6
THE ALLEY BEHIND CREATURE COMFORTS, A MONSTER BAR
in the New Combat Zone, is narrow and dark, piled high with trash
and reeking with the scents of urine and vomit. Not the kind of
place where you want to hang out at one o’clock in the
morning.
Lucky for us. I was planning to hide Juliet here
until I could talk to Axel, the bar’s owner, about giving her
refuge. The scarier and more deserted the alley, the better.
After we’d slipped out of the Goon Squad building,
I headed straight for this alley, hugging the buildings and staying
in the shadows. I was pretty sure no one had seen us. Now, I looked
up and down the deserted alley. Certainly no one had followed
us.
I set Juliet down gently, but her leg buckled and
she collapsed on the sidewalk. She lay on her side, her face hidden
by the robe’s hood.
I checked her injured leg, unwinding the
blood-and-pussoaked bandage. The silver burn looked better—the
blisters were gone, and taut, shiny skin covered the burned-raw
places—but the gash looked worse than it had before. The stench of
it made me gag, though I tried not to let Juliet see. The skin at
the edges of the cut, a sickly shade of purplishgreen, was ragged,
like something had been eating at the wound. This wasn’t right.
Juliet should be healing. Had the Old One’s blade been poisoned?
What could poison a vampire?
Juliet struggled to sit up. I slid my hands beneath
her arms and lifted her to a seated position. The hood fell back as
she rested her head against the brick wall. Sweat plastered her
tangled hair to her face. I wouldn’t have guessed vampires could
sweat—but when they did, it obviously wasn’t good.
“Juliet, I’m going to go inside and ask Axel if
he’ll let you stay here.” Creature Comforts was her best hope for a
hiding place. The New Combat Zone was like Boston’s version of the
Wild West. Although the Goon Squad patrolled here, the Zone
operated by its own rules. And nobody messed with Axel, the owner
of Creature Comforts. Or if they tried to mess with him, they never
tried a second time. Axel wasn’t human—seven feet tall and solidly
built, he looked more like a mountain than a man. Nobody knew what
he was. There was a story that when government workers came to get
a blood sample to analyze his DNA and determine his
species—something everyone was subjected to in the months after the
plague that had created Boston’s zombies—one scowl from Axel’s
shaggy brow had sent the workers scurrying away, their vials
empty.
Juliet needed protection, and I couldn’t think of
anyone better than Axel to give it.
Juliet was shaking her head. “Axel lets no one into
his lair.”
True. I’d seen him win a standoff with the Goon
Squad when they’d threatened to break down his door. Yet that was
precisely why Creature Comforts was the safest place in Boston for
Juliet right now.
“Let me talk to him. He likes you.” At the very
least, he’d set up a cot for her in the storage room until I could
come up with a plan B. I tried the back door, the one that led into
Creature Comforts’ storage room. Damn. It was locked. Well, I’d
look at that as more evidence of Axel’s first-rate security.
“I’m going to hide you behind some boxes here,” I
said. “Just for a few minutes, while I go talk to Axel.” I couldn’t
risk carrying Juliet through the bar. Business throughout the Zone
had been slow lately, with the code-red restrictions on zombies and
fears of the Reaper keeping norms home at night, but once the story
of her escape hit the news, even one witness could threaten
Juliet’s safety.
Juliet’s face clenched with pain, and she didn’t
say anything else. I assumed she was okay with my plan.
But I wasn’t—not quite. A pile of boxes wasn’t
exactly armor, and I couldn’t leave her alone and vulnerable with
the Old Ones after her. We hadn’t been followed, but I couldn’t be
sure she was safe. For all I knew, her enemies could track her by
smell.
I thought about leaving her Brown Robe’s sword but
decided against it. If the Old Ones arrived, it’d be too easy for
one of them to use it against her.
I unwrapped the silver chain from my waist. The Old
Ones wouldn’t get within lashing distance of it. As long as it
didn’t come into direct contact with Juliet’s skin, she could use
it to fend off Brown Robe. Unless he arrived with an army.
The robe’s sleeves were too long for Juliet’s arms.
I knotted the right sleeve at its opening so it couldn’t slip up
her arm and expose her skin. Then, feeling through the cloth, I
closed her fingers around the chain’s shackle end. “If that Old One
comes, whip the chain at him. Show me you can do it.”
“If an Old One comes, you’ll never see me again.”
But she flailed the chain a few times. There was more strength and
energy in her movements than I’d expected. Good. And I’d get her
out of here in a couple of minutes.
Working quickly, I surrounded Juliet with a stack
of empty boxes. I checked from several angles, rearranged some
boxes, added a few more. Then I hurried to the end of the alley and
down the street to Creature Comforts.

AS SOON AS I OPENED THE FRONT DOOR, ANY HOPE THAT
Axel was having a slow night fled. Laughter and music blasted out.
Creature Comforts was packed with women, dressed for a night of
partying. They filled all the tables and spilled out of the booths.
As I stepped inside, I was hit by the bar’s characteristic perfume
of beer, tobacco, and a slight whiff of human blood—shot through
tonight with a strong scent of musk. On tables at the back, two
half-naked, human male dancers performed an athletic bump-and-grind
routine.
Oh, great. I’d walked into a werewolf bachelorette
party.
Massachusetts was one of a handful of states that
recognized marriages between paranormals. Other states had passed
laws restricting marriage to humans only. Although some norms in
“Monsterchusetts” objected to paranormal marriage, no one seemed to
mind the money it brought the state. It had become fashionable
among werewolves to have a norm-style wedding in addition to
whatever ritual they performed at the full moon. In Boston, a whole
industry had sprung up offering destination weddings to
werewolves.
I scanned the crowd but didn’t see a face I
recognized. I knew most of Deadtown’s werewolves through Kane.
These were definitely tourists.
“Hey!” A woman pointed at me. She wore a tight,
supershort, low-cut black dress and a crooked tiara sparkling with
pink and white rhinestones. She flipped her glossy blond hair over
her shoulder, managing to make the gesture an act of aggression.
“This is a private party. The bar’s closed.”
Damn territorial werewolves. When they traveled in
a pack, even out-of-towners acted like they owned the place.
I ignored her and walked toward the bar.
She was in front of me before I got halfway across
the room. Her nostrils flared as she sized me up in a few sniffs.
She bared her teeth—not a very impressive gesture in her human
form—and growled. “I said it’s a private party.”
“Do I look like I’m here to crash your party?” I
gestured at my ruined dress.
She didn’t look at my outfit. She stared at the
sword in my hand, the one I’d taken from the Old Ones.
Oh, that. Well, yeah, I could see how that might be
interpreted as a threat.
I didn’t have a sheath for it, so I stuck it under
my arm, where I hoped it seemed less dangerous. I stepped to the
left, intent on getting around her. “I need to talk to Axel.”
She growled again and dropped into a fighting
crouch. Jesus, the full moon was still three weeks away and she was
going into feral overdrive.
“You want to challenge me? Fine.” I dropped my
purse on the floor and shifted the sword to my right hand, ready to
use it. I wouldn’t have minded two blades in a fight with a
werewolf, but I wanted to teach her some manners, not kill her.
Besides, it’s bad form to rummage through your purse for a dagger
at the start of a fight.
We circled each other. Someone cut the music. All I
could hear was my heart thumping in my ears and the raspy breathing
of my opponent—until Axel stomped over and got between us.
Axel isn’t a guy you can easily ignore. Especially
when he’s wearing his pissed-off expression.
“No fighting.” The werewolf tried to dodge around
him, but his massive arm blocked her. “You fight, you’re out. No
refunds.”
She pushed against his arm with both hands,
snarling at me. Axel turned fully toward her, clamping his hands on
her shoulders. A low, threatening sound issued from his throat. All
at once, the werewolf relaxed. She dropped her arms, looked at the
ground, and backed away.
Axel’s not a werewolf, and he may not say much, but
no one can beat him in a display of dominance.
The room remained silent for a few seconds. Then
someone called out, “A toast to Kiana!” Other voices joined in: “To
Kiana!” “To Kiana!” “To the bride!”
The werewolf who’d challenged me stood in the
center of the room as everyone raised glasses to her. She lifted
her gaze from the floor, broke into a wide grin, and grabbed a
glass. “Let’s have some music!” she shouted, adjusting her tiara.
Something started up, loud, with a heavy bass line I could feel
through the floor. The male dancers gyrated, the female werewolves
howled, and everyone went back to having a good time.
I’d almost gotten into a bar brawl with a werewolf
bride on the eve of her wedding. Another day in the life.
Axel was back behind the bar, filling a row of
plastic flutes with champagne.
“Axel, I need to talk to you. It’s important.” I
had to shout to be heard over the music.
He kept pouring but nodded.
“Juliet—”
A redheaded werewolf in a green halter dress glared
at me as she grabbed a glass of champagne from the bar. I didn’t
want to shout. Wolves have sharp hearing. Even with the music
blasting, I’d be broadcasting a bulletin about Juliet’s escape to
everyone in the room. They might be out-of-towners, but they didn’t
need to know Juliet’s business.
I climbed onto the bar and, kneeling there, cupped
both hands around Axel’s ear. He popped another champagne cork and
poured as I spoke. I tried to sum up the situation as quickly and
clearly as possible.
“Juliet’s in trouble. The Goon Squad had her in
custody in connection with that murder in D.C. A couple of powerful
super-vampires killed some cops trying to kidnap her. She was
chained to her cell with a silver shackle, and they almost cut off
her leg trying to grab her. She’s hurt, and she’s not healing like
she should. She needs a place to hide.”
Axel stopped pouring. “Here?”
“I couldn’t think of anywhere safer.”
Axel pursed his lips behind his beard. He poured
champagne into a flute, waited for the foam to die down, then
topped it off. He filled three more flutes that way before he
nodded.
“Okay.”
Relief flooded me. “She’s in the alley behind a
pile of boxes, by your back door.”
“Bartender! We need more champagne.” The redheaded
werewolf was back, waving two glasses and looking impatient.
He looked at the werewolf, then at me. At her, and
then back at me.
“You want me to tend bar.” A nod. “But Axel, I
don’t know anything about bartending.” My taste ran to club soda
and lite beer—the kind that comes in a bottle. They both taste
about the same.
He opened a fridge stocked with green bottles
topped with gold foil. “Champagne.” He pointed at a cardboard box
stashed under the bar. “Flutes.” He grinned. Apparently he’d just
taught me the secrets of his trade.
Axel patted me on the shoulder. He went to the back
of the room and pushed a button on the portable stereo, cutting off
the music. A few howls of protest went up but faded when they
caught the look on Axel’s face. Thirty female werewolves cringed
under his gaze. “Going out. She’s in charge,” he said, gesturing
toward me. “No fighting.” He stalked down the back hallway, toward
the storeroom.
Thirty glittering pairs of eyes turned toward me,
and thirty werewolves straightened. You could almost hear the
hackles rising.
The last thing you want to do when staring down a
pack of werewolves is act intimidated. Even the norms know that.
The best approach would be to emulate Axel’s nonchalance. Just
pour. It’d be nice if I could also emulate his height and muscle
mass, but I’d work with what I had. Besides, I’d stashed the short
sword within easy reach on a shelf below the counter.
Intimated? Not me.
I wished they’d turn the music back on, so they
could ogle their beefcake dancers instead of stare at me.
I picked up a champagne bottle and peeled off the
foil. The hairs on the backs of my arms stood up, making me all too
conscious of my audience’s intense gaze as I fumbled with the wire
cage around the cork.
Why the hell didn’t this stuff come with screw
tops?
“I’m thirsty. Hurry up.”
The bride-to-be stood at the bar, her tiara crooked
again, her lips pulled back in an expression halfway between a
sneer and a snarl. Oh, goody. More dominance games.
The wire came off. I grabbed the cork and yanked.
It exploded from the bottle and flew from my fingers, missing the
bride’s head by a quarter-inch. Champagne sprayed out—and the
champagne didn’t miss. It hit the bride squarely in the face,
soaking her hair, dripping from her nose and chin.
I righted the bottle and set it on the bar, foam
flowing like lava over my fingers. In any other situation, I’d
apologize. But you just don’t say sorry to a soaking wet, angry
werewolf. I gave her a hard stare and groped for my sword under the
bar.
She grabbed the bottle, shook it hard, and blasted
me with cold, wet spray. Sputtering, I snatched the bottle and
emptied it over her head.
A roar went up. Werewolves rushed at me from all
sides—running, vaulting over the bar. I went down. What a
ridiculous way to die, I thought. Stomped to death by two dozen
tipsy werewolves in stilettos.
A French-manicured hand reached toward me. I looked
up. The bride, still dripping, smiled at me. What the hell? I
grabbed her hand, and she pulled me to my feet. She offered me an
open bottle of champagne.
The werewolves had raided the fridge behind the
bar. Throughout the room, they sprayed each other with champagne.
The poor dancers seemed to be getting more than their share. The
wet look suited them, I had to say.
I shook the bottle and sprayed the bride, who
laughed with delight.
Someone started the music, and the dancers resumed
their gyrations. Drops of champagne flew from their bodies,
catching the light. The werewolves started dancing, too, pushing
aside tables to clear the floor.
The fridge stood open, empty. I shut the door. Then
I found a recycling bin and started picking up the champagne
bottles that littered the room.
“Don’t do that.” The bride put a hand on my arm,
but her touch was tentative, not aggressive. “Please. My girls will
take care of it.” She cupped her hands and shouted over the music.
“Listen up, ladies! Everyone pick up two bottles and put them in
the bin.” She sat me down in her former seat, telling me to relax,
and went behind the bar to find more recycling bins.
“Thanks.” A werewolf with chin-length black hair
sat down across from me. “You saved the party.”
“You’re welcome.” I tried to look as though I knew
exactly what I’d done, then gave up. “Um, how?”
“Ever since her engagement, Kiana has been a total
bridezilla. Her mother stopped speaking to her weeks ago. She
reduced her dressmaker to tears. She actually bit the caterer—the
poor guy needed stitches.” She shook her head. “The trouble is,
she’s not really all that dominant. Not by nature. It was stressing
her out to be such a bitch.”
Ah. The picture was becoming clearer.
“Somebody needed to challenge her. But you just
don’t do that to a mating female. She’s like . . . like a
temporary queen. Everyone defers to her. But everyone also saves up
their grudges and takes them out on the bride’s hide as soon as the
honeymoon’s over. Kiana knew how much trouble she was headed for,
but she couldn’t seem to stop herself.”
“So a challenge from me released the
tension.”
“Exactly.” She grinned, showing white, even teeth.
“And you did it without spilling a drop of blood. Brilliant.”
“Yeah, it always kinda sucks when a bachelorette
party turns into a bloodbath.”
The werewolf grinned again. “Now Kiana can relax
and be herself. She’ll still have some fights to face a couple of
full moons down the road, but a lot of us will let our grudges
slide. We’ve got our friend back.” She got up and danced her way
into the middle of the room.
TEN MINUTES LATER, AXEL RETURNED. HE STOPPED AND
stared at me, sitting at the bride’s table, wearing her tiara, and
holding a bottle of my favorite lite beer, paid for by the bride.
He turned to the bar, where Kiana was mixing a cocktail for one of
her friends. “The champagne I paid for ran out, so it’s a cash bar
now,” she called.
Axel turned back to me and raised a shaggy
eyebrow.
“She said she was a bartender in college. I’ve been
watching. She’s charging for the drinks.”
He sat down across from me. His eyebrow seemed to
have found a permanent home halfway up his forehead.
“I, um, beat her in a challenge. Accidentally, kind
of. There was no fighting involved,” I added quickly. “Just
champagne.”
Axel surveyed the room. The place stank of spilled
champagne, but there was no broken furniture or bleeding patrons.
Better than a typical night.
“How’s Juliet?” I asked.
“Safe.” He placed the silver shackle and chain on
the table. A nearby werewolf glanced at it, shuddered, and moved
away. “She said you’d need this.”
“Can I see her?”
He shook his head. “She’s resting.”
Shit. Axel wasn’t going to let me into his
apartment. As Juliet had said earlier, he never let anyone in. He
was bending his usual rule to protect her, but his hospitality
wouldn’t extend to me. I’d just locked Juliet away even farther out
of reach than she’d been with the Goon Squad.
And I still didn’t have any answers.
“Axel—”
He shook his head, and I knew there was no use
arguing.
“Okay, then tell her to call me as soon as she’s
feeling better, okay? Tomorrow, no later. I really need to talk to
her. Can you do that?”
This time I got a nod.
I removed the bride’s tiara and set it on the
table, then stood. “Keep me posted about how she’s doing, will you?
I’m worried about her leg. And thanks. I know you . . . um, value
your privacy. I’ll try to move her to somewhere else that’s safe as
soon as I can.”
I wrapped the chain around my waist, picked up my
purse, and moved toward the door.
Axel’s big paw shot out and grabbed my arm. “Come
back after sunrise.”
I nodded. I didn’t know whether he’d let me see
Juliet or whether he merely expected me to help clean up after
these rowdy werewolves. Either way, I’d be here. Axel was good
people—whatever species he was.