fun, you two,” Bertha called out in a much too
cheerful manner.
“Thanks,” Elizabeth said back sweetly.
Having fun wasn’t what Tom intended. Ensuring the
Woodcroft boys stayed out of trouble and that the she-
wolf
coyote didn’t get herself into a mess would be a job, not
a
fun excursion.
He held the door open for Elizabeth and tried not to
take
in her appearance again, but it was difficult not to—
being
the wolf that he was. She avoided looking at him, which
made
him believe she was a beta.
That brought his alpha nature to the forefront,
protective and in charge.
He shut the door of the B and B, escorted Elizabeth to
his pickup truck, and opened the passenger-side door.
She eyed the interior of his truck. “Bertha… well, she
said…”
“Yeah?” Tom wondered just what Bertha had said.
She finally let out her warm cinnamon-scented breath,
misting when it mixed with the icy air, and turned to
gaze
up at him, her eyes so striking that it was as if he were
looking into a crystal clear, blue-green lake. “Bertha
said
you could hang around to bring me back to the B and B
later,
but I’ll just take the shuttle.”
Without waiting for him to respond, she got into the
vehicle. “Thanks,” Elizabeth said back sweetly.
Having fun wasn’t what Tom intended. Ensuring the
Woodcroft boys stayed out of trouble and that the she-
wolf
coyote didn’t get herself into a mess would be a job, not
a
fun excursion.
He glanced back at Bertha and tilted his chin down to
give her a disapproving look.
Bertha’s smile only broadened. Tom shook his head.
He held the door open for Elizabeth and tried not to take
in
her appearance again, but it was difficult not to—being
the
wolf that he was. She avoided looking at him, which made
him
believe she was a beta.
That brought his alpha nature to the forefront,
protective and in charge.
He shut the door of the B and B, escorted Elizabeth to
his pickup truck, and opened the passenger-side door.
She eyed the interior of his truck. “Bertha… well, she
said…”
“Yeah?” Tom wondered just what Bertha had said.
Elizabeth cleared her throat.
He waited.
She finally let out her warm cinnamon-scented breath,
misting when it mixed with the icy air, and turned to
gaze
up at him, her eyes so striking that it was as if he were
looking into a crystal clear, blue-green lake. “Bertha
said
you could hang around to bring me back to the B and B
later,
but I’ll just take the shuttle.”
“I’m fine with bringing you back here.” He shut the
door,
then hurried around to the driver’s side.
He didn’t know how he would manage to work ski patrol
without thinking of this she-wolf up on the slopes by
herself. He could imagine all the bachelor males in their
pack hot-wolfing it down the slopes to get her attention,
and all the injuries that could result.