Gypsy Freak (Page 38)

“You’re saying Fay was the target,” Emit states quietly.

“Yes, because she had a secret minor pack—”

“It wasn’t secret. She informed me just last—”

“If you say last week, which was just before your beta meeting, where you may or may not have brought it up in casual conversation, I’ll take it to mean I’m correct on this matter and your wolves were killed in house. It’ll negate future claims of vampires being mixed up in this case.”

There are several long minutes of complete silence, not even any breaths.

“Those packs were just for runs and for social inclusion,” Emit says in a weak attempt to shed doubt, though I already hear the denial slipping.

“Check your wolves, alpha. It seems they’re running wild and killing for secrets. You should worry yourself with what secrets they wanted to ensure never left a threatened omega’s lips to her alpha.”

I hang up, staring idly at dead Anthony. Pity. I had a few more betas I wanted to pencil to the wall for this inquiry and accidentally kill.

“Your skills will no longer be needed today,” I tell Damien as the sun starts to set. “This matter is closed on my side. No farther investigation needed,” I add as I drag Anthony out into the hallway and snap my fingers at one of the interns.

Said ratty intern looks positively terrified.

“I don’t want to eat you. I just need you to take him and drain him for me. No sense in wasting all that beta blood when I’ve been starved for a century.”

I’m positive the stench of piss fills the air as I turn to leave. He better not have pissed on my new rug.

I start to shut the door, when Damien barges by me.

“Do I want to know why you’re running?” I call to his back as he leaps over the balcony.

“Fay would have told everything to her omega pack, and any wolf would know that.” His gaze flicks over his shoulder. “And we just decided Violet is their new alpha.”

I shouldn’t be in any sort of hurry. No wolf would be that stupid. Certainly not on the first day back for the omegas.

I listen as Damien talks to Emit on the phone on the way to his vehicle, and I follow close behind him, forcing myself to be slow. Violet should be answering her phone, but it just goes to her voicemail when I try to call.

The phones are working today, despite the worsening weather. She’s not been gone all that long.

Is she just ignoring me? She really is young, so it’s possible she’d be playing a game that way.

“Is Violet with your omegas?” Damien asks Emit.

“Lemon has decided it’s best for them to move in with Violet, and I—”

The line goes dead in the next instant.

“He’s just figured out the same thing, and he’s apparently in a fucking hurry to get there,” I say with a nod as an unexpected knot forms in my throat.

No one would be that stupid. Couldn’t be that stupid. We’re ridiculous for considering wolves to be this brazen. There’s not a single threat to Violet at all. We’re complicating things and overthinking them.

I leave Damien behind when I do get in a hurry.

Chapter 24

VIOLET

“It’s a personal letter. You’re not supposed to read it,” I hear Lemon hissing.

“It was balled up in her drawer like trash. How was I supposed to know?” Tiara is answering.

“It was in her drawer!”

“You’re back!” Mary says loudly on a nervous laugh, her eyes widening on mine. Then her nose wrinkles. “With vampire all over you…”

“With Arion all over her,” Lemon says as she starts sniffing around my neck, tickling me.

“Told ya! I like your style,” Tiara says with a firm nod. “There’s nothing wrong with vampire sex.”

“But Arion?” Lemon snaps.

“Arion would slaughter a legion of people for vengeance if she was killed with his scent on her,” Mary assures her, which…definitely does not make me feel assured about anything other than the fact he’s certifiably insane and I’m still attracted to him.

I’m not sure what’s wrong with me.

“I went to get clarification,” I answer dismissively.

“Clarification on what?”

My eyes pass over the wrinkled, open letter from Anna that Leiza quickly tries to cover when she sees me looking at it. I just exhale while shaking my head.

“I’m still not sure if I have a definitive answer, but the bottom line is that as long as Arion needs me for whatever game he’s playing, you’re safe. And for now, he needs me.”

“What about later?” Lemon asks.

“Later is yet to be determined.” I lift the letter as Ingrid pops out of nowhere and puts a drink in my hand.

“Why are you reading my personal—”

Tiara lets off a sharp growl, and suddenly all five girls burst out in fur, wolves surrounding me in my kitchen, seconds before my door is kicked open.

My glass tumbles to the ground, shattering, as two men in masks come out of nowhere.

“Get to Emit’s. Now!” I shout at Leiza as I rush toward the two men, threads flying across the room around me.

I never fight first, but this time I have no choice, because there are others who can die and can’t do anything to really protect themselves.

The threads grapple both men, and I see Leiza exhale in relief, before following the rest of the omegas out, racing away.

I rush over, ripping the mask off the first restrained guy, seeing his face distorted as a snout starts to form.

A screech escapes me as I stumble back, skipping step one and getting ready for step two, trying to dig my silver Van Helsing knife out of the holster on my ankle.

I never make it quite that far, because something slams into the back of my head so hard that the light speckles for just another blink—

Chapter 25

EMIT

My head pounds as my eyes struggle to open. I’m dizzy and disoriented, blinking slowly to blurry images around me as a familiar voice rises to my ears.

“Too long we’ve watched as the vampire alphas stepped on our wolf alphas!”

A round of cheers has my eyes swinging up, finding a crowd of fifty or more…wolves.

The sting of betrayal never burns any less, no matter how many centuries dwindle on.

My eyes adjust to the dim lighting inside the large barn. The mobs never get more creative. They form, they stage a coup, they kill, and I come back to kill only the ones I must.

“This almost went south, but tonight, we stepped up and we did what had to be done. We cut the loose ends like he’s failed to do. We cleaned up the mess like good alphas should. And we’ll take our packs like the alphas we’re meant to be, and deal with the fucking vampires the way wolves were intended to do.”

I laugh under my breath, drawing Ian’s attention as the restraints on my arms and legs hold me in place to…something. My head is still a slight fog after the clocking I took.

I was on the phone with Damien…wasn’t I? Now I’m here with a mutinous bunch of traitors.

My life on a cycle.

My head falls back as Ian glares over me with far more contempt than I deserve from him, of all people. I’ve practically raised him.

Sheltered him.

“You think this is funny?” he asks as the rest of the room goes quiet. “Was it funny when Arion came in and tore apart all your wolves? Was it funny when you let him off with a slap on the wrist?”

I shrug a shoulder. “Get the taste of blood you want, Ian. Kill me and enjoy it for the next twenty-eight years while I take a little break during full reincarnation. Then, on my twenty-eighth birthday, I’ll return and kill you as I’ve killed every other beta before you for doing this exact same—”

“We’re not killing you, alpha,” he says, spitting that word out like I’m the disgrace to it.

I’ve only ever wronged one pack.

I take in the fact that I’m clamped inside what appears to be a silver coffin. It burns when I move just a little and a hint of skin slips off the rubber mat I’m strapped to, so there’s definitely a lot of pure silver in it.

“Not the first time someone has buried me. You going to bury Vance too? Before he finds me?”

Ian continues to smirk. “I know how to trick a Van Helsing.”

“You went in a long loop?” I muse, wondering just how many people know that trick.

He nods like he’s a smug genius, and I look away.

It’s going to be a painful day or so of suffocating, so that helps me resist the urge to feel sorry for him for simply being an idiot.

He pulls out a knife, and I give it a bored look.

“I really hoped you’d be more crushed. Maybe feel the way we did when our friends were slaughtered at the hands of that psychotic son of a bitch who kicked your pathetic ass. I hoped this would disgust you just as much as it disgusted us to hear you stand before us and tell us no farther retaliation will be taken toward him, after you’d attended his homecoming party,” he goes on, his jaw ticking.

“Live for over a thousand years, and tell me you still feel that burning anger every time someone lets you down, pup,” I say with a bitter smile.

He just stares at me like he’s disappointed, and I bite back the defense of Arion, even though the words are on my tongue. I’ll never publicly defend him.