Then, when we reach the crone’s, for some reason, he chills out. Una’s scent is all over. It’s like it’s coming from the garden somehow, and it isn’t laced with pain. It’s faint and mellow. Sweet.
We didn’t get here a moment too soon. The crone has an electric blue hatchback backed to her front door, and she’s stowing a suitcase in the trunk.
I shift, trotting over to help. She doesn’t need it. The witch has a wiry strength, and I doubt she’s as old as she acts. She hasn’t aged a day in as long as I can remember, and she listens to human music that sounds like it’s made by robots.
Still, you show respect to your elders. Especially to a female with powers.
She’s wearing linen slacks, a classy silk shirt, and gold in her ears and around her neck. Her hair is coiled in a slick bun, not the braid she usually wears.
“Visiting Moon Lake?” I know she’s got a side hustle over there. Wouldn’t surprise me if she’s got herself a cozy cottage in all of the pack lands.
She smirks. “Might be.”
“Did you plan on asking me?” It’s a joke. The crone doesn’t recognize my authority.
“Asking, no. Telling—” She pats my arm. “Also, no.”
“Who’s watching the cat?”
I’ve never actually seen the bugger, but I can smell him. He takes one whiff of me and bolts.
“My girls will keep an eye on them.”
“And who’s gonna keep an eye on your girls?” I know they come up here all the time. I figured it was fine. The crone herself is better protection than my scouts. But maybe I need to rethink that.
We’re almost a mile from the commons, and less than half that from the boundary of Quarry territory.
Strike that maybe. I definitely need to reconsider. At least rework the patrols so they crisscross the crone’s land.
“You will, won’t you?” The crone winks. “A real close eye on one in particular.”
Her amusement doesn’t amuse me, but I don’t let my displeasure show. You can’t dominate the crone. It was the one decent lesson my father taught me. He said witches dance between raindrops. Any male who thinks to control one doesn’t understand nature.
“That’s why I’ve come,” I say.
“I figured. I thought I had a day or two more. I should’ve left last night.” She sighs. “Well. You’re here. I’m busted. Cup of tea?”
“If you’re so inclined.”
Tea’s not my thing, but I’m not gonna be rude.
She leads the way to her front door, and once inside, she throws me a pair of athletic shorts before busying herself building a fire. I make myself comfortable at her kitchen table.
Like the crone, the cottage hasn’t changed from when I was young. My mother used to bring me up here. The females would go out to the shed for some female business, and I’d be left inside with a cookie and a glass of goat’s milk. My mother warned me not to touch anything, but she needn’t have. I felt then like I do now—like an alien on a strange planet. And all the shit could be poisonous. How would I know?
It doesn’t smell like pack in here. It smells like earth. Herbs. Dust and age and wood and sunshine. It confuses the nose, clings to your hair and skin.
If a predator was stalking me, he’d be able to get damn close before I clocked him. That’s dangerous.
I was always happy to leave after my mother had her cup of tea and chat with the crone. After I shifted the first time, she didn’t bring me with her anymore, and that was fine by me.
The crone disrupts my reminiscences by setting a plate with cookies in front of me. Oatmeal. Same as I remember.
She raises a gray eyebrow. “Your favorite, weren’t they?”
I nod.
“What did my mother come here for?” We always left with a small brown bag. I had a child’s lack of curiosity. To be honest, I’m not really sure why I’m wondering now.
“Not my tale to tell.”
“She’s long gone.” Wasting sickness got her in the last wave.
“That’s one way of looking at it.”
It’s my turn to raise an eyebrow. “There are others?”
“Always.” She goes back to the fireplace to hang the kettle.
“You know why I’m here.”
“I do.”
“Is Una Hayes my mate?”
“Did you ask her?”
Did I? I definitely did. Didn’t I?
She said I wasn’t. She agreed with me that she wasn’t. I search my memory for the exact words. It’s never this hard with males. I hate semantics. “I don’t know. She said you fixed it. What does that mean?”