Twenty-four hours. Long enough for an ex-husband to decide it was safe to come courting.
The front door rattled under a quick, efficient knock, and Sera started, her fingers clenching around the phone until the casing creaked. A second later sense kicked in, and she rose from the table and took two steps toward the door, close enough to get a feel for the person standing on the other side.
Wolf, partially obscured by the scent from the kitchen but unmistakable. Power pulsed on the other side of the door, not the angry, aggressive magic of an alpha trying to set someone in their place, but a steely dominance that flowed from only two wolves currently living in New Orleans.
Andrew was clear across the country, which left… “Julio?” The door was heavy, but he’d hear her.
A pause. “Yeah. Can I come in, Sera?”
Wards aside, there were still lots of locks. Two deadbolts and a chain, remnants of the days when Kat had lived here on her own, and she’d come home to more than one break-in. Kat was gone now—living with Andrew, even if her name was still on the lease—but the locks remained, a reminder that the people who had broken in had upped their game to kidnapping.
And Julio had been one of their victims.
Sera eased open the door and tried to smile as her stomach flip-flopped again, this time for an entirely different reason. Julio Mendoza was a beautiful man. Broad and solid, built like a wrestler but graced with the dark good looks of a playboy. And that was only the physical, the shell for all that delicious alpha power. Even a coyote knew what to do in the face of such unchecked magic—roll to her back and pray the wolf felt merciful.
Looking at him was such a mistake. Words tumbled out, the human equivalent of baring her belly. “Come on in. Can I get you a drink or something? I just took some brownies out of the oven.”
“No, thanks. I’ve eaten.” He cast a glance around the room and frowned. “Is Anna here?”
Sera closed the door and was proud when she managed to only refasten one lock. “She had some errands to run. She’ll be back in an hour, maybe less.”
“You know where she went?”
As if Anna ever told anyone her plans. “No. But she usually has her phone, if it’s important…?”
His brows drew together as he stared at the phone clenched in her hand. “Is everything okay?”
“I’m—” She forcibly relaxed her hand, concentrating on each finger until she could set the cordless phone on the counter. “I’m probably just jumpy,” she admitted, silently begging him to agree. “I had a couple hang-ups from a blocked number. It could be some contact of Anna’s who doesn’t want to talk to me, though.”
“Could be,” he agreed easily before nodding to the sofa. “I’ll wait for Anna, if that’s all right.”
Silent question. Unspoken answer. She didn’t need to tell Julio how much she needed soothing, because he’d always know. Sera smiled. “You sure you don’t want brownies?”
He stretched his legs out before her and shook his head. “I’ll take a beer, though.”
When Kat had lived there, she’d stocked the fridge with imported beers and a collection of questionable wine coolers. Anna was more likely to bring home expensive liquors. Sera had nothing more exotic than Bud Lite. She retrieved two bottles and offered him one before retreating to the loveseat. “Nothing bad’s happened, right? I mean, that’s not why you need to find Anna?”
“Patrick McNamara’s in town,” he explained. “He needs a place to rest up for a while, so I was going to ask about the apartment over the bar.”
Anna was liable to do everything short of toss Sera into the street to give Patrick a safe place to stay—and admitting as much would betray a weakness Anna fought bitterly to hide.
“She probably won’t mind. No one really stays there most of the time.”
“Nick wanted it free for emergencies, and Andrew said she couldn’t rent it out short-term.
Some kind of zoning thing.”
“Then it should be fine.” Sera studied Julio, looking for signs that Patrick’s arrival had unsettled him. Instead he seemed as steady as ever. Tired, a little stressed…but if Patrick had shown up in the usual condition, that was understandable.
It wasn’t her place to ask. Wasn’t her business, since Julio’s care of her was probably a favor to her father or his sister, or simply a member of the Southeast council taking care of another shifter in his town. Reading too much into it would be asking for a bruised heart.
He sipped his beer. “How have you been, Sera?”
“Okay.” Which was the truth, as far as it went. Life was okay. Not good, not bad. Status quo. “Keeping busy at work. And taking cooking lessons.”
“Yeah? From John?”
“He says I’m not too bad.” What polite, banal small talk. She balanced her unopened beer on her knee. “You don’t think it’s one of Anna’s contacts calling, do you?”
He watched her, unblinking. “Does it matter what I think?”
“Yes.” Because he was strong. And because he’d seen her at her worst, the day she’d walked—
Julio finally shrugged. “None of Anna’s contacts have a reason to call her on the landline. It doesn’t mean the calls were ominous, but there you have it.”
She closed her eyes and exhaled slowly. “I feel like I’m overreacting
“Can’t hurt to let Anna know, all the same.”
It was a relief, knowing Anna would protect her, and a twisting pain in her chest that Julio was so willing to let her. “I will, I promise.”
He drained half his beer, then leaned forward and set the bottle on the coffee table with a thump. “If it keeps happening, you need to call your dad.”
“He’s busy.” She wanted to lean in too, close enough to let his aura brush hers, to steal safety from him. “And my dad’s…” Even thinking it was a betrayal. She couldn’t bring herself to say it. Not even to Julio.
“Recovering,” he murmured. “I know.”
He knew. Everyone knew, and still she flinched. “He’s recovered enough for daily life, not to be fighting challenges.”
“So you think it’s him.”
“I don’t think that’s true.” There was something intense about the words, oddly certain, but before she could press him, he retrieved his beer and finished it.
Hers was unopened, so she held it out. “No one else is stupid enough to start trouble in New Orleans over me.”
He accepted the proffered second beer and twisted off the cap in one skilled motion, but didn’t comment on her words. Instead, he asked, “Have you talked to Kat lately?”
A safe topic. “Yeah, she calls or texts every few days. Either I scared her into regular check-ins, or her cousin did.”
Julio swirled the brew in the amber-colored bottle. “Either one’s possible.”
With Kat’s overprotective cousin married to a very pregnant, very snarly alpha wolf, Sera didn’t have any doubts. “By the time Nicole has that baby, no one’s going to want to get near the state of Wyoming. I guess that’s the downside of dominant shifters having babies together.
Hormones
“Always fighting to see who comes out on top?”
“Always fighting just because.” Sera brought one heel up to rest on the edge of the loveseat and dropped her chin to her knee. “Because y’all don’t know how to stop.”
That earned her a rusty chuckle. “No. No, I guess we sure the hell don’t.”
His laugh raised goose bumps on her arms, the kind that preceded arousal instead of fear.
She clung to the conversation out of self-defense. “Alphas having babies together makes sense if you’re wolves living in the wild. Doesn’t work so well all pent up in human society. Not enough danger.” Usually.
“Isn’t that the point, Seraphina?” He leaned forward, letting the beer bottle dangle between his fingers. “We’re human too. It’s easy to please a wolf—or a coyote. It’s everything else that muddies the water.”
Oh yes, her coyote was easy to please. Wasn’t that why she’d avoided him to begin with?