The odor of wet dog burned my nostrils as I stalked into the infirmary with one purpose in mind—tear out Dane Gray’s canines with my bare hands. My eyes flashed from green to silver and my fangs lowered slow and deadly.
Dane was responsible for what had happened to Ben. I couldn’t exactly prove it, but Ben’s wound was definitely from a large animal. Bears were a possibility, but they were rare in and around the city.
For the last eleven days since the ambulance brought Ben in, he’d been in and out of consciousness, and as the days passed, his condition wasn’t improving.
It felt like a dagger stabbing my heart over and over again anytime I looked at my best friend. He’d been through hell and back since I’d become a vampire. He’d been the product of an experiment gone wrong, and as a result, he was half human and half vampire. The vampire in him should have been healing him, which led us to believe he’d been bitten by a shifter. According to Doc, their venom could be poisonous to vampires. Not so much for humans. I was curious about whether Ben’s half-human side would become a shifter.
Tripp had said no unless an alpha had bitten him. Despite that, I was thankful a clerk at a gas station not far outside the state forest had found Ben behind his establishment and reacted quickly. Luckily, one of the paramedics on the scene knew Ben was a Navy SEAL stationed on the naval base. He’d gotten ahold of us, and we’d rerouted them here.
Tripp marched toward me, his bronze eyes pinpricks. “Back away. We don’t know that Dane’s pack is responsible for Ben.”
I glowered at the alpha in the distance as he and a bald dude gave Dr. Vieira their rapt attention.
I gritted my teeth. “He is. I feel it in my bones.”
Tripp slapped a hand on my shoulder just as Dane sat in a chair and held out his arm. He was there to give Doc a blood sample for his research. We’d agreed to help the Gray Pack uncover why one of their own had died from a shot of a drug used by Layla Aberdeen and her sisters that night at the club.
Tripp guided me into an empty patient room. “We invited them in. We are not getting into a fight. Not here. Not now. Are we clear?”
Growling, my fangs clicked into place as rage boiled inside me. I was one second away from ramming my fists into the glass supply cabinet. “Who’s the bald dude?”
Tripp swiped a hand over his sandy-blond hair tied into a ponytail at the nape of his neck. “Dane’s beta, Ross. Look, after Doc pulls their blood, I have a plan.”
I retracted my fangs. “Care to share?”
“Just follow my lead.” He sounded as frustrated as I probably looked.
I tucked my fury away for the time being, stretched my neck one way then the other, and trailed behind Tripp. If he had a plan, I was sure it was a good one. Unlike me, Tripp had an uncanny way of extracting the truth without beating someone over the head.
Blood flowed from Dane’s arm into a vial before Doc switched the filled tube with an empty one. Ross was engrossed in something on his phone as he waited his turn near the stainless steel counter along the sidewall opposite Doc.
Dane lasered his dark eyes on me as though he was ready to leap over the black countertop and tear out my throat.
That rage I held so tightly was about to burst as I approached.
Tripp pressed his hands into the edge of the counter. Easy, Sam, he said telepathically.
I sidled up to him. I’m cool, I lied.
Dane swung his gaze to Tripp. “Did you work out your issues with the hunters?”
“Let’s stay focused on why you’re here,” Tripp said.
Ross’s bald head shot up from his phone, his hazel eyes glinting beneath the stark bright lights overhead. “The Aberdeen women need to atone for what they did to one of our own.”
I tucked my fisted hands into the pockets of my cargo pants, staring him down. “Touch any of them,” I barked, “and you’ll deal with me.” If he so much as said Layla’s name, I might tear him to shreds.
Ross whistled. “Sounds to me like you have it bad for one of them.”
It was hard not to. Layla Aberdeen was beautiful, wild, tough, sassy, feisty, and bold as fuck, and she was all mine.
Sam, take it down a notch. Tripp’s caustic tone blared in my head.
Easier said than done. Layla was embedded in my psyche, my skin, my veins, my brain, my dreams, and every part of me. I hadn’t been able to stop thinking about her since she left. The way she made me feel like a god among gods, like she was my other half—which sounded fucked up on so many levels. A relationship between a human and vampire wasn’t unheard of. After all, my mom had been human. But my mom hadn’t been a hunter and had no desire to burn my father at the stake.
Regardless, eleven days had passed since Layla had left. Eleven days of hell, not being close to her. Eleven days of sleepless nights, thinking of her and every other screwed-up thing happening in my life. I’d been tempted to get my ass on a plane and pay her a visit. Maybe that would calm me down. Hell, I knew it would. But the auburn-haired goddess wanted some space to clear her head, and I wanted to be there for Ben.
However, if she kept ghosting me and not responding to my texts, then, vampire hunters be damned, I would storm their Montana ranch.
“Okay, Dane,” Dr. Vieira said. “Ross, it’s your turn.”
The two traded places.
“Sam, I would like you to meet my beta, Ross Gray,” Dane said.
Ross and I exchanged a glare.
“I see you and my brother will get along great.” Sarcasm dripped from Dane’s voice as he smirked.
I envisioned my hands around their throats, snapping their necks.
As if Doc knew what I wanted to do, he piped in, zapping the tension strung between Dane and me. “I would like to run an autopsy on your dead shifter.” He inserted the needle into Ross’s arm. “Is it possible to bring the body to me?”
“It isn’t,” Ross said, “but we did extract some of her blood before the burial.”
Dane slid a box across the lab bench to Dr. Vieira. “We kept it refrigerated.”
“Mm,” Doc said as he finished pulling Ross’s blood. “Not as good as doing an autopsy, but I might be able to work with this.”
“How long before you have any results?” Ross asked.
Doc tore off his nitrile gloves and deposited them into a trash bin near the sink. “I’m not sure. The blood samples will go to our lab for a full toxicology workup. We have a small number of the darts that were recovered from the club. I’m having the drug analyzed as well.”
Wyman, who had hired Layla and her sisters to capture me, was still in our custody. He’d given the drug to Layla to knock me out so he could turn me over to his former employer—the CIA. Regardless, he’d learned about the drug from none other than Layla’s father. As far as Wyman knew, it was a highly concentrated human sedative that the Aberdeens had been testing when Layla’s father was killed. I was one hundred percent certain Layla didn’t know that tidbit. In fact, she’d given us the impression she had no clue what the drug could do.
But I wasn’t about to divulge that part to the shifters who were salivating to seek revenge on the Aberdeens. I couldn’t blame them. If the tables had been turned, I would have wanted the same. Still, we couldn’t allow shifters to take out humans.
I zeroed in on the conversation.
“You don’t think there’s wolfsbane in the drug?” Dane asked Doc. “That’s the only thing I can think of that would kill us. Can it do the same to your kind?”
“It hasn’t been known to,” Dr. Vieira responded. “But as a doctor, I won’t say it’s impossible. However, not one vampire died at the club that night. Your shifter was the only death.” Doc wiped his hands with a paper towel. “I might need more blood from you and your pack. Will that be a problem?”
“No,” Dane said. “Just let me know what you need.”
“Good. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I would like to pack up these samples for the lab,” Doc said.
Dane scrubbed a hand along his angular jaw. “I have one last question. Why didn’t Roman Brown react the same way as the other vampires in the club? From what he told us, the drug paralyzed him, but he was still awake.”
“It’s highly possible Roman has access to an antidote to counteract sedative-type drugs,” Doc replied. “We have one handy for that very reason, and the SEAL team is given a dose when entering into combat or potential situations with our enemies.”
The Council of Elders had interrogated Roman until they were blue in the face. According to my old man, who was an elder, Roman wasn’t talking. My father had taken the next step to read Roman’s mind, but the fucker was smart. He knew how to clear his head, so my father couldn’t get a damn thing from him—either that or Roman had a mind-blocking potion like ours. After all, he’d worked for a pharmaceutical company, so it wouldn’t have been a shocker for him to have access to drugs.
Doc glanced up at the six-foot-five alpha. “I’ll let Lieutenant Tripp know when I have concrete results on your blood samples.” He collected the tray of samples along with the box Dane had given him and headed in the direction of his office.
Silence descended before Tripp cleared his throat. “Dane, if you have a minute, I’d like to show you something. Follow me.” Tripp didn’t wait for the shifters to answer. He pivoted on his heel and stalked toward the patient rooms that banked one wall in the infirmary.
Dane and Ross exchanged a suspicious look but followed Tripp into Ben’s room.
Once the four of us surrounded Ben’s bed, Dane’s eyebrows pinched together. “You want to show us a patient?” It sounded as if he had never seen Ben before. Maybe I was wrong about him.
The heart monitor beeped as Ben’s chest rose and fell.
Tripp pulled back the blanket, exposing the bandage on Ben’s waist.
Dane’s Adam’s apple bobbed as nervous energy floated in the air.
A muscle jumped along Ross’s jaw.
Tripp lifted the taped gauze to expose Ben’s massive wound.
I fisted my hands at my side.
Dane pointed at Ben’s mangled waist. “What’s this? Are you trying to say we did this?” His tone bordered on a growl.
I glowered at the shifters. “Did you?”
Dane’s eyes flashed red as his canines clicked into place.
Tripp jutted out his chin, calm and reserved. “We’re only asking. Obviously, this is a shifter bite.”
“That could very well be from another animal, like a bear,” Ross said smugly.
Tension, thick and angry, dangled over Ben.
It was Tripp’s turn to show his fangs. “Do you think we’re idiots, beta? If it were a bear, I’m sure Ben wouldn’t be here. That’s a wolf bite. I should know. I’ve seen plenty of them. Wolf blood runs in my family.”
If they were surprised by that, they didn’t show it.
I didn’t detect any guilt or that they were hiding anything. Then again, they weren’t exactly human, which meant they knew how to hide their true emotions.
Dane flared his nostrils. “So, you’re accusing me or my pack of doing this to your man?”
“One of your pack members, Vera, had been Roman’s sidekick,” I said. “She wanted revenge for her sister’s death.”
Tripp’s eyes morphed from bronze to liquid black. “Let’s not forget, Dane, that you were taking orders from Roman that night. You were desperate to do his bidding because you owed him a favor.”
Dane’s claws, sharp and deadly, grew from his fingernails as his red eyes bore a hole into Tripp. “I ought to rip out your throat.”
“For what? Asking a question?” Fury fueled my elemental powers, causing Doc’s rolling metal table to fly across the room. “Seems to me, you’re guilty.”
Ross, who had been standing at the foot of the bed, stalked up to me. “I don’t like you.” His eyes morphed from hazel to shimmering blue.
I was beginning to learn that the alpha had red eyes. His beta’s were deep cerulean-blue, but Vera, if I remembered correctly, had amber eyes in wolf form. Interesting hierarchy of physical transformations. Then again, my family had different eye colors that aligned with how powerful we were.
Ross and I were nose to nose, chest to chest, and both of us were breathing fire. “Feeling’s mutual, beta.” I itched to do something other than stare at the jerk. “Who in your pack attacked Ben?”
A deep grumble shook the walls. In a flash, Ross was pushed aside, and Dane dug his claws into my neck. “Back the fuck down, vampire.”
I grinned as I gripped his balls. “I could crush your jewels in a flat second, so take your fucking paws off me.”
“Sam,” Tripp warned, “this isn’t the place.”
Pain etched Dane’s face as his canines dripped with venom.
I snarled, pushing Dane so hard he stumbled into the medical supply cabinet, almost breaking the glass doors.
He lunged at me, swiping his sharp claws down my face.
Motherfucker.
Ross and Tripp intervened.
Dane shrugged Ross off as his red eyes bored a hole in my forehead. “Touch me again, and I will rip out your throat.” Then he brushed his hands down his jean-clad legs, retracting his canines as well as his claws. “Keep your man in line, Lieutenant, or I’ll have to do it for you.”
It was Tripp’s turn to show a side of him not many saw as he spit fire at Dane, standing toe to toe and eye to eye with the alpha. “Let’s get something straight. I don’t take orders from you, and if you want our help with the drug, I suggest you answer our question. Did you or did you not tear out Ben’s flesh?”
Ross ran a hand over his bald head. “Just tell them, Dane. Then we can get the fuck out of here. These vampires are making me itch.”
It was useless even to acknowledge the brazen barb. “Karma’s a bitch, man. But you’re right. The faster you dogs leave, the better we’ll all be.”
Dane backed away from Tripp, sighing. “We have a new pup in our pack who couldn’t control himself. When your man escaped from Roman, we had one of ours chase him. Things escalated. The two got into a fight. Our man went down, and yours disappeared.”
Kraft had mentioned that he and Olivia had found a trail of blood in the snow that night.
I rubbed my throat. “He dies, I’m coming for you.” I pointed at Dane. Fuck his beta. I wanted to take down the big bad alpha.
Dane arched a thick dark brow, which was in stark contrast to his white hair. “You can try, vampire. But you’ll fail.”
Tripp pinned me with daggers, no doubt daring me to engage.
I bit my tongue for the time being and stalked out. I needed to release some fury, and short of getting laid, I had something else in mind.