"So you suggested Adam?"
"No, ma"am." David"s voice was mellow, but I bet if he"d been in wolf form, his ears would have been pinned against his skull. "That was Gerry. He wanted me to come talk to him, one old friend to another."
"Bran is not one of the Gray Lords. He would never abandon his wolves. I suppose it never occurred to you to call Adam on the phone and talk to him-or even Bran, for that matter," I said.
"We were just back from a mission," David said. "We had the time. Some things just work better in person."
"Like kidnapping?" I asked dryly.
"That was unplanned," Connor said, a touch of heat in his voice.
"Was it?" murmured David. "I"ve been wondering. The whole thing came off so badly-with four of Gerry"s wolves dead-that I can"t help but wonder if it was planned that way."
"Three of his wolves dead," I said. "Mac was ours."
David smiled, more with his eyes than his lips. "Yes, ma"am. Three of his wolves died, then, and one of Adam"s."
"Why would he want to kill his own wolves?" asked Connor.
"We"d have to look at the wolves who died." David looked thoughtful. "I wonder if they were dominant wolves. I didn"t know any of them well-except for Kara. She wouldn"t have liked taking orders from Gerry for long. The boy, Mac, betrayed him by going to Adam for help."
"You make Gerry sound like a psychopath," said John-Julian. "He didn"t strike me as crazy."
"He"s a werewolf," David told him. "We"re a little more conscious of the chain of command than humans. If he wants to stay in control, he"d have to get rid of the wolves who were more dominant-and, eventually, the wolves who betrayed the pack."
I looked at David. "I don"t know Gerry well, but if I were to guess, I"d say you were dominant to him, too."
David grimaced. "I have my people. I don"t want Gerry"s, he knows that better than anyone. He"s watched me for years."
"So he felt safe calling you in," I said tentatively. "Knowing you wouldn"t challenge his leaders.h.i.+p."
"Gerry told Grandpa that Adam didn"t want to challenge Bran, but he might listen to an old friend," said John-Julian mildly. "He offered to fly us out here to talk, so we agreed. It didn"t take long before we realized matters were a little different than presented."
"I"d made inquiries." David took over the narrative. "I called friends and found out that Bran really does intend to tell the Alphas at the December meeting that he is going to take us public. So we came here to talk to Adam. I didn"t think it would do much good. Adam likes the Marrok too much to challenge him."
"But matters weren"t quite as they were presented," said Connor. "Gerry never told us he was a.s.sembling an army of mercenaries and werewolves."
"An army?" I said.
"A small army. Two or three of the lone wolves like Kara, who couldn"t find a pack of their own," John-Julian explained. "And a small group of mercenaries, loners he apparently offered to turn into werewolves."
"I should have put a stop to it when the d.a.m.n fool armed a bunch of frightened idiots with tranquilizer guns." David shook his head. "Maybe if I"d realized Gerry"d come up with something that could hurt a werewolf... Anyway, from that moment on it was a cla.s.sic SNAFU."
"Adam said they shot Mac when he opened the door," I said.
"Gerry"d gotten them so worked up about how dangerous Adam was that before they even checked to see who it was, they shot him." John-Julian"s voice held only mild regret-and I had a feeling that was mostly for the stupidity of the shooting rather than Mac"s death.
"Did you know Mac?" I asked, looking down at Zee"s dagger because I didn"t want them all to know how angry I was. But, of course, the werewolf knew.
"No, they didn"t," David said. "We flew in last Monday afternoon." He gave me an a.s.sessing look. "We were there when one of Gerry"s mercenaries, a human, came in thoroughly spooked."
"The man said someone killed his partner," said John-Julian looking at me, too. "A demon."
"No demons." I shrugged. "It doesn"t take a demon to kill an untrained, newbie werewolf who was too stupid to live."
I swallowed my anger-it wasn"t their fault they didn"t know Mac. I looked at them and hesitated. Maybe they should.
My inclination was to trust them. Part of it was that their story rang true-though I didn"t know them well enough to tell for sure. Part of it was remembering Adam"s voice as he talked about David Christiansen.
"Let me tell you about Mac, the boy who died on my porch," I said, then told them about his Change, the Chicago Alpha who sold him to Gerry, and the drug experiments.
"All we saw were the tranq guns," said John-Julian, slowly. "But two shots killed the young wolf-and they shot Adam with five before he was doped enough they could bind him."
"Our metabolisms are put out of commission by the silver while this DMSO carries the drug more quickly into our blood system?" asked David. "Does that mean someone could just subst.i.tute something else for the Ketamine?"
"I"m not a doctor," I told him. "It sounded like something like that would work, though."
"Maybe that"s what it sounded like to Gerry, too, and he was testing it out," said David. "With a real pack, it wouldn"t have worked, but with this mix of lone wolf deviants and new wolves born of mercenaries who also have to work alone-there"s no one who would feel it necessary to protect the prisoners."