He’d never been needed as an alpha.
“Sanctuary,” he confirmed. “That’s what I’m doing. We’ll have to declare it, and that means going to Memphis. Part of me agrees with Colin, you know. Let ’em come here expecting to find Zack and the others…and find us instead. But the rest of me knows it’d be too traumatic. If even one of them got past us—” He shuddered. It was exactly what had happened to Eden. “It’s too risky.”
Colin hesitated for a moment before nodding. Fletcher grinned and lifted his coffee. “A sanctuary right on top of a human town. You’ve got big brass balls, my friend.”
Jay snorted. “Why do you think we need those wards so damn bad? Find me a witch, Shane.”
“Done.” He grinned over the top of the monitor. “Stella has to make arrangements and check with her alpha, but she’s going to get back to me by the end of the day.”
“Stella…” Colin narrowed his eyes. “She’s the one apprenticed to Keith Winston’s witch, isn’t she? Up in Red Rock?”
“That’s her. She was mentioning just the other day that it’s time for her to do some work on her own.”
“Then we’ll be glad to have her.” Jay arched an eyebrow. “Fletcher will even pay her, since he’s hot to start writing checks.”
Fletcher grinned. “My signing fingers are tingling already. I’ve always wanted to buy a witch.”
“Hire a witch,” Shane corrected. “You talk like that around Stella and she’ll bite your signing fingers off.”
“Good. She’ll fit right in with Jay’s snarly blonde.” Fletcher met Jay’s eyes, and there was a hint of challenge there. A lazy demand that Jay step up to the line. “She is yours, right?”
Eden was exactly the sort of woman Fletcher couldn’t resist. Jay suppressed a growl. “Yeah, she’s mine.”
“Well, then. Best to avoid temptation altogether. All the ladies are off limits.” Fletcher punched Colin on the shoulder lightly. “You hear that?”
Colin growled. “You touch me one more time, you’re going to lose that hand.”
“Jesus, Colin. I hope you’re more charming with the ladies.”
“I don’t need to be charming with the ladies. My face isn’t half as busted as yours.”
Jay pinched the bridge of his nose. “We’ll go to Memphis tomorrow. Shane can stay here and look out for the place. In the meantime…try not to kill each other?”
Colin stood and jerked his head toward Shane. “You need help unpacking your gear?”
“I brought my bike, so there’s not much.” Shane swept up his computer as he rose from the table. “Have to get my wireless signal booster set up, though, if you’re looking for something to do.”
“Sounds like a party.”
Fletcher lingered as the two men stomped down the porch steps. “You’ve got your hands full, all right.”
“Yeah.” He squinted at his oldest friend. “What was that? That look you gave me about Colin?”
Sighing, Fletcher rubbed a hand over his face. “It’s getting to him. He ignored me when I told him to take it slow with the vigilante work. That shit’ll eat you up if you let it, and he’s been hip deep in it for a few years now without stopping to breathe.”
And Jay was dragging him to Memphis, possibly for more bloodshed. “If we can get past the immediate danger, maybe he’ll agree to stick around for a while. Take it easy.”
“I think he needs to.” The look in Fletcher’s eyes was deadly serious. “He’s been calling me more than he used to, and lately it hasn’t just been as a friend. He needs an alpha. Ask him to stay, and I’m pretty sure he will. Maybe for a long time.”
Colin wasn’t like Fletcher. With a good enough reason—for a good enough leader—Colin would sublimate his own alpha tendencies and content himself with helping to run a pack. Fletcher, on the other hand, would push and push, driven to challenge because his instincts would accept nothing less.
No, Colin wasn’t like Fletcher, who’d never stay. Who would wander until he formed or took on a pack of his own.
“He might stay,” Jay agreed. “I know you won’t. I get that too.”
“I’ll stay until everything’s settled,” Fletcher promised. “I want to help you, because I can believe in this. But once we’re out of enemies to fight together, you know what’ll happen.”
The squabbling would start—not petty, silly shit, but actual arguments arising from the fundamental differences in the way they approached problems. “I can take it. Can you?”
“Of course we can take it.” He glanced at the door. “It’s unfair to the rest of them, though. There can only be one leader. I’ll follow as long as I can and leave when I can’t.”
“Who knows? You might find something worth sticking around for.”
“Because that worked out well for me last time around.”
Rebecca. To say that Fletcher’s last serious entanglement had ended in disaster was an unqualified understatement. “Shit. I’m sorry, man. I didn’t mean to bring that up.”
“It’s forgotten.” Fletcher rose with his coffee cup in hand. “Do you want me to get right on the babysitting, or do you mind if I borrow your girl for a couple hours and write my first check?” He nodded toward the empty fridge on the other side of the kitchen. “We need a whole lot of food if we’re setting up camp. Might as well stock everyone’s pantries.”
Jay’s first instinct was to deny him the time alone with Eden. His second was to smile. “You’ll have to ask her.”
“Smart man.”
By the time she started her third batch of biscuits, Eden was starting to feel almost accomplished. The slight singe around the edges of the first batch hadn’t stopped hungry werewolves from devouring them in minutes.
She used her grandmother’s measuring cups to dump enough flour for a double batch into the large ceramic bowl and smiled ruefully at Lorelei. “You weren’t joking. A house full of werewolves can eat a lot.”
The other woman smiled a little. “No, I wasn’t joking.”
Such a tiny smile, but Eden was learning to count each one as a step forward. “Well, my father’s finally going to get his wish. I’m learning the family business.”
“Does he want you to take over the diner someday?”
“I don’t think he cares about the diner as much as just being able to leave me something.” Eden twirled her hand, her gesture taking in the farmhouse. “This was his legacy, before everything went wrong. The diner belonged to my mother’s family.”
Lorelei dusted flour over the butcher’s block. “Zack never mentioned this place. I didn’t know it existed until he started talking about bringing everyone here.”
“I’m not surprised. Growing up was tough, and Zack’s father…” Eden glanced at Lorelei, unsure how much Zack had shared and unwilling to tread on what little privacy her cousin had left. “No one was really happy here.”
“It’s a shame.” Lorelei wiped her hands on a kitchen towel, her expression sympathetic but also somehow matter-of-fact. “Is that dough ready?”
“Just about.” Eden turned toward the fridge to retrieve the buttermilk and froze when a glance out the front window showed Mrs. Wilson lugging an oversized basket up the driveway. “Oh, hell. We’re about to have company.”
Lorelei froze. “It’s not—” Her voice cracked, and she shook her head. “Who?”
“No,” Eden said quickly, cursing her verbal clumsiness. “No, it’s just the neighbor from the farm down the road. She’s harmless, but she’s nosy. She’s the one who called Jay when you guys first showed up.”
“What could she possibly want?”
Eden wiped off her hands with a wry smile. “You’re not from a small town, are you?”
Lorelei groaned. “A bunch of women living here with your hoodlum cousin. That’s what this is about.”
Judging by the size of the basket, Mrs. Wilson had been counting the number of people who came in and out of the farm. “We were always going to have to deal with this eventually. How good are you at charming old ladies?”
“Honestly? I suck at charming anyone who isn’t trying to get in my pants.”
“Oh boy.” Eden eyed Lorelei for a moment and couldn’t help her grin. “I guess I could always pass you off as my cousin. You look more like me than Zack does.”
Lorelei nodded. “Let’s go with it.”
“Dad’s side of the family,” Eden decided, throwing the towel over her shoulder as Mrs. Wilson’s footsteps creaked up the porch steps. “We’ll just say family’s reclaiming the farm and leave it at that for now.”
“Got it.”
Mrs. Wilson knocked, and Eden counted silently to five before crossing to the door to pull it open with a smile. “Mrs. Wilson, how nice to see you.”
“Pleasure’s mine, Eden.” She held up the basket, her gaze already sliding past Eden and over the interior of the house. “Is this a bad time?”
If she didn’t let the woman in, Mrs. Wilson would only be more convinced that something deviant and illicit was happening behind the closed doors of the farm. Lifting the basket from the old woman’s hands, Eden stepped back and nodded toward the open archway to the kitchen. “My cousin and I were just making biscuits, but if you’d like to come in and have some tea, you can meet her.”
Her eyes lit on Lorelei. “Your cousin?”
Lorelei smiled and held out her hand. “How do you do?”
“Mrs. Wilson, this is Lorelei. She’s my second cousin once removed, maybe? Or third cousin.” Eden faked a lighthearted laugh as Lorelei shook hands. “I can never remember how those work. Anyway, she’s come to help us turn the farm around. I’m sorry I forgot to call and warn you that they were on their way in. Chief Ancheta told me you were keeping an eye on the place, and I appreciate it so much.”