by Amira Rain
She knew nothing for a long, long while.
Mary-Lou woke to hushed voices – to agitated barks and half-swallowed hissing. As that was an improvement to being shaken awake by her own body’s terrified thrashing, she did not question the situation too much. Instead, Mary-Lou chose to snuggle back into Jonas’s warmth – because of course Jonas was right there, arms gentle but tight about Mary-Lou’s body – and struggled to remember what had happened.
“I’m awake,” she murmured in his ear, lifted an unsteady hand to tangle in Jonas’ golden hair. Jonas clutched her tighter for a brief, breathless moment, before releasing her to study her expression.
“Are you alright?” he rasped, eyes wide and concerned as they roved over her face.
“I am fine,” Mary-Lou was quick to reassure, surprised to find the statement true. No pain weighted her body, no worries or lingering fear – she took a deep breath, released it in a happy sigh. “I’m really, really fine.”
“Glad to hear it,” Rowfer said, managing to sound both genuinely happy and impossibly grumpy in one breath. “Now, let’s finish up here. All this talk of dreaming has got me sleepy.”
Mary-Lou nodded her acquiescence, memories of what had prompted the man’s visit dampening her spirits. She moved to disentangle herself from Jonas – a task she soon gave up as futile, given that the golden-haired Shifter did not so much as budge.
Annoying. She was sticking with annoying in describing Jonas’ overprotective tendencies, at least for the moment.
“Go ahead,” Mary-Lou sighed, knowing she must look ridiculous: Sitting in the middle of the living room floor, wrapped in two hundred pounds of worried Shifter. “Cara and Sasha should hear, too,” she added, not wishing to banish the couple yet again. Rowfer nodded his gray head, a grin hidden in his eyes; Mary-Lou got the feeling that the two would have been allowed to stay, had she pressed the issue.
Right, she was an alpha now. A leader. Mary-Lou kept forgetting what that meant.
“How long was I out?” she whispered to Jonas.
“Just under ten minutes,” he rumbled back, arms tightening about her waist.
“I told you she’d wake up,” Rowfer muttered, disregarding both the angry hiss and low growl Sasha and Cara let out with practiced ease. “Now,” he continued, “Onto your powers.”
“My what?” Mary-Lou blinked heavily, hoping she had misheard.
“Right. Of course you don’t know – why would you?” Rowfer muttered something too quick and low for Mary-Lou to hear. Judging by the faint blush that rose on Cara’s cheeks, it was nothing flattering. “Alright, listen here, because I really hate repeating myself.” Rowfer leaned forward against the anchor of his cane, eyes serious in his gray, wrinkled face. “You may not be able to Shift, you may not have our strength, but there is nothing human about the blood you carry.”
“What does that mean?” Mary-Lou gasped, cold with shock and a new sort of terror. Not human. Not Shifter. Where did that leave her? What was she to be? She tried to remember how to breathe.
“Steady,” Rowfer warned, “No need for panic. You’ve always been this, always had the power of the Mother Goddess within you – nothing to fear now, just because it has finally been awakened.”
“The power of – Mary-Lou is magic?” Cara gasped; Rowfer rolled his eyes. “What did I just say?” he grumped.
“So the dreams – the nightmares,” Mary-Lou could not finish. The anxiety that had weighted her chest turned colder, cut sharper.
Real. Could it all be real?
She closed her eyes, trying to staunch her panic. It would not do any good to fall apart now – not when so many depended on her. When it would change nothing. Mary-Lou took a breath; when she addressed Rowfer again, her voice was steady and her eyes, calm.
“What do I need to do?”
Rowfer grinned. “That’s what I like to hear.” The aged Healer stretched a shaking hand to grasp Mary-Lou’s shoulder. “You,” he told her, “are to lead the right and punish the evil. What you saw, dear – what torments you in your sleep – is the result of leniency, of misplaced compassion, of self-imposed blindness. The world of Shifters is not that of humans,” he reminded. “Might, obvious and vicious, dominates. If you are to fulfill your destiny, you must first bear those who would have it otherwise. As publicly as you can manage,” Rowfer finished off with a wink.
“And what of her powers?” Jonas spoke up. “What of the next disaster, and the next one after that? Is she going to be plagued by nightmares her entire life?” Anger rolled off Jonas, powerful but aimless. The idea that he could not protect her against this, against herself, made the Lion within him roar in wounded displeasure.
“Young people,” Rowfer sighed, “Always so impatient. Tell me, Jonas, what happened the first time you Shifted?”
Silence fell, thick and sudden. Mary-Lou twisted around in Jonas’ grip, eyes widening to see the man’s face red with embarrassment.
“…I clawed up the couch,” the Lion Shifter finally muttered, in a voice that very clearly stated the couch was but one of several unfortunate victims. Sasha stifled a snort; Cara giggled. “Like you did any better!” Jonas snapped at the duo leaning against the kitchen wall, “It’s hard, the first time – you don’t know your limits, and everything looks so different—”
“Exactly.” Rowfer cut him off. “But you got the hang of it. So will Mary-Lou, given enough time and practice.”
“That’s great,” Mary-Lou breathed. “That is really – thank you. Thank you so much.” She would have hugged the man, had Rowfer not been so obviously uncomfortable with such gestures.
“Don’t thank me,” Rowfer pushed up against his cane, rising unsteadily from his seat. “It’s your job to master your powers, to understand them, and it ain’t an easy one. Just remember, not everything you see has to happen—” the Healer wagged a finger near Mary-Lou’s nose, “—and not all can be saved.”
Jonas helped Rowfer out of the apartment and down to the blue Honda and the patient young man sitting behind the wheel. “My grandson, Erik,” Rowfer introduced the youth. Erik offered a polite hello to Mary-Lou and her pack, half-hunching in his seat. “Excuse him; he is a bit socially inept,” Rowfer muttered as Erik moved to help him into the car. “We don’t get too many visitors, and have even less cause to visit others.”
“Where do you live?” Cara asked.
Rowfer did not answer. Cara let the subject drop.
“Thank you once again,” Mary-Lou offered. Jonas echoed the sentiment, smiling slightly when Rowfer grumbled something snarky back.
They waited until the blue car disappeared around a corner down the road before filing back inside. Mary-Lou grabbed for the house phone, dialing a row of numbers from memory.
“Irma?” she gasped into the receiver, “I need to use the library.”
CHAPTER TWO
Wiley Turbo was not a coward.
The bartender set a cool, brown bottle in front of Wiley’s slumped form, quietly whisked the empty one away. He had stopped asking questions around the fourth beer, unnerved both by Wiley’s increasingly hateful expression as well as the man’s apparent lucidity. The beer had come on the heels of three shots of vodka, yet the dark-haired man seemed no drunker than he had when he first sat down.
Wiley glared at the man’s back as he turned to tend to someone else a few tables down, then spat in disgust. Fucking humans. The whole world was crawling with them, choking beneath their weight. How he wished he could – just –
Wiley gulped down a mouthful of bitterness along with his beer.
Wiley admitted to being a great deal of unsavory, inglorious things: Liar, thief, murderer – the kind of bad man mothers warn their children about. Hell, he embraced these dirty titles freely, leveraged the fear they inspired in the weak and stupid to take what he wanted. It was a way of life, one that fitted him quite nicely.
A monster, Wiley was. A coward?
He had torn the tongue of the first man who dare
d call him that right out of his dumb, gaping mouth.
Wiley was not a dog, was not a spineless bitch ready to kneel at the sound of the leash. He was a man of violence, a man of action – a man who could not be ignored. Wiley built his life around that idea, established himself and gathered a loyal pack with a brutal efficiency few could rival. He had pulled himself out of poverty, lifted himself out of the misery that followed his parents’ death with his own two hands – motivated then as he was now by a single, crystal-clear goal: That of Shifter dominance.
Before any of that could happen, the Shifter ranks themselves had to be weeded out of weakness. Human-borns and human-sympathizers, powerless omegas and Formless elders – all that garbage had to go. Wiley was just the man to make it happen, had been so close to being recognized by those in power as the one that would lead them to victory, when—
Wiley slammed a fist against the wooden table, sending both the porcelain ashtray and his untouched glass of water tumbling to the floor. The two other patrons barely glanced in his direction; the bartender smartly remained behind the safety of the bar proper.
Wiley ignored them all, eyes red and claws lengthening in the curl of his fists. That girl. That human bitch and her disgusting, traitorous family – she had done that to him, publicly humiliated both Wiley and his pack and set him back at least a year in his plans. Wiley had spent the last four months reeling from the unexpected roadblock: Nursing his wounds and scaring some respect back from his followers. Or what remained of them, at any rate. Those on top where not too pleased with him, either, and there was nothing to be done—nothing but finish what he had started and kill the miserable human wench.
Problem was, Wiley was stumped as to how exactly he was going to accomplish that particular task.
It was an insanely frustrating situation. On one hand, Mary-Lou was hardly a match for him: Even with the sparkly little trick she had up her sleeve, the woman was very much human; a single, well-aimed claw would tear life from her flesh forever. On the other, she was surrounded by heavy-weights. Irma and Jonathon Stevens were legendary Hunters; Jonas Edwards traced his lineage all the way back to Shifter myths. The addition of Alexander Ivanov, heir to the Ivanov Dynasty and natural alpha, was downright unfair. Even the little fox they had running around – Sara, Kera? – even she was not your typical omega. Wiley frowned, anger building as he tried and failed to find a weakness he could exploit.
“Woman troubles?” a voice slurred to the Shifter’s right.
“Fuck off,” Wiley growled, not bothering to look at the inebriated human who had presumed to disrupt his peace.
“She mouthing off?” the man continued, oblivious to the hateful anger radiating from the dark-haired man as only drunk men can be, “Just thrash her around a bit. Shuts them right up. Or did she find someone else?” he gurgled out a laugh. “Did she? Well, you are a big fellow – lug the son of a bitch a few good ones! That ought to settle the score. Hell, I’d come with and help ya hold the fucker down, if I wasn’t so pissed.”
Wiley had stood up during the man’s rant, had walked closer to the human’s table with the very real desire to punch the drunk into bloody silence. He was but a step away from the hunched man when he stopped, dark anger clearing as a much more vicious, much more efficient idea coalesced in his brain.
Jonas.
Wiley strode up to the still-laughing man, bent so his entire body loomed over the drunken fool’s hunched form.
“Congratulations,” Wiley hissed between long, long teeth, “You will live to waste another day.”
The man’s confused What? was lost beneath the sound of bones breaking, transformed into a high-pitched scream as the pain of his hand shattering registered in his alcohol-soaked mind.
Wiley removed his elbow from where it crushed the man’s hand flat against the table. He threw the horrified bartender a fifty in passing, a satisfied smirk spreading on his face.
Mary-Lou’s greatest strength was to become her worst weakness. Wiley found he rather enjoyed the irony.
He knew that he was going to enjoy her blood a lot more.
***
Mary-Lou was cautiously optimistic.
The pack had spent the week following Rowfer’s visit at the Cabin; more precisely, in the Cabin’s basement, scrutinizing each and every relevant book for potential clues to Mary-Lou’s “condition.” In seven days, they had managed to go through over three hundred written works – including some Folklore volumes written in Chinese, courtesy of Jonathon’s translation skills. Irma and Jonathon had been thrilled at the news of Mary-Lou’s yet unknown abilities. They had thrown themselves into figuring out Mary-Lou’s powers with single-minded enthusiasm, completely disregarding the no-doubt important project that had occupied their time for the last month. Mary-Lou was more grateful than she could explain; she hoped one day to be able to repay their kindness.
The results of the research were much less gratifying. There was not a lot of information regarding supernatural powers in Shifters – outside of the usual human-to-animal metamorphosis, that is. The only records of individuals who suffered vivid, predictive dreams were of Seers.
Mary-Lou was quite certain she was not a Seer. For one, she had not actually predicted anything up to date. She refused to count the single, blood-curdling nightmare her mind played on loop as any sort of sign to the contrary, given that no such events were in immediate danger of happening. Furthermore, would she not be plagued by a number of visions, not the same disturbing one, if she had the power of Sight?
Seers aside, information regarding extra-special Shifters was suspiciously lacking. There must have been some – Mary-Lou was a living, breathing example of how possible it was – yet the written history they perused remained empty of their presence.
“What if they were all human?” Cara had wondered aloud at some point during day five. Her hands bore smudges, of ink, Mary-Lou remembered – left trails of it down her cheek as she pushed a strand of red hair out of her eyes. She had clamped her mouth shut but seconds after the question slipped her tongue, her face going strangely blank.
“What do you mean?” Mary-Lou had asked. When Cara turned to look at Sasha instead, Mary-Lou narrowed her eyes and insisted, “Cara!”
“Um,” Cara hesitated. When Mary-Lou did not back down she lowered her head in submission, hurriedly whispering out, “They might’ve been hiding their powers.”
“Or were killed before they could fully realize them,” Sasha added. Cara threw him a pointed glare; he shrugged, unapologetic, “It’s likely. A human possessing supernatural powers?” Sasha snorted. “Humans would have believed them devil-followers; Shifters –a threat. Neither would have ended very well for the person in question.”
Mary-Lou had shaken her head, partly in disbelief, partly in horrified understanding. Jonas drew near, but did not attempt to touch her. Irma and Jonathon remained where they sat surrounded by books, silent.
They remained at the Cabin for two more days. Sasha’s grim revelation dampened their spirit some, but it also strengthened their resolve. In the end, they had found two volumes of folklore – one Egyptian, the other Japanese – that contained stories and anecdotes pertaining to people with rather familiarly unique powers.
In the present, Mary-Lou laid her hand atop the blue folder containing the scanned pages. She then glanced at Jonas, smiling to find him staring distractedly out of the car window.
“Five minutes tops,” Cara called out from the passenger seat. “You can’t believe how much I missed my bed—HOLYSHIT!”
The car lurched sideways, tires screeching shrilly against the cement. Mary-Lou was thrown forward, almost hit the back of Cara’s seat if not for Jonas’ supernatural speed – the Lion Shifter grabbed her and held tight, maintaining his own balance by embedding the claws of his left hand into the upholstery. The back seat will never be the same again; Mary-Lou had a single, delirious moment to consider how much Sasha will bitch (it was an expensive car, and it was his), before ever
ything fell still.
“Fucking—!” the rest of Sasha’s angry outburst was lost as the Snake Shifter slammed the driver’s door open and jumped out of the car.
“What happened?” Mary-Lou pushed against Jonas’ solid chest, attempting to free herself enough to see what had enraged their usually mild-mannered friend. When Jonas only growled and held on tighter, she sought Cara’s eyes instead.
“What’s going on?” Mary-Lou demanded. Cara hesitated a moment longer.
“Wiley,” she said, spitting the name out like the very sound of it offended her.
Mary-Lou stilled.
“Let me go,” she told Jonas, voice clear and calm. Jonas held on, seemed as if he wanted to refuse; in the end, he did let her go – reluctantly, and not far. His eyes were electric blue, Mary-Lou noted, his claws fully-extended. He looked as she felt.
Mary-Lou did not slam the car door open, did not scream or curse at the familiar, smug face that leered at her several paces away. She drew to her full height instead, her gait unhurried as she moved to join Sasha and face Wiley and his gang.
“Wiley,” Mary-Lou acknowledged. She felt Jonas stand beside her, saw Cara move to Sasha’s other side; good. Mary-Lou focused cold, glass-green eyes on Wiley, feeling a thrill of satisfaction as something in the man visibly faltered.
Whatever reaction Wiley had been expecting, indifference was not it. Good; keeping one’s opponent imbalanced was the most basic of strategies.
Time to escalate.
“You are trespassing,” Mary-Lou noted. “All of you,” she added, making sure to lock gazes with each and every member of his pack. Most of them bowed their heads or turned their eyes; one glanced at Wiley, briefly, as if to reassure himself that all was fine.
All was not fine. No, not at all.
“My apologies,” Wiley offered after a long, awkward pause. There was no sentiment in his words, their vowels ground between too many teeth. Mary-Lou narrowed her eyes, tired of the game before it had even begun.