by Cheree Alsop
They advanced toward him. Alex looked around for an escape around. The wall of shields pressed closer on every side, creating a cage. Panic welled in his throat. He wanted to attack them, but he wanted to return to Cassie and Kalia, to return home to the Academy. Attacking would definitely get him shot. Even if each man only shot him once, he knew he couldn’t survive sixteen silver bullets. He spun in a circle looking for an escape.
“Alex Davies.”
Alex’s teeth bared of their own accord at the voice.
A sound of footsteps followed. The men with shields shifted on the right side, revealing Drogan. He looked slightly ruffled from his flight, but gave a predatory smile as he studied his captive.
“Who would have thought you’d come searching for your beloved Jaze?”
“They’re coming for you, Drogan,” Alex replied, forcing his voice to remain steady. The gun felt heavy in his hand. He lifted it slowly.
“Drop the weapon, Alex. We both know it won’t kill me.”
“It will if I shoot you in the head,” Alex replied.
The guards closest to Drogan shuffled their feet as if anxious to protect him, but he lifted a hand and they held their positions.
“Then my men will kill you and you’ll have lost everything anyway,” Drogan replied calmly.
“At least you’d be gone. The world will be a safer place,” Alex growled.
Drogan’s voice grew deadly. “Give me the gun, Alex.”
Alex shook his head. “Never.”
Drogan lifted a hand. Every gun in the room aimed directly at Alex’s head. “At my signal, your face will no longer be in one piece. You sure you want your body to go home to your sister like that?”
Alex’s hand that held the gun shook. He didn’t want to give it up. It felt like the only lifeline he had. Yet there was no denying the cold attention of sixteen guns aimed with deadly accuracy at his head. He held his breath and opened his hand.
Drogan took the gun from him. “Good boy,” he said. He lifted the weapon and fired it point blank at Alex’s chest.
Alex stumbled backward with the force of the blow. He fell against the shields behind him as the sleeping agent swept quickly through his veins.
Drogan was about to win. Alex couldn’t let that happen. He gritted his teeth and surged back to his feet. Drogan’s eyes widened. He pulled the trigger two more times. Each bullet slammed into Alex’s chest. Pain ricocheted through his ribs. He fell to the floor. The sleeping agent stole his ability to fight or think. He tried to force his mind to clear, but his eyes closed against his will.
“Werewolves,” Alex heard Drogan mutter before his thoughts shut off to the world.
Chapter Thirty
“He looks like Jet,” a voice said through the haze that filled Alex’s mind.
Another voice laughed. The sound sent ice rushing through Alex’s veins. “You know that’s impossible.”
“Yeah, but the resemblance is uncanny.”
Someone slapped Alex’s cheek. He jerked back more at the shock of it than the pain.
“Thought I may have killed you with all that sleeping juice,” Drogan drawled, giving Alex a humorless smile. “Thought you might get off lucky.”
Alex willed his gaze to focus on the man’s mismatched eyes. “Where am I?”
Drogan shrugged. “Safe. Or not, depending on how you look at it.” His gaze narrowed. “I’d go with not.”
“Why keep me alive?” Alex asked. His head pounded and his wrists burned where they were fastened behind his back. He had no doubts the metal coating the handcuffs was silver. He sat in a hard-backed chair that felt flimsy beneath him. A lone light hanging from the ceiling lit the small cement room. Three guards wearing the same armor Alex recognized from before stood near the door.
“Who said anything about keeping you alive?” Drogan replied.
The man’s fist slammed into Alex’s cheek. Pain flared through his cheekbone so intense that Alex had to blink back tears. He tried to focus on Drogan’s fist to see why it had hurt so badly. He had been punched many times during combat training, but nothing had felt like that.
Drogan grinned and flexed his fingers, revealing a set of brass knuckles coated in silver. “Smarts, doesn’t it?” He hit Alex again.
Alex’s head rocked back. His jaw slid to the left and he bit down, feeling his cheek slice open on the inside from his teeth. A different taste touched his tongue. A memory of a small square of metal in a plain gray box brushed his mind. He had gotten so used to the device he had forgotten it was there. He bit down on it hard. If he could stall Drogan, Jaze might find him in time.
“Why not kill Jaze?” Alex asked, shaking his head to clear his vision. The second blow had opened his cheekbone. He could feel the blood dripping from the wound.
“Oh, I wanted to,” Drogan replied. His eyes narrowed. “I can’t tell you how badly I wanted to. But there are others interested in your great leader’s hide.” He gave Alex a stare laced with steel. “But if they’re that slow getting to us next time, I’ll kill Jaze and the rest and tell my father they died in the firefight. Having them dead will make quieting this little rebellion that much easier.”
“This rebellion is a lot stronger than you think,” Alex told him, picturing the wolves in Red’s warehouse.
“They’re cowards,” Drogan spat. “They’ve gone into hiding, fending for themselves and leaving the others to our mercy. If that’s your rebellion, you’ve got a lot of disappointment coming your way.”
“They’ll beat you,” Alex told him. “They’ll win in the end.”
“Like your brother, Jet?” Drogan’s mouth cracked into a cruel twisted grin. “Oh, wait. My mistake. He’s not your brother, is he?”
Alex followed Drogan’s gaze to a smaller man near the guards at the door.
“He’s not,” the man confirmed with a chuckle. “That would be impossible.”
Alex’s heart burned with indignation. “Jet is my brother,” he growled, trying to stand.
Drogan hit him in the chest so hard Alex fell over backwards, landing painfully with his wrists locked behind the chair. Drogan put a foot on Alex’s chest and leered down at him. Alex’s ribs ached from being shot. The shells were still lodged in his chest. He could barely breathe.
“It’s about time someone told you the truth, boy.” Drogan’s eyes narrowed. “Your parents adopted you after you were given up by your birth mother. She apparently didn’t like the taint of your bloodlines, and neither do I.”
Alex spit out the blood that coated his mouth. He didn’t want to know what Drogan was talking about, but the man’s words ringed with truth. “What are you talking about?” he forced himself to ask.
Drogan’s eyes narrowed. “My father has issues with werewolves. What I didn’t know is that those issues also included him taking a female werewolf and using her any way that he liked before throwing her to the gutter to die.” He shook his head and growled, “My father apparently forgot that werewolves don’t die so easily.”
Drogan picked up Alex and the chair in a fit of rage and threw him against the wall. Alex fell to the ground on his knees and face. He lay there struggling to breathe.
Drogan flipped him over. “That woman had twins.” His lips lifted in a snarl. “My baby half-brother and sister who turned out to be filthy werewolves like their tramp of a mother.” The man’s green and blue eyes glittered in the half-light. He pulled out a knife. Alex’s heart slowed when he recognized it as the same blade Drogan had used to slit his parents’ throats. Drogan leaned down.
“I’m going to end your revolting lives so that my father doesn’t find out he gave life to such vile offspring. When you and Cassie are out of the way for good, we can blow up your precious Academy and I’ll know for certain that you’re dead.” The corners of his lips lifted at the thought. “I can’t think of a better way to get rid of several generations of cursed werewolves.”
Alex’s mind reeled. He couldn’t take in everything Drogan was
saying. It didn’t make sense; yet the back of his mind argued that it did. He could hear the truth in the human’s foul words. His soul rebelled against them.
Drogan’s knife pressed against Alex’s throat. Alex could feel the burn of the silver-coated metal as the razor sharp blade touched his skin.
“I can think of a better way to get rid of them,” Alex said, his voice tight.
The pressure against his throat lessened slightly. Drogan grinned down at him. “Feeling like some revenge against your classmates?” the human asked. He glanced up at the man by the door. “What do you think, Jenkins. Should I slit his throat or listen to him?”
Alex lifted his head just enough to see the man lace his hands together as he thought.
“It couldn’t hurt to listen,” the man said. “Maybe his ideas are more creative than yours.”
Drogan leaned forward. “I’m all ears,” he said.
Alex kept his voice carefully quiet. “I think you should go to the school.”
Drogan bent closer to hear him better.
Alex dropped his voice even quieter. “Go through the front doors, up the stairs to the left.” He spoke softer and Drogan crouched lower. “Go to the end of the hallway and open the window.” Alex felt the weight of the knife lessen as Drogan’s interest was piqued. “Then jump out of it so the wolves can tear you from limb to limb when you end up broken on the ground,” he finished with a shout so loud Drogan jumped.
Alex jerked to the side and turned as soon as his knees hit the ground. The legs of the chair caught Drogan on the back of his legs and sent him tumbling to the floor. Alex spun sideways, slamming his shoulder and the top of the chair into Drogan’s back before the guards could pull him off.
Drogan gave a shout of pain. Rough hands grabbed Alex and tore him away from the Extremist leader. He was thrown onto his back again. The clatter of the metal chair against the cement floor echoed through the room.
Drogan clambered heavily to his feet. He gripped the knife so tight his knuckles turned white. He limped back to tower over Alex.
“You think you’re funny?” Drogan demanded.
Before Alex could move, Drogan slammed the knife into his stomach.
A ringing sound filled Alex’s ears. The pain from the silver blade made his legs go numb. He could see Drogan shouting, but couldn’t make out the words. Drogan looked like a mad man. Spittle flew from his lips and landed on Alex’s cheek. Alex wished with one line of strangely coherent thought that he could wipe it away so he didn’t die with Drogan’s slobber on his face.
Drogan’s eyes widened. He looked over Alex’s chair to the door beyond. Alex wished through the hum that he could see who entered. Shots rang out. Drogan fell back clawing at his chest. Alex stared at the three pools of blood that began to flow down the Extremist leader’s shirt. Drogan’s eyes lock on Alex’s. His legs buckled and he hit the ground.
“Alex, are you alright?”
Alex blinked, focusing on Jaze’s concerned face. The werewolf motioned and Alex was lifted up to a sitting position. His handcuffs were unfastened.
Jaze touched the blood that coated Alex’s cheek. He ran his hands quickly over Alex’s sides and back. They paused at his chest.
“You were shot,” he said. Before Alex could reply, Jaze tore open Alex’s shirt. Jaze’s brow furrowed as his gaze shifted from the bullet holes to the knife wound in Alex’s stomach. Blood pooled down to Alex’s pants.
“Lyra, Alex needs your help,” Jaze said, looking past him.
She stepped quickly around the chair and knelt down in front of Alex. “These look like they’re from one of our guns,” the werewolf said, her gaze on the three bullet holes as she pressed bandages against Alex’s stomach.
Alex thought wearily that they sure hurt a lot more than the tiny holes looked like they would.
“You’ve lost a lot of blood,” Jaze said. “We need to get you home.”
Alex nodded. “Home sounds good,” he said, his words just above a whisper.
Jaze gave him a warm smile. “We almost didn’t find you.”
“You got Drogan,” Alex said.
“You got Drogan,” Jaze replied.
Both of them watched Kaynan and Chet lift Drogan and drag him not so gently from the room. A moan of pain came from the man.
“He’s not dead?” Alex asked.
Jaze shook his head. “Sleeping agents.” His voice said he preferred it to be different. “He’ll be well sedated on his way to the GPA. We’ll deal with him there.”
Alex winced as Lyra pushed harder on his stomach.
“We need to get Alex to surgery. There are silver shards in the wound that will have to be removed so he doesn’t get an infection,” Lyra told Jaze.
Jaze nodded. “There’s no time to waste.” He shifted his gaze. “Get him to the helicopter.”
Vance knelt beside Alex and picked him up.
“Not again,” Alex protested. “I can walk.”
“I don’t believe you,” Vance replied.
Every step flooded Alex with pain.
“Just think of it as if you have your own personal servant,” Vance told him.
Alex stared at the huge werewolf.
Vance cracked a smile. “Yeah, Jaze told me what horrible living conditions you were in over Christmas. Now I wish I’d sent you to my mom’s.”
Alex chuckled, then winced and doubled over at the pain through his stomach.
“Easy there, chief,” Vance replied quietly. “Maybe cut down on the laughter until you don’t have a gaping hole in your stomach.”
“Good idea,” Alex replied tightly.
Chapter Thirty-one
Drogan’s words pressed against Alex’s mind as the sedation from surgery wore off. The General, Jason Carso, was their father. If that was the case, everything he knew about his childhood was skewed. His parents, his relationship to Jet, even his revenge against Drogan.
His stomach twisted at the realization that Drogan was his half-brother. Being related to the man made him feel sick. Yet he and Cassie had Jet’s dark blue eyes. There had been a kinship there he couldn’t deny. There was no way it was true.
Understanding flooded him so sharply he couldn’t catch his breath for a minute. His heart skipped several beats. The monitors that had been beeping quietly sounded an alarm. Footsteps hurried into the room. He heard voices talking as the monitors were quickly checked.
A hand touched his forehead, brushing back his tangled black hair. He opened his eyes to see Meredith looking down at him.
“Hi, Mom,” he forced through his throat that was so dry his voice cracked.
Meredith’s blue eyes filled up with tears. “Oh, Alex,” she said softly.
“What does he mean?” Cassie asked from the other side of the bed. She looked from Alex back to Meredith. “Why did he say that?”
Alex took a shuddering breath and turned his head to face his sister. “She saved us, Cass. She gave us to her sister and brother-in-law after their baby was stolen.” He took a shallow breath. “She was afraid the General would find her. She saved our lives.” He winced at the thought that the General was their father. He took another breath and felt the pain in his ribs ease. “Meredith is our mother.”
Alex’s gaze shifted to the form standing in the doorway. Jaze watched him with sad eyes. At Alex’s questioning look, the dean nodded, confirming Alex’s words.
Alex slipped his hand under Meredith’s. Tears streamed down her face. “My little boy,” she said in a sob.
Cassie ducked under Meredith’s arm. It was clear by her expression that Cassie didn’t understand it all yet, but she trusted her brother. Alex gave her a weak smile. “It’s okay, Cass.”
She nodded. “I know it is. We’re going to be alright.”
Alex smiled and let his eyes droop shut. Memories of being a child at his father’s knee filled with the wonder of the world held him. He saw Jet there, lying on the grass watching the moon and speaking of hope. Mom stood in the door
way with her soft smile on her face, her eyes so warm and deep like her sister who turned out to be their birth mother. They were family. Nothing could change that. If anything, he and Cassie had been given a gift. They had a mother again; they were home. Alex drifted off to a sleep that was filled with peace.
The Werewolf Academy Series
Book 3- Instinct
By Cheree Alsop
Chapter One
Alex ducked into the tunnel when Jaze pulled open the door. The scent that rushed over him in a wave made his stomach lurch. Stale bodies, feces, and the kind of dirt that comes with a place that hasn’t been washed since it was built hit like a wall. Alex breathed through his mouth as he ran silently down the cement walkway, checking the corridors for anyone who might try to stop them.
A sound caught Alex’s ears. He paused at the sight of eyes peering back at him through the bars.
Alex put a finger to his earpiece. “There are live ones down here,” he said.
Answering footsteps ran toward him.
“Don’t worry. We’re here to get you out,” Alex reassured the boy who looked only a few years older than his own sixteen years.
Fear and relief combated in the boy’s wide eyes as if he didn’t dare to believe Alex’s words.
“Look out,” a deeper voice said from further down the hallway.
Two men appeared as silently as ghosts from the next corridor. They were dressed from head to toe in black and wore night vision goggles Alex didn’t need thanks to his werewolf senses. Two red dots centered on Alex’s chest. He wondered for a split second whether the bullets would be silver. He decided it didn’t matter. He didn’t like getting shot either way.
Alex dove to the side as the guards’ fingers tightened on the triggers. Bullets ricocheted down the hallway. The guards looked around wildly for Alex, but he had already reached them.
Alex knocked the gun on the right aside and slammed his fist into the first guard’s throat. He used the same fist and pummeled a haymaker into the second guard’s jaw. The guard squeezed his trigger spasmodically at the blow and the bullet drove into the ceiling. Alex chopped the man’s arm and he dropped the gun. The werewolf fell to one knee and spun, knocking both of the guards’ feet out from under them. He hit them with a two fisted punch to the face and their heads rebounded off the cement, knocking them out cold.