The prickling along her jaw became a buzz.
“Where?” Meg cried in frustration. “When? How will I know?”
“Arroo?” An idle, conversational query from Nathan, who was snoozing in the front room.
Her right hand buzzed. The index finger burned. Meg turned over the card beneath that finger.
A communication card—drawings of a telephone and a telegraph key.
Breathing hard, Meg looked at the phone on the counter.
“I’ll get a call.”
“Arroo?” No longer an idle query.
“It’s nothing.” Meg raised her voice enough to carry to Nathan. “I’m just talking to myself.”
That would stall him for a minute, maybe two. Then the watch Wolf would come into the sorting room to have a look around.
The prickling faded in her hands, in her jaw.
Meg retrieved a notepad and pen and wrote down the three sets of cards in their proper order, and then added the communication card. She left the pad on the counter, facedown. Then she scooped up all the cards and dumped them in the drawer. She would ask Henry to make her a special box big enough to hold all the decks. A box with a lock. A lock with two keys. She would keep one. Who should hold the other? Simon? No, too easy to find a key if left at Howling Good Reads or his apartment. Henry or Tess?
Grandfather Erebus. Yes, the Sanguinati should hold the other key to the box.
There was no evidence of what anyone had been doing in the sorting room by the time Nathan leaped over the counter and came in to sniff around. A Wolf didn’t need evidence. His growls made it clear that he knew exactly who shouldn’t have been in the sorting room.
He trotted into the back room and returned a minute later in human form, wearing a T-shirt, denim shorts, and sandals—clothes he’d left in a bin in the storage area.
“I need to talk to Simon.” Nathan gave her a hard stare. “Are you expecting any deliveries?”
“No.” A message, yes, but not a delivery.
“Jake will keep watch and give warning if anyone comes in.”
“Okay.”
She waited. Winced when she heard HGR’s back door slam. Then she braced her hands on the counter beneath the sorting room’s open window and shouted, “Henry? Henry, I need to see you.”
Not telling Nathan about the cards was one thing. But someone needed to know. And it had to be someone who could know about the terra indigene prophecy cards that were mixed in with make-believe images.
When Henry walked in, Meg picked up the notepad and hugged it to her chest. “I don’t know what it means, but there’s something you need to see.”
Gathered in HGR’s office with Henry and Vlad, Simon stared at the paper with Meg’s list of images. “We don’t have any bison in the Courtyard—at least, not on the hoof.” They’d killed the one yearling they kept and had packed every available freezer with bison meat, but there was no reason for Meg to see a vision about that. “And the terra indigene in Talulah Falls wouldn’t use revolvers or rifles to kill the bison we gave them.”
“Rifles,” Henry said. “The bison are killed with rifles.”
“There’s a revolver on the card too.”
“I don’t think Meg saw the revolver. She wrote down ‘rifle’ because that’s what she saw.”
Vlad rubbed his chin. “Selective seeing when there is more than one object on a card? That’s an interesting thought.”
“But not one for immediate concern.” Simon studied the list. “Wolves being attacked with knives? Not a smart thing for a human to do, especially if there is more than one Wolf.”
“Rifle card was already used,” Henry said. “Maybe Meg needed another human weapon. Rifle or knife, the result is the same. She saw death.”
Simon looked at the last set of words and shivered. How much human will the terra indigene keep? He remembered the words the Elders had spoken, but it was Vlad who pointed to the list and said, “It looks like we’ve run out of time.”
“We were out of time when the humans disregarded the significance of the Elders declaring a breach of trust and decided to cause more trouble,” Henry rumbled.
“How did Meg know that card was supposed to be a terra indigene form?” Simon asked.
“Jester knew,” Henry replied.
Which meant at some point in his life, the Coyote had actually seen one or more of the terra indigene who were Namid’s teeth and claws.
“He separated the forms from the make-believe creatures and told Meg she shouldn’t send that deck to other blood prophets,” Henry continued. “The Jesse Walker already has that deck, but only Meg knows that not all the images are make-believe.”
Simon handed the sheet of paper to Henry. “We don’t know when it will happen.”
Henry folded the paper until it fit in the back pocket of his jeans. “Meg will receive a phone call, and that will be the battle cry. At least for us.”
Simon felt grief already clogging his throat. “Some of us are going to die. If the Elders have made their decision, why are they going to hold back until some of us die?”
“I don’t think shifters like us are that important to the Elders,” Henry replied. “But even if we do matter to them, maybe they have to wait for something to be set in motion before they act, even if waiting means watching some of us die.”
CHAPTER 30
Firesday, Juin 22
Hope dropped the gray crayon, horrified by the drawing. She leaped up then half fell on the bed when her feet, asleep from being tucked under her for so long, couldn’t hold her. She felt warm liquid run down her legs, barely understanding that she’d wet herself.
Shaking, sobbing, too scared to call for help—too scared that no one would answer—she forced herself to look at the drawing again.
More than death. A horror that would never be forgotten.
She looked closer. She didn’t know that face. He didn’t live in Sweetwater. Had she drawn that face before? She couldn’t remember.
Fear grew inside her, its sharp edges slicing through her ability to think.
Had to find Jackson and Grace. Had to run, escape, hide. Had to tell . . .
A face in the corner of the paper, apart from the rest of the drawing.
. . . the Trailblazer.
Hope pushed to her feet. She could run fast now. She could run to the communications cabin and call the Trailblazer. She remembered the number. She would call because the danger would strike somewhere else before it came to Sweetwater. So she would call, and then she would find her friends and they would run and hide.
She stumbled out of the Wolfgard cabin, almost fell down the steps.
Caw!
One of the Ravengard, watching her.
No time to explain. Not until she had sent the warning.
Hope dashed between the cabins that made up the terra indigene settlement until she reached the dirt road. Then she ran as fast as she could to the communications cabin, chased by the image of a drawing full of death.
Joe Wolfgard scratched on Tolya’s motel room door, then turned away and listened to the howl of Wolves in the distance.
The Song of Battle.
<What’s wrong?> he demanded.
<Humans!> came the answer. <They’re shooting our bison again! They’re killing our meat!>
<Wait! They can shoot you too!>
But the pack’s hunters and guards, enraged by more wanton slaughter, didn’t listen.
Tolya opened the door. “Joe?”
<Humans are killing bison again.>