Part 2 (1/2)

The ugly alpha let go and shoved me back a step, mostly to save face.

My fangs retracted as I looked over my shoulder. My Garda friend was surrounded by pairs of the integration agents under his command, at least two of whom were s.h.i.+fters. None of them looked as though they felt any comradery with Mac.

”And what do you want, human?” Mac asked, folding his arms across his chest.

s.h.i.+fters' hearts beat at a faster rate than humans' did, but I was struggling to count Mac's. He was in fight-or-flight mode.

”You've gotten your money's worth,” Shay said, his voice uncharacteristically cold. ”Now leave. You didn't find Esther. I highly doubt she's hiding behind the bookcases.”

Mac strode over to Shay, getting in his face. The s.h.i.+fters on Shay's team moved to block the way. The male looked down at Mac, unflinching. I didn't understand why Mac wasn't calling them untethered. They obviously weren't loyal to the pack anymore.

Mac scoffed before waving his hands. ”Come on, boys. We'll be back for the second round soon.”

I glared at the s.h.i.+fters still loitering in my hallway. ”You heard him. Get out.”

They reluctantly followed Mac, who exchanged a few more barbs with Shay's s.h.i.+fters before showing signs of actually leaving.

Shaking his head, Shay met me halfway across the cul-de-sac. ”Everyone all right?” he asked.

”He threatened the kids.” I folded my arms across my chest. ”And he had a stupid piece of paper telling me that I couldn't do anything about him. I was powerless. I hate him.”

”We'll make sure they all leave.” He avoided my eyes. ”If there's anyone you need to go see today, you might not want to use the front door.”

I nodded gratefully to him and his team as they escorted the s.h.i.+fters out of the cul-de-sac. Shay might have distanced himself from us over the last few months, but I could count on him in a crisis. And Mac counted as a crisis.

I signalled to Peter then stepped into my house. The s.h.i.+fters had trashed the place. I swallowed a sudden lump in my throat as I walked right through and out to my back garden. I soundlessly climbed the wall, too full of anger to worry about falling off. Mac had come into my territory and threatened my people. I had to figure out a way to deal with him before he destroyed everything. I jumped off the wall, barely missing a thick hedge, and ran through the property behind my house. Though it looked abandoned, I secretly owned it.

I ran through thigh-tall gra.s.s as best I could, counting each step to focus my boiling rage, then rushed through a small wooded area. I finally reached the back roads that would eventually lead me to a block of flats. Being forced to go to such lengths to visit a friend was ridiculous, but the world wasn't as safe as I'd imagined it would be. We had changed everything, and yet so much had stayed the same.

I ran, careful to make sure I wasn't being followed, and had calmed down significantly by the time I reached the place where Moses lived. A couple of women waved at me, giving me warm smiles that drove away the cold Mac had embedded into my chest. He'd made me feel vulnerable, but worse, he had surprised me. I hated that. I knew the nearby brethni would sound a warning if Mac finally figured out that he should search the flats-that was the only reason I had agreed with Esther when she wanted to return there when Mac became troublesome. I had wanted to ask Val if Esther could stay in the sanctuary, but I wasn't sure where Phoenix would stand on that matter, so I left the half-h.e.l.lhound out of it. At least for now.

I jogged up the stairwell to Moses's flat. He answered wearing a white-and-orange knit hat with flaps that dangled over his ears. It didn't mesh with the thick gold chain around his neck or the oversized medallions he wore on his chubby fingers.

I blinked a couple of times, feeling disoriented for the second time that morning. ”What's with the hat?”

Sheepishly, he pulled it off his head. ”Ah, yeah, that. I knitted it myself.”

I snorted. ”No, you didn't.”

”I did! Me ma got one of those knitting loom things because Esther thinks her hands are like paws holding knitting needles. Esther got bored after five minutes, but I dunno-it's kind of relaxing.”

I kept my face blank, hiding my amus.e.m.e.nt. ”Cool. Knit me a scarf or something. So can I come in, or are we going to stand here, swapping patterns?”

”Yeah, come on.” He moved aside and waved me in. He was starting to plump back up again, and it suited him better than the gaunt look that worry had given him. ”Anything going on?”

I nodded then smiled at his mother, who always seemed to clear the room when I arrived. Esther was scowling on the sofa, flicking through stations on the television, when I stepped into the living room. She brightened when she saw me, leaping up off her chair to embrace me.

”Hey,” she said excitedly. ”How is everyone? Any news? I've been trying to call.”

”I've warned everyone not to call, just in case. Mac was back today.”

She scowled. ”What's new?”

”He got permission from the Senate this time-that's what's new,” I said. ”He let his s.h.i.+fters trash my house, and he threatened everyone, even the kids. I couldn't do anything. It was so frustrating.”

”Hold on,” Moses said. ”Why would the Senate even agree to that?”

I shrugged. ”They must have voted. Shay showed up before things got too tense, and Mac left, so I a.s.sume he wasn't supposed to actually destroy anything.” I groaned. ”I probably brought that on myself. I made a comment about him tras.h.i.+ng that s.h.i.+fter woman's house because she left the pack to be with a human.”

Esther clenched her fists. ”That s.h.i.+fter woman left Mac to be with a human. I tried to contact her, you know.”

”Esther.” She wasn't supposed to be communicating with the s.h.i.+fters while wearing that big neon target on her back.

”I had to try. And get this-n.o.body's heard from her since then. She's vanished.”

”You think Mac hurt her?” Moses asked.

”Actually, I think he forced her to stay with the pack. He could be keeping her prisoner, for all I know.”

I gently kicked her shoe. ”Then he'll do worse to you. He has permission to take you in since he somehow convinced the Senate that you're dangerous because you're not aligned to a pack.”

She snapped her fingers. ”So that's what he's doing. I've tried to reach out to lone s.h.i.+fters, the ones who don't a.s.sociate with the pack for whatever reason. The only ones I can track down who aren't with Mac are with Shay.”

”So if he goes after you, he'll have reason to go after Shay's s.h.i.+fters, too,” Moses said. ”If the Senate backs Mac, then Shay won't be able to protect his own people. I'll have to warn him.”

”Do that,” I said. ”It's better coming from you. n.o.body in the Senate knows you now, not really. And you're human. But if they come here”

Moses cracked his knuckles. ”The brethni will help us teach them not to come back. This is serious s.h.i.+t, Ava. I might not be scary anymore, but I'm not about to let any s.h.i.+tebag s.h.i.+fter come here and try to show us who's boss.”

”He's really making enemies for himself,” I said. ”Why even bother? He's acting like a nutcase.”

”He's trying to a.s.sert himself. There might be rumblings of somebody else challenging him,” Esther said. ”This will keep them in line for a while. I mean, who else would want to go against so many people?” She frowned. ”And all for an ancient rule that n.o.body even thinks about anymore.”

”Think somebody ancient put it into his head?” I asked. ”He was boasting about higher powers on his side.”

”It's possible, but who? And what would they have to gain?” She thrummed her fingers against her chin. ”I'm missing something here. I have to be.”

”He said he'll be back,” I told her. ”I don't like it, but it means you can't visit us, Esther. It's not safe. I have to take the back route just to get here. I can't risk leading them to you.”

”This is all on me,” she said. ”I have to deal with him, Ava. I think I'm going to have to challenge him.”

”There's no way,” I said. ”You can't challenge the alpha. You're still recovering.”

She made a face. ”I've been recovering for a year, Ava. This is the best I'm going to get.”

”Do you really think he'll fight fair?” I demanded. ”He's adamant that a woman will never be alpha, particularly one like you.”