Austin poured me a taste of the next wine, exactly as much as Donna would have given me. He poured himself a full glass.
“Please don’t chug-a-lug that wine,” I begged despite the situation. “It really kills the spirit of the thing.”
He shook his head, a smile wrestling his lips again. “It’s impossible to stay serious with you.”
“I was being serious with that request.”
He started laughing. “That’s what’s so funny. Look, you grew up thinking that magic exists only in storybooks.” He paused for my reaction. I gave him a blank stare. “Did you ever wonder where the ideas came from?”
“Nope. I always assumed it was drugs and/or alcohol.”
“But what if the ideas came from life?”
“Hallucinations, you mean?”
He showed me his fingers, the burns gone. “Normal humans don’t heal this quickly.”
I grimaced at the taste of the Chardonnay. “This one is a nope. Big nope on this one.” I leaned closer to his fingers. No remnants of the burn were left on his thumb and pointer. “Okay, but you said it was an allergy.”
“Normal people don’t have their skin sizzled away when they touch silver.”
“People have sun allergies. That has to be a lot rarer than a silver allergy. What’s not normal is this conversation. Look, Austin…what you’re saying is not logical. People probably haven’t been honest about that with you because of your size and scariness, but I’d be doing you a disservice if I didn’t say anything. Now, I should—”
“You’re going to have to change,” Donna yelled from the back room. “She’s been a Jane all her life. It’s like imagining the impossible is possible without any proof. She’ll have to see it for herself.”
“See what?” I asked.
“Donna, you do it,” he commanded.
“Donna, do not enable him because of a crush,” I called. “Don’t try to change men—if they don’t do it willingly, it’ll never stick.”
Donna re-entered the tasting room, stripping off her shirt as she did so.
I paused in confusion, watching her come around the bar and stop in the middle of the space. Her bra followed her shirt onto the floor.
“Nope.” I stood. “Strip shows and that God-awful Chardonnay are a nope.” Austin put his hand out to stop me. I pushed it to the side. Or tried. It didn’t budge. “Get out of the way. I’m done. I’m not here for…whatever this is. I’m going home. Then maybe re-considering this whole move because O’Briens has gotten to be entirely too much.”
“Watch,” he said, then squinted and pulled his head away, as though nervous I might jab his eyes.
Why were people in this town so protective of their eyes? Usually people didn’t think about that vulnerability. It didn’t speak well for my favorite self-defense technique.
I pushed at him again as Donna said, “This isn’t a striptease. This is magic. Look.”
A flash of light and heat drew my attention. Donna, stark naked, mottled and bent and reduced down into a huge, hairy black rat.
“What the f—!”NineteenI blinked at the giant rat for a moment. The rat blinked back up at me. I looked around the room. I looked at my hands.
Then my wine.
“What did you guys put in this wine?”
“It isn’t the wine. She’s a were-rat. Her parents are both were-wolves, but her mom…had an indiscretion, made evident when Donna first changed. Our animals are passed down directly from our parents. There aren’t dominant and recessive options, like normal genes. Shifter children are usually shifters, and they always shift into the same animal as either their mother or father. Upon learning that Donna’s mother had cheated, her father divorced her—or the shifter equivalent. He made life difficult for them within the pack. Her mother found a place in another pack, but it was also all wolves, and Donna was the odd one out. She was ridiculed. So much so that she ran away at sixteen…and found this town.”
“There is no way being a rat among wolves is less normal than this crazy town,” I said, downing the awful Chardonnay in my glass.
“You know what a shifter is,” Austin said, and I just wanted him to stop talking. I wanted to wake up from this sudden nightmare. Because I’d tried hallucinogens in high school, and I knew how they worked. If the wine had been drugged, more things would be morphing and changing. I wouldn’t feel this horribly sober if I’d just hallucinated a woman turning into a rat. A rat that docilely stood in the center of the wine tasting room, staring intelligently up at me.
I shook my head and turned around. “This isn’t possible.”
“You learn new things all the time,” Austin said. “How is this so different?”
I widened my eyes at him and pretended not to see Donna change back to human out of the corner of my eye. My stomach rolled with the implications.
“This is different,” I said, my voice uncontrollably rising. “This is much different.”