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Claiming the Wolf
Claiming the Wolf
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Claiming the Wolf


Twisting his body, the werewolf pounded again toward the glass and this time the clear sheet sucked inward and the vehicle dropped swiftly. He caught the crackled sheet of glass against his paws and, with a heave, forced it out through the metal frame. Pushing from the seat with his powerful feet, he soared toward the surface.

A paw broke through to the cool night air, and his wolfish head followed. Gasping, he eyed the shore, sniffing. No mortals in the vicinity. Kicking his legs, which were encumbered by the mortal pants that hadn’t fallen away, the werewolf instinctually shifted as he knew he wasn’t designed to swim in this shape.

Sinking in the murky depths, Hart quickly reverted to were-form with a howl that drank in the dirty Seine. Breaststroking, he swam toward the surface and, by flinging himself halfway onto the sanctity of a hard surface, landed on the cold sidewalk.

He lay there panting, spitting out the disgusting water, wincing when he realized his left ankle had been twisted and broken during the crash. Already healing, the knitting bone and sinews hurt like a mother.

“Longtooth,” he muttered, then lifted his head to scan the river. “Where did you go?”

He suspected vampires were better swimmers than werewolves simply because they didn’t have to deal with any shifted body parts, but he watched the deceptively calm surface, mirrored with frail moonlight, for a long time. Nothing broke the water, nor did he spy anyone surface across the other side, or down as far as he could see. They’d plunged in at city’s edge. Hell, he suspected it would be a while before rescue vehicles got the call someone had driven into the river.

“One dead vampire is no skin off me,” he muttered, then slapped a palm to his aching neck. And yet... “She bit me.” He could still feel the open wounds, which meant it was deep, because a small injury should have healed within moments.

If she hadn’t surfaced, she must be dead, Hart decided. On the other hand, drowning wasn’t going to kill a vampire. And something he’d seen while struggling with the crazed vamp returned to his thoughts.

“That tattoo,” he murmured. But a flash second had shown him the detailed and finely wrought words: come what will.

Hart lifted onto his elbows and fiercely stared toward the spot where he presumed the vehicle had settled. She was down there. Alone. A just punishment for what she’d put him through.

Shaking his head like a dog to whip the water from his short hair, he growled and smashed his fist against the sidewalk. She was alone. And the tattoo bothered him. Recent? Some weird part of him answered, yes, it’s new ink. Which meant...

Hart stood and dove into the water.

* * *

Danni struggled with the steel pipe that pierced her gut and pinned her like a giant bug to the back seat of the submerged SUV. Upon descent, she’d instinctually started breathing through her nose. She couldn’t think how wrong it was she was still alive and struggling. Yet another cool thing about vampirism she had never asked for.

No matter how she tried, she couldn’t dislodge the pipe, which had come from the rear cargo area and had wedged in the dashboard. Stuck here forever. Literally.

When would she die? God, she didn’t want this. She’d never asked for any of this! The idea of tears made her choke on the water and she wished she could drown and get it over with and done.

When she felt the hand on her leg, she kicked, but instantly regretted the move. Help? Yes, please!

The hand returned and moved along her leg, groping over her limbs. Even with her heightened vampire sight she could only make out shadows and the tiny LEDs on the dashboard. When the hand moved over her hip and slapped against the pipe embedded in her body, she knew whoever it was had determined her dire situation. She landed her hand on his face, stroking her fingers down the side of his jaw and neck, where she felt the serrated skin.

It was him, the werewolf who had condemned her to this watery grave.

You did too, eh, Dan the Man? Would have never landed in the river if you hadn’t bitten him.

He tugged at the pipe, and each jerk felt as if her insides were being rearranged by a flunky surgeon. He touched her arm, moving his hand down her skin past her wrist. Placing his palm over hers made her feel as if he were trying to convey something. He swept away, and suddenly she was alone.

He was leaving her? Danni protested with a yell. Stupid. No sound down here, save the gurgling of bubbles still rising from the settling vehicle. And her frantic heartbeats pounding in her veins and ears. She deserved it, she supposed. She had tried to kill him. But only in self-defense.

The hand slapped over her ankle again and he pulled himself inside the vehicle by moving along her body. Fingers pressed gently to her cheek, reassuring, and she moved her hand over his, squeezing. Must have gone to the surface for air.

Now the pipe moved, she could feel every inch as it slowly tugged at her skin and muscles, and hell—who knew—it might have pierced a kidney or her liver. She was still alive by some impossible means that made her want to kick and scream and yell. But she wouldn’t. He was helping her. All that mattered now was that she cooperate.

Slowly, methodically, he managed to move the pipe toward the rear of the vehicle. He’d hooked a leg about one of hers, which held him down and his powerful muscles flexed against hers. Another pause, he pressed his palm flat to hers again, and she knew before he left he had to resurface to take in air.

Wolves couldn’t breathe underwater? A girl learned something new every day.

Those minutes she lay in the darkness were the longest in Danni’s life. Six months ago she’d never imagined this for herself. She wouldn’t let this be her end, she was stronger than that. Curling her fingers about the end of the pipe, she felt but a foot left to go, but she couldn’t move it herself. Even with the infusion of blood she’d taken in the car, exhaustion coiled about her bones. She couldn’t hold her eyes open and let the lids fall shut.

The next time she opened her eyes it was to thin moonlight upon silver waves as she was being pulled ashore. Her body landed on a hard surface and she choked up water endlessly.

“Gotta get out of here,” a male voice with a British accent said near her head. “I can hear sirens now. I’m sure neither of us wants to talk to the police. Trust me, eh?”

Danni’s eyes closed as she felt her body lifted and tossed over the burly wolf’s shoulder.

* * *

He walked the half mile home with the vampiress flung over one shoulder as if she were a sodden sack of laundry. He only encountered a few odd looks at the half-clad, soaking wet man as he went along the way. He growled at an elderly gentleman who’d suggested he take his antics to the privacy of his own home. The French were such snobs.

Hart dropped the vampiress onto the ceramic-tiled floor inside his apartment, not wanting to lay her on the suede sofa. Without a glance behind him, he aimed for the bathroom, striping off his wet pants and the few remaining shreds of his shirt. Walking right into the glass-walled shower, he turned on the hot stream. “Bloody yes, I needed that.”

Ten minutes later, he grabbed a towel and wandered out to the living room to find the vampiress alert, crouched against the door and flexing to stand as he approached. She put up her fists, as if ready to go a couple rounds with him.

That gave Hart a mirthless chuckle. “Feisty longtooth, aren’t you? Here.” He tossed her the towel, and she pressed it to her gut, which didn’t bleed anymore, but then, he hadn’t expected it to. “You healed?”

She nodded.

Anger returning in a whirl of energy, he fisted the air as if he’d just laid the punching bag flat. “What the hell are you about? Going after my principal, then nearly drowning me? And this?” He slapped the side of his neck where the bite wounds had finally healed, yet had marked him forever in ways no wolf could comprehend.

“Just doing as I was ordered.” She straightened, lifting her chin defiantly.

Despite her bedraggled, wet-rat appearance, her eyes were bright blue and her thick lips were jeweled with water that dripped from her candy red hair. The dark clothing clung to a long, narrow frame defined by lean muscle.

Hart’s first assessment of her stood: gorgeous. Yet deadly. And too cocky for a vampire standing before a wolf who could shear her head from her neck with one flick of his wrist.

“Why did you do it?”

“Do what?” Hart snapped, pacing before her, unsure yet if he should get out the stake he kept in a kitchen drawer—he’d lost the gun in the Seine—or shove her out the door and wish her good riddance.

“You saved my life.”

He flung a hand outward, dismissing the heroic deed. “Wasn’t like you were going to die.”

“No, but I would have been stuck down there forever.”

“Yet still alive. So there. I didn’t save your life.”

She heaved out a sigh and nodded. “Either way, I owe you one.”

“I don’t need a favor from a longtooth, thank you very much.”

“I know. You hate me. I’m supposed to hate you.” She lifted the clump of her wet hair and squeezed the water out onto the floor. “What’s your name?”

He snarled, thinking she had some nerve. By rights he should bring her in to the compound to let the pack serve her the justice they saw fit.