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And her mate is his son Charles, the pack enforcer. With all the advances that have been made in forensics, the werewolves will not be able to hide their existence from humans much longer - and Bran wants their coming out party to be on his terms.
But his European counterparts don't see things the same way. Anna and Charles are chosen to represent Bran at a key meeting. But when a French werewolf, one of Bran's most vocal opponents, is found murdered, Charles's reputation shoots him to the top of the suspect list. And among the wolves, there is one penalty for breaking the law: death.
The killer must be found, or Charles will take the fall.
About The Author
Patricia Briggs graduated from Montana State University with degrees in history and German. She worked for a while as a substitute teacher but now writes full-time. Patricia Briggs lives in the Pacific Northwest.
Industry Reviews
"A complex, supernatural mystery...good fun."--Locus
More Praise for the Alpha and Omega Novels
"A terrific saga."--Midwest Book Review
"Briggs has created such a detailed and well thought out world that I am helpless to resist."--Fiction Vixen
"[Briggs] spins tales of werewolves, coyote shifters and magic and, my, does she do it well...If you like action, violence, romance and, of course, werewolves, then I urge you to pick up this series."--USATODAY.com
"Interesting, fast-paced urban fantasy...[An] imaginative writer who always leaves fans anxiously waiting for the next tale."--Monsters and Critics
"Patricia Briggs is amazing...Her Alpha and Omega novels are fantastic."--Fresh Fiction
She observed him from her chosen cover, as she’d done twice before. The first two times he’d been chopping wood, but today, after a heavy snowfall appropriate for the third week of December, he was shoveling the sidewalk. Today was the day she’d take him.
Heart in her mouth, she watched as he cleared the snow with carefully controlled violence. Every movement was exactly the same as the one before. Each slide of the shovel was strictly parallel to previous marks. And in his fierce control, she saw his rage, tamped and contained by will alone — like a pipe bomb.
Flattening herself and breathing lightly so he wouldn’t see her, she considered how she would do it. From behind, she thought, as fast as possible, to give him no time to react. One quick movement and it would all be over — if she didn’t lose her courage, as she had the first two times.
Something told her that it had to be today, that she wouldn’t get a fourth opportunity. He was wary and disciplined — and if he weren’t so angry, surely his senses,werewolf sharp, would have discovered her hiding place in the snow beneath the fir trees lining his front yard.
She shook with the stress of what she planned. Ambush. Weak and cowardly, but it was the only way she could take him. And it needed to be done, because it was only a matter of time before he lost the control that kept him shoveling to a steady beat while the wolf raged inside him. And when his control failed, people would die.
Dangerous. He could be so fast. If she screwed this up, he could kill her. She had to trust that her own werewolf reflexes were up to this. It needed to be done.
Resolution gave her strength. It would be today.
Charles heard the SUV, but he didn’t look up.
He’d turned off his cell and continued to ignore the cool voice of
his father in his head until it went away. There was no one who lived
near him on the snow-packed mountain road — so the SUV was just the
next step in his father’s determination to make him toe the line.
'Hey, Chief.'
It was a new wolf, Robert, sent here to the Aspen Creek Pack by his
own Alpha because of his lack of control. Sometimes the Marrok could
help; other times he just had to clean up the mess. If Robert couldn’t
learn discipline, it would probably be Charles’s job to dispose of him.
If Robert didn’t learn manners, the disposal job wouldn’t bother
Charles as much as it should.
That Bran had sent Robert to deliver his message told Charles just
how furious his da was.
'Chief!' The man didn’t even bother getting out of the car. There
weren’t many people Charles extended the privilegeof calling him
anything but his given name, and this pup wasn’t one of them.
Charles stopped shoveling and looked at the other wolf, let him see
just what he was messing with. The man lost his grin, paled, and
dropped his eyes instantly, his heart making the big blood vessel in
his neck throb with sudden fear.
Charles felt petty. And he resented it, resented his pettiness and
the roiling anger that caused it. Inside him Brother Wolf smelled
Robert’s weakness and liked it. The stress of defying the Marrok, his
Alpha, had left Brother Wolf wanting blood. Robert’s would do.
'I . . . ah.'
Charles didn’t say anything. Let the fool work for it. He lowered
his eyelids and watched the man squirm some more. The scent of his fear
pleased Brother Wolf — and made Charles feel a little sick at the same
time. Usually, he and Brother Wolf were in better harmony — or maybe
the real problem was that he wanted to kill someone, too.
'The Marrok wants to see you.'
Charles waited a full minute, knowing how long that time would seem
to his father’s message boy. 'That’s it?'
'Yes, sir.'
That 'sir' was a far cry from 'Hey, Chief.'
'Tell him I’ll come after my walk is cleared.' And he went back to
work.
After a few scrapes of his shovel, he heard the SUV turn around in
the narrow road. The vehicle spun out, then grabbed traction and headed
back to the Marrok’s, fishtailing with Robert’s urgent desire to get
away. Brother Wolf was smugly satisfied; Charles tried not to be.
Charles knew he shouldn’t bait his father by defying his orders —
especially not in front of a wolf who needed guidance as Robert did.
But Charles needed the time.
He had to be in better control of himself before he faced the Marrok
again. He needed real control that would allow him to lay out
his argument logically and explain why the Marrok was wrongheaded —
instead of simply bashing heads with him the way they had the last four
times Charles had spoken to him. Not for the first time, he wished for
a more facile tongue. His brother could sometimes change the Marrok’s
mind — but he never had. This time, Charles knew his father
was wrong.
And now he’d worked himself up into a fine mood.
He focused on the snow and took a deep breath of cold air — and
something heavy landed on his shoulders, dropping him facedown in the
snow. Sharp teeth and a warm mouth touched his neck and were gone as
quickly as the weight that had dropped him.
Without moving, he opened his eyes to slits, and from the corner of
his eye, he glanced at the sky-eyed black wolf facing him warily . . .
with a tail that waved tentatively and paws that danced in the snow,
claws extending and retracting like a cat’s with nervous excitement.
And it was as though something clicked inside Brother Wolf, turning
off the roiling anger that had been churning in Charles’s gut for the
past couple of weeks. The relief of that was enough to drop his head
back into the snow. Only with her, only ever with her, did Brother Wolf
settle down wholly. And a few weeks were not enough time to get used to
the miracle of it — or to keep him from being too stupid to ask for her
help.
Which was why she’d planned this ambush, of course.
When he was up to it, he’d explain to her how dangerous it was for
her to attack him without warning. Though Brother Wolf had apparently
known exactly who it was who’d attacked: he’d let them be taken down in
the snow.
The cold felt good against his face.
The frozen stuff squeaked under her paws, and she made an anxious
sound, proof that she hadn’t noticed when he’d looked at her. Her nose
was cold as it touched his ear and he steeled himself not to react.
Playing dead with his face buried in the snow, his smile was free to
grow.
The cold nose retreated, and he waited for it to come back within
reach, his body limp and lifeless. She pawed at him, and he let his
body rock — but when she nipped his backside, he couldn’t help but jerk
away with a sharp sound.
Faking dead was useless after that, so he rolled over and rose to a
crouch.
She got out of reach quickly and turned back to look at him. He knew
that she couldn’t read anything in his face. He knew it. He
had too much practice controlling all of his expressions.
But she saw something that had her dropping her front half down to a
crouch and loosening her lower jaw in a wolfish grin — a universal
invitation to play. He rolled forward, and she took off with a yip of
excitement.
They wrestled all over the front yard — making a mess of his
carefully tended walk and turning the pristine snow into a battleground
of foot-and-body prints. He stayed human to even the odds, because
Brother Wolf outweighed her by sixty or eighty pounds and his human
form was almost her weight. She didn’t use her claws or teeth against
his vulnerable skin.
He laughed at her mock growls when she got him down and went for his
stomach — then laughed again at the icy nose she shoved under his coat
and shirt, more ticklish than any fingers in the sensitive spots on the
sides of his belly.
He was careful never to pin her down, never to hurt her, even by
accident. That she’d risk this was a statement of trust that warmed him
immensely — but he never let Brother Wolf forget that she didn’t know
them well and had more reason than most to fear him and what he was:
male and dominant and wolf.
He heard the car drive up. He could have stopped their play, but
Brother Wolf had no desire to take up a real battle yet. So he grabbed
her hind foot and tugged it as he rolled out of reach of gleaming fangs.
And he ignored the rich scent of his father’s anger — a scent that
faded abruptly.
Anna was oblivious to his father’s presence. Bran could do that,
fade into the shadows as if he were just another man and not the
Marrok. All of her attention was on Charles — and it made Brother Wolf
preen that even the Marrok was second to them in her attentions. It
worried the man because, untrained to use her wolf senses, someday she
might not notice some danger that would get her killed. Brother Wolf
was sure that they could protect her and shook off Charles’s worry,
dragging him back into the joy of play.
He heard his father sigh and strip out of his clothing as Anna made
a run for it and Charles chased her all the way around the house. She
used the trees in the back as barriers to keep him at bay when he got
too close. Her four clawed feet gave her more traction than his boots
did, and she could get around the trees faster.
At last he chased her out of the trees, and she bolted back around
the house with him hot on her trail. She rounded the corner to the
front yard and froze at the sight of his father in wolf shape, waiting
for them.
It was all Charles could do to not keep going through her like a
running back. As it was, he took her legs right out from under her as
he changed his run into a slide.
Before he could check to see if she was okay, a silver missile was
on him and the whole fight changed abruptly. Charles had been mostly in
control of the action when it was just he and Anna, but with the
addition of his father, he was forced to an earnest application of
muscle, speed, and brain to keep the two wolves, black and silver, from
making him eat snow.
At last he lay flat on his back, with Anna on his legs and his
father’s fangs touching the sides of his throat in mock threat.
'Okay,' he said, relaxing his body in surrender. 'Okay. I give up.'
The words were more than just an end to play. He’d tried. But in the
end, the Alpha’s word was law. Whatever followed would follow. So he
submitted as easily as any pup in the pack to his father’s dominance.
The Marrok lifted his head and removed himself from Charles’s chest.
He sneezed and shook off snow as Charles sat up and pulled his legs out
from under Anna.
'Thanks,' he told her, and she gave him a happy grin. He gathered up
the clothes from the hood of his father’s car and opened the door to
the house. Anna bounced into the living room and trotted down the hall
to the bedroom. He tossed his father’s clothes into the bathroom, and
when his father followed them, shut the door behind the white-tipped
tail.
He had hot chocolate and soup ready when his father emerged, his
face flushed with the effort of the change, his eyes hazel and human
once more.
He and his da didn’t look much alike. Charles took after his Salish
mother and Bran was Welsh through and through, with sandy hair and
prominent features that usually wore a deceptively earnest expression,
which was currently nowhere in evidence. Despite the play, Bran didn’t
look particularly happy.
Charles didn’t bother trying to talk. He had nothing to say anyway.
His grandfather had told him once that he tried too hard to move trees
when a wiser man would walk around them. His grandfather had been a
medicine man and talked like that sometimes. And he was usually right.
He handed his da a cup of hot chocolate.
'Your wife called me last night.' Bran’s voice was gruff.
'Ah.' He hadn’t known that. Anna must have done it while he’d been
out trying to outrun his frustrations.
'She told me I wasn’t hearing what you were saying,' Da said. 'I
told her that I heard you tell me quite clearly that I was an idiot for
going to Seattle to meet with the European delegation — as did most of
the rest of the pack.'
Tactful, that’s me, thought Charles, who decided sipping
his cocoa was better than opening his mouth.
'And I asked him if you were in the habit of arguing with him
without a good reason,' said Anna breezily as she slipped by his father
and brushed against Charles. She was wearing his favorite brown
sweater. On her it hung halfway down her thighs and buried her shape in
cocoa-colored wool. Brother Wolf liked it when she wore his clothes.
She should have looked like a refugee, but somehow she didn’t. The
color turned her skin to porcelain and brought out rich highlights in
her light brown hair. It also emphasized her freckles — which he adored.
She hopped up on the counter and purred happily as she snagged the
cocoa he’d made for her.
'And then she hung up,' said his father in disgruntled tones.
'Mmm,' said Anna. Charles couldn’t tell if she was responding to the
hot chocolate or his father.
'And she refused to pick up the phone when I called back.' His
father wasn’t pleased.
Not so comfortable having someone around who doesn’t instantly
obey you, old man? Charles thought — just as his father met his
eye.
Bran’s sudden laugh told Charles that his da wasn’t really upset.
'Frustrating,' Charles ventured.
'He yelled at me,' Anna said serenely, tapping her forehead. The
Marrok could speak to any of his wolves mind to mind, though he
couldn’t read their thoughts no matter how much it felt like that was
what he was doing. He was just damnably good at reading people. 'I
ignored him, and he went away eventually.'
'No fun fighting someone who doesn’t fight back,' Charles said.
'Without someone to argue with, I knew he’d have to think about what
I said,' Anna told them smugly. 'If only to come up with the right
words to squelch me the next time he talked to me.'
She hadn’t reached even a quarter of a century yet, they hadn’t been
mated a full month — and she was already arranging them all to suit
herself. Brother Wolf was pleased with the mate he’d found for them.
Charles set down his cup and folded his arms over his chest. He knew
he looked intimidating, that was his intention.
But when Anna leaned away from him, just a little, he dropped his
arms and hooked his thumbs in his jeans and made his shoulders relax.
And his voice was gentler than he’d meant it to be. 'Manipulating
Bran has a tendency to backfire,' he told her. 'I’d recommend against
it.'
But his father rubbed his mouth and sighed loudly. 'So,' said his
father. 'Why is it that you think it would be disastrous for me to go
to Seattle?'
Charles rounded on his father, his resolve to quit fighting Bran on
his decision to go to Seattle all but forgotten. 'The Beast is coming,
and you ask me that?'
'Who?' Anna asked.
'Jean Chastel, the Beast of Gévaudan,' Charles told her. 'He
likes to eat his prey — and his prey is mostly human.'
'He stopped that,' Bran said coolly.
'Please,' Charles snapped, 'don’t mouth something you don’t believe
to me — It smells perilously close to a lie. The Beast was forced to
stop killing openly, but a tiger doesn’t change his stripes. He’s still
doing it. You know it as well as I do.' He could have pointed out other
things — Jean had a taste for human flesh, the younger the better. But
Anna had already experienced what happened when a wolf turned
monstrous. He didn’t want to be the one to tell her that there were
worse beasts out there than her former Alpha and his mate. His father
knew what Jean Chastel was.
Bran conceded the point. 'Yes. Almost certainly he is. But I’m not a
helpless human, he won’t kill me.' He looked at Charles narrowly.
'Which you know. So why do you think it will be dangerous?'
He was right. Take the Beast out of the picture, and it still made
him ill to think of his father going. The Beast was the most obvious,
provable danger.
'I just know,' Charles said, finally. 'But it is your decision to
make.' His gut clenched in anticipation of just how bad it was going to
be.
'You still don’t have a logical reason.'
'No.' Charles forced his body to accept his defeat and kept his eyes
on the floor.
His da looked out the little window where the mountains lay draped
in winter white. 'Your mother did that,' he said. 'She’d make a
statement without any real support at all, and I was supposed to just
take her word for it.'
Anna was looking at his da with bright expectancy.
Bran smiled at her, then raised his cup toward the mountains.'I
learned the hard way that she was usually right. Frustrating
doesn’t come close to covering it.'
'So,' he said, turning his attention back to Charles. 'They are on
their way already, I can’t cancel it now — and it needs to be done.
Announcing to the real world that there are werewolves among them will
affect the European wolves as much, if not more, than it does us. They
deserve their chance to be heard and told why we are doing it. It
should come from me, but you would be an acceptable substitute. It will
cause some offense, though, and you will have to deal with that.'
Relief flooded Charles with an abruptness that had him leaning
against the countertop in sudden weakness, as the all-consuming sense
of absolute and utter disaster slid away and left him whole. Charles
looked at his mate.
'My grandfather would have loved to have met you,' he told her
huskily. 'He would have called you ‘She Moves Trees Out of His Path.’ '
She looked lost, but his Da laughed. He’d known the old man, too.
'He called me ‘He Who Must Run into Trees,’ ' Charles explained, and
in a spirit of honesty, a need for his mate to know who he was, he
continued, 'Or sometimes ‘Running Eagle.’ '
' ‘Running Eagle’?' Anna puzzled it over, frowning at him. 'What’s
wrong with that?'
'Too stupid to fly,' murmured his father with a little smile. 'That
old man had a wicked tongue — wicked and clever, so it stuck until he
dinged you with your next offense.' He tilted his head at Charles. 'But
you were a lot younger then — and I am not so solid an object as a
tree. You feel better if you—'
Anna cleared her throat pointedly.
His da smiled at her. 'If you and Anna go instead?'
'Yes.' Charles paused because there was something more, but the
house was too busy with modern things for the spirits to talk to him
clearly. Usually that was a good thing. When they got too demanding, he
sometimes retreated to his office, where the computers and electronics
kept them out entirely. Still, there was something in him that breathed
easier now that his father had agreed not to go. 'Not safe, but better.
When do you want us in Seattle?'
Chapter Two
'I love Seattle.' Krissy folded her arms around herself and spun in a circle. She looked up with a practiced little-girl grin, and her lover smiled down at her.He reached out and tucked a gold curl behind her ear. 'Shall we move here, princess? I could get you a condo that looks over the ocean.'
She thought about it and finally shook her head. 'I’d miss New York, you know I would. No place has shopping like New York.'
'All right,' he said, his voice an indulgent purr. 'But we can come here to play now and again if you like it.'
Krissy tilted her head and caught the rain in her mouth, a quick snap like a bat taking a bug out of the sky. 'Can we play now?'
'Work before play,' said Hannah, the spoilsport. She’d been Ivan’s playmate before Krissy. Krissy had taken her place in his bed and in his heart, and it made Hannah pissy.
'Ivan,' Krissy coaxed, putting a hand on either side of his shirt and tugging him down so she could lick his lips. 'Can’t we go play? We don’t have to work tonight, do we?'
He let her take his mouth, and when he raised his head, his eyes were hot. 'Hannah, take the others to our hotel and contact our employer. Krissy and I will be there in a few hours.'
It was raining again, but Jody had been raised in
Eugene, where it only rained once a year — from January to
December.Besides he was a Pisces; water was his element.
He raised his face and let the rain wash down it. Practice had run a
little late and the sun had set before he’d gotten out. The music had
been good tonight, they’d all felt it. He pulled the sticks out of his
back pocket and beat the air in a rhythm only he could hear. There was
something he should change in that last measure . . .
He took the shortcut to his apartment — a dim little street barely
wide enough for a car and a half. It wasn’t late, but there was no one
around except for an older man and a girl who looked about sixteen.
They were both drenched and hurried toward him.
'Excuse me,' said the man, 'We’re visiting and seem to have gotten
turned around. Do you know where the nearest restaurant is?' The coat
he wore was expensive—wool, Jody thought, and he had a bright gold
watch on his wrist that looked like it cost a bundle. The girl — as
they got closer he was pretty sure that there was more than a
generation between the old gent and the girl, maybe she was his
granddaughter — was wearing four-inch heels that made her feet look
tiny.
She caught him looking and enjoyed his admiration. He couldn’t help
but smile back. She put her hand on his wrist, and said, 'We need to
find some food.' And her smile widened a little more, and he saw fangs.
Strange, he thought, she didn’t look like she belonged in the groups
his ex-girlfriend had hung out with, where they all wore fangs and
played that stupid game . . . not D&D, which was cool . . .
something with vampires.
This girl wore a ponytail and looked more like Britney Spears than
Vampirella. Her shoes were hot pink, and there wasn’t a piece of her
clothing that was black.
He didn’t like it that his throat tightened in fear because she was
wearing acrylic fangs.
'There’s a place a few blocks away,' he told her, twisting his wrist
gently to get her to let go. 'Serves Italian food. They have a great
red sauce.'
She licked her lips and didn’t let go of his wrist. 'I love red
sauce.'
'Look,' he said, jerking his wrist free, 'cut it out. That’s not
funny.'
'No,' breathed the man, who had somehow gotten behind him while Jody
had been talking to the girl. 'Not funny at all.' And there was a sharp
pain in his neck.
'Where is someplace private?' the old man asked after a little
while. 'Someplace we might play together for a while without anyone
seeing us?'
And Jody led his new friends a few miles away to a place on the
Sound where he knew no one would come.
'Good,' said the man. 'Very good.'
The girl closed her eyes and smiled. 'The traffic will drown out the
screams.'
The man leaned over and put his mouth to Jody’s ear. 'You can be
scared now.'
Jody was scared for a very, very long time before they threw him
into the water for the fish to eat.
'The rocks will keep him underwater until they won’t
be able to tell how he died,' said Ivan.
'I still think we should have left him naked hanging from a tree
like that girl in Syracuse.'
Ivan rubbed the top of her head. 'Dear child,' he said — and sighed.
'That was a special case, she was a message to her father. This one was
just play, and if we let the silly humans know we killed him, it would
interfere with business.'
She looked at the bloody drumsticks and sighed, tossing them in
after the body. 'And nothing interferes with business.'
'Business keeps a roof over our heads and lets us travel when we
want to,' Ivan told her. 'You need to wash your face, princess, and put
your clothes back on.'
ISBN: 9780441017386
ISBN-10: 044101738X
Series: Alpha and Omega
Published: 1st September 2009
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Number of Pages: 320
Audience: General Adult
For Ages: 18+ years old
For Grades: 12
Publisher: ACE
Country of Publication: US
Dimensions (cm): 17.02 x 10.41 x 2.29
Weight (kg): 0.17
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