Taken by Storm: A Raised by Wolves Novel (13 page)

BOOK: Taken by Storm: A Raised by Wolves Novel
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CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

 

 

I
DEBATED WHETHER OR NOT TO TELL
C
ALLUM WHAT,
exactly, had sent Maddy over the edge, and then I debated what the likelihood was that he already knew about the baby. The second I came on the line, though, he spoke, and I immediately had other concerns.

Bigger ones.

“She’s going to kill again. Tomorrow.”

“Are you sure?” It was a stupid question, one that came out as a reflex.

“I’m sure someone dies,” Callum replied. “And I’m sure that we’ll have thirty-six hours after the body is discovered before Shay learns there’s been another attack and moves to enact the Senate’s vote.”

Thirty-six hours? We’d been looking for Maddy for longer than that already, and while the picture of how she’d spent these past few months was becoming clearer and clearer, I still didn’t know where she was now.

Thinking back to the dream we’d shared, I grasped for clues. I’d seen images in her mind: sharp stones, the dark walls of a hollow place, some kind of stream. The mountains, maybe? Was she holed up in some kind of cave?

That didn’t exactly narrow things down.

“Is there any way to stop this?” I wasn’t sure whether I was asking if there was a way to prevent another attack, or to keep the other alphas from racing to find Maddy on their own.

Both, probably, but I would have settled for either.

Callum did not oblige. “The future’s been uncertain, Bryn, but in the past hour, certain outcomes have become more and more likely.” He didn’t pause, didn’t give me time to process. “Someone else
is
going to die.”

I thought of blood-streaked walls, of Maddy’s haunted eyes and broken words.

Everything I touch dies.

“And the Senate?” I asked. There was no use dwelling on the things I couldn’t change, not if this was something that I could.
“Is there anything we can do to keep that from happening?”

“There might be. There might not.”

Well, that was less than helpful.

“Either way, Bryn, you need to find her first.”

A year ago, I might have snapped at him for telling me the
obvious. Instead, I relayed what I’d seen in the dream, the
images that I’d pulled from Maddy’s mind of the place she’d been staying.

“If we could get an idea of the general area she’s in,” I
concluded, “I might be able to find her, but there’s too much No-Man’s-Land, and we don’t even know for sure that she hasn’t crossed a border somewhere.”

She could just as easily be holed up in the remotest areas of our territory—or someone else’s. If she was careful to stay far enough away from the other wolves, they might not even know she was there.

“There’s a third-rate ski resort near your western border in a town called Winchester. It falls between Shadow Bluff territory and Cedar Ridge, but the northern packs could reach it through the mountains.”

“And that’s where Maddy is?” I asked, wondering why, if he knew that, he hadn’t just sent me straight there, before the countdown to confrontation had gotten so tight.

“That’s where the next attack happens,” Callum said. “You won’t get there in time to stop it.”

“But if we move quickly,” I said, “she might still be in the area when we get there.”

Maddy wouldn’t stay in the immediate area—she was too smart for that, but if she was hiding out in the mountains, she
might retreat to the place I’d seen in the dream. Assuming it was
close by, we might be able to put two and two together and find it.

Find her.

“Be careful, Bryn. Things could get bad, and I’d not have
you dying, not for this, not now.”

“Don’t worry,” I said reflexively. “Rumor has it I’m hard to kill.”

For the first time in memory, I hung up the phone on
him first. There was something Callum wasn’t telling me—
probably lots of somethings. That was nothing new, but this time, I couldn’t tell whether this was just another stage of the Let Her Make Her Own Mistakes plan in which he seemed to revel, or if there was another reason for keeping me in the dark.

If my knowing something would cause me to act differently than I otherwise would have, and if that difference led to an
undesirable future, Callum wouldn’t bat an eye at keeping
things to himself—even if those were things I wanted—and maybe even needed—to know.

Then again, I hadn’t exactly told him that Maddy was pregnant.

“This is my cue to leave.” Archer kept his distance and very wisely did not put a hand on my shoulder this time. “I was happy to help, but I gave up danger for Lent.”

“It’s August,” I told him.

“Global warming,” he replied, without missing a beat.

“Fine,” I said. “Go.” I didn’t even watch him leave. Instead, I turned my attention back to the others.

“We’re going north,” I said. “Weapon up.”

CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

 

 

W
INCHESTER,
I
DAHO, WAS A TWO-BIT TOWN COVERED
in dirt. Winchester, Montana, wasn’t much better. The two sat nestled beside each other in the middle of a pile of rocks that looked less like a mountain than an environmental death trap.

“Ski resort?” I muttered. “Yeah, right. And I’m Molly Ringwald.”

In the silence that followed my words, I felt Devon’s absence like a missing piece of my own body. I wasn’t sure how he would
have replied to my sarcastic statement, but I was almost certain it
would have involved some variation on the phrase
pretty in pink
.

Getting to Winchester hadn’t been easy—especially since we didn’t have the option of entering from the west. The Montana side of Winchester wasn’t exactly accessible by car—not if you didn’t want to risk blowing a couple of tires, at least. Since we couldn’t risk trespassing on Shadow Bluff territory, that left us traversing the last few miles by foot.

Chase and Lake could have made the distance in short time, but Caroline, Jed, and I were stuck with “slow and steady,” and when we finally made our way to the edges of “town,” it was already abuzz with news of the body that had been found, right outside the Bait & Tackle. They were calling it an animal attack, but I knew better.

Most animals didn’t play with a corpse and then leave it in the middle of Main Street, like a present for the masses. Then again, most werewolves didn’t, either.

“Victim’s a teenage girl, and she wasn’t killed here.” Caroline’s
voice was quiet enough that if she hadn’t been standing right next to me, I wouldn’t have heard it. Still, talking about this in the light of day, out where anyone could hear us, didn’t seem like the best idea in the world. “The blood’s not right,” she murmured, “and the body …”

We were standing far enough away that my eyes couldn’t make out the details, but Caroline had incredible long-distance vision. The same thing that let her hit a target a football field away meant that even from our vantage point, a block away, she could still make out the details of the scene.

Unlike in bigger cities, there was no police tape here. Just a sheriff, a couple of deputies, and an off-white sheet that someone used to cover the body.

Badly.

“I’m starting to think our killer wants to get caught.” Jed’s voice was just as low as Caroline’s. “You all got any reason to believe that’s true?”

I thought back to the dream Maddy and I had shared. She’d been quiet, self-contained, maybe a little unhinged, with the way she’d insisted that she hadn’t done anything and immediately gone on to qualify that she hadn’t
meant
to.

“I don’t know,” I said. “I don’t know if she’s the one who did this, or why she’d choose to do it like this.”

The one thing I was sure about was that if Maddy was killing, it wasn’t because she
wanted
to. It was because she
couldn’t stop.

“It’s like a hound,” Lake said, “dropping a dead bird on your front porch and expecting you to be pleased.”

From the way they were talking, you would have thought that Maddy did this—all of this—for me.

That thought never left my mind—not as we made our way to the lone Winchester gas station and not as Jed gave our cover story, which involved fly-fishing, family bonding, a very bad sense of direction, and a car running out of gas. The possibility that Maddy had killed to get my attention was there as I listened to the loud whispers of the town folk, fascination warring with horror in their tones.

“I reckon it was a bear. Strange that it would come this far into town, but the Sutton boys have been at their old tricks again—probably led it straight to us.”

“Those Suttons are a menace. And that poor Johnson girl. First, her daddy kills her mama, and now this. Earl and Betsy must be taking it hard.”

I didn’t get to find out who Earl and Betsy were, because at that exact moment, I noticed a change in the pack-bond. Across
the room, Chase stiffened, his nostrils flaring outward, his fingertips curling slightly inward, like claws.

“—just coming home from work, and now she’s gone.
Funeral won’t be open casket, that’s for sure—”

Beside Chase, Lake paused, too. They smelled something.

Someone.

Making my way out to the front of the gas station, I scanned the streets for Maddy. Surely, she wouldn’t have come back here. Surely, she wouldn’t have stayed so close to a kill.

I smell … I smell …,
Chase whispered the words straight into my mind.

What? What did he smell?

The answer came to me as nothing more than a vague sense that Chase was smelling something he’d smelled before—at the Wyoming murder site, at Wilson’s cabin in Alpine Creek.

It was faint. Different. It smelled like a werewolf, and it
didn’t.

It smelled the way things did in dreams—a fraction off, a shade too, too …
something
.

For the first time, I really and truly let myself believe that
Maddy might not be the one behind the murders. But that meant
someone—or some
thing
—else was. Something that Lake and Chase couldn’t quite scent.

Something that was close.

Caroline and Jed must have noticed something was wrong, because they paid and followed us quickly out of the store.

Watching Caroline sparked a memory, and I sent a question silently to Chase and Lake.
You guys can’t smell Caroline,
I said.
You can’t track her. It’s part of her knack. Do you think what you’re smelling—not smelling—now could be something similar?

Based on the crime scene, I’d been certain that our killer was a werewolf, but like Callum and the Resilient wolves in my pack, some werewolves had knacks, too.

In Wyoming, the killer hadn’t left any footprints in the victim’s blood.

What if this thing wasn’t a werewolf? What if it was something else? Something that made as much sense to me as psychics and werewolves would have to anyone else?

Without warning, Chase took off, as quick as a serpent’s strike. Lake followed, holding back on her speed enough to appear human. Jed, Caroline, and I slipped out of town, following them to the edge of the mountain and then into the forest.

We stopped at a densely wooded area where the smell of blood was so thick in the air that even with human senses, I wanted to gag.

Fresh blood this time—and it didn’t belong to an animal. It was human blood, and odds were good that it belonged to the girl whose remains had been found on Main Street.

This was where she was killed.

Through the pack-bond, I could hear Chase’s racing
thoughts, and Lake’s, and I realized that beneath the pungent scent of iron and human flesh, they could smell something else.

The kind of something that smelled like a werewolf, but
not. A dream smell, a memory, a scent they couldn’t quite
make out.

I heard a noise then—a rustling in the brush to my left. Caroline whirled, her blonde hair fanning out around her baby-doll face. She had a crossbow in her left hand and a pistol in her right, and she was halfway to pulling the triggers before my eyes ever locked in on her prey.

It was a boy, about my age, standing only a few feet away—
a pale and almost see-through boy, standing in a field of blood. He had golden hair, halfway between honey and a light, sun-kissed brown. There was a smattering of freckles across the
bridge of his nose. His cheekbones were sharp, and his eyes
were green, the exact same shade as Lake’s.

Caroline fired, and I watched as a bullet passed straight
through the boy. A bolt came within a foot of his body, but he waved his hand, and it fell to the ground.

This was what Chase had smelled at the crime scene.

This was the kind of monster who could kill without leaving a trail.

This was a nightmare, dressed up like a boy.

It started walking toward us, and a sense of déjà vu washed over my body. There was something familiar about this thing, this boy. Something more than the way he smelled—or didn’t smell—and the serious expression on his face.

“Lake,” he said.

For a split second, there was silence all around us, and then Lake replied, her voice barely more than a whisper, but filled with a whole host of emotions, each as sharp as glass.

One word.

She just said one word.

“Griff.”

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