He snapped his gaze away. “Six! Most will be dead in six days.”
Reeling in the wake of his presence, Susan busied her hands, cutting off bits of mold and kickstarting her brain. “I know. Let me think.” The antibiotics needed to ferment in a warm medium to make pharmaceutical-grade penicillin. “Can you make a thin broth?”
Sorin tilted his chin and frowned. “Yes.”
Responsibility weighed a lot. She set the knife aside. “We’ll make a weak batch and use it until the stronger one is finished. It can’t hurt to try.” She didn’t need his doubts plaguing her. She had enough of her own.
She scraped the mold from the old food while he prepared broth. Half the mold went into the sterile jug with the water, sugar and yeast. The other half, she stirred into the cooled broth.
“We need to let it sit until afternoon. The longer in the broth, the better the medicine.” She plopped onto a chair, weariness seeping into her marrow.
Sorin stirred the broth, then met her tired gaze. “Thank you, Susan.”
“Thank me if it works.”
He smiled at her.
Stunned, she watched his scarred face transformed by his lazy, crooked grin. Years of worry disappeared. She’d given up trying to crack his shell. Finally, he’d dropped his alpha’s mask and showed her the real Sorin.
“You’ve given me the most hope I’ve had in a long while.” He drew her onto her feet.
Before she could blink, he leaned forward and pressed a kiss on her lips. Quick and soft, it barely brushed her. The exhaustion plaguing her body vanished and her spirit soared. Thank God, she’d been wrong. He really did like her.
He hesitated as he pulled away, hovering over her mouth.
She licked her lips, making sure what she’d felt was real.
Sorin glanced at the movement, hunger blazing in his eyes. Strong arms engulfed Susan before she could take a breath. He bent, pressing their bodies together, and devoured her mouth. Hard and deep, he kissed her as if the secrets of life rested on her lips.
Tangling her fingers in his long hair, she pulled him even closer. A moan slipped from her throat as the warmth in her belly ignited into a full-blown wildfire.
He growled back, his hands moving lower to massage her ass.
She burned with desire, and Sorin held the only thing that would extinguish the flames. Running her hand under his leather kilt, she touched his bare, hard-muscled thigh.
“Sorin?” a woman’s voice called.
They sprang apart.
Lailanie entered the kitchen. “What are you doing?” Her eyes narrowed as her glare landed on Susan.
“Ma—” Sorin cleared his throat. “Making medicine.” His hair stuck out at odd angles where she had gripped him.
“Is that what they call it?” She strolled toward Susan and tucked part of her shirt back into her pants.
Chapter Eighteen
Sorin tried to keep his hope under rein as he carried the heavy pot of healing broth into the gathering–chamber-turned-sickroom. This had to work.
Susan hovered at his elbow. Anxiety tinged her clear, sharp scent as she nibbled on her nail.
The pot occupied his hands so he couldn’t keep her from chewing off her thumb. He stopped before entering the room. “All will be well.” Doubt would harm his pack. They needed her confident and calm.
“What if it’s not strong enough?”
“You’ve made us wait until afternoon to allow this weak brew to strengthen. The sick can’t afford to wait any longer.” He glanced at the mold soup he was about to serve his people. Doubts returned. “Will it hurt them?”
“No.”
“So this dose will help them and the next ones will only be stronger.” Some of the females were preparing bread to mold so they could continue making batches.
“I know, I know, but how much should they drink?”
“The human has a valid point.” Lailanie exited the chamber. The prickly odor of her anger still clung to her.
How did Lailanie make him feel guilty over a kiss? He held in a sigh. It was truly a gift. Staring her down didn’t work. The pain bleeding from her wounded gaze twisted his heart. He’d made his disinterest in her clear years ago yet she still hounded him.
He glanced at Susan. It was just a kiss—one that kept him busy all morning with thoughts of soft, unblemished skin, firm ass and needy moans. Biting his inner cheek, he banished these thoughts. They’d only lead him to the cold mountain spring outside the den again. Dumping bucket after bucket of icy water over his body and groin had helped a few hours ago.
“The children need smaller amounts than the adults. How many are sick?” Both females left him and approached the pack bed, discussing doses versus quantity.
He sought out Peder and placed the pot next to his favorite omega.
“Good morning, Alpha.” The slender shifter set out cups. Susan insisted on individual dishware to prevent the spread of the disease. The simple measures she’d suggested all made sense once she rationalized them. Yet no one from Sorin’s pack had thought of them. She continued to amaze him.
Sorin noticed a tremor in Peder’s hands.“Did you sleep?”
“Yes.”
Sorin didn’t need his keen sense of smell to recognize the lie and patted the omega’s shoulder. He appreciated Peder’s effort to ease his concerns then he knelt and stirred the broth.
The four of them were the only healthy people in the cavern. To prevent further spread of the illness, he called all other pack members to their duties in the den. Some worked to make penicillin, a few went to hunt and others managed the neglected cleaning. It would be nice to have fresh meat again.
Both females returned.
Susan smiled at Peder.
Sorin choked on a growl aimed at the pretty omega male. He didn’t like the comfortable manner between them. Once Sorin made his intentions clear, Peder had better back off.
Shrinking low to the ground, the other male remained still.
“Stop glaring.” Susan smacked Sorin’s shoulder. Her defense of Peder hurt a hundred times more than the strike.
Lailanie stepped in between him and Susan, making sure to sit next to him, so close he thought she would land upon his lap. “She doesn’t understand our ways. She’ll never adapt.”
A flush spread across his human’s cheeks. “This dose is weak and won’t affect their fever. We’ll still need more of those flowers you use.”
Sorin’s gaze traveled to the omega.
“I will depart this afternoon.” Peder didn’t meet his stare. He didn’t want to leave the den. Tending the sick suited the omega’s nature, but he was the only one who knew where another patch of the flowers grew.
“Good. Be careful. Stay off Temple lands.”
“Yes, Alpha.”
Susan nodded to them. “We should test for allergies to the medicine before administering it.”
“How?” Lailanie leaned forward.
“Scratch the inside of the person’s arm and apply a drop. If the skin swells or a rash develops, then we can’t give them the medicine.”
Before anyone could ask, Peder rose with a cup of the broth and started the process.
Susan took command so easily. His pack did as she asked without question or challenge. That was the biggest difference between these two females. Lailanie ordered and bullied, where Susan made requests and suggestions. Her tasks were to the point, organized and well thought out.
He grabbed a cup of broth and joined Peder. “How long do we wait?”
“Not long.” She turned her back on Lailanie—something a shifter would never have done. Not with the hostility radiating from the other female.
At least Lailanie didn’t demand a challenge.
He wouldn’t have allowed it, but any of his interventions would lower Susan’s good status with the pack. Shifters didn’t respect weakness. Most saw physical prowess as the source of power and leadership. He knew better. Saw it this morning in the kitchen. Knowledge was true power, and Susan was the smartest person he’d ever met.