Authors: Carrie Vaughn
“I think he expected us all to come home together,” Walters said into his food. He’d raised his head to look at us, his expression mournful. Wounded, I decided. He was wounded. “He expected us to still be a pack. That he would still be taking care of us.”
I wanted to tell him everything was going to be okay, as if he were a little kid. So strange to see someone that tough and capable look that lost.
“Bad planning on Gordon’s part,” I said. “He should have spent a little more time teaching you to take care of yourselves. The whole pack thing . . . it can be a lifesaver. It can be supportive and amazing. But it can also be codependent as hell.”
“We were a family,” Tyler said. “That’s part of why the captain picked us. None of us have wives or kids. It was just us.”
“Thank goodness for small favors,” I muttered, not quite under my breath. These guys having kids would have added a whole other level of tragedy to the situation.
“It didn’t matter how much the captain explained, we still wouldn’t have known what to expect. Like this,” Tyler said. He wiped his hands on a paper napkin and pushed up his left sleeve. “What do you see?”
A really buff arm, with a rounded shoulder and well-defined biceps. The dark skin was smooth, unblemished even by goose bumps. I shrugged and said, “Your arm?”
“I had a tattoo here. Really nice, tribal—covered half my arm. We all had tattoos—names, unit badges, good-luck charms, usual army shit. Then Gordon turned me. When I woke up, there was a big ink stain on the sheet and no tattoo. That happened to all of us.”
“It healed,” I said. “Werewolf superimmunity—your body rejected the ink as a foreign object.” Good thing I hadn’t been thinking of getting one of my own.
“It was like being erased,” Tyler said. “Starting over with a clean slate. But it also felt like losing something. I lost something I thought was going to be part of me forever.”
I knew how he felt. Saying so would sound trite and probably not help much.
“Have you heard anything about Van?” Walters asked suddenly. “The doctor won’t tell us anything.”
I didn’t imagine Shumacher talked to them much, if ever.
“Vanderman you mean?” I said. “No. Not apart from his being charged with murder.”
Walters slumped. “It wasn’t him. I mean, not just him. He wasn’t in his right mind.”
“He still has to stay in custody.”
“He’s taking the fall for us,” Tyler said.
“I don’t think you should feel guilty,” I said.
“You’re so keen on helping us, you ought to be helping all of us,” Tyler said.
“We’re a pack,” Walters said, as if it was a mantra.
I started thinking this would have been easier with Vanderman included. If I could rehabilitate him, the others would follow. Then I remembered the look in his eyes, that killer instinct. If Tyler and Walters were going to function on their own, they had to do it without the alpha.
They
were
making progress here. They were talking. They weren’t panicking or raging or about to shape-shift. They were acting almost normally. I had to give them goals, keep them motivated. Distracted. We had to make progress.
“Do you guys want to get out, maybe see a little of Denver?” I said. Ben glanced at me, questioning.
Tyler and Walters looked at each other, and Tyler said, “Could we really do that?”
“Why not? You can sit here and have a conversation. The next step is to sit out there and have a conversation.” I nodded in the direction of the door. “Discipline. It’s all discipline and self-control.”
“The army way,” Tyler said, quirking a smile.
My phone rang with “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.” The soldiers jumped, and I glanced around the table apologetically.
“Cormac,” I told Ben as I clicked the phone on. I’d finally given him his own ringtone so I’d have some warning.
“
That’s
your custom ringtone for Cormac?” he said.
I smirked back at him as I went to the corner for some privacy. Into the phone I said, “Yeah?”
“Your guy, Franklin? I found something,” Cormac said.
Life could never be simple, could it? I couldn’t deal with just one problem at a time, could I?
“What is it?” I pressed a hand to my other ear and listened.
“Your friend was right,” Cormac said. I almost corrected him, that Charles wasn’t my friend—but when he needed to talk, he’d called me. What did that make me? Cormac continued, “Harold Franklin was traveling in all those locations on those dates. I’m not sure it means anything—the
post hoc ergo propter hoc
fallacy—”
“Whoa—what was that you just said?”
He paused before saying, “Never mind.”
“But—”
“Maybe Franklin had something to do with those storms, maybe he didn’t. But it’s interesting that he’s never been present for major earthquakes, mudslides, wildfires—just storms.”
So Franklin coincidentally shows up for major, historically significant storms, but not other natural disasters. It wasn’t much to base a defense on. “Like you said, that doesn’t necessarily mean anything. And I don’t think it’s admissible in court.”
“Probably not. But it’s a start. I’ve got some more checking to do.”
“Great. Cool. Whatever you can find. Do you need help?”
“You know—I might,” he said. “Let me talk to Ben a minute.”
Sure, he could connive with Ben but not with me . . . I held the phone out to Ben and raised my eyebrows at his curious expression. “I may not be guilty of libel after all.”
“Not about Speedy Mart, anyway,” he said.
“Hey!” I pouted.
Grinning, he took the phone and replaced me in the corner. I tried to listen in, but Ben’s side of the conversation mostly involved him saying, “Yeah . . . okay . . . okay . . .” Cormac was speaking low enough that I couldn’t hear his side.
“What’s that all about?” Tyler asked.
I sighed. How did I explain this in as few words as possible? “I spent part of my show last week talking about whether or not something supernatural is going on with Speedy Mart—the 24-hour convenience store chain, right?”
“Something supernatural—like vampires and werewolves?” he said.
“Kind of. Anything, really. Magical, supernatural—weird. Anyway, the president of Speedy Mart is suing me for libel. So now we want to prove that
there really is something going on with him because then it isn’t libel.”
Tyler leaned forward a little. “If someone’s giving you trouble, Walters and I could maybe take care of it—”
“No,” I said. “That will definitely not be necessary. We’ve got it under control.”
Not that siccing a couple of Green Beret werewolves on Franklin wouldn’t be fun to watch . . .
Ben returned to the table, folding my phone and handing it back to me.
“Well?” I said.
“Later,” he said.
“You two lead interesting lives, don’t you?” Tyler said.
I shrugged. “For certain values of interesting.”
We finished the meal. The sodas were drunk, the skewers lay empty and bloody. I was feeling quite pleased with myself.
“Thanks,” Tyler said. “Been awhile since I’ve eaten that well.” Walters made a sound of agreement. Was he actually smiling?
“You’re welcome,” I said. “Think about that next step, okay? I’ll see if I can’t arrange a field trip.” I tried to sound encouraging.
Tyler’s responding smile was grim, but it was a smile. Walters looked up, then away. But tension in the room was less than it had been when we entered.
Ben and I left shoulder to shoulder, and Shumacher led us back to her office for the debriefing. She kept looking at Ben—who had, of course, blown his cover by coming here and talking werewolf with the soldiers. Ben looked back at her, unconcerned and amused. We’d discussed this—and if he hadn’t been okay with her knowing, he wouldn’t have come.
“I assumed you’d guessed when I didn’t mind getting Kitty’s blood all over me,” he said finally.
She blushed and ducked her gaze. “I didn’t spot it. I thought I was getting good at identifying werewolves on sight. But you hide it well.”
“I’d appreciate it if you kept it quiet,” Ben said. “I’m not the publicity hound Kitty is.”
“Publicity hound? Is that a joke?” I said, and he kissed my cheek in response.
“Of course,” Shumacher said. “Of course.” She was nervous around us—her body tense, her gaze darting, her smell sharp. I’d have thought she’d gotten used to being around werewolves by now. Maybe she didn’t like being outnumbered. “Are you sure taking them outside is a good idea?” She set her clipboard on her desk.
Ben and I took chairs across from her.
I shrugged. “They’ll be supervised. We have to start somewhere.”
“I’m not sure they’re ready,” Shumacher said.
“Have you even talked to them? Found out what they want?”
“I’m not sure they’re in a position to be making those kinds of decisions, after what they’ve been through.”
“They’re not children,” I said. “Sure, they need help. But they deserve to have a say in what happens to them. The only way they’re going to get better is if they have a
reason
to get better. It’s the carrot approach.” I sat back and tried not to frown.
“Is she always so optimistic?” Shumacher said to Ben.
“Yes. I usually just stand out of her way and let her go. It’s easier than arguing,” Ben said.
Shumacher studied her clipboard a moment. It held what looked like a stack of charts, computer printouts of some kind. I couldn’t tell what information she derived from them.
“They did well today, didn’t they?” she said finally.
“I think so,” I said. “They’re listening to me. I think they’ll listen to me if we go outside.”
“Maybe I can allow a short trip. An hour or two.”
“That’s all I’m asking for,” I said. “Baby steps.”
“I’ll need to get authorization from Colonel Stafford,” she said.
Which was touch and go at best, but I couldn’t complain.
We said our farewells, left the building, and emerged into an increasingly overcast winter afternoon. The air smelled wet.
“That went well,” Ben said as we crossed the parking lot, and he didn’t even sound sarcastic.
“Really?” I said hopefully.
“Yeah. Those guys deserve a break. I hope we can help them.”
I wrapped my arm around his middle and hugged him. “So what’s up with Cormac?” I said.
“Oh, you’ll like this.” Ben wore a shit-eating grin. It was his courtroom attorney “I will bury you” expression.
“What? What does he want?”
He just kept grinning, stringing me along.
“Come on. Just tell me.”
We reached our car before he said anything.
“We’re going on a stakeout.”
“J
ESUS, THIS
is just like old times,” Ben muttered.
He leaned back in the driver’s seat and tapped the top of the steering wheel.
“Old times” meant the days when Cormac loaded his Jeep with rifles and silver bullets and called Ben for backup when things got rough. I remembered Ben saying something about how he mostly drove the car on those treks. Kind of like he was doing now.
That thought didn’t soothe my nerves. I sat on the passenger side, watching through the windshield, ready for anything. We were parked in downtown Denver, waiting for Cormac’s phone call. He was on foot, staking out the Brown Palace Hotel, where Franklin was staying. The Brown Palace was the posh, fancy local hotel, and had been for the last hundred years or so. It was the stylish place to stay, and that he had a room there told us that Franklin cared about appearances.
Cormac wouldn’t tell us anything more of what he’d learned about Franklin. Just that my crazy caller, Charles, might have been on to something. But we needed evidence that it wasn’t all a big coincidence. Hence the stakeout.
“Has Cormac ever done this before?” I asked.
“Sure, he’s tailed lots of guys before.”
“No, I mean has he ever been so . . . vague? Tossing off Latin phrases, buying into conspiracy theories. Ever since he got out of prison he’s just seemed a little out of it.”
“You don’t think just getting out of prison might have something to do with that?”
“I suppose. But sometimes, he doesn’t even smell right.”
After a few silent moments, Ben said, “Yeah, I noticed that.”
“What’s happening to him?”
“I don’t know. As long as he keeps his nose clean and stays away from his guns, I’m not sure it matters.”
My phone rang—Cormac’s tone. I jumped and rushed to answer. “Yeah?”
“He’s on the move. I’m at the corner of Seventeenth and Glenarm.”
I relayed the info to Ben, who started the car and pulled into the street. We turned to the next block and found Cormac, who opened the back passenger side door before the car slowed completely to a stop,
and Ben had pulled away from the curb before the door was finished closing. Real getaway pros, they were.