Is it a Vampyre thing, shoving your pointy little fangs into other peopleâs business and ruining their plans? Or is it more of a Misery Lark passion project?â
Iâve been nursing my abused soles on the living room couch for less than five minutes, but itâs the third time a variation of this question has been asked of me. So I keep my head bent down and ignore Loweâs secondâthe one who looks like a Ken dollâas I pluck an assortment of detritus from my toe. I need tweezers, but I didnât bring any with me. Do Weres use them? As the original furries, do they find them morally repugnant? Maybe they hold body hair sacred, and any threat to its rightful dwelling on the flesh is considered blasphemous.
Food for thought.
âLet me go,â Max whines. Like me, heâs sitting on a couch. Unlike me, his hands are tied behind his back, and heâs being watched by several guards with the kind of icy treatment one would reserve for someone who tried to kidnap a child.
Which is exactly what Max did.
âYou can stop asking,â Cal tells him mildly. âBecause it ainât going to happen.â Out of all the Weres in here, itâs clear that he and Ken Doll are the highest ranking. They also appear to have a bad cop, even worse cop thing going on. Cal is affably scary, Ken is snarkily terrifying. Whatever works for them, I guess.
âI want to see my mother,â Max re-whines.
âDo you, champ? Are you sure? Because your mother is out there, humiliated by what you just did and the company youâve been keeping.â
âI dunno, Cal.â Ken fixes his baseball cap. âMaybe we should turn him over to his mother.â He leans forward. âIâd love to see his face when she declaws him.â
Max growls, but it turns into a whimper when his Alpha comes in, Juno and Mick in tow. I mouth a bashful So sorry to Mick, worried that heâll get in trouble for taking a piss and leaving me alone for a minute. He waves his hand at me, and the entire room drops into silence, everyone focusing on Lowe like his presence is a gravitational pull. Even I cannot look anywhere else, and abandon my toe to its infected destiny. Lowe looks so stone-cold pissed, I shiver. Though it could be the blast of the AC on my blistering flesh.
âIs Ana okay?â Gemma asks.
Lowe nods. âPlaying with Misha.â Hands on his hips, he surveys the room. Every pair of eyes is instantly downcast.
Except for mine.
âWho wants to tell me what the fuck just happened?â he asks, staring at me. I expect everyone to explode into rushed explanations, but Were discipline is better than that. A heavy silence stretches, broken only by Lowe coming to stand in front of me. Iâm ready to say my final words, but all he does is take off his zip-up hoodie, wrap it around my shuddery shoulders, then admire the result for a beat too long.
Everyoneâs eyes are still on the ground.
âCal,â he says. Itâs embarrassing, the sense of relief I feel at not being called on.
âEverything was going according to plan,â Cal starts. âAs expected, Max was trying to lure Ana away. We were tailing him to see who he would rendezvous with, when . . .â
He turns to me, and suddenly I am the center of the room. My relief was premature.
âIâm sorry.â I swallow. âI had no idea this was some kind of cahooty ambushy plan. If I see a guy whoâs been a total dick to me absconding with a child, itâs only natural for me to . . .â To what? Why did I intervene, again? Now that the adrenaline has dried up, I cannot recall what my reasoning was. Iâm no hero, nor do I want to be.
Ken Doll snorts. âWere you watching us from the window?â
âI mean . . . yeah?â
âCreepy. You need a hobby.â
âYouâre right. Iâve heard amazing things about paragliding, or competitive duck herding. Maybe I couldâoh, wait. I forgot that Iâm literally stuck in a one-hundred-and-thirty-square-foot bedroom twenty-four seven.â
âRead a book, pointy.â
âEnough.â Lowe stalks across the room to crouch in front of Max, who instantly tries to scramble away. His tone is firm but surprisingly gentle when he asks, âWhere were you going to take Ana?â Max doesnât reply, so he continues, âYou are fifteen, and Iâm not going to punish you like an adult. I donât know who you got mixed up with, or how, but I can help you. I will protect you.â
Sweat trickles down Maxâs temples. Heâs much younger than I thought. âYouâre just going to get rid of me. If I tell you, youââ
âI do not hurt my own, especially not children,â Lowe growls. âI am not Roscoe.â
âNo.â Maxâs eyes flick to me. âHeâd never have made alliances with the Vampyres or the Humans, would never have taken one in and left her to kill the Weresââ
âYouâre right. Roscoe liked to kill the Weres on his own.â Max lowers his eyes. Heâs just a boy. âIs an alliance with the Vampyres really worse than more Were deaths at their hands?â
Max seems to grapple with the question, Adamâs apple bobbing. Then he remembers his rage, and spurts out, âYouâre not the rightful Alpha.â
Itâs clearly a big faux pas. Because every other Were in the room takes a step forward to interveneâand then stops at once at Loweâs lifted hand.
âWho told you that?â he asks. Menacing, ruthless. âMaybe itâs a fair mistake. Maybe they simply werenât there when Roscoe lost the challenge to me. I sent a message to the Loyals, let them know that Iâd gladly accept the challenge from any of them. And yet.â Lowe stands. âDissent and discussion are welcome. Iâm not Roscoe, and I wonât dispose of those who disagree with me. But trying to take a child, sabotage important infrastructure, brutally attack huddles who support me . . . This is violent insurgence. And as long as Iâm Alpha of this pack, Iâm not going to accept it. Who sent you here, Max?â
He shakes his head. âI donât know.â
âDid you forget?â Ken Doll comes to stand next to Lowe. Max recoils. âWe have ways of making you remember.â
âHeâs barely more than a child, though,â Cal points out.
âHe chose to work with the Loyals,â Ken says, cracking his knuckles.
Cal, to my shock, shrugs. âI suppose youâre right.â He, too, cracks his knuckles.
I search Loweâs face for a sign that heâs not going to let his minions . . . I donât know, waterboard a boy. His expression is detached, happy to delegate. Not what Iâd expect from someone whoâs planning on deescalating this.
âWait!â I yell. Today must be a particularly nosy day for me. âDonât hurt him. I can help you.â
All heads whip around to me, with varying degrees of annoyance. âI think youâve done enough, leech,â Ken says.
I roll my eyes. âFirst of all, I grew up among the Humans, and leech, parasite, sanguisuge, bloodsponge, tick, sucker, bat bitchâtheyâre not the groundbreaking insults you think they are.â Vampyres do drink blood to survive, and weâre not shy about it. âI can find out who sent Max. Without nail pulling or whatever youâre planning.â
âI dunno,â Cal says. âHe deserves some harm.â
But Max is shaking like a leaf. And I must not be the sadist I fancied myself. âPlease,â I plead to Lowe, tuning out the rest of the room. âI can help.â
âHow?â He, for one, seems more curious than irritated.
âItâs easier done than said. Here.â I stand and brush past him to go to Max. He stops me with his fingers on my wrist. When I crane my neck up to him, startled, heâs looking straight ahead. âWhy?â he asks, without meeting my eyes. His voice is low, meant only for me.
Iâm not quite sure what he wants to know, so I go for what feels right. âAna has been visiting,â I say, matching his tone. âShe keeps me company, and even though sheâs terrible at pronouncing my name and clearly doesnât know whether sheâs six or seven . . .â I swallow. âIâd rather she doesnât get, you know. Kidnapped and trafficked.â
He finally looks down at me. Scans my face for several long moments, and whatever his inspection is about, I must pass muster. He nods and lets go of me. I donât move.
âActually, could you help me? Iâm not super good at this.â His brows furrow, and I hasten to add, âBut good enough.â
I think? Iâve only done this with Serena, who insisted I foster my single useful Vampyre trait and practice on her. Sheâd have me put her under and use our shared cell phone to film videos of her making out with a cabbage; reciting the Pledge of Allegiance with a German accent; confessing to an entire series of dirty dreams with Mr. Lumiere, our French tutor, as the recurring guest star.
Hopefully, I remember how to.
I kneel in front of Max, ignoring his nauseating, fear-drenched heartbeat, the way he hisses at me to get away. âDude, Iâm trying to help you avoid an iron chair, or however it is that your people extract information, soââ
Something wet lands on the front of my tank top.
Because Max spit on me.
âEw.â I gasp, disgusted, but before I canâI donât know, spit back?âLoweâs hand presses against Maxâs chest and pins him to the couch.
âWhat the fuck did you just do?â he grunts.
âSheâs a Vampyre!â
âSheâs myââ Loweâs hand jerks up to clutch Maxâs jaw. âApologize to my wife.â
âSorry. Sorry. Please donâtâ Iâm sorry.â Max starts sobbing.
Lowe turns to me. âDo you accept?â
âAccept . . . the spit?â
âHis apology.â
âOh.â Oh my God. What is happening? âSure, why not? It was so . . . sincere and spontaneous. Just, hold his head still, and donât let him moveâyes, hands on the chin. Okay, this will take a second, donât let him wiggle away.â
I start with my thumb at the base of Maxâs nose, and my index and forefingers on his forehead. Then I wait for Max to calm down and meet my eyes.
At the fourth attempt, I get a lock. Maxâs brain is soft, and overagitated, and easy to sink into. I stitch his mind to mine and then scramble it a littleâa temporary interference. I donât stop until Iâm extra sure that my hold on him is tight, and when I pull back, his body relaxes at once, pupils suddenly blown wider. Behind me, I hear some murmurs and a soft âWhat the fuck?â but itâs easy to push it out, just as easy as it is to let my eyes do what theyâre supposed to.
For the thrall.
Humans say that we have magical mind-control powers. That our souls can body-snatch theirs and tie them up like a Thanksgiving turkey. Much like everything else, though, itâs simple biology. An additional intraocular muscle that allows us to shift our eyes at high speed and induce a hypnotic state. Vampyres who are talented thrallers, like my father, can do it without touching their victim at all, and much more quickly. But they are rare, and for the mediocre ones like me, who need someone to be restrained to initiate a thrall, it can be an unwieldy practice.
There are some caveats, too. The thrall only works on other species, and not every brain is equally responsive. And, of course, entering peopleâs minds without consent is an act of violence, and deeply unethical. Just because we can, it doesnât mean that we should. But Max did try to hurt Ana, and he might do it again. Plus, my morals are just not that solid.
âOkay.â I lean back, vigorously rubbing my eyes. The thrall requires a lot of energy. âHeâs all yours.â
Everyone stares at me open-mouthed. And my mind might be playing tricks, but Iâm almost positive that theyâve all taken a step back from me.
Except for Lowe, whoâs almost too close.
âYou guys might wanna hurry. This will only last ten minutes or so.â I point at Maxâs state of unresponsive stupor. âHe wonât just word-salad his life story at you. You need to go ahead and ask him questions.â No one speaks. Did I accidentally thrall them, too? âSomething like, âWhy were you trying to take Ana, Max?âââ
âI was tasked to take her to the Loyals, where she could be used as leverage, to force Lowe to step down as Alpha,â he recites tonelessly.
The room explodes in a flurry of panicky, suspicious mutters that have nothing to do with Maxâs answer. In fact, Iâm pretty sure I catch a âMicrowaved his brain.â
âThe thrall,â Lowe murmurs.
âYup. Thatâs it. No deep-frying involved.â I stand and grimace at the spit on my shirt. Itâs starting to seep throughâgross.
âI thought it was a myth,â Cal whispers. âThat our elders used to scare us.â
I can relate, since I grew up fairly sure that if I misbehaved, a Were would crawl up the toilet to eat my ass. âItâs not. Iâm not really good at this, actually.â It seems best not to disclose what someone like Father could do.
âYou look plenty good to me,â Cal says. He actually sounds admiring, while Ken is glaring suspiciously, and Mick frowns, and Gemma shakes her head, and some other Weres exchange looks, and Juno seems, as ever, worried and angry, and Lowe . . .
Iâve given up on understanding Lowe.
âHow do we know youâre not planting lies in his head?â Ken asks.
I shrug. âAsk him something I wouldnât know.â
âWhat happened when you asked Mary Lakes out for a date?â Juno says.
âShe said no,â Max drones.
âWhy?â
âBecause I had a huge blob of snot coming out of my nose.â
Itâs funny, but no one laughs. The group seems to have gotten over the initial incredulity, and Cal starts grilling Max. âDid Roscoeâs mate send you to take Ana?â
âI believe so, even though I did not talk to Emery directly.â
Cal shakes his head. âOf fucking course.â
âStop.â Lowe interrupts, and the room falls silent again. He turns to me. My breath catches as his arm reaches inside the hoodie he put on me. His palm briefly fits on my waist, then moves north to brush against my breast, and oh my God, whatâ
He slides his phone out of the inside pocket and pulls back.
My cheeks are on fire.
âTake her to her room, then come back,â he orders Mick. To Juno: âCheck on Ana, please.â
Iâm escorted out. I must really be at my most busybody, because Iâm tempted to ask if I can stay. Figure out what this strange war within the Weres could be about. Instead I meekly follow Mick up the stairs.
âI hope I didnât get you in trouble,â I tell him, âbut I saw Max take Ana, and I know you guys donât believe me, but heâd attacked me, soââ
âNo one doubted you,â he says kindly.
I look at him. âLowe sure did.â
âLowe knew Max had attacked you first. He is very good at smelling lies.â
âOh. As in . . . literally smelling?â
Mick nods but doesnât elaborate. âHe knew Max was up to something, knew it had to do with Ana, and wanted to get as much information as he could out of him. Itâs a tightrope to walk, for Lowe. He wonât go about interrogating every person he doesnât like, or heâll be the same as Roscoe was toward the end. But the Loyals have been hurting their own, and they must be stopped.â
âHe sure seemed ready to let the others torture Max.â
âThat was a show, meant to scare Max. And it would have worked, we could all smell it. But you did make it easier with your . . .â He smiles and gestures at my eyes. âJust promise you wonât do it to me, okay? You were scary in there.â
âI would never. Youâre my most beloved jailer.â I smile, close-lipped and fangless. âBesides, Iâm the one who should be scared.â
âWhy?â
I point to the scar on his neck. The row of teeth marking his collarbone. âYouâre the one rolling in here with that, like your favorite pastime is getting into fights.â I cock my head. âIs that how you turned into a Were?â
His eyebrow quirks. âWeâre a legitimate species, not an infectious disease.â
âJust making sure that if someone bites me I wonât turn into you.â
âIf you bit someone, would it turn them into a Vampyre?â
I think about it for a moment. âTouché.â
He laughs softly and shakes his head, suddenly wistful. âThis is my mateâs bite.â
Mate. The word, again.
âDo they have one, too? Your mate.â
âYes, of course.â
âHave I met them?â
He looks away. âSheâs not with us anymore.â
âOh.â I swallow, unsure what to say. I hope it wasnât one of my people who did it. âIâm sorry. It sounds like mates are a big deal.â
He nods. âMating bonds are the core of every pack. But I donât think itâs wise for me to discuss Were customs with you.â He gives me a look that manages to be chiding and soft all at once. âEspecially if youâre chatting with your brother in a language no one else speaks.â
Oh, shit. âItâs not . . . I just missed home. Wanted to hear something familiar.â
âDid you?â We come to a halt in front of my door. Mick opens it, and gestures for me to step inside. âHow curious. You donât strike me as the type who ever had a home.â
I let his words churn around me for several minutes after he leaves, wondering whether heâs right. When they grind to a stop, I know he isnât: I did have a home, and her name was Serena.
I change my top into one less smeared with Maxâs DNA and silently slip out of my room. With everyone distracted by the commotion, breaking into Loweâs office is almost suspiciously easy. There are plenty of ways to hack into a computer, few of which are at my disposal. Fortunately, I have enough experience with brute-force techniques to be optimistic.
The sun is setting, but I donât turn on the lights. Loweâs desk is given away by Anaâs grinning picture. I tiptoe there, kneel in front of the keyboard, and start messing around.
This is not my bread and butter, but itâs relatively simple and not too time-consuming. Itâs clear that the Weres donât expect intrusions from within, and the machine is mostly unprotected. It only takes me a few minutes to force my way into their database, and a handful more to set up three parallel searches: Serena Paris, the date she disappeared, and The Herald, in case my suspicions are right, and Lowe was part of some story she meant to cover. Itâs just a start, but I hope that if she was mentioned on any communication device thatâs automatically backed up onâ
Something soft rubs against my calf.
âNot now,â I murmur, distractedly swatting Serenaâs damn fucking cat away. The terminal starts to populate with hits. I stroke a few keys to maximize. So far, not too promising.
The catâs wet nose presses against my thigh. âIâm busy, Sparkles or whatever. Go play with Ana.â
He starts purring. No, growling. Frankly, itâs a level of entitlement that pisses me off. âI told you toââ I glance down and instantly scramble back, nearly falling on my ass.
In the dim light of dusk, the yellow eyes of a gray wolf stare angrily at me.