An Enchanted Season
That observation made Nate's incisors threaten to erupt. The leopard was not happy with Tamsyn right now. Neither was the man. They both wanted to bite. To dominate. To mark. "Switch me with Juanita."
"You sure?" Cian scowled. "You're not exactly in a good mood. Do you want to be around Tammy?"
It was an insult--as if he'd ever hurt her. "If I had wanted advice, I'd have asked for it. Switch."
"Fine." Cian threw up his hands. "I'll tell Nita."
"And mind your own damn business from now on." Turning off the comm, he finished his coffee and headed out. He was hungry, but he figured Tammy would have something--she was the best cook in DarkRiver.
His new watch area was in the immediate vicinity of the Pack Circle and included Tammy's home among a few others. On his first pass, it appeared she was still asleep, but he caught the sharp freshness of tea leaves on the second pass. Since he'd remained in human form, it was easy to walk up to her back door and knock.
He knew she had to have scented him, but she peered out suspiciously from the kitchen window before opening the door with a scowl. "What are you doing here?"
Okay, so she was still mad. His cock throbbed at the memory of the events that had led to their fight. He wanted to put his hands on the sweet curves of her bottom, crush her to him, and kiss the hell out of her bad mood.
"Good morning to you, too, sunshine," he managed to say through the chokehold of desire. It was torture being near her, but that was infinitely better than the distance she'd maintained over the past few days.
"You're just hungry." She snorted and turned away, leaving the door open.
He walked in to find her at the counter, cutting slices of bread from what looked like a home-baked loaf. He forced himself to stand to the side instead of going behind her and bending down to draw in the lusciously feminine scent along the line of her throat. "Only bread today?"
She lifted the knife and pointed it in his direction. "Do you want to get fed or not?"
"I love bread." He knew how to stroke his mate when she needed stroking. His mind immediately took the image and ran with it, ratcheting his hunger past explosive. "Why are you half-dressed?" She was wearing his old football shirt and those ridiculous pink fluffy slippers. Sexy and adorable. A killer combination.
"I was minding my own business in my own house. You're the one who decided to intrude." She slapped some butter onto a slice of bread and shoved it in his direction.
He decided not to ask for jam. "Bad night?"
"Nate," she said very quietly, gripping the edge of the counter with her hands. "Did you come here to gloat?"
He put down the half-eaten piece of bread. "What the hell are you talking about?"
"You know exactly what I'm talking about!" She turned and poked at his chest with a sharp finger. "Look, I can make stupid, virginal Tammy Mahaire so hot she doesn't know which way is up. I can leave her gasping for me and walk away as if it doesn't matter!"
"Hey." He grabbed at her hand, but she pulled away. "I didn't mean anything like that. I didn't have a good night's sleep, either."
"Oh, that makes it all right!" She threw up her arms. "We were both miserable. Whoop-de-frickin'-do!"
There was no missing the sarcasm. It dripped from every word. "What the hell is it with you lately?" He succeeded in trapping her against the counter.
"Nothing!" She shoved at him but he was far stronger. "Go away. Go away and leave me alone. Don't you get that? How many times do I have to tell you?"
"You don't get to do that--I'm your mate."
She stopped fighting, her chest heaving. "No, Nate, like I told you before, you don't get to pick and choose which parts of the mating bond you want to accept. As far as your treatment of me goes, I'm not your mate. I'm simply another young, uninteresting female."
"Don't be an idiot."
"I'm not. I'm sexually frustrated." She narrowed her eyes. "But as we discussed last night, that can be easily fixed."
He snapped. How could she possibly think to replace him with some mechanical object? Masculine pride, pure need, and raw heat made for a volatile combination. "Sex? That's really what this is about?" He pushed harder into her, crushing the softness of her thighs under his.
Instead of backing off, she pushed into him. "Yes! Yes! Yes! Clear enough for you?"
"Fine." Grabbing her waist, he lifted her onto the counter, spreading her knees wide in the same move. Something fell to the floor and shattered, but he didn't give a shit. "You want to fuck, we'll fuck."
A hint of uncertainty moved over her face. "Nate--"
He closed his hand over the bare skin of her upper thigh. "You're backing off? Don't want me now that you're faced with the reality?"
Her lower lip quivered. "Not like this," she whispered. "Why are you being so mean?"
The protective male core of him couldn't bear to see her looking so emotionally bruised, but they had to have this out. He couldn't handle being pushed the way she'd been pushing him since her return from New York. "I'm trying to give you something--I'm trying to love you the only way I know how, and you're rejecting it because you're hot for sex?" That hurt him. Her freedom was the biggest gift he could give her. Some days, the cost it demanded threatened to drive him to murder.
"No, Nathan, no." She cupped her face in his hands. "I just need you--all of you--so much that I'm going crazy. I need your laugh. I need your company. I need you to sleep beside me and I need you to wake when I wake. I need you with everything in me."
"Then stop with the sex talk. It's not you."
Her hands dropped to his shoulders. "It's not me?" A soft question.
"No. You're warm and practical and loyal. You don't go around flaunting yourself like a--" He caught himself before he said something unforgivable.
"Why don't I finish it for you--like a bitch in heat--that's what you were going to say, wasn't it?"
Eight
"DAMN IT, TAMMY, DON'T LOOK LIKE THAT." HE WAS THE one who cupped her face this time--her spine was straight, but she couldn't hide the hurt in her eyes. "All this, the way you've been talking and dressing, it's not anything normal for you and you know it."
She looked at him through her lashes. "Yeah. Don't know what I was thinking."
His beast didn't like the flatness in her tone. Reacting instinctively, he bent until their foreheads touched. "Come on, where's my sweet Tammy?" He missed the woman who had become his closest friend over the years, the one with whom he could totally lower his guard. It was something he hadn't been able to do since the day she'd started pushing at him. "Tamsyn?"
"I'm fine and I'm also late." She gave him a shaky smile, then pressed her hands gently against his chest. "Some of the kids will be here soon to finish up their ornaments. I'd better get dressed. I'll talk to you later, okay?"
"You sure you're all right, baby?" His leopard was pacing inside his skull, growling that something was wrong.
"Just a headache. Lack of sleep, you know." She shrugged, making the former point of contention a joke. When her lips curved upward in a deeper smile, the leopard relaxed.
"Yeah, I do." Laughing, he helped her down from the counter, then lifted her over the mess of the broken jam jar on the floor. "Go get changed. I'll clean this up and head out to continue my watch."
"Here." She reached out, picked up a muffin from a tin, and gave it to him. "I made them for the kids."
He bit into it. "Good thing I got here first."
TAMSYN LEFT THE ROOM TO THE SOUND OF NATE'S chuckle. The knives of pain inside her stabbed with brutal force, but she kept her composure until she heard him leave the house. Then she sat down on her bed and cried. The tears weren't of frustration or simple hurt. They were the shattered cries of a broken heart.
Juanita had been wrong. The mating heat might have forced Nate into wanting her, but he didn't actually see her as a sexual, desirable woman. He saw her as comfortable...practical. Warm, loyal Tamsyn. If the bond hadn't thrown them together, he'd probably never have looke
d at her twice, not as a man looks at a woman.
She might have lain there for hours, but she couldn't bear to disappoint the kids. So she got up and dressed. What she saw in the mirror simply reinforced her earlier conclusions. Dressed in a pair of old jeans and a thick white sweater, with her hair pulled back into a ponytail, she looked young and...ordinary.
She was no temptress. She was safe and sensible, the one that juveniles came to for help without judgment, and mature women for ideas about how to handle rambunctious infants. Even senior packmates didn't blink at asking her advice on Pack issues. Because she was trusted, both for her steady temperament and for her loyal heart. None of which was bad. Only she didn't want Nathan to see her as that--she wanted him to see her as she saw him. As a lover, a playmate in the most intimate of arenas.
But he didn't. And that blow cut so deep, she could barely think.
Something registered in her consciousness. A second later, she picked up the high-pitched sounds of children's voices. The healer in her took over--there was no time for self-pity. Wiping her eyes with the backs of her hands, she went to the bathroom and splashed cold water over her face. Then she used her healing abilities to get rid of the redness around her eyes.
The doorbell rang.
Pasting on a smile, she walked down and opened the door. The kids' bright and excited faces turned her faux smile real, but nothing could heal the open wound that was the jagged beat of her animal heart.
NATE SAW TAMSYN AGAIN THAT DAY, BUT IT WAS HOURS later and with several others as they sat around her kitchen table eating dinner. She'd chosen not to sit next to him, but he could understand why. The awareness between them had only gotten stronger since this morning, until he could scent nothing but the sensual promise of her. She was everything he had ever wanted--that smile, that acerbic wit she seemed to show him alone, and lord help him, that body--and she was his. No other man had the right to her.
His beast wanted to roar its claim, but he fought the impulse. He'd wait. He'd wait...but maybe not as long as he'd initially planned. He'd give her another six months of freedom at least, let her live some of her dreams. She could go roaming if she liked, explore a bit of the wild. It might be dangerous, but Tamsyn was smarter and more mature than most of the other young leopards. She'd be fine.
The cat in him didn't like the idea, knew how badly it would hurt to be parted from her, but it had to be done. He never wanted her to turn to him--as his mother had turned to his father--and accuse him of stealing her life. That would destroy him. Because she was his life. The thought of crushing her spirit was his personal nightmare.
"Are you going to eat or do you plan on staring at Tammy the whole night?" Juanita passed him the potatoes.
"I can stare if I like." It was his right.
Rolling her eyes, she called out to Tammy. "Hey, where's that dress you were going to wear tonight?"
Tammy colored. "I changed my mind."
"You look fine to me." Dressed in black slacks and a pale blue cardigan, she appeared soft and touchable. Strokable. Shit. His mind was going off track again. Before long, he'd start thinking about unbuttoning that cardigan and kissing his way--
"Great," Juanita hissed, breaking into the taut eroticism of his newest daydream. "Tell your mate she looks fine."
"What the hell's wrong with that?" He took the peas she almost shoved into his chest. "She looks--" He cut himself off before he said what he wanted to say, which was "pretty enough to bite into."
Juanita shot him a disgusted glance before turning her attention to the packmate on her other side. Ignoring her, Nate went back to the pleasurable task of watching Tamsyn. The beast bucked to taste her. Six months, he told it. Six more months and then you can have her. In every way. And over again.
BUT A BARE WEEK LATER, HIS HUNGER FOR HER HAD GOTTEN so bad that he had Cian reassign him to the perimeter. Tammy was no longer trying to flaunt herself at him--if anything, she seemed to be going to great lengths to give him space. Paradoxically, that only amplified the building pressure to mate, to touch and taste and claim. Without the control provided by the vivid scars of memory, he'd have given in a hundred times already.
Still, he couldn't keep from going to her each morning, just to see her smile. "Hey, sweetheart, any muffins today?"
She gave him one, but there was no smile on her lips. "How's the Solias King situation? Any decisions?"
"We're planning to make a move in a few days." He'd already told her what they intended to do--she was his mate, and more than that, she was damn sharp, an integral part of the steel backbone of the pack. "You want to come along? Be a nice run." He wanted to feel her beside him, strong and hotly female.
She shook her head. "This isn't working, Nate."
The quick change in subject rattled him. He put down the food, belatedly aware of the bags under her eyes, the lack of light in her face. "We'll get past it."
"Not living so close." She shook her head. "One of us has to leave."
He'd thought about setting her free to roam, but now that it had come down to it, he found he couldn't let her go. "Don't make any impulsive decisions. It'll die down."
"No, it won't. Don't lie to me," she snapped, folding her arms. "We're experiencing the final stages of the mating dance and it's going to keep getting worse, especially if our beasts continuously sense each other's presence. I was thinking I should go to--"
"Just wait." He fisted his hands to keep from touching her. "I'll talk to some of the other mated pairs. Maybe there's something we can do to lessen the impact."
"I thought you wanted me to go out into the world?" Her voice was soft, her skin flushed with need. "Isn't that why you keep pushing me away?"
"Stay." That single word held his heart.
Nine
STAY, HE'D SAID, BUT TAMSYN KNEW HE DIDN'T MEAN IT the way she needed him to mean it. The mating instinct urged him to protect her and so he wanted her in sight. It didn't make him happy just to see her. Not like it made her heart bloom simply being in the same room as him.
If the mating urge died tomorrow, there would still be no other man for her. He was her one and only. But she wasn't his. Her throat feeling as if she'd gotten a rock stuck in it, she left the parking garage in the city and crossed the street.
She'd promised the kids she'd get more lights for the tree, but now that she was here, she decided to pop into the bookstore, too. Nate liked reading. She knew exactly what to get him for Christmas. That thought made her want to cry again. Her nose grew stuffy with withheld tears as she strolled through the small and expensive hard-copy section. Most people bought the downloads, but she wanted to give Nate something he could hold, something that made him think of her.
Her choice was sold out, so she went to one of the consoles and ordered in another copy. That done, she picked up her other purchases and began to make her way to the exit.
That was when she saw her.
The Psy woman--a stranger with eyes of darkest brown and skin the same rich shade--was occupying a booth near the door. Dressed in a black pantsuit teamed with a white shirt, she appeared a serious business professional. But then again, all Psy seemed to wear variations on the same theme. Tamsyn had never seen one of the psychic race in any color, excepting white, that didn't fall in the range from deep gray to brown/black.
On any other day, she would have kept walking. But today, she didn't, her motive a mystery even to herself. "Excuse me," she said, coming to a standstill near the woman.
The Psy looked up. "Did you want the terminal? I'll be finished in approximately one minute." She glanced over Tamsyn's shoulder. "There are several others that appear free."
"No, I don't want the terminal." Tamsyn looked at her, at her human-seeming eyes, her clear skin and shining fall of jet-black hair. There was nothing that marked this woman as different, as Psy, part of a race that had eliminated its emotions. "I wanted to ask you a question."
The stranger considered her request for a second. "Why are you asking m
e?"
"I need to ask a Psy and you're the only one here."
"I can't fault your logic." She tapped her finger on the screen to complete her purchase, then turned to give Tamsyn her full attention. "Your question?"
"Do you ever cry?" It seemed imperative that she know the answer.
The Psy didn't react to the oddness of the question--if she had, she wouldn't be Psy. "Even those of my race have little to no control over certain physiological reactions. If, for example, a foreign object were to accidentally enter or touch my eye, that eye would certainly produce fluid in an attempt to excrete the intruding matter."
Tamsyn frowned at the clinical description of such a wrenching, heartbreaking act. "No. I don't mean that. I mean, do you cry?"
The stranger looked at her for several long moments. "As you chose to approach a Psy, you must know the answer to that question. However, I'll respond as I see no possible negative repercussions from doing so." She picked up a slim electronic pad from the desk near the terminal. "No. We do not cry out of fear or sadness, anger, or rage. We do not feel, therefore, we do not shed tears."
"Don't you miss it?" Tamsyn asked.
The Psy ran her gaze over Tamsyn's face. "Judging from the redness of the blood vessels in your eyes and your stuffy nose, I believe I can say with certainty that crying is in no way a positive experience. Why would I miss it?"
"No. I meant...don't you miss feeling?" Love and hope, joy and need.
"I can't miss what I've never experienced," the other woman said, as if that should have been self-evident. "My race chose to eradicate emotion for a reason. Those with emotions are weak. We're not. It's why the Psy rule this planet." With that, she gave a curt nod and left.
Tamsyn stared after her, the words circling around and around in her head. Those with emotions are weak. She saw the reflection of her drawn, listless face in the terminal and found herself agreeing. For a frozen heartbeat, she wished she were like that Psy woman. Cool, controlled, focused. No attachments, no hopes, no dreams.
And no Nathan.
Her eyes, which had started to close, snapped open. "No," she whispered fiercely. She would not, could not, live in a world where Nathan didn't exist. He might make her cry as much as he made her laugh, but she couldn't imagine waking up one day and having emptiness where he was.