Hunter's Trail
Page 90“What do the Luparii do?”
“Kill werewolves,” Jesse said promptly.
She sat up, swinging her legs to the floor and leaning forward. Despite wincing a tiny bit at the movement, Scarlett plowed on. “Ana’s upset about Lydia. So she comes after me, for the cure. And maybe she goes after Will, for not protecting her girlfriend from Eli in the first place. She’s not strong enough to kill him herself, and her pal Terrence is too crazy to do it. So she gets the Luparii to send a scout here who can take care of Will. But the scout doesn’t appreciate being used as someone else’s tool, so he kills Terrence and his henchman.”
Jesse considered Scarlett’s explanation. It made sense. It would have been much easier for Anastasia to just shoot Will with a silver bullet, but even that might not necessarily kill him unless the circumstances were perfect. And then Ana would have had to face the rest of the pack for killing their alpha.
Instead, Ana had managed to arrange for someone else to do all her dirty work, without even paying them. It wasn’t a bad plan, except for the part where the Luparii aren’t anybody’s puppet. “Why go after Will, though?” he asked Scarlett. “Why not go after Eli?”
“For one thing, she couldn’t find him,” she pointed out. “But more importantly, everything that happens in a wolf pack is the alpha’s fault, good or bad. To Ana, part of Will’s job was to keep Eli and Caroline from attacking humans. He failed at that.”
“So she and Terrence found a bigger, badder asshole to go after Will,” Jesse said slowly, shaking his head a little in amazement. “If it’s true, I don’t think Terrence even knew the whole plan. I could see him calling the Luparii, but when I suggested he made the nova, he flipped out on me. I don’t think it was faked.”
“Ana used him,” Scarlett said simply. “I don’t know how much of it was always the plan, or how much of it was her taking advantage of a moment, but Lydia’s change was ripping her apart. It was destroying their relationship. Add that kind of stress to the regular tension and discomfort that the werewolves have to deal with every day . . .” She shrugged helplessly, looking a little sad. “It’s kind of tragic. Ana and Terrence were both miserable, but they were too weak to get what they wanted. They found someone stronger to do it for them, but then they were too weak to survive the help.”
“Jesse,” Scarlett broke in, fear in her voice. “If we’re right, then the Luparii scout knows who Will is. And tonight’s the full moon. There’s no guarantee that he’ll go after the nova when he could go after the pack.”
That chilled him. “Remember, if we can take away the bargest, the Luparii isn’t going after anybody, not today,” he said to Scarlett. She nodded resolutely, and he went on, “But how do we find the scout?”
“You’re asking me?” Scarlett asked, wide-eyed.
“Shh. I’m thinking aloud.”
“Oh.”
Jesse snapped his fingers. “Phone records.” He pulled his phone out of his pocket again and began scrolling numbers.
“Who are you calling?” Scarlett asked.
“Unless they set up their meeting before the guy left France,” Scarlett pointed out.
“Shh. Be hopeful,” Jesse told her. She gave him a tiny smile, and motioned that she was going to the downstairs bathroom. He nodded and she hobbled away.
After five rings, Glory finally answered her phone. “Sherman.”
“Glory, it’s me. Has Bine identified the two bodies yet?” he asked. No point in tiptoeing around it.
“Well, hello to you too. Yes, they got the IDs in this morning. Terrence Whittaker and Drew Riddell. But you already knew that,” Glory said angrily.
Jesse blinked. “You know why I couldn’t tell her,” he said, and then winced at his own voice. He sounded just like Scarlett when she talked to him.
“Yeah, but you left Runa and me holding the bag. Bine really tore into us.”
Glory sighed into the phone, a heavy static sound. “I don’t know; Runa made something up.”
“Good, good,” Jesse said distractedly. “Listen, I need to get Terrence Whittaker’s phone records. Just for the last week.”
There was a long, pregnant silence. “I can’t just drop everything to chase some hunch for you, Jesse,” Glory said. “I have my own work to do.”
Jesse pressed on. “I know, Glory, but it’s important. I need to know if he called a number in France, and any calls he made here in the city.”
There was a pause. “Is this coming from you or Dashiell?” she asked icily.
He swallowed. Dashiell was using Glory’s kids as leverage. Jesse would never do that . . . but at the same time, there was too much at stake to dick around with a distinction that didn’t really matter. He was working for Dashiell now, after all. “Both, I guess.”
“Then I’ll see what I can do,” Glory said shortly, and hung up the phone. Jesse stared at it, feeling about two inches tall. He already regretted lumping himself in with Dashiell. He hoped she wasn’t thinking that he was on Dashiell’s side now instead of hers.