Emmitt's Treasure - Melissa Haag Page 0,19

for the fact that they were both Elders and were forbidden from Mating, I would have sworn Sam was sweet on Winifred.

Though their interactions sometimes made me curious, it wasn’t with the same light I now saw in Michelle’s eyes.

I moved down to the step in front of her in an effort to reclaim her attention.

“If not aspirin, maybe Nana has something that could help.”

Michelle shushed me. This time, she turned toward Nana’s window, fully listening.

I inhaled, scenting Michelle’s growing excitement as Winifred rattled off some stock nonsense then said, “Just pick?”

“Pick the first one,” Michelle said rather loudly for someone with a headache. “Ride for a one-point-six increase then drop it.”

She breathed deeply, and I watched in amazement as her color improved. The slight bend in her stance disappeared with that same breath. It was as if I’d just witnessed her headache vanish.

Winifred didn’t miss a beat. As soon as Michelle said her recommendation, Winifred repeated it to Sam.

Michelle caught me studying her and blushed slightly before looking away. It didn’t take a body language expert to interpret that. Whatever had just occurred was a closed subject.

“We were still thinking of going to the lake after breakfast,” I said, as if what just had happened didn’t matter. Because it didn’t. Michelle seemed better, and that was all I cared about at the moment.

“Nana already went for groceries this morning. Will you come to the lake with us?”

She nodded, and I grinned.

“You might want to change.”

She looked down at her pajamas and wrinkled her nose. When she met my gaze again, her blush deepened.

“I’ll just go get ready,” she said.

I watched her dash up the stairs, then went to tell Liam and Aden that their sister was feeling better and had gone to get ready for the lake. Their excitement was palpable, and Jim and I grinned at each other while we ate the remaining pancakes.

As soon as they finished, the boys ran upstairs to help their sister. Without any witnesses, Winifred packed the car in record werewolf time then came in to help me with the dishes. Jim quietly sat at the island, eating the scraps and avoiding work.

“You should take the bike, Emmitt. Might be the only time she touches you,” he said when we were almost done.

“Best behavior, Jim,” Winifred warned.

Jim laughed and went to get his trunks on while I continued drying and putting away dishes and considered what he’d said. Michelle was complex. She didn’t trust us—didn’t trust me—and was running from a man, or several men, who made her very afraid; after what I just witnessed on the porch, she was maybe hiding something else, too. Yeah...complex was an understatement. As her Mate, I needed her to trust that I could protect her. But she didn’t know I was her Mate, and I couldn’t tell her that until she trusted me. Yet, would gaining her trust before exposing my secret possibly risk destroying her new trust in me?

“You’re too deep in thought,” Winifred said. “Go get ready. I’ll finish up here.”

I let her take the cup and towel then leaned against the counter.

“Will telling her chase her away?”

“Who’s to say? Your mom stuck around. Michelle’s only been here two days, Emmitt. And, we got off to a rocky start. Don’t rush this. Trust the pull.”

I nodded slowly, then went to change into my swimsuit.

When Michelle and the boys came down the stairs, we had the car seats in the car, but I was still debating whether to take the bike or the truck. The truck would probably make her more comfortable, but the idea of her on the back of my bike heated my blood.

As soon as Michelle walked out the door, Jim opened his big mouth.

“Emmitt, take the bike. That truck’s too much of a gas hog.”

Michelle glanced at the truck, then the bike, and finally the car. I could see she didn’t understand what Jim was really suggesting.

Winifred threw her two cents in.

“It would be safest if the kids rode in the car. That leaves the front seat open for someone while the other two follow on the motorcycle.”

Michelle’s gaze flew to me, and when her mouth opened in a slight “O,” I knew she understood. I waited while she thought it over.

“Do I need to go change, again?” she finally asked.

I eyed her shorts, t-shirt, and sandals.

“No. You’ll be completely safe.” With me. Always.

She looked doubtful but didn’t say no. After helping the boys into their seats, she came to me.

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