Beware of Wolf

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by Geonn Cannon




  Beware of Wolf: An Underdogs Novel

  Geonn Cannon

  Supposed Crimes LLC, Falls Church, Virginia

  Smashwords Edition

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  All Rights Reserved

  Copyright 2013 Geonn Cannon

  Published in the United States

  ISBN: 978-1-938108-34-1

  Smashwords Edition, License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  PART I

  Chapter One

  Context was important. Without context, Ariadne Willow knew that things looked grim for her. She was currently in a burlap sack large enough to hold her wolf-form, the loop of chain that had been used to subdue her still around her neck. She could hear the men who'd abducted her talking because she was stuffed into the trunk of their car. The carpet underneath her reeked, and the road whispered under the tires as the bad guys drove to an undisclosed location for the next step of their dastardly plans.

  Just as she planned.

  Fifteen minutes ago she had spotted the beat-up blue Oldsmobile idling in an alley that dead-ended at a wooded area. The driver was behind the wheel, a lit cigarette in the hand that hung out the window. Ari stayed low to cross behind the car without being spotted, trying to pick up the trail of his passenger. It was nearly two in the morning so following the freshest scent was her best bet. She put her snout to the ground and let it lead her to the source two blocks away.

  The guy was tall and wiry, crouched low and moving slowly so he wouldn't startle his prey. Ari mimicked him, but she managed to do a much better job of remaining inconspicuous.

  As she watched, the guy crossed someone's side lawn and moved up to the chain-link fence. He moved with purpose, avoiding the furtive movements that would have been a giveaway to his nefarious motives. He quietly fiddled with the latch and almost immediately received a barked warning from further in the backyard. The man ignored it and pulled the gate open the rest of the way. He stepped back and to the side, waiting patiently until the border collie came running. The man extended the long pole he'd been carrying and readied the loop.

  Ari moved out of the shadows that she'd been using for her cover and sent a thought across the yard to the dog.

  Run. Go back to your people.

  The dog skidded to a stop, confused. The man was confused as well, torn between getting what he came for and crossing into the people's yard. Ari didn't like 'speaking' with dogs. Canidae could do it with normal dogs, and to a minor extent could manage it between themselves, but other canidae at least had the benefit of knowing what was happening. For a dog to suddenly have a head full of human commands was perplexing to the poor beasts. Ari tried to keep it simple.

  Danger! Run away!

  The border collie turned tail and ran back into the yard.

  "Oh, you stupid mutt..." the man muttered.

  He started to go after it, but was stopped when Ari began barking. He turned and, when he saw her racing toward him, decided to go with the bird in his hand. He faced her full-on and brought the pole around. A short length of chain looped around Ari's neck when she was close enough and the man pulled a trigger to tighten it. Ari's bark was cut off to a wimpy squeak, her forepaws lifted off the ground as the man lifted the pole. He used the pole as a safety measure, keeping her from biting him as he examined her.

  "Looks strong. Mean, too." He lashed out with his right hand and slapped the side of her head. "You got a temper, huh?"

  Ari blinked to steady her vision. Oh, you're gonna pay for that...

  The man looked around and pushed the fence shut to hide the fact he'd been there. He jerked the pole and started walking, half-dragging Ari back the way they had come. She put up a valiant fight, making it look good. Even a man this stupid would be suspicious of a dog that was abducted willingly. She snarled and snapped at the chain, throwing all her weight against her back legs. Just because she planned to be stolen didn't mean she was going to make it easy on the jerk. The one thing she didn't do was bark, even when the choke chain allowed it. She didn't actually want anyone coming to her aid.

  The man finally got her back to the Oldsmobile. The driver saw them coming and popped the trunk, getting out so he could help stow her.

  "That ain't a border collie," he hissed.

  "I still got one. What's it matter? This one is wild. Could be rapid."

  "Rabid, you idiot. And thanks for tellin' me that before I got near its mouth. Hold him still, will ya?"

  Idiot stepped over Ari's back and held her still with both hands. Driver got the bag out of the trunk and held it wide. She got a glimpse of his face - long and thin with a scruff of black beard but no mustache. She would remember that face. The bag was secured over her head and then the rest of her body was shoved inside by Idiot. She was lifted off the ground, tossed into the trunk without finesse, and the lid slammed.

  Now the car was thumping over an uneven road. The air smelled salty and cold, and she could hear the lapping of waves. Industrial District, she guessed. Judging by the time they'd been on the road, it was somewhere close to the West Seattle Bridge. Driver finally slowed down and Ari heard the rattle of a garage door being manually lifted. The car rolled through and the gate was dropped behind them. The weight of the car shifted as her kidnappers got out.

  "What did you get?" someone new asked.

  "Some kind of mutt."

  I'll show you mutt.

  The trunk was opened and Ari twisted inside the bag. The new guy laughed. "Whoa-ho, a lively one. That's a good sign." He put a hand on her shoulder through the bag, pinning her down as he opened it to look inside. "Hm. Nice coloring. Looks strong. You should've seen the stray McCauley brought in the other night. Fuckin' skin and bones. It needed a walker just to stand upright."

  "They make walkers for dogs? How's that work?" Idiot, of course.

  "Shut up, idiot." The new guy cinched the bag again and hauled Ari out. She was momentarily dangled upside down before he put her on hard concrete. She snarled and thrashed like a fish, the wolf part of her brain panicking at the lack of control. New Guy told Driver to hold her head down, and he grabbed it through the bag. The wolf wanted to try biting him even through the thick burlap, but Ari calmed it and held it back. The bag was opened again and New Guy reached inside. Something was latched to the chain around her neck and she was hauled out. The fish metaphor took on new meaning as she was lifted onto her hind legs and forced to stand.

  She was in a garage; three rows of fluorescent lights illuminated a large but empty work space. An open door led into what looked like a dark warehouse. Ari could hear men laughing and cheering. Their shouting was joined by a rattle of chains, and underneath it all was the snarl and barking of her cousins. She could smell blood, and it made her twist and buck against her captor's arms.

  "Definitely a fighter!" New Guy was bulky and bald. His face was wide and flat at the chin but tapered to a smooth dome not far above his eyebrows. The reek of cigarettes was strong on him, as were other odors Ari didn't feel interested in identifying. She snarled and bared her teeth at him, twisting her body in an elaborate move designed to look like escape. Instead, she took a quick look at her new environment. A wall o
f lockers stood as barricade to a series of dark offices, with several tools strewn about between the two.

  "It's a female."

  Idiot frowned. "Huh? You didn't say nothin' about whether you wanted a boy or a girl."

  "No, it's good. Females are called bitches for a reason." He tilted his head to the side and then nodded. "Okay. Go to the office and tell J.J. to get you some cash. Usual rate."

  Driver nodded and tapped Idiot's arm to make sure he followed. New Guy let Ari's front legs drop and started walking, pulling the rigid pole he'd attached to her chain. Ari tried to fight, but the ground was too smooth to give her traction. After skidding a few yards she got her feet under her and reluctantly trotted into the warehouse behind him.

  They entered into a room full of cages stacked two high, running along the length of the interior wall. Ari lifted her head and looked at them as she was dragged past, meeting their eyes. She heard some of their thoughts as she was pulled along.

  Not like us.

  Help?

  A few of them were too aggressive and riled up to make sense, their spittle glistening on the bars of the cage as they barked at her.

  "Come on," New Guy growled. He hauled her through another door into a blindingly bright room that reminded her of a doctor's exam room. The diagrams of canine anatomy and pictures of dogs on the wall revealed it was actually a veterinarian's realm. New Guy bent down and grunted as he hauled her up onto the table in the middle of the room.

  "You behave. We're just gonna make sure you ain't got no diseases or anything, all right? Wanna make sure you don't keel over your first time out."

  Ari flattened her ears against her skull, widened her eyes, and whimpered.

  He kept his steady glare on her.

  Ari coughed, trembled, and hunched her shoulders. When she looked up at him again she rolled her eyes back in her head and went limp. She dropped onto her side and let herself fall as limply as if she was dead onto the hard tile floor. Ouch. She lay perfectly still and held her breath as New Guy stared in shock.

  "What the hell. What the hell." He got onto his knees next to her, both eager to try and help but reluctant to touch her. He finally seemed to decide the ruse was too complicated for a dog to fake and put his hand on her throat to feel for a heartbeat. Ari didn't have to fake a rapid pulse. "Those assholes..." He got to his feet and ran from the room.

  Ari immediately flipped onto her stomach and pushed herself up. She brought up one forepaw and pushed it through her collar, holding it there until the claws flattened into fingernails. The hair receded from her hands and arms, her body changing shape with pops and cracks that sent waves of pain through her body. As soon as she had opposable thumbs, she got the choke chain off and tossed it. She arched her back and felt the last few bones pop into place.

  Her hip and shoulder ached where she had taken the tumble, but she couldn't focus on that. She limped out of the exam room and back down the row of cages. All the dogs were now staring at her in confusion. The aggressive ones still bared their teeth but they were too confused to actually bark.

  Back in the garage Ari ran to the lockers she'd spotted earlier. There was a thick brown jumpsuit hanging on a hook by one of them and she grabbed it. She had just yanked up the zipper when she heard New Guy shouting curses from the direction of the vet's office. She eyed the row of tools nearby and grabbed the shovel. She ran back to the cages and arrived just as New Guy and the Vet came running out of the office. They stopped in their tracks when they saw her.

  "Who the hell are you?"

  "You oughta be careful who you call a mutt," Ari growled.

  She swung the blade of the shovel and both men jumped back even though she was too far away to hit them. She wasn't aiming for them, anyway. The sharp edge of the shovel hit the padlock on the nearest cage and snapped it. The impact shot up both of Ari's arms to her injured shoulder but she ignored the pain as the dog launched out of the tiny space. Given the choice between his rescuer and the people who had tormented it, the dog charged at New Guy.

  "Go get him, cousin."

  She went back to the garage and used the shovel to break the office window. There was a couch just underneath and Ari used it as a step to enter. She walked to the desk and dialed 9-1-1. When an operator answered she said, "Yeah, anyone you can spare to this location. And bring Animal Control."

  She put the receiver down on the blotter and left the office just as Driver and Idiot came back for their car.

  Driver looked at the broken window. "Hey. What's going on?"

  Obviously New Guy and Vet hadn't raised the alarm yet. Ari could still hear the ruckus coming from the bowels of the warehouse which told her the evening's entertainment hadn't been interrupted. She was still holding the shovel so she gestured past them. "Gotta muck out some of the cages. Don't suppose either of you want to help me out."

  "Sorry. I don't do dog shit," Idiot said. "You new here? I ain't seen you around."

  Driver tugged on Idiot's arm. "Come on. Flirt on your own time."

  "This is my own time. We just got paid." He smiled and walked closer to Ari. "I'm Kevin. What's your name?"

  Ari gestured with the shovel again. "I really should get to work."

  Driver was leaning against the car with his elbows resting on the roof. "Kev, she just chose shoveling dog crap over talking to you. Take the hint, man. Sorry to bother you, miss. We'll get out of your hair."

  Ari didn't want them leaving before the police arrived. "It's not from a lack of interest, you know. It's just that my boss is a real hard-ass. If I leave that stuff sitting around too long, he acts like it becomes radioactive. You guys seem nice. I wish you were sticking around so we could get to know each other better."

  She directed that at Driver. She knew Kevin the Idiot would stick around no matter what; Driver was the one she had to convince.

  Kevin was looking at Driver, too. "C'mon, Tommy. What are we gonna do, just go home and go to bed?"

  Tommy sighed heavily and looked at the door, obviously eager to get away from the scene of the crime. But finally he tapped his hands on the roof and pushed away.

  "Sure. Whatever. How long you think it'll take with the shit?"

  "Not long." She stepped closer to Kevin and lowered her voice. "Kind of gets boring back here in the garage all by my lonesome. Be nice to have you boys keeping me company." She winked, then looked at Tommy and bit her lip. He finally seemed interested so she smiled. "I'll be right back. Don't you go anywhere."

  She walked through the door, looking back once more just to make sure they were both on her hook. Once she was out of sight, she put down the shovel and went back to the exam room. New Guy and Vet were cornered in the vet's small office and the pit bull she'd freed was clawing at the door. He spun at the sound of Ari's arrival and barked at her, but Ari held up a hand to soothe him.

  "Easy, fella. Friend. Remember?"

  His growl was a low rumble in his chest, but he didn't attack her.

  "Good boy. Keep them inside there. If they step out, bite them."

  The dog scampered around to face the window and directed its growl at the men behind the glass. New Guy glared at Ari.

  "Who the hell are you?"

  "Not your ordinary bitch."

  By then the sirens were close enough that Ari could hear them even over the commotion in the cages. She followed the narrow and winding corridor into an open area where the spectators had gathered. A chain-link fence supported by steel poles stood in the middle of the space, the sides rattling occasionally as one of the victims slammed against it. Ari skirted the edge of the crowd until she found the front door. There were security guards posted at all three of the visible exits, but only one of them had taken a position where he couldn't see the cage in the middle of the room. He was at least a full head taller than Ari, and his shoulders made him twice as wide as she was. She walked over, approaching from an angle he couldn't see, and spoke only when she was close enough to touch his arm.

  "Hey."r />
  His shoulders straightened and he assumed a defensive posture.

  "Your job is to keep people out, right? I'm already in, so you can relax." He considered that and then slumped against the wall again. "Something is about to happen. Something very dangerous. You wanna get hurt protecting these people?"

  He glanced toward the cage and then quickly away. "Not really."

  "Then follow me."

  He looked at the crowd one more time, then followed Ari back the way she had come. Kevin and Tommy were waiting in the garage, leaning against the front panel of the Oldsmobile. They straightened up when Ari returned, and Kevin looked confused when he saw her huge escort.

  "Whoa. Who is this, your pimp?"

  "No. He's gonna help me with my chore."

  "What chore?"

  "I told you. There's some shit that needs to be picked up." She turned to the bouncer and pointed at the dognappers. "You've probably thought about hurting the people who come in here and watch this shit. You only did it because you needed the money. Right?" She could see the truth in his eyes. "These are two of the guys who provide the fighters. Make sure they can't leave before the show starts. You do that and I'll forget I ever saw you here."

  The bouncer moved forward. Kevin and Tommy, torn between fight and flight, got the option taken from them as he closed the distance between them with two steps. He grabbed Tommy and threw him into Kevin, knocking them both down. Ari didn't bother sticking around to see what happened next.

  The sound of sirens was unmissable now, and the crowd began a panicked shuffling toward the exit. The dogs howled inside their cages and Ari tossed a quick apology over her shoulder as she ran past them again. Freeing them would only cause more damage and the police would have to use deadly force to make them stop. They were safer in their cages for the time being.

  A few people had noticed the door Ari had come through and, assuming it led to a secondary entrance, began bottle-necking there as well. Ari shoved through the crowd of them like fighting a current, slipping her hand into someone's pocket and absconding with their phone. When she got free, she moved toward the fenced area. The dogs inside the cage were oblivious to the pandemonium going on around them. They had been poked, prodded, provoked, and conditioned to fight to the death.

 

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