Dedicated to the two guys who remind me daily what love, loyalty, and friendship truly meanmy husband, Karl, and my son, Jaiden. The right words dont exist in any language to completely describe just what you both mean to me.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Acknowledgments
Also by Shannon Delany
Copyright
PROLOGUE
A LITTLE MORE THAN A YEAR AGO
In a seemingly standard suburban sprawl outside the city of Farthington something has gone wrong.
Sharp sidewalks and careful y clipped lawns hem in the town houses and flank the expected al otment of single homes. Its a quiet neighborhood, where everyone appears to know everyone else. But things are not always as they seem, and people are seldom only what their neighbors expect.
In one such innocuous yard a man natural y inclined to an animal grace staggers. Tal and broad shouldered like his elder son Max, and lean as his youngest, Pietr, hes dark as any Rusakova, with only a hint of silver in his hair.
Even so young a father, his life is nearly over. Not because of the poor choices he made as a younger manchoices that caused his wife to give their children her name rather than hisbut because regardless of how normal the setting seems, Andrei is far from the norm.
He sways by the picket fence, the traditional American symbol for happiness, successthe elusive American dream. But to him, even pretty fences make a common cage. He glares toward the neighbors house, a powder blue Cape Cod, and his wife lopes out of their home, crossing the yard on quick and quiet feet.
Slender and lithe as their daughter Catherine but with heavy highlights of red streaking her rich brown hair like coppery lightning, Tatiana tilts her head, nostrils flaring in question. Her eyebrows draw together, and she circles him. Come inside, she pleads, laying a hand on his arm.
He shakes it off like a dog throwing off the rain. Face red with rage, his fiery gaze stays fixed on their neighbors home. The way he watches you
She blushes, fearing the shame is shared although she tempts the man unwittingly. With its very existence the animal that skitters and claws beneath her human skin cal s to some men, entices and ensnares their weaker senses.
The door of the blue Cape Cod opens and the man steps out, waving boldly at her. The smile stretching his lips does nothing to mask his unwanted attentions.
The sun slips away, leaving a bloody smear across the southern mountaintops. These are the dangerous hours, when the skin feels loosest on the wolf within and the beast in the human-seeming breast grows more anxious to burst free.
I wil rrrip out his hearrrt
As her husband springs across the fence with a snarl, Tatiana fears that although this is not the first time a man has acted indecently toward her, this might be the only time it matters.
Its a race up the broad porch stairs to the neighbor, who doesnt even have enough sense to go inside, bolt the door, and lock himself in a closetto wait out the dawn and pray for reason to override rage.
Instead he stands there. Spreads his legs in a fighting stance. Off my porch, Rusakova, he growls.
The sound is nothing compared to the noise tearing out of Andrei. Coursing through his chest, the twisting growl erupts as he takes the porchs final three steps in one smooth leap.
His hands on the man who stares openly at his wife, Andreis words are too thick with anger to be clear.
A growl, a slurlanguage matters little when actions speak louder than words. And Andreis actions speak wrath, revenge hate. So fluently.
The man flops in his grasp, fighting stance forgotten as he screams and lands sloppy and panicked punches on Andreis face as it twists and pulses and pops. Changes
Someone appears at the window, shoves the curtains aside, mouth drawn into an o of terror. The leerers wifethe mouse he ignores except when he publicly berates her. She thrusts her son from her side, and the curtain fal s back across the window.
Behind him, the mans door clicks shut; the lock bolts into place with a slithering sound. There wil be no retreat.
Tatiana pushes between the men, grunting with exertion. Stop, she urges, eyes wide.
Lights flash, coloring the dimming neighborhood quickly fal ing into dusk with red, white, and blue as a siren wails its way down the normal y quiet suburban street.
Not finished with you, Andrei, half-turned, yowls. He throws the man across his shoulder and lopes around the house, into the tree-fil ed backyard and the shadows that threaten to solidify beyond.
With a glance toward the street, Tatiana sets her jaw and fol ows her husband, disappearing into the growing darkness.
A swarm of uniformed officers mount the porch stairs, as one unmarked SUV slips silently past the house, daring to scatter the darkness with its piercing headlights.
In the Rusakovas home Catherine presses her face to the window, Pietr by her side. Unable to be much help, the twins are more than a year outside their first ful change.
Pacing, Alexi refuses to change and go. His shaking fingers drag through his hair, but he rejects Catherines pleas and ignores Pietrs threats. Begging until her voice is nothing but a reedy whine, Catherine sobs; her tears smear the glass, and the world outside seems to ripple. Pietr pul s her away, silently wrapping her in his arms.
And as vehemently as Alexi refuses to go, there is no place hed rather be than beside the parents who adopted him and have kept his secretthat he is nothing like his siblings and is simply, horrendously, human.
The one Rusakovathe one wolfable to help is missing. Spending one more night in the arms of anonymous girls, Max is living his short life as fast as he can.
In the woods not far from the backyard stands the tragic threesome. Tatiana, shaken by frustration into her ruddy wolfskin, circles the rivals for her attention, growling. Andrei releases the man, speaking to the worried wolf in a most guttural Russian. His words impeded by long and pointed teeth, he searches for an worried wolf in a most guttural Russian. His words impeded by long and pointed teeth, he searches for an explanation, some justification. Distraught, he wavers as his metabolismhis canine bitsburns through the drug or drink that had such a hold on him.
Their neighbor looks around, contemplates escape. His jeans soiled from something fouler than the tears streaking his frightened face, he watches the werewolves warily.
Al eyes suddenly focus on something someoneshrouded in the shadows. The wolf Tatiana howls at the betrayal as a smile once again slides across the leerers lips.
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