Read Seal Wolf Hunting (9781402293832) Online
Authors: Terry Spear
After unpacking their bags, fixing breakfast, and taking a long wolf hike in the woods, Paul and Allan had lunch with Allan's mother, while everyone elseâthe Greypaws and Allan's sisterâwas conspicuously absent.
Paul finished eating Catherine's delightful chicken wings, covered in her special hot-and-spicy rub, and mashed potatoes and pushed his empty plate away. “Are you certain the other wolves haven't caused trouble for any members of our pack?” He couldn't imagine they had left the females alone.
Allan stopped eating his chicken and watched to see his mom's expression.
“Not for me. As far as I know, not for any of the others either.”
Catherine sounded evasive, and she glanced at Allan as if worried he might believe she wasn't telling the truth. Paul thought she was getting technical with him. Trying to pin her down, he asked, “So you're saying if someone had difficulty with any of them, she just didn't tell you.”
“Well, right.”
Paul ground his teeth. “But you suspect one of our women had difficulty with one of them?”
“Maybe or maybe not. The men have gotten into a couple of barroom brawls that I heard about. That's when I learned they were actually living in the area now and working for Somerville. No one in our pack told me that they'd had difficulties with the men. I'm not about to make up something when there's no cause for it. For now, as long as the men are only instigating problems for the humans, we can deal with them.”
“As long as they don't get incarcerated. You
asked
the others, and everyone said they haven't had any difficulty with them, right?”
“Yes. Which probably means they didn't.”
Paul relaxed a bit. “All right. As usual, the meal was great.” He couldn't cook worth a darn, although not for want of trying, which meant he really appreciated anyone who could.
Catherine smiled, but she still looked apprehensive.
“What concerns you?”
“Those three men caused problems for their own pack eons ago, before the rest died. I'm afraid that
eventually
they'll do the same with ours. They were omegas, sure, but when they have no one else to keep them in line, even omegas can behave in alpha or beta ways.”
“So you've been keeping an eye on them.” He should have known she would. He just hoped that all their wolves would be as wary about the men.
“As much as I can. They stay close to the Somerville ranch for the most part.”
“Okay, thanks. I'llâ¦check into it.” If Paul had been strictly a wolf, he would have chased the three wolves out of his pack's territory. Or killed them if they persisted in hanging around. But as a
lupus
garou
, it wasn't that easy.
If Paul was here all the time, he'd have more of a handle on this. But popping in every once in a while wouldn't deter other wolves if they wanted to cause problems for the Cunningham wolf pack.
When Paul and Allan returned to the cabin, they took a wolf's run through the forest and then did some work around the place, trimming back tree limbs stretching out to the cabin and handling a few other odd jobs before they grilled hamburgers on the back patio for dinner. The time just seemed to fly by. Paul was glad to be back home and was thinking how much he'd like to do this more often. He was a little apprehensive about who would win his services tomorrow night, though, and what he would be expected to do.
He didn't want anyone to feel they didn't get their money's worth out of him, even if it was for a good cause.
* * *
At her grandma's home where Lori lived and helped take care of things, they were getting ready to eat dinner. Lori hadn't wanted to worry about the auction, but she knew her grandma was bidding for either Allan or Paul. Lori just hoped that no one would offer too much money and make the bidding go too high, because she didn't want her grandma to be disappointed if she didn't win one of the bids.
The aroma of spicy beef enchiladas smothered in cheese filled the air in the bright yellow kitchen as Lori set the dinner on the table. They settled in their seats, and her grandma smiled at her, her hair in gray curls pinned on top of her head and her eyes alight with excitement. Emma was wearing her favorite green blouse and olive-green-and-brown broomstick skirt, an outfit she fondly called her “earth clothes” because she looked like she could blend into the woods on a summer's day. The green blouse emphasized the green in her amber eyes, and she looked so perky and happy it made Lori smile.
“So,” Emma said, cutting into one of her enchiladas, “did you want to tell me about that?”
“About what?” Lori asked, feigning cluelessness. She knew just what her grandma was referring to.
“Paul kissing you.”
Lori tried to keep a straight face, but couldn't. She hadn't expected him to kiss her. She only wished he hadn't done so in front of an audience. Rose was still teasing her about it. Lori was glad Rose hadn't taken a picture or video of the deed and posted it on Facebook.
“He was trying to get me to give up my weapon. Or appease me for scaring me to pieces.”
“Another man might have gotten angry when you hit him with the broom. I thought that was anâ¦
interesting
way to handle the situation.” Emma cut up another slice of enchilada.
Lori sighed. “Totally surprised me. But you know that's part of their training.”
“Kissing a woman in distress?”
Lori rolled her eyes. “Using the element of surprise.”
“It's about time.”
Lori shook her head. “He's not ready to settle down. I'm not sure he ever will be.” She took a bite of her enchilada.
“A man like that needs to find an interest that begs for attention more than the mission he goes on. I'd say he might just be looking for something else, even if he's not fully aware of it.”
“You mean because he kissed me? It was just a rash, impulsive gesture.”
“Don't think I don't know what's going on between the two of you.”
“
Nothing's
going on.” Which was the problem. But Lori wasn't going to chase after him or beg him to stay with the family. She didn't want to screw up a good thing. Right now she really cared for him and she thought he cared about her, but she didn't want to act like a clinging vine.
“Lori Lee Greypaw, lately, every time he returns home, you conveniently make yourself scarce. He knows why too.” Emma speared another piece of her enchilada. “You were there for him when he needed to heal when you both were younger.”
“He's a grown man. A SEAL who loves his work more than anything.”
“Have you ever stopped to think he comes home to see you?”
Lori frowned at her grandma. “He's too busy doing things with Allan or seeing Allan's family when he comes here.”
“And me. He
always
spends some time with me. You think he really wants to see an old lady like me?”
“Of course he wants to see you. You're part of his pack, whether he wants to admit that he's our leader or not.”
Emma humphed under her breath. “You know very well he comes by to see you, and you always skedaddle out of here for some purpose or another. If you were around more, he'd do things with you. Not just with Allan. He knows you are purposefully avoiding seeing him.” She cut into her last enchilada. “You know why he
really
kissed you?”
Lori let out her breath. She didn't want to hear what Emma had to say, but she knew she was going to hear it anyway. “Why?”
“He had to prove to you that he wanted to see you. And
not
just to say hi. No way was that just a sweet, little hello kiss.”
Lori fought a smile. She had to agree with her grandma. She couldn't deny that she had been avoiding him. But it
all
had to do with not wanting to feel more about him than he felt for her. She didn't want him to feel he had to choose either her and the pack or the SEAL team and his missions.
“I don't want you to draw any kind of conclusions. I doubt he's changing his mind about staying around here for good.”
Emma took a sip of her hot cherry tea. “Catherine warned me. Allan told her that Paul blames himself for losing a hostage they were trying to rescue on this last mission. You know how Paul was when his parents died. He really takes losing someone to heart.”
Lori stared at her grandma in surprise. She'd never imagined that anything could have gone wrong on the SEAL wolves' last mission. Paul seemed fine to her, and she felt bad that she hadn't intuitively realized anything was the matter.
“You know he'll move forward like he's done in the past. He'll pretend nothing happened and won't work through it.”
“What happened?”
“Catherine said Allan wouldn't give any of the details. Just that there were four hostages, and one was killed before they could save her.” Emma reached over and patted Lori's hand. “You were the only one he finally opened up to after his parents died.”
“He had been taking care of us.”
“Yes. Too busy and unwilling to deal with his own grief while the rest of us were in shock over what had happened. He's a natural-born leader like his parents were, and you, young lady, were the only one who could help him to heal back then.”
“If he doesn't want to discuss what has happened⦔
“Maybe not at first. But make yourself available to him. Let him know you're there for him if he wants to confide in you. You can't keep running away every time he returns.”
Lori snorted. “He doesn't even notice that I'm not here.”
Emma tilted her chin down. “You can't tell me he would have kissed you the way he did if it didn't mean anything. He notices when you're not here. He always asks about you. I bet you anything, his kissing you was a way to show you just how much he's missed seeing you. Like
you've
taken the easiest way out by avoiding him,
he's
taken a similar path in not chasing you down.”
“
That
would be the day.”
“Prove me wrong.” Emma cut up some more of her enchilada. “
Actually
, Paul already proved me right when you smacked him upside the head with the broom and he kissed you.” Her eyes sparkled with mirth. “He probably feels you aren't ready for
him
.”
Was that what he thought? No way. He was too hung up on his missions.
Lori let out her breath. “All right. I'llâ¦hang around this time. I already did, didn't I?” Which had everything to do with Catherine entering Paul and Allan in the auction, and Emma getting the notion to bid on them. That meant Lori had to watch out for her grandma. “Not to change the subject, but why don't I do the bidding at the auction for you?”
“Nothing doing. It's my bid, my prize. If you were doing the bidding, he might think you have the hots for him and want him for something other thanâ¦
work
.”
Lori smiled and shook her head. She loved her grandma. “And what will you have him do? If you win a SEAL's services for the weekend? You just had a bunch of work done on your houseâ¦by professional repairmen.”
“I'll find plenty for him to do.”
Lori leveled her with a warning look. “
No
matchmaking
.”
“You think I'd spend a whole bunch of money just so you can go on a date? No way. The two of you have to figure that out on your own.”
Well, Lori didn't
think
so. Her grandma was levelheaded and frugal, and usually did a great job with her expenditures. But stillâ¦Emma kept worrying that she'd leave this world, and Lori wouldn't have a mate. And she could be leaving sooner, rather than later. A wolf geneticist had confirmed that the pack's shifter longevity was at stake when he dropped by to take blood samples from pack members to learn if he could do anything to stop the shifter aging from mimicking the human aging process.
“Be sure to wear that teal dress that looks so pretty on you.”
Lori raised a brow at her grandma. “I was going to wear jeans like everyone else.” She wasn't about to dress up to try to catch Paul's eye.
Emma let out an exasperated breath.
“I'm
wearing
jeans.” And Lori wasn't changing her mind about that.
“All right. You young folk don't know how to dress when you go out.”
“We're not going out. It's just an auction. And everyone will be wearing jeans. Well, except for you.”
“I'll be the best-dressed gal there.”
Lori laughed and took the dirty dishes into the kitchen. “You will.” She just hoped her grandma wouldn't be disappointed if she didn't win. But also, Lori had to find a way to get Paul to open up to her.
* * *
The next day, Lori taught martial-arts classes and scheduled herself to be off from teaching classes for the next weekâthough she'd have to slip in and do some that her assistant didn't have time forâso she could see Paul and learn what had happened on his last mission.
She had an early dinner with her grandma before they had to go to the auction. When Lori began clearing the table, Emma glanced at the clock on the stove and said, “Oh, oh, we're going to be late.” She rushed to help Lori put stuff away.
“We have another hour and fifteen minutes before we need to be there.”
“I want to sit right up close to the front. I'll never see over the other people's heads, and what if no one sees my number?”
Emma had never been this interested in any kind of auction. She'd never even bid on anything in the past. Which again concerned Lori. She was going to have to really watch her grandma.
They arrived an hour before the auction started, found several chairs right up front, and saved a couple of seats for Catherine and Rose.