Unbreakable (Waifwater Chronicles Book 1) Page 2
Sadie and Elmer began to bray with even more desperation, and she recognized their tone. Company was not only coming, but had arrived.
She’d heard no vehicle.
She lifted a heavy black robe from its hook and shrugged her naked body into its silky confines, but had no time to release her heavy—and newly pink—hair from its braids.
She braided her hair every night before sleep—otherwise she awakened with a tangled mess it took her hours to sort out.
Then she grabbed her wand but before she could leave her room, her uninvited company began pounding on her front door.
Elmer and Sadie were going nuts, braying as though a pack of monsters had arrived and were about to eat the dogs alive.
She’d forbidden them to kill a visitor unless she gave the order. Usually their ferocity was enough to drive off trespassers.
Abby raised the wand and yanked open the door.
Eli Dean stood on her porch, naked, his arms crossed.
Her stomach fluttered but the wand never wavered as she pointed it directly at his bare, rather beautiful chest.
“We’re closed,” she said, stupidly.
His stare lingered on her face before dropping to her robe clad body. “We need to talk, witch.”
He had his grandfather’s scowl.
She shuddered and ducked her head, regretting that she had no hair behind which to hide her face. Her ugliness. “You’re trespassing. You need to leave.”
Obviously he’d discovered that she’d helped Brooke escape him.
She didn’t ask why he hadn’t driven up her hollow instead of shifting and running through her woods. She didn’t really care.
He narrowed his eyes. “Lower that stick before I take it from you. I’m not leaving until I get some answers.”
At that moment, two other naked people stepped up behind him. One was a man, body as hard and defined as the alpha’s, and the other was a female who looked meaner than both of them.
“Sadie, Elmer,” Abby said to the barking dogs, her voice calm. “Hush, now.”
They fell silent immediately.
The wolf alpha took a step closer. “Good thing they obey you. I didn’t want to have to kill them.”
She motioned at him with the wand. “Come in. I’ll give you ten minutes. Your two goons will wait outside.”
The male goon took a half-step forward, growling, but the alpha stopped him in his tracks with a quick command.
Abby smiled. “Good thing they obey you. I didn’t want to have to kill them.”
She was pretty sure the female wolf hid a smile behind her fist, but Eli’s almost blank expression didn’t change.
He walked past her when she motioned him inside, and she shut the door quietly before pointing him into her little sitting room.
She didn’t ask him to sit.
She reached up to pat a tight braid, tempted to excuse herself long enough to take down her hair, but that was out of the question. She’d just have to deal with it. “What can I do for you, Mr. Dean?”
“One of my wolves, a girl named Brooke Dunn, knocked me unconscious in the early hours of this morning and stole the talisman that protects my pack.”
She lowered the wand and put her free hand to her chest. “What?”
“Oh yes.” He took a step toward her. “Would you like to feel the back of my head where she smashed in my skull? I haven’t yet shifted long enough to heal it.”
She refused to step back, though every part of her shrank away from him. “I’m sure you deserved it. I saw the bruises from the beating you gave her. She also told me your plans to…” She shut her mouth, as though by saying the word, she might somehow give him ideas.
He hands curled into fists at his side. “She lied to you.” He ran his fingers through his hair, then flinched when he touched a sore spot.
“Perhaps you’re the one lying.”
“For what reason?”
He spread his hands and she had to work to keep her stare from his body. Instead, she concentrated on his dark hair as it curled gently around the strong column of his throat. “I don’t know, Mr. Dean. But when a girl comes to me and begs me to save her from rape, then I will do what I can.” She kept her face half turned from him. As if that would do any good.
She ducked her head, uncomfortable, feeling more exposed than she would have had she been standing in front of a group of strangers, completely naked.
And he didn’t have the decency to look away, but kept his stare pinned to her face. “You made a very big mistake, Ms. Cameron, and you will fix it.”
“What do you want from me?”
“As I’m sure you know, the talisman has been in my pack for decades and keeps the pack safe.”
“I should think that would be the alpha’s job.”
His face changed from blank to rage so suddenly she took a step back.
She’d hit a nerve.
His jaw bunched as he fought to regain his control. He did not attempt to change his words or defend himself. “You’re going to help me get the talisman back.”
She shook her head. “I have no idea where Brooke went once she left me.”
Abby acknowledged the stirrings of guilt growing inside her. No matter what had happened to Brooke, stealing the talisman was a terrible thing to do. She’d put the entire pack in danger.
“I have to retrieve the stone. I’m sure you know what will happen to us without it. I don’t expect you to care, but I swear with everything I am—you’ll right this wrong, or I will see you dead.”
Abby nodded. She’d expected nothing less. “I’ll help. Not because you order me to, but because it is my fault it was taken.”
Waifwater and the pack shouldn’t suffer because he was a Dean. She couldn’t let her hatred of that name color her judgment.
Rival packs, landless groups, and roaming bands of cruel, sadistic mercenaries would make the Black Feather Pack’s lives miserable—as well as every human in town—when the talisman lost its charge.
The talisman, in essence, protected them all.
“How did she steal it? Don’t you keep it hidden?”
His muscles bunched when he crossed his arms. “Somehow, the traitorous little wolf got inside my home and waited patiently for me to reveal the hiding place. I knew something was going on. Food went missing. Once, the refrigerator door was open. The toilet would flush when no one was in the bathroom. Things like that.” He speared her again with his stare, which seemed to pierce right through to her very thoughts. “I began to believe I had a ghost. Finally, she caught me charging the talisman.”
Abby tugged at a braid lying tightly against her skull. She’d been had. She knew it, felt it, owned it. “She said you were planning to rape her and pass her around to your subordinates before you killed her.” She closed her eyes. “She was very convincing.”
The alpha said nothing.
She shook her head. “I really believed her.”
“It took me a while to figure out you were the one who’d helped her.” He touched the back of his head. “Apparently I was unconscious for a while. One of my guards said she came running out of my house, muttering.”
That explained how the guard had seen her. Brooke hadn’t kept her mouth shut.
“Why didn’t he stop her?”
“She,” he said. “Remy is one of my betas.” He pointed his chin at the door. “She’s the woman outside.”
“Whatever,” Abby said. “Why didn’t Remy stop Brooke?”
His lips tightened. “She thought we’d been—”
“Okay,” Abby said, holding up a hand. “I get it.”
“I don’t think Brooke left town.”
“Why wouldn’t she leave?”
“Annie, her BFF,” he said, his voice mocking, “told me that Brooke has been talking for quite a while of rising in the ranks of the pack. She wanted to become my mate and rule at my side.”
Abby shook her head. “And?”
“She finally figured ou
t that was never going to happen. Annie thinks Brooke made a deal with a landless pack leader—she’d steal the talisman, and the new pack leader would murder me and take over—with Brooke at the helm.”
“She thinks everything is just that easy,” Abby murmured.
“She’s young. And foolish.”
“And greedy,” Abby said. “She’s a greedy girl.” She tried to smother her disappointment. She’d been gullible and Brooke had been very, very convincing.
The little twat.
Eli looked around the small room. “We’re wasting time. Look into your crystal ball or tea cup or whatever it is you do, and find my traitorous wolf.”
Abby curled her lip. “You watch too many movies.”
He shrugged. “I have no idea how you work your hoodoo, and I don’t care. Just do it. And after we find her, I’d appreciate if you’d stay away from my pack.”
“She came looking for me.” She held up a hand when he started to speak. “The spell won’t wear off for at least a week.” She paused, full of a very potent guilt. “Bring me something of hers. Clothing she’s recently worn and not washed. Hairbrush. Anything. There’s a good chance Sadie can track her, if she’s truly still in town.”
Hope lit his face, covering, for one second, the cold blankness he wore like a mask. It made him seem almost…pleasant.
“I’ll have the item back here in an hour. Be ready.” He stood before her, completely comfortable with his nudity, barking orders like all the world—and she—should bow down before him.
Just like his grandfather had.
A sudden spasm of anger caused her to stiffen, but she kept herself outwardly calm. “I’ll be ready.”
She was leaving One Hex Hollow, whether she wanted to or not. Worse, she had to spend time with Eli Dean.
She didn’t hate him.
She hated his grandfather.
But he, the alpha, he made her nervous.
He looked at her.
Most people had the decency to avert their gazes.
Not the wolf. His stare was fierce and unapologetic.
He didn’t seem to understand that she would rather hide than be stared at.
His pack would stare.
Still, she’d made the error, and she would fix it.
She would take Sadie off the land, and she would help the alpha find his talisman.
But first, she would take out her fucking braids.
Chapter Three
She wasn’t ready for him when Sadie and Elmer began sounding the alarm. The dread that held her stomach in a tight fist grew larger, and she had to fight not to lock herself inside the spell room and hide.
She took a deep breath, then another, and finally, she opened the door.
He stood there, calmly studying her, his gaze inscrutable.
She turned her face away from him and flicked her hair over her face with a quick, practiced move.
“Your hair,” he said.
“What about it?”
He opened his mouth, then shrugged and said nothing.
She dropped the strap of the wand sheath over her head, then slid her wand into it. “Let’s get this over with.”
He waited until she closed the door behind her, then walked with her toward his car. “You didn’t lock your door.”
“The animals won’t allow anyone on my land, let alone into my house. If someone manages to slip by the animals, a locked door isn’t going to keep them out.”
There was only one person who could get by the animals—the empath Becky Bates. But Becky wasn’t anyone Abby wanted to keep out of her house. Becky was good for Abby’s peace of mind, and the girl could visit whenever she wanted.
Abby stopped to place her hand gently on Elmer’s head. “I’ll bring her back to you soon, Elm. I promise.”
He gave a short but mournful howl, tossed a longing look at Sadie, then trotted away.
Abby sighed. “Poor baby.”
Eli opened the back door of his car for Sadie, then held Abby’s open for her. “In you go.” He wrapped his big fingers around her arm.
She jerked away so violently she nearly fell.
He held his palms up. “Relax, for God’s sake. I wasn’t trying to cop a feel. I’m not in the habit of molesting the feebleminded.”
She felt the blood drain from her face and then return in such a rush her head began throbbing. Stories abounded about the reclusive, unsightly witch of Waifwater. Over the years they’d been twisted beyond repair. In the end, they resembled nothing near the truth, and no one cared but her.
Their truth wasn’t her truth.
A lot of people believed she was unstable and missing some of her brain cells, and she was sure her strange ways didn’t help. Just as she knew how she must look to others, hiding behind all her long, thick, colorful hair…
But she was not unintelligent.
She was incredibly embarrassed and every time she caught a glimpse of her reflection she was mortified and horrified all over again.
She was self-conscious.
She was not an idiot.
She slid into the car and stared through the windshield as he shut her door. It was going to be a very long day.
He got into the car, then sat silently for a moment. “I apologize, Abby. I know you’re not feebleminded.”
She glared at him. “How would you know?”
“Because I can see the intelligence in your eyes every time you look at me.”
She felt her face heat and turned back to her window. “Apology accepted.”
“What does the talisman look like?” she asked, after he’d started the car and began the long drive out of One Hex Hollow.
“It’s a cut from a special crow feather suspended in a piece of amber.”
“Oh yes. The Black Feather Pack is allied with the crow shifters. A strange union, that.” She stole glances at him as he drove.
He shrugged. “Not so strange. The alliance was made when my great-great-grandfather was a boy.” He paused. “It is a strong alliance.”
“Too bad they can’t help you find the talisman.”
“They’re doing what they can, actually, just as we all are.”
The silence became uncomfortable, and at last, she broke it. “Everyone must hate me.”
“They feel they have reason to. You put everyone in danger.”
From the backseat, Sadie released a low, rumbling growl.
“Sadie,” Abby cautioned. “I shouldn’t have been so quick to believe your wolf’s stories.”
“Or my guilt.”
“Perhaps not.”
He lifted an eyebrow, and when he started to look at her, she quickly turned her face toward the window.
“You don’t have to go through the trouble of hiding from me,” he said.
She clasped her trembling fingers together in her lap and didn’t reply.
“I’ve seen your face, Abby.”
“Please,” she murmured. “Please be quiet.”
He acquiesced and she was sure it was out of pity. She didn’t want him to feel sorry for her, but if it bought his silence, she wasn’t going to complain.
Best thing to do was help him find the talisman and then get back to her land before something terrible happened. If getting to know her made the alpha curious and he started looking a little too deeply, she wasn’t sure her secrets would withstand his investigation.
She would have moved away a long time ago if leaving Waifwater had been possible. She wasn’t safe there.
“There’s a bag of Brooke’s things by your feet,” he told her, after a few minutes.
She pulled the bag to her lap and rifled through the contents, finally deciding on a pink cotton top. “This will do.”
Sadie leaned forward and gingerly took the top when Abby held it out to her.
“How is it,” Eli asked, “that a dog can track someone whose scent you’ve covered with your spells?”
“Not any dog. Sadie is special.”
“Where’
d you get her?”
She appreciated that he was trying to be civil. “I didn’t get her. She got me. She showed up a long, long time ago and has taken care of me ever since.” She paused, wondering why she felt the need to tell him anything. “So has Elmer. They’re my familiars.” She cast a quick glance at him, then let it linger when he continued to stare straight ahead.
“What does a familiar do for a witch?”
“They do many things for me.” Her voice softened. “They’re my friends.”
He was silent for a long moment. “You must be the loneliest person on earth.”
She spent the rest of the drive staring out her window.
“We’ll be in Featherclaw in a couple of minutes,” he said. “Can you handle it?”
Featherclaw was the village on the edge of town where the pack lived. She’d never been there. “Do I have a choice?”
“You could wear a mask.”
Abby’s heart dropped into her stomach and only her shock kept her from crying out in pain.
But Sadie felt her dismay.
Sadie didn’t just growl—she snarled and snapped at the alpha, her teeth two inches away from his head.
Eli slammed on the brakes and turned to face the dog, his growl leaving his throat in a low, wispy warning. “Do that again and I will kill you, dog.”
The dog and the wolf stared at each other until Abby twisted in her seat and put a hand on Sadie’s head. “Stand down, sweetheart.”
Panting lightly, Sadie immediately shrunk back in her seat.
Abby turned back around. “She will protect me against any threat, Mr. Dean. You should be more understanding.”
“You think I’m a threat,” he said, his voice hard. “You believe I would hurt you?”
“You caused me pain. It doesn’t have to be physical. Sadie feels what I feel and it’s her job to stop it.”
He was silent but she felt his heavy stare. “Please, let’s go. I would like to get this over with and go home.”
“I’m a wolf, Abby.”
“I’m aware of that,” she said, dryly. “So?”
“So I’m not brimming with tact or diplomacy. I’m curious. If you’re worried about people seeing your face, why don’t you wear some sort of mask?”
“Mind your own business, alpha.” Then she shrugged. “There are a couple of reasons.”