“That’s because the stubborn woman is too busy always trying to save herself and others.”
“Julia’s had to be independent most of her life. It’s not like she could count on Uncle Harry or Aunt Lynn for help.”
“I get that.” He could. He’d never liked the social climbers.
“To be honest, Julia refuses to ask for help because of my mother.”
“Oh hell, was she as bad as Harry and Lynn?”
“She wasn’t cruel, no. But she was self-involved. A lot of drama in the Easton household,” Gabby said with a bitter twist to her lips. “She and my father were not on good terms.”
“I’m sorry. I know he died a little after Meghan was born.”
Gabby raised her brows. “You know what? I don’t care anymore.”
“Huh?”
“I need you to promise me something.”
Every instinct in his body warned him to pay very careful attention to Gabby. “What?”
“Promise me that no matter what, Julia and Meghan will always have a place in Cougar Falls.”
Ty didn’t like that Gabby didn’t include herself in that promise. “And you?”
“I can fend for myself. Meghan’s stubborn, but she’ll want to keep ties to the family even after she marries Jason. And she will marry him. Julia’s too dense to see it, but Meghan really loves him.”
“Shit.”
“Yep. Julia needs Cougar Falls, Ty. She always has to have a home there. And I want you to promise she’ll be okay.”
“Gabby, just tell me what you’re hinting at and stop dancing around it,” he growled.
“Sorry, Sheriff. I know you’re used to being in charge, but this is too important for rules and regulations. I need your promise. Consider it blind faith in my sister.”
“I won’t let anyone harm Julia, ever.” And he meant that with every breath in his body.
He must have sounded convincing, because Gabby sighed with relief. “Good. Fact is, our dad didn’t die right after Meghan’s birth. The fox everyone thinks fathered us never existed. My real dad and mom married in secret. He was never good enough for the family. Aunt Lynn hated him, and Uncle Harry made his life miserable whenever Dad would see Mom. Eventually he stopped coming around.”
Ty blinked in astonishment. Of all the things Gabby might have told him, he hadn’t expected this. “A secret mating? How did they keep that quiet?”
“According to Julia, they would meet outside of town. That way no one could track Dad by scent.”
“That’s crazy, not to mention dangerous.” Anger on Julia’s behalf struck him. “If something had happened to your mother, with your dad outcast, who would have been left to raise you three? Lynn and Harry,” he answered with disgust. Then what she’d said made a sick kind of sense. “Hell. Is that why your mother died? She’d gone to meet your father?”
Gabby nodded, her eyes sad. “Julia refuses to talk about it, but I once heard Aunt Lynn talking to Uncle Harry. After Dad left, Mom was really depressed. It was hard on all of us, but especially on Julia. Dad loved her a lot, and Mom needed someone to talk to about her misery.”
“So she shared her concerns with her what, ten-year-old daughter?”
“Yep. Good old Mom cried herself to sleep after every one of Dad’s visits. Mom wouldn’t move from Cougar Falls. I like to think she wouldn’t leave us, but who knows? Dad got sick of having to hide all the time and just left. Mom followed him and…”
“That explains a lot.” Like why Julia had such an aversion to dating. Why she had looked horrified at thoughts of mating. Relieved it wasn’t because of him, he had a sudden urge to shake her, to tell her that not everyone was like her parents.
“Gabby, tell me something. Why didn’t your father just claim your mother in public? Why did he agree to so much secrecy?”
“Because Dad wasn’t a silver fox.”
“What?”
“And he wasn’t an outsider.”
Ty didn’t understand. “Then what was he?”
“Cat.”
“But, that… Clans intermarry, it happens. But they don’t breed.”
“Normally, I’d agree with you. But Julia, Meghan and I are proof they sometimes do.”
Ty whistled, shocked and somehow not surprised. “If word got out you three were part cat, some in the clan might strike to have you removed. Wouldn’t want to taint our pure lines, now would we?” he asked with sarcasm.
“Tainted lines, hmm?” Trust Julia to return to the room and interpret his words in the worst possible way. She stared in shocked dismay from him to Gabby.
Gabby shook her head. “Oh, Julia. It’s not what you think. Ty wasn’t saying—”
“He’s just like the others. I told you that. But you just had to push it. You and your silly notions that love conquers all. You know better, Gabby.” Julia whipped her gaze to his and tilted her chin at a stubborn angle.
The heartbreak in her soulful eyes tore at him. “Julia, you don’t understand. I wasn’t—”
“I knew you’d react this way. The high-and-mighty sheriff who enforces all the rules.”
“Now hold on—”
“And you,” she said to Gabby, who now looked shamefaced. “You just had to tell him. Now you’ve compromised not just yourself, but Meghan too. Where’s she going to go when she realizes her infatuation with Jason won’t last?”
“Julia, Ty won’t tell anyone.”
“It doesn’t matter. We’re going home. Or at least, we’re going to the place we used to call home.” She stormed out of the room, but not before Ty saw a tear slide down her cheek.
In the state she appeared, nothing Ty said would get through to her. Tension, fury and fear radiated in her brown eyes, a storm brewing and ready to rain all over their tentative relationship. But it was her hurt that knotted him from the inside out.
“Gabby, go help her. Fuck,” he swore and left the room, wishing Gabby had never opened her mouth. How the hell was he supposed to work around this huge revelation?
Earlier, when he’d teased Julia about marrying him, he’d wanted to see her reaction. He’d been hoping for a surprised yes, not a horrified no. Burying the ache when she’d rejected him, he’d pretended not to care. But the fox inside him demanded he strengthen his ties to the vixen.
Ty had an uneasy feeling he’d scent-marked her as more than just his latest girlfriend, but as something much more permanent. She had a right to her worry. Though his parents weren’t purists by any means, he knew they expected him to mate with a silver fox. As town sheriff, his position relied on his ability to keep the peace, as well as the respect afforded him by the Ac-taw he protected. A fierce fighter and strong Shifter, he’d never before had a problem with support. Would he now?
Thoroughly disgusted with himself for even thinking of distancing himself from Julia’s plight, he reminded himself that the woman he still burned for was Julia. Bear, fox, raptor or cat, she commanded his affections because of who not what she was.
He’d have a hard enough time convincing her to put aside her prejudices and take a chance on him. In the meantime, he’d have to work his way around the clan council.
Well, he did love a challenge. Time to put his intelligence to the test. So thinking, he made a phone call to Gerald. If anyone could weasel Julia out of possible trouble, it was his friend, Mr. Lawyer extraordinaire.
After an eye-opening conversation and a shower, Ty changed into the clothes he’d brought with him and sat at the kitchen table across from Gabby, hoping someone in this cabin could cook. Julia glared at him from her position at the stove but didn’t speak. Gabby refused to meet his gaze, chastised and looking depressed. Gabby didn’t wear a frown well. The expression didn’t fit with her sunny disposition.
Julia looked tense and angry. He didn’t like it.