Susan Millerâs POV
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Toddâs lawyer had met with him following his arrest. The US Attorneyâs office charged him with two counts of kidnapping, second-degree murder, and four counts of attempted murder from the hit-and-run. Since the arrest had come late in the week, his arraignment would not be until Monday morning, at the Federal Courthouse in Minneapolis. He was facing life in prison.
Saturday
I met with my mateâs lawyer the morning; he was a werewolf in the Afton Pack, so we could talk about the unique problems of werewolf incarceration. Heâd gotten Todd to sign over power of attorney to me so I could operate the business and banking while he was in prison. That was what gave me the authority to sell Alpha Leo all but five percent of our stake in Volkov Construction.
The picture Jonathan Turner, Esquire, painted about his chances of beating the charges wasnât encouraging. Todd had admitted the hit and run to him, but vehemently denied anything to do with the kidnapping. âEven with attorney-client privilege, he says he was set up,â Jonathan said. âHe has no idea where the phone and the money came from. Itâs going to be difficult for me to prove he was framed since the desk is his, and his office is always locked. Then he went after the targets again with a dump truck.â
âWill he be granted bail?â
âItâs unlikely given the seriousness of the charges. If the judge grants it, it will be a high amount, five to ten million dollars. Youâll have to come up with ten percent in cash to cover the bail bond.â
âIt wouldnât matter if it was five hundred thousand. I donât have any money, weâre almost bankrupt,â I told the lawyer. âThe house is mortgaged to the hilt, and our credit cards just got maxed out with your retainer.â
He nodded. âItâs probably best that he remain there for now. Alpha Leo wants his pelt above his fireplace, and the Council canât be happy with him either. Monday morning, the charges are formally entered. Heâll give the judge his not guilty plea, and a court date will be set for a few months down the road.â
âThe construction company will go bankrupt before the trial, and Iâll have nothing,â I said sadly.
âIâm sorry, Susan. The retainer covers the cost of my services, but a trial is going to be much more expensive. He really should consider a plea bargain when it is time, or heâll never get out.â
âWhat does jail do to a werewolf?â Iâd heard stories, but Iâd never had to deal with something like this.
âIt slowly kills them. With the cameras and the cramped quarters, you canât shift. Youâre also separated from your Alpha and your Pack. If we donât intervene, his wolf will slowly die over the next few years. We canât allow that to happen, as there is a chance it goes feral and shifts among them. At some point, they have to be taken out if they donât kill themselves first.â
I nodded. âThat is why we donât imprison our guilty. We kill them quickly and quietly.â
âIn part. The werewolf society canât incarcerate a wolf long-term and expect to get a functioning member back. If Todd hadnât been arrested, heâd be facing Council trial and execution by tomorrow. He attacked a fellow Alpha without proper notice and challenge, and he caused the forced change of a human. Both of those acts carry the death penalty with the Council.â
âSo, what do we do?â
âWe worry about the arraignment first.â
Sunday afternoon
I felt a lot better after my meetings with the Council and Alpha Leo. The deal he offered was beyond generous for my children and me, but the price would be high for Todd. He would have to plead to something he did not do. For once in his life, he would have to sacrifice for the greater good.
I didnât know if he would do it. Todd was my mate, but that didnât blind me to the kind of person he was. He manipulated and schemed to get to where he was, and he was good at it. I parked at Fort Snelling and got on the light rail into Minneapolis, getting out at the Hennepin County Government Center. Moving into the retail buildings nearby, I found a spot on the skyway where I could sit and look at my phone. No one passing by would ever know that I was mentally communicating with mate and husband, in a jail a few blocks away. âTodd? Can you hear me?â
The answer was immediate. âSusan, FINALLY. Where are you?â
âIn the skyway a few blocks away. How are you?â
âFrustrated and pissed off. My lawyer canât get arraignment until tomorrow, so Iâve been stuck with these lowlifes all weekend. You have to get me out of here.â
âIâm not sure I can, Todd. I talked to your lawyer, and he thinks you will be denied bail.â
âThatâs bullshit. Get the money ready.â
He was delusional. âWHAT money? Tell me where the hell Iâm going to come up with a half-million in cash, maybe more? The company is going bankrupt, and youâve already borrowed against all the equity in our home. I donât know how the kids and I are going to live while you are in prison, Todd! The Pack is gone, everyone is leaving, and Iâm stuck with the bills. We will be living out of our car before your trial even starts!â
He didnât say anything for a while. âUngrateful bastards. They should be raising money to get me out.â
âTheyâre scared and pissed off at what you did. The Council is here now, and they arenât happy that our conflicts are spilling out into the human world. They want it fixed quickly and quietly. Theyâve already spoken to Alpha Leo.â
I could sense his anger as that name went to him. âFucking has-been Alpha Leo, screwing up everything. Why couldnât he just die after losing his mate like everyone else? Itâs all his fault, him and his brother.â He didnât say anything for a bit. âIf Ivan could have kept his dick in his pants after getting mated, there would not have been a problem here. I tried to kill that guy for you, and for the Pack.â
âKilling a little girl and her human mother is somehow supposed to be good for the Pack? Itâs RUINED us, Todd! No Pack will touch us now.â
âThe money Luna Brenda offered for her death would have kept the business solvent until spring. If the boys had finished the job down in the ravine, weâd have the money already. Alpha Leo hadnât been recognized by the Council formally, so theyâd get over that.â
I just shook my head. âThey arenât âgetting overâ anything, Todd. The Chairman is here with his mediator and his guards. Theyâve already interviewed men that were part of the attack, and they know what you did and why. Luna Brenda has confessed to offering you the money to kill an Alpha and his heir. They are going to try you in absentia, Todd. You wonât need bail, youâre better off where you are. You will have a death sentence on you in our world if you ever get out of jail.â
âThey canât do that! Iâm an Alpha!â
âNot anymore, my mate. You canât be an Alpha without at least five members, and all you have left is your family.â I let him think about that for a bit. âWhat kind of life will we have with you in jail? No Pack will take us, and with the company in bankruptcy, Iâll have NOTHING.â
âIâll figure something out,â he said. âThere has to be a way out of this.â
It was time to give him the offer. âI was given an offer, via the Council mediator, that would settle the human involvement in this mess and provide for our family. They want you to plead guilty to all charges, including the kidnapping, and take the prison time.â
âWHAT?â I could feel his rage over the bond; he was probably hitting or breaking something right now. I waited calmly for almost ten minutes before he came back to me. âI didnât order the kidnapping; that is a setup.â
âI know you didnât, and so do they, but if the FBI keeps poking around, it will lead places the Council does not want them going. Youâre guilty of the four counts of attempted murder, and thereâs nothing we can do about that. Talk to your attorney and get him to work out a plea deal.â I kept talking, telling him that he should say he had become obsessed with Olivia after seeing her at Wiederholtâs. He had heard of the kidnappers through some ex-cons heâd met. Heâd offered ten grand upfront and ten more after delivery to bring Olivia and Vicki to him; Vicki was taken to ensure Olivia cooperated with his plans for her. He never thought they would be stupid enough to kill the grandmother. The hit and run was a target of opportunity; heâd seen Liv with Leo at Wiederholtâs that Tuesday. Leo had saved the two, and now they looked very friendly with each other. If he couldnât have her, Leo wouldnât either, and he could take out all three at once as they went home.
âThatâs it? All I have to do is confess to enough felonies to keep me behind bars forever, and then what?â
âThen I sell off most of the company before it goes bankrupt. The mortgage on our house gets paid off, and enough debt gets cleared for the company that it has a chance to grow again.â
He didnât say anything for a bit. âWho is buying my part of the company?â
âLeo Volkov.â If I thought he was mad before, he was worse now. It took fifteen minutes this time before he came back to me. âMost of the Welch Pack is now with him. He agreed to let us stay in the Pack, and I can keep working in the office. With the mortgage paid down, we wonât have to sell our home. All we need to do in return is for you to plead guilty.â
âNo FUCKING way. Not Leo. He doesnât get to win. Iâll die before I let that bastard have his company back. Susan, you are FORBIDDEN from having anything to do with Alpha Leo or the Miesville Pack.â
That asshole was going to ruin it all. âItâs the ONLY WAY, Todd! If we donât grab this lifeline, youâre dead, Iâm broke, and the kids and I are on the street! Is that what you want?â
âI want you to kill Leo and Vicki, Susan. Finish the job. If they die while Iâm in jail, the lawyer can use that to show that Iâm innocent.â I didnât know how to respond. âItâs the only way we can be together again.â