Long run or short run? I asked warily. Wolves love to run, but even most of them dont love to run the way Adam does.
He pulled on underwear and running shorts, socks and shoes as he considered my question.Long run, he said, sounding a little surprised. Im a little wound up about something He let his voice trail off and gave me a small, almost shy, grin. Wolf instincts are good, but sometimes its hard to figure out whats touching them off. Running helps connect the frontallobe with the hindbrain.
That helps? I asked with sudden eagerness. It really irked me when I knew something and had no idea where it came from.
He laughed.Sometimes. Sometimes I just get tired enough not to care. You staying here?
I am feeling extremely mellow, I told him. Hed run things off better if I wasnt with him. Ill stay here. But you better put a shirt on, or your gorgeous self will cause an accident if you go running by the road, and someone sees you. He smiled at that; I think he thought I was joking. Ill take a shower and read until you get back. By then we might think about food, making some or hunting some down.
He hesitated.
Adam, I said, we are out in the middle of nowhere. No one who hates me knows where we are unless you borrowed this rig from Marsilia. Go run. Ill be here for you when you get backthats a promise.
He gave me one of his assessing looks, then left, closing the trailer door gently behind him. *
THE SHOWER IN THE TRAILER WASNT HORRIBLE. ID expected something only pygmies would be able to use, but it wasnt bad. I had no intention of using it, though, not with the camp showers available.
Camp showers should be primitive. Ive used camp showers that only had cold water, that had no shower curtains, and some that I came out of feeling dirtier than I had when I went in. The camp showers here were an entirely different thing.
The whole building was air-conditioned down to a civilized and chilly contrast to the outdoor temperature. The floors were slate tile. The mirrors in the lavatories had hand-carved wooden frames. The countertop was a slab of dark green marble that contrasted beautifully with the bronze faucets. There were four shower rooms, in which the slate tile and bronze fixture theme was continued.
Id never seen such a place in a campgroundor even in a hotel. The water pouring out of the giant-sized, ceiling-mounted showerheads was hot and sluiced the sweat out of my hair and worry for Adam off my shoulders. I stayed in the stall a long time, and the water never changed temperature.
When I was wrinkled and relaxed, I dressed in cutoffs and a T-shirt that had a picture of a ratty little house on it. The caption said,Thieves welcome. Please dont feed the werewolves. Jesse had it made for me.
On the way back to the trailer, the sun baked the water out of my wet hair. I ducked in the trailer, pulled my book out of my suitcase, and went back outside to lie in the grass and read until Adam got back.
Hed been running for a long time.
I read for about fifteen minutes, then the sound of something scuffing the ground jerked me out of the story. I looked up, but there was nothing but birds and insects
within my sight.
I looked back down at the page Id stopped on, and I heard it again. It sounded as if someone was rubbing the bottom of soft-soled shoes on pavement about ten feet in front of me, but there was no one on the road. I took a deep breath, testing for scentmy hearing is good, but my nose is better.
I expected to scent a mole or ground squirrel, something that could be making noise out of sight. Instead, the air carried old-fashioned tanned leather, campfire smoke, a whiff of tobacco, and the unmistakable smell of an unfamiliar man. I set the book down and stood up.
As I turned in a full circle, seeing nothing, the hair on the back of my neck began to shiver in a familiar way.
I am a walker. That means, basically, that I can shift into a coyote whenever I want to. It gives me sharper ears and nose than the rest of the human population. It gives me an edge of speedand I can sense ghosts that other people cant.
There was a ghost here. I couldnt see it, but I could feel itand smell it.
The scuffing sound started up again and, with the sun high in the sky, I walked over to the asphalt road, where the sound seemed to originate.
A hawk cried out, though the sky was clear of any predatory birds. I wasnt the only one who heard it, because all the birdsong that had been keeping me company while I read ceased. Maybe it was a real hawk, but my instincts were convinced it wasnt, though most of the ghosts Ive seen have all been human.
The scuffs were rhythmic now, almost like a very slow polka. Scuff-scuff, pause, scuff-scuff, pause. The scent grew strongerand I could pick out one more. Coyote.
I must have stood there for three or four minutes as the sound of dancing grew more solid before I saw him. I saw his leathers first; the rest of him was shadowy and dreamlike. But the fringe and the quill patterns on his sleeves and the outsides of his leggings were clean and distinct.