by Mac Flynn
“Like finding a soul mate?” I guessed.
“Sort of, but on a more primitive level. We are descended from wolves, after all,” she told me.
“We are?”
Stacy sighed and shook her head. “Remind me to knock some sense into that man when we get back. You should know much more than this.”
I grinned. “With pleasure.”
22
We finished with the interior scrubbing without being seen, but there was a problem with outside. We couldn’t scrub the pine needle and dirt-strewn path up to the villa. All we could do was kick more dirt over it and cover most of the scent. I glanced at Stacy. “What now?” I asked her.
She shook her head. “Now we hope that whoever attacked him will decide he isn’t worth a second beating.” We returned to the room to find Luke had cleaned Alistair’s wounds and wrapped him in bandages. “How long will he need to mend?” Stacy wondered.
“A day or two. The cuts are deep,” Luke replied.
“Is that it?” I gasped. I thought for sure we’d be playing wrap-the-mummy with him for a month.
Stacy frowned, stalked over to where Luke sat in a chair beside Alistair’s bed, and knocked him on the head. Luke cringed and whipped his head around to glare at her. “What’s that for?” he asked her.
She gestured to me. “You haven’t taught her a damn thing about werewolves, have you?”
“I taught her the basics of our society.” Luke received another rap on the head for that. “Why is that bad?” he growled.
“Because that’s an overwhelming-”
“-and boring,” I added.
“-subject to start a new werewolf on,” she argued. “The basics of our abilities, strengths, weaknesses, and history would have been a better start. Have you even told her about yourself and your family?”
“I’m afraid our enemies haven’t given us time to sit down together for a long chat,” he shot back.
Stacy grabbed a chair and shoved it beside Luke. Then she stomped over to me, grabbed my shoulders and guided me into the set chair. “The voting doesn’t start until eight tomorrow morning, and right now it’s only nine in the morning. I’ll try to find who attacked Alistair, but because we couldn’t clean the blood outside the villa you two will have to stay here and sit watch over Alistair.” Luke opened his mouth to object, but one evil eye from her and his voice choked. I dreamed of having that sort of power over him. “Not a word of argument. Tell her what she needs to know. I’ll check on you three later tonight to see how things are going.”
Before either of us could argue Stacy strode out of the room and shut the door behind herself. I glanced to Luke at my side and snickered when I saw the dumbfounded, steam-rolled look on his face. “She really knows how to get what she wants,” I commented.
Luke frowned and ran a hand through his hair. “Yes. She’s had centuries of practice.”
I took a page from the Book of Stacy and took charge of the conversation. “So what do you need to tell me?”
He sighed and leaned back in his chair. “What do you know?”
I shrugged. “We’re werewolves, and we have a really complicated government.”
Luke cringed. “This may take all day.”
“We’ve got time.”
“Quite a bit, and to be honest I’m not sure where to start.”
I furrowed my brow and glanced down at my hands in my lap. I lifted a hand and stared at the finely sharpened nails. Being a werewolf had its perks, and I had an idea. “Why don’t you teach me how to change?” I suggested.
“In this small space? That wouldn’t be a good idea,” he advised.
“You have any better idea, teacher? Besides, if I don’t know how to transform and defend myself I’m probably going to end up worse off than Alistair,” I argued.
Luke sighed, but nodded his head. “All right. Stand up.” He guided me over to the center of the room and we faced each other with three feet between us. Luke held up his hand and showed off his smooth, long fingers. “We’ll start with the arm. It’s the least damaging to clothing and the most effective tool against enemies.”
I smirked. “I don’t know. A good kick in the crotch with a clawed foot is pretty effective, too.”
Luke managed a smile. “True, but what if the attacker is female?”
“Then it’s still pretty effective. We girls are sensitive down there, too, ya know.”
His eyes twinkled with mischief. “I have some personal experience with down there, but we’ll focus on transforming without sexual arousal.”
“Yeah, I don’t really expect our enemies to get me horny.”
“I would hope not.”
“So how do I change my hand, teacher?”
“Through concentration.” His fingers and nails lengthened, and hair sprouted from his palm. “It’s a matter of focusing on the Beast inside of you and changing the part of the body that you need. Changing the whole body is much easier because there is no specific area to train your thoughts, but you may not be able to control the instinct of the Beast so we’ll stick with the hand.”
“All right, so I just imagine my hand all furry and clawed?” I guessed.
He shook his head. “Not entirely. That helps, but you also have to imagine using the claw. Slashing it through the air is a good image to focus on along with gutting an enemy and-”
“-and that’s kind of sick,” I gagged.
Luke grinned. “Well, I suppose you don’t have much personal experience with such imagery, so we’ll stick with slashing the air rather than an enemy.”
“The air molecules will be my enemy.”
He chuckled. “And they won’t stand a chance, but don’t forget to focus on the physical aspect.” He held up his half-transformed limb, more paw than hand now, and turned it around and around. “See the texture of the hair and the sharp fingernails? How the light shines on each thread and muscle?”
“This reminds me of a beauty care commercial.”
“Focus, Becky,” he scolded.
“All right, all right.” I sighed, raised my arm like Luke’s, and my eyes zeroed in on my hand. It was a nice, normal hand. Well-manicured since my werewolf change and very smooth. Now I needed to make it all soft, fuzzy, and vicious. I squinted my eyes and imagined the nice, soft fur waving in the breeze and the claws slicing through to cut in half a dangerous leaf blowing in the wind. My mind inevitably wandered to how soft the fur would feel against my cheeks, and how I’d giggle and-
-and something was not quite right. I felt something poof out of my cheeks and all over the rest of my face. I reached up and my fingers sank into a carpet of fluffy fur. I’d imagined my cheeks against fur, and fur had sprouted from my cheeks. Luke barked out a laugh that echoed around the room. I scowled at him through my furry face. “That’s not funny,” I growled.
“But you’re not seeing it from my view,” he protested.
“You won’t be seeing anything through two black eyes if you don’t tell me how to reverse this,” I threatened.
“Not without a picture,” he insisted. He stepped over to the door adjoining our room, but I jumped and blocked his path.
“Oh hell no. You are so not doing anything but telling me how to undo it,” I persisted.
Luke wiped the tears from his eyes and shrugged. “Very well. Imagine yourself as though you were looking into a mirror.”
“All I’m seeing right now is a carpet looking back at me,” I grumbled.
“Your human self,” he emphasized. I sighed and closed my eyes. My image floated through my mind. Nice, normal, human me smiling back and probably laughing at my stupid furry face. I felt the fur shrink back into my skin and in a moment the itchiness was gone.
“Am I back to normal?” I asked him.
“All done,” Luke assured me. I opened my eyes and reached up to feel nothing but smooth skin. He chuckled. “When we have children I’ll be sure to relate to them this story.”
“Do and they’ll suddenly
be in a one-parent household,” I warned him.
He smiled and stepped back to the center of the room. “Should we try the hand again?” he offered.
“All right, but this better work,” I mumbled.
“The problem wasn’t the transformation, but your thoughts,” he pointed out. “You need to focus on that single part of the body and not on any other part.”
I sighed and nodded. “I’ll try.” I raised my hand and glared at the fingers. Stupid fingers not getting hairy. All I wanted was for them to look nice and long and pointy. Then I could hack and slash through forests, and slice tomatoes without needing a knife. To my surprise and glee my fingers stretched and short stalks of hair slipped out from my skin. My face lit up and I had to contain myself from bouncing up and down. “It’s working! It’s working!” I cried out.
Luke smiled and put his hands on my shoulders. “Easy there, Becky. You’re not done yet. Let’s try to get the hand finished, and then back to its human counterpart.”
I nodded and glared at my hand, willing it to change. The fingers lengthened and the nails became as hard as-well, nails. The fur grew taller and shimmered in the light. I pushed through with the transformation until I felt like I hit a brick wall. Everything just stopped. “I can’t do anything else,” I told Luke.
“Does it feel like you’ve hit a wall?” he asked me.
“Yeah, a brick one.”
“Then you’ve reached the end of your transformation.”
“So I do what now? Rewind?”
“Try out the hand,” he invited me.
“How?”
Luke looked around the room and his eyes fell on a bowl of fruit. He grabbed an apple, turned to me, and held it up in front of him. “Try to catch this.” He tossed it to me and I swiped it from the air. I didn’t know my own strength because the hard fruit squished in my hand and apple juice ran down my arm.
“Ugh. You could have warned me about that,” I growled at him.
“Practice is the best teacher,” he argued.
“So I should fire you?”
“Do you want to learn this on your own?”
“No. . .”
“Then I recommend I stay on as your teacher.” I cleaned myself up and he grabbed another apple. “Try to slice this one as it flies toward you,” he suggested. There was the windup, the toss, and in the blink of an eye my claws swung down on the apple. The fruit was cut to ribbons and I was again covered in its juicy, sticky guts when it flew into my shirt.
“I’m starting to see a pattern with me and fruit. Maybe we should try something else before I attract flies,” I quipped.
“All right, let’s try reversing the process. Return your arm to its human form,” he instructed me.
“So do everything, but in the reverse?”
“Exactly, and imagining your human hand instead of your wolf paw.”
“I’ll try.” I closed my eyes and focused on my old hand. Nice, smooth skin that didn’t look like it needed a shave. Manicured nails that couldn’t cut fruit into snack-size. Fingers that were kind of short and stubby and-
-not appearing. I didn’t feel any of that changing magic happening, so I opened my eyes and saw my still-transformed paw. “Um, something’s wrong,” I told Luke.
He raised an eyebrow. “What’s wrong?”
“It’s not changing back.”
“You’re not trying hard enough.”
“I tried as hard as I did to change it into a claw.”
“Try again.”
I nodded, closed my eyes, rinsed and repeated. I got the same results, but was now a little more panicked. My hand was still as furry, clawed, and definitely not human. “How do I get it off, Luke? It’s not coming off!” I yelled in my panicked voice.
“Becky, you don’t get it off. It’s your hand,” he reminded me. “Also, stay calm. This happens occasionally to those learning to transform.”
“Why didn’t you tell me that sooner?”
“You didn’t ask.”
“Don’t make me use this clawed hand on you.”
“I would rather you didn’t.”
“And I would rather you tell me how to get it back to the hand type I can safely scratch myself with, but right now neither of us are getting what we want.”
“In this situation you only have two choices. Either fully transform or wait until your hand naturally changes back,” he told me.
“But I don’t know how to fully transform,” I reminded him.
“And I would rather you not do it inside Sanctuary. Fully transforming is also dangerous in that you could become stuck in the full werewolf form, or go even farther.”
“Even farther?” I repeated.
“To a complete wolf. It’s the risk every werewolf takes when they transform. In that stage the Beast completely takes over and you may never regain your human consciousness.”
“I’m starting to see this whole transforming thing as a curse.”
“It’s a responsibility,” he corrected me.
“Responsibility is a curse of adulthood,” I replied.
Luke sighed and stepped up to put his hands on my shoulders. “We’ll wait for you to transform back. I’ll be very surprised if it hasn’t happened in twenty-four hours.”
I cringed. “That long?”
“That long.”
“Fine, I’ll wait, but don’t expect me to be happy about it.”
23
That was a long twenty-four hours. I was stuck with a clawed hand, Alistair was unconscious on the bed wrapped like a mummy, and our enemies were out there plotting and planning. Stacy arrived after dinner, or rather with dinner. I was starved for something more than just the survivors of my chopped fruit exercise, and she provided us with meats, but not with any good news. She deposited the food on the table, plopped herself down in a chair and her eyes glanced at my clawed hand. “It looks like I wasn’t the only ones with problems this afternoon,” she mused.
“A temporary problem, but what did you learn out there?” Luke asked her.
Her face grew grim and she shook her head. “I went as far as his scent trail led me and I couldn’t sniff out a single smell other than his own.”
Luke forsook the food and stood close by the table. I didn’t wait for an invitation before digging in. Transforming was hard work. “Were there any tracks to follow?” he asked her.
She shook her head. “No, the ground was swept clean of all tracks, even those left by the walkers along the path. Whoever Alistair ran into are very good at covering their activities.”
Luke frowned and strode over to the balcony door. He glanced through the glass out onto the moonlit deck and mountain below us. The sun had set a few hours before, and all was quiet in anticipation for the voting tomorrow morning. “If we only knew what they were planning,” he mumbled.
“If we knew that we’d be able to go to my father while he still retained the position of High Lord,” she pointed out. “As it is, we don’t have any proof anything suspicious has happened except for what Lance spoke about and Alistair here.”
I paused and frowned in mid-eating. “What did Lance talk about again? Something about stolen gunpowder?”
“Explosives, to be exact. Of the plastic variety,” Luke corrected me.
A horrible thought drifted into my mind, and I suddenly lost my appetite. “And he said somebody would try to blow this place up?” I squeaked.
Luke turned to me with a raised eyebrow. “Yes, why?”
I nodded at Alistair. “What if he found out who took it?” I suggested.
Luke and Stacy froze, and then they whipped their heads to each other. The looks of horror on their expressions told me I’d hit on an idea. One I wish I hadn’t. “Then Lance wasn’t lying?” Stacy gasped.
“Perhaps not as far as we assumed he had been,” Luke corrected her.
I raised my hand. “Can I be excused from this vote tomorrow? I think I hear my bed calling me back at Luke’s house.”
�
�This is no laughing matter,” Luke sharply scolded me. “We are dealing with-” -a knock on the door.
We all glanced at one another, and all of us shrugged in reply. Apparently none of us had ordered a pizza. “Who is it?” Luke called out.
“A message for an Alistair,” came the reply. It was a man’s voice, and sounded old and feeble.
“Written or verbal?” Luke asked him.
“Written.”
“Slide it under the door.”
“I’m afraid it’s too large, sir. It’s in an envelope. Can’t I hand it to you?” the voice pleaded. Luke growled under his breath and strode to the door. He opened it a crack, but the person on the other side was pushy. The delivery man shoved it open with his shoulder and knocked Luke back onto the floor. The stranger hurriedly stepped into the room, closed the door softly behind himself and pointed the barrel of a muzzled gun at the four of us. He was a wrinkle-faced old man with speckled hands and wore drab clothes two sizes to big for him. Luke raised himself onto his arms, but froze when the barrel turned on him. “The first to move dies,” the man warned. His voice had dropped forty years from the tone, and I recognized it from the train station in Wolverton.
“Alston!” I gasped.
The man grinned and bowed his head. “I thank you for remembering me, but another word and I will shoot you. I promise these bullets will hurt, they’re made from pure silver.” We all stiffened, and I tried not to breathe too deeply. Alston strode through us and over to Alistair. He sneered down at the unconscious man. “A bullet would have been more effective than a beating,” he mumbled.
Luke whipped his head around and growled at Alston. “So you’re the one who injured him.”
Alston tilted his nose up. “I wouldn’t have dirtied my hands with such an impractical method of ridding ones’ self of an annoyance, especially not when there are more than enough mindless volunteers to do the deed for us.”
I noticed Luke’s hand wrap around something on the floor. “Us? You mean Lance?” Luke asked him.
Alston chuckled. “This is really too much talking.” He aimed the gun at Alistair’s head.