The Wolf's Surrender. Sandra Steffen

The Wolf's Surrender - Sandra  Steffen


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was more like the plaintive sound of an injured kitten, raising the hair on the back of his neck.

      “You okay?”

      “I…don’t think so.”

      He opened the door far enough to stick his head inside. She was lying on the floor, her face ashen. He threw open the door and rushed inside. “What’s wrong?”

      She lifted her head weakly. “The baby. I think it’s coming.”

      “You think it’s coming! Now? Here?” His voice boomed, echoing, causing even him to cringe.

      She rolled to her side, as if to try to get up.

      “Don’t move.”

      Resting on one elbow, she breathed deeply. “I had a little backache. Just a tiny one, mind you. And then, the next thing I knew, I doubled over. My water broke. The pains haven’t stopped for more than twenty or thirty seconds and they last well over a minute and a half. According to my prenatal classes, that means I’m in the final stages of labor.” Her voice started to shake. “First babies are supposed to take hours and hours. Days. They’re supposed to take days.”

      She wet her dry lips, those full, ought-to-be-a-law-against-them pink lips. Grey’s mouth thinned in irritation. “Okay, you doubled over. You’re in the throes of labor. Why the hell didn’t you call me?”

      She’d closed her eyes, and was breathing strangely. He couldn’t take his eyes off her face.

      Finally, she said, “I…didn’t know…you were…still here.” She took several more deep breaths before relaxing. Her eyes opened, and her gaze unerringly met his. “Why are you still here?”

      “Good question.” But he thought it was a good thing he was. A good thing for her. That bad feeling was getting worse.

      Grey’s great-grandfather, George WhiteBear, claimed every Comanche man, woman and child had his or her own guardian spirit. The old man had made several journeys in search of his of late. Grey had never felt the need to do the same. George WhiteBear’s guide was a coyote. There were no coyotes in the Comanche County Courthouse. Some would say that was a good thing. Grey could have used help in any way, shape or form.

      He saw Kelly’s phone lying next to her on the floor. Lowering to his haunches, he reached for it. “Why didn’t you call 911?”

      “I tried, all right? Why are you so grouchy?”

      He wasn’t grouchy. He was focused.

      Maybe he was a little grouchy.

      He punched in the three digits. At the first sound of the busy signal, he punched the off button. “The emergency phone system must be down.”

      “Or overloaded.”

      “Damn.”

      “I hear you. And I understand your frustration. But my baby can hear you, too, so would you mind not swearing?”

      She pushed herself to a sitting position. He could tell it hurt. Her coat was open. For the first time, he noticed she was wearing a long, moss-green knit dress and sensible leather boots. She placed both hands on her stomach, which seemed to be rock-hard. Her green eyes narrowed, and her face grew even more pale.

      Grey didn’t know what the hell to do.

      He jumped to his feet and paced the small room. Kelly moaned quietly. She was in labor. The pains were close and severe. He started to swear, only to clamp his mouth shut before he’d completed the word. He was judge of Comanche County. He didn’t swear. He had when he was younger, but not anymore.

      Damn it to hell, what was he going to do?

      He stared at his reflection in the mirror. The black-brown eyes staring back at him seemed to narrow and dilate. Strangely, a sense of calm settled over him. It started behind his eyes, moving down to his throat, easing the tense muscles in his shoulders, uncurling the knot in his stomach.

      “Can you get up?” he asked. Even his voice sounded calmer.

      She swallowed tightly and nodded. The moment she tried to rise, she slumped down again. This time, her groan was agonizing.

      He turned on the water and punched the hand soap button. When his hands were clean and relatively dry, he lowered to his haunches again. “I’m going to pick you up. Tell me if I hurt you.”

      “If you help me to my feet…” Her voice trailed away on a sound that was barely human. “Maybe I can walk.”

      It wasn’t easy to help her to her feet. He didn’t know where to put his hands. It seemed he couldn’t put them anywhere without brushing the outer edge of her breast or the hard girth of her stomach. He ended up putting an arm around her back. She grasped his other hand. Her grip was strong. She was strong. She proved it by making it to her feet. Once there, she leaned against the counter behind her. “Well. So far so good.” Swaying, she took a step. It cost her.

      Without conscious thought, Grey swung her into his arms. He staggered backward a step. She was slender, but she was about five feet six. And pregnant.

      A glance at her face showed a small smile. While she steadied herself by wrapping an arm around his neck, probably in an effort to hold on for dear life, he redistributed her weight more evenly in his arms.

      “Are you sure you can do this?” she asked quietly.

      The sound he made had a lot in common with a snort again. “Just open the door.”

      “Yes, Your Honor.”

      She pulled on the door. Using his foot, he pushed it to the wall, then shouldered his way through.

      “Where are we going?”

      Until he saw the elevator door that was standing open, he hadn’t known. Entering the small compartment, he said, “There’s a sofa in my chambers.”

      He figured she would have argued, if another pain hadn’t ripped through her. She squeezed her eyes shut, and he swore every muscle in her entire body tensed.

      They reached his chambers before her pain subsided.

      This was bad. He had no knowledge of medicine. He hadn’t so much as had a cold in twenty years. And while he’d helped his cousin, Bram, deliver one of Bram’s prize quarter-horse colts a few years ago, Grey had no idea how to deliver a human baby.

      With painstaking care, he lowered Kelly to the leather sofa. Instantly, he grabbed the phone on his desk and tried 911 again. The results were the same. He dialed his mother’s number next. He got her machine. He was in the middle of dialing his sister’s number when the phone went dead.

      Reluctantly, he hung it up.

      “What’s wrong?” she asked.

      “The ice must have taken down the phone lines.”

      “My cell phone isn’t working, either. I’m going to have my baby here, aren’t I?” There was hysteria in her voice.

      “I think so.”

      She gasped, and he said, “I can think of worse places.” He could think of better ones, too. Hospitals. Clinics. The moon.

      Kelly took a series of deep breaths. “The labor instructor lied. Breathing doesn’t help.”

      “It’s got to be better than the alternative.”

      Her pain subsided long enough to appreciate his stab at wry humor. She eased back on the supple leather sofa, taking stock of her situation. The baby was coming. She could feel it pressing lower and lower. It hurt so bad. She couldn’t call the hospital or her doctor. But she was warm and dry. And she wasn’t alone.

      She placed a hand on her swollen abdomen.

      “Lie back and rest.”

      She could hear Grey fluffing a pillow. A moment later, he tucked it under her head.

      “Talk


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