Deadly Crush
Page 28Dominic’s phone buzzed on the coffee table, and the voice caller display chirped, Jade Shaw, in a mechanical female tone.
“Don’t answer that,” I said, and grabbed his reaching hand before he could get the phone. “She kind of thinks I locked you up.”
“What?” Dominic asked, and he gave me a look that clearly said he thought I’d lost it. He glanced at the phone again, and then leaned back, settling into the couch, with a raised eyebrow, waiting for me to explain.
The oven door slammed, and the scent of hot pizza filled the room. “Jesus, Aidan, what the hell did you do this time?” Marcy yelled from the kitchen. She clattered around, slamming cupboards and banging plates against the counter.
I groaned, and watched the phone until it stopped skittering across the table. “She wouldn’t submit. She also thinks I have you locked up, Mac. Oh, and I kind of left the enforcers with her to make sure she doesn’t leave the house.” Saying it out loud made it worse, and dread pooled in my stomach. Yep, she’s going to kill me. And I knew I’d let her if she really wanted to. I’d welcome it. I deserved it. I really am a jackass.
“Really, Aidan? Really?” Marcy said aghast. She came through the small doorway juggling two pizzas and a stack of plates, and stomped over to us.
“I want her to win,” I said lamely. Trevor and Dominic were both chuckling, and Marcy rolled her eyes.
“Dumbass,” Dominic said and shook his head. “I didn’t think you were this stupid.”
Marcy giggled. “She’s going to kill you when she finds out you’ve lied to her again.” She placed the pizzas on the coffee table and started filling the plates, handing them out, before taking a seat next to Trevor.
I gave them all a dirty look, biting back the urge to tell them off. The only thing that stopped me was the fact that they were right. I certainly felt like a dumbass. So I leaned back on the couch, propping my feet up on the edge of the coffee table, and let them laugh.
I hadn’t expected the question, and I took a large bite of pizza as I thought it over. The spicy sausage and pepperoni made my stomach growl with hunger, and I devoured the slice before I finally said, “She’s being impossible. She needs to learn some respect.” And she is not an alpha … yet, I said silently. There was no point in reminding them. The two werewolves in the room had made it clear on more than one occasion that they already considered her their alpha female. I just wished that I could ignore the rules, too.
Marcy shot me a stern glare. “Lying to her and manipulating her isn’t going to get her to respect you.”
I scrubbed at my face roughly, attempting to rub away all the confusion that that girl had brought into my life. “I thought she wanted me. I thought … I thought … dammit. After she beat Trisha today …” I let my words fall short, and I glanced at Dominic waiting for the lecture that I knew was on the tip of his tongue. I almost wanted to hear it. Dominic watched me, chewing on his pizza. I’d never seen him so quiet. He was pissed off, that much I could tell, but the rest was hidden under his carefully placed mask. “Look, I didn’t have much of a choice,” I said to Dominic. “Her scent was overpowering me. My inner-wolf has already accepted her as my mate. Every time I get near her, all I can think about is claiming her. I had to let my alpha out.”
“You haven’t been using it with her?” Trevor asked and laughed again.
“Not fully, well, at least not until today,” I admitted, guiltily. I knew I should have been. Dominic had even advised me to do it. We had all hoped that it would encourage the alpha in her out, but every time I thought about doing it before today, I felt like an ass. “Call me crazy, but I was kind of hoping she’d feel the same thing for me as I do for her. I didn’t want to force her inner-wolf to realize she’s meant to be my mate. And I didn’t really lie to her completely. You both have violated laws.”
“Dude, not part of the pack,” Marcy said around a mouthful of pizza.
“Dude,” I said, mimicking her snark. “Trevor claimed you. He did two nights ago. Even if you haven’t been changed, a mate is considered part of the pack. You’re bound by my laws.”
I instantly knew I’d said something stupid. Marcy turned ten different shades of red before she shrieked at Trevor, “You told him!”
I held back a laugh, but Dominic didn’t. He let out a deep belting roar, and he started to cough, choking on his pizza. Trevor turned white as a sheet, and his eyes widened. It was more than a little obvious he didn’t tell Marcy what would happen after they hooked up.
“Don’t you dare say it!” she said, jumping up from the couch. “God, isn’t anything private with you guys?” She spun on me then and snapped, “Jade does want you, but she’ll never bow down to you. She’s not going to fight for someone who is trying to force her either.”
“Okay, I get it,” I said, throwing my hands up in the air, and all my pent-up laughter fizzled away. “I’m a moron. How the hell do I fix it?”
“You let the people that know her best out of jail,” Dominic said with a chuckle. “She’ll win the games tomorrow.” He laughed again and focused on Marcy, “Mac, you up for it?”
Marcy considered it for a second before a grin inched its way on her lips. “She’s going to kill us. But I’m in.”
CHAPTER 27
~ JADE ~
My heart dropped when I heard the engine of a car pull into my driveway. It was a rumbling, clunking sound, instead of the purr of Aidan’s Mustang.
I stood at the fridge, cell phone in hand, staring at the sharp scrawl of his handwritten number. Last night after he left me, I had realized four things. One: He might have been smarter than me. Two: He was hiding something from me. Three: I needed to play nice and get Dominic and Marcy out of jail. Four: I was falling for him — hard.
His alpha wolf spoke to my inner-wolf in a personal way. It took the control that my inner-wolf craved. But it wasn’t just his alpha that spoke to me. It was him. This jackass thing was an act. I knew it without a doubt, and I was determined to break through it.
The enforcers were the only wolves that I had never, and would never, pick a fight with. No one walked out of that alive. They had no compassion. They didn’t ask questions. They didn’t have to follow the normal rules of the pack. In a sense, when they were called upon, they held just as much power over the pack as the alpha did, except they always executed that power with death and violence.
But Jared had given me a choice, which had shocked the hell out of me. Jared wasn’t known for his patience, or for giving options. Kill first, ask questions later. That was pretty much his motto. But instead of attacking me, he let me decide: call Aidan or go back inside. In the end, my stupid pride had won … again. Jared made it clear that I wasn’t allowed out unless I spoke to the alpha, and since I refused to call him, I was escorted back into the house. But before Jared closed the door on me, he had looked me up and down and said, ‘We’re going to have a lot of fun once you lose the alpha games, little girl.’ There had been no mistaking his meaning. The gleam in his eyes when they settled on my breasts told me everything I needed to know. He planned to take me as his mate. I wanted to ask Jared what he was talking about. What were the alpha games? But instead, I slammed the door and locked it.
That was when I decided that Aidan just might have been smarter than me, and when I realized that he was hiding something from me. It was also that moment that I knew I was falling for him. The idea of anyone else touching me other than him was something I didn’t want to think about, and it made me feel a little queasy for more than one reason. I was supposed to hate him. I was supposed to hate the pack.
I’d been trying to call him for the last hour, but my inner-wolf had been fighting me. For reasons that I couldn’t begin to understand, it didn’t want me to submit. Not yet, a voice chanted over and over in the back of my mind. You need to win him first. It just sucked that I really didn’t understand what that meant.
“Jade?” Mom called from the hallway. “Honey, are you home?”
“In here, Mom,” I said, bracing myself for what I was sure was going to be a lot of tears. I hadn’t seen her since I was bitten, and knowing my mom, I knew that that wasn’t by her choice.
“Oh, honey,” she said, as she came into the kitchen. She looked exhausted, but she tried to hide it with an overly bright smile. Her pink scrubs were all wrinkly, and her hair was a mess, falling out of her ponytail. She set her bag on the counter and rushed over to me, wrapping me in a hug. “I’ve been so worried about you. How are you feeling?”
“I’m fine, Mom,” I said, squeezing her back. She sniffled in my ear, and swallowed loudly, as if she was trying to choke down her tears. “I’m good, really,” I said softly, trying to sound reassuring. “I shifted. Everything’s fine.”
“If everything’s fine, then why are there wolves surrounding our house, Jade?” she asked, as she released me and folded her arms over her chest, waiting for my response. ns class="adsbygoogle" style="display:block" data-ad-client="ca-pub-7451196230453695" data-ad-slot="9930101810" data-ad-format="auto" data-full-width-responsive="true">