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The one hesitating growled at me.  I didn’t stop speaking, though.

“If you want to be part of something great, then stop fighting.  Concede to Thomas and join his pack.  Don’t try to lead it.  You were never meant to.”

A group of men stepped from the trees, distracting me from the fight.  I recognized the man who strode ahead of the rest.  He’d been the one who’d attacked me several days before...the man who’d pushed me to the ground and scraped my face.

“It is our right and our way to challenge for control,” he said, anger lacing his words.  “You have no right here.  After Thomas finishes with these two, I challenge for pack leadership and rights to this land and these buildings.”

That the group had remained close was concerning.  That they’d chosen to challenge Thomas immediately after he finished his current one concerned me even more.  Thomas obviously fought well, but for how long?  He would tire eventually.

The two wolves attacking him seemed to think the same thing.  They both launched at Thomas.  Snarls and growls filled the air again as Thomas twisted to avoid teeth and claws and feinted to try to score either of the pair.  One got lucky and raked Thomas’ head.  His ear bled.

Thomas jumped, landed on the back of the one with the torn muzzle, and used his back legs to tangle with his opponent’s.  The move brought the wolf down and exposed its throat.  Thomas dove for the opening, and a gurgle cut off the wolf’s startled yelp before I could look away.  The focus cost Thomas, though.

The second wolf sprang forward just as Thomas lifted his head, exposing his own throat.  I gasped.  Thomas twisted, looking away from the attacker.  Teeth tore the side of his neck instead of his throat.

Thomas pushed backward into his attacker.  The challenger lost his footing and fell onto his back.  The fight ended for him just as quickly and in the same manner as his partner.

I lifted my hand from Gregory’s back and wiped the wet hair from my face.  Thomas stood over the second wolf, head down, and chest heaving.  The two fallen wolves were slowly reverting to their human forms.

The man who’d issued the last challenge stepped forward, obviously ready to begin.

“Stop,” I said.

The man turned to me with thunder in his eyes.  “Do not interfere.”

“Two of your kind just died.  Allow a few minutes for those who might know them to remove them and grieve.  That’s not interference.  It’s respect for your own people.”

He snarled at me but nodded.  A few men stepped forward and walked to the fallen pair.

“Thomas, Mary is worried about you.  While they are grieving, can you speak with her?”  I knew better than to say I was worried or to ask him inside to clean his wounds.  His opponent would most likely not allow me, the interloper, any kindness nor Thomas any quarter.  But Mary was one of his own.  Plus, I knew she would be worried, too.

Thomas trotted toward me, bumped me with his nose to indicate I should go first, then followed me inside.

Once inside, he reverted to his human form.  He bore a cut near his left eye and bled too much from his neck to see the exact extent of the damage there.  He had a nasty bruise forming on his right shoulder and a cut high on his thigh.

I nodded toward the table, pretending he wasn’t standing there naked.  He silently sat and waited as I quickly retrieved a cloth then began to clean his neck.  Someone had managed to bite him if the four punctures in his skin was any indication.  But, they weren’t so deep that the teeth between the canines had marked him.  He was lucky.  I hurriedly doused his skin with alcohol.  My purpose wasn’t to disinfect as much as to make him taste bad and deter further biting.

While I helped Thomas, Mary emptied the cooked rice onto several plates and refilled all our pots with water.  We would need it.  She set as many as she could on the stovetop and the remaining two by the fire.

No one spoke as we worked.  I knew too well those outside probably listened, and I didn’t want them to know just how bad Thomas was.  I gently touched his torn ear.  It needed to be stitched, but I knew there wasn’t time for that.  Hopefully, the next fight wouldn’t take long.

When I made a move to step back, Thomas’ hands wrapped around my waist, anchoring me.  Our gazes met; his reflected weariness.  He exhaled heavily and leaned his forehead to my chest.  My stomach somersaulted.  I stayed still for a moment, staring down at his dark hair, before I set the alcohol aside and lifted a hand.  I touched him gently.  His hair, his undamaged ear, his bruised shoulder.  I tried to give him the kindness he wouldn’t find when he walked back out into the yard.

Someone pounded on the door.  “It’s time.”

Thomas lifted his head and stood.  He didn’t let go of me, though.  A blush heated my cheeks as his hips bumped against mine.  It was an unintentional result of him standing without letting go, rather than a lustful move.  Yet, we both stilled.  His gaze held mine, and he lowered his head.  My heart thumped heavily, and I lifted my lips to meet his.  My chest felt too tight the instant before our mouths touched.  The heat spread, relieving an ache I hadn’t recognized until it was gone.

I lifted my hands to his chest to steady myself.  He tilted his head and pressed his lips more firmly against mine.  Then he was gone.

My breathing was quick and short, and my eyes strayed to his backside.  He stopped before the door and shifted back into a wolf, hiding his injuries with fur.  The door opened.  Grey held it for Thomas.  When he saw me, he winked.  Thomas trotted out, leaving Mary and me alone in the main room.

“For a Claim that didn’t work, you sure seem interested,” Mary said in a hushed tone.

I gave her a sidelong glance but remained quiet.  I’d been interested in many things throughout my life—I thought of the hair ribbons I’d outgrown—but nothing lasted forever, and part of me hoped my interest in Thomas was one of those things.

Mary and I walked to the window.  We couldn’t see much as too many men stood around the fight.  But we could hear the snarls and growls.

“I can’t stay in here,” I said, moving to the door.

“We can’t go out there,” Mary said, grabbing my arm.

Deep down, I felt I was meant to be here, that I was meant to help these people.  I was certain Winifred thought that way, too.  Without Thomas or a similarly sympathetic wolf in charge of the lead pack, I’d find myself removed from their lives.  I couldn’t let my fate solely rest on Thomas’ shoulders.  But, what did I think I could accomplish by going out there?  I couldn’t use my powers again.  It was too risky.  There had to be more I could do.  I had to be worth more than just my abilities.  If there was a way to help Thomas, I would find it.

“Mary, please.  Let go.”

She shook her head but let go as I asked.  I opened the door and stepped out.  Grey and Gregory, still wolves, guarded the door and moved with me as I walked forward.  A few from the crowd turned to look as I made my way toward the circle.  Men moved aside for me, some with growls.

Thomas and his challenger already bled.  Thomas conserved his movements, letting the other circle him between attacks.  I watched silently, inwardly cringing at the injuries both received as the fight wore on.

Finally, Thomas’ opponent made a mistake that exposed his throat.  Thomas had the wolf on its back within a heartbeat and dove for his neck.

“Wait,” I said, stepping into the circle as Thomas’ teeth closed down.  Thomas didn’t remove his hold, but he paused.

“Winifred said your kind is dying.  Since I’ve been here, I’ve witnessed three maybe four deaths.  You’re killing each other because you have different beliefs regarding the future of your people.  But you’re forgetting your common belief, that your kind does have a future.  Stop killing.  Show tolerance and mercy.”