“Very light sleeper. So, did you need something?”
“Yeah. Your truck? Can I borrow the keys?”
He leaned against the wall and folded his arms. “It’s three in the morning. You’ve been injured. You don’t have your driver’s license.” He glanced at her wrist. “Where’s your wrist wrap?”
She wiggled her hand back and forth. “All better. I want to take a run and do some tracking.”
“At the B and B.”
“Yeah. To see if I can learn anything.”
“In your wolf coat.”
“My back feels a hundred percent better.”
One eyebrow raised, he gave her a skeptical look.
“Eighty-five percent.”
He smiled.
“Seventy.”
He didn’t budge from the wall.
“Nearly seventy percent.”
He exhaled heavily and moved toward her. She stood her ground, and this time she folded her arms. She knew that look on his face. He didn’t believe she could track better than his wolves. Nobody ever believed it until she proved it to them.
“We’ve got pack members on it.”
“I can do better.”
He smiled.
She reached out her hand for his keys.
“Darien would have a fit.”
“Don’t tell him.”
“I’m part of a pack.”
“I’m not.”
“I still have to tell him.”
She sighed. “So tell him.”
“He’ll say no.”
She turned and stalked toward the bedroom at the end of the hall. She didn’t know which room was Darien and Lelandi’s, but this one had more of their scent leading up to it. Others had been here also, probably doing what she was about to do. Bother them for pack business.
Tom said, “I’ll call him. It’s less likely to disturb Lelandi than knocking on the door.”
He slipped into his bedroom and walked back out with his phone in hand. She’d already headed in his direction, and he put his arm around her. “Darien—”
“No,” Darien said over the phone. “I heard everything. Wait until tomorrow.”
Tom looked to see if Elizabeth had heard what Darien said.
Elizabeth made a face. “Help me strip out of my clothes.”
Tom smiled just a little.
“I’m going running, no matter what Darien says. Since I’m only seventy percent healed, I might need a little help pulling off my clothes.”
Tom still had the phone up to his ear, still smiling, but Darien didn’t say anything.
“Okay,” she said, “I can do it myself. I’m probably more like ninety-five percent fine.”
She pulled away from him, and he hurried to join her.
“She can’t run,” Darien said.
“’Night, Darien. Sorry we disturbed your sleep.” Tom shut off the phone and took Elizabeth’s hand. “Come on. Let me get dressed.” He glanced down at her stocking feet. “You’re going like that?”
“I thought you might help me get my boots on.”
“Are you sure you’re able to run in your wolf coat?”
“Sure. If I start feeling bad, we’ll come back here.”
“You promise?”
“Yeah.” But only if she didn’t get a lead.
***
Tom and Elizabeth drove into Silver Town and parked in front of the B and B. Bertha met them at the front door, wearing a pink floral flannel nightgown, a big fluffy pink robe and slippers, and a nightcap on her silver curls. “Darien called. Said you were on your way over here. Said it was a case of life-and-death.”
“Yeah, mine, I’m sure,” Tom said.
Bertha smiled.
Elizabeth and Tom went inside, intending to change in her room so they could shift in privacy.
Bertha shut and locked the front door. “Darien wasn’t real happy you headed on over here. You can use another room. I’ve had to leave all the glass everywhere because he wants to see things the way they were first thing in the morning. Just leave the window open and come back in that way. The other guests are not like us,” Bertha whispered.
“Thanks, Bertha,” Tom said.
“Should you run as a wolf so soon after the accident?” Bertha asked Elizabeth.
“She’s a better tracker than our people,” Tom said.
Bertha smiled. “Good. We need the best.”
Elizabeth was certain Tom didn’t believe her, but she’d prove she was right.
“I’ll be off to bed. Just close the window when you return and lock the front door when you leave. ’Night, folks.” Bertha disappeared into her own suite of rooms.
Tom closed the door to the guest room and crossed the floor to open the window. “Are you sure you feel well enough to do this?”