Adam leaned against the wall just inside the room. He wore jeans, a sleeveless shirt, tennis shoes. His bracelet gleamed dully in the half-light from the hall.
Now that I thought about it, he hadn't had that bracelet on in the cage. Then again, something like that could fall right off your paw.
"How did you get out?" I demanded.
Confusion nickered over his face. "Out?"
I cast a glance at Luc, who was staring back and forth between us. I needed to get Adam away from the boy, especially since I might have to kill him.
"Let's discuss this outside."
"Fine." He gave Luc a stern glare. "Stay here."
Adam headed for the front of the house, and I followed, fingers surreptitiously unzipping the compartment that held the silver knife.
Outside, the night was completely dark. The moon was gone; the sun wasn't yet up. I pulled out the weapon, tightening my fingers around the hilt. "I'm taking Luc."
Adam faced me, saw the knife, and laughed, "Didn't we do this already? I'm not a werewolf."
He was so different from the man I'd left in the swamp. Sure he looked and sounded the same, but the snakelike coldness had left his gaze and the nasty smirk no longer twisted his mouth. When he spoke he didn't say evil, hurtful things. At least not yet.
"I saw you change," I said.
Something flickered in his eyes. "When?"
He didn't deny it, and even while I'd seen the truth, believed it, too, somewhere inside I must have been hoping for a miracle. "You don't remember?"
"Just tell me when and where."
"About an hour ago. Where Charlie died. I left you in a cage."
He cursed.
"How did you get out?" I repeated.
He ignored my question, clenching and unclenching his fists in great agitation.
"Adam! I'm not going to let you hurt Luc."
Fury spread across his face, and quick as a forked tongue, his hand shot out and grabbed the knife by the blade, taking it away with an ease and quickness that was mind-boggling. He flipped the weapon end over end and it stuck in a fence that separated the trailer park from a used-car lot.
I fought the urge to run. "I'm not leaving without him."
"You aren't leaving with him, either. He's my son."
"You lied to me."
"I he all the time, cher. Anymore I wonder if I even know what's a lie and what isn't."
"You said you weren't the loup-garou!"
He sighed. "I'm not."
"And I should believe an admitted pathological liar?"
"Believe what you want."
I had a thought Maybe the loup-garou wasn't harmed by silver. Maybe all the tests I'd run on Adam had been a waste of time. Hell, maybe he could slip through bars, or at the least bend them with his superhuman strength.
Adam started for the trailer.
"Where are you going?"
'To tell Sadie I'll be back in an hour. I have to go into the swamp."
"What? Why?"