“I didn’t lie. I’m fine and I meant it,” she snaps.
“You don’t sound fine,” I point out, irritated by her continued lie. “Something’s bothering you. I can smell it, Clove. Your distress disturbs my wolf. And lying about it pisses me off.”
“Maybe I’m distressed because I’m now trapped on a yacht with two angry Alphas that apparently want to punish me for truthfully saying I’m fine,” she bites back.
“I’m talking about your distress after you shifted, not the furious energy coming off you right now,” I clarify as I shut the door and lock it. “I’m talking about you clearly lying to me when I asked if you were all right. And now I’m going to talk about why this is a problem and what we’re going to do abo—”
“It wasn’t a lie,” she interrupts, speaking through gritted teeth. “I am fine. I just had a few unwanted thoughts. But they don’t matter. I’m safe. I’m protected. I’m fine.”
I narrow my gaze.
“And I want clothes,” she adds. “I didn’t do anything wrong. I even won Volt’s challenges. But now I’m not in the mood for my reward because you both are being Alpha assholes.”
I arch a brow at Volt. “Reward?”
“I said I would pleasure her until it was time to go, but only if she shifted without my help and went on a run with me.”
“And then we ran all day,” she mutters.
“Because you needed the run, sweetheart.”
“Yes,” she agrees. “Since I clearly won’t be getting the other thing I need.”
I frown, glancing at Volt and then at her.
“What other thing?” I ask.
She huffs and starts pulling the blanket off the bed. “Since I can’t have clothes, I’ll—”
Clove shrieks as Volt lifts her up off her feet and tosses her into the center of the bed. He’s on her in the second second, capturing her hands over her head and pinning her to the mattress with his thighs.
“What other thing?” I repeat.
But she mutinously snaps her jaw closed, her teeth clenching so hard I can hear it.
“I see,” I murmur. “Well, while you’re being silent, I’ll explain why lying isn’t acceptable in our clan. You’re an Omega. That makes you inherently weaker than us.”
Her cheeks darken with fury, her brown eyes glowing with the need to rebuke my statement.
“It’s a fact, Clove. We are bigger and stronger. And while you may harbor some alpha-like traits, they are not of the physical variety.”
“She was pretty quick on her paws today,” Volt offers, causing some of her ire to bleed out of her expression. “Definitely nimble and agile.”
“Fantastic traits,” I admit, “but they don’t detract from the reality that she’s an Omega.” I walk up to the bed to stare down at her, but she’s too busy avoiding my gaze and biting her tongue to look at me. “Can you move, Clove? Can you push Volt off of you?”
He wiggles in response to my words, daring her to try.
She doesn’t.
“You can’t, can you? Because we are much stronger than you physically.” I infuse a hint of dominance in my tone, making her shiver. “You’re helpless to us. If we want to fuck you, we will. If we want to kill you, we can. And if we want to hurt you, there’s nothing you can do to stop us.” I grab her chin and force her gaze to meet mine. “Except for one thing.”
She swallows, her eyes filling with furious tears. She hates being put in this position. But that’s the point. This is what I need her to understand.
“You have the power here, Clove,” I tell her. “You may be physically weaker, but we are slaves to your desires. A single command will release you. A truth. That’s all you need and Volt will do exactly what you tell him to do.”
Volt may be a little unhinged and crave violence, but he’s so smitten with Clove that all he needs is to hear the words and he’ll do whatever she asks.
“That’s why your words matter.” I tighten my grip on her chin, demanding that she hear me. “Your truth is vital to the success of our clan. You don’t have to tell us exactly what you’re feeling, but admitting that you’re not okay is imperative to how we function as a unit. Otherwise we risk crossing a boundary that may cause irreparable damage.”
Volt gathers her hands in one of his, pulling out a blade with another to set it against her throat. “Trust is crucial, sweetling. Without it, you could die.”
A far more crass approach, one that is particularly dangerous considering the yacht is gaining speed.
But I choose to trust Volt’s steady hand.
And the startled glimmer in her gaze tells me the point is finally registering. “Tell him to put the knife away, Clove.” I don’t phrase it as a demand, instead offering it as a suggestion as I release her chin.
She slowly looks at Volt, her throat working beneath the metal edge.
He stares down at her, waiting.
“I asked for clothes and you denied me,” she says. “Yet you’re telling me my words matter. Well, so do your actions.”
“Actions,” I repeat. “Such as allowing you to roam our den as an unknown wolf. Feeding you without requesting anything in return. Giving you a safe place to rest. Ensuring none of the other Alphas attacked you when you went into heat. You mean actions like those?”
She doesn’t reply.
“True words, Clove,” I press. “Requests that actually mean something. Those are what matters. And we both know your request for clothes wasn’t because you actually desired them.”
“So I should just trust you to know my desires, then,” she says bitterly. “To know whether I really mean something or not.”
“That’s the heart of our clan,” I reiterate. “It’s being open and honest with each other so we can trust our instincts. We could so easily hurt you, Clove. That’s what we want to avoid. And to do that, we need you to be honest with us.”
“Saying you’re fine when you’re clearly not, isn’t acceptable,” Volt adds, his tone holding a darkness to it that makes Clove’s eyes widen a little.