: Chapter 22
Fury Frayed
The music pulsed loudly and the lights flashed annoyingly when I went back inside the Roost.
Moving to the second-floor railing, I looked down at the dancers. They were all having a great time, completely ignorant of the man screaming outside. Or maybe they had great hearing, like Oanen, but didnât care. Probably the latter. And that made life seem just a little too messed up, even for a seventeen-year-old fury. Granted, my life had never been ânormal,â but I longed to know what ânormalâ felt like now more than I ever had in the past.
My gaze locked on Fenris and his group of girls, who danced in the middle of the crowded floor. He looked bored and completely miserable. Maybe normal, or at least our version of normal, wasnât that great anyway. His would improve, though, if he would just walk away from his groupies.
Shaking off my reverie, I made my way down the stairs and skirted around the dancers. A few people nodded to me, but I didnât slow. I wanted to get outside and check for that siren.
Eliana waited for me at the back table right where Iâd left her and stood as soon as she saw me.
âAbout time,â she said. âWhat happened?
âWeâll talk about it outside.â
She slipped her hand into mine, and we both moved toward the door.
Fenris called my name, and I stopped to look back at him. He motioned for us to come join them. His gaze pleaded with me. I shook my head and nodded toward the front door. He gave a playful frown but waved us off. Behind him, Aubrey gave us her usual evil glare.
Ignoring her, I tugged Eliana out the door. The man who had tried giving drugs to the siren still leaned against the car, his face pressed to the roof as quiet sobs shook his shoulders. Eliana gave him a puzzled look.
I released her hand, letting my emotions flood me again, and motioned for her to stay there. The knowledge of the manâs damage to himself didnât reduce the incredible amount of anger I felt for him. However, it did allow a very human amount of pity.
I walked toward the man, my bare feet not making a sound on the pavement.
âDo you want me to open the door for you?â
The sound of my voice made him jump, which made him groan and gasp while frantically nodding his head. I reached between him and the car and pulled on the handle. He cried out as he fell to the sidewalk, clutching at his groin.
Having freed him, I no longer felt pity, only disgust. I turned and walked back to Eliana.
âWhat the hell was that about?â she asked, still staring at the man.
âThat was a drug deal gone wrong. A siren took his money and made him slam his dick in the car door.â
Eliana winced.
âYeah, thatâs what I thought. The guyâs an asshole, but the punishment seemed a bit cruel. Ready?â
âShouldnât we tell someone about him?â
âOanen flew to tell his parents. Iâm sure someoneâs on their way, and that guyâs not going anywhere.â
She tore her pitying gaze from him and nodded at me. But, before we made it more than a step, a shimmering hole appeared before us. Adira stepped through and gave us both a warm smile.
âIâm very proud of you, Eliana. I think you dressed beautifully tonight. Any luck?â she asked.
âLuck?â Eliana said. Then a flush covered her cheeks. âNot really. I wasnât trying for that. Baby steps, right? I have a very succubus style dress on.â
Adira reached out and gave Elianaâs arm a gentle squeeze.
âYouâve done very well. Progress is good; just make sure to keep moving forward.â
âWhat are you going to do to him?â I asked, tilting my head toward the man behind us.
She looked down at the man, and her expression hardened.
âHe is going to have his memory wiped and be removed from Uttira. There are other human towns he can terrorize instead of ours.â
âDo you need help with him?â I asked.
âNo, you two are free to continue your evening. I will see you on Monday, Megan. We can talk about your report regarding your week-long break in town.â
I nodded, hiding my disappointment. At the end of each day this week, Iâd fulfilled her request and had sent an email with names and conjectured reasons about why those people might have ticked me off. Each email had ended with a request to do the same thing the next day. Adira hadnât answered todayâs email, and Iâd already guessed she wanted me back in class before sheâd just confirmed it.
Adira stepped past us, and Eliana and I quickly moved to her car. I got in with a sigh of relief.
âWell?â Eliana said as she started the car. âWhat happened? Why were you gone so long?â
âAdiraâs been telling me to evaluate why someone is making me angry, right? There are two people in this town who have made me angry since day one. The first is Aubrey. Sheâs a bitch, and sheâs underage. So, she is obviously not the killer. The other person is Trammer.
âOanen flew me to Trammerâs house so I could try to get a sense of why I might be so angry with him, like Adira keeps suggesting I do. Only, we get there, and Trammerâs super sweet to Ashlyn and making dinner and all concerned about her. Doesnât seem like someone whoâs wicked, does it?â
âNot really,â she agrees.
âAnd not only is he super sweet to his niece, heâs got a grudge against anyone not human, which according to Oanen makes Trammer a perfect liaison. Now, if the bodies that keep showing up were creatures like us, I could totally see Trammer as a suspect. But, theyâre human. Trammer has no reason to kill humans.â
âWell, maybe Jesse but not Camil,â Eliana said.
âWhat do you mean?â
âJessie was a human trafficker, right? Human. But, he didnât know we werenât human.â
âSo you think Trammer would want to kill Jesse because of human trafficking?â
The light in the car dimmed as we left town.
âIf you were a human adult trying to protect a human niece, wouldnât you?â
I frowned.
âYouâre right. Jesseâs death makes more sense than Camilâs. But, why kill Jesse if his mind was wiped, and Trammer had orders to remove him? Removing him from Uttira would have removed the threat from his niece.â
âTrue.â
Yeah. True, but something about Trammer still pissed me off. And, until I knew what, could I afford to make any assumptions of innocence when my anger was telling me otherwise?
I took my phone out and sent Oanen a text.
I think we need to follow Trammer when he takes the guy out of town.
Iâll be at your place in 10.
âWhat are you thinking about?â Eliana asked.
âIâm not sure. I just think thereâs a reason Iâm angry at Trammer, and I shouldnât give up on finding out why. Iâve asked Oanen to help me follow Trammer when he leaves town with the guy from tonight.â
She slowed and pulled into my driveway.
âIf Oanenâs going to come to get you in a little while, I might as well go home.â She parked by the back door. âCall me when youâre done, though, okay?â
âI will.â
I ran inside and up the stairs. Riding a griffin in a dress once had been enough for me. Stripping from my dress, I kicked it aside and quickly put on jeans and a dark, long-sleeved shirt, which I layered with a hoodie for warmth.
Jogging back downstairs, I pulled my hair into a ponytail and drank down a glass of water. When Oanen landed in my backyard, I was outside and ready.
âI hope you know where to go,â I said, climbing on his back.
He launched himself into the air, his wings beating hard to gain altitude. Once we soared well above my house, he took off south toward the barrier.
âJust donât run into the thing,â I shouted.
A booming cry answered me.
He circled over a section of road twice then started to descend. Just before we dipped below the trees, I caught a glimpse of approaching headlights. Oanen set down near the tree line beside the road. I quickly hopped off his back and ducked behind a tree. Oanen shifted to his skin and moved behind me.
âWe should have brought you clothes,â I said softly, not taking my eyes off the road.
âI donât feel the temperature unless itâs really cold.â
âI wasnât worried about you. I was worried about me.â
He chuckled, and I blushed.
Trammerâs police car sped past and kept going down the road through the barrier.
âI wish we could follow him through that,â I said.
âMe, too.â
The faint smell of burnt hair reminded me not to think too hard about leaving Uttira. With Oanen standing behind me, I didnât feel the least bit cold. I did, however, feel very nervous. Why hadnât I thought to grab the pants heâd left at my house?
âYou looked nice tonight,â Oanen said.
My fading blush re-ignited.
âThank you.â
âI wish I would have been there when you arrived. I would have liked to dance.â
Heat flared in my middle.
âWe need to focus,â I said.
âI am focused.â
âOn watching for Trammer,â I clarified.
âI donât think heâll be back anytime soon. The nearest town is a twenty-five minute drive from here. There and back? Thatâs close to an hour. So we have time to pick up our conversation from the roof.â
âHuh?â
âThe conversation where you were trying to tell me you donât date.â
My throat burned, and sweat beaded my forehead as my pulse jumped into hyper speed.
âAre you serious right now?â I asked.
The bark of the tree bit into my palms as I pressed harder against it.
Oanenâs hand settled on my shoulders.
âI have excellent hearing, Megan. You need to calm down. Weâre talking. Youâre not angry, which means Iâm not doing anything wrong.â
The approach of headlights from the south saved me from saying anything. With increasing anger, I watched the maroon car speed through the barrier and blinked at the driver.
âWasnât thatââ
âYeah. Trammer. Hop on.â The fallen leaves rustled behind me. When I turned, Oanen dipped his feathered shoulder for me to climb onto his back.
I gripped him tightly as he took off in a rush. Why had Trammer switched cars?
Oanen coasted on the currents, following the car from high above. Trammer signaled on the last left before my house and followed the meandering backroad to its end, not more than two miles from my back door. There he pulled over and killed the engine.
âWe need to get closer,â I said softly.
Oanen started to descend. Landing quietly on the top of one of the towering pines, he gave us the perfect vantage point to watch Trammer. The man climbed out of his car and looked around as he walked to the trunk. The sight of him tormented me with the need to cause him pain. The intensity of my need to hurt him had increased since the last time I saw him. Why?
I had the answer when he opened his trunk. A long, lumpy form wrapped in black garbage bags lay within the dark interior. Trammer bent forward and tugged the plastic encased body from the trunk, letting it drop right to the ground. He squatted down and cut away the black material. The moonlight cast a pale glow on the drug dealerâs lifeless face.
âBut why?â I said quietly.
Oanen turned his head and nipped at my jeans with his beak. Yeah, Iâd be quiet. For now.
We watched Trammer stuff the plastic back into the trunk then turn toward a nearby tree. He pulled a knife from the bark and squatted by the body once more.
Pressing my face into Oanenâs feathers, I didnât watch what he did next. I stayed like that until the car started again, and Trammer drove away.
Oanenâs unexpected launch into the air startled a squeak from me. He beat his wings hard, gaining altitude enough that I could see Trammerâs headlights. Oanen silently tailed him. At the end of the road, Trammer signaled right, retracing his route.
âWait,â I said when Oanen started to do the same.
âThereâs no point in following him. We need to go back to that clearing.â
None of what we saw was making any sense. Why would Trammer kill a human for trying to deal drugs to a siren? He didnât like any of the creatures in Uttira. And why take the man out of Uttira only to bring him back in? Why not just kill the guy and leave him in a ditch outside the barrier?
Oanen landed not far from the body. I slid off his back and tried to understand Trammerâs motive for gutting the guy. Blood and innards spilled out onto the grass. The scent of death tainted the air.
âWhy are we here, Megan? We need to report this to the Council.â
âThis doesnât make sense,â I said. I turned and looked at the tree where the knife was once again embedded. âWhy have a knife here, waiting? How could Trammer have premeditated this when no one knew weâd report this guy?â
âTrammer and the Council always know when a human enters the barrier.â
âThey do?â
Oanen nodded.
âMost humans avoid Uttira. Well, the decent ones do. The Council keeps an eye on them all, though, to make sure that any human who happens to find their way into Uttira doesnât discover anything theyâre not supposed to.â
I recalled the way Trammer had conveniently appeared at my front door the day the cable and TV delivery men had shown up.
âOkay. So the Council and Trammer knew about him. That would mean Trammer could have come out here and put a knife in the tree in anticipation of having to remove the guy. But why would Trammer kill him for trying to sell drugs to a siren? Trammer couldnât care less about any of us.â
Oanen shrugged. âThis guy had been delivering drugs to Camil every week for months. Heâd never done more than stop at her house and leave again, though. Since the Council was aware of the deliveries and the man caused no trouble, Trammerâs orders were to leave him alone.â
âItâs just not adding up for me. How many times has Trammer had to remove this level of scum from Uttira?â
âAt least a dozen.â
âBut no deaths until I showed up, right?â I paced around the body, studying it. âWhy kill this guy tonight then? Why slice him open like this but not remove anything like Camil in the alley?â
I stopped pacing.
âThe other bodies were eaten. Trammer wouldnât eat them.â I looked down again at the way heâd cut the man open and let his insides spill out. The scent of blood filled my nose.
âThis is bait,â I said with shocked realization.
Oanen immediately shifted and dipped his shoulder.
âWe need to know who or what Trammerâs baiting,â I said. âWe need to watch.â
He nipped at my jeans until I gave in and climbed on. Instead of taking me home, like Iâd thought, he flew us back up to the tree.
âGood,â I said, running a hand down the feathers of his neck. âI want answers.â
We sat in the tree for the next several hours in silence. When my eyes started to stay closed between blinks, he nipped at my pants again.
âYeah, yeah,â I mumbled, holding tighter. âI wonât fall off.â
He tipped forward, falling out of the tree and catching an updraft with his wings. My heart thudded in my chest from the scare.
âYou could have warned me,â I said.
Laying my head against his back, I held on as he flew the short distance to my house and enjoyed the warmth radiating from his feathers. Even with my eyes closed, I could feel it the moment he started descending. He reared back slightly as he landed, and he began to shift beneath me. Startled, I grappled for a new hold on bare shoulders as I slid off his back. He twisted and pulled me up into his arms. I blinked up at him.
âYouâre not going to throw me on my bed again, are you?â
His lips tilted up at the corners.
âNo. Not this time.â
He set me on my feet but didnât release me. His thumbs moved over my shirt on my biceps.
âIâd like to stay again, tonight.â
Warning bells went off in my head, but given what was going on just a few miles from my house, I wasnât stupid enough to say no.
âYeah, thatâs fine. I wouldnât want to be alone if Trammer showed up, anyway. I donât know that Iâd be able to stop myself from going after him.â
Oanen shook his head slightly and nodded toward the house.
I turned and led the way inside. While I opened the fridge to use the door as a shield to keep my gaze from wandering, he grabbed his clothes from the chair in the kitchen and ducked into the bathroom. I glanced at the clock. Just after midnight. Despite seeing a dead body, I considered making us a snack since I already had the fridge open.
Pounding on the front door interrupted my thoughts. I moved to answer it. Oanen stepped out of the bathroom and blocked my path.
âIâll get it,â he said.
He turned away from me, and my gaze swept over the jeans riding low on his hips and the t-shirt hugging his back.
I made a little face of longing before shaking myself from my mental cloud. Maybe I needed to tell him to hit the roof.
He pulled open the door, and my temper flared at the sight of Aubrey.
âHeâs not here,â Oanen said before she could speak. âAnd Iâve been with Megan since she left the club, so thereâs no need for threats, either.â
She snarled and turned away, marching down the porch steps as he closed the door.
âThat girl needs a leash,â I said as tires squealed on the road.
âOr maybe Fenris does,â he said, frowning. âHow many times has Fenris been missing just before a body is found?â