We remained quiet all the way home. I don't know what she was thinking, but my thoughts were full of what would happen if one of us got furry.
Would I be able to shoot her as she'd asked me to? Yes.
Would she be able to shoot me? It didn't really matter, because I'd be able to shoot myself.
Jessie let us into her apartment. She went straight to the message machine in the kitchen.
"You have no new messages."
Her sigh of disappointment plucked at something too near my heart. I'd been in love once. I'd lost him, badly. I understood where she was coming from.
Will wasn't back yet; he hadn't called, and she was even more worried.
I glanced at my watch. Three a.m. Not good. I was starting to worry myself.
"Take a shower," I told her.
"Kiss my ass."
She's baaack, my mind taunted. I'd been waiting for Jessie to snap out of her zone. It figured that she'd do so cursing me.
"I'll pass," I returned, "but thanks anyway."
"I don't want to take a shower," she said mulishly. "I'm still on duty."
"And I bet the people you've vowed to serve and protect will be thrilled with your new look. Blood and werewolf brains are such a fashion statement."
"Do you have to be right all the time?" She stomped into the bathroom.
"That was a rhetorical question, right?"
She slammed the door in my face.
I opened her refrigerator and helped myself to a can of soda. Then I sat on the couch and I considered what we'd learned.
Not much.
We still didn't know where their lair was, and I had no idea what they were up to, hiding human bones in the mine.
Hector was here. I was certain of it. But what was he planning? And how was the brown wolf involved?
What about the power eater legend Will had been mumbling about? I had to think we were hip deep in something serious.
A tap on the windowpane made me jump so high I nearly levitated. I spun around, gun in my hand, and came face to beak with a crow on the windowsill.
The thing tilted his head, first one way, then the other, as if trying to figure out what I was.
"Take off." I set my gun next to my cola, then made a shooing motion, to no avail.
Caw, he returned, then stretched out and tapped the glass again.
I was so preoccupied with the damn bird, I didn't notice the scratching at the door until it was too late.
The lock clicked free.
I've been set up, I thought.
Crows and wolves work together in nature. Who's to say they don't work together unnaturally, too. Had the pesky bird drawn my attention away from the door long enough for one of the bad guys to get inside?
I sprinted across the room, pressed my back against the wall, waited for the intruder to show himself.
He did, and I jumped him. In a quick, professional movement, he flipped me onto my back, hard, then pressed a knee into my chest.
"Oh, hi, Leigh."
Cadotte was back.
He stood, then held out a hand to help me up. I couldn't breathe.
"You OK?"
I shook my head.
The bathroom door opened. "Leigh?"
Cadotte's face lit up from the inside out. He left me on the ground to die and ran to Jessie.
"Will," she whispered; then she slugged him.
"Ow." He rubbed his stomach. "What the hell was that for?"
She grabbed his cell phone from his belt and waved it in front of his nose. "Turn it on once in a while, dick weed. You scared me to death."
Jessie tossed the phone upward. He snatched it from thin air as she stalked past him and into the living room. Observing me on the floor, she smirked. "Did he flip you?"
I nodded.
"He thinks he's Jackie Chan."
Right now, I kind of thought he was, too.
Jessie spun toward Will. "Where's my gun?"
"In the trunk of my car."
"Fat lot of good it's going to do you there."
"Getting stopped with a loaded firearm would not be healthy, Jess."
I managed to get off the floor under my own power; then I collapsed in a chair. "Why not?"
Will pointed a finger toward his face. "Indian. Gun. Too many cowboys."
"I still don't get it."
Jessie made an impatient sound. "The civil rights movement hasn't gotten here yet. There's still a lot of prejudice against Native Americans."
"A loaded gun in the car is illegal," I pointed out.
"True. But there'd be a whole lot more than arresting going on if Will was stopped with one." She glanced at him. "Sorry. I wasn't thinking past your being safe from the werewolves."
He shrugged. "I'm fine. But why are you home, in the middle of your shift, wearing a towel?"
Jessie gave me a narrow-eyed glare, which I took to mean, Shut up. So I did.
"Never mind me," she said. "Where have you been?"
"Madison."
"You were supposed to be back eight hours ago."
He shrugged, his face sheepish. "I got distracted."