Chapter 77
Accepting My Twin Mates
Accepting My Twin Mates Chapter 77 Chapter 74 â How Did He Get Hold Of This?
Astennu âMake this quick. I donât like being apart from our brother,â Aasim paced, becoming increasingly uneasy.
Our two strongest bonds were those between our mate, who had been forcefully ripped from us, and our twin, our strongest that had existed since the womb. With one bond unresponsive, my wolf needed the reassurance that Badru was there, that he wouldnât vanish either.
âI donât wanna be separate either, but weâre gonna have to adopt a divide and conquer approach,â I huffed, having galloped up several flights of stairs.
Several pack members were leaving my destination, Konstaninâs room, a few of them carrying items in their hands. I hurried down the hallway, my bare feet thudding on the naked floorboards, finding my father overseeing the last two wolves about to leave. Nothing much was left of the door, except a few splinters strewn on the floor that had been missed on what looked like the first clean-up. The hinges were all that remained, fastened to the doorframe and with shards of the former door affixed to the screws. The temperature seemed several degrees lower too, as though a window had been left open for hours.
âHow did he get hold of this?â My father never turned when I stepped into the room. Instead, he held a sheet of paper aloft once the wolves had walked out, leaving us alone.
I picked it from his grasp, my brows puckered in confusion that this would be his first question and what importance a piece of paper could be. My expression sobered as soon as I saw what was scrawled on the surface, my heart returning to pound in my ears in a cold shiver of dread.
It was a rough draft of a patrol schedule for the week. I had written it in pencil till I had been happy with it and then typed it out properly to send to my father⦠one that I had left in Evieâs room when her heat hit, because thatâs all I or Badru were focused on. I hadnât given it a thought, until now.
âWhen I sent a couple of warriors here after making sure your mother arrived at the hospital,â my father finally turned around, his jaw tight and his voice thin. A faint tinge of red rimmed his eyes. He had cried? I had never seen my father cry. âThey had no reply and had to break the door down. The room was empty and the window wide open with items strewn on the bed. Trackers have been searching around the pack house, as far as they can, and not one of them can pick up his scent. So, I will ask again,â he snatched the paper back from my hand, crushing it in his fist. âHow. Did that man. Get a hold. Of this?â
âI⦠we had it in Evieâs room before we went up to the lodge,â my throat began to run dry. âBut nothing looked disturbed there when we came ba-â
âWhy was it left there?â He interrupted my excuses and, suddenly, I felt like a pup in trouble. âWhy didnât you lock it away in your office? Why didnât you destroy it?â
âWe didnât have time when we took Evie away and we were going to file everything properly after training toda-â
He sighed heavily and angrily, his nostrils flaring. âSo, youâre telling me Konstantin had three days, unsupervised, where he could have gotten hold of any of our pack documents that you left casually lying about?â
âYou think Konstantin did this? You think he kidnapped his own daughter?!â My voice rose. âHe could have been taken too. Or heâs out there,â I gesticulated at the window, âtrying to look for her-â
âWake up Aste!â My father roared, his aura flaring in a shuddering wave. âThe man played you!â
âHe didnât! Heâs clearly being framed here!â
My father tutted in exasperation, throwing his head back.
âHe is! How do you explain the scent cover? Or whatever drug was used-â
âDid you search him?â
My mouth bobbed, seeking an answer that didnât involve a no, because I hadnât. Not that I needed to.
What Konstantin had told us was the truth, I⦠I was sure.
âNo, of course you didnât. You had that sufficient two minute conversation which was all you needed,â
he took several deep breaths, closing his eyes. âYou may be a grown man, but you still have so much to learn.â
He swiped a hand over his face, rubbing the short black beard of his jaw. When he opened them, his eyes were softer but pensive, filled with a sombreness.
âWithout a routine search, how did you know what the man had on him? Perhaps he wanted his daughter and knew she wouldnât leave? All I know, is I have a mate drugged and in the hospital,â his chest rumbled in a snarl, black hair sprouting from his knuckles and receding in the same breath. âWe have a human pack member that has been bludgeoned, your mate is missing, and thereâs not one trace of anyone breaking into the pack. Yet, in all this, the rogue that waltzed into this pack, without being searched or properly questioned, is gone. Along with what few belongings he brought and a patrol schedule in his possession that gave him everything he needed to escape. Astennu, what else am I meant to believe?â
âFinley!â I yelled, pissed off that the most obvious person appeared to have fallen from his head. âIâm positive he did this, to get back at us. And heâs obsessed with Lucy, Konstaninâs second chance mate.â
âHe was already on the list of suspects, but Kate has confirmed he isnât even in the state. She dropped him off at the airport herself two days ago.â
âNo, that⦠that canât b-â
âIt is,â he cut through me. âApparently, he wanted to get away from here for a while and went to New York. I rang the hotel Kate told me he was at and they confirmed he checked in and everything. Itâs The Moonâs Courtyard near Central Park, caters to werewolves. Feel free to make your own inquiries.â
Could Konstantin have planned this?
To kidnap his daughter and flee the pack?
Had he been playing us from the beginning or had he upped and decided he truly hated packs this much and the mate bond be damnedâ¦
âHe wouldnât,â Aasim was adamant, a tinge of unease in his tone. âHe might not have trusted pack, but he trusted us. Dad is wrong about him⦠heâs wrong.â
The doubts had flitted from my mind as soon as they entered, too. In spite of that, though, a speck of doubt clung to my mind against my will.
I shook my head, âif Konstantin wanted to leave, heâd just say so. Heâs like Evie, blunt and to the point,â
all this subterfuge and underhandedness was not his style. âFinley is involved in this. I donât know how and I donât care what you say otherwise.â
âIâm not discounting the boy as a suspect, but itâs a little hard to believe when heâs clear across the other side of the country.â
âSupposedly,â I clarified.
âPrecisely why he isnât discounted fully yet,â my father moved to leave, pausing by the obliterated doorway. âSon, weâve done all we can here. We need to regroup and discuss everything we know.
Tamlyn is still running her squads around the pack garage and the cafe. Aside from a few generic boot prints, thereâs nothing more for her to go on. Your motherâs awake, so Iâm going to her. Go check your mateâs room, see if anything else is missing.â
I nodded, swallowing hard. The idea of setting foot in her room, with her spiced vanilla scent drilling into my senses, pounded my heart in my ribcage. Every flash of memory of her stormy blue eyes or dark golden hair reminded me of my failures, my mistakes. That was where Evie existed now⦠in a memoryâ¦
âUntil we get her back,â my wolf affirmed.
I wanted to agree and share his earnest conviction, but to hear and see how I had fallen short as a mate and Alpha chiselled away at any optimism I may have had. And the alarm I was feeling from my twin was doing nothing to calm me. Lucy had to have been there, in her room. Because if not, he would have mind-linked to say otherwise.
âRu? Whatâs going on?â
âItâs Lucy, someone drugged her water. Iâm rushing her to the pack hospital in town.â
Oh hell⦠this would be another mark against Konstantin, in the eyes of my father. For me, it solidified his innocence. If she had woken during this bizarre ambush, she would have raised the alert that something was amiss.
âOk, Iâll be with you soon⦠I need to stop somewhere first and then Iâll tell you what happened up here,â
I sighed, watching my step on the way out to head to Evieâs room, no matter how much I didnât want to.
âIâm certain Konstantin is being framed for all of this and, unfortunately, our dadâs not hearing anything else.â
âWell s**t. Weâll add it to the list of fires to put out later. Just get down here as fast as you can. The hospital lab is screening for the tranquilliser used. Whatever it was, it doesnât look as though it was cut with wolfsbane.â
That was of some comfort as we didnât know how badly wolfsbane would affect Evie with her being half lycan. But it was also unusual. Most tranquillisers used on werewolves contained wolfsbane, to cut the connection with our wolves. However, there was no mistaking the instant it was ingested. Whether a wolf partook in wolfsbane training or not, ingestion or injection of it caused a burning sensation on contact, as the toxin stimulated the pain receptor nerves. The more wolfsbane training that was undertaken, the greater tolerance was gained.
Steeling myself outside Evieâs room, I slowly punched in her number combination and creaked the door open. Her sweet and beautiful aroma hit me, full force in the face, as though she would be waiting on the side with her arms outstretched to soothe me that all of this had been a mistake, that she hadnât gone anywhere.
âDammit, this is the worst torture,â Aasim whimpered, wanting to curl up on her mattress and bury himself in her scent and our self-pity.
âThen we better make this quick.â
There were only a few files Badru and I had left behind, all of which were present, say for that one damned schedule⦠one stupid mistake that I never once considered.
âKick yourself later. Focus presently!â
Listening to my wolf, I moved through the rest of our mateâs items, not finding anything of consequence absent. I hadnât a clue if any of her clothing was missing; I wasnât too well acquainted with her wardrobe. But I spotted the items my brother and I had given her, plus our own clothing was there.
Changing out of my borrowed sweatpants so I could put on some underwear and a pair of jeans, I shoved my feet into the boots I had left behind and found my thick plaid shirt, putting aside a change of clothing for Badru too.
Just as I flicked up my collar to straighten out the flannel material and button up my shirt, I noticed a small yet prominent missing item. By the side of her bed should have been her locket. Evie didnât wear it this morning and her silly little joke she chuckled rang clearly in my ear.
âJust in case it comes to blows and I have to smear tea leaves on my face like war paint, I think Iâll leave it here.â
And I was positive Evie took off the locket and left it right where I was crouched. I looked high and low, under the mattress, on the blankets, on her dresser table and even in the bathroom. She wouldnât mislay it, that locket meant far too much to her. It was all she had of her motherâs.
Someone came in here after we left to take it.