"Sounds like you're trying to convince yourself, not us," I said.
Her eyes flicked to me. "You must be Anita Blake." She glanced behind at the watchers at her back. "Please, Richard, just go." The aura of energy around her was vibrating harder, almost a visible shimmer in the air. It prickled along my skin like ants.
Richard reached out towards her.
Heidi flinched but stood her ground.
Richard smoothed his hand just above her face, not quite touching her skin. As he moved his hand, the energy around her quieted, like water calming. "It's all right, Heidi. I know the situation Marcus has put you in. You want to join another pack, but he has to give permission. To get his permission, you do what he says, or you're trapped. Whatever happens, I won't hold it against you."
The anxiety seeped away. Her otherworldly energy quieted until it was barely there at all. She might have passed for human.
"Very impressive." A man stepped forward. He was at least six foot four, maybe an inch taller, his head bald as an egg, only his eyebrows showing dark above pale eyes. His black T-shirt strained over the muscles in his arms and chest, as if the shirt was the skin of an insect about to split and let loose the monster. Energy boiled off him like summer heat. He moved with the confident strut of a bully, and the power crawling over my skin said he might be able to back it up.
"He's new," I said.
"This is Sebastian," Richard said. "He joined us after Alfred died."
"He's Marcus's new enforcer," Heidi whispered. She stepped back, halfway between the two men, her back to the curtain we'd entered through.
"I challenge you, Richard. I want to be Freki."
Just like that, the trap was sprung.
"We are both alpha, Sebastian. We don't have to do anything to prove that."
"I want to be Freki, and I need to beat you to do it."
"I'm Fenrir now, Sebastian. You can be Marcus's Freki without fighting me."
"Marcus says no, says I have to go through you."
Richard took a step forward.
"Don't fight him," I said.
"I have to answer challenge."
I stared at Sebastian. Richard is not a small man, but he looked small beside Sebastian. Richard wouldn't back down to save himself. But for someone else . . . "And if you get killed, where does that leave me?" I asked.
He looked at me then, really looked at me. He turned back to Sebastian. "I want safe passage for Anita."
Sebastian grinned and shook his head. "She's dominant. No safe passage. She takes her chances like the rest of us."
"She can't accept challenge, she's human."
"When you're dead, we'll make her one of us," Sebastian said.
"Raina has forbidden us to make Anita lukoi," Heidi said.
The glare that Sebastian gave her made her cringe against the curtain door. Her eyes were round with fear.
"Is that true?" Richard asked.
"It's true," Sebastian growled. "We can kill her, but we can't make her pack." He grinned, a brief flash of teeth. "So we'll just kill her."
I drew the Firestar, using Richard's body to shield the movement from the lycanthropes. We were in trouble. Even with the Uzi, I couldn't kill them all. If Richard would kill Sebastian, we might salvage the situation, but he'd try not to kill him. The other shapeshifters watched us with patient, eager eyes. This had been the plan all along. There had to be a way out.
I had an idea. "Are all Marcus's enforcers ass**les?"
Sebastian turned to me. "Was that an insult?"
"If you have to ask, then indeedy-do, it was."
"Anita," Richard said, low and careful, "what are you doing?"
"Defending myself," I said.
His eyes widened, but he didn't take his glance from the big werewolf. Richard understood. There was no time to argue about it. Sebastian took a step forward, big hands balled into fists. He tried to step around Richard to get to me. Richard moved in front of him. He put out his hand, palm outward like he had with Heidi, and that roiling energy damped down, spilling out like water from a broken cup. I'd never seen anything like it. Calming Heidi was one thing. Forcing a lycanthrope to swallow such power was something else.
Sebastian took a step back, almost a stagger. "You bastard."
"You are not strong enough to challenge me, Sebastian. Don't ever forget that," Richard said. His voice was still calm, with the barest hint of anger underneath. It was a reasonable voice, a voice for negotiating.
I stood behind Richard with the Firestar held at my side, as unobtrusive as I could make it. The fight was off, and my little show of bravado hadn't been needed. I'd underestimated Richard's power. I'd apologize later.
"Now, where is Stephen?" Richard asked.
A slender black man stalked towards us, moving like a dancer in a shimmering wash of his own energy. His hair was braided in shoulder-length cornrows with colored beads worked into them. His features were small and neat, his skin a rich solid brown. "You may be able to control us one at a time, Richard, but not all at once."
"You were kicked out of your last pack for being a troublemaker, Jamil," Richard said. "Don't make the same mistake twice."
"I won't. Marcus will win this fight because you are a f**king bleeding heart. You still don't get it, Richard. We aren't the Young Republicans." Jamil stopped about eight feet back. "We are a pack of werewolves, and we aren't human. Unless you accept that, you are going to die."
Sebastian stepped back to stand beside Jamil. The rest of the lycanthropes moved up behind the two men. Their combined energy flowed outward, filling the room like warm water with piranha in it. The power bit along my skin like tiny electric shocks. It rose in my throat until it was hard to breathe, and the hair on my head stood at attention.
"Will you be pissed if I kill some of them?" I asked. My voice sounded squeezed and harsh. I moved closer to Richard, but had to step back. His power poured over me like something alive. It was impressive, but there were twenty lycanthropes on the other side, and it wasn't that impressive.
A scream shattered the silence, and I jumped.
"Anita," Richard said.
"Yeah."
"Go get Stephen."
"That was him screaming?" I asked.
"Go get him."
I looked at the mass of lycanthropes and said, "You can handle this?"
"I can hold them."
"You can't hold us all," Jamil said.
"Yes," Richard said, "I can."
The scream sounded again, higher, more urgent. The sound came from deeper in the barn where it had been divided into rooms. There was a makeshift hallway. I started towards it, then hesitated. "Will you be pissed if I kill people?"
"Do what you have to do," he said. His voice had grown low, with an edge of growl to it.
"If she kills Raina with a gun, she still won't be your lupa," Jamil said.
I glanced at Richard's back. I hadn't known I was being considered for the job.
"Go, Anita; now." His voice was dying down to a growl. He didn't have to add, hurry. I knew that part. He might be able to stall, but he couldn't fight them all.
Heidi walked towards me, behind Richard's back. He didn't turn any attention to her, as if he didn't consider her a danger at all. She wasn't powerful, but you didn't have to be powerful or even strong to stab someone in the back, claw or knife, what did it matter? I pointed the gun at her. She passed within inches of Richard and he did nothing. My gun was the only thing guarding his back. Even now, he trusted Heidi. Right this minute, he shouldn't have trusted anyone but me. "Gabriel's with Raina," she said. She said his name like she was afraid of him.
Gabriel wasn't even a member of the pack. He was a were-leopard. He was one of Raina's favorite actors, though. He'd appeared in herĀ p**n o flicks and even one snuff film. I almost asked her who she feared most, Raina or Gabriel. But it didn't matter. I was about to confront them both.
"Thanks," I said to Heidi.
She nodded.
I went for the hallway and the sound of screams.
8
I entered the hallway and followed the sounds of voices to the second door on the left. I heard at least two different male voices, soft, murmuring. I couldn't make out the words. The screams changed to yelling. "Stop, please, stop. No!" It was a man, too. Unless they were torturing more than one person tonight, it had to be Stephen.