
“They’ve returned to find me,” he said.
“Your pack?” I said, hoping that his kin had returned to retrieve him.
“No.” His face was bleak. “The Sharp Claws.”
“Call your people. Get them here.”
“They left me for a reason.” He looked humiliated. “I didn’t want to talk about it. But you’ve been so kind.”
I was not liking this more and more. “And that reason would be?”
“I was payment for an offense.”
“Explain in twenty words or less.”
He stared down at the floor, and I realized he was counting in his head. This guy was one of a kind. “Packleader’s sister wanted me, I didn’t want her, she said I’d insulted her, my torture was the price.”
“Why would your packleader agree to any such thing?”
“Am I still supposed to number my words?”
I shook my head. He’d sounded dead serious. Maybe he just had a really deep sense of humor.
“I’m not my packleader’s favorite person, and he was willing to believe I was guilty. He himself wants the sister of the Sharp Claw packmaster, and it would be a good match from the point of view of our packs. So, I was hung out to dry.”
I could sure believe the packmaster’s sister had lusted after him. The rest of the story was not outrageous, if you’ve had many dealings with the Weres. Sure, they’re all human and reasonable on the outside, but when they’re in their Were mode, they’re different.
“So, they’re here to get you and keep on beating you up?”
He nodded somberly. I didn’t have the heart to tell him to rewind the towel. I took a deep breath, looked away, and decided I’d better go get the shotgun.
Howls were echoing, one after another, through the night by the time I fetched the shotgun from the closet in the living room. The Sharp Claws had tracked Preston to my house, clearly. There was no way I could hide him and say that he’d gone. Or was there? If they didn’t come in . . .
