: Chapter 14
Fury Frayed
I took my time in the shower and thought about the day before.
A dead body.
A weird conversation where adults hadnât seemed overly concerned about whoâd made the body dead.
And Oanen.
Heâd managed to weird me out again. After Eliana had ditched me in the living room to warm my breakfast, Oanen had sat next to me on the couch and watched TV. Simple. No big deal. Except heâd put his arm behind me on the back of the couch. Still not that big of a deal. Until Iâd felt his fingers on the back of my neck again. The soft stroke, up and down, had spread a tingle of something racing under my skin.
Iâd bolted. Me. I didnât bolt. I decked people.
I groaned and stuck my face in the spray of hot water, wishing I didnât have to go to the Academy. The idea of skipping Monday check-in bounced around in my head until I remembered how Trammer had come for me the last time. If I wanted to avoid a ride in his dead-body car, I needed to go with Eliana.
Turning off the water, I mentally prepared myself for another Monday.
By the time Eliana pulled up in front of the house, Iâd talked myself up enough to greet her with an enthusiastic smile.
âHey, Megan,â she said when I got in. âYou look much better than yesterday. Headache gone?â
I only felt a tiny bit of guilt that Iâd lied about having a headache to get her and Oanen to leave.
âYep. All better.â I leaned forward and eyed the skies. âNo Oanen?â
She shook her head slightly. âHeâs running late, but heâll be there.â
I settled back in my seat as she took off and debated asking her about him. He was like her brother. Did that make him a closed topic?
âCan I ask you about Oanen?â
âSure. But you better make it quick. Iâm not sure how long itâll be before he catches up.â
âDoes he have a girlfriend?â
Instead of the yes I was hoping for, she let out a crazed shriek that nearly gave me a heart attack.
âOh my gosh! I canât believe I was right. I mean, I saw you checking him out that first day we rode together, but I wasnât sure if it was check-checking him out. Heâs going to go crazy whenââ
âWhoa, whoa, whoa. Timeout. I wasnât asking because Iâm interested.â
âRight.â She drew out the word in obvious disbelief. âIâm a succubus. I know youâre interested every time I get a whiff of your l-lust when you look at him.â
I ignored her stumble on the word and her beginning blush.
âWhat? No way.â
Her peal of laughter filled the car.
âIt doesnât mean anything,â I said quickly, denying the possibility of me with Oanen. âItâs like window shopping. I might like looking, but I have no intention to buy.â
âToo bad,â she said. âBecause Iâm pretty sure he has his eye on you. And he really wants to buy.â
âIâm not for sale. Ever. We talked about this. I have way too many issues to be someoneâs other half. Iâm barely my own half. I just need to know what to do.â
âDo? What do you mean? Did something happen?â
A distant cry cut through the air.
âNever mind,â I said quickly.
She said no more but grinned the entire way to school.
As usual, our flying escort zoomed ahead as soon as we reached the gates.
âCan you let me off at the front?â I asked her.
She did as I requested, and I quickly closed the door on her knowing smile. Once again, Adira waited for me in the main lobby.
âGood morning, Megan.â
âMorning.â
I followed her to her office, took my seat, and released a slow, calming breath, relieved that Iâd managed to escape face to face time with Oanen.
âIs everything all right?â Adira asked.
âYeah. Sure. I mean, except for finding that body over the weekend, everythingâs great.â I might have been more convincing if Iâd managed something other than a sarcastic tone.
âYes. The body. A man named Jesse who was into human trafficking. Would you like to talk about him?â
âNot really. He was a scumbag. That much was clear when he detailed how he wanted to rape Eliana then sell her. I canât say Iâm overly bothered that heâs dead. I am bothered by how none of you seem too concerned about who did it, though.â
She smiled slightly. âGood. That should bother you. Iâd like to change things up for you, Megan. I think youâre ready, and very able, to start attending sessions daily.â
Disbelief coursed through me.
âWhat?â I fisted my hands, already knowing how this would end for me. âI donât think thatâs a good idea at all.â
âWhenever you start feeling angry, I want you to let me know who triggered your anger.â
âBefore or after I beat them bloody? I mean, thatâs why Iâm in Uttira, right? Because I donât have much control over my temper. Because I want to hurt everyone and everything ninety-eight percent of the time. Adira, I donât have many people in my life the way it is. The few friends I have managed to make, despite my amazing personality, are going to bail when I start getting into fight after fight.â
âYouâre not among humans anymore. You might be surprised by how your friends here react when you do fight. However, I encourage you to come to me before you beat someone bloody. If you can manage.â
I sat back in my chair and considered what she was asking of me. Try to control my temper? My gut reaction demanded that I laugh in her face. But I couldnât because, as Oanen had pointed out, I had managed to control my temper with Jesse. However, Iâd had Eliana right there. It wouldnât be that way here, though. I doubted Adira would be too impressed with my efforts on my own. Iâd probably get into so many fights that sheâd kick me out of school. Maybe even Uttira. Two weeks ago, I wouldnât have cared. Now, though, I had a friend. Maybe more than one if I counted Fenris and Oanen. Although I did want to be able to leave town, I wasnât sure I wanted to be banished from it or whatever their punishment would be.
âWhat happens when I fight here?â I asked.
âYou will not be expelled if that is your hope. If it proves too much for you on your own, I will assign someone to stay with you at all times while youâre at the Academy. I believe Oanen is already in most of your classes.â
The idea of Oanen with me every minute of the day made my insides go funny.
âNo, I think I can manage on my own with minimal carnage.â
âGood.â She stood, and I knew we were done.
Leaving the room, I wandered toward the main halls, lost in thought. Although I had issues here, they were far less than at a human school. Iâd get small flashes of irritation, but not full bursts of my true temper. Unless Aubrey was around.
âHey, Megan,â Eliana said when I reached the main hall. She straightened from the spot where she had been leaning against the wall.
âHowâd it go?â We started toward our first session together.
âOkay, I guess. Adira wants me to start attending daily.â
Elianaâs face lit up with excitement.
âThatâs great. I can pick you up and drop you off every day. Thereâs this new show Iâve been dying to watch but not alone.â
I grinned knowing where this was headed.
âYes, you can hang out with me after school.â
Her smile widened, showing perfect, white teeth.
Further down the hall, a voice rose above the rest and ignited my temper. As my steps faltered, the back of Elianaâs hand touched mine. The contact was enough to calm the heat of my anger so I didnât charge forward.
âI donât care what you need to do, just keep her away,â Aubrey seethed, glaring at Oanen who didnât look the least bit upset.
âI didnât do it, you know,â Fenris said softly beside me, making me jump.
âWhat?â I turned my head to meet his earnest brown gaze.
âKill that guy. I couldnât care less what everyone else thinks, but I want you both to know I didnât do it.â
For whatever reason, I believed him.
âOkay,â I said.
âGood.â He gave me his best boyish smile. âYou still owe me a spaghetti dinner. What about this Wednesday?â
I glanced at Aubrey, who still spoke in a barely hushed, vehement tone to Oanen.
âI donât know, Fenris. Aubrey already has it out for me the way it is.â
âThatâs exactly why youâre going to say yes.â
I sighed and playfully grinned back at Fenris.
âIâll see you Wednesday at five.â
The bell rang, and Eliana and I headed to our first session.
As the minutes dragged into hours, I couldnât say I looked forward to a whole week of Academy time. Sure, I liked hanging out with Eliana, but as Adira had pointed out, the rest of my sessions were with Oanen.
When I saw him after the first session, he didnât ask about my headache and acted completely normal. He quietly sat beside me in class; and in the hallways, he kept me from losing my cool whenever my temper spiked. I only had to report to Adira twice that day for two separate girls. I didnât bother going to her every time Aubrey set me off, though.
By the end of the day, I was more than ready to escape and beat Eliana to her car by less than a minute.
âHowâd you do after lunch?â she asked, backing out of her spot.
âNot too bad. Thanks for making me something, by the way. It was way better than having to wait in line. Iâll need to remember to pack a lunch tomorrow.â
âI didnât do it; Oanen did. He thought you might want to avoid the crowd in the cafeteria. Whatâs up with you and Fenris? I thought that was just a friend thing.â
âIt is.â
âI donât know. Remember what I said about sensing emotions? Thereâs a whole heck of a lot of lust coming off of him. Although, to be fair, heâs always sending off waves of the stuff.â
âHe knows where I stand. I canât do relationships. Iâd be bad for any boyfriendâs health.â
Overhead, a griffin cried out, reminding me our conversation wasnât exactly private. Neither Eliana nor I said anything else the rest of the way home.
âI donât understand why Adira and the Quills are forcing it so hard,â Eliana said, gripping the steering wheel tightly in frustration. âI proved that I could feed. Why canât that be enough?â
âI think theyâre afraid that if you get hungry enough with a ready, willing food source nearby, youâll snap.â
âI havenât snapped on you.â
âThatâs because youâre not pulling lust or passion from me. Iâm the wrong food group.â
She sighed and shook her head.
âI donât know what Iâm going to do.â
âYou have time. You said it yourself. Adiraâs telling you now so you can wrap your head around it. The end of term is a long way off, and you get a break before the new term and your deadline. Plenty of time.â
âWhat about you and Fenris? Ready for tonight?â
âThereâs nothing to be ready for.â
She snorted.
âEvery time heâs near you, heâs sending off waves of sexual energy. Iâm betting heâs going to make a move tonight.â
This time I snorted.
âIâm betting he shows up at school with a black eye tomorrow, then.â
She laughed and parked in front of the house.
âWe can watch a few episodes of our show before I have to start dinner,â I said.
She killed the engine and came inside to keep me company until four. Granted, she teased me the entire time and bailed as soon as I pulled out the pot to start browning the meat.
âGood luck,â she said, giving me a tight hug.
âDonât need it. I donât plan on doing anything you wouldnât do.â
She laughed and left me to get dinner ready on my own.
I only enjoyed about thirty minutes of quiet before Fenris knocked on the front door. Since I was in the middle of draining noodles, I just called for him to come in.
âIt smells amazing in here,â he said, walking into the kitchen.
âThanks. I wasnât sure how much to make and think I overdid it. Hope youâre hungry.â
âStarving.â The husky note in his voice was the only warning I had before his arms wrapped around me, and he hugged me tightly from behind. His hands didnât grip anywhere inappropriate. In fact, other than his arms, and his nose sniffing in my hair, he didnât touch me. Stillâ¦
âEr, Fenris? This doesnât feel like just friends.â
âSorry.â He pulled away. âI was just really looking forward to this.â
I put the noodles in a bowl and drizzled them with oil before setting the dish on the table.
âI bet you were. More Aubrey avoidance time?â
He gave me a sheepish smile.
âSomething like that.â
âWell, sit down. I think I have everything just about ready.â
After his hug, I thought things might get awkward. Instead, dinner progressed in a relaxing stream of conversation. I learned a bit more about the Councilâs weak investigation into the body Iâd found, and Fenris got to hear all about the shows Eliana and I were watching because I didnât have much of a life beyond that. He didnât seem to mind, though. He listened attentively and asked questions as if he was actually interested.
It didnât seem like an hour had passed until he sighed and looked at the clock.
âI better get going.â
âAn hour is all she gives you?â
He chuckled. âIf Iâm lucky. Hopefully, sheâll leave you alone. It helped that Oanen was here last time she showed up.â
I said nothing as I walked him to the door. He surprised me again with a tight hug and his face buried in my hair.
âThank you, Megan. This meant more than you know.â
He turned and left before I could respond. Watching him get into his junkie car, I hoped that this dinner with him didnât mean more than I wanted it to.
âSo,â Eliana said when I got in the car, âhow was dinner?â
âNice.â
âWell? Was I right? Did he try to put any moves on you?â
âI donât think so. He hugged me when he got there and hugged me goodbye, but I think it was mostly just friendly. I donât hug many werewolves so Iâm not sure. He sniffed my hair.â
She snorted a laugh.
âAre you serious? Thatâs funny stuff.â
âIt was a little weird; but other than that, he was a gentleman. It doesnât sound like his father is any closer to ferreting out who might have killed Jesse. All the adults are accounted for, and none of the underage wolves had left the barrier that night, not even with adult supervision.â
âHonestly, I donât think the Councilâs too worried about it,â Eliana said. âThey sent a few guardians to affirm the guyâs disappearance wouldnât be questioned. I guess he was into bad enough stuff that no one will really care if he just goes missing. And because of what he meant to do here, he apparently had been pretty quiet about where he was going when anyone last saw him.â
âDoesnât it bother you that no one seems to care that thereâs a human-eating creature here?â
She laughed.
âThe gods made us all differently. Some feed off of humans without killing them, like I do. Or like I would do if I wasnât so hung up on feeding. Some creatures, like Oanen, are just here to protect. And some others? Well, they like flesh. They have found ways to satisfy their hunger for it without killing every human they come into contact with. It was hard for me to come to terms with all the different ways we use humans. Obviously, Iâm still hung up on a few. But, I keep reminding myself, no matter how one of us feeds, we all still need to eat. Itâs not any of our faults we were made the way we were.â
âSo youâre okay with the occasional dead body?â
âIf itâs humans like Jesse? Yes. His death prevents the death of innocent humans.â
She had a point.
When we got to school, Oanen was waiting in the parking lot. His steady gaze swept over me and settled on the bag I clutched in my hands. On Tuesday, heâd packed another lunch for me. I had assured him he didnât need to keep making meals for me, and even though his expression hadnât changed at the time, Iâd felt that telling him so had somehow disappointed him. Now, I felt the same thing as he stared at the bag hiding my leftover spaghetti and garlic bread.
âI can smell it!â Aubrey screeched.
I looked to where Fenris and Aubrey stood near their car. He had her arm firmly clasped in his hand to keep her from running this way.
âCalm down,â he said.
âYou said you had spaghetti at home. Why do I smell it here?â
Something tugged the bag from my fingers. I turned my head forward again and blinked at the up-close view of Oanenâs snuggly fitted shirt. He didnât say anything as he looked down at me and slipped a paper lunch bag into my hand.
My pulse increased the longer he stood so close. I opened my mouth to ask what he was doing, but the moment his gaze dipped to my lips, I forgot what I meant to say.
âI should have known it was you,â Aubrey said from behind me.
Oanen broke his gaze away first and looked at Aubrey. I turned, ready to confront her, but Oanen quickly anchored me to his side by the weight of his arm settling over my shoulder. My confiscated lunch dangled against my arm.
âMorning, Aubrey,â Oanen said.
Her gaze shifted to the bag that hung from his fingers to the brown paper bag that I clutched in my hands. Oanen had once again covered for Fenris. Or maybe me. I still wasnât sure who he was actually helping.
âHey, Oanen,â Fenris said. âI forgot to ask. You guys going to be at the Roost on Friday?â
âOf course,â Oanen said.
Fenris looked at me and Eliana for confirmation, too.
âSure,â Eliana said.
Aubrey glared at me. I grinned.
âI wouldnât miss it,â I said.