Hunted (Pack of Dawn and Destiny, #1)(21)
It’s good for him. It teaches him patience—surely all leaders are always in need of learning to have more patience! Besides, he can’t fault me for making sure he’s pursued in an orderly fashion that doesn’t disrupt city or Pack business.
It helped that it would usually be the visiting werewolves Greyson would be most irked with—though he was too good at his control to ever lose it in front of them.
“Let me find today’s date…” I skimmed through his weekly calendar—I snuck into his office on Sunday evenings when he was always out for a Pack run to make sure I had the most up-to-date version of his schedule that I could get.
Hector had tried locking me out, but it is difficult to keep a determined hunter out of a locked room. Particularly when she’s an excellent climber and there is a very handy tree just outside.
(Wolves are excellent at fighting. Subterfuge? Not so much.)
“It is 12:45, which means…” I smoothed out the paper that held the day’s schedule. “He is either just wrapping up a meeting with his beta, Hector, in the Pack lodge—it’s the large star here.” I pointed to the map that marked out all the clothing drops posted around town, tapping my finger on the giant star seemingly in the middle of the forest.
“Or, if that meeting wrapped up early, it means he’s off on his 1:00 time slot, which is…oof. That’s his personal training time. Well, that means he’d most likely be in these areas, which are sanctioned for fights.” I pointed out a few bare spots among the trees. “I’d head over to the Pack lodge fast. He’s never happy about his training time getting interrupted.” I slapped the binder shut and shoved it into the depths of my desk.
“If you can’t find him, come back here or give me a call and I’ll help you track him down,” I said. “Just remember: be discreet.” I tapped my fingers on my desktop for emphasis. “If you charge in, he’ll have someone escort you away.”
Which would then give them less time to potentially annoy him, and I can’t have that!
“We understand,” the brunette said.
“Thank you!” The blond gave me a gorgeous smile before she and her friend hurried off, the doorbell jingling as they sauntered out of the building.
“Good luck!” I called after them just before the door swung shut—it didn’t matter, they’d hear me with their superior wolf hearing.
Shania stretched like a cat. “You really mean that, don’t you?”
“Of course,” I said. “I want them to find Greyson. It will annoy him to the point of distraction, and he can’t do anything about it.”
“I swear you’re more invested in Alpha Greyson’s love life than he is,” Shania said. “But Aeric and Wyatt are just as bad as you, if not worse.”
“The Pack is justifiably concerned about it, because Greyson’s missing mate means he’s in pain—to a certain extent.”
“Maybe.” Shania dug her keys out of her pockets and jangled them. “I’m going for real, now. I’m supposed to meet Aeric, and I’m late now. Oh, but I have to say I admire how you handle Greyson’s dating candidates. I’d never be able to lecture a werewolf about staying clothed, knowing they could just reach across the desk and throttle me.”
“It’s all in the firmness,” I said. “They can smell it when you’re scared—your sweat glands give it away. But if you act like you don’t care and can keep your cool, you can pull them into your space, and they’ll listen.”
“I think it’s just because it’s you,” Shania said.
“Not hardly,” I snorted. “Though I will admit my puppy pheromones help. I know as long as I mind my manners, they won’t swat me.”
Shania started walking backward to the door. “See, it’s your can-do attitude like that, that got you stuck working the welcome center where they need someone to mind visiting werewolves when you could be doing so much more!”
My smile turned a little wooden, but I forced a laugh as Shania reached the door. “Yeah, maybe. Have a nice lunch with Aeric!”
I waited until Shania left before dropping my smile.
She couldn’t have known the emotional bomb she’d almost stepped on.
What was I doing here?
Given that I lived in that uncomfortable not-Pack-but-not-human state, there was nothing keeping me in Timber Ridge since Mama Dulce and Papa Santos had passed away.
I could go anywhere.
I should go anywhere but here. Then I’d maybe have a chance to get a life.
Most annoyingly, I’d tried.
I’d left Timber Ridge first for college, but I transferred to online classes and came back after one semester because I’d been absolutely miserable away from Timber Ridge. I didn’t regret coming back, it was a short time later that Mama Dulce and Papa Santos died, so those last few seasons we had together were that much sweeter since I was home with them.
But I’d tried twice since then to leave Timber Ridge.
Both times I’d been so homesick it hurt to breathe, and I’d come back within a week.
It has to be that I hang out with wolves all the time. They’re such homebodies, they’re wearing off on me.
I sighed and slipped out from behind my desk, heading to the gift shop.