40: A Feast for the Fallen
Trapping Quincy
Quincy St. Martin
I rip the baguette with my fingers and dip it into the remaining beef stew before cramming it in my mouth. I miss boeuf Bourguignon, and this one tastes almost like the one Nana used to make. Besides, Iâm hungry.
I couldnât believe it when Enzo woke me up and escorted me down to the dining room with food and everyone waiting for me.
Everyone at the table is staring at me. By everyone, I mean Luna Bianca, my uncleâs wife, Maria, my cousin Joelle and a few of her friends, a few other women from the pack, my sister, Caitlin Rose, and last but not least, my mother dearest.
It was made very clear right from when I was just a little girl that I am far beneath them. So far beneath them that I am not worthy enough to sit at the same table as them.
So why am I sitting at the packâs dinner table now?
Frankly, I have no idea. It feels like a last supper to me. You know, the meal they serve prisoners just before their execution?
They are all smiling, except for my mother, but even the widest fake smile cannot hide the deep-seated disgust that they feel for me. Thereâs surprisingly a flash of pity in one of the womanâs eyes. I do not like pity, but anything but disgust and hostility is surprising to me.
âJoelle, why donât you take your cousin out for a walk after sheâs done eating, honey?â suggests Luna Bianca sweetly.
âOf course, Luna,â replies Joelle, sounding very eager and pleased to do so.
I look at them both suspiciously. I have been looking back at all of them very warily.
The pack house is guarded like a fortress. I realized that as soon as I stepped out of the bedroom, which I come to understand is old Mr. Maddoxâs bedroom.
My walk with Joelle and her friend Kelly only reinforces what I already know. The whole house is heavily guarded. The ground is crawling with Loup Noir Pack warriors.
Now I understand the look of defeat on my cousinâs face. Jorden knew there was absolutely zero chance for us to escape. Weâre both are as good as dead even attempting to escape.
âNow let us take you back to your room. I bet they have the bath ready for you,â says Joelle after she dragged me around the outside of the packâs house.
âDonât they have a shower or a bathtub where you went off to?â
âYeah, Iâve been wondering about that,â comes a response from her clone, Kelly.
Joelle covers her nose with her fingers, and both of them laugh like hyenas.
I know I stink because the last shower I had was a couple of days ago and the car Iâd been in for the last two days stank to the highest heavens, but Iâm tired of their games.
Theyâve been sickeningly sweet but condescending. Ridiculing me with their backhanded compliments.
âAt least Iâll smell better after a shower. You two are so full of BS no amount of bath could mask the stench.â
Joelle gasps. âGoddess, Quincy! How rude! Weâve been so nice to you.â
âYeah, weâve been so nice,â agrees Kelly. âYou havenât changed a bit.â
âNothing can cure bad breeding,â announces Joelle.
âBut I thought sheâd changed after she became Mr. Maddoxâs mate,â says Kelly to her as if I wasnât there.
âI am not old Maddoxâs mate!â I say.
âOh, please! You should feel so lucky that he claimed you are,â says Joelle with a sneer. âLet me be honest with you, Quincy,â she leans in and whispers in my ear. âNobody else wants you here. Youâre so useless. More useless than the omegas. Youâre so pathetic, but you donât seem to get it. You donât know your place no matter how many times we try to tell you.â
She straightens up. Thereâs so much hatred in her eyes.
Sheâs right. I donât get it. I donât understand where all the hatred came from. I donât remember doing anything bad to her or anybody in this pack, at least not something that would warrant such loathing and contempt.
She smooths her dress and takes a deep breath, the ugly scowl on her face now gone.
âWe were planning on getting rid of you,â she continues casually as if sheâs talking about the weather, âbut Mr. Maddox said youâre his second mate. So weâre going to be nice to you.â
She smiles at me then Kelly smiles at me. I think I prefer their hateful glares than the smiles. I think I will be pulling bloody knives out of my back very soon.
Iâm being led back to old Maddoxâs bedroom. Two big burly guards escort us. Don and Enzo are stationed at the door.
Three women are waiting for me inside the room. One of them ushers me through the door of an ensuite bathroom where another two women are waiting for me.
A bath is ready. Steam rises, and the smell of lavender fills the air. It reminds me of the late Judith Maddox. She smelled like lavender. I feel sick.
I feel the beef stew that I ate earlier rise in my stomach. I turn, fall on my knees, and hurl.