JIM…
Winifred’s thoughts cut into my contemplation of what I would like to do to Blake for everything he’d done to Michelle, the rest of the girls, and all the males in this car.
Why have you stopped moving? She sent me.
Aden is starving and everyone needed a minute to think of something other than death.
I understand, but you need to keep moving. Gabby says there are several Urbat nearby. I’m worried.
We’re in the car at a fast food place. Lots of exhaust to cover up our scent. As soon as we get our order, we’re heading south like we agreed. How are things looking for you? How are Mom and Michelle?
Everyone’s fine. You just worry about keeping your group safe, and we’ll keep everyone here safe.
Someone tapped on my window. I turned toward a woman and teen boy who carried several bags of food and a cardboard tray of drinks. With a grin I didn’t feel, I rolled down the window.
“Thank you. The little guy in back was about to starve.” I winked at the woman so she’d know I was joking and started accepting the bags and handing them off to Paul.
“We’re sorry about the wait,” the woman said, handing over the drink tray.
“Don’t worry about it. Thanks for the food.”
Jim! Get out of there now.
The fear and command in Winifred’s message had me shoving the drinks toward Paul and grabbing the wheel. I slammed the vehicle into reverse and twisted in my seat to see behind me. However, my foot never descended onto the gas pedal.
A group of seven males, directly behind us, stopped me. They’d made little attempt to blend. Ragged, dirty clothes covered them, but the threadbare material would have never kept a normal human warm.
The woman still beside the window made a small noise, also seeing the mongrels that held my attention.
The lead man smiled slowly, showing his elongated canines.
They’ve found us, I sent Winifred as I slammed down on the gas.
The tires squealed, and we shot backward. The woman screamed, she and the boy still not moving.
“Run,” I yelled to them.
The mutts scattered, jumping out of my way. They didn’t go far though. With snarls and curses, some partially shifted.
I cranked the wheel as I reversed, listening to claws screech against metal. Aden whimpered. Shouting erupted from the nearby humans, spilling from the restaurant.
Slamming on the breaks, I shifted to drive. The glass behind Gregory shattered and curled forward in a webbed sheet. Furred hands reached for Aden.
Gregory’s gaze met mine in the rearview mirror. Angry knowing lit his eyes. He growled, and his own claws erupted.
We needed to get out of here, but people ran in every direction. My foot hesitated on the pedal. Save their lives or those of the cubs. I glanced in the mirror again. Gregory swiped at the mutts then used his nails to cut Aden’s seatbelt.
“Henry,” he called, throwing the boy forward. The cub’s eyes were wide and panicked.
I gunned it forward as Henry caught Aden and curled protectively around both cubs. A man yelled and dove out of my way, and I jerked the wheel to the right, avoiding the back end of the nearest car trying to escape the chaos.
Cackling laughter exploded from the back. I looked up at the mirror in time to see arms grip Gregory’s shoulders.
Don’t stop, he sent me. Keep them all safe.
With a heave, several of the mutts pulled Gregory from the back as we swerved out of the parking lot and onto the main road.
“Dad!” Paul yelled from beside me, proof he’d witnessed what had just happened.
I checked the mirror again as I wove in and out of traffic. Gregory fought five of them in the middle of the road. Two sprinted after us, their paws eating up the distance.
“Keep hold of those cubs,” I said to Henry.
Giving the van more gas, I ignored the distant wailing sirens, the sound of Paul begging me to turn around, and Liam and Aden’s soft whimpers. Cars honked and veered out of my way. One of the mutts jumped on top of the roof of an old beetle, using it as a springboard to launch himself at us. He just missed the back end of our van, his claws scraping briefly on metal then nothing as he fell to the road and rolled in a heap of fur.
The second mutt trailed us persistently to the edge of town. Then he veered off the road and disappeared into the sparse trees separating one business from another. The sound of a helicopter overhead sent my heart racing.
The south is clear, Winifred sent, interrupting my thoughts. Head south.
They shifted in the open, calling attention to all of us. There’s a helicopter in the air now. I’m not sure if it’s following us or trying to track the Urbat. The back window is broken out. We’re too easy to identify from the ground and air. I need to change vehicles.
Do what needs to be done.
I turned onto the next street I found and parked the car.
“Everyone out,” I said.
“Are we going back?” Paul asked, opening his door and moving to grab Aden from the middle.
I grabbed their bags from the back and tossed them each one without answering.
“You know we can’t,” Henry said.
Both boys—men—looked down at the cubs.
“We need to move, now,” I said, my eyes on the sky while I listened to the approaching sirens and closed the back of the van. “Cut through this yard to the next block over. No fur. As soon as we’re on the next block, hold hands with the cubs and walk like nothing’s happened.”
They listened then responded immediately. One block over, a helicopter flew overhead, speeding in the direction we’d been headed.
“Don’t hurry,” I said softly.
We continued walking, cutting another block west. A car idled on the sidewalk.
“This one?” Paul asked.
“No. It’ll be reported missing too quickly.”
Three houses down, I saw a paper still on the front stoop. After we passed the house, I told the boys to keep walking and ducked in between yards, circling around to break into the garage. The older car looked brand new. It didn’t take me long to start it up and quickly back out of the garage. Hopefully, the owner wouldn’t notice it missing for a long while.
Catching up with the boys, I pulled over so they could pile in. Liam helped Aden buckle as I pulled away from the curb.
“Are we going back for Uncle Gregory?” Liam asked.
“No, buddy. He doesn’t want us to,” I said.
Is he still alive? Henry sent me. I allowed myself to focus on where Gregory’s link should be in my mind. Its presence was only a small relief. We’d left him surrounded by Urbat and exposed to humans. If the first group didn’t kill him, the other would likely take him and—I couldn’t finish that thought.
Where should we meet you? I sent Gregory. I waited several long minutes before I understood there would be no response.
He’s alive, but not answering, I sent back to Henry.
We can’t risk going back for him.
No, we can’t.
His maturity saddened me. Too much, too young. Paul sat in the front. He’d said nothing since getting in. Soft traces of anger laced his scent. Mostly, though, I smelled his grief.
“I’m sorry, Paul.”
“It’s not your fault. It’s not anyone’s but the mutt who wants power at any cost. He won’t win.”
I agreed with his last, growled sentiment.
The distant sound of the helicopter grew louder before fading again. We headed out of town, my thoughts on Mary and Gregory and the boys they’d left behind.
Blake wouldn’t win. We would make sure of that. But at what cost? Would there be any werewolves left in the end?
We’re in a new vehicle. I sent to Winifred. Does it seem like anyone is following us?
After a moment, she answered.
Gabby said that no one seems to be following you.
There was a moment of silence where I could feel her worry and sorrow.
Who did you leave behind?
Gregory.
How many will we lose before this ends? she sent, echoing my thoughts.