Bonnie Doon
Sharkbait Down Under
I think we were all a bit nervous as we drove past farms and parklands towards Bonnie Doon. Our plane had arrived from Brisbane just after midnight, bringing me with Amy, Makani, Noelani, Nicholas, Fiona, Carly, Olivia, and Leo. The girls changed their flights so they could support us.
My Mom had arrived in Melbourne an hour before we did, and it was great seeing her again. Ian and Dorothy had flown in two days after the wedding, and Susan and Hammer would fly to Melbourne tomorrow with Linda and the crew. âHow many people showed up?â
âMost of them,â Craig said. He was Uncle Josephâs eldest son and still lived at the family compound where the meeting was. He was single and a sophomore in college. âDad said only three of our kind couldnât make it. Most of the wives came with, so this is the biggest gathering in a long time.â
âThatâs good,â I replied. âHow is your wolf doing?â
âHeâs a little intimidated right now,â Craig replied honestly. âIâve never felt the kind of dominance Leo puts out, much less yours. And it is a little weird feeling Nicholasâ wolf now; our wolves used to be equal, and now mine just wants to roll on his back when he comes up.â
âA lot will change now,â I said. Iâd spent a lot of time talking with Nicholas, Ian, and Leo about what we would be doing.
âRemember when you were worried that mating and becoming an Alpha would mean you might not get to go to college for what you wanted,â Mom teased. âThose were the days!â
âOh, my,â I replied. âEasy button compared to this.â Heck, it was going to be hard to balance a mating with my career and commitments, much less family on the other side of the world and an untrained Pack.
Craig told us about his family and their land as we drove, and soon we arrived at his familyâs station. He pulled to a stop in front of a sprawling one-story farmhouse. There were tents pitched around the yard and a few campers off to the side, only a few with lights showing. âFull house?â
âYou wouldnât believe how full. Come on, my parents, Joseph and Margaret, are waiting by the door.â
As always, I let my bodyguards get out first, and thatâs when everything went to shit. âMATE,â Fiona growled out, and she took off for the stairs and Joseph. He had no idea what was happening, so he growled and pushed his wife behind him. By protecting this woman and growling at her, he was rejecting her. It was a slap at her wolf, and she shifted to eliminate the threat to her mating.
âNO! STOP,â I yelled as her wolf leaped for the pair.
Joseph shifted as well, but his wolf was confused. It wanted the beautiful she-wolf running towards it, not the human behind him that his other half loved. Fiona crashed into Margaret and bit into her arm as she screamed and tried to fight off the enraged wolf.
Leo shifted before I could, and he knocked Fiona off of Margaretâs chest. He quickly pinned the struggling wolf, holding her neck until she submitted to him. Josephâs wolf thought about interfering, but Leoâs dominant wolf looked at him, and he backed down.
I took control. âCraig, take your mother inside and take care of that bite. Joseph, go inside and change while Leo and I deal with Fiona.â
Craig helped his Mom up, holding his shirt over her bleeding arm as she cried. Family members had started to gather around, drawn by the screams and the dominance of the new arrivals. Joseph shifted back first. âDonât hurt her,â he asked.
âShe attacked a human,â I said. âThat must be dealt with.â He grabbed a pair of shorts that one of the family members tossed him and grabbed his torn clothing before going inside. I took over for Leo, kneeling and holding Fionaâs scruff while he jumped back into the van and pulled on new clothes. Ian approached me. âDo you have a silver collar or something you use to restrain wolves?â
âThere are a post and chain in the back Joseph use for punishments,â he said.
I pulled an apologetic and devastated Fiona around the house, chaining her up to the thick post set into the ground. I didnât have to tell her how badly sheâd messed up; sheâd attacked a human, and there was a fifty-fifty chance that Margaret would die. Fionaâs life was forfeit if that happened. Even if Margaret survived the forced change, Fiona earned a harsh punishment.
There was no guarantee Joseph would choose Fiona over the woman heâd been married to for decades, and no guarantee heâd forgive her for his wifeâs death. Fiona let out a mournful howl before lying down, her head on her paws.
If there was a worse way to bring the Werewolf world to this family, I couldnât think of it.
âWe could have handled that better,â Amy sent to me as I finished up.
âNo kidding.â Iâd reached my limit on problems three problems ago. âCan you and Leo handle things for a few minutes? I have to call Alpha Steven and tell him what happened.â
âSure, but donât take long. Craig will finish bandaging up Margaret in a few minutes, and everyone is gathering in the living room to figure out what is going on. They are pissed and scared for Margaret, who they think is in for a painful death.â
I pulled out my phone and walked away from the house as I made the call. âVicki? Whatâs going on?â
It was close to noon there, so they knew it was the middle of the night for me. âWe arrived at the station to meet everyone, and things went bad. My dog Fiona bit the ownerâs wife. Iâve got her tied up in back until the test results come through.â
He didnât say anything; I was speaking in code with the open line. I couldnât openly say that his Pack Warrior went full loco werewolf on the human. âWill you send her home?â
âI was going to ask you about that after we know how bad Margaretâs bite is.â
âKeep me posted; when there is a chance, we should probably have another videoconference. In the meantime, Iâll defer to Leoâs judgment on things if it canât wait until you get home.â That was the kicker; it would be dangerous to bring Fiona home with a death sentence on her. Leo would make the call and would carry out the sentence here if needed.
âIâll let him know he is acting for you locally. Thank you, Steven, Iâll call you when I know more.â
âThank you, Vicki. Good luck.â
I hung up the phone and went inside through the door to the kitchen. Margaret was sitting at the table, tears streaming down her face as Craig finished taping the dressing down. âMargaret, Iâm Vicki, Nicholasâ mate. I wish we had a better meeting than that, but thank you for opening your home to us.â
âSheâs killed me,â Margaret said as she looked at her arm.
âMaybe not. Come on, letâs join the others, and weâll unpack everything that just happened and what it all means.â Craig and I helped her to her feet and brought her into the living room. Adults packed the room, maybe fifty of them, most of whom had just woken up. Every horizontal surface had someone on it, including the floor. Joseph was sitting in his recliner, and Craig moved his Mom to sit on his lap. Although his arms held her, I could see in his eyes how conflicted he was.
Well, I might as well get started. Since I was likely to be the Australian Alpha, Leo thought it would be best I linked my hands with Nicholas and faced the crowd from the kitchen entrance. âHello, everyone. My name is Vicki Lawrence. Arriving with me tonight are Alpha Leo Volkov, from my home Pack in Miesville, Minnesota, in the United States.â Leo waved and smiled, but few met his eyes. Theyâd felt his power when he shifted, and everyone knew it was more than their wolves had. I quickly introduced my mother, Amy, the twins, and Carly, who was sitting in Patrickâs lap. âIt is late, so I thought Iâd answer some of your questions quickly tonight, and we can go over them in more detail when weâve all gotten some sleep.â
âWhat is happening to that wolf who attacked Margaret for no reason? Heâs killed her,â one person asked.
âThat wolf is Fiona, a warrior in the Three Sisters Pack in Oregon. She is my bodyguard and my responsibility,â I said evenly. âIâll explain what happened soon, but she is tied up out back until we can set her punishment for attacking a human.â I looked out among them. âWhat is your experience with bites?â
âThey are always fatal,â Ian said.
âNot for us,â I said. âWhen a werewolf in its wolf form bites a human, a transformation begins. My mother used to be human until a werewolf bit her during an attack on our car. She survived, but not all do. We donât know why some make it, and some donât, but we DO know that an Alpha needs to be present at the change. If the person is strong enough and in a Pack structure, about half make it.â There was some grumbling. âWe will be here for Margaret to give her a chance.â
âWhy was she attacked?â
âI should first explain what mates are,â I said as I put my arm around Nicholas. âWhen the Moon Goddess created our kind, she gave us mates. Your wolf recognizes its mate by the smell, and the attraction between you is strong and immediate. The bond is until death, and is deeper and more satisfying than any marriage. Since we have some new mates here, maybe they can explain what it felt like.â I gave Patrick and Nicholas a chance to describe it. It was all new to them, and I could see it on their faces. None could deny what was in front of them, though. âJoseph is Fionaâs mate. She saw Margaret as a threat to her mating and tried to eliminate it.â
Margaret stood up, looking at her husband. âYou knew?â
âIt all happened so quickly,â he said. âAt first, I was defending you, and then my wolf refused to harm Fiona.â
âAnd this is the problem your isolation has created. Just because you donât interact doesnât mean Luna hasnât placed mates in the world for you. Fiona waited for a quarter-century for her mate to find him married and living here. Marrying a human doesnât break the attraction to a mate; only by rejecting the mate, the death of the mate, or claiming another wolf as your mate does the attraction go away.â
It was a lot to take in, especially for Joseph. âWhat happens next,â he asked.
âYou, Margaret, and Fiona will hopefully have choices to make,â I said.
âHopefully?â Margaret asked.
âWell, if you donât survive the change, Fiona will be executed, and there arenât any choices left. When you become a werewolf, you will not be Josephâs fate mate. That is Fiona; youâll have a fated mate out there as well, someone we donât know yet. If the two of you decide that your life together is more important than your fate mates, you claim each other and become choice mates. Your mating breaks the bond with Fiona and whoever your fate mate was, allowing Luna the chance to find another wolf for them. That is what happened to me; my fated mate rejected me for another, and Luna gave me Nicholas instead.â
âWhat if I want Fiona,â Joseph asked nervously.
âIf you choose to mate with Fiona after her punishment ends, you would divorce Margaret in the human world and allow her to go to other Packs find her match.â This caused another round of murmuring.
âWhat about me,â a woman asked while being held by her husband. âI donât want to risk death for him, even if it is a coin flip.â
âNo one can make you risk the change if you donât want to, but there are other people affected than just you,â I replied. âYou all live your lives with human spouses, but your true mates suffer because they never find you. They might die, frustrated and alone, never knowing why.â
âWe owe it to them to help you find each other, even if only to reject them so they can get a second-chance mate,â Leo said. âWhat we would do is send a piece of clothing with your scent around to the Packs until someone recognizes it. We would then bring the two of you together so you could reject them in person, or claim them and put your wife aside.â
âItâs a lot to think about, and nothing must happen immediately,â I said. âI think we should all go to sleep and pick this up tomorrow. Make sure you spend time with Margaret, as once the fevers begin, it wonât be easy on her.â
âAnd tomorrow we will talk more about Pack structures, Alphas, and our wolves,â Leo promised.
There wasnât much room, and there was so much unrest that Leo and I decided our group would shift and puppy pile in the living room. It didnât take long for others to join us; it was natural for wolves to gravitate to the dominant wolves under stress. By morning, the majority of the assembled wolves had joined us on the carpet.