Beneath a Blood Moon (63 page)

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Authors: R. J. Blain

Tags: #Fiction, #Urban Fantasy

BOOK: Beneath a Blood Moon
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“Bear with me. I’m thinking out loud. When we met you that first night, you were drugged with wolfsbane and Ketamine. If your father is a Fenerec, particularly a dominant one, he would have made plans to take back what is rightfully his; in this case, you,” Desmond said, and I felt his stare on me. “A man as wealthy as I suspect your father is wouldn’t accept anything other than becoming the leader of his own pack. Your father may have seen an opportunity to lure you back with your ex-boyfriend, teaching him the ritual to claim you into his pack. However, if that’s the case and your father had become a Fenerec, he wouldn’t permit just any Fenerec to court you. Your ex-boyfriend would have known he couldn’t have you, so why not get rid of you?”

I flinched. Everything he said made a sickening amount of sense.

“So, let’s assume your father wanted you for his pack, be it as a bargaining chip or simply to keep his flesh and blood close under his guard. He sends part of his pack—his rogue pack—to Las Vegas to capture you or turn you into a Fenerec. He likely sent his unmated males to attempt to solidify his hold on you. If he controls your mate, he controls you. Maybe he tells your ex-boyfriend he can’t have you. Maybe your ex-boyfriend simply didn’t want the competition.” Desmond growled, wrapped his arm around Nicolina, and pulled her to him. She squeaked, her eyes widening. “Daughters are precious.”

Sighing, Richard propped his feet up on the coffee table. “No matter what I say, I will anger a Desmond. All Desmonds are dangerous when angry.”

“You’re such a sweet talker,” Wendy said.

“He’s a thief. Don’t compliment him,” Desmond muttered. After a sigh of his own, he continued, “For whatever reason, instead of obeying his Alpha, your ex defied him, attempting to kill you instead. He failed. But if your father wanted to take you alive for his pack, he would have made plans to capture you. That explains the drugs at your workplace. Maybe in his pride, he didn’t anticipate someone coming along with a higher offer, which led to your boss attempting to kidnap you when you went to quit. The gala would have been a perfect place for your father to put you on display. Drugged with wolfsbane, you would have been a beautiful puppet obedient to his every whim.”

My mate tightened his hold on me, growling with his every breath.

Desmond stretched his feet out beside Richard’s. “But that’s where things fall apart. You gave him the slip along with your mate. His contact within the Inquisition probably warned him you’d be protected. We called the pack to tell them you two are safe in Seattle. We made the mistake of letting a few in the pack know we were going to Sanders’s greenhouse. The word spreads to New York, giving him barely enough time to fly some Fenerec out to make a hit. We kill a couple of their pack before they drug us, expecting us to both run wild with our mates captured.”

My mate’s growls intensified. Twisting around, I gently nipped his throat until he quieted. Sighing, I rested my head against his shoulder, wiping my eyes and sniffling.

“Of course, it was a possibility. Fortunately, they underestimated Richard and Nicolina,” Desmond said, his voice quiet.

Nicolina smiled and leaned against her father. “Once I talked sense into them, they were a force to be reckoned with. I pitied anyone in their way, right up until Mom showed up.”

“It was a near thing at the greenhouse, though. When we arrived, they were both wolves and pretty aggressive. She zapped them,” Richard stated. “She said, and I quote, ‘I underestimated my strength. Oops.’ Desmond was out for twelve hours, and for a while there, I thought Sanders wasn’t going to wake up at all. He was out for two days, leaving me to try to figure out what happened to you.”

“Oops,” Nicolina echoed, her smile growing into a broad grin.

Grinning back at his mate, Richard continued, “Anyway, I made some phone calls and flew in Alex and Lisa as well as some others of my pack. I got into your security system at the greenhouse, nailed down a description of the truck, and located it at a marina. At that point, I called in Dustin. He had a talk with some of his shark friends. They love a good hunt as much as we Fenerec do, and he managed to impress upon them to eat any furry males but to help the pregnant females. Sharks are smart, and don’t ask me how, but apparently they can tell the difference between males and females—and pregnant females from other females. It actually helped Dustin’s your nephew, Sanders, as there are some similarities to your scent. Because Sara’s carrying your scent, it was easier for the sharks to locate her.”

Desmond chuckled and grinned at me. “You surprised the hell out of all of us when you went and subjugated those two wolves, Sara. Through you, I got a good sense of the other pack. There’s not many left. Pity both of the ones you took died, because I wanted to question them.”

“She thralled them,” Wendy said, rubbing my back from her perch on the arm of my chair. “The one in charge thought he could force those puppies to mate with her. She wasn’t having any of it. I suggested she subjugate them. At that point, she was out for blood and picked a fight with a wolf far larger than her. Dustin’s sharks ate all five of the Fenerec who took us—and a good thing, too, because she couldn’t beat a male so much larger than her.”

I huffed, annoyed at my failure to defeat the sandy-haired Fenerec.

Sighing, my mate took hold of my chin, lifted my head, and ran his thumbs across my cheeks. “If we prove your father is the one behind all of this, what do you want us to do?”

Family, I remembered, mattered more to Fenerec than anything else. I should have cared about what happened to my father, and by extension, my mother. Realization settled in that I had finally embraced what I had been trying to convince myself of for so many years.

The only family I had was the one I chose for myself. Smiling at my mate, I pressed my fingers to his mouth. “They hurt you. They tried to hurt Wendy and Desmond. They tried to hurt our puppy. I think a nice funeral is more than he deserves. Don’t bother bringing me his head, however. It’d make a mess I don’t want to have to clean up.”

Chapter Thirty

For over an hour, everyone tossed around ideas on how to deal with my father and find out if he was the one responsible for kidnapping Wendy and me. I listened, marveling at the casual way they discussed putting down an entire pack of rogue Fenerec.

Their lust for revenge drowned out the other scents in the room, stinging my nose.

Desmond’s phone rang, and with a sigh, he pulled it out and checked the screen, enabled speakerphone, and answered, “Desmond.”

“You didn’t call me back,” the Shadow Pope complained.

“Sorry, sir. We got ahead of ourselves a little,” my Alpha admitted. “Did you find out anything about Mr. Watson?”

“Mr. Watson is selling one of his businesses, so I asked Liam to go have a sniff. He didn’t get close to Mr. Watson, but sure enough, the building stinks of Fenerec—if Mr. Watson isn’t one, someone near him is. Is Sara there?”

“I am,” I said. “Who is Liam?”

“New York’s Third. Good catch on the phone records, by the way. I’ve gathered a list of all of the Fenerec in your pack who have contacted phone numbers associated with Mr. Watson. You aren’t going to like what I’ve found, Sanders.”

“Let’s not dance around the matter any. How many are involved? Who?” While there was no sign of my mate’s distress in his voice, he stank of it. At a loss for how to deal with his misery, I touched my fingers to his chin. He seized my fingers between his teeth, gentle but firm.

“Eleven. One of them bothers me, however. All of them showed contact with Mr. Watson beginning immediately after you met your mate. This specific person ceased all contact with Mr. Watson after Sara attempted suicide. The others continued calls, with the most recent being about two hours ago. This one also ceased contact with the co-conspirators, leaving me to come to the conclusion this person is no longer involved.”

“Who?”

“Your Second.”

Sanders grimaced. “Is Chrissy involved?”

“No. None of your submissive Fenerec are involved.”

“How many others close to the top?” Desmond demanded.

“They’re all close to the top, Charles. To make matters worse, they were paid a lot of money. I had their financials pulled. I’m going to be very blunt. Setting up two Alpha females to be taken by a rival pack was crime enough, but once I add in the attempted murders of two unborn, several counts of kidnapping, and the attempted kidnapping of an Alpha, it’s a death sentence for all of them. The only one I might be able to spare is Joseph; he didn’t receive any funds and ceased communications, although he was very likely in on the attempt to kidnap your mate. It’s only a might—it depends on what he has to say about the calls he received and placed.” The Shadow Pope sighed. “He’s already in custody being questioned. The others are under surveillance.”

I clenched my teeth, and my rage burned at the intensity of my mate’s misery. Flexing my hands, I stood, marched to the couch, and sat on the arm next to Nicolina. “If we want to find out if my father is responsible for this, why don’t I just give him a call?”

“Absolutely not,” my mate snarled.

“Overprotective tendencies,” Desmond informed me, reaching over his daughter to pat my knee. “I believe I mentioned something about that being an Alpha trait. You, Mrs. Sanders, are not getting anywhere near your father. I have made that mistake once in my life, and I will never allow it to happen again.”

Richard grimaced, and for the first time since I had met him, he lowered his eyes, refusing to meet anyone’s gaze, not even Wendy’s. Nicolina growled, opened her mouth, and shut it with a clack of her teeth.

“What can he do to me on the phone?” I demanded. “Nothing. If it puts an end to this, I’ll talk to him. I don’t know what the rules of your Inquisition are, sir, but I’m not stupid. What’s killing so many of our pack going to do to Desmond and Sanders?” My throat tightened, and I couldn’t mask the bitterness in my voice. “It sounds like you’re punishing my mate far more than you’re punishing them. They’ll be dead. It’s not like they will be able to face any more consequences once you’ve killed them. Sure, they can’t do something so stupid again, but that’s where it ends. The only people who suffer are the victims. Where’s the justice in that?”

A cold and deathly silence answered me.

Turning to Nicolina, I held out my hand. “Your phone,” I demanded.

She met my gaze, narrowed her eyes, and smiled a grim smile. Without a word, she handed me her cell.

“I’m not asking for permission. Don’t like it? Shoot me along with the rest of the pack, because at the end of all of this, if I hadn’t come around, none of this would have happened at all. Maybe I don’t get the whole pack thing. Maybe I’m scared of it. But to hell with you if you think I’m going to sit here and just watch you hurt them without doing something about it.”

Growling at the interface, I set Nicolina’s phone beside Desmond’s. With a soft laugh, Desmond reached over and pressed on the screen to bring up a dial pad. I took over, tapping in my father’s number.

My father answered on the third ring. “I was wondering when you were going to call me, Mrs. Murphy—Or should I say, Miss Desmond? Was it difficult for you to call, knowing I stole your precious mother from you? Do you miss her? I guess your father is no longer capable of handling his own matters, is he? It must be so difficult, knowing you’ve lost one parent and will soon lose the other.”

With wide eyes, I glanced at Wendy. She snatched a piece of paper and wrote me a note informing me that the rest of the pack hadn’t been told of our safe return. I smiled and pressed my finger to my lips.

Nicolina made strangling motions at her cell phone, and I jabbed her in the ribs with my elbow.

“Nothing to say? Must hurt, knowing your mother is probably adrift somewhere in the Pacific, starving to death as we speak. We could help each other. I’ve heard about you and the things you can do. I’ve heard about your mate. Kill that wolf who deludes himself into thinking he is worthy of my daughter. Do so, and I will see to your mother’s safe return. Perhaps your father might be spared. I’ve heard what happens to rabid wolves, so I suppose time is rather precious to you right now.”

“You’re so full of shit it’s leaking through the phone.” I hoped he heard my disgust loud and clear. “You’re like a bad villain from an even worse movie. Is that really the best you could come up with? You know full well you lost your prized bargaining chip. You knew the instant I stole your two mutts, made them mine, and turned them on your pack. You knew the instant I ripped out your wolf’s throat with my teeth. We fed them to the sharks, Wendy and I.”

Desmond clapped both of his hands over his mouth, his eyes wide and watering. Nicolina balled her hand into a fist and went to punch her father, only to have Richard intervene, catching hold of her hand. The two squabbled in silence, wrestling with each other with Desmond caught between them.

I heard a startled inhale on the other end of the line. “You.”

“Must stick in your craw knowing I ran away so many years ago, far out of your reach. It must burn knowing your perfect little daughter went to Vegas and turned herself into a stripper, all to defy you. It must be diving you mad, knowing I picked someone who is far more of a man and a father than you ever were.” My wolf delighted in my outburst, her savage pride bolstering me and spurring me on. “Did you like it when I thwarted you, stealing away my mate before you could catch us? You can’t have him. He’s mine, and you’re not wolf enough to take him from me—you’re not man enough to, either.”

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