“Football metaphors aren’t like you,” I tried.
“You would not believe how competitive a bunch of doctors can get,” Samuel said, sounding more like himself. “I’ve played a lot of football—proper football and not American—this past year.”
“Where are you now?” Adam asked.
Africa was a whole giant continent. I never had been able to pin down exactly where Samuel and Ariana were on it. Sometimes he talked about where they’d been last week or last month, but not where they were.
“Middle of a snowstorm,” Samuel said. “In more ways than one. I have about three minutes of battery left on my phone, Mercy. What did you need?”
“Snowstorm in Africa?” I asked. Granted it was a whole continent, but when I thought of Africa, I thought of jungles and deserts.
“What did you call me for?” Samuel said.
From the sound of his voice, he was done talking about himself.
“Sherwood’s memory came back,” I said.
“Hah!” Samuel said, and I could hear his smile. “I told Da he wasn’t faking it.”
“Did Bran think he was?” I asked.
“You know? I’m not sure. It seemed to irk Da a whole lot, though.”
He was sounding more like himself, but there was still an undercurrent of something, a little edge that told me he was in the middle of something desperate. If talking about our mysterious Sherwood gave him some amusement, some respite, then we could talk about Sherwood—for the next three minutes, anyway.
“Just who is he?” I asked.
“I’m not sure I am at liberty to tell you,” Samuel said.
“I can tell he’s one of you—a Cornick. And he’s old.”
“Did you ask him?”
“Who was it who told me never to ask old wolves about their pasts?” I asked in return. If Sherwood had intended to tell us who he was, he would have done it.
“Did I do that?” He laughed. The honest amusement made him sound tired.
I exchanged a look with Adam, who was frowning.
“Yes,” I said. “If your phone gives up before you tell me, I’m going to sell your Christmas present on eBay and donate the proceeds to—” I tried to think of somewhere he’d hate. “The John Lauren Society.” The John Lauren Society was an anti-fae, anti-werewolf, anti-supernatural hate group for the Upper Ten Thousand.
Samuel laughed. “What the hell. He’s Da’s oldest brother.”
I’d finally gotten Samuel to tell me how he and Ariana met. That had taken in a lot of history I hadn’t expected to hear about.
“All of Bran’s brothers died saving Ariana from her father,” I said. “You told me that story.”
“He left Grandmother’s pack long before that,” Samuel said. “His escape was one of the reasons Grandmother came hunting Da. She couldn’t find”—he started to say another name and changed his mind—“Sherwood.”
I exchanged a look with Adam. What had Bran been thinking to stow his brother with us? Had he been protecting us? Protecting Sherwood?
“Look,” Samuel said. “Be careful with him. Of him. You know what Charles does for Da?”
“Goes out and kills rogue wolves?” I said.
“And scares the rest into behaving,” agreed Samuel. “It’s a horrible job, but necessary. Sherwood was my da’s bogeyman before Charles was. It’s not a job that leaves someone stable and well-adjusted.”
“Bran wasn’t the Marrok before Charles was his bogeyman,” I said.
“Wasn’t he?” Samuel sounded amused.
“Sherwood is dangerous,” said Adam.
“We are all dangerous,” Samuel told him. “He’s worse than that.” I heard a faint beep. “Love you,” said Samuel. “Got to go. Bye.”
He hung up before I could say anything more.
“I don’t like that,” I said.
“If you didn’t know Sherwood was dangerous, you haven’t been paying attention,” Adam said.
“Not that.” I waved the issue of Sherwood away for later consideration. “I meant Samuel.”
“I know,” said Adam gently. “But he’s an old wolf, and not stupid. He has backup if he needs it. Sounds like he has Bran involved already.”
My phone rang again.
“Samuel?”
The person on the other end of the line didn’t say anything. I couldn’t hear breathing, but I could hear the faint sound of the wind in some trees. I disconnected.
“Wrong number or something,” I told Adam. I had more interesting things to think about than a crank caller. “First-string wouldn’t be Bran. Bran’s not part of the team. Bran would be . . . I don’t know. Coach, maybe. Or the franchise owner. First-string—that’s Charles all the way.”
“Agreed,” Adam said.
I nodded. “Okay, that’s good. He’ll be okay if Charles has his back.”
“And he knows he can come to us,” he said.
“And I can check with Charles to make sure that there really isn’t anything we can do.”
“Yes.”
It started to rain. Out of habit I checked the temperature, but we were a few degrees too warm to have to worry about freezing rain. This rain would only get us wet.
“What do you think is so bad that it has Samuel on the run?” I asked, my voice sounding small in my own ears.
“I have no idea,” said Adam.
He put his hand on my knee and gave it a squeeze. For absolutely no rational reason at all, that helped.
Jesse and Tad were doing homework on the kitchen table when we got home.
“Glad you’re alive,” Jesse said. “There’s pizza in the fridge—we saved you some. Kind of nice just having the three of us plus one in the house. When you put something in the fridge, it doesn’t magically disappear.”
“Glad you’re alive, too,” I said with maybe a bit too much emphasis.
Both Tad and Jesse looked up.
“I thought that your death had been indefinitely postponed, Dad.” Jesse sounded worried.
“It was,” Adam said. “But since we never want boredom to be a thing in this household, today it’s Mercy’s turn to have a killer on her tail.”
Tad and Jesse both looked at me.
“The Harvester is out to get me,” I said with perfect truthfulness. Almost perfect truthfulness. “We think.”
There was no way to be sure that the Soul Taker was after me just because I was connected to it. But Zee and Adam had both decided that probably I was in its sights, metaphorically speaking.
Jesse rolled her eyes, but Tad, who could hear the truth in my answer—or at least knew a little bit more about the story of the Harvester than he had last night—stiffened. He looked at Adam, who nodded once.
Jesse missed that exchange. She had other things on her mind.
“Dad, you’ve been to Southeast Asia. Have you been to South Korea?”
“Yes?” he said cautiously.
She narrowed her eyes at him. “How long ago?”
“Ten years?”
She pointed at the seat next to her. “Sit down, right here. I need you. You will be my primary source.”
She looked at me and waved her hands. “You. Stepmother. Eat your pizza somewhere else while I quiz your man about the way women were treated ten years ago in South Korea.”
With a grin, I loaded a plate with a couple of pieces of kitchen-sink pizza, a third piece with pineapple and what looked like poblano peppers, and started for the back door.
Tad hopped up and opened the door for me. “If you have a killer out hunting you, maybe I should come out with you.”
“Don’t you have a paper to write?” I asked.
But he was right, I needed to be more careful. When he followed me out the door, I didn’t object.
Normally I’d have said our house was the safest place for me to be. But normally there were three or four werewolves here as well as a demon dog. We’d sent them all away.