“If you prefer, but unlike the devil, I’ll keep my word.”
“That’s to be seen,” she said through chattering teeth.
He sighed as she shivered under him. The adrenaline of the chase had apparently begun to wear off, and she was getting cold. His body temperature ran hotter than the normal temperature of a human, so he hadn’t noticed the cold. While the black leather that encased her lithe figure was sexy as hell, she needed to get the wet clothes off and get dry and warm. The way the leather hugged every lean, toned curve of her body made his cock take notice, but he suspected he’d like her even more naked.
“You have two choices. I can put you in that truck, which you were so hell-bent on getting to, take you back to my place, and keep you locked up until I’m done working the area.” He wasn’t about to tell her that he pretty much did the same thing she did . . . hunt lycans, at least not yet anyway. “Or we can make somewhat of a truce. You trust that I won’t hurt you, promise not to try to kill me again, and we’ll stick together until it’s time for me to move on.”
He’d leave out the part where he’d never go anywhere without her again, but she didn’t need to know that at this point. If he ever wanted to have a hope in hell of convincing her to stay with him, he’d have to ease her into the idea, along with making her understand that he wasn’t a monster.
“Those aren’t really choices. That’s forcing me to do something I don’t want to do in either instance.”
“They are still choices, and not all choices in life are peachy.”
“I prefer the one where I’m not a prisoner.”
“Give me your word that you won’t try to run.”
“And you’ll believe me?” she asked before laughing.
“I have no reason not to.” He smiled when her gaze flared with anger. “Besides the fact that you tried to kill and geld me.” She would probably give him several more reasons in the next few days, hell, hours.
“Fine. I won’t run. Now can we go before I freeze to death?”
He stood up and held his hand out to her, but she refused to touch him. If he had his way, she’d be begging for his touch by the end of the week. He bent and fished the dagger out of the snow and handed it to her. She hesitated and frowned as if she were wondering if he was giving her some kind of test by giving her the weapon back before taking it and shoving it into the side of her boot.
“I already told you silver doesn’t have any effect on me.”
He kept a groan from escaping when she looked at the deep cut across his chest and raised that one haughty, dainty brow again. Obviously silver did have some effect when it was used to slice him open, but it didn’t have the effect that folklore touted. Silver didn’t burn or instantly kill lycans or have any other magnificent killing power over other materials or metals. The lycan ancients had started the myth of silver hundreds of years ago, which had proved an extremely smart maneuver, for he hadn’t run across anyone who knew about iron being their real weakness.
He’d have to shift to heal the cut and the damned hole in his chest, but he wouldn’t do so until she was safe at the house he was currently renting. He didn’t own a place of his own, had never had a reason to stay in one place for very long. However, now that he’d met his mate, he wondered if she’d want a place they could settle down in. He suppressed a snort. She hated him, and he wasn’t positive he’d be able to change that, but he would try like hell. Living with a mate who couldn’t stand the sight of him wasn’t preferable, but living without a mate at all now that he’d found her was even less appealing.
He had to find a way to get her to trust him, see him as a man and not a monster. His wolf cringed at being called a monster. He cringed at being thought of as a monster by his own mate. He and his lycan counterpart may be different on some levels, but they were merely two parts that blended into a whole. True, one was more dominant, depending on the form he was in, but when he was lycan, he didn’t turn into a half-
crazed killer. He’d never do anything in wolf form that he objected to as a man.
He followed her to the truck, not missing the scathing glare she gave him when he slid in behind the wheel. She’d given him her word she wouldn’t run, but he was no fool. Giving her an opportunity to prove to him she’d keep her word was one thing, but letting her drive was as naive as waving a loaded gun under her nose. If she decided to renege—and she most likely would at some point in time—it’d be too damned easy for her to drive them into a ditch or do something else that might put her in danger. He could handle whatever she decided to throw at him, but he wouldn’t tolerate her putting her own safety at risk.
There would be no hesitation on his part in giving his life to protect her, for his meant little in comparison to hers. He wished he could make her understand how important her existence was.
The fact that she was here, alive and breathing, gave him a drive, a force that came from deep inside, a new reason to want to live. He’d never felt the longing that now swelled inside him.
When he was younger, his zest for life had been stronger, but that had been before the years of killing and watching the deterioration of his species had wreaked havoc on him. He wouldn’t necessarily say he’d been void of feelings, but they’d been numbed—a natural barrier that had been built over time to shield against pain and growing hopelessness—and his heart had grown heavy as the suffering of his race continued throughout the years because of rogues’ careless actions.
He slid the truck seat back all the way, so his knees were no longer bunched under his chin, turned the engine over, cranked the heat up, and started for his place.
Chapter Three
Rose sat beside the lycan, silently contemplating her options. She’d given him her word she wouldn’t run, but would she keep her word to a monster? She’d always considered herself an honest person, but this was an entirely different matter. She glanced at him from under her lashes. He was nothing like the other lycans she’d encountered over the years. Oh, he had the speed and strength, and the rage that had been thick in the air as he’d chased her had turned her stomach, but he’d controlled his anger.
She couldn’t blame him for being pissed at her. She had shot him, and—worse, probably, from his standpoint as a man—she’d racked his balls good for him. She’d be irritated, to say the least, if the situation were reversed—about the shooting part, anyway, because, of course, she had no balls to rack—but after he’d captured her, once he’d realized she was a woman, he’d been almost . . . gentle.
She had the distinct impression if she’d been a man, she most likely would not have come out so unscathed. No lycan who had ever had the misfortune of getting his hands on her had ever been gentle, or lived, for that matter, and she had the scars to prove it.
“My name is Knox Slade.”
She let a smile play at the corner of her mouth, an appropriate name for a dominant predator. Did he really think she was going to cozy up and play nicey nice with him just because he’d shown her some manners?
“Do you not have a name?” He chuckled.
“Of course I do. I’m just not sure I see the point in sharing it with you.”
She hated to admit it, but the man was easy on the eyes, and that was stating it mildly. He had medium-
length hair, with a bit of wave that looked as if it had been spun from gold. His body was heavily muscled, and he was huge, which was not uncommon for most of the lycans she’d encountered, but somehow he was more so. The normally roomy cab of the truck felt unusually cramped with him sitting beside her.
His cheeks slanted down to sharp, chiseled jaws, full lips, and a straight but not overly big nose. And his eyes—she’d never seen eyes quite that midnight shade of blue. The scars on the right side of his face had definitely been the result of some wicked claws. The angry, puckered white edges looked similar to some of the scars she wore.