Alpha Omega 03 - Fair Game
pretty?”
“Not as pretty as the one you let get away,” said Heuter.
“Not my fault. Not my fault. That big wolf—he was going to kill me.” There was an edge of hysteria in the man’s voice and an odd cadence to his speech pattern. “You never said they’d have a monster with them. Killing werewolves isn’t hard. I killed all of them Uncle Travis sent me. Why is that one so hard to kill?”
“The witch did something,” said Heuter. “Used some kind of magic so the wolf could see you, and it must have made him stronger. The girl we got tonight is his wife.”
“He’s going to be so mad at me.” He sounded scared.
Heuter headed it off at the pass. “He has to find us first. This will be the last one for the year, and then we’ll move on.”
“I get her first,” said the man who wasn’t Heuter. Anna was pretty sure that Heuter was not the fae—surely Beauclaire would have been able to tell if he had been. She decided that the other man must be the fae. Neither of them sounded old, and Lizzie had told them that one man was older—and if Anna decided one of the speakers was the fae, no unseen person could be watching her from the shadows.
“I get her first because that wolf hurt me. I get to hurt her. I’m going to take her until she understands who’s boss. I’m—”
He continued in that vein, working himself into a frenzy as he used fouler and fouler language to describe her fate in ugly detail. Anna deliberately tuned him out. She’d learned how to do that shortly after she’d been Changed and there had been no Charles to save her from the crazy bastards in the broken Chicago pack.
She couldn’t feel Charles. He was going to be too late, and that would destroy him. She tugged on the chains, but they’d held werewolves before and there was no way she could break them. Blowing onher hands to ease the burn, she thought about how Isaac had said that his wolf Otten had been waiting for a chance and the killers hadn’t given him one.
She couldn’t afford to wait—she had to make her own chance. Because Anna had been a victim once upon a time, and she was damned sure never going to be one again.
Despite her determination, she was scared. Her chances weren’t good—these men had managed to kill a lot of people, werewolves and fae, some of them considerably more experienced at protecting themselves than she was.
The sick, acrid smell of her terror burned out the last of the chloroform from her nose and she grabbed her fear, the lingering pain of the headache, and the ache that was seeping into her muscles from the silver. She pitted it all against the metal cuffs that held her—neck, wrists, and ankles—and called on the change.
These were not a pack of werewolves; they were human and fae. Raping Anna when she was a wolf was an entirely different proposition from doing the same to her when she didn’t have freakishly sharp teeth and claws that would be a credit to any cougar on the planet.
The change always hurt. Always. And she’d long ago learned to use the pain to bully her way through the freaky feeling of her bones stretching and bunching, of muscles growing and teeth sharpening that was so much more intolerable than mere pain.
This time the change was worse than usual.
Her throat buckled under the pressure of the silver collar. Then it rehealed and buckled again, trapped inside a metal band that was too small to contain it. She thought she’d just stymied her kidnappers by killing herself when something in the more-fragile mechanism of the lock finally broke, sending a piece of metal flying. The collar fell away from her, hitting the floor and bits of chain with a harsh clank.
Sucking in air like a bellows, she still had to hold on to her thoughtsand make her arms that were becoming her front legs move at just the right time while her hands were still hands but after her arms had slightly reshaped in order to get out of the wrist manacles. Her wrists bled and she panted, trying to keep quiet, as she dragged herself free of the two-inch-wide silver bands that imprisoned her. She didn’t worry about the cuffs on her ankles because they were wider and the wolf would just step out of them.
She waited, but there was no pause in the conversation outside. Either they were too involved to notice, they expected her to be making some noise, or their ears were too human to hear through the walls the way she could hear them.
She lay spent for a moment—then realized
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