She answered her phone with a terse, “Special Agent Zheng.”
“It's me,” Ukiah said. “Rennie asked that we come for
dinner tonight. They're doing a cookout and a howling. My moms will watch Kittanning.”
“Both of us? He wants me there? What's up?”
“Nothing. They want to see me. They'll like it if you come too.”
There was silence from the other side of the phone.
“We do an early dinner, and I'll go on alone,” he offered. “Or we can do breakfast tomorrow.” When the silence continued, he said, “It's just a cookout; I can skip it.”
“No!”
It was a hard sharp denial. Indigo took a deep breath, and let it out. “I can't isolate you from your people. You told me how alone Magic Boy was, how unhappy he was, how desperate he was for someone like himselfâit got him killed. I can't take the Dog Warriors away from you.”
“You don't have to go with me. I can go alone.”
“How can I slight your family and then ask you to spend time with my family later?”
“Well, your family isn't a collection of FBI most wanted.”
“Granted, but I think this is important. It's a package deal. I get them when I take you.”
“You didn't know that at the start.”
“Life is full of surprises,” she said. “Don't tell me where the Howling is, though, I might be tempted to raid it just to vent some frustrations.”
“You would?”
She laughed lightly at the surprise in his voice. “No. Probably not. I'd rather not have to deal with the temptation though. Can you pick me up?”
Â
Dusk gathered in the shadows of skyscrapers while Ukiah rode his big Kawasaki Ninja motorcycle through downtown. When afternoon's rush hour ended, evening usually found Pittsburgh a deserted town, everyone fled to suburb homes. The Kawasaki's gas gauge read low, he noticed, but there was enough to run up to McConnell's Mills and back. Ukiah pulled up in front of Indigo's athletic club; she had wanted to burn off frustration and change into street clothes before heading out to the Howling. She came out wearing leather pants so tight he wanted nothing more than to be alone with
her to take them off. That he couldn't only made him more miserable than he already was.
“What's wrong?” she asked, reading his face.
“Kittanning wasn't happy about going home with Mom Jo.” Worse, Kittanning had been able to reach mentally into Ukiah and project all his consuming fear, hurt, and anger. “He kicked up a fuss.”
“He was fairly cranky the whole time you were gone.” Indigo pulled on her helmet. “He missed you.” She swung her leg over the back of the bike, and tucked up against his back, arms about his waist, her inner thighs pressed tight on his upper legs. Even through the two layers of leather, he could sense her living warmth. “I missed you.”
He pulled out of the parking lot, made his way to the I-279 on-ramp, and headed north. Like one body, moving together, they leaned into the curves and wove through the light traffic.
It was like their lovemaking, purity without words. It seemed like an open communion of souls, but how much did it show him of Indigo's heart? And how could he expect to know her true desires when he didn't know his own.
Â
It was full dark as they threaded their way through back roads, cutting down through the gorge and across the picturesque covered bridge beside the old gristmill. Ukiah only had Rennie's memories of the place: a hilltop farmhouse surrounded by ten to fifteen acres of level land, a set of well-kept outbuildings, and the rest of the farm's acreage rolling away in a series of steep hills. A large sycamore shaded the front yard, and a bonfire had been built up just beyond its spread, so that the flames shone on autumn-gold leaves and bone-white branches.
The fire made Ukiah slow while making the turn into the drive. The Pack never built fires as big as signal lights unless there were Ontongard to cremate. There were people moving around the fire, some of them turning at the sound of his engine, his headlights reflected in wolf eyes.
Rennie?
So, Cub, you did make it after all.
There was a knot of motorcycles parked together, too
many to be just the Dog Warriors. He paused beside them, wondering if one of the Pack clans was moving through the area and stopped for the Howling. Doubtfulâthe Pack never parked all of its vehicles in one area, out in the open where they could be seen by any passerby.
He continued on past the parked bikes and into the shadows of a wagon shed.
Something hung in the tree, and it took him a moment to realize it was a deer skeleton wired together, complete with antlered head, with huge leather wings attached. When he killed the deep rumble of his engine, he heard then the deep thumping bass of heavy metal music.
“What's going on?”
“The land has passed on to a younger generation, who's a twit.”
Rennie's presence grew stronger as the Pack leader moved unseen through the darkness toward Ukiah.
Ukiah scanned the yard. While the Pack kept to the shadows, he could sense their minds on him and caught the occasional gleam of their eyes. The strangers must have come doubled up on the bikes parked out front; they outnumbered the Pack nearly two to one.
“Who are all these people?” Ukiah asked aloud for Indigo's sake.
“Smack came out yesterday to see if the old alliance still held.” Rennie drifted into the shifting light thrown by the bonfire. “The twit said all the right things, but then called his friends and invited them to the Howling. Pack wanna-bes. They've made it an early Halloween party.”
Indigo startled slightly, her hand slipping into her jacket to touch her pistol grip before relaxing. “Shaw.”
“She's wound tight,”
Rennie said. “Thank you for coming.”
“It's the kidnappings,”
Ukiah told Rennie.
“The case is getting to her.”
“I'm surprised you haven't run them off.” Indigo meant the wanna-bes.
“They're mostly harmless,” Rennie said. “You might have to look the other way tonight, Ms. FBI. I don't think these
brats would learn âdiscretion' even if you carved it into a bat and beat them with it.”
“I'm not going to pretend I'm blind just to protect your reputation as big, bad asses,” Indigo said.
Rennie grinned, teeth flashing in the darkness.
“He's got a quarter acre of marijuana growing at the center of that cornfield, and there are others here dealing in harder drugs.”
“Can't you discourage them? Without doing permanent harm to them?”
“Oh, you want to make it tricky,”
Rennie said silently, and then said aloud, “We just finished putting out the food. We're set up in the barn. The kids have food in the house, but it's mostly pizza and chips. Go. Eat. Relax.”
Rennie drifted off to go “scare off drug dealers.” Ukiah took Indigo's hand and they strolled toward the barn.
“What got said that I didn't hear?” Indigo asked quietly.
“Things that would upset you if you heard.”
“I wish you wouldn't do that,” she said. “You might be silent, but your body continues to talk. I can see the conversation going on around me, and I'm left guessing.”
“Your family speaks Chinese in front of me.”
She winced slightly, nodded in acknowledgment that it was true, and changed the subject. “I'm surprised the Pack is letting outsiders stay.”
It was his turn to wince. The Pack often encouraged wanna-bes trailing at their heels; it gave them a ready supply of bikes, guns, money, and Gets. He changed the subject again, telling her of his conversation with Mom Lara and Magic Boy's impatience with his mothers. “Before I left, I was happy to let things ride as they were. Now, though, I want to move forward, but I'm not sure how to take that step. Where do we even stand, you and I?”
“IâI don't know. I've been avoiding it because it's too hard to know what I should do.”
Marry me!
His eyes must have shown his unspoken words, because her face softened and she pressed her hand to his cheek.
“Sometimes it seems like a cold swimming pool in early summer, so clear and perfect, but the only sane way in is to
leap in all at once instead of trying to ease into it. Once you get to the waters, you don't know why you were so hesitant about swimming.”
He wasn't sure what “it” was. Marriage? Their future together? Their love? “Is it that you're not sure you love me?”
“Oh, I know I love you.” She took his hands in hers. “But is love enough? Having that time alone with Kittanning was so wonderful and awful. I loved him so dearly, and yet trying to take care of him and work was so hard. It was a relief to stop, to hand him over to your moms, and yet afterward, I was so desperate to have him back as mine again.
“I don't know what I want. No, I know what I want, but it's not real. I can't have all the good without the bad. And I'm not sure if I can take the bad. Nor am I sure what would even be selfish of me. Would it be selfish of me to say that I don't want to jeopardize my career and that I'm afraid that one day it could become horribly important for me to give birth to a child that is genetically
both
of ours, or is it more selfish to try to have it all, even though I wouldn't be the only one hurt if it all went to shit?”
He winced. There was a certain irony that as Earth's only breeder, he'd been mandated by the Pack not to sire children. In their war with the Ontongard, the Pack did not want him providing perfect hosts to their enemies. Luckily, since the first time he'd been with Indigo, she'd provided protection even his biology couldn't defeat; else the Pack wouldn't have been so lenient with him dating.
“We could make it work. Even Rennie says that if the Ontongard are dealt with, we can have kids together, someday.”
“But what if I mess us all up? You mar people forever with divorces. I can't bear the thought of making you bitter and hard, of Kittanning being one of those kids being shuttled from house to house because his parents broke up, of what it would do to me.”
“From what all I've seen, patience is the most important thing in a marriage. If you're willing to step back and give things time to work out, there's not much that you can't deal with. You and I, we're patient people.”
She laughed. “Most people don't think so. We had sex before we dated. We had a baby almost before we had sex.”
“Well.” He struggled for something to say to that. “That just happened. We were a little busy at the time, saving the world and all.”
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With Hex dead, and a large number of his Gets destroyed, finding the Ontongard had become increasingly harder. The other Pack clans continued to hunt the continent. The Dog Warriors, however, kept close to Pittsburgh, watching over Ukiah and Kittanning, while they patrolled for new incursions of Ontongard. To stay ahead of the law, the Dogs moved their sleeping site daily, using mostly campgrounds and abandoned buildings, seemingly in random order. In truth, the Dog Warriors moved down a long list known to them all. They could scatter to the winds for an extended period of time and still know where to find each other at the end of any given day. The cookout deviated from the list, a sudden desire to celebrateâthus Rennie's personal invitation.
The great doors of the hay barn stood open to the crisp night air, lit by electric fixtures screwed to the massive hand-hewn beams. Ukiah paused just inside, marveling at the difference between the Ontongard's squalor and the Pack's comfortable cleanliness.
The Dogs had swept the rough wood planking clean, cleared the rafters of dust and cobwebs, and even scrubbed the high arched window the owners had installed in the back wall. Clothesline, strung at the seven-foot mark, divided up the empty haylofts into smaller, private sleep areas via quilts pinned to the line. While the Pack considered their belongings readily disposable, it hadn't stopped Hellena and others from quilting scraps of material into beautiful wall panels. Futon mattresses and other personal items had been tucked in the sleeping areas.
In the center of the barn, the Dogs had set up trestle tables and loaded them heavily with food. Starting with sizzling chili with a sour cream side, it worked its way down to the chilled watermelon cut into easy-to-manage wedges.
“Oh, good, no dog food,” Indigo said cryptically, finding the plates and handing one to Ukiah.
“If you don't see anything you like, we can stop on the way home and get something,” Ukiah murmured quietly to her, although the Dogs probably could hear every word.
“This is fine,” Indigo stated, although the tension in her voice said otherwise. “It looks great, actually, and I'm starving. I didn't have anything for breakfast or lunch.”
He supposed that it was just as well, with her having to stand through the autopsy. He nearly asked how the autopsy had gone, then realized now wouldn't be a good time to talk about it. “Is there anything I can do to help with your case?”