Dark Wolf Rising (Bloodrunners) (19 page)

“I’m only saying what a bunch of us are thinking.”

“I won’t tell you again,” he warned in a chilling tone. “Get your ass out of here.”

“Make me,” the Lycan shot back as if they were school kids facing off on a playground. Shaking his head at the pathetic loser, Eric started to turn and head back inside, knowing the last thing he needed to do in front of so many witnesses was give in to his need to knock Glenn on his skinny backside. But the idiot didn’t know when to leave well enough alone. Drunk on his little power play, the jackass came up behind him and shoved Eric in the shoulder. “You runnin’ now, Drake?”

His fingertips burned as deadly claws pricked just beneath the surface of his skin, but he fought back the urge to release them. Glenn was just looking for a way to add more fuel to the fire, and Eric was damned if he was going to give it to him.

Rubbing his tongue over his teeth, Eric slowly turned around and regarded the Lycan with a look of disgust.

“You and your friends can’t keep running things,” Glenn snarled, his voice rising. “The pack doesn’t want their help.”

“Maybe a few bigots feel that way. But I think the majority are finally seeing the Runners for what they are.” It was ironic, really. In his bid to destroy the Runners forever, his father had brought the pack closer to acceptance of the half Lycan, half human hunters than they’d ever been before, since it was the Runners who had saved the town from Stefan Drake’s psychotic plans. Yeah, there was still a lot of progress to be made, but at least the lines that separated the Runners and the pack were starting to blur.

“What they are,” Glenn echoed with a gritty laugh. “You mean a bunch of embarrassing half-breeds?”

“More like heroes!” someone called out from the crowd.

“They’re mongrels!” Glenn shouted, turning red in the face. Then he took a deep breath, regrouping, and slid Eric a taunting leer. “There might be a few who misguidedly support the Runners, but you should know that there are a lot of us who will do whatever it takes to stop them from assuming control here.” His voice got lower. “And there are a lot of us who believe that your family will finally get what it deserves. Including your sister.”

It took no more than a second for Eric to have Glenn’s throat in his grip, then slam him down backward on the hood of the nearest parked car with a bone-jarring thud. “You so much as even look at my sister,” he said in a low, deadly rasp, leaning over and getting right in the bastard’s face, “and I’ll take your fucking head off. We clear on that?”

He didn’t wait for an answer. He just left Glenn sprawled on the hood, turning back toward the house just in time to catch Chelsea and Elise rushing down the front steps, their expressions of worry nearly identical.

“Sorry!” Max called out, following after them. “I tried to keep them inside, but your woman kneed me.” Judging by the way Max was walking, Eric had a good idea of
where
Chelsea had landed the blow, and he was privately thankful he hadn’t been the one trying to stop her. She fought dirty!

“Are you okay?” she called out, running up to him.

“I’m fine,” he told her just as Crissy Cowell came around the edge of the crowd, a derisive look on her face when she spotted Chelsea.

“A human, Eric? Are you kidding me?”

He cut the female Lycan a dark look from beneath his brows. “Stay out of it, Crissy.”

Laughing, showing a catty side of her personality that Eric must have been blind to miss, she asked, “Isn’t she a little too much like prey for a guy like you?”

“I’d watch what you say, bitch.” The snarled words came from Elise.

Crissy smirked. “So the little human doesn’t mind that he likes to use his fangs and claws in the sack?”

Chelsea might have paled, but she didn’t cower. “Do you have any idea how jealous you sound right now?” she snapped.

The Lycan looked at Eric, her rouged lips curled in a sneer. “Dark wolves and humans don’t mix.”

“For the last time,” he growled, wondering how he’d ever been stupid enough to get involved with this woman, “mind your own damn business.”

“But she’s right!” Glenn shouted, pressing one hand against the back of his head as he staggered away from the car where Eric had flattened him. “You’re threatening this whole community by bringing her here!”

Everyone started shouting at the same time, his supporters well outnumbered by those who were quickly jumping on Farrow’s bandwagon.
“When they find her body, he’ll bring the cops down on us!...He was just fooling us for years!...He’s just like his father!...This is going to end in another catastrophe!”
In the middle of it all, someone threw a clump of mud at his chest, splattering his T-shirt and arms. Eric growled, scanning the crowd for the guilty party, but all he saw was a sea of angry faces.

“I don’t know about the rest of you,” Glenn’s brother, Mark, muttered, puffing up his chest as he came toward them, “but I think a night in lock-up might do him some good.” He started to lower his hand toward the hip holster he always wore for his gun, but Eric beat him to the draw. He whipped his Beretta from his waistband behind his back, aiming it point-blank at the center of the Lycan’s forehead.

Slowly releasing the gun’s safety, Eric narrowed his eyes on the younger Farrow. “You need to walk away, Mark. Right now. Because I am done with this shit.”

“Glenn’s right about you,” Mark snarled, moving his hand away from his weapon. “You really are as crazy as your old man.”

“He’s not crazy, Mark. You’re just a jackass!” The set down came from Brian Everett, who came to stand beside Chelsea just as Eric was slipping the Beretta back into his jeans. Brian was one of the guys who Eric had worked with on the new housing development he’d started before everything went to hell because of his father. He and Brian had always gotten along, but it was still a surprise to hear him publicly going against Glenn. There’d been such a negative push against him lately that Eric had lost sight of those who still supported him.

They waited until some of the others had dragged Glenn and Mark away, apparently deciding that retreat was their best option at this point. With a small sigh of relief to see a red-faced Crissy leaving, as well, Eric turned his attention to Brian. They talked about how Elise, who was still standing near her front steps with Max, had thought someone had been in her home. “If El has any trouble again,” the older Lycan told him, “you let her know that she can give me and Meryl a call, night or day. She’s always welcome over at ours.”

“Thanks, Brian.” He shook the other man’s hand. “I really appreciate it.”

“I’d like to thank you, as well,” Chelsea murmured, still glaring at the few stragglers who remained on the far side of the street. She looked so enraged on his behalf, and it put a kinda warm feeling in Eric’s chest that he liked far more than he should.

They said goodbye to Brian, who told them he’d clear away the remaining members of the crowd, then headed over to wrap things up with Elise and Max. Though Chelsea apologized for hurting him, Max still gave her a wide berth—not that Eric blamed the guy. He’d give any woman who kneed him in the nuts a wide berth, too.

After Eric had made Elise promise to call him the next day, his sister and Max went inside the house, talking about what kind of pizza they should order for dinner, and he and Chelsea started back down the blessedly quiet street. “Now I really need that shower,” he muttered, scrubbing his hands over his arms to wipe off the splatters of mud that still covered him.

“Do you want to stop by your house while we’re here?” she asked.

He slid her a questioning look. “You wouldn’t mind?”

“I’d like to see where you live,” she said with a little smile.

“It’s not far, so we can walk,” he told her, thinking it would be a good chance for him to pick up some of his things. And for some reason that he didn’t quite understand, he liked the idea of having her in his home.

They turned at the next corner, heading left, and passed a group of children who were playing in one of the yards, running through a sprinkler. The kids waved at Eric, and he started to wave back, until one of the mothers sitting on the front porch of the house caught sight of him and started shooing the kids inside.

* * *

Unable to believe what she’d just seen, Chelsea said, “I don’t understand this place, Eric. Doesn’t it drive you crazy when they act like that?”

He shrugged. “You can’t make people trust you, Chelse. They either do or they don’t.”

“But you haven’t done anything to lose their trust!”

The look he slid her was dark and piercing. “That doesn’t always matter, does it?”

She flinched, knowing damn well he was thinking about the conversation they’d had earlier about Jason Donovan and Perry. Which wasn’t fair. “I’ve given you more trust than I’ve ever given any other man. And I’ve only known you for a few days. So cut me some slack.”

He was quiet for a moment, and then he said, “Sorry. This place just sets me on edge.”

She was about to tell him that she could understand why, when his phone rang. Eric took the call, his mouth tilting in a frown as he listened, then said goodbye and slid the phone back in his pocket.

“What’s wrong?”

Rubbing at the back of his neck, he said, “That was Jeremy. They’ve found some tracks on our land that don’t belong to the pack. From the scent, they think that five or more males from the Greywolf pack up north of us must have been sniffing around, doing reconnaissance on the town.”

“Do you really think one of the other packs might attack the Silvercrest?”

“It’s always been a possibility, but especially now that we’re so vulnerable. And if one tried to invade our land, you can bet the violence would spread. The idea of an all-out pack war is a huge concern for a lot of reasons, the least of which is the threat of exposure.”

“You mean to humans?” she asked.

“Yeah.” He gave a tense sigh. “But sometimes I think we’re lucky it’s held together this long.”

Before Chelsea could lecture him about having a defeatist attitude, they reached his home—a beautiful two-story on a picturesque street lined by towering oaks. As they made their way inside, she changed the subject, saying, “Crissy was an interesting woman.”

He shook his head and made a rough sound in the back of his throat. “She acted like a total bitch.”

“She’s the one from the other night, isn’t she? The one you were with when the scouts called you about me?”

Eric grimaced as he shut the door. “Why the hell would you think that?”

A wry smile twisted the corner of her mouth. “Same hideous shade of lipstick.”

He slid her a sharp glance, then slowly shook his head again. “You women are scary,” he grumbled under his breath.

“I think the word you’re looking for is
perceptive.

He switched on a lamp in the spacious living room, then rolled his shoulder in one of those purely male gestures of unease. “Yeah, well, it wasn’t anything...serious.”

Chelsea lifted her brows. “So you were just sleeping with her?”

“Once.” His voice was rough, and maybe just a tad embarrassed.

“You must have made quite an impression,” she said, trying to keep her tone light. “It’s obvious she wants a repeat.”

Eric snorted as he headed into the kitchen through an archway. “Doesn’t mean she’s getting one.”

He asked if she wanted anything to drink, bringing her back a cold bottle of water. She thanked him for it, then said, “You never know. You might feel differently about Crissy when things have calmed down and I’m not crowding your life anymore.”

He froze with his water bottle halfway to his mouth, his eyes dark with shifting emotions. Anger, frustration and what looked like a sharp, intense burn of desire. It made her toes curl in her shoes, even as her heart gave a painful lurch in her chest. Then, very quietly, he said, “Don’t.”

She didn’t know what she’d expected him to say, but it wasn’t that. Just a lone, raw, emotion-rough command. She wanted so desperately to surrender to the relief that was slipping through her veins, easing the tightness in her chest, but couldn’t quite find the courage to do it. “I’m just being realistic, Eric. I won’t be here forever. Crissy will.”

The hard line of his jaw told her he was pissed, but he didn’t argue. He just said, “I’m grabbing that shower now. Make yourself at home while I’m gone.”

Then he set down the water and pulled off his shirt, and she was stunned once again by how gorgeous his body was. God, his shoulders were huge. His arms, too. Every inch of him seemed to be ripped with muscle, but he didn’t look bulky. Just sharp and fast and sleek. She loved watching his biceps bunch beneath that sexy tattoo as he hooked his shirt over his shoulder. Loved the way his muscles shifted and flexed beneath his tight skin.

As if he knew just how devastating he was to her senses, he shot her one of those cocky, crooked grins before turning around and walking away. She watched him until he disappeared through another archway, unable to take her eyes off the beautiful lines of his back and his muscled backside, loving the way his faded Levi’s hugged his ass. The fiend knew exactly what he was doing to her, flaunting his gorgeous body at her, and it was working. Big-time.

It was embarrassing, how long she just stood there, staring all dreamy-eyed at the now-empty archway, but she finally shook herself out of the lust-induced trance and started looking around. The house was beautiful, though she preferred the more rustic look of the cabin. But she enjoyed walking through the living room and looking at the books and DVDs on his shelves, as well as the photographs hanging on his walls. There were a lot of pictures of him with Elise and a man who looked so much like them that she knew it must be Eli. Chelsea pored over each photograph, enjoying the different smiles on Eric’s face. It was clear he was a guy who liked to have fun, and who loved his family.

This was what she’d been hoping for when she’d suggested they stop by—an insight into his life, into who he really was.

And what she found made her like him even more.

* * *

Wearing a clean pair of jeans and running a towel over his head, Eric stood in the archway to the living room and watched Chelsea studying his photographs. It felt strangely right, having her in his home. For so long he’d felt as if there was something he needed to be searching for, something he needed to find, that he couldn’t get his hands on. And for the moment, at least, he felt like he had it.

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