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“You’re going to argue that with me now?”

Smitty remotely unlocked the doors. Grabbing hold of Mace by his jacket, he lifted him away from Jessie and shoved him into the car, causing the man to moan a bit.

Jessie’s Pack quickly retreated to the warmth of the lobby, watching them from behind the glass doors, leaving only Jessie standing outside in the cold. She twisted her hands in front of her. “I’m so sorry about this.” She looked at Mace. “God, you don’t think he’ll have permanent brain damage, do you?”

“You’d never be able to tell if he did.”

She scowled at Smitty. “Is this time to joke?”

“If you’re that worried”—he opened the back passenger door—“come with us.”

“Huh?” She glanced back at her Pack before shaking her head. “No. No. That’s not necessary.”

“You want him to pay the bills for this?”

“Of course—”

“’Cause personally I’d like to avoid any legal problems stemming from this little episode.”

“What? You’d sue—”

“Now, now, darlin’. Let’s deal with Mace first.” He gave her his best earnest look. “He’s all that matters right now.”

“But—”

He pushed her into the truck and closed the door, enjoying his good luck. True, his best friend had been wounded, but sacrifices sometimes had to be made.

CHAPTER 5

He’s not quite sure how it happened. One second he was in an elevator heading up to a dog den for the final check from his company’s recent job, secretly enjoying the fact that Smitty couldn’t get past the front desk. The next he was flat on his back looking up at a bunch of dogs staring at him, horrified.

Two hours later, he had a face full of stitches and a raging Desiree, who had somehow backed a predatory male wolf into a corner.

Mace had to admit he was enjoying the show.

“Well, where the hell were you?”

“Uh... ” Hands in his front jean pockets, Smitty glanced over at Mace. His big dumb dog eyes pleading for help, but Mace only grinned, ignoring the pull of stitches.

When Dez looked at Mace over her shoulder, his face dropped into an expression of pure pain.

“Look at him!” She shoved Smitty by the shoulder. “Look at that face!”

“It’ll heal in a couple of days.”

Oooh. Wrong answer.

Dez turned those gorgeous gray-green eyes on the wolf, and Mace watched Smitty do what any sensible predator would do in a situation like this...

Plot to run away.

“He’ll heal? Is that what you said to me?”

“Well—”

“Because what if this wasn’t some simple facial lacerations? What if someone had pulled a gun or put a knife to his throat?”

“Yeah, but—”

She took a step closer. At least five inches shorter than Smitty, she still would make any male wary. After the baby had been born, Mace really worried that side of his Dez had gone away. But one day back at her job and she was tougher. More dangerous.

Mace found it so hot.

“When he goes to work, I’m assuming you’re protecting each other. That you’re protecting him.”

“Yeah, but he’s king of the jungle.”

Mace watched those eyes he loved so much narrow dangerously. Her hand curled into a fist. And Mace knew Dez had at least two guns on her.

Smitty swallowed, probably wondering who could move faster—Mace’s money was on his woman and her ability to draw her weapon. Then the hospital door opened and Smitty took his chance.

“It’s not my fault.” He pointed at the wild dog who’d just walked into the room. “It’s hers.”

Dez spun around, nailing Jessica Ward to the spot. But after a moment, the two women grinned, squealed, and ran into each other’s arms for a big hug.

“Jess!”

“Dez! Oh, my God, girl. How are you?”

“I’m fine. Fine.” Dez pulled back. “Look at you, Miss Too Rich to Remember Her Friends.”

“Oh, yeah, right. I was at the Christmas party at Moriharty’s. Where were you?”

Dez smirked and nodded toward Mace. “I’d just bred his little demon seed.”

Jess gasped in surprise. “You’re a mother?” That question was followed with another squeal that had both Smitty and Mace covering their ears in agony.

When Mace could hear again, the women were huddled over Dez’s wallet and pictures of Marcus—and her dumb dogs. He glanced at Smitty, who mouthed, “Asshole.” In response, Mace gave him the finger.

“So what happened?” Dez asked after the pair had gushed over how beautiful Marcus and those dumb dogs were.

“Bobby Ray is right,” Jess admitted. “It was my fault. I forgot Mace was coming to the office, and Danny was doing his usual lunch thing by letting our dogs take him around the office on his skateboard. They love doing that. Anyway, with a lion suddenly appearing in the office, they got a little spooked.”

Dez turned accusing eyes on Mace. “You scared her dogs?” she yelled.

“Wait. How did this become my fault?”

Jess stood around chatting with Dez until two more lions, mocking Llewellyn mercilessly, showed up. One of the big cats she knew: Brendon Shaw. Her company had done work for him on more than one occasion, she’d seen him at a few social events over the years, and the Pack’s much-loved Long Island property butted right up against Marissa Shaw’s and the Stark hyena Clan’s territories.

With Shaw came his brother. Not as big but just as handsome. She’d never met him before, but he seemed pleasant enough.

The problem wasn’t the brothers but the fact that Brendon brought flowers for Mace. As a joke sure, but Jess couldn’t find it funny. Since her allergic reaction to flowers could be considered colossal. She had small zipped cases in her backpack and key strategic places she frequented that held her allergy pills, nasal spray, and even an inhaler for those worst-case scenarios. Unfortunately, she hadn’t brought her backpack or coat with her. So she had no way of stopping one of her bouts unless she left the room in the next ninety seconds.

Not wasting any time, she whispered good-bye to Dez with promises to see her another time for lunch or dinner, before making her escape.

She pressed the button on the elevator and checked her e-mail from her phone. The elevator doors opened and she stepped inside. She pressed the ground floor button and went back to her phone. A rude reply from a rude client had her seeing blood red, and she immediately began typing a seriously vicious reply. Once she hit send it suddenly occurred to her the doors hadn’t opened. She glanced up and realized the floor numbers didn’t seem to be moving either.

“Took you long enough.”

Startled by the low voice—and damn him that sexy slow drawl—Jess snarled and slammed her back against the opposite elevator wall.

“Jesus, Mary, and Joseph! Don’t sneak up on me like that, Bobby Ray!”

“Sorry, darlin’. Didn’t mean to startle you into blaspheming. Though I’m never quite sure how you don’t know when someone’s standing right next to you. We’re supposed to have enhanced skills.”

“I was taking care of something.”

“So I could see. Man, those little fingers move fast.”

“They’re not little.”

He grabbed hold of her right forefinger and lifted her hand. “Like a leprechaun’s hands.”

Trying not to notice how good his rough fingers felt on hers, she snatched her hand back. After all these years—and with her at a cool five feet nine inches—Smitty still called her small. Of course, compared to those linebackers he called She-wolves...

“They are not like a leprechaun’s hands! Now, is there a reason you stopped the elevator?”

“I see you still have your allergy to flowers,” he said, stunning her that he actually remembered after all these years. “Is that why you left the room without talking to me?”