Dez scowled at Mace. “I did not throw my son at you. I just handed him over and walked quickly from the room so I could scream into a pillow in our bedroom.”
“I found her under the bed with the dogs.”
“I was getting their toys, you big-haired bastard.” She looked back at Smitty. “It’s just taking some getting used to. The snarling, the hissing, the purring. Then I have to deal with it from the baby... .”
“Ha, ha,” Mace stated dryly.
“When do you go back to work?” Smitty asked because he loved seeing the way Mace’s entire body tensed with panic.
She gave a deep sigh. “Tomorrow. They asked me back early. Said they were desperate. I thought about telling them no, but Mace said I shouldn’t risk my job.” She rubbed her husband’s thigh and gave him that sincere, loving look that always made Mace want to run for his life. “You’re so wonderful about all this, honey.”
“Uh... yeah. Thanks.”
Mace turned toward Shaw and asked him about the hotel, and Smitty watched Dez, Ronnie Lee, and Sissy Mae all exchange suspiciously smug glances.
“Hey,” Smitty said, “did you three plan—ow!”
The entire room looked at him and he gritted his teeth against the sudden and brutal pain in his foot where Dez had stomped on him under the table.
“What’s the matter with you?” Mace demanded, almost sounding like he really cared.
Smitty shook his head while Dez gently brushed his hair out of his eyes. “I think the poor baby got a leg cramp, huh?”
He nodded this time, unable to speak as she ground her heel into the upper part of his foot.
“You don’t hunt enough,” Mace accused, already turning back to Shaw. “That would work those cramps out, ya know.”
Dez kissed his cheek and hissed in his ear, “You say a word—they won’t find your body for months.”
Wolves were a smart breed and always knew when a predator meaner than them was near.
Still holding the baby, who seemed quite happy with the vicious side of his momma, Smitty promised, “Not a word.”
Jess dropped onto the couch beside the sixteen-year-old boy reading a book and trying to pretend she wasn’t sitting next to him.
She opened her laptop and booted it up. “You weren’t up to zoo time today?” she asked him.
Jonathan DeSerio, Johnny, shook his head, his eyes focused on the book in front of him. Until his head suddenly snapped up and he hurriedly said, “Unless you want me to go. I can next time.”
For three years after his mother died, child services bounced Johnny between foster homes. For reasons no one but other shifters understood, the full-human families the city stuck him with simply didn’t like having him around. They found him odd. And with reason. He wasn’t really human, not completely.
Finally, a division of Child Protective Services that handled mostly shifter cases discovered Johnny. They tried to place him with one of the local wolf Packs, but none of them would take him. So CPS finally came to Jess and asked if they could place him with her Pack. They were all canines after all.
Jess didn’t hesitate taking him in. And she’d worked hard to make him feel at home, but he continued to fear they’d send him away. Like all the others had. Johnny still hadn’t realized he wasn’t going anywhere. They wouldn’t suddenly decide they didn’t like having him around and kick him to the curb. Wild-dog Packs didn’t work that way. Once you were in, you were in. Kind of like the Mafia except without the blood oaths and murders for hire.
“If you don’t want to go to the zoo, Johnny, you don’t have to go.”
“Okay.”
After a few minutes of silence, she asked, “So have you hear—”
“No.”
“I wouldn’t worry—”
“I’m not.”
“Okay then.”
Johnny had applied for an extremely prestigious summer music program that his violin teacher recommended. It was brutally competitive and only the best got in. Jess had faith, but clearly Johnny didn’t. But that was okay. She had enough faith for both of them.
May and Danny’s daughter Kristan walked into the living room, looking adorable as always in her pink, faux-fur–lined jacket and mini-skirt with the full-length leggings to keep her warm.
She glanced down at Johnny. “Are you still sitting here?”
“No,” he said with dry sarcasm, not even bothering to look up from his book. “This is just my hologram. I’m actually in Utah.”
Jess snorted. So far, Kristan had been the only one able to get Johnny out of his shell. She did it mostly by annoying him; but hell, if it worked, it worked.
“He was sitting in the exact same spot when the brats went off for zoo day,” she informed Jess.
“Why didn’t you go?”
“Hello? A little too old for that.”
“One is never too old for the zoo.”
Kristan rolled her eyes. “Whatever. I’m going to the diner. You wanna go?”
Jess stared at Johnny but realized he didn’t understand Kristan spoke to him. She shoved her elbow in his side and his head snapped up from his book. “Huh?”
No wonder Jess liked the kid so much, he was a male version of her.
“Diner,” Kristan pushed. “For dinner. Burgers. French fries. Lots of ketchup. Then we can hit the arcade or a movie or something. Unless you want to stay here with the old people.”
“You do know I’m not afraid to hurt you, right? And don’t be out late,” Jess said with a mock glare, which merely elicited the usual eye-rolling-boredom-sigh universal among brats... er... children.
“Yes, mom.”
“I guess I can go.” Johnny looked at her and Jess shrugged.
“Your choice, kid.”
Unsure, Johnny stood, his book still firmly in hand.
“You’re bringing that tome with you to the restaurant? I can assure you I’m much more interesting than some crappy old book.”
“Hey!” Jess warned. “Watch your mouth when you speak of this book. It’s Lord of the Rings.”
“Your obsession with elves is really unhealthy.”
When Johnny simply stood there, dumbstruck, Kristan gave that put-upon sigh again, grabbed the book from his hand, and tossed it to Jess. “I’ll even introduce you to some hot full-human girls. They’re total sluts.”
“Kristan Jade!”
“Sorry, sorry.” Kristan grabbed Johnny’s hand and dragged him toward the front door. “See ya, Aunt Jess.”
Johnny looked back at her, and Jess couldn’t help but enjoy that particular look of fear on his face. No panic, no despair, just a deep abiding fear of what a perky She-dog might be up to. Definitely progress.
“Have fun,” Jess called after them before turning back to her laptop. Her Pack had whined—literally—when she said she should go into the office. So her compromise? She’d work from the couch. At least that way she could join in later for a little after-dinner fetch.
Jess had no idea how long she’d been working when her cell phone went off. Thinking it might be Johnny or Kristan, she immediately answered.
“This is Jess.”
“Hey.”
She frowned. “Hey... who is this?”
“It’s Smitty?”
Jess’s eyes crossed. Still persistent as a pit bull. “How did you get my number?”
“Can’t really tell you that.”
“Oh!” she said with a huge amount of cheeriness. “Okay.”
She slammed the phone shut and tossed it onto another couch across the room. “Asshole.”
Smitty stared at the disconnection message on his phone in horror.
“She hung up on me.”
Ronnie patted his leg. “I’m sure she didn’t—”
“On me!”
Brendon Shaw burst out laughing. “You know, I never really paid much attention to Jessica Ward before. But I have to say... I’m starting to really like her.”