Wolf on the Road (6 page)

Read Wolf on the Road Online

Authors: Lynn Red

Tags: #pnr, #werewolf romance, #jamesburg, #bad boy romance, #fantasy romance, #paranormal romance, #alpha male romance, #lynn red, #biker romance, #shapeshifter romance, #scifi romance

BOOK: Wolf on the Road
10.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Mali laughed despite her anxiety, and just doing that gave her a little wave of calm that slid down her back, between her shoulder blades, and relaxed her ever so slightly. “I guess it’s time I started forgetting all that stuff, huh?”

She finally turned around and when she did, she found Jake looking in her direction with a kind, gentle look on his face. “No,” he said, “I don’t think you should. I don’t think there’s a single former-human in our pack, although my brother is mated to a full human, who somehow managed to have his pup...”

“Whoa, whoa, whoa cowboy,” Mali said. “You gotta take it slow with some of this info dump. A little bit at a time, you know? You mean to tell me there’s a
pack
of werewolves, and your brother, one of those werewolves, has a human mate? And that she had his baby? Do they look like puppies?”

Jake first lifted his hands in a defensive gesture, but then let them drop to his sides. “Well, yeah, I guess they do sometimes. But they look like humans sometimes too.”

Mali took a deep breath and let it out slowly, as though she was trying to convince herself of something. “Okay, look. I’m having a lot of trouble with the ‘acceptance’ part of this whole grieving process for my former humanity.”

“Understandable,” Jake said.

“But I could take a whole lot of shit to see a werewolf puppy.”

“They are pretty cute,” he scratched his chin as he answered. “Although Frederick ate my glasses once. Really nice ones, too. Tom Ford frames. Cost me like four hundred bucks.”

“So much is happening right now with that statement that I can’t even really process the first part. The cub is named Frederick, and he ate your glasses. You wear glasses?”

Jake stiffened. “I mean, just when I have hay fever. Otherwise I use contacts.”

Mali shook her head. “Unbelievable.”

“I’m sorry I don’t have the natural gift of perfect eyesight,” he said.

Mali snickered softly. “I just... I can’t believe all this, but okay fine. The prospect of a werewolf puppy is too much for me to overlook. Lets—”

As she was about to swing her leg over the back seat on Jake’s bike and resign herself to her fate of being a furry, if somewhat reticently so, member of a world she never knew existed, a roar of engines in the distance caught both her, and Jake’s, attention.

“It’s them,” he said haltingly.

Mali shook her head. “Can’t be. Last time they were around, I couldn’t hear the engines. This time, I—”

Jake stared at her for a second. “Fascinating,” he said in a long, drawn-out breath. “So maybe there’s something about them only we can hear? You can hear them now, though, right? You just said you could. I’m an idiot. Look, I’m sorry that I seem like I’m interested in this in a scientific way, but—”

“Jake?”

“Yeah?”

“We should probably run.”

The roar of the engines was so close now that both of them felt it in their bones, not just their ears. Jake grabbed both of Mali’s shoulders and held her still for just a second. “I know I have no right to ask you to trust me.”

“You don’t,” she said, “but I also don’t have any choice. At least not unless I want to end up as some weird magic biker’s old lady.”

Jake laughed. “More like bi—”

Mali stuck a finger in front of his face. “Be polite,” she said. “Let’s get the hell out of here.”

5

––––––––

“Y
ou know what the boss lady said!” One of the bikers shouted, loudly enough that Mali clearly understood, even though they were still hundreds of yards in the distance. “Take ‘em both! We got this fucker in the bag!”

She had the thought to ask Jake about all this, and she once again remembered his talking about being in trouble, something that had so quickly slipped through her mind before, but now was in the front and center with everything else going on. Jake took her hand though, and when she felt the heat of his palm against hers, momentarily she forgot about her questions and her doubts.

“Come on!” he shouted. “Hold tight. I might be going fast,” he said as she hopped up behind him and hugged the bike with her knees and his torso with her arms. Mali clung fast to his shirt, digging her nails into the fabric and getting handfuls even though they weren’t moving yet. “All right,” Jake whispered as he stood, and kicked at the started. “All right, Danniken, calm down. Keep your brain calm. Just keep calm.”

“Is this like one of those personal affirmation things?” Mali asked with a grin.

“I can’t explain this,” Jake said, “and not because I’m trying to be secretive.”

The engine throbbed heavily, the muffler barely muffling the bike’s engine. Mali’s entire body shook with the raw, three hundred horse power strength between her legs. She smiled again, this time because she had the strange idea this was going to be one hell of an adventure—and that’s a thought that
never
would have appeared to the old Mali. So, something was changing past her eyes and ears. She scratched the back of her neck and was a little surprised, though not terribly, to find extra hair, fine though it was.

When he cranked his wrist, the throttle fired heavily and loudly, giving Mali a shot of excitement. Every time she did the same thing with her own bike, she got a jolt of life, but on this thing—on this monstrous, massive road hog—it was completely different. It was like she had no real control over her own life, but she had just enough to not feel helpless. “You don’t have to explain anything,” she whispered in Jake’s ear. She spoke so quietly there was no way a normal human could have heard her over the engine’s wild, feral roar.

He popped his neck to the left, and then to the right. “It’s hard to explain,” he said, as though he was himself trying to figure out what he was talking about, and how exactly to put words to emotions he hardly understood. He was clenching his jaws, which Mali had already learned was a bad sign, but he also seemed loose and relaxed. Jake shook his head again. “I think... I’ve never really felt like I needed to protect anyone except myself before. And now, here we are.”

“You don’t need to protect me,” Mali said.

Suddenly, an acute, and very nasty pain shot up her arm. She cried out as her fist clenched itself tightly. The tendons in her hand and her arm ached deeply and sharply. It was all she could to do hold on as her other hand joined the fun. “What’s happening?” she cried out. “My hands, they’re... holy
shit
this hurts!”

She lifted her legs up off the stirrups and used those to hold on to Jake’s trim, muscled waist as her hands flared and throbbed. When she finally took control of her fingers again, every movement, no matter how small, sent shivers of agony through her fingers, all the way up to her shoulders and down her back.

“Claws,” Jake said after a moment’s thought.

“Huh?”

“Claws,” he repeated. “You’re growin’ em. I like the way it feels with your legs around me,” he said with a low, throaty growl in his voice. “This better not be the last time.”

Before Mali could reply, he gassed the throttle again, and at the same moment that the bikers ripped into the clearing, Jake let go of the brake. His back tire spun viciously, throwing tiny stones, leaves and dirt behind him in a great rainbow of earthen junk. He gunned it again, spraying off another cascade of stinging, biting rocks and tiny bits of dirt, and then let his tire catch hold.

Mali let out a squeal of laughter and grabbed on tight. Jake, then, yelped and shifted himself in the seat. “Watch those claws,” he said, laughing. “You’re about to cut my guts out!”

“Sorry!” she yelled, looking back behind them at the encroaching beasts. “Who the hell
are
these guys? They don’t quit, do they?”

“I’ve got a couple theories,” Jake said with his head turned slightly to the side. “None of which make a lot of sense. Hold on!”

Jake yanked the bike hard to the left. Mali grabbed ahold as tightly as she possibly could, and as they skidded, something flew inches above her head and struck the nearest tree, ripping out a hunk of bark. The wood exploded in a cloud of splinters, and peppered Mali’s face, tearing at her skin and drawing tiny drops of blood. “Hold on!” Jake shouted again.

“You keep saying that,” Mali said, running out of breath from the excitement.

“We can’t get away. We gotta do something stupid.”

“Something else, you mean?” Mali cackled with laughter. Electric surges coursed through her veins, lighting every nerve on fire and sending her into a deliciously dangerous ecstasy. When Jake heaved the big bike around in a half circle and revved the engine toward the small gaggle of bearded, vest-wearing bikers, she realized what “something stupid” meant. “We’re going...
at
them?” she asked.

Jake jerked the handlebars up, and let out a loud, almost deafening roar. “You wanted to learn how to be a wolf?” he asked. “Here’s your first lesson.”

Mali’s eyes were the size of Golden Corral dinner plates, and just about as jumbled up and confused. “How?”

“Don’t think,” Jake said, “just
feel
. Now!”

He jumped off the bike and without giving it a second thought, Mali followed him. The motorcycle careened into the rider in front, bashing him and the two men behind him into the air like bowling pins. One of them let out a screech, but the others were silent. Fire launched into the sky in a great column. For a hair of a second, Mali watched the conflagration, wondering what the hell just happened.

Jake threw his head back and roared as his shirt split down the middle, his muscled back now covered with wiry, steel-gray fur and twice as wide as it had been when he was human. Mali’s eyes darted around, unable to focus on a single target for more than a fraction of a second. The riders in the second line, which had been about fifty yards behind the outriders, were raging toward them, but Jake took a second to pick one of the fallen ones up, shake him, then toss him aside. His body hit a tree like a sleeping bag full of Spam.

“How?” Mali asked again, her voice growing to a desperate pitch. “I don’t know what I’m doing!”

“Just let go,” Jake said. His voice was gruff and raspy. “Don’t think,” he repeated, “feel!”

Mali shook her head and clenched her fists. She closed her eyes tight, squeezing them together to try and concentrate, though on what she didn’t know. Four riders were bearing down on them, only seconds away. Jake dove at one, yanking him off his motorcycle, but before he could do anything else, the other three jumped on Jake, taking him to the ground in what looked like a tornado of fangs, claws and fur.

He clocked one of them in the jaw, and drug his claws across the next one’s chest. “Mali!” he shouted, “little help here!”

But it was too late. One of the two remaining riders grabbed one of Jake’s arms and twisted him into a full nelson as the other drove a fist straight into his stomach. A yelp of pain hit Mali’s ears, and the next thing she knew, her vision flooded with a crimson tinge.

“No!” she screamed, “no!”

Momentarily caught off guard by her violent protest, the shaggy, gnarly looking wolf holding Jake helpless turned his head toward her. She felt things she couldn’t explain: her teeth elongating, her fingers curling into claws, her toes tearing at the soles of her shoes and stretching until they audibly tore through the canvas on her feet.

Her vision swam. Ripples that seemed to careen through reality at once confusing and exciting Mali as her brain tried to make sense of everything happening. Her senses erupted, and a zen-like calm settled in. She looked around, and the world seemed to move in slow motion, though she was going at hyper speed.

The biker punched Jake again in the stomach, but that was the last one.

Mali dove forward, wildly clawing at the nasty creature’s face, chest and arms. She dug in, then gave him a nasty bite square in the neck. He threw his head around, screeching and whining, trying to detach her, but having absolutely no luck at all.

Jake went to one knee, clutched his stomach, and hoisted himself back to his feet. By the time he was back up, Mali’d made an absolute mess out of one of the bikers, and had the other one clutched by the throat, pinned against a tree trunk. She had a tooth-baring on her lupine face and a streak of blood on her forearm, which then was covered in coppery fur that matched her hair. She and Jake caught each other’s gaze and watched one another for a brief moment.

“What now?” Mali growled in a voice that surprised her when it came out of her mouth. She touched her throat, which was covered in coarse fur, and felt not fingers, but claws when she did.

Jake pointed into the distance. “More coming,” he said. “I’m hurt, you’re two days old. We should probably get—”

A net fell on Jake, and two hard, heavy balls thumped against Mali’s legs in one second, and in the next, she fell flat on her face. The taste of dust and leaves filled her mouth and nose.

“Oh lookie here!” a cheerful voice, thick and sloshy and syrupy, hit her ears. She managed to flop over on her back and look in Jake’s direction right when the unheard, unseen newcomer planted a boot in Jake’s gut. He groaned, but didn’t cry out. After the boot to the stomach came a kick to the head, and after that, Jake didn’t cry out because he was cold unconscious.

“No!” Mali cried out. “Who the hell are you? What do you want with us?”

The big, leather-clad wolfman was fully human, but she knew what lay underneath his vest and his skin. She
sensed
the beast inside him, only this one gave her a shiver as though his distastefulness physically repulsed her.

“Ain’t what I want,” the man said, “I get paid to do this. I’m here for you and your little boyfriend. Gonna take you two ta’ my boss and get a big pile of cash. I’ll prolly spend it on new chrome. Or maybe I’ll buy a bunch’a hamburgers and whiskey. I dunno. That’s the great thing about life, ain’t it? Never know quite what’s gonna happen next.”

Mali shook herself and then felt a sharp, awful pain in her lower back. She twisted around to find another of the riders holding a syringe. “Special sauce,” he said with a dumb grin. “That should be enough, but ain’t gonna kill ya.”

As Mali’s vision started wobbling and a cacophony of bizarre aromas—almonds, grape jelly, grass—filled her nose, Jake stirred. She watched as he thrashed for a second, then went still when he realized he was only making the net cinch down tighter. “Who... how did you...?” he managed, before running out of air.

Other books

The Skull by Philip K. Dick
Ember Island by Kimberley Freeman
Unnatural Exposure by Patricia Cornwell
Captain by Phil Geusz
Typhoon by Shahraz, Qaisra
Slave to the Rhythm by Jane Harvey-Berrick
Arcadio by William Goyen
Dead Past by Beverly Connor