Moving deliberately, Karyn unbolted the front door. She turned the knob and slowly, carefully pulled the door open.

The wolf rose with a rumbling growl. It began to move toward her.

The shooting lessons Roy had given her came back to Karyn in fragments. There was no time to try to remember everything. She shouldered the gun, aimed at the wolf, and pulled the trigger. The gun boomed and dirt exploded two feet to the right of the wolf. The animal stopped coming for a moment, but showed no fear.

Keeping a grip on her emotions, Karyn reloaded the gun, corrected her aim for the trigger pull, and fired again. The charge of shot hit the wolf full in the face. The animal made no sound, but the impact knocked it over backward. For a moment all four feet thrashed the air.

When the beast regained its footing one side of the massive head was raw and bleeding. However, the damage was far less than it should have been, considering the close-range shotgun blast. Karyn broke the weapon open and prepared to reload and fire again, but the wolf gave her no opportunity. It bounded away to the edge of the forest. There it stopped, looking back at her with raw animal hatred. After a moment it vanished among the trees.

Karyn went back into the house and leaned the shotgun against a wall. Breathing heavily, she sat down at the kitchen table to await Roy's arrival.

Chapter Fourteen

Roy Beatty stopped in the doorway, a greeting frozen on his lips. In a glance he took in Karyn's controlled expression, her rigid posture in the chair, and the shotgun leaning against the wall.

'What happened?'

'It was here. The wolf. Right out in front of the house. I shot at it and hit it, but it got away.'

Roy blinked, struggling to catch up. 'A wolf?'

'Right outside. I shot it.'

He walked over and looked down into Karyn's eyes. She looked frightened, but under control and rational enough. He went into the kitchen and found a flashlight in the tool drawer, then returned to Karyn.

'Show me where the animal was when you shot it.'

Karyn got up and led him out the door and into the clearing in front of the house. Roy played the flashlight over the ground as they walked. Karyn stopped walking and pointed down at her feet.

'The wolf was right here,' she said.

Roy knelt at the spot she indicated and slid the circle of light over the crisp dry grass. He reached down to touch a dark patch and held the light on his fingers. They were sticky with blood.

'I guess you really did hit something,' he said.

'Not something, Roy. A wolf. The biggest wolf I've ever seen.'

'All right, you shot a wolf. What happened next?'

'It ran off into the woods.'

Roy swept the light over a larger area of ground. He spotted something a few feet away and went over to pick it up. It was a piece of ragged gray tissue the size of a playing card. He held it gingerly between thumb and forefinger.

Karyn came over to look. 'What is it?'

'An ear.'

Karyn turned away, shivering.

'You go on back in the house,' he said. 'I'll take a look around in the woods.'

'Roy, don't go out there alone.'

'I'll be careful. The shotgun's coming along too.'

Karyn chewed her lip a moment before she spoke. 'Roy, I don't think the shotgun can stop this wolf. I should have killed it with my shot, but it just came up bleeding a little.'

'You probably didn't hit it as good as you think,' Roy said. 'If it's still around I'll finish it off.'

They went inside and Roy took the shotgun from where Karyn had propped it against the wall. He put a fresh shell in the chamber and dropped several more into his jacket pocket.

'Keep the door locked while I'm gone,' he said.

'Don't worry.'

When Karyn had closed and locked the door behind him, Roy walked to the edge of the clearing and swept the brush with the flashlight. He moved along slowly, examining the ground and the bushes. At one of the faint paths that led away from the house the light picked up something. Roy leaned down and saw a dime-sized spot of blood on a flat stone. Whatever it was that Karyn had shot must have come this way. Roy straightened and moved off along the path.

Overhead the high cloud layer began to break up, and a bright moon shone through the openings. Roy walked easily along the path with the shotgun in one hand and the flashlight beaming ahead of him.

A movement up ahead caught his eye and he stopped short.

He snapped off the light and stepped cautiously forward. In a small grassy clearing he saw it again — something pale caught in the flash of moonlight. Roy brought the shotgun to a ready position and waited, holding his breath.

'Are you going to stay there crouching in the bushes, or will you come and join me?' The woman's voice mocked him from the clearing.

Roy stepped toward the voice and snapped on the light. Marcia Lura looked back at him, her eyes glowing.

For a moment Roy could not move. Marcia wore a deeply cut gown in green and black, night colors of the forest. Her dark hair folded softly back over wide shoulders that gleamed palely in the light. There was no surprise in her face, just a faintly amused smile.

'My God, I almost shot you,' Roy said.

'It's a strange time to be out hunting.'

Roy lowered the flashlight beam from Marcia's face down over the lithe body. Its lines were clearly visible beneath the thin material of the gown. Suddenly uncomfortable, he snapped off the light.

'I was following a wounded animal. My wife shot at a wolf, she thinks, and it came this way.'

'I saw no wolf,' said Marcia, 'or anything else.'

'What are you doing out here, anyway?'

'I often walk in the forest at night. It's so very private.'

'I suppose it would be.'

'Have you ever tried it?'

'Not alone.'

Roy found himself standing quite close to the tall supple woman. He was not sure whether he had walked across the clearing or she had come to him. It didn't matter. The scent of sandalwood clung to her. Sandalwood and something else… something wild.

'Would you like to walk with me?' she said.

The pale-green eyes caught the reflected moonlight and seemed to draw Roy down into them.

'Or would you rather do something else with me?'

With a swift, graceful movement Marcia unfastened the gown at her breast and let it slide down her body to make a dark pool at her feet. Beneath it she was naked. She stepped free of the fallen garment and moved back so he could see her.

Her body was lean and smooth, her breasts high. Her stomach was flat. Below the navel a wedge of silky black hair pointed to the joining of her legs.

'Do you like me?' she asked.

Roy could only answer honestly. 'Yes.' He realized he was still holding the flashlight and the gun. He let them drop.

'Come to me,' Marcia said. She stood with her legs apart and held out her bare white arms to him.

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