Five minutes later, I’m sitting on the couch watching Sara roll around the floor with the mysterious white cat and I’m not only praying it doesn’t have fleas, but also wondering how the hell I’m going to explain to Caine we’ve somehow acquired a new cat when I wasn’t supposed to leave the camper.
This is bad.
An absurd level of panic keeps rising in my chest, even as I try to convince myself it’s fine.
"We’re keeping it, right?" Jer asks, his arm around Sadie as he watches his sister play with the cat.
I shift uneasily. "I don’t think the cat wants to stay with us." Better to blame the strange feline than my fear over Caine’s temper.
Even as the words leave my mouth, the white cat stretches languidly across Sara’s belly, looking for all the world like a giant, furry limp noodle. Its eyes close to contented slits as her small fingers trace patterns through its suspiciously pristine fur.
Shouldn’t a cat out in the wild like this be—I don’t know... dirtier? Especially when it’s white.
"It looks like it wants to stay with us," Jer points out, eyebrows raised like I’m the one not seeing reason here.
"Oh, please?" Sara begs, soft and pleading. She cradles the cat against her chest even though it’s longer than her torso, and the cat purrs louder.
I rub at my closed eyes with a groan. Caine’s going to be so mad when he gets back, and he should be back any minute. Not just mad—furious.
I was supposed to be inside with the doors locked, not chasing mysterious animals across open fields. And I’m pretty sure I definitely wasn’t supposed to bring one of those animals back inside.
Especially a cat.
A disgruntled huff comes from under the dinette. Fenris sulks in the shadows. His storm-gray eyes track the cat’s every movement, ears pinned back against his skull. After I told him to leave the cat alone, he retreated to pout like an overgrown puppy.
Meanwhile, Sadie’s practically vibrating beside Jer, her golden body trembling with the effort of restraint. She whines every so often, desperate to get to the cat but not being allowed to.
I’ve got her leash wrapped around my wrist, just in case. Cats and dogs aren’t supposed to mix. Probably not with wolves, either.
"We can’t keep it," I say, trying to sound firm even as Sara’s face falls. "It probably belongs to someone, and we’re not exactly in a position to adopt pets right now."
"It doesn’t have a collar," Ron points out. Isn’t he supposed to be my most helpful kid? And now he’s working against me, too. "And it came right to you, didn’t it?"
"That doesn’t mean anything," I counter. "Cats can come to anyone if they’re friendly enough."
And if this particular cat is the same one I saw before... what are the odds?
I mean, we’re in the same general area, but it shouldn’t be possible...
Bun jerks upright in Ron’s lap out of nowhere, and turns around to blink as she looks around the room. Her eyes are still glazed from sleep, but she pushes his hands away when he tries to pull her against him.
Then she sees the cat and squeals. All semblance of sleepiness fades as she dives off her brother’s lap.
He catches her before she falls head-first onto the floor, setting her upright. "Be careful. We have to be gentle, okay?"
She babbles something nonsensical as she toddler-stomps her way across the floor, squatting next to Sara and the cat. Little whiskers sprout on her face, and she meows.
The cat just turns its head and gently bumps its nose against Bun’s outreached fingers.
"Lie?" Jer suggests helpfully, earning a sharp look from Sara.
"Don’t be stupid," she snaps. "Alpha wolves can smell lies."
The camper rocks as someone steps on the stairs, and all of us freeze.
I move to stand between the door and Sara, as if my body can somehow hide the evidence of my disobedience.
The door swings open, and Caine fills the frame, his broad shoulders blocking the light from outside as he looms in menacing Lycan fashion. His gray eyes immediately lock onto mine. "I leave you for thirty minutes and you bring home another pet?"
What the hell? Did he smell it as soon as he walked in?
Fenris huffs, and I freeze. Of course. Caine already knows. His wolf was here the entire time, and probably told him everything.
I’m so screwed.
Squeezing my hands together, I suck in a deep breath. "The kids want to keep it."
"Of course they do." He tosses the keys onto the dinette and closes the door behind him. Then he steps forward, grabs my wrist, and drags me to Lyre’s bedroom as energy surges immediately at the contact.
"Wait, why are you—"
"We need to talk," he snaps.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Grace of a Wolf (by Lenaleia)
Grace needs to get a grip of herself and starts acting like a responsible adult if she wants Caine to treat her as his equal and trust her being a strong capable woman...
All the things she is thinking in her head, she should just tell him like that. Nothing wrong in saying she wants to be treated as equal, have responsibilities....
Well... i "acquired" as you say this child a couple of hours ago! Obviously I didn't make her overnight! 😅🤣...
Ferris 😍😍 Caine is definitely not the brightest bulb in the pack! 😅Thanks God Jack-Eye is smarter! 😉...
This girl is really slow to understand despite living with wolf for so many years.🙄 Caine is a caveman 🤦🏼♀️...
Yet again the wolf is smarter than the man.... Caine is missing really missing interactions skills!...
Fighting the obvious! I love 😍 Fenris! The escape plan is a dead one, completely...
So his wolf can separate and they speak together? Interesting 🤔😊 that's new...