Wolf in the City � Ch. 5
By Laura S. Fox
Copyright � 2025 Laura
S. Fox
All Rights Reserved
Gay Erotica
Intended for Mature
Audiences Only
This story will contain
graphic depictions of sexual intercourse, strong language and it is not meant
for readers who are less than 18 years of age.
Consider making a
donation to Nifty by clicking the little blue button on the front page, as they
help us all enjoy so many great stories, while aiding authors like me to
display their work.
Chapter Five � Danger
Zone
Another young man in a
suit tended the front desk of the Pembroke building, but his attitude toward
Ryder was the same as his colleague's.
"I must insist," he said.
"It is a matter of life and death."
"Sir, Mr. Pembroke does
not receive anyone without a prior appointment," the young man replied calmly.
Telling these people the
truth took him nowhere. Ryder despised guile more than anything else.
"I do have an
appointment," he said, pursing his lips.
"Now you have an
appointment? Let me check with Mr. Pembroke's assistant," the young man said, lifting
the receiver of the phone on his desk, all the while his eyes remaining glued
to Ryder. "Anita, hi, there's this strange man--"
Ryder grabbed the phone handle
from the desk attendant and started, "If you don't put your master through at
this moment, you will all be sorry. Tell Theodore that his mate is here."
The woman at the other
end squealed nervously, but she seemed to have more sense than the pretentious
silly man in front of him.
"Give that back," the
desk attendant protested and wrestled the phone out of Ryder's hand. Only
because Ryder relaxed his hold could he achieve his purpose. "Anita, sorry�oh,
please forgive me, sir. Yes, I will tell him right away." He placed the phone
back into its cradle and stared at Ryder with unhidden anger. Still, his voice
was strangely calm when he spoke. "Mr. Pembroke will see you now."
***
The elevator even had an
operator in this building, another young man in livery that used a range of
gestures that appeared too grandiose and overly sufficient for the job at hand.
Ryder paid him no mind; Theodore obviously enjoyed having an army of human
servants, and it seemed like he was magnanimous by nature. Most of these people
seemed to be doing little to justify being by their master's side.
He looked at the blinking
numbers as the carriage moved up. He would soon see his mate; he would be able
to remove the curse placed by thus far unknown forces on his pack and he'd do
it all before his next heat began.
Whenever he had thought
of this moment, he had imagined it differently. But there was no unfamiliar
flutter in his stomach, and his heart wasn't skipping a beat. He was only
slightly upset at the ridiculous obstacles he had met so far. Otherwise, he
didn't behave as if he could barely wait to meet his mate, and the strangeness
of that fact took him by surprise.
"Hello," a woman in a
tight skirt and a crisp white shirt welcomed him, jumping out of her seat as if
it had burned her as soon as he arrived at the last floor and the door had slid
open.
Large artificial plants were
tucked into every corner, and the entire place looked and smelled like it had
been sanitized with the usual chemicals that humans used to chase away dirt.
Their combination hurt Ryder's head, and he found it difficult to breathe. How
could his mate live here? Conduct his dealings every day without succumbing to
these terrible scents?
Maybe he was using all
these things to cover his true nature.
"You should have told the
desk you went to school with Mr. Pembroke," the woman said nervously.
School? Ryder didn't trouble
himself to figure out what was going through the woman's mind. As much as he
didn't want to lie, this would have to be a lie by omission.
"Take me to him," he said
curtly.
She hurried to open two
large wooden doors to let him walk into the main office. She bowed her head as
he entered and lifted her eyes in surprise at his sincere `thank you'.
The large desk placed in
front of the glass wall grabbed Ryder's attention right away. The lavish chair
was turned away from the door, and there was no movement until the female human
closed the doors as she withdrew.
A low chuckle emerged
from that turned away chair. Ryder frowned. The scents weren't as offensive in
here, but he didn't like that laugh. It was cruel and clearly pointed at him.
The chair finally turned, revealing its occupant.
Theodore Pembroke held
his hands steepled in front of him and looked over them at Ryder. "My mate," he
said in a low voice.
He looked even more
handsome than in the pictures Ryder had seen. His broad shoulders pressed
against the back of the leather chair, as Theodore pushed himself back to take
a good look at his visitor.
"Remind me, what classes
did we take together?"
Ryder's eyebrows shot up
in surprise. What was Theodore talking about? Such a mistake was to be expected
coming from his mate's human servants but not from him.
"I have to admit that I
was intrigued by the commotion. I looked over the security cameras to discover
who dared to demand to see me about a � what did you call it? � matter of life
and death."
Ryder took a step
forward. If only Theodore could detect his scent, and Ryder smelled him too,
this whole misunderstanding would be resolved with no need for further
explanations.
"I know for a fact that
you're not carrying a concealed weapon, so I assume you intend to come at me
with your bare hands. Very well," Theodore said and stood to his feet. He
shrugged off the coat of his suit and crossed his arms. "Who sent you?"
His heart was beating the
same as always. He couldn't smell Theodore's scent at all in this scent-crowded
room. Ryder took in the incense stick burning in a beautifully adorned
container in a corner. It reminded him of something but he couldn't recall
what.
"I know of your true
nature, Theodore," he said in a low voice, using the same tactic his mate had.
He needed to show he wasn't intimidated. "I am here because I am your mate."
"My mate?" Theodore
frowned and moved around the desk. He was coming closer, and Ryder felt his
anticipation growing. Soon, his teeth would sink into his mate's coveted flesh,
and he would be able to save everyone.
He needed to wait
patiently. Since Theodore was, unusually enough, a submissive alpha, that
didn't make him any less of an alpha. Offering himself up for Ryder to mark him
would take going against everything he had been taught his entire life.
They were of equal
height. They were so close now they could stare into each other's eyes. Ryder
tried to focus, to capture his mate's unique scent, the only one that was able
to make him go mad with desire, but he couldn't find it.
He needed to extinguish that
burning incense to stop it from releasing its terrible scent, but not now. He
had to allow his mate to sniff him and know that they were meant for each
other.
Theodore did just that.
He leaned forward and sniffed Ryder, although not as overtly as a mate might hope
for.
He pulled back in
surprise, narrowing his eyes. "Wolf," he said through his teeth.
Finally, he understood.
Ryder reached out for Theodore, willing his heart to do its thing, and his
teeth to tingle in the anticipation of meeting his mate, but there was none of
that. The damn incense was most likely to blame.
"You are mine," he said,
although his words sounded hollow, as if they belonged to someone else.
He opened his mouth wide,
his eyes fixed at the side of Theodore's neck. He would mark him properly
later, but for now he needed to make his intentions known.
Soon, he would be
intoxicated by his mate's wonderful scent. He closed his eyes, and just as he
did so, his senses tingled in alarm.
Danger? What sort of�
The air swished, sliced by
sharp blades, and Ryder barely had time to pull back out of their path.
Those weren't blades �
they were Theodore's claws, brushing by Ryder's chest, slashing his t-shirt.
What was happening? Why
was his mate attacking him? Ryder moved swiftly out of the way. Theodore's
right arm had broken through the tailored shirt sleeve, and it was now hard and
dangerous, covered in dark fur. Theodore's eyes had turned red and burned,
while their owner bellowed and launched another attack at Ryder.
Something was wrong.
Everything was wrong. Nothing had prepared him for this sort of danger. Could
it be that the curse had affected Theodore, as well? Ryder needed to make him
see the truth, but when a wolf got that sort of eyes, any sort of talking
rationally to him was going to fail.
He nimbly stepped out of
the way of the Theodore's continued attacks. Although the wolf inside him was growling
to come out and punish the one who dared to provoke him, Ryder used all his
power of will to command him to stand down. Theodore was in danger and had to
be subdued in a different way.
First, he had to destroy
the incense diffuser. Ryder felt it was important to do so.
Theodore blocked his path
and bellowed at him. His face was now turning, as well, and Ryder could clearly
see what a handsome wolf his mate was, his fur so dark it shone blue.
Now wasn't the time to
admire his destined one.
"Has the city destroyed
your sense of smell?" he hissed at Theodore. "How can you not tell that I'm
your fated mate?"
"You're fated all right,"
Theodore growled. "But mate? My mate, you? How silly can you be?"
"Stop attacking me. I can
barely keep my wolf from responding in kind, and you won't like it when he
comes out to fight," Ryder warned.
His words fell on deaf
ears. He shouldn't have been surprised, and the fact that they couldn't smell
each other grew more and more frustrating with each passing moment. He ducked
just in time and hurried toward the corner that held the incense diffuser.
"Coward!" Theodore
growled at him. "Come and fight me!"
Ryder ignored the
insults, even though they were making his blood boil. He threw himself at the
small table on which the incense stick was burning, kicking one of its legs.
The container flew across the room, smashing against the wall.
A small cloud of terrible
scent emerged from the broken pieces, making Ryder dizzy. It weakened him enough
to let Theodore jump on his back and wrap his clawed paws around his neck. He
felt sharp stings like needles sinking into his skin and going deeper.
Would his mate kill him,
under the effects of that dark spell? Ryder pushed Theodore away, as his wolf
could no longer suffer the indignity of staying out of the fight.
He stood so abruptly that
he sent Theodore flying. As he turned, he faced the pair of maddened eyes with two
of his own.
They were about to lunge
at each other, when a voice, coming from the desk made them stop dead in their
tracks.
"Mr. Pembroke, I need to
remind you that you have an eleven o'clock meeting with the board."
Theodore transformed
under his eyes. He walked over the desk and pressed a button on the phone
there. "I will be ready in five. I have something to finish up first."
Ryder thought fast. He
pulled back to the wall and then made his way quickly to the door. If he
managed to dash through it�
"I'm not finished with
you!"
"For now, you are," he
said and opened the doors, returning the puzzled look on the female human's
face with absolute calm.
Behind him, Theodore had
remained motionless, as he had predicted. Ryder nodded at the secretary, just
as her eyes moved down to his chest and ripped t-shirt, only to jump back to his
face.
Like other wolfshifters, Theodore couldn't reveal his true nature to
the humans around him. Unless the female human had been sworn into secrecy by
giving her blood, his gamble would pay off.
The elevator door opened
before him and he stepped inside. The elevator attendant didn't give him a
glance, but the secretary was leaning over her desk, still staring at him, her
mouth agape. Now in front of his office doors, Theodore was giving him the evil
eye. Ryder noticed with satisfaction that, even if by accident, he had managed
to temporarily scar his mate. A few droplets of blood seeped out of a
superficial wound on his left cheek.
***
"That is so not his
boyfriend," Danny heard Jeff's obnoxious voice coming from not more than three
feet behind him.
"You think? It looks like
our little doe finally found her wolf," Kat whispered angrily. "And keep your
voice down. He's right over there."
Danny had a mind to turn
on his heel and abandon his post only to scare the living daylights out of the
two gossipers. Unlike Kat, who usually assumed a submissive role when his
boyfriends were around just to show what a cute twink
he could be, Jeff was more masculine in appearance and preferred to pretend to
be a straight shooter � but not that sort of straight. Both of them hoped for
billionaires to come through the front door and whisk them away to lives of
luxury.
They worked in a store
that catered to young guys with a bit of money to spend on jeans and t-shirts
nicer than usual, so that hope for billionaires was so misplaced that it made
Danny laugh to himself to think of it.
He must have laughed to
himself a little too loudly, because the gossiping stopped abruptly.
"Hey, Danny," Jeff called
out. "Kat is telling me that you got yourself a boyfriend. But I don't buy it.
Was that guy from this morning some sort of rent boy you found at a discount or
something?"
Danny turned, his face
all a smile. "The guy from this morning will come pick me up at six, when we
finish here. You'll have a chance to ask him yourself."
The way Jeff's face
metamorphosed from obnoxious to unsettled should have been recorded for
posterity. Danny shrugged and returned to his task. He wasn't the sort to
strike back because, usually, Kat and Jeff aimed their poisoned arrows at him.
Right now, however, they were insulting Ryder by calling him a rent boy � a
mistake Danny himself was guilty of, but he could give himself a break due to
the shock of having such a handsome guy in his home. What were his colleagues'
excuses?
***
Was there such a thing as
a clairvoyant in this damned city? Ryder zippered his jacket after getting one
too many stares from people who eyed his bloodied chest, seemingly startled by
the sight of a bit of blood.
His mate had to be under
a spell, but without Cassandra's help, Ryder couldn't identify its source, nor
the way to lift it. The fact that he hadn't been able to smell his mate at all
was unnerving, but at the moment that was the least of his problems.
Theodore was strong, and
while Ryder didn't wish to hurt him, a second meeting was likely to turn really
bloody for both of them. Without answers, he couldn't face Theodore again.
Hopefully, he would get them before the next full moon. If not, they would all
remain cursed for eternity.
Every place in this city
was carefully documented on maps that could be accessed through his phone.
Ryder studied the device with keen eyes. If he managed to find someone similar
enough to a clairvoyant or a wizard of sorts, he might come closer to discovering
a solution to his current predicament.
"Fortunetelling?" he
murmured to himself.
There was a fee for the
services offered. And there were so many to choose from. How was he supposed to
try them all and see who was a fraud and who wasn't?
"First session free, come
back for more," he read slowly. A free session sounded like a good deal in the
beginning. This person was obviously confident enough in his or her ability to
charge only for a second session; displeased customers would surely not return
to someone who told them a bunch of silly lies the first time.
Ryder had to find this
fortuneteller and see if there was any thread of magical wrongdoing he could unravel
from the little he had glimpsed during his visit to his mate.
***
The fortuneteller was
conducting his business in a small room that could barely contain a tiny table,
covered in a dark red cloth, two chairs, one currently creaking under Ryder's
weight, and the young man who advertised his services on the screens of phones.
"I'm here for the free
session," Ryder informed him.
The young man was short
and thin, looking like any gust of wind would blast him away. He reminded Ryder
of a rodent, but not the pesky kind. More like the cute kind that the girls in
his pack sometimes kept as pets. The thick-rimmed glasses seemed too big for
the young man's head, and he was nervously fiddling with a deck of cards on his
table.
"Certainly. I wasn't
expecting anyone." The cute little human offered a small nervous smile, then
added, "Today."
"You're a fortuneteller
and you couldn't tell someone was going to come through your door today?" Ryder
inquired, quirking an eyebrow.
"Good point." The
fortuneteller pointed both his index fingers at him. "I'm doing this as
research."
"Research of what?"
"Never mind. Let's
start."
Ryder pondered whether or
not to get up and leave. But the allure of a free session of fortunetelling,
seeing how meager his funds were, couldn't be denied.
"As a clairvoyant, are
you sworn to keep all you find of a person's future a secret from everyone
else?" Ryder asked. Cassandra had told him about this; if a clairvoyant
disclosed what he or she knew, a curse would be the prompt reward for such
actions.
"I will keep your
secrets, sir," the young man said solemnly.
"Very well. I am Ryder
Asherman from Pinemoor, the alpha of Luna's Sentinels. I am here to find my
mate and just discovered that a spell has been placed on him."
The young fortuneteller
stared at him wide-eyed. "Hi, I'm Jack. Your... mate?"
"Yes. My fated mate,"
Ryder said slowly, as it seemed that Jack was a bit slow.
"And who is your mate, if
I may ask?"
"You may. My mate is
Theodore Pembroke."
"Pembroke? That
Pembroke?"
Ryder had no idea what
Jack meant by `that Pembroke'. "The tall building three subway stations from
here. It belongs to him."
Jack opened his mouth and
closed it a couple of times. "Wow. This is juicy. I mean, interesting."
"Can you help me?" Ryder
asked.
Jack grabbed his deck of
cards. "I can try," he said, smiling happily.
TBC
Thank you for reading!
If you
like this story and you want to support me while writing it, here is my Patreon account. For
their generosity, my patrons receive early access to new chapters, extras for
stories finished that are not available elsewhere, as well as complete books.
You can
get all my finished books on Smashwords, as well.