her light, I offer you my body.”
   Desire and something else, something more ethereal,
   shimmered between them, warming the night. Warming
   her. His rigid heat slid deep inside, until it felt as if he
   was claiming every inch of her. He began to rock. It felt so
   good, so right, a moan escaped her lips.
   “Under the divine light of the moon,” he said, “I offer
   you my heart.”
   It felt like her own heart was snapping tight, ready to
   shatter. “Under her light, I offer you mine.”
   The sting in the air was becoming stronger. Sweat
   skated across her skin. Pretense, she told herself fiercely.
   Nothing more.
   His grip on her rump grew stronger, holding her steady
   as the tempo of his thrusts increased. “Under the divine
   light, I offer you my soul.”
   Deep down the tremors were beginning, spreading
   through her body like a wave. She gripped his shoulders,
   digging her nails into his flesh, fighting the sensations
   rippling through her, fearing the burning in the air. Fearing
   the fact she could not stop the words flowing from her
   lips.
   “By her light, I offer you mine.”
   He was thrusting deep and hard. The world seemed to
   be spinning, and every fiber of her being was tingling with
   magic. Burning with the need for release.
   “Then let our souls become one as our bodies have
   become one.”
   “Let the moon bless and rejoice in this union,” she
   somehow gasped.
   “Do you accept the gift of my seed?” he growled. “Do
   you accept the promises of the night and the moon?”
   “Yes,” she cried. “Yes.”
   He went rigid against her, the force of his release
   tearing her name from his throat. Heat seemed to explode
   around them, through them, and her climax came in a
   rush of power that stole her breath, stole all thought, and
   swept her into a world that was sheer, unadulterated bliss.
   For a long moment, neither of them moved. She rested
   her forehead on his chest, desperately trying to catch her
   breath, desperately hoping the ritual hadn’t worked. But
   the air still hummed, her skin still tingled, and he was
   still so very hard inside her.
   After a while, he lifted her chin, his lips seeking hers,
   his kiss a lingering taste of passion.
   “What the moon has joined, let no wolf break.” He
   brushed sweaty strands of hair from her forehead, then
   kissed her again. Sweetly. Gently. But it wasn’t his kiss
   that sent goose bumps fleeing across her skin. It was the
   caring in his dark eyes. The gentle, almost loving smile
   touching his lips. “May the moon bless this union and
   grant us life.”
   Energy seemed to flow through every pore of her being.
   For one moment, it felt as if the moon itself was blessing
   her. Blessing them. She fought the sting of more tears
   and closed her eyes. Thankfully, the moon couldn’t bless
   this union with life. Not when Duncan had been given the
   fertility control injection.
   “By the moon’s divine light, let us now celebrate this
   union.” Though the words were the last in the ritual, they
   were also what she wanted. All she wanted.
   All they did, through the remainder of the long night.
   By the end of which she truly knew what it felt like to be
   loved by a man like Duncan.
   But did she dare believe it?
   ***
   A distant ringing stirred Duncan from slumber, but it
   was a sound that stopped almost the minute he woke. He
   swore softly and looked around. The morning’s light peeked
   past the bedroom curtains, indicating dawn had come and
   gone. He hadn’t meant to sleep so long. Hadn’t meant to
   love Neva so long. Hadn’t meant to do a lot of things.
   But he regretted none of them.
   Especially not binding Neva to him heart and soul.
   He smiled and splayed his fingers across her belly,
   pressing her close against him. She was his, and there
   was nothing on this Earth that could separate them now.
   While it was supposed to have been nothing more than
   pretense, the minute he’d said the first words of the ritual
   and felt the stirrings of magic in the air, he’d known what
   was happening. And there was no way in hell he’d been
   about to stop—or let her stop. Neva was his, and the
   ceremony ensured that, from this point on, she could no
   more turn to another wolf than he could. It wasn’t playing
   fair, wasn’t giving her the choice, but in all honesty, he
   didn’t care. He’d spent more than half his life looking for
   his soul mate, and now that he’d found her, he wasn’t
   about to let her go. Wasn’t about to sit back and watch
   her walk into the arms of what her family might consider
   a “more suitable” mate.
   Because he very much suspected that was what she
   might do. Family was everything to a wolf, to Neva more
   than most, and this break with her parents was killing
   her. And while he was responsible for that, he had no
   intention of walking away to mend the rift. And the
   ceremony had given him the time he needed to convince
   Neva and her parents, that his intentions and his feelings
   were both honest and true.
   The ringing started again, soft but insistent. It seemed
   to be coming from downstairs...his cell phone, he realized.
   It was still in the pants he’d discarded in the living room.
   Neva stirred, and he brushed a kiss across her shoulder.
   “Sleep,” he said, using the power of the moon binding
   to make it an order. She’d probably fry his brains when
   she woke and realized he was still using that hold on her,
   but right now, he didn’t care. She needed the rest.
   She murmured something that sounded suspiciously
   like a curse, then drifted back to sleep. He kissed her
   again, this time on her cheek, then climbed out of bed
   and padded downstairs, finding his pants and pulling out
   the phone. “Hello?”
   “There’s been a fire at the hospital.”
   His father’s voice was flat, devoid of any emotion, and
   Duncan’s gut began to churn. “René?”
   “Is missing. Kane was found unconscious but alive in
   one of the stairwells. Looks like he’d been trying to stop
   the kidnappers.”
   “He’s okay?”
   “Nothing more than a bruised ego, and a mighty bump
   on the back of the head.”
   “I gather it was Betise and Iyona?”
   “Yes. Apparently Betise let him chase her into the
   stairwell, where Iyona jumped him.”
   Duncan took a deep breath and released it slowly.
   “What about Savannah and the other patients?” Neva
   would want to know her sister was okay, even though she
   would surely have known if something bad had happened.
   The link between the two of them was strong.
   “They’re fine. The fire was in the basement, used merely
   as a distraction.”
   “You’re heading up a hunting party?”
 
					     					 			   “Tye’s on his way to join me and Kane. Savannah’s
   given permission for us to be included in the official party.”
   Probably because she knew they’d form a hunting
   party of their own if she didn’t. “Do you intend to join
   them?”
   “Yes. If only because if I find those two alone, I might
   be tempted to kill them. The Sinclair name has taken
   enough of a beating these past few weeks. We don’t need
   to add murder to our crimes.”
   Duncan glanced around for his sweater. “I’ll be there
   in five minutes.”
   “We’re meeting over at the rangers’ office.”
   “I’ll be there.”
   He hung up and quickly dressed, then bounded up
   the stairs. He knelt by the bed, kissing Neva’s lips gently,
   feeling the stirrings of passion in the sleepiness of her
   response.
   “Sleep well, my love. I’ll be back soon.” He brushed
   the hair from her eyes, kissed her nose, then left.
   The phone rang again as he was walking towards Main
   Street. He pressed the receiver and said, “Don’t tell me,
   the location’s changed.”
   “It certainly has.”
   It wasn’t his father on the phone. It was Betise. His
   knuckles went white with the force of his grip. “If you’ve
   hurt him, bitch, you’re both dead.”
   Betise tsked. “Such anger.”
   “Just tell me what you want.”
   “My mother is waiting in front of the hair salon for
   you. I’m not sure where you are, but you have two minutes
   to get there and get into the truck. We hear, see, or smell
   the rangers anywhere near, and René is a dead man.”
   “This is not going to achieve anything.”
   “Promises were made. Tonight they will be fulfilled.”
   The bitch was definitely crazy. He hit the “end” button,
   then dialed his father’s number as he ran. “Betise just
   called me,” he said, the minute his father answered. “She
   wants me in front of her hair salon, alone, within two
   minutes.”
   Zeke swore. Duncan didn’t give his father the chance
   to say anything else. “Follow the truck’s tracks,” he said.
   “And don’t get near enough for them to see or smell you,
   or René’s dead.”
   He hung up, sped around the corner, and saw not one
   waiting truck, but two. Out of the corner of his eye, he
   caught movement, and something sharp plunged into his
   arm. He swore and swung around, fist flying. Betise
   laughed and danced out of the way. He glanced down. A
   dart had been buried hilt deep into his forearm.
   “Do you really think I’d trust you to sit back like a
   good little wolf while we take you to René?” she taunted.
   “I may be well-used flesh, Duncan, but I’m not stupid.”
   He lunged for her. But it felt like he was moving
   through glue, and his feet were extraordinarily heavy.
   Betise laughed, capering just beyond his reach. The dart
   must have been drugged. He cursed her and lunged again,
   but suddenly found himself falling face first onto the
   pavement. Then the darkness rushed in, accompanied by
   harsh, almost maniacal laughter.
   Fifteen
   Neva woke to the nagging sensation that something
   was wrong. Frowning, she lay still in bed, listening to the
   silence haunting the cabin. Duncan wasn’t there. His smell
   was little more than a lingering tease of wood on the air,
   and there was no sound of footsteps or breathing. Maybe
   he’d joined the hunt for Betise and Iyona.
   She glanced toward the window. The light filtering past
   the curtains was soft, almost muted, as if the day had
   come and gone, and dusk was almost over. Surely she
   couldn’t have slept that long.
   Neva? Savannah’s thought was abrupt, and the feeling
   of wrongness increased.
   What’s happened? She swung out of bed, shivering a
   little as the cool air caressed her skin, and padded
   downstairs to find her clothes.
   Plenty. Savannah’s mind voice was grim. There was a
   fire at the hospital, which we’ve since discovered was little
   more than a cover for René Sinclair being snatched. Duncan
   then got a phone call stating he’d better meet Iyona in front
   of Betise’s hair salon if he wanted to see his brother alive.
   He wouldn’t have gone to such a meeting alone. Surely
   he wasn’t that stupid.
   He was given little choice and little time. But he did
   call his father. By the time we got there, the trucks were
   gone. We followed the tracks, but the damn snow came
   down again, and we lost them.
   Neva cursed the unseasonably late onslaught of snow,
   though no doubt the skiers still lingering in Ripple Creek
   were rejoicing. I’m coming to the hospital.
   I’m not there.
   What? Savannah—
   I’m fine. I’m being careful. But I’m a ranger, and I’ll be
   damned if I’ll lay on my back in bed while these bitches
   run around killing and kidnapping people.
   Neva moved across to the window and looked out. It
   was no longer snowing, and the moon was rich and yellow
   and almost full as it began its ascent in the darkening
   sky. She stared at it for a moment, remembering Betise’s
   words. Remembering her conviction, her certainty, that
   she and Duncan were soul mates. She’s going to perform
   the promising ritual.
   What?
   Betise believes she’s Duncan’s soul mate. She grabbed
   her coat, swept a set of keys off the coffee table and ran
   for the door.
   Impossible, when you— Savannah’s thought cut off
   abruptly. It doesn’t matter, does it?
   No. It’s the night of promising. The magic can be raised
   whether it’s your soul mate or not. God, how she wished
   their pretense last night had been real. While she might
   then have bound herself to a man who did not love her,
   she’d rather that than Duncan being fettered to a
   murdering fiend like Betise. Have you searched down
   Heather Creek Road?
   We did last night, after they’d attacked you, but we
   found nothing. And the truck tracks didn’t head that way
   tonight.
   Well, that’s where they are. Why she was certain, she
   couldn’t say. And if she was wrong, Duncan would pay.
   Where are you?
   Just coming out of Snowflake Lodge.
   I’ll meet you on Main. Be there in five minutes.
   Savanna was there in two, and she didn’t come alone.
   There was a convoy of four trucks in all. Neva climbed
   into the first one, relieved to see Ronan at the wheel. Her
   gaze swung left to meet Savannah’s. The main bandage
   had been removed from her sister’s face, but there were
   still dressings on her right cheek and over her left eye.
   “I’m a little surprised to see you in the back seat rather
   than the driver’s.”
   Her sister’s good eye twinkled brightly in the shadows.
   “I may be stubborn, but I’m not a fool.” Her voice was dry.
   “Besides, I can’t see well eno 
					     					 			ugh to drive just yet.”
   “Mind you,” Ronan commented, a smile touching his
   gray eyes as he glanced at Neva, “it took the threat of a
   revolt to lose that foolhardiness she claims not to have.”
   “Why am I not surprised?” Neva slammed the door
   shut and buckled up her seat belt as Ronan took off. Lights
   swept through the rear window, briefly setting Ronan’s
   russet hair aflame as the trucks behind fell into line.
   “Probably because doing stupid things runs in our
   family,” Savannah replied.
   Neva met her sister’s gaze. “That it does.” Things like
   deciding to seduce the most dangerous man in the Sinclair
   pack, or pretending to perform the promising ritual. One
   had led her heart into danger, and the other had forced
   her to confront what she’d been trying to ignore—the fact
   that in a mere couple of days she’d fallen in love with
   Duncan.
   She pulled her gaze from Savannah’s and stared out
   the window. “It doesn’t matter,” she said softly.
   It does if you love him.
   I love Mom and Dad, too. I won’t give up my family for
   the sake of a man. No matter what I feel for him.
   Savannah didn’t say anything. There was nothing she
   could say, because they both knew the truth of the words.
   Ronan turned the truck onto Heather Creek Road, and
   they quickly left the lights of Ripple Creek behind them.
   Under the cold light of the rising moon, the land became
   a vast expanse of black and silver. It was stark, oddly
   beautiful, but also eerie.
   Neva stared out the window, her gaze roaming across
   the lustrous landscape without really seeing any of it. They
   were closing in. She wasn’t sure how she knew, but the
   sensation was similar to what she shared with her sister.
   It was as if somehow Duncan had become a part of her,
   as if he was reaching out for her, not only psychically but
   physically. She could feel him, not only in her mind, but
   on her body. Almost as if he were caressing her, trailing
   his fingers across her skin, sending little tingles of
   electricity through every nerve ending. She was attuned
   to him. Totally attuned. She briefly closed her eyes, too
   afraid to confront the reason why that might be. Because
   confronting it wouldn’t change the facts. Wouldn’t change
   her parents’ opinion. Wouldn’t change her refusal to walk