"So they do allow humans and werewolves to intermingle sexually there?"
"Yeah. There's a no claws or violence rule, though. Anyone seen getting a little too heavy with a human gets thrown out." She looked at me coldly. "Don't tell me you're one of those wolves who believes a no-mingling-with-the-humans rule is safer for everyone?"
"I've seen what a werewolf in a sexual frenzy can do to another wolf. A human wouldn't last."
She snorted. "You misjudge the strength of humans."
"Or you're overestimating it."
If there was one inescapable fact in this world, it was that werewolves were stronger than humans. We might not be able to rip someone apart limb by limb, but we could rent and tear and brutalize. And if we were in the midst of moon fever, we might not even realize we were doing it until it was all too late.
Given that one inescapable fact, I was betting the humans who went into Mirror Image signed some type of waiver before they were allowed to enter. Letting humans and wolves intermingle in a sexually charged environment had to be asking for trouble. Especially during a moonrise.
Jodie didn't argue the point. Just looked away again.
I studied her for a moment, wondering just what Adrienne had seen in a woman who wasn't only human, but who was all delicate angles and bones, then asked, "Is the club monitored?"
"Heavily. Cameras and nonhuman bouncers everywhere."
With nonhuman bouncers, they didn't really need that many cameras. Most of us could scent trouble long before it started. But maybe the owners were just being cautious. Or maybe they got off on watching others have sex.
"Did you and Adrienne go there often?"
She sniffed. "It was one of the few places we could go and not be worried about who was watching. There's not many choices for those with human partners."
And for damn good reasons. "And you didn't notice anything odd or out of place during your time there?"
"No."
"When was the last time you saw Adrienne?"
"At the airport. She was going to Monitor Island to chase a lead."
"Don't suppose she mentioned what sort of lead?"
"No, but she was excited. She said it could make her career."
Or break it, as the case may be. "Did she contact you at all while she was away?"
"Every night. The last time she was a little deflated. I gathered she couldn't find anything good for her story." She paused, and took a shuddery breath. "I was supposed to pick her up from the airport, but I got held up in traffic. She wasn't there when I finally arrived, and I thought she'd gotten tired of waiting and caught a cab."
"But she never arrived home?"
She shook her head. "I reported her missing two days later."
"Why two days?"
"Because she's disappeared before, but only for a day or two. She usually comes home after she's blown off some steam."
I wouldn't have been surprised if Adrienne's past disappearances coincided with her more aggressive tendencies. A careful wolf might be able to curb her instincts most of the time, but violence was a part of our soul, and sometimes it just needed to come out.
"I don't suppose you remember what were you doing when Adrienne first started investigating the club?"
"You know she did a newspaper piece on it, don't you?" Yes.
"She hated doing that, you know. She preferred crime stuff, investigative reporting. She was good at it, too."
"Then why did she do the entertainment piece?"