11:10 A.M.
With my deadline looming to meet the gremlin, I got an update on the fire about fifteen minutes later via a phone call from Marcus. Tybalt was driving, and doing an impressive job in rush hour traffic with his prosthetic hand. I put the phone on speaker so I didn’t have to repeat the conversation.
“House was one block up, two over from that old lady you talked to earlier,” Marcus reported. The faint sounds of raised voices and sirens still hummed over the line. “The fire was going so hot and hard, it nearly took out a neighbor’s house. All the fire department can do is control its burn.”
“Do we have any information on who owns it?” I asked.
“Yes, and it wasn’t on your list. You’ll never guess, so I won’t even ask you to try.”
Thank God for small favors. I wasn’t in the mood for guessing games; I doubted anyone else was, either.
“Winston Zeigler,” he said.
The name seemed familiar, yet I couldn’t place it. Paul saved me from looking like an idiot by asking, “Who’s that?”
“Former head of the biology department at the university.”
Of course he was. “Don’t tell me,” I said. “He was there at the same time as Thackery.”
“Bingo.”
“How the hell did Reilly miss that connection?”
“He didn’t. Zeigler’s name wasn’t on the deed. It was his late wife’s family home and under her maiden name, so unless Reilly dug extra deep on all the homes, he wouldn’t have found it.”
Good. It saved me having to rip him a new one for the oversight. “How’d you find it?”
Marcus made a huffing sound that might have been laughter. “Reilly’s a PI, but he’s only been in the city a few months. My sources are still better.”
“So Winston Zeigler is our only lead?” Tybalt asked.
“At the moment, yes, but it isn’t a great one.”
“How’s that?”
“Astrid already called the university. Mr. Zeigler quit his position—”
“Three and a half years ago?” I said.
“Yes. He was diagnosed with a rare kind of cancer, and even with treatment he was given just a few years to live. He told colleagues he inherited a bit of money from a recently deceased relative”—
“I just bet.”
—“and wanted to travel the world before he died.”
“So Zeigler is living out his last days on a cruise ship somewhere, while an old pal uses his house to raise werewolves.”
“It seems so.”
“Which means Zeigler is a dead end?”
“Not entirely. Someone was likely put in charge of maintaining the home while Zeigler’s out of the country. Astrid and I are going to pay a visit to the family lawyer and see what they have to say.”
It was something—way better than the big fat nothing we’d had just a few minutes ago. “Hey,” I said, “any news on Autumn and Sandburg?”
The pause made my heart sink. “Sandburg will be fine. Autumn’s hanging on. Dr. Vansis has done all he can.”
“They’re not infected?”
“By the Lupa? No. Their bite has never been known to affect other Therians.”
I expelled a deep breath, glad for that bit of clarification. “Okay, thanks.”
We arrived at the old factory site a few minutes later. Police tape hung in tattered shreds across the main parking lot. The rubble was mostly gone. Only a blackened steel skeleton remained. Tybalt parked a few yards from the side entrance and idled there. He glanced at me, one eyebrow arched high.
I mirrored his expression, remembering the last time we’d both been at this particular location and the explosion that had decimated the structure.
“Okay,” Paul said from the back, “what did I miss?”
“Nothing,” we said in stereo.
“Wait here,” I added.
The air reeked of char and oil. I navigated an archipelago of water-filled potholes, reasonably sure I wasn’t being watched. Hunters often gain an overdeveloped sense of paranoia, and mine was quiet. Thackery had been one step ahead of us all night long. Maybe luck was on our side this time.
Reasonably sure that the two steel pillars I stood near had once been the side entrance, I turned in a slow circle. The lot was quiet, with no immediate sign of the gremlin that I was here to meet.
So I was mildly startled when it emerged from the other side of a support beam clutching some folded paper in its hand. It crawled on all fours, body slunk low to the ground. Gremlins didn’t much like daylight, and it probably felt exposed coming out like this. I allowed it to approach me.
It dropped the folded paper at my feet, then inched backward until it found a shadow to melt into. I snatched the paper. Unfolded a drawing of a squiggly Y with a couple of dots here and there. No, not a Y … the rivers. Three red dots littered the area that was probably Mercy’s Lot. A single black dot was very, very close to our current position.
I turned the drawing around. “Explain?”
The gremlin pointed a gnarled, clawed finger at the paper. “Red. Many infected. Black. Animal men.”
“Animal men?” What the holy hell did—?
“Prisoners.”
My heart slammed against my chest. “Shape-shifters? Therians? There are Therian prisoners at the black dot?”
It took a moment to process my words. “Yes.”
“Are there infected at the black dot, too?”
“Yes.”
“It’s somewhere along the Black River, right? The docks?”
“Yes. Sit on water.”
Gremlins were completely literal creatures. I dug through my own vocabulary to figure out what it meant. “It floats? The place where the captured Therians are? It floats on the river?”
It blinked at me. I took that as a yes, which likely meant a boat. Some of the still active docks had cargo ships coming and going. A few rusted, abandoned ships were docked here and there, slowly becoming part of the waterfront’s permanent landscape—those were very likely locations to stash dozens of Halfies.
Wind in the walls. Token’s rough, garbled voice repeated the description of the place he’d been imprisoned. I hadn’t consciously thought of the missing goblin/human hybrid in weeks. He’d tried to kill me, then tried to help me, only to disappear with no reported sightings these last two months. If our initial plan had worked as expected, he might have led us to this location ages ago. If only.
“Thank you,” I said. “This is more than worth the price I paid for it.”
It nodded, then turned and slunk away. I gazed at the map, hand trembling slightly. It was the break we needed. My desperation to find the kidnapped Therians before any more were killed threatened to overtake my good sense. I wanted to charge down to the docks, procedure be damned, and start hurting things. And I’d succeed only in getting myself killed. Or kidnapped. Probably the latter, then the former.
Dammit.
I jogged back to the waiting car; Tybalt looked ready to climb out of his skin. As I slid back into the passenger seat, his expression switched from pensive to curious.
“Good news?” he asked.
“Great news.”
By the time Tybalt and I returned to the Watchtower twenty minutes later, two things had happened. Astrid called demanding a noon meeting in the War Room of all available squad leaders. My gremlin information got me an invite, but she didn’t offer any hint of what she’d learned from Zeigler’s lawyer. And I found out that the Assembly of Clan Elders was officially in their emergency session discussing what was to be done about Michael Jenner’s murder.
I handed the map over to Tybalt for delivery to Operations. Smarter people than me could go over the Black River waterfront and decide the best places to start looking for a target. The only thing I could think was to call the place where the Therians were being held, and Thackery’s possible headquarters. My curiosity as to the condition of Isleen and her fellow vampires took far second place to my need to see Wyatt, so I ignored the questions being thrown at me from various sources and beelined for the infirmary.
Dr. Vansis was in Wyatt’s room, making notes on a chart, his body blocking my immediate view. He glanced up, eyebrows arching in surprise. “Ms. Stone,” he said.
“Hi.” I also noted with rising annoyance that we were the only ones in the room. “Where’s Gina?”
“Restroom. She’ll be back shortly.”
I stepped around the bed, really taking in Wyatt’s appearance for the first time. His skin was blotchy with fever—deathly pale in some places, marred by spots of red and pink on his face and chest. He’d been intubated, and the various tubes and wires were awful reminders that Vansis had induced a coma to try to save him. He was so still. Even asleep, Wyatt had always seemed vibrant and alive. Now he looked much like he had three months ago, dead in my arms in the mountains north of the city.
“I’m doing what I can,” Vansis said, “but next to nothing is known about how the Lupa virus interacts with human physiology. No one has seen its effects in centuries.”
Wyatt’s hand was cool in mine. I held it tight between my palms, hoping to warm it just a little. “What do you know about rabies, Dr. Vansis?”
“It’s treatable, if caught early. However, this virus is acting more like rabies that has gone undetected and traveled to the brain. Once it reaches that stage, cranial inflammation begins, and it’s often fatal.”
Vansis turned, as if to leave, then paused in the doorway. “I know it’s little consolation now, Ms. Stone, but the Lupa are alive and well, and anything we learn from Mr. Truman’s illness may help us treat the next human they infect. If we’re lucky, his is the only life we’ll lose to them.”
His is the only life we’ll lose. Pragmatically, it was a nice thing to hear. In reality, the idea of losing him to the Lupa’s bite broke my heart into sharp, frozen pieces. I didn’t want to be pragmatic, or to look at the bigger picture. It was Wyatt, goddammit, and I wanted him alive.
Vansis left, and I perched on the narrow space between Wyatt’s arm and the edge of the bed. “Hey,” I said. “We’ve got good news. We might even have Aurora, Joseph, and Ava home by dinner. I want you there when we bring them home.” Wanted him there so badly that my chest ached with the need.
Or was that with unshed tears?
“I’m an idiot. Did you know that?” I could almost see him nodding at me, agreeing with a teasing smile. “Of course you do, but I’m going to share this little epiphany with you anyway. Most of my life, I thought love was just something people did in movies. That in real life, people hurt each other and left and you just picked up the pieces for the next person who came along to hurt you. I mean, let’s face it. My role models have sucked.
“I never wanted to fall in love. Not before I died, and not after, but I guess we don’t get to decide who we love. Whoever I am—this person I became the night you died and this body switch was made permanent—this person loves you. I love you. I haven’t said it much, but I like to think you believed me when I did.”
My throat closed; hot tears stung my eyes. “I didn’t want to love you, but I do anyway. And I think I finally grew up and realized a few things. I realized being in love doesn’t exempt you from hurting each other, but when you do, you don’t give up. You fix it. With Thackery … I was a coward, and I didn’t want you to see that side of me. I didn’t want to admit I’d been so weak. That I was weak with Felix. Pushing you away was easier than talking about it, and I’m so sorry for that.”
Warm wetness splashed my hand. I allowed the tears to fall, not caring anymore who saw me cry. “We flirt with death every single day. It’s always around the corner, Wyatt, waiting to take one of us away. And I can’t keep allowing death to control my life. Not anymore. Loving doesn’t make me weak, Wyatt, I know that now.”
Images of him, of Alex and Phin and Aurora and Ava, even of Jesse and Ash—they telegraphed through my memory, reminding me of people I cared about. Loved. Some I’d lost. Others I was still battling against all odds to protect.
“Loving makes me stronger.” I laughed, choked, and wiped my nose on my arm. “That sounds like a fucking greeting card, I know. But it gives me something more powerful to fight for than just honor and nameless, faceless innocents. There’s real power in loving someone, and I know it now.” I leaned down and pressed my forehead to his, aware of the heat of his skin, the machine that drew his breath, the monitor that ticked off the beats of his heart. “I just hope I didn’t learn it too late.”
I sat like that awhile, pretending he felt my presence and could feed off my strength. Sat until my back hurt and my neck ached, and I simply had to sit up again and stretch. He hadn’t moved; I hadn’t really expected him to.
“I have a meeting,” I said. “A meeting that will hopefully lead to a plan that includes reconnaissance, invasion, extraction, and lots of enemy decimation.”
“That was kind of poetic,” Milo said.
His voice startled me right off the bed. I barely had my balance back before snapping, “Make some noise or something next time.”
He leaned in the doorframe, hands in his pockets, wan and fairly simmering with untapped energy—rage, grief, frustration. He wanted to be out in the field, part of the solution, instead of left behind due to his recent gunshot wound.
“Everyone’s buzzing about your information and wondering where you got it,” he said.
I blinked. I hadn’t asked Tybalt, Astrid, or anyone else in Baylor’s squad to keep my informants a secret. They’d just done it. In the Triads, we’d often operated on a version of “don’t ask, don’t tell” when it came to acquiring information. The more people who knew about your informants, the less likely you were to get good info when you asked them. Nice to see that the policy was still alive and well.
“Doesn’t matter where as long as it’s accurate,” I said.
“I know, but the Therians aren’t used to working like that. I did float the idea that you probably got the info from the gremlins.”
“You what?”
He lifted one shoulder in a half shrug. “Shelby didn’t believe me. The Felia he was with thought it was a ridiculous idea, that the gremlins are nasty little creatures who don’t help anyone except themselves.”
I very nearly laughed. Apparently, humans weren’t the only ones with hidden prejudices against other races. Recalling Phin’s violent reaction to the odor of vats of gremlin urine, I imagined that Therians and gremlins didn’t mix it up very often.
“That is where you went, right?”
“Yeah,” I said. “With Tybalt, no less.”
“How was that?”
“Nostalgic.”
“Things have a funny habit of blowing up when you’re nearby.”
A sharp retort died on my tongue. He was right. Rufus’s first apartment, the potato chip factory, the half-Blood in the hospital parking garage, Felix … “They do, don’t they?” I said. “I’m sorry you had to see that happen to Felix.”
Milo frowned. “Felix died two—”
“I know, he died two weeks ago. But that doesn’t make seeing his shell explode any easier, right?” It certainly hadn’t made shooting Alex Forrester in the back of the head any easier for me. The Halfie I’d killed wore the face of a man I’d once cared about; the Halfie who’d blown up in our jail wore the face of a man Milo had once cared about. Loved.
“No, it doesn’t,” Milo said. “At least he’s at peace now.”
“You’re not.”
“No, I’m not. Not even close.” He clenched his jaw, seemed on the verge of adding to his statement. Then he swallowed hard. “I, ah, Gina asked me to stay here during the meeting.”
I didn’t know what time it was, but probably damned close to noon. “Thanks for sitting with him.”
“Nothing better to do.”
“Even so.”
He nodded. A heavy weariness settled over him and he seemed the oldest twenty-year-old I’d ever met. I gave Wyatt’s hand another strong squeeze, and then left.
The War Room was packed with more than just squad leaders—every human ex-Handler, a handful of ex-Hunters, and quite a few of the higher-ranked Therian squad members were there, alongside their squad leaders. The only noticeable absences were the vampires stuck in quarantine.
An unexpected face stood out from a cluster of ex-Handlers near the far wall, and not just because he was sitting while the others were standing. Rufus St. James had been invited more than once to join us as part of the Operations staff. His experience as a Handler was invaluable, and he had a terrific tactical mind. His old Triad had rivaled my own in effectiveness, until they were all killed and he was shot by Halfies, effectively crippling him.
I guess an epic crisis really does bring people together, because Rufus was in Operations, chatting quietly with Nevada, Sharpe, and Tybalt.
He watched my approach with a steady gaze, studying the telltale signs of my minor breakdown. “How is he?” he asked.
“Dying,” I said, in no mood to sugarcoat what my mind told me to be true. Unless Thackery had a cure hiding up his sleeve. I just had to find the bastard first.
Rufus gave a slow nod and blink. “With everything happening, I thought I might be of some use here.”
“We’ve been saying that for weeks, buddy,” Nevada said.
“All right, people,” Astrid said, voice booming around the crowded room, “let’s do this.” She stood near the head of the long conference table, whiteboards behind her covered in scrawled writing. A laptop was open, and a projector light shone against the only clear section of the board. Baylor and Phineas flanked her on either side, with Gina and Marcus nearby. Heads turned and all other conversation in the room ceased.
Astrid looked as agitated as I’d ever seen her. Her long black hair was in a hasty, messy braid, her clothes were wrinkled and dirty, and a soot streak still lingered on her neck. The shadow of her true self seemed to pace just beneath the surface, tail twitching, eager to hunt and punish.
“I doubt anyone hasn’t heard the news by now,” she continued, “but just in case you’ve had your head in the sand these last twelve hours, here’s a recap. First, a half-Blood was captured tonight, brought back for questioning, and a few hours ago he blew up from the inside out. The purpose of this was to infect our vampire comrades with an unknown agent that is negatively affecting a good percentage of them, so they are all in quarantine until further notice.
“Second, seven Therians were kidnapped from their homes, and it is confirmed that the wanted human Walter Thackery and several Lupa are involved. At least three more Lupa are currently at large in the city, and it’s possible there are more.” She paused, wetting her lips. “We have a working theory on how they’ve remained concealed from us for so long.”
They did find something out from the lawyer, and it wasn’t good. That much was evident in Astrid’s expression, and in the way Marcus stood a little straighter.
“Third,” she said, “is the threat these Lupa present to humans. No other Therian’s bite has proved harmful to humans in the past, but the Lupa is the exception, and its bite is still harmful now. One of ours is fighting for his life against this Lupa virus, so my warning to the humans here is this: do not let them bite you. As of now, there is no cure.
“Fourth, we know where to start looking for Thackery, the missing Therians, and all the half-Bloods we’ve been hunting these last two weeks.”
A murmur ran through the room. Apparently, this tidbit hadn’t yet made the rounds.
Baylor stepped forward, and attention shifted to him. “Reliable intel places our target along the Black River waterfront, roughly between West Chestnut Street and Cottage Place.” He touched the laptop’s keyboard, and a satellite image of that section of the river appeared. “Our research has narrowed that field down to three possible locations. First is the old Waylander Shipping Company building.”
He clicked again, and a photo of that particular site blinked onto the wall. It was a four-story white-walled cement block building, at least a hundred yards long and no telling how wide. It butted right up to the river, its visible wall dropping straight to the water below. A few remnants of the old pier remained. I mentally checked it off my list. Too stable; none of the rocking motion that Token had mentioned.
“Waylander’s size and location make it our most likely target,” Baylor continued. “It has a large parking lot around it, and no neighboring buildings currently in use. Second possibility, just north of Waylander’s, is Snyder’s Marina.” I perked up as he switched images. I knew that area, had hunted there a few times my first year in the Triads.
The Marina had been carved out of a natural curve in the river. It had eight piers, six slips each, and a boat-house anchoring it onshore. According to people who knew and cared about local history, it had been a busy place for locals who wanted to go out on the river to fish or simply putter around in their shiny new boats. Until about forty years ago, when pollution kept fish away from this length of the Black River and the Marina closed.
The current satellite image showed a boat boneyard—speedboats, small yachts, some pontoon boats, even a few fishing boats. Nothing seemed singularly large enough to house dozens of Halfies and a couple of kidnapped Therians.
“South of Waylander’s is the third possible target, the old Black River Ferry port.”
As soon as the photo appeared, a mental lightbulb went off in my mind. Until the Wharton Street Bridge was completed some sixty-odd years ago, the only way to cross the Black River from the north was via the ferry system. Three boats were in operation at its peak—two passenger and one freight. Each boat had three levels, excluding the upper deck and lower engine deck. The pier-level deck on the passenger boats held up to forty vehicles and up to five hundred foot passengers, all interior except for the aft and stern balconies. The freight ferry ran for about a decade after the passenger lines shut down, but now all three boats were permanently anchored at the old port. Someone tried briefly to turn the port into a museum, but the project quickly fizzled. One boat had been refurbished into a seafood restaurant for a couple of years, but nothing ever stuck because it was in the middle of a mostly abandoned industrial portion of the city that just didn’t draw the traffic needed to sustain any real business.
It was absolutely perfect.
“Daytime isn’t ideal for recon, but we’re on a bit of a time crunch,” Astrid said. “We’ll get as close as we can with surveillance equipment on land, but meanwhile I have some volunteers from the Pinnia Clan reconning by river.”
I glanced around the room, and sure enough most of the human faces wore the same question mark mine had to display. Baylor coughed softly.
Astrid puckered her lips, not thrilled with letting another bit of information slip out. “Their true forms are seals. They should be able to move undetected.”
Were-seals. Okeydokey. One more of the fourteen Clans whose name I finally knew. For as much as the Assembly preached cooperation, they still liked to keep some things to themselves.
“I want four teams prepped and ready to go in thirty minutes,” she continued. “Three are tactical advance teams, one outfitted and briefed for each specific target. The fourth team is backup for whoever strikes gold. Marcus will remain and run Operations here. Myself, Phineas, and Baylor will lead the three advance teams. Kismet will lead the backup team.
“Volunteers?”
Except for Rufus, everyone in the room had a hand up. A small niggle of pride warmed my chest to see humans and Therians coming together over this crisis—not something I ever expected to see just a few weeks ago.
Astrid’s mouth twitched. “Good. I’ll have team assignments in five minutes.”
I met Phin’s gaze from across the room, those bright blue eyes staring holes in my head. He mouthed the word “ferry.”
I nodded.
Time to get his family back.
The crowd broke up, most of them wandering out of Operations to wait in the hall. I cornered Baylor after the majority of them had left. “What did you get from the family lawyer?” I asked.
His intense frown soured even more. “Nothing Astrid wanted to share with everyone quite yet.”
“My lips are sealed.”
“Zeigler’s estate was managed by Johnson and Crown, one of the oldest established law firms in the city. Only two partners, but they handle a lot of the wealthiest families, and their associates are hand-picked, usually with connections. Including the junior associate assigned upkeep on Zeigler’s house, who went over once a week to water the houseplants, monitor lawn care, and collect the mail. And apparently knew that seven teenage werewolves were living there, because that would be damned hard to miss.”
Wow. “Who is this guy?”
“Her name is Edwina Fair.”
“Seriously?” It was the most ridiculous name I’d ever heard. Okay, maybe not ever, but it definitely ranked.
“Yeah.”
It wasn’t the reason why Baylor looked like he’d just sucked on a lemon, though. “And?”
He glanced at the few people lingering in the room, then plucked a folder off the conference table. Took out a glossy photo. “Meet Edwina Fair.” Handed it to me.
The first thing I saw was the sparkling blue eyes. Past the eyes, thick spirals of sunset red hair. A beautiful, toothy smile. A chill danced down my spine; gooseflesh crawled across the backs of my legs and shoulders. I knew this woman. I’d spoken to her several times, always in the guise of another.
Edwina Fair was the human avatar of Amalie, Queen of the sprites and leader of the Fey Council. She’d given refuge to me and Wyatt once. She’d opened her home to us, told us secrets about First Break and the doorway her people protected. She helped create the Triads ten years ago. She gave werewolves to Walter Thackery.
She was once our ally, and now we had indisputable proof that she’d been working against us the whole fucking time.
Our team was ready to go in twenty minutes. Destination: Black River Ferry port. Phineas, myself, Tybalt, Kyle, Shelby, and Paul Ryan on the assault team. I wasn’t sure how I felt about working with Paul again, but he’d been an asset earlier in the day when we found Jenner’s body. He was, despite my best efforts, growing on me. I tried to get Jackson into our group so he’d be there to fight for his mate, but Astrid overruled the request. I guess she didn’t want everyone who was personally involved on the same team.
I’d been hunting at the ferry port twice in my career, Tybalt three times. All had been tips about goblin activity, rather than Halfies, and it occurred to me on the drive to the river that overall goblin activity had been negligible lately. We’d seen very little from them since the battle at Olsmill almost three months ago. I didn’t want to look a gift horse in the mouth, but it worried me a little. Goblins were not subtle creatures.
Each of us humans was loaded down with more weapons than I was used to carrying into a single fight. Two guns each, one primary and one backup. Four clips of bullets: two regular and two of a new variety tipped with an infusion of garlic and onion oil. The latter wouldn’t bother the Lupa much, but they’d be painful as hell on the Halfies—like shooting them up with poison. Our access to anticoagulant rounds was diminished after the destruction of the lab at Boot Camp. The oil-tips were our first collaboration with the vampires on an effective weapon against their kind.
The fact that Isleen suggested the bullet never failed to astonish me all over again.
We also had a variety of other weapons, depending on our comfort levels. Tybalt had a scary blade attachment on his prosthetic hand. I had three serrated hunting knives strapped to various parts of my body, as well as a pair of silver chopsticks in my ponytail. Paul favored brass knuckles and an aluminum baseball bat. He had apparently developed a fondness for whacking his victims with solid objects.
Kyle and Shelby had only a single gun each, which they’d likely pass off to one of us when they shifted into their true forms. I’d never seen Shelby shift, and knowing he was a polar bear made me a little eager to witness the Halfies’ reactions when they first saw him.
Phin, of course, had his Coni blade loosely belted to his waist.
We had a handful of photos to study, as well as Historical Society literature that came with a handy map of the port. The Terminal Station has a chain-link fence built around it to prevent vandalism (in theory), but no security measures were in place around the weed-strewn parking lot. A single cement and steel dock jutted out from shore, directly in front of the Terminal Station, its aluminum roof with the same faded blue paint as the ferries themselves. All three were anchored in a row—one south of the dock, and two north.
Astrid’s orders to all assault teams were to get into position no closer than one block from our target, create a tentative plan of attack, and then wait. As soon as Marcus got word from the Pinnia scouts, he’d pass along anything of relevance and we’d go from there. Thackery could be at only one of the three potential targets, and we needed to be ready to move on all of them. Even though I’d wager my handy healing powers on him being at the ferry terminal.
Kyle was driving our SUV through the city. Paul rode shotgun, and Phin and I took over the middle two seats, with Tybalt and Shelby in the rear. Mercy’s Lot gave way to the industrial section that lined the east bank of the Black River. Cheap apartment buildings gave way to businesses and storage facilities. A block from our destination, Kyle found an alley between two crumbling brick structures, one of which had once been a fire company station, and parked.
“The ferries are almost completely enclosed except for the lower car deck,” I said. “Seal the windows on the upper levels and he’d have a lot of space to work with.”
“Agreed,” Phin said.
“Could he be on more than one ferry?” Tybalt asked.
“Unless he found a way to travel between them underwater, I’m doubtful. The Terminal is abandoned, but still within sight of a street and intersection.”
“What about this sheltered area?” I said, pointing at the covered pier between the ferry on the south and the two on the north. “If he’s in the boats on either side, he could use that awning as cover to move between them. Plus they have the most direct access to land.”
Phin nodded. “So they are our most likely targets.”
Paul shifted around in the front passenger seat. “You two are really convinced that Thackery’s got the Halfies here, aren’t you?”
“Yes,” Phin and I said in stereo.
“This isn’t you letting personal bullshit affect your judgment?”
Phin deferred that one to me, and I just shrugged one shoulder. “Maybe, but I learned a long time ago to trust my instincts on stuff like this.”
“Baylor thinks they’re at Waylander.”
“And it could be, if one of Thackery’s little science projects hadn’t told me he felt movement like water where he was held,” I said.
Paul frowned. “You didn’t share that?”
“Then we wouldn’t have been the first ones here.”
He opened his mouth as if about to object, then snapped it shut. His lips twitched into a half smile. “So if they’re on two boats, how do we go in?”
I glanced at Phin, sure that he was thinking the same thing as I was—we both wanted to hit the boat with the Therians first. As soon as Thackery realized he was being breached, he was likely to kill them all. The man had taken a nosedive off the crazy board weeks ago, and I wouldn’t put anything past him now.
“I can get onboard in my true form,” Phin said. “I’m small enough. Once I know which boat is holding my people, we’ll be better able to formulate a plan.”
“Thackery’s going to have scouts watching land and air,” I said. “And he’ll make sure they know what an osprey looks like.”
He gave me a slow, deliberate blink, then reached over the backseat for a duffel bag. Rummaged around inside until he produced a can of black spray paint. “They may not notice me if I don’t look like an osprey.”
Tybalt chuckled. “That’s fucking genius.”
“Spray paint?” I took the can from Phin like I’d never seen one before. “You want me to spray-paint you?”
“Yes,” Phin said.
“Black?”
“Yes.”
“Okeydokey.” A bizarre thought occurred to me. “If I spray-paint your feathers, will you still be painted when you shift back?”
He started to answer, then paused with his mouth open. Blinked. “I have no idea. But if it gets me onboard, I don’t care.”
“Good enough.”
“So we aren’t waiting for information from the Pinnia?” Tybalt asked.
“Why bother?” Kyle said, adding to the conversation for the first time. His lover was out there somewhere; I couldn’t imagine what was going through his mind as he turned his intense gaze on Phin. “I trust your instincts.”
“I’m in,” Paul said.
“Okay, then,” I said. “Phin gets onboard, figures out where to find the Therians, comes back to tell us, and we go from there.”
“If we confirm this target before Astrid hears from the Pinnia scouts,” Phin said, “we’ll inform the other teams before we move in.”
“Right.” We’d need all the muscle we could get, depending on—“And try to get a rough estimate of how many Halfies we’re looking at.”
“Of course.”
“Then let’s do this.”