By the time the tow truck comes and goes and I’ve made peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for all the adults (only to find out Caine likes grape jelly like a psychopath), I’m calm again.
We’re out. It didn’t happen to us. And right now, that’s my focus.
Besides, despite having lucked out onto a wide shoulder like this, I’m still a little worried a car’s going to crash into us. With our current streak of luck, it isn’t a baseless concern.
Andrew dangles a piece of crust in front of Sadie, who’s been sitting in front of him with begging eyes since he first started eating. He seems both nonplussed and enthralled by her.
At first, it was weird. But then I thought about it. Wolves never get to spend time with dogs, so they’ve never had the Sadie experience.
Her tail swishes against the floor as she gingerly snatches it from his fingers, only to then scarf it down like a feral beast.
Then he gets a second bit of crust out, dangling it in front of the dog.
"Don’t feed her that!"
Andrew freezes mid-motion, the crust hovering between his fingers and Sadie’s expectant mouth. "Why not?"
Sadie’s eyes lock with mine. Her tail stops wagging. I’ve destroyed her doggy Christmas.
"Because we don’t know what’s up with her." I take another bite of my sandwich, chewing slowly as I frown at the dog. She’s cute, but knowing there’s something strange about her... it’s hard to see her as just a big, loveable ball of fur.
But so far, aside from her lack of fear, she’s just... a normal dog.
Too normal.
Shouldn’t she want to go back home? Why is she so comfortable in a stranger’s car? And now she’s going in and out of the camper with us like she’s been part of the family forever.
"It’s just a dog, Grace." Andrew shrugs and drops the crust anyway. Sadie’s tail resumes its happy rhythm as she snatches the offering.
"She’s not just a dog," I mutter.
When I’d asked what Sadie actually was, Lyre had danced around the subject. She did say the dog wasn’t any sort of threat, and might actually be helpful. How a dopey golden retriever’s going to somehow help our little caravan has yet to be realized, though.
But the kids like her. So I guess there’s that.
Come to think of it, Lyre gave no explanation about what happened to Archie and Doris—just reiterated Owen’s claim that they’re not dead and leaving them there will be fine.
Which, of course, makes zero logical sense, but I’m coming to think of this as the App Phenomenon. Anything under its purview is on a need to know basis.
Though I still don’t understand why an old couple who like to barbecue have anything to do divinities and Chaos.
And Caine’s been no help with dragging information out of Lyre. I’d thought he’d be pushier, demand answers, but the moment the magic words came out of her mouth, he was done. It just took the one phrase: "They have nothing to do with Grace, and they’re not a danger to you."
After that, his focus had instantly shifted back to us—to me—with his intense, single-minded concentration. He’d even said, "If it’s not a threat to Grace or the children, it’s not my concern right now," without even a flicker of discomfort over saying a line I’d read out of a sappy romance novel somewhere.
But it should be his concern. It should be everyone’s concern when two seemingly normal people turn out to be something strange and dead-but-not-dead. In my world, we call those zombies, thank you very much. And zombies bring uprisings and the apocalypse.
"I do. I just think it’s weird and suspicious she’s sticking around us. What if she’s a magnet for trouble?"
"She’s a dog," Andrew interjects again. "She can’t be that bad."
Sadie whines, and I’m convinced she not only knows we’re talking about her, but she can understand every word we’re saying.
Maybe she’s a shifter like the children?
It would make sense. She loves them, and there’s certainly no rule saying dog shifters don’t exist. I mean, Sara can turn into a hedgehog, and all of these kids are able to shift well before the standard age of sixteen.
Maybe the old people were like Owen, saving a little soulspliced shifter who prefers to live as a dog.
The more I think about it, the more it makes sense. Caine had said something about the old people smelling a little like Owen. And when Jer was freaking out, it was Owen who came to explain they weren’t dead.
Yep.
Sadie’s a soulspliced child.
I just know it.
But how to prove it?
This chapt𝓮r is updat𝒆d by (f)reew𝒆b(n)ov𝒆l.com

Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Grace of a Wolf (by Lenaleia)
Aww 🥰 she misses Aron/Jack-Eye... she already mentioned him 4 times 😉...
Take Grace to your lodge big alpha, instead of the truck!...
W hy those deities are so restrictive? How are they supposed so save innocent souls without using magic?...
The paragraphs in this and the latest chapters are mixed up, making the reading difficult to follow 😔😪...
This guy is an idiot... first time in a truck? Just take her to you quarter or stargaze!...
I just can't stop laughing 😆 this situation is as hilarious as ridiculous 🤣 "not his mate" of course it is not as clear as the sky now that she is his mate!! Even theclycans, who are not the brightest, understand that she is his mate. I love ❤️ the sense of humour of this author...
This mission makes no sense. I'm starting to think it was just a way to keep Grace away from Lyre. Or return to the pack with Cain to destroy it completely 🤷♀️...
Saddie and the cat are protecting her... she really has a limited intelligence to not get it. And poor Andrew, he is sweet 😊 i hope he will find a nice mate when the time comes...
You haven't properly discussed about anything future and logistics topics related... Grace severely lacking pragmatism 😒 and the cat + dog can surely work as bodyguards for now...
Aww 🥰 I knew Ron is powerful and has potential. It's time she stops seeing him as a kid, Cain is right: it's about time to start training 😉...