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“Hurts like hell, but I think I’ll survive.” Rindy tried for a smile, but it felt forced.

“Just think, when you turn, if you get hurt, all you have to do is shift to wolf form. Once you change back to human, all your wounds are healed.”

“Yeah. Brent told me. I have to admit, that seems pretty handy.” Rindy limped to the couch and sat down on the soft cushion at the opposite end from where Karen sat.

“Can I get you anything?”

“I would like something to drink if you wouldn’t mind.” Rindy didn’t think she’d ever get used to other people offering her help, but she had to admit, she liked it.

Karen stood. “Not at all. What would you like?”

“Water is fine.”

“Water coming right up.”

Rindy watched the graceful way Karen moved. She wondered if all lycans moved that way. It would be logical to think so since they were part predator.

But Karen had been human like herself. Had being turned changed who she’d once been?

Karen came back with two cold bottles of water. “Here you go.” She handed a bottle to Rindy.

“Can I ask you something?” Rindy unscrewed the top of the water and took a long sip of the cool liquid.

“Shoot.” Karen downed half her bottle and leaned back on the couch.

“Are you still the same? I mean, are you still the same person you were before you changed?” Rindy screwed the top back on the bottle and sat it on the end table.

Karen laughed. “God! You sound so much like me. I was so worried that I would become this monster when I changed. I thought I would hurt people, lose who I was.”

“You didn’t?” Rindy waited for her response.

Karen leveled Rindy with a gaze that could only be interpreted as confidence personified. “No. I am still very much the same old Karen I was before I turned lycan. Yes, I have better hearing—way better—improved eyesight, speed, and strength, but mind and soul—the same. I admit the first time I changed, it was terrifying and awing all at once, but Anthony was there with me and helped me through it. Since then, I’ve never looked back. I feel freer, more confident, and happier.”

“Oh.” Rindy sighed.

“No. It’s better than ‘oh.’ I cannot tell you what joy there is in running through the snow- covered forest floor in the middle of the night with your mate by your side, your fur blowing in the breeze. It is magical; it is amazing.” Karen smiled and closed her eyes as if imagining what she’d just described.

“Do you, um, do you . . . never mind.” Rindy could feel the heat burning in her cheeks.

“Let me guess. You were going to ask if we have sex in wolf form. Yes.

We do. And, I will be honest, it took me awhile to come to terms with that.

But once I did it? Well, you will just have to wait and see.”

“How did you know that is what I was going to ask?” Rindy’s cheeks were still burning.

“Because, I told you, you’re a lot like me. And I had all of the same worries.”

Karen started to say something else, when the cabin door flew open and slammed against the wall. After Anthony dragged Brent’s unconscious body through the door, Rindy jumped up and grimaced when she landed on the knee she had forgotten was twisted.

“What happened?” Rindy limped over and gingerly knelt beside Brent, trying hard to keep her eyes averted from Anthony’s nude body.

Rindy pushed the tangled hair off of Brent’s face and gasped. His eye was swollen shut and black, and he had four long, deep gashes down his cheek and neck. The wounds were bleeding heavily. She looked up at Anthony, then quickly looked back at Brent, waiting for an explanation. If she weren’t so upset over Brent’s condition, she’d probably die from embarrassment, although she couldn’t deny Anthony was one fine-looking man.

“Brent changed to human form to lure the other two wolves out while I hid. Sometimes, they will attack us in human form because they have somewhat of an advantage that way. We only meant to draw them out, and Brent was going to change back once they took the bait. Unfortunately, one of the wolves came from nowhere and tagged Brent. But, rest assured, Rindy, those two will never bother you again.” Anthony’s voice was low and strained.

Karen carried a throw to Anthony and looked him over from head to toe as if checking to make sure he was unharmed. He took the throw and knotted it around his hips.

“Will he be okay?” A tear slid down Rindy’s cheek.

Anthony grunted. “Should be. If we can get him awake, he can shift.

After that, he’ll be as good as new.”

“Can we get him on the sofa so he’s at least on something soft?” Rindy asked.

“Yes.” Anthony bent and picked Brent up with little effort and carried him to the couch. He deposited him gently on his back.

Brent mumbled under his breath, but his eyes remained closed. Rindy’s stomach knotted and she felt queasy. He’d gotten hurt because of her. He’d gone after the monsters who’d killed her family. Yet, as much as it galled her to admit to herself at this point with Brent lying unconscious and hurt, she’d felt utter relief when Anthony told her the bastards were dead. The turmoil that had swirled inside her for years had eased. Did it make her a bad person for feeling relieved that the lycans had died? At this point she really didn’t care. They had deserved it after what they’d done to her mother and sister.

But Brent hadn’t deserved what he’d gotten. And she’d wrongly accused him of being a monster. He wasn’t anything like the lycans that had killed her family. She trailed her fingers over his cheek. “Can someone get me a washcloth, soap, water, and some towels?” Rindy pulled the soft throw Brent had covered her with earlier from the back of the sofa and draped it over him.

Karen left the room without saying a word while Anthony stood by the glass doors, staring outside. If Rindy wasn’t mistaken, he looked remorseful.

Surely he didn’t feel bad for killing such monsters. Yet how would she feel if she had just taken human lives, even if they had deserved it?

“Thank you, Anthony. I’m sorry you had to clean up my mess.” Rindy sucked in a breath when Anthony trained his green eyes on her. The man was intense, lethal-looking.

“You’re welcome. Just do me a favor?”

“Name it.” She owed him, and he knew it, but what was he going to ask of her?

“Take care of the pup there. He’s a good guy.” He nodded toward Brent and turned his eyes back to the glass doors.

“I will,” she whispered.

She watched as Anthony slid the door open and stepped outside right before Karen came back with everything Rindy had asked for.

Karen glanced toward the glass doors and sighed.

“Will he be okay? ” Rindy asked.

“Yes. He gets a little withdrawn when he has to put rogues into place. It’s not easy to kill anything, but sometimes it has to be done for everyone’s safety.” Karen dipped the washcloth into a bowl of water, wrung it out, and handed it to Rindy.

Rindy squirted a dab of soap on the cloth and rubbed it together until a thin lather appeared. She gently cleansed and rinsed Brent’s wounds while he lay motionless. She took the dry towels next, dabbed at the cuts with one, then folded another and propped it under his neck to catch any more of the blood that might seep from the injury.

“Why isn’t he waking up?” Rindy frowned, and took one of Brent’s hands in her own. She stroked the back of his hand with her fingers, playing with the dark hair sprinkled on his skin.

Karen patted Rindy’s shoulder before gathering the washcloth, bowl, soap, and used towel. “He’ll be okay, hun. Our men are tough. You’ll see.

Just give him a little time.” She smiled and left the room.

Rindy brought Brent’s limp hand to her mouth and kissed his palm. She held her cheek to it and closed her eyes. “I’m sorry you got hurt for me, Brent. I would have rather those bastards lived than see you like this. It’s all my fault.” The words were hard to get out over the lump in her throat.