Piper’s brain hurt.
She wasn’t technically sure that was possible in a biological sense, but hers did. She was sure of it. For hours now, she’d been concentrating so hard on every word that came out of Dr. Stu Foster’s mouth, but there’d been so many of them. Frightening words. Words she didn’t want to have to wrap her mind around. Words like ventricular arrhythmia and cardiogenic shock. And worst of all—mortality rate.
“It looks like the charcoal treatment worked. The first one cleared him of gastric content. I performed a second treatment as a precaution, and nothing came back up.” Stu removed his stethoscope from around his neck, inserted the earpieces and pressed the chest piece against the matted fur on Koko’s side.
She knew it had to be her imagination, but the animal seemed so much thinner already. In the course of a day, her big black wolf had been transformed into a bag of bones. Plus he was filthy from the charcoal treatments and their ensuing sickness. She could barely tolerate looking at him like this. She wanted to give him a bath and brush his hair, which had to be one of the most nonsensical thoughts she’d ever had.
And she was tired. So very tired. She wished she could close her eyes, fall asleep and wake up when this nightmare had ended.
“His breathing is still much shallower than I’d like.” Stu moved the stethoscope around a few more times and listened intently, his face a mask of concentration.
Piper bit the inside of her cheek to keep herself from crying, because she knew once she started, she might not ever stop.
“We’ve done all that we can do for now.” The vet pulled the stethoscope out of his ears and let it hang around his neck again. A lifesaver’s necklace. Or so she hoped. “I’ve put a heavy dose of electrolytes in his IV, along with some nutrients, to replace the fluids that he’s lost. I’m also giving him a sedative to keep him calm so he can sleep off the effects of the poison.”
The hard knot that had lodged in Piper’s throat hours ago tripled in size. She couldn’t seem to swallow. Or breathe. “So you do think that’s what it is? Poison?”
Her knees buckled. She needed to sit down again before she collapsed. She sank into the snow. It seeped through her jeans with prickly cold wetness, which she barely noticed. Her discomfort didn’t matter, anyway. Nothing mattered.
Someone had tried to kill one of her wolves.
How could she go on after this? Even if Koko survived—and right now, survival hardly seemed a given—how could she stay in a place where her wolves were so despised that someone had done this?
It was over. Her sanctuary. Her dream. All of it.
Stu crouched down in the snow beside her and placed a reassuring hand on her knee. “Yes, Piper. I’m afraid that’s what it looks like. Koko’s symptoms are indicative of acute poisoning. We won’t know for certain until the toxicology reports come back.”
“I see.” She nodded absently. His voice sounded faraway and strange, as if he was speaking to her from the bottom of a well. She wondered if she might be going into shock. Probably. Wasn’t that what happened when people lost a loved one?
“Try not to take this so hard. Koko’s not out of the woods, but he’s still with us. He might pull out of it. Right now all we can do is wait.” Stu placed a hand on her knee in a gesture she was sure was meant to comfort her. But she didn’t feel it. She couldn’t feel a thing anymore. The cold. The wind. Nothing.
She swallowed. Or tried, anyway. The lump in her throat refused to budge, and she coughed instead. “Wh-where? Where do we wait? At the hospital?”
Koko would hate that. When he woke up—if he woke up—the bright florescent lights and all the strange smells would bring back so many terrible memories. Memories that had taken Piper years to help him overcome.
Stu shook his head. “I could take him to the clinic, but I don’t think that’s a good idea. Most wolves do best in their own environment. I’m afraid to place him under any more stress than he’s already encountered. I think it’s best that he stay right here where he’s comfortable. This is his home.”
This is his home. For how much longer? This land, Alaska, everything she’d ever dreamed of—she felt as if it was all slipping through her fingers.
“Good.” She nodded and somehow did a passable impression of someone who wasn’t on the verge of falling apart.
“Is there anyone I can call for you, Piper? You seem...well, distraught. That’s a completely normal, understandable reaction. I just don’t think you should try to deal with this alone.”
Okay, so maybe her facade wasn’t believable, after all.
“There’s no one.” Never had those words cut so close to the bone. “I mean, I’m not alone. See?” She waved a hand toward the surrounding acreage.
Stu chuckled under his breath. “You have a point. Half the town is in your front yard. Aurora does a good job of taking care of its own. I just wondered if there was anyone special you wanted by your side.”
She looked up. Sure enough, people were milling about everywhere. She’d been so focused on what was going on inside Koko’s enclosure that she’d forgotten the world beyond the chain-link fence even existed. When she’d gestured to the rest of the sanctuary and said she wasn’t alone, she’d been talking about the others. The wolves—Tundra, Shasta, Echo, Whisper and Fury. She hadn’t meant actual people.
Only now, after seeing Stu point to all the folks on the other side of the fence, did she realize how profoundly sad such a mistake seemed.
“I hate to say this, but you’re going to need to keep an eye on him tonight. In the event that he wakes up, we don’t want him pulling that IV out of his leg.” Stu ran his hands along the shaved spot on Koko’s right foreleg where he’d inserted a catheter. “It looks good and secure right now, and we want it to stay that way.”
“Absolutely. I won’t leave his side.” She would have stayed, even if Stu had ordered her gone. Leaving Koko alone right now was inconceivable. “Um, Stu, I have a question.”
He looked up from his vet bag, where he’d almost finished storing away all the supplies he’d used over the course of the morning and afternoon. “Yes.”
“What if Koko doesn’t wake up?” It hurt to ask the question aloud. Her throat burned from the effort it took to articulate her worst fear. “I mean, is it possible that he won’t?”
Stu’s gaze dropped to Koko, sleeping peacefully in the snow. And she knew. Before he even said it, she knew.
He looked back up and leveled his gaze at her. “I’m going to be honest, Piper. Koko is really sick. I wish I knew what kind of toxin he’d ingested. That kind of knowledge is crucial. It would help me make decisions regarding his treatment. But since we don’t know, I’m administering the broadest possible range of treatment protocols. At this point, based on what little we know, I’d say he’s got a fifty-fifty chance of making it through the night.”
Fifty-fifty. Like two sides of a coin. How did that old childhood saying go? Heads, I win. Tails, you lose. What she would do for a two-headed nickel right now.
Fifty-fifty. Please, God. Don’t let him die.
She lifted her eyes to the sky, where twilight dripped gray overhead. Moody, like a bruise. Like the storm clouds she’d seen in Ethan’s eyes right before he’d kissed her.
“Stu, actually, there is someone I’d like you to get for me. If he’s still here, that is.” What was she doing? Ethan wasn’t her boyfriend. He wasn’t even technically a friend. But right now, he was the one she wanted. The only one. His parka was still wrapped around her, enveloping her in the comfort of his smoky pine scent. Like a fireside embrace. She needed more. She needed to feel his arms around her again. Only for tonight. Just one more time.
Besides, what else could possibly go wrong? The worst had already happened. Hadn’t it?
“Could you find Ethan for me?”
* * *
Ethan narrowed his gaze at the vet. “Me? Are you sure?”
Stu nodded. He looked exactly like one might expect a person to look after he’d spent a day trying to save an animal from a mysterious poisoning. Exhausted. “Yes. She’s pretty shaken up. These animals obviously mean a great deal to her. I’m not sure she should be alone tonight. The next eight hours are crucial for Koko. Honestly, it could go either way.”
“Right.” Ethan nodded. He’d hoped for better news.
“I asked her if there was anyone special she wanted by her side, and she asked for you.” Stu glanced in the direction of Koko’s enclosure, where Piper sat in the snow with the wolf’s head in her lap.
Ethan knew that if he left and returned the next morning, he’d find her in that exact same spot. If losing Koko was a real possibility—and Stu certainly seemed to think it was—she wouldn’t leave the wolf’s side. The thought of her keeping vigil all alone made his gut ache.
She’d asked for him, of all people. If that didn’t put an exclamation mark on just how alone she was, nothing would. He shouldn’t be the one she wanted. Given everything that had happened in the past ten days, she should have asked for anyone but him.
But she hadn’t. Had she?
“Well?” Stu looked at him, waiting for an answer.
Ethan had every reason to say no. His column, for one. He was due to turn it in at midnight. In light of the day’s events, he had plenty to write about. Of his entire series on the wolf sanctuary, this would likely be the pivotal piece. A story about a wolf’s life hanging in the balance after being poisoned? Readers would eat it up.
And then there was his interview in Seattle. His flight out of Aurora was at sunup. Seattle was his future. Alaska wasn’t. Piper wasn’t.
Anyone in his position would say no.
He nodded. “Okay, then.”
He’d miss his deadline. An unpardonable offense, especially for a reporter who was already skating on thin ice with his editor. Lou was sure to fire him, if not outright strangle him. With any luck, Ethan would manage to land the job in Seattle. He could still catch his flight. He had to. It was either that, face unemployment or embark on a new career in hotel management.
Stu gave him a grim smile. “You’ve got my number. You two call me if anything changes.”
“Will do,” Ethan said, and watched Stu’s truck make the long crawl down Piper’s snowy drive.
He gathered a few things from his SUV—thermal blanket, battery-operated lantern, hand warmer packets. Sleeping in his car those few nights when he was keeping an eye out on the sanctuary had proved at least a little helpful. He may have failed to keep Piper’s wolves safe, but he could keep her warm for a night.
“Hi.” She looked up when he pushed open the gate to Koko’s pen. Her smile was bittersweet and uncharacteristically bashful.
“Hi.” He felt as if he was on a first date, which was a preposterous thing to think in light of the circumstances.
“Thank you.” Her gaze flitted to the lifeless wolf sprawled across her lap, then back to him. “For staying, I mean.”
“Of course.” He wedged the lantern into the snow and flipped it on.
Piper’s face glowed gold and ethereal in its dim light. “I hope I’m not keeping you from anything.”
Ethan settled down beside her and wrapped the thermal blanket around both of them. It was barely large enough for two. Sitting so close to Piper immediately sent waves of awareness crashing over him. He inhaled a steadying breath and caught the scent of flowers from her hair. Poppies and hollyhocks. Alaskan blooms.
He swallowed and felt as if he was swallowing glass. This was going to be a long night. “No, nothing special. You save me from a boring night in front of the television.”
If she didn’t believe him, she gave no indication. He kept his gaze glued to Koko, though, just in case.
She cleared her throat. “It was awfully nice of so many people to stop by today.”
Ethan nodded. Were they going to make small talk all night? It didn’t seem right. The church folks, the women from the recital committee and the youth group had all gone home by now. Darkness had fallen. Darkness so thick it felt as if the whole world was asleep. Tonight wasn’t a night for chitchat. Maybe it was the way the snow glimmered like sugar under the starlight. Maybe it was the closeness of Piper’s thigh pressing against his. Maybe it was the way Koko’s breathing sounded far too slow and labored. Whatever the reason, the night deserved more than small talk.
Ethan wanted to know her. Really know her. Maybe it was the reporter in him, but he needed to understand how she’d ended up here. She’d told him bits and pieces, but he still didn’t know how things began. Why wolves? “Tell me something. How did you get started with all this?”
“You mean the wolves?” She smiled again, and this time there was the barest hint of joy in her eyes. “Are you asking me how I started rescuing them?”
“Yes.” It was a question that had haunted him since the moment he’d first laid eyes on her, but for some reason he’d been either unable or unwilling to ask. Maybe because a part of him dreaded hearing the answer. “Tell me about the first wolf.”
“Okay.” She stroked Koko’s head, pausing. Remembering. “I was sixteen. For days, a stray dog had been hanging around an abandoned building that I passed every day when I walked to school. At least I thought it was a dog.”
“It was a wolf?”
“No.” She shook her head. “A hybrid.”
Hybrids, animals that resulted from the pairing of a wolf with a domestic dog, were extremely rare in nature. Humans bred them, sometimes with the intention to create a “perfect” watchdog, and other times, simply because they could. Whatever the reason, it was typically a mistake. Hybrids made challenging pets, often too territorial to blend into a normal household. Because even a little bit wild is still wild. “Ah.”
“I didn’t know it at the time, of course. I didn’t know anything about wolves at all back then. All I knew was that every day when I passed that building, I saw an animal that was obviously hungry. And obviously homeless.” Her voice lowered to barely above a whisper, as if she were imparting a secret. Something she didn’t want to tell the mountain or the trees. Not even the wolves. Only Ethan. “I guess I identified with that animal. I was in my sixth foster home, and I wasn’t any more wanted there than I had been at the others.”
He took her hand. Her fingers, cold as ice, wrapped around his and squeezed. Tight. As if she was in danger of drifting away if she didn’t hold on to him.
“I started saving food. Bits and pieces of leftover dinner. Sometimes I skipped my meals altogether so I could bring that dog something to eat. I gained his trust that way. After a couple weeks, he let me put a rope around his neck and I took him home.”
Ethan had a few guesses where this story was going, and none of the possible scenarios playing out in his head were good. “What happened next?”
“My foster parents were furious, of course. They said they could barely afford to feed me, much less an enormous, flea-bitten stray. I was devastated. I begged. I cried. I even considered running away. Finally, I settled on taking the dog to the local animal shelter. At least that way, they could find the poor thing a permanent home. A real family.”
“So I took the dog to the shelter, and the staff promised me I could stop by for visits until he was adopted. I left in tears, but knew that deep down I was doing the right thing. I’d done all that I could do. I let myself think that the dog would get adopted, find a forever home and live happily ever after. When I went to the shelter after school the next day, and the dog’s cage was empty, I thought that’s what had happened.”
Ethan closed his eyes, not wanting to hear the rest. He knew it had been something like this. Some painful genesis that could never be undone. Something he couldn’t fix.
He opened his eyes, and she shook her head. “The shelter vet had identified the dog as a wolf hybrid and immediately euthanized him. They said he was too dangerous to place in a home. I knew better. I’d fed that animal by hand for nearly two weeks. I’d bathed him with a garden hose in the front yard of the house where I lived. He’d licked my face and let me hug him. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d hugged someone like that. But that animal, that wolf they thought was so deadly, had let me.”
Ethan’s arms ached to hold her. It took every ounce of self-restraint he possessed not to reach for her. The house where I’d lived. Not her home. My foster parents. Not her family.
The differences weren’t lost on him.
All this time, she’d been trying to create a family for herself. A place where she belonged. In rescuing those animals, she’d rescued herself. And along Ethan had come and systematically, day by day, word by word, torn what was left of her world apart.
“So that’s the story of the first wolf. He’s the only one I lost, the only one I failed.” A single tear slid down her cheek. “Until now.”
“Don’t,” Ethan said, more firmly than he intended. “Don’t think like that. There’s still time.” It was running out, though. Each second, each minute, each hour that Koko didn’t wake up brought them closer to the end.
“I know. It’s just...” Her gaze fixed on something behind him, and she smiled and pointed to the sky. “Look.”
Ethan turned to see a wisp of color dancing in the northern sky. Pale pink. “The auroras.”
The northern lights were back, just like the night he’d told her about the bear attack. And once again, Ethan was tempted to believe in signs. Not folk tales like the revontulet fox fires. But reminders of a real and caring God. If those pink lights stood for something, if they were more than just a scientific phenomenon, he would have liked to think they meant God was there. He knew the secret hurts they’d both carried for so long. Releasing those burdens meant something. Something so profound it had to be written across the sky.
* * *
He was going to kiss her again. Piper could feel it coming this time.
The moment Ethan saw the auroras, his expression changed. And when he turned back around, he looked at her with eyes filled with awe and wonder. As if he’d seen something exquisite for the first time in his life, a rare orchid or a delicate bird that had been thought to be long extinct. But he wasn’t looking at a flower or a bird. Nor was he looking at the auroras. He was looking directly at her.
“I’m sorry, lovely,” he whispered, and brought his hand to her face. “About everything.”
I’m sorry.
Words she’d never heard from her mother. Once upon a time, when she was a little girl, she’d thought those words could fix things. If her mother had ever come for her, they would have. Baby girl, I’m sorry. That’s all it would have taken. Piper would have followed her anywhere and forgiven all.
Things had changed by the time Stephen had come into her life. Or maybe it was just that she herself had changed. She’d grown up. She’d made a life for herself. She knew she didn’t need anyone. Not people, anyway. She’d survived her entire adulthood with no one but the wolves, and it had been okay. Maybe not perfect, but okay. An apology didn’t carry the same weight it once had. Not that Stephen had ever come right out and apologized.
I’m sorry, lovely. About everything.
They were just words. But right here, right now, with a dying wolf in her lap and the auroras dancing overhead, Ethan couldn’t have said anything more perfect.
His hands slid through her hair until he cradled her face. Piper could see a world of color in his eyes, and though she knew it was only the auroras reflected back at her, it seemed like more, like an apology for every wrong she’d ever experienced. And his touch carried the promise of a balm.
She swallowed hard. The sky glowed pink and violet, the colors of romance and lilacs and the rebirth of spring. Snow fell around them like falling stars. And with excruciating slowness, Ethan’s gaze dropped to her mouth.
He was definitely going to kiss her again. But only if she didn’t kiss him first.
She leaned into him, and their lips met. Two long-lost travelers who’d finally found their way home.
Piper was suddenly spent, more exhausted than she’d ever felt in her life. She felt as if the weight of her past and that of every wolf she cared for was pressing down on her. So much time. So much pain. She wasn’t sure she could do it anymore. Not by herself.
She kissed Ethan as if it was the last breath she’d ever take, as if she was gasping for air. He stroked her hair, whispered words of comfort and told her everything was going to be fine. Koko would wake up. The sanctuary would survive. She would be okay. And in that moment, she loved Ethan for it. She’d never heard such beautiful lies.
“Sleep, lovely. I’m here. You’re not alone. Not this time.” He pressed a kiss to her hair, and she dropped her head to his shoulder and burrowed into the crook of his neck. To that warm, intimate place where his pine scent and beautiful words lived. And that smell, that warmth, those lovely sentiments she wanted so desperately to believe, they were all as soothing as a lullaby.
* * *
Ethan held Piper as she drifted off to sleep, his mind fixed on the idea of memories and how they shaped people. How they’d shaped Piper. How they’d shaped him.
How strangely sad it was that some experiences burned themselves into one’s being like a forest fire, destroying everything in its path—relationships, hopes, dreams and faith. Moments and lifetimes lost. Until by some act of godly grace, something happened to break the stifling hold of those traumatic memories. Feelings long forgotten were brought back to the forefront, at times in the blinding light of an amethyst sky, and other times, in the quiet hush of snow falling on a wolf’s dark pelt.
Ethan had known something was happening to him from the first day he stepped onto Piper’s land. He’d fought it. He’d fought it as best he could. But how long could a person fight something as exquisite as sanctuary?
It still didn’t seem quite real—the idea that he could finally be free. He knew it with his head, and he knew it with his ears, as he listened to the mournful howl of the wolves, their saddest of songs in the bitter Alaskan night. But for all Ethan’s newly recovered awareness, he still didn’t know it in his heart. It was almost as if the bear attack had altered him to such an extent that he couldn’t possibly be the same man who’d carried a dying coyote along the banks of the Last Fork River or had dug snow caves until his hands bled. All for a wolf. Where had that man gone?
He wanted to be that man again, at long last. For Piper. For Koko. For himself.
He reached out and rested his hands on Koko’s back. It was the first time he’d touched a wolf since he’d come back to volunteer at the sanctuary. All this time, he’d steadfastly avoided actual physical contact. As if he’d known a touch was all it would take. As if things could be so simple.
Maybe they could. It felt that way now. At long last.
He held on for dear life—for his life, for Piper’s, for Koko’s. He buried his hands in the wolf’s ebony fur and wept like a baby. Reborn.
He wasn’t sure how long the three of them stayed that way. Him. Piper. Koko. Together under the stars. Long enough for the indigo darkness to fade to a sparkling sapphire blue. Long enough for Piper to stir and awaken. But not long enough to see any change in Koko.
“He’s still asleep,” she whispered, and the grief in her voice almost broke Ethan’s heart all over again.
“But he’s still alive,” Ethan said. “I think we should call Stu. Maybe there’s something he can do.”
“Okay.” She nodded. “But my phone is in the cabin.”
“Mine’s in the car. I’ll get yours, and I’ll bring you something warm to drink. I’ll be right back. I promise.” He pressed a kiss to her forehead.
He hated to leave her, even for a second, but he wanted Stu here. Ethan couldn’t keep sitting around, waiting for the wolf to die. And he really couldn’t stand watching Piper do the same.
When he let himself into the cabin, a shaft of pink light from the auroras drifted through the narrow opening in the curtains, illuminating a vase of flowers in the center of the rustic pine table that Piper apparently used as both her dining table and makeshift desk. Books on ecology, animal husbandry and wildlife management were stacked five deep. A pile of papers had been placed neatly on top of her closed MacBook computer. Ethan recognized the seal at the top of one of the pages as the insignia for the National Nature Conservancy.
Her grant paperwork.
He had a mind to take a look at it and see if there were any adjustments or additions he could make in order to improve her chances for an amended application. But now wasn’t the time. He needed to get back outside and check on Piper. He was worried about her. Koko still hadn’t regained consciousness, and already the auroras were growing fainter and fainter, like a faded watercolor painting. Dawn loomed upon them with all its fatal implications.
Time was running out.
He strode toward the door, but something made him pause. He couldn’t put his finger on what it was. A feeling. An impression of something out of place.
He turned back around and took in the cozy scene with Piper’s books and papers, pieces of her life he wanted to thumb through so he could know her better. The tiny room glowed pink as a cherry blossom. Ethan felt as if he was looking at it through rose-colored glasses. Then, as the auroras ebbed and flowed, the hue faded to a whisper of blush. Ethan blinked. Everything looked different all of a sudden, most notably the flowers in the center of the table.
Only now did he notice the ultraviolet petals, so bright they almost looked blue. Soft velvet trumpets, all clustered together and dangling elegantly from their shooting green stems like a blooming chandelier.
Ethan couldn’t believe what he was seeing. He took a step closer, just to be sure, and bent to inspect the lush bouquet, careful not to touch them with his bare hands. As he did, Piper’s voice resonated in his soul, as real as if she were whispering in his ear.
Open his eyes, Lord.
He blinked, and knew with absolute certainty what he was looking at—the key to the mystery. The answer.
Those flowers. They were a special variety, one that thrived in melting snow. Alpine aconite, sometimes called by their more common name, wolfsbane.
Queen of the poisons.