Chapter 1
“Wanting her was dangerous. She was not of his kind, and if she learned what he was, she could put the pack at risk. Yet desire waylaid him each time he caught her scent.”
Aidan Wal ace listened intently as Emma Gavin—her cute, blond self tucked into a red dress—read from her latest book, Night Shift. Emma always kicked off a book tour with a reading in Manhattan, and Aidan had attended the last three. The first two times he’d come as a fan intrigued by this petite twenty-eight-year-old who seemed to have an uncanny understanding of werewolves. Most writers got it al wrong.
But her accuracy had a downside. For this Wednesday night event, he wasn’t here as a fan. Instead he was attending in his role as chief security officer for the Wal ace pack. Howard Wal ace, the alpha and Aidan’s father, worried that a rogue werewolf might have been feeding Emma information. If she’d made contact with somebody on the inside, that kind of leak had the power to destroy the pack.
Three months ago, Howard had directed Aidan to put her under twenty-four-hour surveil ance. So far he’d turned up nothing, but his father wanted him to stay on the job. When Emma left on her book tour, Aidan would fol ow, although trailing her from place to place without being spotted would test his skil s.
He would manage. With business interests that stretched from Park Avenue to Broadway, from Wal Street to Times Square, the Wal aces couldn’t afford a security breach. New York City tolerated a diverse population, but even New Yorkers might panic if they learned that a sizable chunk of the city was owned by werewolves.
“She wanted him, too. Her breathing changed and her pupils widened whenever he was near.” Emma paused and ran her tongue nervously over her lips.
She never seemed at ease during these events.
That didn’t surprise him. After observing her for three months, he knew she’d rather have been alone in her loft, curled up in a cozy chair with a book or her laptop. Besides, she had to be exhausted after pul ing that al -nighter to meet today’s deadline for the next book in the series.
Aidan figured that if she was getting inside info from the werewolf community, she would have contacted her source sometime during the past few days, and most definitely last night, when she was pushing toward the finish. She hadn’t. So what explained the on-target nature of her stories? Lucky guesses?
Aidan had pondered that while reading Night Shift recently. He’d been privy to an advance copy because his father and the publisher were old drinking buddies. No wonder Emma had chosen this passage for tonight’s presentation. It captured the basic appeal of the series—a takeoff on Beauty and the Beast that had fans sacrificing grocery money to buy her books in hardcover .
The fantasy of a male werewolf mating with a human female was a popular one.
Aidan would like to believe he wasn’t drawn to it, that he viewed the subject intel ectual y. That wasn’t quite true.
But tonight, with Emma standing there in a silk dress, which lovingly draped over her br**sts and hips, he couldn’t al ow himself to fantasize. His groin tightened, and he glanced away, irritated with his automatic response to her. Arousal was a reaction he couldn’t afford, especial y given his genetic flaw: Unsatisfied arousal caused him to begin to shift.
He concentrated on the uncomfortable nature of the metal folding chair. The manufacturer hadn’t created this chair with a six-four, two-hundred-pound werewolf in mind. The seat was too smal and the back, too low. Mental y complaining about the chair did the trick, and he was able to return his attention to Emma.
She stood in front of a table stacked high with her books, and a young brunette in a black suit hovered nearby. Aidan pegged her as somebody from the publishing house who’d come along to facilitate the signing gig.
“If he took her, there would be no turning back. A werewolf mated for life.”
As would he. The crown prince of the Wal ace pack was expected to choose Welland cement either a financial or political al iance with one of the other great werewolf families based in North America. His brother, Roarke, might have more leeway, but Aidan’s path was preordained.
Barring some misstep, he’d end up with Nadia Henderson, daughter of Leland Henderson, alpha leader of the pack based near Chicago. Aidan and Nadia had known each other since they were young, and he liked her. She didn’t excite him sexual y, but that wasn’t the point. Uniting the New York and Chicago packs through marriage would create a powerful dynasty.
Because Emma stirred him more than any human female he’d ever met, he was wary of her. At thirty-two, he was fast approaching the time when he’d have to commit to Nadia, and he prided himself on honoring his commitments. Love and passion, the kind Emma wrote about, wouldn’t factor into it.
Distracted by that thought, he missed the end of the reading and the beginning of the autographing session. A line had formed by the time Aidan stood, and the woman in the black suit had stepped in to slip promo material into each copy before handing it back to the buyer.
Holding the hardback he’d purchased earlier in the evening and folding his topcoat over one arm, Aidan headed to the back of the group. He hated lines, but he would stand in this one because it would give him a rare chance to talk with Emma face-to-face. Maybe he’d learn something important.
He hadn’t sensed any other werewolves in the crowd, which was a disappointment. He’d thought her informant, if she had one, would want to attend the launch of her book tour. Apparently not.
He recognized a few faces from the previous two signings. Her mother was here, of course. Betty Gavin had taken a chair in front and was near the head of the line.
Her blond hair was mixed with gray, and she carried a few more pounds than her daughter, but the resemblance was striking. She worked as an administrative assistant for a group of lawyers. Aidan had checked her out thoroughly, too, and hadn’t found anything suspicious. Obviously she thought her daughter had hung the moon.
Aidan settled in to wait and tried to block out the sensory overload created by a pack of humans. Perfume, aftershave, and deodorant assaulted his nostrils, while a cacophony of voices, cel phone chimes, background music, and shuffling feet battered his eardrums.
He longed for the stil ness of the forest or the hushed ambience he’d achieved in his Central Park West apartment with triple-paned glass and yards of moss green carpet. A flat-screen in every room ran continuous forest-scene footage to give him the il usion of the deep woods—even in the heart of the city—and he kept a jungle of plants healthy with the help of a plant sitter.
Silence was another thing he appreciated about Emma. She didn’t make unnecessary noise, except once in a great while when she’d crank up the volume on her iPod speakers and dance around her Greenwich Vil age loft. She knew some sexy dance moves that he’d have been wise to forget about.
She didn’t wear perfume, either, which al owed him to pick up her true scent.
Unfortunately, he was drawn to it. He understood the power of pheromones and recognized that he had a significant problem with Emma in that regard.
Her beguiling aroma reached out to him, penetrating the maze of competing scents, taunting him from thirty feet away. He’d met her up close only twice before, both times when she’d autographed books at this store.
The first time she only smiled and thanked him for coming. But the second time she’d asked enough questions to find out he was a member of the Well-connected Wal ace family. She’d seemed a little surprised, yet pleased, that Aidan read her books.
He figured she’d already spotted him tonight. After al , he was one of a handful of men in the audience. He’d bet he was the only one who knew how she took her coffee—no sugar, two creams—or what color sheets were on her bed—hunter green. Seeing her tonight was a completely different experience for him now that he knew so much about her. He’d have to be careful to keep al that intimate knowledge under wraps when he spoke to her.
For three months, he and his staff had monitored her activities through wiretaps and hidden cameras in her loft. He’d personal y fol owed her whenever she left her apartment for lunch dates with her mom, her agent, or a girlfriend.
Her lifestyle wasn’t al that different from many women in their late twenties. She was an environmentalist, which prompted her to take public transportation to save fossil fuels. She drank organic coffee, but she drank too much of it, which had turned her into an insomniac. Or maybe it was al the organic chocolate she ate along with the coffee. More than once he’d cringed as he’d realized her dinner had consisted of those two items.
But he understood the food, or lack thereof, more than he understood her choice of boyfriend. As he moved closer to the signing table and the pul of pheromones grew stronger, his thoughts understandably turned to her sex life, or what passed for her sex life.
The way he figured it, a woman who could dance, a woman who could write creative sex scenes that left him hard and aching, would require a dyn**ite lover.
Instead she had ... Doug, who was also her CPA. Doug might have been world-class when it came to preparing her tax returns, but apparently he didn’t know jack shit about pleasing her in bed.
Doug had spent the night at Emma’s loft exactly four times in three months. Aidan had balked at putting a camera in her bedroom, both to respect her privacy and protect his sanity. But the audio from the living-room camera had picked up the sounds of a couple hav**g s*x in the bedroom. Sad to say, he hadn’t detected much excitement. Doug seemed to have the energy quotient of a stale bagel.
Emma deserved somebody more inspired, somebody more ardent. Aidan wondered whether she was so busy with her career that she simply lacked the time to search out a better alternative to Doug. Then, too, her taxes were probably complicated, and a good CPA was hard to find.
As Aidan contemplated Emma’s sorry excuse for a sex life, Betty Gavin walked past him, holding her signed book.
She paused. “Aren’t you Aidan Wal ace?”
“Guilty as charged.”
Betty smiled and held out her hand. “I’m Emma’s mother. She told me you read her books. I think she’s proud of that.”
Aidan shook her hand and took note that Betty had a firm grip. His contacts had assured him that, in the office where she worked, she was a force to be reckoned with. “Your daughter’s a gifted writer.”
It was the right thing to say. Betty beamed as if he’d handed her an Academy Award, and her blue eyes, so like Emma’s, glowed with pride. “She’s amazing. I don’t know where she gets al those ideas.”
That was the very question that had the Wal ace pack so agitated, but he couldn’t say that. “I guess she’s just creative.”
“Yes, she certainly is.” Betty looked over toward the bookstore entrance. “I was so hoping Doug would surprise her at the last minute and show up.” She glanced at Aidan. “That’s her boyfriend. But he had a Rotary meeting tonight.”
“You’d think he’d want to be here.” No, shit—he should be here.
“You would think so, wouldn’t you? Emma just finished a book early this morning, and she likes to celebrate after turning in a manuscript. I wish I could stay and party with her, but my office cal ed an early meeting, and if I don’t head home I’l sleep through it.”
“Maybe her boyfriend will show up.” Aidan wondered how tuned in the guy could have been if he didn’t know about Emma’s habit of celebrating when she met a deadline.
“Maybe he will. Anyway, I have to go.” Betty patted his arm. “It’s almost your turn, anyway. Thanks for coming to her signings. I know she’s thril ed about that.” She walked away clutching her book.
Aidan figured she’d paid ful price for it, too, because she wanted to support her daughter’s career. He admired that kind of loyalty.
Just then, the woman in front of him walked away with her signed book, which left him as the only autograph seeker in the vicinity. Emma’s scent hit him ful force, and he steeled himself against the urge to reach across the table and pul her right out of her chair and into his arms.
That the thought crossed his mind was a warning signal. Years of training had subdued his animal instincts, but no amount of training would eliminate them completely. He would be careful.
“Aidan Wal ace!” Emma smiled as she stood and held out her hand. “I saw you in the audience, and I was hoping you’d stick around.”
Aidan put down the book in order to take her hand. “Had to get an autograph before you head off on your tour.” Her hand was ice-cold, and he unconsciously sandwiched it between both of his. Not good. He released her hand and cleared his throat. “Congratulations on your new book.”
“Thank you, Aidan.” Her blue eyes sparkled in welcome, but her makeup couldn’t disguise purple smudges underneath those incredible eyes.
She needed a vacation, not a book tour. He thought of his ancestral home near Sitka, Alaska. The remote lodge, surrounded by cozy log cabins, was his favorite retreat in the world, and he had the insane urge to take her there so she could rest.
Ah, but they would do more than rest. And there was the rub.
So instead he made pleasant conversation. “I hear you’re headed off to Chicago in a few days.”
“Right!” Her enthusiasm didn’t ring true, but if she dreaded the tour, she couldn’t very Wellmention that in front of her publisher’s representative. She turned to the woman in black. “Jenny, this is Aidan Wal ace. Aidan, Jenny Dunn handles PR for the company and was kind enough to come with me tonight.”
“It’s the least I could do, considering how hard Emma works.” Jenny shook hands with Aidan. “It’s nice to meet you, Aidan. I’ve seen your father a few times in the office.”
Aidan nodded. “He and Roger Claymore go way back.”
Emma braced both hands on the table as she gazed at him with a bemused expression. “I didn’t realize your father and Roger were old friends. Your father should have snagged you an advance copy of the book.”