Spider Monkeyâs POV
I-5 North of San Francisco
I stayed in the back seat while Vic drove, keeping my computer equipment going as we drove north. The Prospect who drove our car and trailer from Las Vegas had met us yesterday in San Jose. He helped us store our motorcycles and more of my stuff from the storage garage into the enclosed trailer. We repacked everything so Heatherâs Harley and her things closer to the doors. We dropped the prospect off at the airport for the flight back, then continued up the coast towards Heatherâs new home in Washington state.
Rori had called Vic and asked us to cut our vacation short. The news about her grandfather Charles, though not unexpected, had hit her hard. The coroner had released the body yesterday, and they cremated his body immediately.
Rori and Chase wanted to go to New York for his funeral and asked if we could come back to help run things. When I asked why we were needed, Vic just said that Ron and Teri had to travel on business and werenât available. It took all of my control to avoid blurting out that they were trying to figure out how the Werewolf Council server was compromised. Or that it was the Adirondack Pack, and as Alphas, they needed to be there.
Iâd learned so much in the last week or so since I got into the Council server. I marveled at how well they hid their nature; Vic couldnât say no to me, but he never let on anything about it. The same went for Rori and the Pack; I had seen them as another Club, like the Brotherhood chapters Iâd been a part of for decades. Their facilities were resort quality, and the parties epic, but I never saw or heard anything to hint they were all WEREWOLVES.
Iâd even seen one shift, as the cellphone video of Tatiana shifting and attacking Heather was on the server.
I looked up at the profile of Vic at the wheel and wondered what his wolf looked like. I imagined his wolf would be like him. Tall, black fur with streaks of gray around the muzzle, broad-shouldered, deep chest, tapering to a trim waist and powerful thighs. My big dog nickname was prophetic. I smiled as another thought came to mind. If his body is proportional, his wolfie wiener would almost be dragging on the ground!
I knew the Council had discovered the hack, but Iâd left a worm behind to hide the evidence. I hoped they had good backups of their data because the program would turn their servers into expensive doorstops in just a few minutes. I wasnât worried about them finding me; the hacking server routed the files through servers in two other countries, and the file transfers were untraceable. Just to be safe, I activated a program on my hacking server that erased all the files there, overwriting them several times, so there was no chance of recovery. I didnât need them anyway, as I had already been sent the updated data each night. The hacked files were on removable hard drives connected to my laptop, along with the hard drives Iâd removed from my clean server. I made it a habit to remove and lock up my data in a fireproof safe, but for this trip, I brought it all with me.
âWhatâs the plan when we get to Carsonâs place,â I asked him.
âItâs going to be dark by the time we arrive, so weâll unload her stuff into the garage and stay the night,â he said. âWe can get going in the morning. It will take us two days to get home with me driving,â he said.
I didnât like driving with a big trailer behind me, especially in the mountains. The seat only adjusted so far for a tiny thing like me. âIs that going to be fast enough? I thought Chase and Rori needed to leave tomorrow night.â
âItâs as fast as I can drive safely,â he said. âAnd thatâs weather permitting. Can you check the travel forecast?â
I minimized the window for the audio files I was playing, all recordings of the Werewolf Council members calling out from their headquarters. I had been working backward from the most recent communications, taking notes on each file and its contents. I was pulling up Intellicastâs page when my phone rang. It was the alarm company for my home. âHello?â
âMiss King, this is First Security Alarm Company with an alert. We are showing a door open alarm on the front entrance door. Can you confirm if this alarm is valid?â
âIâm twelve hundred miles away,â I said. âNo one is supposed to be in my home.â Before we left, Vic arranged for some of his people to clean the carpets and repaint two rooms, but they had finished up days ago.
âWe are contacting the police, oh, wait⦠I have a fire alarm, as well. Contacting 911 in your area, please stay on the line.â I told Vic what was happening as I waited for the operator to come back on the line. He immediately called the security center at Arrowhead to tell them what was going on.
It was a long thirty seconds. âMiss King, I have multiple fire alarms in the home now. Can you confirm if there are any pets or occupants in the home?â
âNothing,â I said. I didnât even have a fish.
âEmergency services are on their way to your home, and I have provided the 911 operator with your contact information,â she said. âThank you for using First Security,â she said before hanging up.
âOur home is on fire!â
âI know.â He had an earphone in, so I couldnât hear the other side of the conversation. âThe house is completely engulfed. Someone broke in and torched it.â
âShit.â I looked over at the bag on my seat where the hard drives were. Everything else in my computer room I could replace. âI hope that safe we buried in the basement is as fireproof and waterproof as they say.â
âItâs bolted to the floor of the panic room, and it would take them a lot longer than two minutes to breach the room and break into the safe,â he said. âYour money should be safe.â Iâd kept about a quarter-million in cash from the Sons of Tezcatlipoca heist, after processing the money I needed to buy and refurbish our home. I didnât trust banks with everything.
âWho would do this?â
âWho wouldnât, if they knew who you were and what you had been doing. The Sons, the Cartels, any of them could be behind it.â
Iâd made a lot of enemies. I didnât think any of them knew who I was. âBastards.â
He listened and gave me updates. The security cameras could see the back of my house, and he told me when the first Sheriff car arrived. One disadvantage to living where we did was that the closest fire station was a good fifteen minutes away. The first fire trucks showed up five minutes after the roof of our home collapsed. âItâs too late to save the house,â Vic told me. âOur neighbors to the south, their home has caught on fire. The fire department is trying to limit the damage.â
I felt sorry for Mrs. Winters; her husband served her with divorce papers at Christmas, after thirty years of marriage, to marry his twenty-four-year-old secretary. She got the lake house in the settlement. I was relieved to remember she was staying with her daughter in Florida now.
âWell, this sucks,â I said. I got another call, this time from the Sheriffâs Department. I told them what I knew, which wasnât much. I had a lot of computer equipment, but no other jewelry or valuables. I didnât know who might have done it. When they hung up, I called my insurance company and gave them the bad news. âI wonât be back in town for several days,â I told the claims adjuster.
âWe will speak with the fire investigators and survey the damage,â she told me. âGiven the clear indications of arson, this claim will take longer than normal to process.â She gave me more information about filing the claim and what my policy would cover for temporary housing. I was exhausted when I hung up. âDo the Arrowhead cameras show anything?â
âThey do, but not in enough detail to make out license plates,â he said. âOne vehicle, maybe a Suburban, and four people go in, all wearing ski masks and gloves. Two are carrying gas cans. A man and woman come out, carrying computer stuff or large boxes, they canât tell. A minute later, the other two come running out as the home goes up in flames.â
âCan you have them provide it to the Sheriff?â
âAlready done,â he said.
âWhat do I go back to if I donât have a house,â I asked.
âYou can stay with Carson for a bit? I have to head back and deal with stuff so that I wouldnât be around much anyway. If the Sons or Cartel tracked you to our home, I donât want you anywhere close to it.â
I couldnât argue with that, as much as I hated the idea of him not being around me. âI suppose I could hang out with Heather for a few days,â I said.
âIâll make the call.â
I let him do that. Needing to calm down, I went back to the work I was doing, listening to the files. I was listening to Councilman Oscar Millner talking to another male. It was apparent they knew each other, and I was about to skip to the next recording when I heard the name.
My blood ran cold as I listened to the rest of the conversation.
I closed my eyes as I considered the potential consequences of the action I KNEW I had to take. It might destroy my marriage, and it could cost me my life, but could I let this happen?
No. I could not let the Council do this to Heather.
âVic, I need you to call Carson Nygaard RIGHT NOW and put it on speaker,â I said.
âWhat do you need-â
âNOW,â I said. âThis is an emergency.â
âI donât have his number,â he said.
âTHEN GET IT. NOW.â
He nodded and told his phone to call Chase Nygaard while he pulled off the freeway and parked on the exit ramp. A few rings in, he answered. âVic? Are you and Spider Monkey safe?â
âChase, itâs Spider. Carson and Heather are in danger, and I need to talk to them immediately.â
âHang on.â
I heard some tones, then a female voice came on the line. âCarson Nygaardâs office, this is McKenna,â she said.
âMcKenna, this is Chase Nygaard. I need to speak to Carson immediately.â
âIâm sorry, Alpha Chase, but Carson is with Heather in the outer range of our territory. Heâs out of link range.â
âWho is the senior person there?â
âHold for Beta Carl Striker, sir.â
There was a short pause before he picked up. âAlpha Chase, how may I help you?â
âGo ahead, Spider Monkey,â Chase said.
âThereâs a threat against Heather Rhodes and your Alpha,â I said. âCouncilman Millner hired men to come to your land and wait for Heather to leave the safety of the Pack House. He told them he has an asset in your Pack who would tell them when and where they would be.â
âSHIT.â I heard yelling, and it was thirty seconds before he came back to us. âI know where heâs at, and weâre passing a warning along now. I have to go; my mate is out there with them.â He hung up.
Chase was still on the line. âNow, what is this plan you overheard?â I took the phone from Vic and held it near my laptopâs speaker while I played the call, which lasted almost ten minutes. When it ended, Chase let out a long sigh. âTeri was right,â he groaned out.
âAbout what,â Vic said.
âYour wife knows about us and what we are. She was the one who hacked the Werewolf Council servers. Sheâs the one Beta Teri was supposed to find, and the Council figured it out.â
Vic looked over at me, and his eyes filled with fear. âThe Council sent those men to our home,â he said. âThey will kill you.â