Could Lorenzo hear the little rattle in her lungs that Simon could hear without the disk?
“Pneumonia’s a concern,” Lorenzo said quietly. “But she might avoid any problems.” He glanced at the Wolf body under the covers. “The main thing now is to keep her warm.”
When Lorenzo left, Simon stretched out his neck again, still wanting to get rid of those bandages and the medicine smell under them. With a quiet grumble, he licked her arm instead.
Her fingers flexed, burrowed into his fur.
“Don’t tell Simon about spinning the BOW,” she mumbled.
He lifted his head.
But she was asleep again.
Nowhere to go. Nothing he could do while she was here. Settling his head on her shoulder, he closed his eyes and slept.
CHAPTER 29
V
lad studied the ash that drifted off the two bodies. The last two enemies had been in sight of the Corvine entrance, had almost escaped. Riding their machines, they might have gotten out if they’d met up with anyone but Fire.
Suddenly aware that the swooshing
sound he’d been hearing for the past minute had stopped, he looked toward the open gate. The figure hesitated, then came forward, moving slowly on skis.
“Mr. Sanguinati? It’s Officer Kowalski. I work with Lieutenant Montgomery.”
He recognized the voice, but he still felt suspicious. “Do humans ski during storms?”
“No, sir, not by choice. But I heard about the explosion in the Courtyard and was coming to see if I could help when I got caught in the blizzard. My mobile phone is still working, and I got a call through to the station. The lieutenant’s teams are heading for the hospital. Protection for Ms. Corbyn while she’s there.”
Still trying to work out if there was another message under the words, Vlad looked toward the Wolfgard part of the Courtyard as howls filled the air.
“Problem?” Kowalski asked.
“One of the Wolves died.”
“In the storm?”
“He was shot by the intruders.”
“I’m sorry.”
And Kowalski was genuinely sorry, Vlad realized. He looked at the two snowmobiles that Fire had left untouched. “Do you know how to work these machines?”
“I’ve ridden on them a few times, so I know enough to drive one.”
“Then you will show me, and we’ll use the machines to reach the hospital.”
Picking up the steaming mug of tea, Henry walked over to the windows of his studio. Nothing he wanted to see out there. Not tonight.
Terra indigene
had died today, and some humans had died in the storm that was the Elementals’ response to those deaths—and to the harm done to Meg.
The intruders had also died, and that was good.
Now they would see if the humans would resume their wary peace with the
terra indigene
or if there would be war. He hoped the humans would show some sense. It had been many years since the
terra indigene
had crushed a human city. If it came to that here, he would regret the deaths of some of these people.
Shaking his head, Henry sipped his tea. No point stirring up the bees if you weren’t looking for honey.
On his way back to this part of the Courtyard, he’d found Nathan, exhausted and half frozen, still trying to chase after that Asia. But Tess had dealt with Asia Crane, so Henry shifted from spirit bear to Grizzly and broke the trail for the Wolf right up to the back door of the efficiency apartments. The girls had put Nathan’s paws in warm water to melt the ice clumped between his pads, had patted him dry with towels, and given him food and water. Now Nathan and John were curled up in the apartment, asleep, while the girls were at A Little Bite, making food and hot drinks. And Lorne, with Henry’s permission, was in the social center, letting the stranded use the toilets and rest in a warm place for a while.
Last winter they would have stood behind their locked doors and watched the humans die. But things had changed around the Lakeside Courtyard, and those changes held promise for all of Namid’s children. So he hoped the human government would be wise enough not to choose war.
Meg woke slowly, feeling a rattle and burn in her chest.
White room. The hated and feared bed. And a figure at the end of the bed.
“No,” she moaned. Had it been a dream, a delusion?
“Meg?” The figure leaped toward her, his weird-shaped hands coming down on either side of her head. “Stay awake, Meg. Stay awake!”
A face out of nightmares, out of visions of dark water and terrible cold. Then the fur receded and she recognized him. “S-Simon?”
Red flickered in his amber eyes and he snarled at her. “If you
ever
scare me like this again,
I will eat you
!” Then he pressed his forehead against her arm and whined.
Not a dream? She had reached the Courtyard, had been building the life that had swum through the dark dreams? “Where are we?”
“Hospital.” He raised his head and snarled again. “You stupid female. You fell through the ice and cut your chin!”
He paced, he panted, he snarled and whined. He threatened to eat her a half dozen times. But when he howled, all kinds of people ran into the room.
Terror filled her when she saw the man in the white coat—the same kind of coat that had been worn by the Walking Names—but Lieutenant Montgomery was the next person into the room, followed by Vladimir Sanguinati.
“Ms. Corbyn, I’m Dr. Lorenzo,” the white coat said. “You’re awake, and that’s welcome news.” He slanted a glance at Simon. “Although hospitals are supposed to be quiet zones, even when there is good news.”
Simon just growled at the doctor.
“I want to leave,” Meg said, desperate to get away from the bed and the room that felt too much like the compound, like a cage.
Dr. Lorenzo shook his head. “Considering the condition of the streets, none of us are going anywhere until morning. Besides, you need warmth and rest. Which is why Lieutenant Montgomery, Mr. Sanguinati, and I were talking about moving you to a private room on another floor. It will be quieter, and, frankly, we need the exam rooms down here in emergency.”
“I agree with Dr. Lorenzo,” Vlad said. “A private room will be less stressful for everyone.”
“But I want to leave,” Meg said, looking at Simon. Would he understand why she was afraid to be here?
Simon hesitated, then shook his head. “Your lungs rattle. I can hear them. We’ll stay here until your lungs don’t rattle.”
So they bundled her up, plunked her in a wheelchair, and took her up to another room, where they tucked her into another bed, gave her warm drinks and a bowl of soup, and then left her with the vampire and the Wolf
.
“Sam?” she asked.
“He’s fine,” Simon said.
“He’s a little hoarse from howling for so long,” Vlad said. “But otherwise, he’s fine. After we sent news to the Courtyard that you would be all right, he settled down. He’s still with Grandfather Erebus. They’re watching movies.”
“Kept him safe,” she whispered.
“You should have stayed with Erebus too,” Simon growled. “Stupid female. And I do not want to know about you spinning the BOW, because I’m sure I would have to bite you.”
She blinked at him.
Oh. That wasn’t a dream either?
Vlad chuckled, an earthy sound. “Let it go, Simon. It’s probably best if we don’t know too much about how our Meg ended up in the creek.”
“Asia,” Meg said. “She came to the apartments. She tried to take Sam. Did she get away?”
They both shrugged, but she saw the look they exchanged. And she wondered how much special meat was going to be available to the Courtyard’s residents over the next few days.
CHAPTER 30
T
hroughout the night, Monty, Louis, and Kowalski stood shifts outside Meg Corbyn’s hospital room, while Debany and MacDonald ferried medicines to people who needed them and could be reached. At one point, Jester had ridden back to the Courtyard with Vlad, who returned with clothes for Simon and Meg, two more snowmobiles that the Others offered to MacDonald and Debany for their use . . . and Jake Crowgard.
Monty didn’t ask about the location of the previous owners of the snowmobiles. Maybe they would be filling out DLU forms for those men; maybe not.
By dawn, news began filtering in.
Lakeside was cut off for the time being, not only by a record snowfall but by the “glaciers” that blocked every road out of the city. Monty wondered if spot melting to clear a road or two was possible—if anyone dared to approach the Courtyard and ask politely.
An hour earlier, Officer Debany called to tell him Asia Crane had been found dead in her car. Monty hoped he never heard that much controlled terror in a man’s voice again.
The shifters and the vampires are the buffer between us and the rest of what lives in the Courtyards,
Monty thought.
We were given a glimpse yesterday. Let’s hope we’re smart enough to heed the warning.
He pushed to his feet when he saw Douglas Burke walk toward him, then walk past him a few steps—just far enough so they wouldn’t be directly outside Meg Corbyn’s room.
“Captain.”
“Lieutenant.” Burke hesitated. “Thought you should know. Our mayor died in the blizzard.” There was a peculiar, almost fearful note in his voice.
“He was out in it?” Monty asked.
“He was in his bedroom, with the door locked and the windows shut. When they found him this morning, the room was filled with snow, floor to ceiling. Medical examiner will have to determine if he froze to death or smothered—or died of some other cause, since there are some suspicious wounds around major arteries and an insufficient amount of blood around the body.” He paused. “The acting mayor wants it known that he will do his utmost to maintain a cordial relationship with the
terra indigene
.” Another pause. Burke lowered his voice even more and added, “Between you and me, I think the
terra indigene
connected His Honor’s interest in apprehending Meg Corbyn with the attack on the Courtyard and the abduction attempt. And that’s why they killed him.”
“But the governor was the one who had pushed for it, sending the orders down the line.” Monty studied his captain’s face and felt chilled. “What else happened?”
“The governor of the Northeast Region also died last night.”
“But the governor lives in Hubbney.” The actual name was Hubb NE. A small town that was the hub of government for the Northeast, it was an hour’s train ride north of Toland, and it was hundreds of miles away from Lakeside. “How did he die?”
Heart attack?
Monty hoped.
Or a traffic accident?
“He froze to death in his bathtub.” Burke’s smile held no humor. “Not only did the water freeze around him so fast he wasn’t able to escape, but it somehow forced its way down his throat and then froze in his lungs. A hideous way to die, I should think.”
“Not too dissimilar to what might have happened to a woman if she fell through the ice while being pursued by unknown assailants,” Monty said, shuddering.
“Not too dissimilar,” Burke agreed.
So the Others had decided the governor was also to blame for the attack and had reached across hundreds of miles to eliminate another enemy.
“Well,” Burke said. “I’m guessing the hospital has provided a place for their staff and law enforcement to crash, so why don’t you take a couple of hours?”
Monty tipped his head toward the door. “It’s my shift.”
“I’m taking your shift, Lieutenant. Get some rest. You’ve earned it.”
He was swaying on his feet, so he didn’t argue. But he did wonder which one would be the first to poke his head out the door to get a look at the unfamiliar police officer: the Wolf, the vampire, or the Crow
.
CHAPTER 31
O
n the Thaisday after the storm, Monty walked into Howling Good Reads and nodded to Heather as he scanned the front of the store. Then he walked up to the counter, giving her a warm smile.
“I noticed the Open
sign,” he said. He and his men had driven by several times a day once the roads were cleared, checking for that sign. “No customers today?”
“Not yet,” Heather replied with forced brightness. Then she pointed to the stacks of paper on the counter and the full cart of books. “But there are plenty of orders to bundle up for shipping.”
You’re not sure the human customers will come back,
Monty thought. He had wondered the same thing. Just like he’d wondered if the Others would open any of these stores to humans again. The Lakeside Courtyard was the most progressive Courtyard in the whole of Thaisia, with its human employees and human customers. Granted, humans still had limited access, but it was a positive start that could ripple through the continent and ease a little of the ever-present tension between humans and Others in cities and towns across Thaisia. But the Lakeside mayor and Northeast Region governor aiding and abetting someone the
terra indigene
considered an enemy could also ripple through the continent, and the storm in Lakeside and the slaughter in Jerzy were grim reminders of how the Others took care of difficulties caused by humans.
And yet there had been a bright note, and that’s what had brought him to HGR as soon as the store reopened.
“I’d like a word with Mr. Wolfgard if he’s in,” Monty said.
“I’ll see if he’s available.” Heather picked up the phone and dialed an extension. “Mr. Wolfgard? Lieutenant Montgomery would like to speak with you.” A pause. “Okay, I’ll tell him.” She smiled at Monty. “He says to go back to the stockroom.”
“Thanks.” As he walked to the back of the store, he realized this meeting would also have significant ripples, and the next few minutes would determine if those ripples would be good or bad.
“Lieutenant.” Simon glanced at him, then checked a list and pulled more books off the stockroom shelves.
“Mr. Wolfgard. No watch Wolf today?”
“They come and go. That was always true, although Ferus and Nathan were the ones who spent the most time on guard at HGR. Ferus is in the Ash Grove now, and Nathan thinks our Liaison is more entertaining than the customers.”
“Ms. Corbyn has returned to work?” He’d seen the lights on in the Liaison’s Office when he and Kowalski had driven past, and that, too, had been a good sign.
Simon nodded. “She should stay in the den until next week, but she
snarled
at me when I suggested it.”
Monty wasn’t sure if the Wolf was offended or pleased, so he didn’t reply. But he thought,
Good for you, Meg.
“Something on your mind, Lieutenant?” Simon asked.
Many things, but he’d start with the one least likely to offend. “I understand you’ve set aside one of the efficiency apartments for my officers’ use. Thank you.”
Simon looked uncomfortable. Then he shrugged. “We had the space. We set two of the apartments aside for our human employees so they don’t have to go out in a storm. And Henry still has the one he prefers when he wants to stay close to his studio. Letting your officers use the last apartment was sensible.”
And it would add another layer of defense to the Courtyard.
“I heard you removed the water tax on the Chestnut Street Police Station and the hospital that took care of Meg.”
“So?” Simon disappeared for a minute, then returned with an armload of books that he put on the cart.
“It’s appreciated.” Now they’d come to the next layer of discussion. “And to show his own appreciation, Dr. Lorenzo would like to set up a small office here and provide medical treatment for your human employees.”
No reason to mention that part of Lorenzo’s interest was the
cassandra sangue
living among the Others. Having the opportunity to gain some understanding of Meg Corbyn’s race was not something the good doctor would pass up.
“We don’t have room for . . .” Simon stopped.
Monty held his breath.
“Maybe,” Simon said. “But allowing this doesn’t change the fact that most of you are still just meat.”
No, it doesn’t change that,
Monty thought.
But
most of us
is a long step from
all of us
, and if you can learn to trust some of us, all of us have a better chance of surviving.
“I’ll discuss this with the Business Association,” Simon said. “Maybe Dr. Lorenzo can come and talk to us about an office—and check on Meg while he’s here.”
“I’ll tell him to call Howling Good Reads and set up a time with you.”
He could read body language well enough to recognize Simon was feeling closed in by all this talk about more humans in the Courtyard, even if he was the one allowing them access. So this conversation wasn’t going to last much longer.
“I have work to do,” Simon said, a growl of warning under the words.
“Then I’ll be brief,” Monty replied. “Your anger at the hospital was excessive even under the circumstances. I think you know that. Do you have any idea what caused that enhanced aggression?”
“No.”
Flat. Cold. The voice of a leader who will allow no challenge.
And a lie.
“All right,” Monty said, taking a step back. “I’m willing to help. Please remember that.”
Red flickered in the Wolf’s amber eyes.
The sound of a door closing. A moment later, Jester approached them.
Giving the Coyote a nod, Monty walked out of the stockroom. He stayed in the store a minute longer, scanning the display of mysteries and making a selection.
Humans have courage and resilience and they endure,
Monty thought as he paid for the book and left Howling Good Reads. Roads would be opened, buildings repaired, and life would go on.
And the humans who had contact with the Courtyard would do their best to help everyone survive.
Simon stared at the Coyote while Montgomery’s words circled around him, closing in.
“Your anger at the hospital was excessive even under the circumstances.”
“How much did you hear?” Simon asked.
“I like it here,” Jester said. “I want to stay.”
Montgomery’s words seemed to echo in the room.
“Do you have any idea what caused that enhanced aggression?”
“How much did you hear?” Simon snarled.
“I won’t tell,” Jester said. “I’ll never tell.”
Quick-thinking Coyote who sometimes saw too much, heard too much. But unlike many of his kind, Jester wouldn’t break his word.
“You can stay.” Of course, what wasn’t said was if he couldn’t trust Jester to stay, he also couldn’t allow the Coyote to leave. But he figured Jester knew that already.
“Thanks, Simon.” Jester backed away. “I’ll go check with Meg and see if she wants the ponies to come up today.”
Then he was gone, and a moment later, Simon heard HGR’s back door closing.
“Do you have any idea what caused that enhanced aggression?”
Oh yes. He’d had plenty of time to think about it while they’d waited to take Meg home, and he had a very good idea what had caused that strange anger. Even the Sanguinati wouldn’t drink the sweet blood of the
cassandra sangue
,
and he’d licked up plenty of it from the gash in Meg’s chin.
Winter and Air hadn’t paid attention to him on the race to the hospital, but Jester had been with him. And Blair and Vlad had been with him at the creek when they pulled Meg out of the water. Give either of them enough bits of information, and they would figure it out too.
He would keep his suspicions to himself for a few more days. Then he would talk to Henry before deciding who else needed to know what he suspected: that the blood of
cassandra sangues
was the source of the sickness that was touching humans and Others in the West.
But that was for another day, and Henry already carried the weight of another secret.
Simon had been at the hospital guarding Meg when Asia Crane was found. He hadn’t seen her, but Henry had. And all Henry said to him was, “I know what Tess is. We will never speak of this.”
Dangerous to be the only one who looked at a body and understood a truth about the predator who did the killing. Or maybe wise to be the only one to carry that burden. Either way, Tess was still running A Little Bite and baking chocolate chip cookies for Meg and Sam.
“Enough,” he growled. “You have a business to run.” And until he pulled these books so Heather could fill the orders, he had to stay here instead of going over to the Liaison’s Office to play with Meg for a few minutes.
Checking the list, he pulled more books off the shelves in the stockroom and thought about Meg, because thinking about Meg made him feel calmer, happier.
She had been released from the hospital on Moonsday, but he’d used Sam’s need to stay close to her as a way to keep her home for a few more days. And he’d also pointed out that most of Lakeside was still shut down, so the stores
couldn’t
send out any deliveries. Even then, she’d been stubborn about staying indoors.
Well, he could be stubborn too, especially when dressing Meg had turned into a game. He and Vlad and Jenni had raided the Market Square stores for clothes to keep Meg warm. They made fingerless gloves for her, and then demanded that she wear mittens over them if she so much as stuck her nose outdoors. If she actually went outside for even a minute, she had to wear an undershirt, a turtleneck, a sweater, and a down vest zipped up all the way so her chest would stay warm. Plus her winter coat and a scarf and wool cap. And two pairs of socks with her boots.
None of them had given the colors of the clothes any thought until Merri Lee came back from visiting Meg on Windsday afternoon and grumbled about her friend being dressed like a paint-store explosion.
Shortly after that, he’d overheard Merri Lee, Heather, and Ruthie ordering clothes that, they said, would work with what Meg already had, so he figured the clothes game had run its course.
But there was still the hat game.
He scanned the shelves again when he didn’t find two of the books he wanted.
“We’re out of that one too?” he muttered as he added another caught-in-a-storm thriller to his list of reorders. Despite the lack of customers today, he’d been on the move since he unlocked the door, and he’d done nothing but pull stock to fill orders going to
terra indigene
settlements!
He refused to consider why the Elementals had put in a request for a handful of the caught-in-a-storm titles.
He stopped and let a shudder run through him. Even among the
terra indigene
, it took a little time to stop feeling afraid when the Elementals lashed out in rage.
But even Winter was calmer now that Meg was home.
Elliot’s meeting with the acting mayor had also helped calm everyone. The man had been quick to assure the Courtyard consul that all the wanted posters that had provoked such a tragic case of mistaken identity had been destroyed, and the police would do their utmost to apprehend anyone who caused Ms. Corbyn any distress in the future.
All the Others living in Courtyards throughout Thaisia would be watching to see if the human government in Lakeside would keep its word.
The man who sent the enemy into the Courtyard, the man who had given Meg a designation instead of a name, was still out there. Her skin was still worth too much profit for him to stop trying to get her back.
That Controller was still looking for her, and now the
terra indigene
were looking for him. The governor hadn’t known much, but he’d told the Elementals who came visiting his house in Hubbney everything he knew about Meg’s enemy. Sooner or later, the Others would find the man, and a human piece of Thaisia would be reclaimed by the wild country.
Simon looked at his hands, which had grown furry. He snarled when he couldn’t get them back to looking human, a sign that he was too agitated to wear this skin. Since he didn’t want to scare off Heather, he did the sensible thing.
He stripped off his clothes, shifted to Wolf, and went to the Liaison’s Office to have a few minutes of playtime with Meg.
Meg put in a music disc and turned on the player. She didn’t want to listen to the radio anymore. She didn’t want to hear about the people who died in the storm or the damage the city had sustained. Maybe she should feel bad about not wanting to listen to the news, but what happened wasn’t her fault. If she had let those men take her, the Elementals still would have savaged Lakeside for the death of old Hurricane, if for nothing else. She could argue that, being the reason the storm ended, she had saved more people than she had harmed by being here.
Didn’t make her feel any less sorry for the people who had been hurt. And it made her wonder whether Lieutenant Montgomery felt the same way.
She had expected to die in the Courtyard, had seen the images from the prophecies come to pass. But the outcome had been different. Not only had she survived, but she had also prevented Asia Crane and those men from taking Sam.
She would always be short, but she wasn’t helpless and she wasn’t small. Not anymore.
She glanced at the clock. Bracing for the sound, she set the mail on the sorting table a moment before Nathan howled. Apparently, he intended to do that on the hour, every hour, while the office was open.
The Meg Report.
Meg is here. Meg is fine.
She hoped he would grow bored with this particular game very soon.
Hearing a sound from the back room, Meg picked up a stack of mail and barely glanced up when Simon trotted into the sorting room.
Something had changed between them while she was in the hospital. She wasn’t sure if Simon considered her a friend, a playmate, or a valued toy, but he seemed to enjoy playing games with her.
Speaking of games . . .
Standing on his hind legs, Simon rested one forepaw on the table and extended the other to touch her nose. She suspected the name of this game was Plop the Hat on Meg. If her nose wasn’t warm enough according to whatever criteria he was using at that moment, he would fetch the floppy fleece hat he had bought for her and make her put it on.