Asher
âThank you all for making it on such short notice,â I greet the group. âWeâve grown quite a bit in numbers, so Iâm happy everyone was flexible so we could all be here.â
Margaery is at my side while we sit at the head of a long table. Weâre using a warehouse owned by Cade Gaius, another wealthy businessman in our pack who agreed to make space for us there since my cabin is no longer in commission. Not that it could fit all of us anymore, which is a good thing.
We have twenty-six people involved in our coup, not including Marg and I, plus their constituents. We have half the most important generals and practically all the most wealthy individuals in the pack. Our trouble has been getting politicians on our side. Theyâre skeevy people by nature. Like cockroaches, they scramble at any sign of danger yet seem to survive it all.
Theyâre ones to go with the status quo so long as it can benefit them. Gen has been clever in prioritizing their loyalty by lining their pockets. She would threaten everyone else, knowing their moral character couldnât be bribedâat least most of them.
Politicians though? Easily bought.
Easily sold, too, though. We just have to figure out their price. Or what cost theyâre unwilling to suffer.
We arenât here to discuss this tonight, though. Today is the day we pick a challenger to face Genevive, a conversation weâve avoided for the last two weeks.
Itâs been so long since Iâve seen Rose, unable to steal away the time now that I have to cross onto her territory to see her. Thereâs no longer a neutral point, making things much harder.
âTo recap what we discussed last time, our three options were Darius Blackwood, Martin Willow, and Phaedra Kincaid?â
âThat is correct,â General Evergreen answers. Heâs been the person Marg and I have trusted most with this endeavor since he was here from the beginning. We put him in charge of finding soldiers, the strongest ones mentally and physically, who would be willing to fight Genevieve. âI have Martin with me today. He was the only one willing to take up the cause.â
âAnd you agree to abdicate the position to Asher if you beat her?â Margaery asks.
âYes, I would,â Martin says, biting his lip. âBut there have been some developments since General Evergreen and I last spoke. I-Iâm not sure I want to challenge her anymore.â
Jeffrey glares at him, about to scold him, but I raise my hand to stop him.
âWhat are your reservations?â I ask. âDo they have to do with the disappearances?â
âYes!â Martin exclaims. âYou know about those?â
âI know thereâs been a lot of hearsay going around,â I reply. âBut who knows what sheâs actually doing.â
âThatâs the thing, though,â Martin insists. âIf it were just that, Iâd be okay with challenging her. Sheâs a madwoman, and everyone in the military hates her. Iâd love nothing more than to see her thrown off the throne. Plus, I knew about the experiments when General Evergreen approached me.â
âThen what changed?â Margaery asks.
âSomething happened yesterday,â he replies. âGenevieve showed up to our normal training session, which we do three times a week. She came to my squad and acted like her usual self, yelling at and challenging us. She normally does this, and weâd eventually let her win because beating her would cost you your head.â
âThen what was strange about this time?â I ask, leaning forward, remembering my strange experiences with her recently. The crazed look in her eye. The paranoid. The insanity.
âThe first guy she challenged was the biggest in our squad. The dude weighs at least two-fifty, all muscle. Also, all pride. He isnât the kind of guy who wouldnât at least put up a little bit of resistance. But she put him down as if he weighed nothing.â
âWhat?â Margaery gasps. âCould she do that before?â
âOf course not!â He exclaims. âIâve never seen anything like it! From anyone or her. It was like she had super strength! And she did it again and again. She tossed a guy halfway across the field like he was a fuckinâ frisbee!â
âWatch your language in the presence of your Alpha, Private Willow,â General Evergreen scolds.
âI think his profanity is quite alright, given the situation,â I reply, trying to coax more out of him. âDid she target you at all?â
âNo, Iâm glad she didnât,â he replies. âBut it was like she was showing off. Taking whatever powers she got out for a spin. There was also the thing with her eyes.â
âWhat thing with her eyes?â
âThe normal color of her wolfâs eyes is bright orange, right?â He says, confirming with me.
âYes, I know them very well.â
âWell, the color of her eyes when sheâd challenge us was always that same orange color, except for yesterday. They were muddy. It's still bright but more brown. Almost like they were mixed with green.â
âGreenâ¦â Margaery whispers, pulling out her phone.
âI donât know,â the young man continues. âShe was crazed, though. She had a blast with it; we were her playground. And what we saw wasnât natural. I donât know what happened, but I do know that if I went up against her, sheâd rip my head off. Which wouldnât get us anywhere except for exposing our plot.â
âThank you for telling us this,â I reply, glancing at Margaery, who is scrolling through something frantically. âWe can all agree that we wonât make you challenge her given this new information. Weâll have to think of something else.â
âBut what? What is the solution now?â Eden Jansen cries. âHow will anyone challenge her if sheâs this powerful?â
I stroke my chin as the group erupts into nervous chatter. I look at Margaery again, whose phone is away. He nods her head, signaling that she wants to talk to me alone.
I stand, letting my voice boom over the noise, but not too loud that itâs intimidating. âEveryone, stay calm. We have time. Margaery and I will stew on this for a bit, and we can reconvene in a week. But weâre going to do some research to figure out what Gen might have done to gain this power so we can understand it more. Then, weâll go from there. Alright?â
They look warily between each other, like my argument doesnât convince them, but it satisfies them enough to nod in agreement.
Theyâre teetering on the edge of their loyalty. I can only hope that if people decide they donât want to be involved anymore, they wonât tell Genevieve about what weâre doing. Iâm putting a lot of trust in many people, which is generally never a good idea.
But I have no other choice. I need allies, and I must trust them for them to trust me.
The meeting adjourned, I follow Margaery outside, and we wait for everyone to leave, entering their cars in staggered timing. We wouldnât want someone to see several cars leaving the same place simultaneously, or that would arouse suspicion. We all take different routes, too. Side roads and shortcuts. The long way home or dirt paths. A few choose to walk, too.
So itâs twenty minutes we have to wait before weâre the last ones around.
âWhatâs up, Marg? Whatâd you find on your phone?â I ask.
âI didnât find anything, at least nothing concrete. However, I did have an epiphany.â
âWhat epiphany?â
âI think I know who can challenge Genevieve.â