Excerpts
These are excerpts from my published works or works in progress.
These are excerpts from my published works or works in progress.
It’s time for the next tidbit in Sand and Amanda’s story! The first bit is pretty much an info dump. This is how I write my first draft. I just dump a bunch of info that I want the reader to know. On my second draft I go back and do a lot of cutting and rearranging. But you poor readers are getting the raw product here with this. I hope you can enjoy it anyway. đ
Snow grabbed the saddlebag to carry into the house before following Paint up the back steps to a kitchen. Sand looked carefully around, noting the strange appliances, as the three of them passed through the kitchen to a narrow hall that led into an office. Three tall windows were set in a rounded wall facing the door, pouring light into the room. A man in a suit and tie sat at the desk, looking down at a stack of papers before him. His dark hair was short, and his hands looked elegant and pampered holding a pen. Who the hell wore a suit to sit at a desk?
The man looked up, blue eyes narrow under black brows, then he stood. He was as pretty as a girl, Sand thought derisively, before amazement unhinged his jaw.
âSky?â he yelped.
The man grinned, then, a dimple biting into his cheek beside his mouth. âSand. I know itâs you by that broken tooth.â The grin deepened. âBreaking that tooth is one of my happiest memories.â
âItâs only chipped,â Sand said with dignity that dissolved under Skyâs fierce embrace. It had been a long time since heâs seen Sky, and he had seemed like some prissy city stranger sitting at the desk. Now, feeling the emotion in that embrace, Sand knew he was still Sky. Changed by his years in Omaha, sure, but still Sky.
Sky released Sand and did the same to Snow, before lightly punching his shoulder. âYou! Snow, you are the reason I was on kitchen duty so much. Whose idea was it to sit out in the hall outside the Lupa and the Chiefâs room when they made love?â
Snow laughed. âThat was a long time ago! We were all just kids back then. Besides, it was Paintâs idea to spy.â
Paint raised his hands. âOh, no, you canât blame me for that!â
They all laughed. After a moment Snow sobered, running his gaze from Skyâs glossy black shoes to his gray-blue slacks with their perfect creases to the matching coat, crisp white shirt and navy blue tie. âYou cut your hair. You donât look like yourself. Whatâs happened to you?â
Skyâs face retained the smile, but somehow it seemed to Sand as if a door had closed. Sky propped one hip on the edge of his desk. âLike you said, itâs been a long time. People grow up. So, are you here to work with me or just visiting? I can always use more muscle to keep the visitors in line.â
âWeâre here for a couple of months. We can help you out. But Sandââ
Sand cut him off. âI found my mate, Sky. Sheâs here in Omaha, somewhere. You have to help me find her!â
Sky stared for a moment, his level brows pulled low. âOf course.â He looked down at his feet, crossing one ankle over the other and apparently examining the shine on his shoe. âYou realize, donât you, that if she is in Omaha she is probably either already married or working in a house?â
That had been the thought circling his mind like a caged beast ever since heâs recognized his mate. He didnât want his feelings exposed on his face, so he bent his head and joined in the examination of Skyâs shoe. Â âI know,â he said softly.
Sky reached a hand to give him a comforting punch in the arm. âBut you never know. Maybe her family is well off and theyâre able to afford to pay the tax.â
Sand didnât know anything about rich women. Had she been wearing rich womanâs clothes? âYeah, maybe.â
Snow dug in the saddlebag. âBefore we get into Sandâs mate, hereâs the letters from home.â
Sky took them and leafed through them until he came to the one with Roseâs handwriting on the outside. As far as Sand knew, this was the first letter Rose had written to Sky since she’d found out he was running a House in Omaha. Skyâs hand clenched on the envelope so tightly his knuckles shone white, and that invisible door opened just enough to show the edge of raw emotion before slamming shut again. âThanks.â He set the envelopes casually on the desk behind him. âSo, tell me about your mate.â
âSheâ s beautiful,â Sand said immediately. âI know every man says that about his mate, but mine truly is. Her hair is long and it shines in the sun. Her skin is very pale.â Words failed him when he remembered her soft, curved body. âShe has a painting on her arm and her shoulder.â
âA tattoo,â Snow put in.
Sky nodded, using one finger to scratch his chin. âWhat was the tattoo of?â
Snow shrugged, looking at Sand. Sand shrugged helplessly. âI donât know. It went from here,â he touched his elbow and drew his fingers up the outside of his arm, over his shoulder to his heart, âand went here. Do you know her, Sky?â
Sky looked at Paint. âMaybe,â he said at last. âI know of a few women who fit that description. Weâll find her, Sand. Not now; itâs late in the afternoon. But weâll find her, I promise. Why donât you get them settled in, Paint? Iâm going to my room to read my letter. My letters,â he corrected himself.
Sandâs wolf didnât want to wait even another minute to start the hunt for his mate, but Sand forced him down. His mate was here in Omaha. He would find her. Sky had his letters in his hand, running his thumb over and over the one with Roseâs handwriting on it. Sky must be anxious to read Roseâs words.
âSure,â Paint said. âIâll get them beds out back and then show âem around.â
Sky got up from his lean on the desk. âIâm glad youâre here,â he told Snow and Sand with fervent honesty. âIâll see you tomorrow and weâll start the hunt for your mate.â
Sand watched him go out. âHeâs not the same, is he?â he asked Paint in a low voice, knowing how good wolf hearing was.
âNo,â Paint agreed. âCome on. Iâll show you the house. We need to keep our voices down. Mostly the ladies nap in the afternoon.â
Sand wanted to ask about the women, but decided to wait. The house was like nothing heâd ever seen before. The Clan mostly roamed all over the Plains in search of good hunting during summer, and lived in either lodges or small plain houses in the Sacred Lands in winter. The den had once been a motel that the Pack had converted to their home. One or two wolves shared a room, but spent most of their time in the rec room or outdoors. The den was comfortable. This house, for all its fancy woodwork and furniture, was not. He followed Paint and Snow through the kitchen into a narrow hall that went to a large room with a long narrow table at it. The dining room was connected to what Paint called a receiving room. Apparently there were two large receiving rooms divided by a staircase, and the hall upstairs was open except for more of the fussy railing from the staircase.
âThe ladiesâ rooms are on the second floor, and Skyâs suite is on the third floor.â Paint opened the door in a spacious entry area. âThere are dorms for the workers in back. Youâll be in the menâs dorm, of course.â
Of course. After they walked around the house and past the stable Sand saw three long single story buildings. âThree? How many men fit in one of those?â
âThere are ten bedrooms in each, plus a lounge, kind of like the rec room back home.â
âSky has thirty men working for him?â
âNope.â Paint tossed a grin over his shoulder. âFourteen, with you two here. Weâre in the middle dorm. The other two are for the women workers.â
Snow stopped so suddenly that Sand bumped into him. âWhat? How many ladies does Sky have working in his House?â
Paint stopped and turned around. âThere are eight who do the kind of work youâre thinking about. Thereâs another twenty who do the laundry, cook the food, do the shopping, clean the house and all the rest of that. Do you know how many times the bed sheets have to be changed in one night? Thatâs a lot of laundry to do every day.â
âI thought all women who didnât get married had to work in a House here,â Snow protested.
âYep.â Paint started walking again. âNo one said what they sort of work they had to do. Here, in Skyâs House, no woman has to do work they donât want to.â
A tension he hadnât even been aware of eased up on Sandâs heart. His mate might not be a prostitute. Not, he hastily assured himself, that it mattered if she were. He would love her no matter what.
§§§§
âSo,â said Paint three hours later. âYou know what to do?â
Sand shrugged unhappily. âYou want me to just stay out here in the hall and listen for a womanâs voice to say âmonitorâ?â
âYes,â said Paint patiently. âThatâs the word the ladies use when their appointment behaves in a way she doesnât like. If you hear a woman call for a monitor, go right into the room and be sure the man isnât hurting the lady.â
Sand hadnât met any of the ladies yet, but already the knowledge that they were members of Skyâs Pack made his hackles rise at the thought of any harm coming to them. He nodded crisply. âDo I kill him?â
âNo! The lady will tell you whether the man should be escorted out or given a warning. OK? You donât have to stand. You can sit here. The appointments will begin arriving in about fifteen minutes. Your shift is three hours long. Iâll relieve you then.â
Sand watched Paint go down the stairs. He looked around the hall with its doors at regular intervals. The second floor was built like an open rectangle. Doors were set at regular intervals along the outside wall, two on each side, with a bathroom in three corners and a linen closet in the fourth. He glanced over the ornate rail that hugged the open edge of the upstairs in a graceful curve and saw the reception rooms below. If necessary he could easily leap over the rail and land. If he needed to get to the opposite side of the upstairs area he could possibly leap it.
At the top of the stairs was a small alcove with two chairs on either side of a small table. He moved over to one of the chairs and gingerly sat. The next three hours were going to be the hardest of his life. He closed his eyes and called up his memory of his beautiful mate. Soon, he assured his wolf, they would find her and claim her.
The door at the far end of the hall opened and Sand sat up straight as a scent came to him. There were a multitude of sickeningly sweet scents crowding his nose, but this one was clean and light. Deep inside, his wolf gave a mighty howl. Sand was so shocked by his wolf that he almost didnât notice the woman stepping  out of the door. She had walked right up to him before he wrestled his wolf into a semblance of submission.
Her hair, the glossy brown of polished walnut, was looped up and fastened in an intricate style that showed off her soft white throat. Sandâs gaze found the edge of a tattoo and followed it to the neckline of her robe. His mate. His mate was here!
âWell, hello,â she said in a throaty purr, looking him up and down with obvious approval. âYouâre the hall monitor for tonight?â
He nodded dumbly, barely able to keep his wolf from screaming his victory, taking in her luscious curves with awed eyes. If he touched her, even a graze as light as air with his little finger, he would seize her and carry her off to .. To where? There was nowhere in this ugly city to take his mate. His fists curled as he fought with his wolf. The wolf didnât see why they had to take her anywhere. Here was a perfectly good place to claim her.
âYou must be one of Skyâs relatives?â she asked.
The seductive shadow of a southern accent in her voice sent a shudder down his spine. He nodded again.
âI knew it. Â Youâre all so buff and handsome. Iâm Miss Amanda. You can call me Amanda.â
âAmanda,â he breathed, leaning a little closer to draw in a lungful of her scent. âIâm Sand.â
She almost knocked him off his feet when she ran the tip of one soft finger down his nose to tap his lower lip. âAnd you all have such fun names. Youâre adorable! I would love to play with your hair sometime. In fact, on my next day off, Iâll give you a freebie.â
She turned to saunter back to her door. Sandâs gaze fixed on her lush, swinging hips, pretending his feet were glued to the floor. She paused and turned back.
âOh, I forgot what I came out for. I was going to tell you that my first appointment tonight is Terry Askup. Last time he was here he was given a warning for being too rough. If it happens again, Iâd like you to escort him out.â
Sand stared at her closed door with cold goo swimming in his guts. Miss Amanda was his mate. His mate was a business woman. In a few minutes she would be entertaining a man with a history of roughness, and she might ask him to escort her appointment out.
Escort him out? The man would be lucky if his wolf didnât rip him to pieces.
This was not good.
As they led their horse down the drive around the house, Sand got a good look at the place. It was huge! Had Sky suddenly become rich? Only a rich man could afford to live in a house like this. It had a fancy porch with white columns, and lots of tall narrow windows with white woodwork around them, and rounded sections Sand didnât know what to call. He couldnât believe his little cousin lived in a house a hundred times nicer than the den. Of course, with his business he needed the space.
âHeâs got humans living here, right?â he muttered to Snow. âMust be a bitch to heat in the winter.â
âOh, sure,â Snow agreed. âMost rooms have fireplaces, but with the electricity generated by the river, itâs pretty warm anyway. The ladiesâ appointments wouldnât appreciate coming into a cold room to do their business.
That was another reason Sand didnât want to be here. He set his teeth together hard to suppress a growl. Omaha was a wealthy city with a strict code of laws, low crime, and a large police force to keep it that way. But all that was paid for by sex. When a woman reached eighteen, she either had to marry, pay a tax to remain single, or go to work in one of the cityâs whorehouses. Every cent she earned was taxed.
His dark thoughts were interrupted by a pair of men stepped onto the drive. âPaint!â Snow called joyfully.
Sand hung back a minute, examining the other man. He was a stranger with dark blond hair and brown eyes, his face hard and expressionless. Sand noted the burly shoulders and long arms. He could be trouble in a fight, Sand judged. Then Paint was pounding on his back.
âIâm glad to see you two!â he said. âNow I can head back to the den for a while. I donât mind helping Sky out, but this place gets to me. Youâll know what I mean after a week or so.â
Sand suppressed a sigh. He hadnât wanted to come in the first place. Except ⊠His mate was here. In his amazement at seeing where Sky lived, he had almost forgotten that. He had to find her!
âThis is Randy Tisdale. Heâs one of Skyâs enforcers. Randy, this is my cousin Snow and my cousin Sand. Iâll take âem in to see Sky. Youâll take care of their horse?â
Randyâs face still showed no warmth. Sand could respect that. They were strangers in his domain. âSure,â Randy said in a gravelly voice.
Snow grabbed the saddlebag to carry into the house before following Paint up the back steps to a kitchen. Sand looked carefully around, noting the strange appliances, as the three of them passed through the kitchen to a narrow hall that led into an office. Three tall windows were set in a rounded wall facing the door, pouring light into the room. A man in a suit and tie sat at the desk, looking down at a stack of papers before him. His dark hair was short, and his hands looked elegant and pampered holding a pen. Who the hell wore a suit to sit at a desk?
The man looked up, blue eyes narrow under black brows, then he stood. He was as pretty as a girl, Sand thought derisively, before amazement unhinged his jaw.
âSky?â he yelped.
The man grinned, then, a dimple biting into his cheek beside his mouth. âSand. I know itâs you by that broken tooth.â The grin deepened. âBreaking that tooth is one of my happiest memories.â
Sky came around the desk to crush him in a hug. Then he did the same to Snow, before lightly punching his shoulder. âYou! Snow, you are the reason I was on kitchen duty so much back at the den. Whose idea was it to sit out in the hall outside the Lupa and the Chiefâs room when they made love?â
Snow laughed. âThat was a long time ago! We were all just kids back then.â He sobered, running his gaze from Skyâs glossy black shoes to his gray-blue slacks with their perfect creases to the matching coat, crisp white shirt and navy blue tie. âYou cut your hair. You donât look like yourself. Whatâs happened to you?â
Skyâs face retained the smile, but somehow it seemed to Sand as if a door had closed. Sky propped one hip on the edge of his desk. âLike you said, itâs been a long time. People grow up. So, are you here to work with me or just visiting? I can always use more muscle to keep the visitors in line.â
âWeâre here for a couple of months. We can help you out. But Sandââ
Sand cut him off. âI found my mate, Sky. Sheâs here in Omaha, somewhere. You have to help me find her!â
Sky stared for a moment, his level brows pulled low. âOf course.â He looked down at his feet, crossing one ankle over the other and apparently examining the shine on his shoe. âYou realize, donât you, that if she is in Omaha she is probably either already married or working in a house?â
That had been the thought circling his mind like a caged beast ever since heâs recognized his mate. âI know,â he told the carpet softly.
Sky reached a fist to give him a comforting punch in the arm. âBut you never know. Maybe her family is well off and theyâre able to afford to pay the tax.â
They would have to be very rich to afford the yearly Single Status tax. She hadn’t been middle aged, but she didn’t look like a teenager, either. Sand didnât know anything about rich women. Had she been wearing rich womanâs clothes? âYeah, maybe.â
Snow dug in the saddlebag. âBefore we get into Sandâs mate, hereâs the letters from home.â
Sky took them and leafed through them until he came to the one with Roseâs handwriting on the outside. As far as Sand knew, this was the first letter Rose had written to Sky since she’d found out he was running a House in Omaha. Sky’s hand clenched on the envelope so tightly his knuckles shone white, and that invisible door over his face opened just enough to show the edge of raw emotion before it slammed shut again. âThanks.â He set the letters casually on the desk behind him. âSo tell me about your mate.â
Here is the second installment of Sand and Amanda’s story. Actually, I’m starting from the beginning this time, but next week I’ll just give you the next installment. Enjoy!
Wolfâs Lady
Chapter 1
Omaha, Nebraska – the new Sin City of what had once been the United States
September 2070
Â
Sand Wolfe looked at the distant wall enclosing the city of Omaha, hiding the distaste wrestling with curiosity in his belly behind a blank face. He had been here only two months ago as part of the group escorting a cousinâs mate to her uncle, but on that trip he had stayed outside the wall. He liked to run free, and living inside a dirty city was something heâd never wanted to do. Damn Snow for talking him into this.
âCâmon,â his cousin Snow muttered. âThe gate is right ahead.â
They walked, leading their single horse behind them, through an area which had once been the outskirts of Omaha. Now it was empty, all buildings and trees burned away decades before he was born to prevent attackers from sneaking up on the city. Sand flicked a glance up at one of the watch towers built into the wall, his excellent eyesight finding two men there, and the long barrels of rifles aimed at him and Snow. The barrenness of the land gave the guards a clear line of fire. Sand forced his shoulders not to twitch.
The road led them directly to the gate. More guards were there, armed with rifles and questions.
âNames,â one guard barked at them.
âIâm Snow Wolfe,â Snow said in his quiet, gentle voice. âThis is my cousin, Sand Wolfe.â
The two guards, beefy and well fed in their olive drab uniforms and black boots, exchanged a glance, but they said nothing about the names as one wrote them in a book. Snow was actually Snow On His Fur of the Lakota Wolf Clan, and Sandâs full name was Wolf Running In Sand. The cousins showed their Lakota heritage in their waist length black braids and dark skin.
âWhatâs your business in Omaha?â
âWeâre visiting family.â
The man poised his pen over his book. âWhatâs the name of the people youâre visiting?â
âSky Wolfe.â
The guard who wasnât writing gave a low whistle. âSky, huh? Lucky. Or does he make you pay full price?â
Sand scowled to hide his confusion. Pay full price for what? The guard writing paused with his pen above the paper. âCute. Snow, sand, and sky. No sun?â
âNo.â Snowâs voice was flat.
âAlright. Ages?â
âTwenty-eight,â Sand answered.
âTwenty-seven,â said Snow.
The man wrote it down. âHow long are you staying?â
Snow raised his eyebrows at Sand. âTwo months maybe. Weâll head out before winter comes.â
Maybe he could stick it out that long, but Sand doubted it. He was sure they could have snuck into the city and avoided all this gab. No wolf warrior liked to be interrogated by human men who were clearly inferior. One of the guards went to their horses and searched through the saddlebags, inventorying their spare clothes and scant food stores. Sand tensed with a low growl bubbling up his throat when he pawed through the sealed letters Taye, Rose, and others from the den had sent for Sky, but the guard only noted the letters down in his book too.
âNo weapons?â he barked.
âWe both have a knife,â Snow said, touching the grip of the knife in his belt.
The guard wrote for a while longer, then tore the sheets out of his book to hand one to Sand and the other to Snow. âYour Visitor Permits. Keep those with you at all times. Theyâre good for two months, until December 1. The City Guard can ask to see them at any time and if you donât have your visitorâs permit with you, you will be escorted out of the city.â
Sand read the words on his permit. It identified him as Sand Wolf, age twenty-eight, six feet two inches tall, 170 pounds, slender build, black hair very long, brown eyes. Nose aquiline, mouth full. All accurate enough, he supposed, folding the paper and putting it on the breast pocket of his plaid cotton shirt. He rolled his lips together, wondering what the paper meant by âfullâ. He hadnât eaten anything since the rabbit his wolf had caught and eaten last night.
Once they were past the gates Sand took a deep breath and steeled himself to enter the city. âLetâs find Sky.â
***
Feeling like a wide-eyed boy from the country made Sand scowl. The city was said to have ten thousand residents. What were they all doing on the street at this moment? He could see only a few yards ahead of him on the sidewalk because it was so crowded with pedestrians. Some of them were women, and as far as he could tell they had no male escort.Â
Women, walking alone? What were their men thinking? Were they crazy? Anyone could snatch them away!
Well, maybe not. The sidewalk was full of people. If a woman screamed for help, there were plenty of men to step in. He saw more men in the olive drab uniforms and black boots standing at corners, watching the people on the sidewalk with sharp attention, noting each wagon or rider than passed on the street.
âI donât like this place,â he muttered to Snow. âWhat is that noise?â
His cousin grabbed his arm. âLook! Itâs the bus!â
A large wooden rectangle on wheels rolled laboriously up the street toward them, accompanied by a roar, like a fierce wind in January. A team pulling a wagon shied, half rearing, until the driver jumped down to pull them to the side of the road out of the way of the box. He soothed them with gentle hands until they stood quietly, only little shudders rolling through them. Sand felt kinship with them. He didnât like the noise either. He didnât see horses pulling the box, and when it passed them he saw no one pushing it. The stench it emitted made him want to gag.
âIsnât that marvelous?â Snow said enthusiastically. âI saw it last time I was here, but I didnât get to ride it. Letâs go!â
Ride in the belly of that thing? âWhat about the horse?â he said, keeping his tone mild so Snow wouldnât know he was unsettled by the evil thing. With the noxious odor lingering behind the bus, even Snowâs keen nose wouldnât detect his unease.
âOh. Right.â Shoulders slumped, Snow watched a door open in the box and steps lower. A dozen people crowded around the opening, and one by one they disappeared inside. âWell, Iâll ride it later, after we stable the horse.â
Sand started walking again. âWhy do you want to ride it? It stinks.â
âBut it goes all over Omaha. Omaha is big! Instead of walking from the river to the outer wall you could sit and ride.â
Sand slanted a glance at his cousin. âWe have feet for a reason. How hard is it toâŠ?â
A splash of color on a pale bare arm, a hand with long fingers tipped with red paint holding a railing as a woman stepped up into the bus. Sandâs heart stuttered when he noticed her. Long brown hair, glossy with health, rippled in the breeze as the woman disappeared into the box. Heâd had only the briefest glimpse of her, but the sight was seared into his brain. He watched the box roll away, almost too stunned to register his wolfâs frantic attempts to burst out, almost too stunned to be able to think. But one piece of knowledge swirled in his belly.
His mate was in Omaha. His mate was in that noisy, stinking box and she was going away from him. The hell she was going away from him! He tore at the buttons on his shirt to strip to let his wolf out, but Snow grabbed his arm hard.
“What are you doing?” his cousin hissed at him.
I thought I would continue to tell Sand and Miss Amanda’s story. I had planned for them to be a secondary story in Wolf’s Princess, but now I’m not sure they will be. But I want to tell their story, so maybe I’ll just tell it in bits and pieces here in the Tuesday Teasers. I’m beginning half-way through last week’s post. Enjoy!
The door at the far end of the hall opened and Sand sat up straight as a scent came to him. There were a multitude of sickeningly sweet scents crowding his nose, but this one was clean and light. Deep inside, his wolf gave a mighty howl, pushing him to his feet. Sand was so shocked by his wolf that he almost didnât notice the woman stepping  out of the door. She had walked right up to him before he wrestled his wolf into a semblance of obedience.
âWell, hello,â she said in a throaty purr, looking him up and down with obvious approval. âYouâre the hall monitor for tonight?â
He nodded dumbly, taking in her luscious curves with awed eyes.
âYou must be one of Skyâs relatives?â
He nodded again.
âI knew it. Â Youâre all so buff and handsome. Iâm Miss Amanda. You can call me Amanda.â
âAmanda,â he breathed, leaning a little closer to draw in a lungful of her scent. âIâm Sand.â
She almost knocked him off his feet when she ran the tip of one soft finger down his nose to tap his lower lip. âAnd you all have such fun names. Youâre adorable! I would love to play with your hair sometime. In fact, on my next day off, Iâll give you a freebie.â
She turned to saunter back to her door. Sandâs gaze fixed on her lush, swinging hips. She paused and turned back.
âOh, I almost forgot what I came out for. I was going to tell you that my first appointment tonight is Terry Askup. Last time he was here he was given a warning for being too rough. If it happens again, Iâd like you to escort him out.â
Sand stared at her closed door with cold goo swimming in his guts. Miss Amanda was his mate. His mate was a business woman. In a few minutes she would be entertaining a man with a history of roughness, and she might ask him to escort her appointment out.
Escort him out? Hell, the man would be lucky to leave alive. The wolf inside snarled at the idea of any man making an appointment with Miss Amanda. Sand exerted all his will to force the wolf back. He was not entirely successful.
This was not good.
****
Amanda glanced at the clock and stretched out on her side on the bed, allowing her robe to show a hint of her filmy nightdress in a demure but subtly sensual pose she knew Terry would like. It was her job to know what her appointments would like and provide it to them. Terry preferred his women to be submissive and present a façade of innocence even while they drove him wild in bed. Submissive and innocent wasnât Amandaâs thing, but she took pride in her reputation as a woman worth every penny of her fee, so for Terry sheâd be submissive and innocent.
Footsteps paused outside her door. She adjusted the neck of her nightdress to show a hint of cleavage and looked at the door with wide eyes, trying for a surprised expression, as innocent as a schoolgirl and as provocative as Eve.
Surprise became real when Sand stepped in and slammed the door behind him. She jerked into a sitting position on the bed, thinking he was gorgeous. Out in the hall he had been cute, with that one imperfect tooth and tongue-tied stammer, but now, with his hip length black hair gleaming in the lamp light and black eyes fixed fiercely on her, he was a beautiful, deadly animal.
âSand! Whatâs wrong? Whereâs Terry?â
âTerry,â he snarled, his upper lip lifting. âHe wonât be visiting you tonight. Or ever again.â
âWhat?â she began. âWhy?â
Sand dragged her up off the bed and held her while he looked her over thoroughly. His gaze was hot enough to brand her. She couldnât miss the bulge straining the front of his jeans, and an answering heat lit in her. That was strange. She didnât usually become aroused so easily. But Sand was amazingly compelling. She stroked her fingers down his cheeks.
âSaturday is all yours, handsome,â she promised in a whisper.
âTonight,â he corrected her hoarsely. âIâve cancelled all your appointments for tonight.â
She wasnât sure if she should laugh or scream. âWell, who said you could do that?â
âI did. Paintâs taking my place in the hall.â His face was very calm when he bent close to her, but hints of wildness showed in the set of that wide mouth. âTell me to go, and I will. But tell me now, because you canât change your mind later.â
He smelled so good. His body beneath the cotton shirt and jeans was lean and muscular. Most of her appointments were middle aged men with bodies made soft by an easy life of wealth. They were the only ones who could afford her price. Looking at the barely constrained strength in Sandâs body made her want to experience his lovemaking.
She placed her hands over the taut curve of his pectoral muscles and stroked down to his narrow waist where his belt buckle gleamed. âTake your clothes off, Sand.â
This is a very tiny snip from one of the secondary stories from Wolf’s Princess. In Omaha, when a woman turns 18, she has three choices: marry, pay a tax to stay single, or go to work in one of the three whorehouses in town. Some women enjoy being “business women”, especially those who work in Sky’s House. He treats them like beloved sisters and any customer who tries to misbehave with them is shown no mercy by the Sky or the wolves who have come to work in the House.
One of those ladies is Miss Amanda, a full figured woman with long mahogany brown hair and flamboyant tattoos spiraling around one arm, over her shoulder to her breast. She’s worked for Sky for three years, and although she doesn’t mind the work and she loves the freedom it gives her, for the past few months she’s been thinking of settling down. She has enough money to pay the Single Status Tax for years to come, and more than enough to pay the Marriage Tax, but she doesn’t know exactly what she wants in a man. Sky would make a fine husband, but he’s taken.
Sand Wolfe came to Omaha as part of the escort Taye sent with Rose. He’s both fascinated and horrified by Omaha. He decides to hang a round for a few months, and Sky puts him to work as additional protection for his Pack of women.
Sand stared at Sky. âYou want me to just stand out here in the hall and listen for a womanâs voice to say Cupcake?â
âYes,â said Sky patiently. âThatâs the word the ladies use when their appointment behaves in a way she doesnât like. If you hear a woman say cupcake, go right into the room and be sure the man isnât hurting the lady.â
Sand nodded crisply. âDo I kill him?â
âNo! The lady will tell you whether the man should be escorted out or given a warning. OK? You can sit here. The appointments will begin arriving in about fifteen minutes. Your shift is three hours long. Paint will relieve you then.â
Sand watched Sky go down the stairs. He looked up and down the hall with its doors at regular intervals. There were four on one side and three on the other. At the top of the stairs was a small alcove with two delicate chairs on either side of a small table. He moved over to one of the chairs and carefully sat. What was he supposed to do for three hours?
The door at the far end of the hall opened and Sand sat up straight as a scent came to him. There were a multitude of sickeningly sweet scents crowding his nose, but this one was clean and light. Deep inside, his wolf gave a mighty howl. Sand was so shocked by his wolf that he almost didnât notice the woman stepping  out of the door. She had walked right up to him before he wrestled his wolf into a semblance of submission.
âWell, hello,â she said in a throaty purr, looking him up and down with obvious approval. âYouâre the hall monitor for tonight?â
He nodded dumbly, taking in her luscious curves with awed eyes.
âYou must be one of Skyâs relatives?â
He nodded again.
âI knew it. Â Youâre all so buff and handsome. Iâm Miss Amanda. You can call me Amanda.â
âAmanda,â he breathed, leaning a little closer to draw in a lungful of her scent. âIâm Sand.â
She almost knocked him off his feet when she ran the tip of one soft finger down his nose to tap his lower lip. âAnd you all have such fun names. Youâre adorable! I would love to play with your hair sometime. In fact, on my next day off, Iâll give you a freebie.â
She turned to saunter back to her door. Sandâs gaze fixed on her lush, swinging hips. She paused and turned back.
âOh, I forgot what I came out for. I was going to tell you that my first appointment tonight is Terry Askup. Last time he was here he was given a warning for being too rough. If it happens again, Iâd like you to escort him out.â
Sand stared at her closed door with cold goo swimming in his guts. Miss Amanda was his mate. His mate was a business woman. In a few minutes she would be entertaining a man with a history of roughness, and she might ask him to escort her appointment out.
This was not good.
Â
Wow! It’s already December? We’re getting a lot of snow the next few days, and then the temperatures are supposed to drop. Highs between -5 and -11, lows between -10 and -24. For Celsius folks, that’s between -20 and -31. A bit nippy even for North Dakota. I guess we’ll have a white Christmas at least! Here is a scene I wrote a while back, and it takes place a few months before Quill leaves Omaha to return to the den.
âIâve waited all my life to have a mate of my own.â Snake’s voice was low. âBetween the ages of ten and twenty I barely ever saw a woman up close, but I always wondered what it would be like to have a mate. Someone who was mine to take care of and love. I dreamed of it. In my dreams my mate loved me and I would do anything for her.â His dark eyes looked directly at her. âI would never do anything to hurt you, Melissa.â
She hated being called her full name. âI believe you,â she told the bedpost.
âNo.â His hand lifted and swayed from side to side as if to disperse her words like campfire smoke drifting in his face. âYouâre afraid of me. I smell it on you from time to time.â
Mel resisted the urge to hunch her shoulders. She also forced her instant denial back. âMaybe I am. But I know I donât need to be. Youâve been really decent to me. All your friends have been nice too.â
âThen why? Is it my wolf?â
Her shabby bedroom faded to be replaced by a nearly bare hotel room. She felt Randy Fosseâs hard hands digging cruelly into her shoulders to hold her down on the bed while Jim yanked on her shirt. The bruising pressure on her shoulders suddenly lifted, and a huge gray wolf tore into Jim Fosse, slinging saliva and blood over herâŠ
âYeah,â Snake said in a near whisper. âThereâs that scent. It is my wolf, isnât it?â
“I can take care of myself.” Mel swept her thumb over the butt of her pistol. âDad taught me to shoot before I was ten, and I’ve been wearing this gun ever since. Iâm never unprotected.â
His laugh surprised her. âGlad to hear it.â He glanced over at the pot of wash water on the stove. âLooks like the waterâs warm. Letâs get going on these dishes.â
Mel let out a shaky laugh. âOkay. Iâll get started if youâll bring in the dishes from the dining room.â
After he went out to collect dishes, Mel braced herself with her hands against the sinkâs rim for a long breath. Her husband was a stranger. A strange stranger, whose attitudes threw her off stride, but she thought she liked him. He didnât push for details sheâd rather forget. And he wasn’t grabby.
When he came in, holding a pile of dishes that would have taken two of her brothers to carry, she was busy at the sink. He set the dishes on the counter and took the washrag himself. âIâll wash and you dry. You know where things go better than I do.â
How odd that a werewolf washed dishes with deft hands and hummed while he scrubbed. Again, that domestic image clashed with her memory of his snarls and growls in the hotel room. Which was the real Snake?
âOh,â he remarked, as if the thought had just come to him, âI wonât be sleeping on the floor tonight. Iâll be joining you on your bed.â
A plate slipped from her hands to shatter on the floor. She blinked down at the scattered shards for a moment before realizing her mouth was gaping wide. She closed her mouth and stared at him. This shouldnât be a surprise. They were married. Her uncle had performed the ceremony yesterday. Last night she had expected him to claim his marital rights, but he had only lain down on the floor in her bedroom. She swallowed now, her breath oddly cold in her lungs, and bent to pick up the pieces of the plate.
Snake stopped her with a wet hand on her wrist. His eyes were shadowed by thick stubby lashes, and it seemed to Mel they were carefully blank. âWas that such a shock?â
âWell, yeâ I mean, no. Well, sort of.â Mel inwardly cursed herself for fumbling her words as well as the plate. She drew in a calming breath and tried to smile at him. âWeâre married. Youâve been pretty patient, but I know you want to, uh âŠâ She waved the dishtowel. âYou know.â
He took a step closer, so close she could make out each individual eyelash that shaded his eyes. âDo you want to?â
Did she? In her mindâs eye she could see through his clothes to the thickly muscled body beneath. During their trip to the ranch she had seen him switch from man to wolf and from wolf to man often enough to have memorized how he looked naked. What kind of lover would he be? Sweetly fumbling like Danny? Viciously aggressive like Rob? He was strong, stronger than a normal man. He could do serious damage to her with a single blow. Her heart slowed to sluggish thumps, as if it were beating in a vat of icy molasses.
Fingertips rough with calluses grazed her cheek. âMel?â
Her heart magically leapt free of the molasses to take off at a gallop. Staring at Snake, she jerked her head from side to side. âNo, I donât want to.â
His hand fell away. âOkay, weâll wait until youâre ready.â He turned back to the unwashed dishes and spoke quietly. âPlease donât be afraid of me.â
About a year before Wolf’s Princess starts, Rose rescued a battered tomcat from a bunch of boys who were torturing him. She named him Mr. Magic 8 Ball. The name was shortened to Mr. Magic, or just Magic. The cat is now overweight, scarred, missing most of one ear, and his tail has been broken more than once. He hates every living thing except Rose. He purrs for her. Taye would dearly love to chuck the cat out, but the creature won’t go. Rose loves that cat, and insisted on bringing him to Omaha with her. You can imagine how Sky feels about him, especially since Mr Magic believes Sky is an interloper and won’t let him near Rose’s bed.
Sky glanced around the hallway to be sure no one was watching, then lowered himself into a crouch so he could stare the nasty feline right in his baleful gold eyes. “Look, cat, this is my house. Rose is my mate. You behave yourself, or you’ll be out in the street, waddling after mice for your dinner.”
The cat yawned insultingly, the scent of fish rank on his breath. Realization ground Sky’s teeth together.
“You thieving feline,” he said with disbelief. “You ate my lunch! I’m going to– Dammit!”
He jerked back the hand he’d reached for the cat with.
Light footsteps sounded behind him. He rose swiftly to meet his mate’s angry glare. “Don’t you dare lay a hand on Mr. Magic!” she hissed.
He shoved his bleeding hand toward her. “Me? He’s the one who attacked me!”
“That’s because you scared him.” She bent to scoop the black butterball up and held him to her face, making kissing noises at him. “Poor Mr. Magic. I won’t let the nasty man hurt you. Poor little sweetie. I’m here now. You’re safe.”
Sky could swear the little beast smirked at him.
I’m TRYING to focus on Snake and Mel, but Rose and Sky keep blocking me! So I wrote this little scene to try to pacify them enough for me to get back to Wolf’s Vengeance. Let me set the scene. Rose has been in Omaha now for about 10 days, and it’s been three days since Sky moved her into his room. That afternoon they kissed–REALLY kissed– for the first time. All day Rose had thought about that kiss, wondering what it would be like to make love with Sky. This is the night he usually joins the mayor of Omaha and his cronies for their weekly poker game. This usually involves lots of liquor and women. Rose is just getting ready for bed when this scene opens.  What do you think?
At the sound of the door opening, Rose snatched her discarded blouse off the bed and held it protectively over her chest. âSky! What are you doing here? I thought you were going to be out late.â
He stood in the door, crisp white shirt unbuttoned to hang open, suit coat slung carelessly over his shoulder, the glare of electric light gleaming on the hard ripple of his abs. His stare was almost tangible. Rose shivered under the weight of it. âIâm back,â he said. âI couldnât concentrate on my cards because all I could think about was the kiss we shared this afternoon.â
A flush of pleasure warmed her. Not sexual pleasure âwell, maybe a little of it was sexualâbut happiness that the kiss had affected him as much as it had her. âWell, step out for a minute so I can put on my nightgown and robe.â
The door closed with a quiet snick. âYou wonât need them tonight.â Sky moved to her with the easy saunter of a predator who’d found his prey, the same glide sheâd seen so often in his cousins, and then his hands fisted in her hair and his mouth fastened over hers with hot greed.
With her hands exploring the feel of his arms and shoulders, only the press of his chest against hers kept her blouse from falling and leaving her exposed.  He was hard muscle covered by smooth satiny skin under the cotton of his shirt, and his mouth pushed all other thoughts out of her head. His hand, large and warm, smoothed down her bare back, and then up to cup her breast.
Her bare breast.
She managed to force an inch of space between them, panting. âWait! What are you doing?â
âPrincess, if you have to ask that, I must be doing something wrong.â
He clamped his hands over her rear end and hauled her so close to him she could feel the ridge his arousal dig into her belly. She couldnât stop herself from rubbing her core against him, needing to ease the hot ache in her body. She was a virgin, but she knew what her body wanted. She just wasnât sure she was ready for it.
âTonight,â he said in a harsh whisper into her neck. âIâve waited a long time for you, Rose. Tonight, in the bed right behind you, youâre going to accept my mate claim.â
âI am?â Her voice lifted in a cracked squeak that turned to a breathy moan when his mouth closed over her breast. She had never felt anything like it. All her curiosity about sex, her private carnal longings, rushed to the place between her thighs. Â âOh, God, Sky, I am.â