Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
âIâll have Carl drive.â
âNo luggage,â I told him. I pulled out my keys and gave them to him, but caught his hand before he pulled away.âMac was a good man,â I told him. I donât know why I said it.
Charles didnât touch anyone casually. I had always thought he rather despised me, though he treated me with the same remote courtesy he used with everyone else. But he put his free hand on the back of my head and pulled my forehead briefly against his shoulder.
âIâll take care of him,â he promised as he stepped back.
âHis full name was Alan MacKenzie Frazier.â
He nodded. âIâll see that he is treated well.â
âThank you,â I told him, then turned and walked toward my room before I could start to cry again.
chapter 6
There was a pile of National Geographic s and a paperback mystery stacked neatly on the nightstand. As I recall, the reading material was put there originally to make up for the absence of a TV. When Iâd cleaned rooms here, you couldnât get reception so far in the mountains. Now there was a dish on top of the motel and a small TV positioned so you could watch it either from the bed or the small table in the kitchenette.
I wasnât interested in watching old reruns or soap operas so I flipped desultorily through the magazines. They looked familiar. Maybe they were the same stack that had been here when Iâd last cleaned this room: the newest one was dated May of 1976, so it was possible. Or maybe random stacks of National Geographic s have a certain sameness gained from years of appearing in waiting rooms.
I wondered if Jesse were lying in a hospital somewhere. My mind flashed to a morgue, but I brought it back undercontrol. Panic wouldnât help anyone. I was doing the best that I could.
I picked up the lone book and sat on the bed. The cover was not prepossessing, being a line drawing of a Wisconsin-style barn, but I opened it anyway and started reading. I closed it before Iâd read more than the first sentence. I couldnât bear sitting here alone, doing nothing.
I left the room. It was colder than it had been, and all I had was my T-shirt, so I ran to number one. I had the key in the pocket of my jeans, but when I tried the door, it opened.
Adam lay on top of the bed on his side, his muzzle wrapped with a businesslike strap. Samuel was bent over him wearing a pair of jeans, plastic gloves, and nothing else. It was a measure of my concern for Adam that my eyes didnât linger. Charles, leaning against the wall, glanced at me but said nothing.
âShut the door,â Samuel snapped, without looking up. âDamn it, Mercy, you should have set the break before you threw him in the car and drove all dayâyou of all people know how fast we heal. Iâll have to rebreak his leg.â
Samuel had never yelled at me before. He was the least volatile male werewolf Iâd ever met.
âI donât know how to set bones,â I said, wrapping my arms around myself. But he was right. I knew werewolves heal incredibly fastâI just hadnât thought about what that meant as far as broken bones were concerned. I hadnât even known his leg was broken. Iâd been stupid. I should have just called Darryl.
âHow much training does it take to set a leg?â Samuel continued with barely a pause. âAll you have to do is pull it straight.â His hands were gentle as they stretched out Adamâs leg. âHeâd have had someone with medic training in his pack. You could have called for help if you didnât have the guts for it yourself.â Then to Adam he said, âBrace yourself.â From my position by the door, I couldnât see what he did, but I heard a bone snap, and Adam jerked and made a noise I never want to hear again.
âI was worried that someone from his pack was involved in the attack,â I whispered. âAdam was unconscious. I couldnât ask him. And they donât have anyone strong enough to control Adamâs wolf.â
Samuel glanced back at me, then swore. âIf all you can do is snivel, then get the hell out of here.â
Despite his condition, Adam growled, swiveling his head to look at Samuel.
âIâm sorry,â I said, and left, closing the door tightly behind me.
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Iâd spent twenty minutes staring at the first page of the mystery when someone knocked on the door. My nose
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