Chloe had once told Selina there was no way to cure lycanthropy, but mitigating the worst effects was possible, which meant no more full moon rampaging, trying to keep young wolves from going mad and biting humans, losing wolves who couldn’t control their magic and didn’t make it through the forced Change at full moon.
Blowing a lock of hair out of her face, Selina raised her eyebrows at Tess’s silence. “You and Alex are both working with Chloe on this, right? I saw Alex yesterday at the Mathison crime scene, and he looked good considering the full moon is right around the corner.”
“Yes, we’re part of the clinical trials.” Tess sat back in her chair. “They’re going well, too. Chloe’s been pretty happy with the preliminary results for the prototype she developed. It’s been working for Alex and me, anyway, though I don’t know about any of her other patients.”
So Chloe had really done it, then. After so many centuries of werewolves dying at full moon, the Standish witch had actually pulled it off. Selina’s debate about pack politics with Darren came to mind. She’d liked the man. To be honest, she’d liked both of Jack’s parental units. Her conversation with them told her they’d make far better pack leaders than those who ruled now. She hoped they would win that fight—she wished she’d be around to see it. The thought stabbed at her soul, and she pushed it away. There was no point in wishing. She met Tess’s gaze. “How long before it’s on the open market? Is it just like the serum vamps take to suppress the need to feed on blood?”
“Yes and no. It’ll take years for it to be available to all wolves. Drug trials need to go on for a while before they can get FDA approval. There’s a Magickal branch for that the same as everything else—the things I never knew as a human.” She pursed her lips. “But Chloe’s drug will definitely be on the FDA fast track because it fills an unmet medical need for a serious disease. They have guidelines and requirements for which drugs can be fast-tracked.”
“Huh.” Sounded like way more bureaucracy that Selina cared to deal with. She dealt with more than enough of it just working for the PD.
“How’s the case going?” the werewolf asked, clearly ready to talk about something besides her issues with Luca and her involvement in the lycanthropy drug trial.
Selina snorted. “We found out this guy has probably killed more people between New Orleans and here. So I wouldn’t say it’s going good, but I’d say that progress is being made.”
“With something like this, I guess that’s all you can hope for.” Hard sympathy shone in Tess’s golden eyes. As a coroner, she had to see the lethal results of some crimes. It wasn’t as pretty or fun or glamorous as the movies liked to pretend. It was dirty and ugly and numbing sometimes. Other times it was exhilarating.
Sighing, Selina propped an elbow on the table, her chin in her palm. “Yeah. It’s a damn shame, but yeah.”
“No other victims before New Orleans?”
She made a negative sound. “None that we found. Looks like that was ground zero for this guy.”
“Hmm. I did find something interesting when I compared the autopsies for our current victims. I’m not sure it’ll be useful, but ...” Tess shrugged. “Let’s wait until Jack gets back so you can both hear it.”
Selina straightened, every sense going on alert at the mention of a new clue. She wanted to demand answers now, but Jack was technically in charge of this investigation. She didn’t like it, but she’d have to wait. It had been a long time since she’d been a rookie and had to clear anything with anyone except her captain. She hadn’t liked it then, and she liked it even less now. It was all she could do not to growl in impatience. “Fine. Eat your lunch while we wait for him.”
Nodding, Tess drank her Starbucks coffee and chowed down on a roast beef sandwich. The meat looked pretty damn red and raw to Selina, but werewolves had weird cravings around the full moon, so she didn’t make a comment.
The lack of conversation made her mind circle around to the case again. Even without Tess’s little autopsy tease, Selina had plenty of new information to chew over, starting with the fact that New Orleans had been an abnormality. Only four victims there. What did that mean? Was there another victim that she hadn’t known about? After they’d found a Normal victim, Selina had gone back and checked for others. She’d been thorough to the point of obsessive, especially after her cousin became a victim. Her supervisors back then had clued in on the obsessiveness when they’d yanked the rug out from under her investigation.
She was pretty damn sure there hadn’t been a fifth victim. They’d need to have the NOLA PD crawl through their old records to check again, but there was no guarantee how fast that would happen. Still, Selina didn’t think there was anything to find. Which meant something made New Orleans different. Was it that it was his first time with that specific pattern? Had something gone wrong with one of his murders? Did someone survive and not report the crime? Why would he add one more the next time and stay with exactly that number for the other cities? Questions chased themselves in circles in her head until her temples throbbed.
She sensed Jack approach before he spoke, her claircognizance recognizing him and filling her mind with the knowledge.
“Hey.” Jack’s knuckles brushed the back of her shoulder, and she jerked away from the touch. That was verboten at work, and he knew it. A hot shudder ran through her, an awareness that was purely physical. Her nipples tightened and thrust against her bra as if they were sitting up to beg for Jack’s attention. She crossed her arms and nodded toward the werewolf.
“Tess has something for us.”
Peyton slipped into the room with his characteristic silence, but he perked up at the news. He settled into Jack’s seat next to Tess, his gaze locked on the female wolf. “Oh, yeah?”
“What do you have, Dr. Jones?” Jack hooked another chair with his foot and dragged it over to the table. He grabbed a French fry and winced when he bit into it. “Cold fries. Nasty.”
“Nuked fries are worse. The vending machine would be a better bet.” Selina gestured toward the big metal monster next to the fridge.
Tess offered half of her bloody sandwich to Peyton, and he accepted, his fingers brushing hers. The look they shared was intimate enough to make Selina pin her gaze to the table.
“This is good,” Peyton grunted, biting into the juicy meat. His eyes went wolfish for a moment, and Selina caught sight of fangs when she glanced at him. Full moon was coming soon, and Peyton would have to lock himself in with the local pack for the duration. He was starting to show signs of the strain of keeping himself in human form—not many signs, considering how controlled he was, but they were there. His body twitched occasionally, his fangs showing every now and then.
Tess touched the back of his hand. “I could talk to Chloe about getting you in the next round of the clinical trial.”
He snorted. “Dr. Standish isn’t a fan of me, and with good reason, considering I was undercover as one of the terrorists who tortured her.”
“You were doing your job,” Tess protested.
“I doubt the distinction would make much difference to her.”
“She wouldn’t do it for you; she’d do it for me.” The female wolf shrugged. “She’s my best friend. I’ll talk to her when she gets back from her honeymoon.”