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Chapter 1 - Georgia
I knocked on the door
uneasily.
“Enter,” the commanding
voice behind the door said. I took a deep breath and turned the knob.
“You wanted to see me, Uncle Callum?” I asked.
Uncle Callum was a big man. Even
sitting behind his desk, he seemed to take up half the room. His muscles
rippled beneath his shirt, and every step he took screamed “power.” His
brown hair was graying, and his face
was wrinkled, but his dark eyes were as
sharp and intelligent as ever. He
regarded me with a cool indifference
that I pretended didn’t make my hair
stand on end. Something about the situation spelled “danger,” but I wasn’t sure why.
“How are you doing, Georgia?”
he asked. It was perfunctory. I knew
he didn’t really care.
“I’m fine,” I said. “And
yourself?”
“Not good.” He stood up and stalked over to the window, looking
out at the town square below, where
people ambled about, enjoying the warmth of early summer. But his next words drew my attention back to him. “I’ve gotten word that there’s a group of ferals nearby.
A large one.”
My stomach clenched. Ferals were dangerous shifters who were wild and erratic, unable to even shift back
into human forms. They were usually loners and easy to take out. But when a
pack got together, they were
dangerous and would destroy everything that got in their way, including an entire village.
But confusion pierced through the cloud of horror even as I
absorbed the information he had just given me.
“That’s terrible,” I
said slowly. “But…I’m sorry…why are you telling me this? I’m not exactly…” I trailed off. But I
didn’t
need to finish the sentence. Uncle Callum already knew what I’d been about to
say.
“No,” he said. “You’re not important. You’re about as low in the hierarchy as
you can get, save maybe your child.” He sniffed
derisively. “Normally, I wouldn’t tell you anything. I’d tell your father out of courtesy and
loyalty to blood, but that’s it.”
I shifted uncomfortably, looking down at the wooden floorboards.
He was only telling the truth, but the blunt nature of his statements still
stung, and the jab at Elle made me bristle.
The more I thought about it, the angrier I got. But I swallowed the temptation
to snap back at him, knowing it would only get
me in trouble, and I didn’t want to give him the satisfaction of
knowing he had gotten to me. Besides, there were more important things to deal
with at the moment. I looked back up at him.
“Then why are you
telling me?” I asked.
He came up to me, towering a good foot over my head. “There’s
a small pack that moved into the
mansion by the lake, up in the hills. Do you know the place?”
I nodded. I’d gone
swimming there before and had always
admired the grand house standing above the lake, with a path from the back leading down the slope to the water’s
edge. I still had no idea where this
was going, though. “I think I heard
something about a pack moving in. What about them?”
“Their alpha introduced
himself when they moved to the area,” he said. “I was able to size him up: young, strong, dangerous-looking, and he seemed the type of man
who could keep his wits about him. He said they didn’t want to cause trouble or
friction and would keep out of our way.”
“So?”
“So that is no longer an
option,” Uncle Callum said. “If we’re to kill the ferals before they get to us,
we’re going to need their help.”
“I still don’t
underst—”
“Are you really this
dense?” he snapped. I flinched backward. “You
know who the alpha is, don’t you?”
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