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Elizabeth's Wolf |
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©
Copyright, Lora Leigh |
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All Rights Reserved |
| ISBN:
1-84360-807-3
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Note: Lora Leigh's Books are intended
for those readers 18 years old or older. |
Excerpt:
Prologue
The letter came at a time in his life when the battle inside his
soul could have tipped either way.
The war against terrorism was still waging, years after it had
begun, and in select areas of the Middle East it was hell. The
Special Forces unit Dash Sinclair was assigned to had been there for
a year now; working together, becoming a part of each other’s lives,
depending on each other. Until the day their transport was taken out
by a well-aimed missile. It had killed the other seven men. Dash was
left barely clinging to life when rescue had arrived.
At the time, he wasn’t even certain what kept him alive. He was
tired. Tired of fighting, tired of hiding, just plain tired of being
alone. He had been closer to those seven soldiers than he had ever
been to anyone, and now they were gone, leaving an awareness within
him of the desolate wasteland his life had become.
Weeks later, his eyes bandaged, his wounds covered, he lay in a
medicated stupor, barely clinging to life. A part of his soul howled
out in fury; that restless, yearning part that never seemed to still
grieved at the continued fight to survive. Why was he alive when the
others had been lost?
It was then his commanding officer came to him.
“You have a fan, son.” Something inside, a primal, instinctive part
of his conscience stilled then. It pushed back the pain, the
memories of blood and death, and became watchful. Waiting.
He had no fans, no friends or family. And he had lost his unit. He
was damned tired of hiding and fighting, and they wouldn’t let him
just sleep. And now, the part of himself he had always fought to
deny was awake once again. Instinctively he knew his greatest battle
was yet to come.
“A nice little girl named Cassie Colder. Let me read this to you
real fast. I’ll answer her until you’re well enough to do it
yourself. But I have a feeling this little girl would get right
pissed if you didn’t eventually answer…”
I liked your name best when the teacher gave us the list. Dash
Sinclair. It has a very nice sound to it I think. Momma said it’s a
very brave, very handsome name, and she bets you like it lots. I
thought it sounded like a daddy’s name. I bet you have lots of
little girls. And I bet they are very proud of your name. I don’t
have a daddy, but if I had one, then I would like a name like that
for my Daddy.
He had created his own name. Long ago. Far away. Created a name he
had prayed would hide his past. Then he had fought to change himself
as well. But he didn’t have lots of little girls and he wasn’t a
daddy. The words his commander read seeped into his brain and a
sense of urgency began to fill him.
My Momma, her name is Lizbeth. And she has brown hair kind of like
me. And pretty blue eyes. But my eyes are kind of blue too. I have a
really pretty Momma, Dash. She makes me cookies, and even tells me
it’s okay to talk to the fairy that lives in my room with me. My
Momma is really nice.
My Momma says you are a very brave man. That you are fighting to
keep us safe. I wish you were here with us Dash, cause sometimes my
Momma gets very tired.
Even in pain, barely conscious, a sense of alarm surged through him.
He could feel fear in that simple sentence. A plea for protection.
And he fought to live. He had to live. He had to save Cassie and her
momma.
He saw Cassie, small and delicate, whimpering in fear. But in
bright, vivid colors, he saw her mother, desperate, frightened,
poised in front of her daughter like a protective she-wolf, snarling
in fury. Why did he see that? Why did the image taunt him?
At other times, he was tormented by the sight of the mother watching
him, her eyes half closed in drowsy passion, her body naked, slender
and graceful beneath his larger frame.
It was little Cassie Colder that wrote to him, but with each line
about her mother, each description, each phrase concerning the Momma
who looked after her, Dash’s need grew. His sense of possessiveness,
his hunger, his inborn knowledge that somehow, some way, Elizabeth
and Cassie belonged to him, began to strengthen inside him.
Yes. The name Dash was a good name for a daddy. For Cassie’s daddy.
But it was also a good name for a mate. Elizabeth’s mate. And once
again the inborn instinct of the animal raised its head. His senses
became sharper as he fought against the fog of pain and medication
then. Twisting shadows of violence and the dark bloody stains of
death began to emerge and coalesce around Cassie and her momma. They
were his, and they were in danger. He had to live.
My Momma says you must be a very kind man. Kind men don’t hit little
girls. Do they?
So innocently phrased, yet with a wealth of meaning. He strained
within the dark agony that filled him, fought through the layers of
pain to find consciousness, to heal. To live. Cassie and her Momma
needed him.
My Momma says there might not really be fairies but it’s okay if I
think there are. Cause nothing don’t exist if you don’t believe in
it. And if you believe in it, then it’s real as sunshine. I believe
in you, Dash… Why did he keep hearing a cry? It was inside his head,
a woman’s tears and muffled sobs. But it was the child’s words his
Major read to him as he fought his way back. A battle he often
feared he would lose.
My Momma says Leprechauns should be real. That gold at the end of
the rainbow sounds really nice.
I promise, Dash. I know a real fairy. I told Momma and she smiled
and said I could ask her in for cookies and milk if I liked. I had
to tell her that fairies don’t eat cookies and milk. They really
like candy bars… The fairy eventually got to share the candy bar
with Cassie. But still, Dash heard a woman’s muffled sobs.
* * * * *
The kid’s letters became a lifeline through long, bitter months of
recuperation. It gave him something to hold onto. He had no one. He
was a man alone in the world and he had thought this was the way he
wanted it, until one little girl’s letters touched his soul.
They were often peppered with amusing, cute little displays of
affection toward a mother who apparently loved her daughter very
much. And the daughter showered him with a sprinkling of the love
her mother gave.
Sometimes my momma is sad. She sits alone in our room and stares out
the window and I peek through my eyes and I think I see tears. I
think she needs a daddy too, don’t you?
The soldiers who had accompanied the Major that day had ribbed him
over that one. But Major Thomas had shushed them quickly and
continued to read. Dash was conscious now, but still weak and had a
long road ahead of him. But he fought. Fought like the animal he
was, because of the woman’s tears and a little girl’s fears.
I wanted to send you a sparkling present for Christmas. But Momma
said we just didn’t have the money this year. Maybe for your
birthday, she said, if you will tell me when it is. So I emailed
Santa instead. I told him exactly what he was to get you, but I bet
your other little girls already thought of it too. I wanted a
bicycle, but Momma said Santa might not make it this year. I told
her he would. This year, Santa would know I’m big enough for a bike.
I’m seven years old. Seven years old is a good bike age, I think.
She wrapped around his heart, with her youthful wit and humor and
her belief in everything good in the world. He wanted her to have
that damned bike. He wanted her to know Santa looked after good
little girls who saved worthless hides like his. He wanted her to
know he was coming for her. He sent her the bike. So she would be
comfortable when he arrived. So she wouldn’t be scared…
She was a matchmaker, though. Major Thomas finally started reading
her letters without the presence of the other men who visited. And
Dash finally got around to speaking, finally managed to give her a
letter in return. It was short. He tired easily but he wanted the
little girl to know what her letters meant to him.
I got my bike, Dash. Momma was really surprised. On Christmas day I
was sure Santa didn’t trust me yet. My bike wasn’t under the tree.
Then the doorbell rang, and when Momma answered the door, there was
my shining red bike. It had my name on it. It was just for me alone
and it was brand new. And it had a helmet. And I have little gloves.
And I have elbow pads. And I have knee pads. And there was even a
present for my Momma from Santa. Can you believe it, Dash? It was
the best Christmas ever. Santa even remembered my Momma.
Of course Santa remembered. Dash had smiled and roughly thanked the
Major for taking care of his request. The long robe would keep the
mother warm until his arms could do the job. Cassie had said her
momma was often cold…
* * * * *
Then the letters stopped. A month before he was released from the
hospital, his eyesight back, his legs working once again, his
strength back at top peak, they had stopped. Concerned, he had asked
Commander Thomas to check into it. To find out what happened to the
bright, cheerful little girl whose momma had raised her to give her
love so freely.
Commander Thomas, I regret to inform you that little Cassidy Colder
and her mother, Elizabeth, died in a fire that overtook their
apartment building several weeks ago. The bodies were unrecoverable,
but there is no doubt that they, along with several others, were
caught in the blaze. There was some trouble associated with the
child and mother, rumors I’ve heard of a contract on their lives.
Please let me know if you would like me to obtain more information…
The fax had arrived from the private investigator he had hired.
Commander Thomas had checked it out immediately. Neighbors had heard
the screams, had seen the apartment building explode, flames
overtaking it in a matter of minutes. Dash felt his world crumble.
The little girl who had saved him, who had given him his will to
live, was gone.
For days he sat silent, staring broodingly at the ceiling. For so
long he had been alone. He had awakened each day knowing he had no
one. Had gone to sleep each night feeling the loss. Yet, while he
lay near death, God had brought him angels. Only to take them away
once again. It was a terrible blow to the soul he thought had
withered away years ago. He knew only blood and death. Had never
known innocence until Cassie and her Momma, Lizbeth. The immature,
childish scrawl of the name had lingered in his mind. Elizabeth. His
Elizabeth.
In thirty years of living, Dash had never claimed any one person as
essential in his life. He had grown up knowing his survival depended
on having no one, knowing he was different, knowing how imperative
it was that he hide those differences. He had made his own way in
life, had literally raised himself as best he could until he was old
enough to join the Army.
He had made the service his home. The men he fought with, though not
close to him, had given him a base to interact, to sharpen his
intellect, to learn how to lead. For twelve years he had done just
that. Led. He moved up the ranks, joining the Special Forces and
proving his capabilities there. He had thought he hadn’t needed
anything more.
Dash realized now how wrong he had been.
Elizabeth and Cassie’s deaths tore a wound in his soul he couldn’t
explain. He had never touched the woman, had never held the
daughter. She wasn’t his mate, wasn’t his child, and yet his heart
screamed something different. His soul howled at the loss and some
instinct, some inborn knowledge, refused to allow him to deny the
bond that existed between him, mother and child.
“Dash, you have to snap out of this.” Commander Thomas sat beside
his hospital bed, his green eyes somber, intent. “These things
happen, son. You can’t explain them or make sense of them. At least
you have a part of her to remember.”
Dash stilled the howl that wanted to rise to his lips. He had
nothing. A pile of fragile letters wasn’t enough. Not nearly enough.
His fingers curled into the sheet as he stared up at the dull white
ceiling silently. They thought he had sunk into depression. Lost his
will to fight. Nothing could be further from the truth. He had one
last battle to fight before he could give into the soul-deep need to
rest. Vengeance. It kept the blood pumping in his veins, kept his
heart beating in his chest.
He gave his commander a long, brooding look.
“I want to know what happened.”
Commander Thomas sighed wearily, shaking. “What does it matter,
Dash? They’re gone.”
Dash felt fury engulf him. It mattered. It mattered because he
intended to exact his own form of justice. “I want to know. Contact
the investigator. I want the information before my release.”
He had his plans in place. The investigator could provide the
background he needed, then Dash would finish the job.
“So you can do what?” Commander Thomas leaned back against his
chair, watching him with a frown. “You’ll be assigned a new unit…”
“I was given the option to return stateside on deactivation.” It was
all he could do to keep from snarling. “I won’t be returning to
duty, Commander. I’ve had enough.”
Surprise glittered in the commander’s eyes, and Dash knew why. He
had been in the service since he was eighteen. He hadn’t once taken
a deactivation. Twelve years he had given to first the Army and then
to the Special Forces Units. He was one of the best, a natural
leader and a savage fighter. But he’d had enough. The unit he had
fought with for over a year was gone. The little girl and the mother
who had seen him through the need for death were gone. He needed
justice. He needed a way to balance the scales and then he needed to
find the part of himself he had hidden for most of his life.
The commander sighed wearily before nodding. “I’ll call him tonight.
You’ll have what you need.”
He rose to his feet, staring down at Dash for long, silent moments.
“Vigilantism is a crime. You know that, don’t you Dash?” he asked
him cautiously.
Dash smiled. A slow baring of his teeth that he knew the commander
would recognize. Dash was one of the best for a reason. He knew what
he was doing. And he knew how to do it right.
“They have to catch you first,” he said softly.
While he waited on the information, he worked on completing his
recovery. He was rarely still. He worked his body and his mind
constantly, making certain each were in peak condition. When word
came through that the information was being sent to the stateside
location Dash had chosen, he packed his duffle bag and prepared to
leave.
* * * * *
Several days before his release, his strength renewed, his mind on
returning to the States and armed with enough information to begin a
slow, steady hunt, an unfamiliar letter arrived. He knew the
handwriting, not the name. His heart stopped when he read the letter
within the plain envelope.
I know you must have lots of other little girls to love. Momma says
you must be married with children and don’t need us. But I need you
Dash. Please help me and my Momma before the bad guys get us again.
I used to be Cassidy Colder, but Momma says now my name is Cassie
Walker. Walkers okay I guess. And here. This is Bo Bo’s Kercheif. So
you know it’s me. Momma says you will think the splosion got us. It
hurt Momma, but we’re okay. Please help us Dash.
It had been hastily scrawled and it sent terror chasing down his
spine. Inside was the locket he had sent her for her eighth
birthday, a picture of herself and her mother inside. The mother
looked haunted. Big blue eyes stared in startled awareness at the
camera while the girl smiled charmingly.
The small red kerchief had been wrapped around a little teddy bear’s
neck that he had asked Commander Thomas to order for her. Bo Bo, she
had named it. He could smell her on it. Baby powder and innocence.
But there was another scent, Elizabeth’s, and it sent his hormones
howling. Pure female seductiveness. Dark, sweet, like a summer
rainfall.
His eyes narrowed on the picture then, rage shaking his body at the
thought of anyone daring to hurt either of them. They were his. And
no one dared touch anything or anyone belonging to Dash Sinclair.
Before he could stop it, a rumble of pure menace echoed in his
chest, a growl of foreboding, a promise of retribution. And the hunt
was on. He would go after the enemy later. First…first he had to
find the family he had claimed in the darkness of pain. The mate
that needed warmth, the child that needed protection. He would find
them first. If along the way, a few of the enemy died, too bad. It
would be a few less to kill later.
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