The werewolves drew in breath sharply, col ectively, like a single quiet scream. I looked around. Werewolfism manifests itself along with puberty, so none of the faces were younger than early teens, but that was young enough to make their presence shocking.
“After the judgments are rendered tonight, anyone who likes can chal enge me on this spot,” Alcide said. His face was savage. “No candidate has announced against me, but if anyone would like to win here and now, without a ceremony, you’re welcome to try single combat. Prepare yourself to fight to the death.”
Everyone was frozen in place now. This was not at al like the packmaster chal enge I’d seen before, the one in which Alcide’s father had died.
That had been a formal, ceremonial contest. Alcide himself had succeeded to the position when his father’s chal enger, Patrick Furnan, had died fighting side by side with Alcide against a common enemy. Packmaster by acclamation, I guess you’d term it. Tonight Alcide was throwing down the gauntlet to every wolf present. It was a big gamble.
“Now for judgment,” Alcide said, when he had looked into the face of every pack member.
The prisoners were pushed forward to land on their knees in the sand of the vol eybal court. Roy, the Were who was dating Palomino, seemed to be in charge of the miscreants.
“The three rogues I had turned down for admission into the pack acted against us,” Alcide said in a voice that carried across the yard. “They abducted Warren, the friend of Mustapha, who in turn is a friend—though not a member—of this pack. If he hadn’t been found in time, Warren would have died.”
Everyone moved in unison, turning to stare at the people on their knees.
“The three rogues were incited by Jannalynn Hopper, not only a pack member, but also my enforcer. Jannalynn couldn’t subdue her pride and ambition. She couldn’t wait until she was strong enough to chal enge me openly. Instead she started a campaign of undermining me. She looked for power in the wrong places. She even accepted money from a fairy in return for finding a half-bitch who would try to get Eric Northman arrested for murder. When Eric was too smart to act the way she thought he would, Jannalynn stole into his yard and murdered Kym Rowe herself, so Kym wouldn’t tel the police who’d hired her. Some of you remember running with Oscar, Kym’s father. He’s joined us tonight.”
Kym’s father, Oscar, was skulking behind Alcide. He looked oddly out of place, and I wondered how long it had been since he’d come to a pack meeting. What regrets did Oscar have now about his daughter’s life and death? If he was any kind of father, any kind of human being, he had to be thinking about how she’d lost her job, how she’d needed money so badly that she’d agreed to be bait for a vampire. He had to be wondering if he could’ve helped her out.
But maybe I was just projecting. I had to keep my mind in the here and now.
“Jannalynn was wil ing to sacrifice Were blood to serve her own interests and those of the fae?” Roy said. I was pretty sure Alcide had prepped him to ask that.
“She was. She admits it. She has written a confession and mailed it to the Shreveport police station. Now we’re going to ensure it’s taken seriously.”
Alcide dialed a number. His cel was on speakerphone. “Detective Ambrosel i,” said a recognizable voice.
Alcide held the phone in front of Jannalynn. Her eyes closed for a moment as she was readying herself to step off a cliff. The Were said,
“Detective, this is Jannalynn Hopper.”
“Uh-huh? Wait, you’re the bartender at Hair of the Dog, right?”
“Yeah. I have a confession to make.”
“Then come on in, and we’l sit down,” Ambrosel i said cautiously.
“I can’t do that. I’m about to vanish. And I’ve mailed you a letter. But I wanted to tel you, so you can hear it’s my voice. Are you recording this?”
“Yeah, I am now,” Ambrosel i said. I could hear a lot of movement on her end.
“I kil ed Kym Rowe. I came up on her when she was leaving Eric Northman’s house, and I snapped her neck. I’m a werewolf. We’re pretty strong.”
“Why’d you do that?” Ambrosel i asked. I could hear someone muttering to her, and I guessed she was getting advice from the other detectives around her.
For a moment, Jannalynn’s face looked blank. She hadn’t thought of a motive, at least not a simple one. Then she said, “Kym stole my wal et from my purse, and when I tracked her down and made her give it back, she disrespected me. I … have a bad temper, and she said some stuff that made me sick. I lost it. I have to go now. But I don’t want anyone else blamed for something I did.”
And Alcide hung up. “We’l hope that wil clear Eric. That’s our responsibility,” he said, and nodded at Eric, who nodded back.
Jannalynn made her face hard and looked around, but I noticed she didn’t actual y meet anyone’s eyes. Even mine.
“How’d she get these sleazebal s to help her?” Roy asked, jerking his head at the kneeling prisoners. He’d definitely been prepped.
“She promised them membership in the pack when she became packleader,” Alcide told the Weres. “Van is a convicted rapist. Coco burned her own family, father and two brothers, in their home. Laidlaw, though not convicted in a human court, was thrown out of his own pack in West Virginia for attacking a human child during his moon time. This is why I had turned them down for the Long Tooth pack. But Jannalynn would admit these people to run with us. And they did her bidding.”
There was a long silence. Neither Van, nor Plump (Coco), nor Laidlaw denied the charges against them. They didn’t try to justify themselves, which was pretty damn impressive.
“What do you think we should do with the rogues?” Roy asked when the silence had lasted long enough.
“What crimes did they commit here?” asked a young woman just past her teens.
“They abducted Warren and imprisoned him at Jannalynn’s family home. They didn’t feed him and left him in an attic room without air-conditioning or any means of relief from the heat. He almost died as a result. They abducted Sookie and were taking her to their own place, and we can only imagine what they would have done with her there. Those actions were at the behest of Jannalynn.”
“And she held out the promise of admission to the pack upon your death.” The young woman sounded like she was thinking hard. “Those are bad things to do, but in fact Warren lived, and Sookie was rescued by the pack. Jannalynn won’t be your successor, and they won’t join the pack.”
“This is al true,” Alcide said.
“So they acted about like you’d expect rogues to act,” the young woman persisted.
“Yes. Not lone wolves,” Alcide explained for the benefit of the youngest Weres present. “But rogues, who’ve been turned down for pack membership, maybe by more than one pack.”
“And what about Kandace?” the young woman said, pointing to the short-haired rogue.
“Kandace told us what was happening because she didn’t want to be a part of it,” Alcide said. “So we’re going to put her membership to the vote in a month. After people have time to get to know her.”
There was a general round of nodding, kind of guarded. Kandace might have told on the other rogues because it was the right thing to do, or she might be a natural snitch. Getting to talk to her on an individual basis was the best course.
“I think we should let these rogues go,” cal ed an older man. “Blackbal them from ever being a pack member anywhere. Put out the word.”
Van closed his eyes. I couldn’t tel if he was feeling relief or misery. Coco was crying; Laidlaw spat on the ground. Not smooth when people were deciding your life or death.