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On
the first floor of the Ingram Estate, Pax ran through the halls. The
news filtered in from Alexandria, sending him away from his lunch and
tearing into the stairwell. He wanted to be the first to break the news
to Alex.
The helicopter landed
in a field two miles away from the scene. A car met Alex and his small
team, taking them the rest of the way to the Jeep where a small crowd
of onlookers gathered by the road. The police kept them out of the field
and away from the scene, but it was the presence of this other crew
that secretly told everyone this wasn’t some simple car accident.
Within minutes of gathering at the scene, a picture of the wrecked vehicle
was already posted to its owner’s online account, via cell phone.
Containing a scene in this day and age was something that concerned
Alex. Walking the line between obscurity and publicly known was becoming
more of a tightrope walk. He hated the internet.
As the car pulled
into the driveway, Pax could sense Alex’s frustration give way to
anger. And the cause was obvious. The cars parked here doubled the amount
of those by the Jeep. One of the vehicles was a large, black truck,
its trailer big enough to carry another vehicle.
The bright, bathroom
light shown the horror left behind. Torn and bloodied clothes scattered
the floor. Alex was allowed inside first. He kneeled by the clothing
and towels, using a pen from his pocket to sort through them. He lifted
a familiar shirt. It was the one Evonne wore last night. He looked around
the bathroom once more. Blood was on the edge of the tub and floor.
His eyes landed on a smeared handprint on the shower’s wall.



Pax
threw open the door to Alex’s office and found it empty.
He grumbled.
“Figures.”
Closing
the door he ran for the grand staircase, certain he knew now where to
find him.
As Pax
came to the door of Alex’s private study, he barged through, almost
smashing the door knob into the wall.
Alex
jumped in his seat. “Dammit, Pax!”
“I’m
sorry, sir,” he said, catching his breath, “but you have to hear
this.”
Pulling
off his reading glasses, Alex rubbed his fingers along the bridge of
his nose. “You could of called me.”
“Not
this. Not this.”
“All
right. What is it?”
Pax
breathed deep. “We just received word that a black Jeep Commander
was found abandoned this morning, about three hours from here.” The
placid look on Alex’s face was an expression he didn’t expect to
see.
“And
why should I be concerned?” he said.
“It’s
the condition in which the Jeep was found. It was crashed into a tree
and the interior covered with blood.”
Alex’s
expression switched to the one Pax expected to see. “Who’s handling
the scene?” he asked.
“A
team from Alexandria arrived not too long ago.”
“Any
havens or packs in the area?”
“I
didn’t have time to check. But if there is a haven, it’s most likely
abandoned like the rest.”
Alex
stood from his desk, thinking of something to say. “Get my helicopter
ready.”
“Sir…”
Pax began, scratching the back of his head, “I, uh…”
“Yes,
you may accompany me.”
“Thank
you, sir. Anyone else you want to bring?”
“Pick
two others and meet me at the helipad.”
The
cars stopped halfway through the field. Pax stayed at Alex’s side
as their small team headed for the Jeep.
“I’m
not sure about the coat,” Pax whispered, nodding once at the long,
dark coat Alex wore. “You look too much like an FBI agent.”
His
boss spoke, ignoring the comment. “I thought you said we had a team
here.”
“To
my knowledge, we do.” Pax looked over the strange faces and found
a familiar one. “Leigh! Where is everyone?”
The
proficient hunter, Leigh, nodded at them. She lowered the camera and
stepped away from the Jeep to properly address them, giving another
nod at Alex. “I wasn’t expecting you here,” she said.
Alex
remained like a stone wall as he surveyed the scene. “Where is everyone
else?”
“Securing
the rest of the scene,” she informed.
“There’s
more?” asked Pax.
“At
a farm about a mile that way.” She pointed into the woods.
Alex’s
eyes kept moving back to the Jeep. “What can you tell me about this?”
Leigh
motioned to the broken rear window. “The glass was shattered inwardly
and the driver was injured badly. My guess is that he was outrunning
something.”
“Gabriel
doesn’t run,” Alex quietly informed. “It’s not in his nature
to run.”
Pax
spoke. “Then that leaves a certain girl behind the wheel.”
Alex
approached the Jeep and peered into the broken window. Blood shown the
trail of someone dragged from the front and out the back. A gun covered
in dried blood sat on the floor. The weapon belonged to Gabriel. Moving
to the driver’s side door, Alex found more blood on the handle. Leigh
moved in and carefully opened the door with a gloved hand. She snapped
a few more pictures before backing away.
Alex
gave the driver’s seat discerning look. While the blood told of the
driver’s severe injuries, the passenger seat was untouched.
“Get
a team to the nearest haven,” he ordered, staring at the blood covered
steering wheel. “If it’s abandoned like the others, I want a full
sweep—the surrounding area included.”
“We
already have,” Leigh informed.
Pax
studied Alex’s faltering exterior. “I thought you were giving up
your search for her.”
“I
have,” he lied. “I just want to know what happened. I want to know
if she’s all right.” He faced Leigh and ordered, “Get the Jeep
loaded up and take it back to inspect further.” His eyes then fell
on the crowd of onlookers. “I want this area cleared out within thirty
minutes.”
“What
about the boys in blue?” she asked.
“Tell
them that this is now an FBI investigation.”
Pax
held back a laugh.
“Take
me to the farm,” Alex ordered.
Leigh
nodded. “Yes, sir.” Motioning to someone, she gave her own order.
“Show them to the farm.”
Alex
left the car in a huff. Pax followed him as he marched up to the truck,
the team at the house oblivious to the man storming their way.
“How
long has this been here?” he yelled.
Everyone
stopped to look at him, surprised to see the big man himself on the
scene.
A woman
finally stepped forward and shrugged. “An hour, maybe longer.”
“This
needs to go back to the Jeep, securing and cleaning that area first,”
he said. “Number one priority—discreetness. We have nearly a dozen
curious eyes scouring that scene, and only four of our men dealing with
damage control. I want to see that amount tripled, and this thing”—he
hit the truck—“out of here.”
The
people jumped into action, scrambling to their vehicles, while a handful
of others filed into the truck. A middle-aged man from the dispersing
crowd approached Alex and Pax.
“I’m
surprised to see you here,” Richard said.
“Thus
the lax in procedure?” replied Alex. “Unacceptable.”
Pax
intervened, deflecting his boss’ anger. “So what’s the story?”
“The
barn is the most interesting,” began Richard, motioning for them to
follow. They crossed the short distance to the barn where four people
worked the scene. A body of a man lay near a large, grey wolf, the bite
on his neck unmistakably the work of a vampire. The wolf shown similar
signs that a vampire fed from it.
Richard
stood over the wolf. “There are two known packs around this area.
We’re not sure which one she belongs to.” Kneeling down, he pointed
to the head. “Shot point-blank.”
“And
the human?” asked Alex.
“He
was fed on, of course,” he said, standing. “And from what we could
gather from the horse and the house, there were two vampires here.”
“Horse?”
questioned Pax.
“In
here.” Richard went to one of the stalls.
The
dead horse shown two wounds on its neck. They weren’t bite marks,
but wounds made by a blade. Another injury to the animal caught Pax’s
eye. He knelt by the horse’s shoulders and brushed the mane to the
side.
“It
was paralyzed,” he concluded. “They were too weak to risk further
injury if the horse struggled.”
Richard
tightened his lips at the theory. “We can spin the scene as an animal
attack. The feral dog attacked the horse, and as the human came to investigate,
he injured the wolf, but was also fatally injured in the process.”
“What
about the house?” Alex asked.
“We
haven’t fully processed everything inside,” informed Richard, “but
the vampires were inside at some point.”
“Show
me.”
“One
werewolf couldn’t do this much damage,” he pointed out.
“Maybe
Gabriel is getting careless in his old age,” Pax casually remarked.
“You
mean Gabriel was here?” asked Richard, astonished. “I heard a rumor
that it may be him, but I wasn’t sure.”
Alex’s
eyes picked out Gabriel’s torn coat. He moved it around with the pen,
seeing the torn fabric covered in dried blood. “Have some people go
around and look for any disturbed earth or caves. They may still be
here.”
“No
need,” Richard replied. “The owner’s truck is missing.”
“How
do know that?”
“Next
of kin. We located his sister who lives in town and she informed us
that he owns one truck—a green Dodge Ram.”
Pax
took in the scene for himself and kicked at the towels. “They were
hurt pretty bad. Still bleeding after getting cleaned up.” Noticing
Alex shooting him a cold look, he backtracked. “Sorry. I didn’t
mean to…
Well, I mean, I hope I didn’t help you visualize them showering together.”
He stopped and tried again. “She has to be all right. There’s nothing
here to suggest otherwise… except for the shredded clothes saturated
in blood, they’re perfectly fine.”
“The
closet in the master bedroom was ransacked,” continued Richard, “looking
for new clothes, I would imagine. But the owner’s wallet was left
untouched on the nightstand.”
“He
wouldn’t touch it anyway,” Alex said, standing. “Give me a time
frame.”
“We’re
thinking they were here around 4 a.m., maybe five.”
“I
saw them last night. They left the estate around 1 a.m.”
The
cell phone in Richard’s pocket rang. He stepped into the hall and
answered it.
Alex’s
eyes went back to the handprint left on the shower wall. Placing his
hand beside it he knew, based on size alone, it was left by Evonne.
Pax
lowered his voice as he spoke. “I don’t want to admit it, and I’d
be the last person in the world to admit this, but I think she’s as
safe as she can be with him. I’m willing to trust Gabriel at this
point.”
Turning
to face the hunter, Alex felt betrayed once again by his words. “I
don’t believe what I’m hearing from you.”
Richard
returned to the bathroom, closed cell phone in hand. “The team we
sent to the nearest haven found it abandoned, but they also found the
bodies of twelve werewolves, all of them purebloods.”
“Anything
else?”
“They
believe that Gabriel was staying there. In the hall where most of the
wolves were killed, they found a room with several bags, one of which
carried guns and ammunition, including some knives. They also found
another bag containing a laptop.”
“Sounds
like they left in a hurry,” Pax pointed out.
“They
wouldn’t leave those things on purpose,” said Alex. “I think they
may try to come back for them. Have them watch the place, but refrain
from standard procedure. Leave everything as they found it.”
“And
if they return?” asked Richard.
“Take
Evonne alive.”
“And
Gabriel?”
Alex
looked at the clothes once more. “Kill him.”
“Sir,”
Pax said, shocked at the order, “but last night you said—”
“What
I said last night was to place them at ease. If they believe I’m no
longer looking for them, they will no longer be on guard.”
“You
know you had enough firepower to take them out last night.”
“It
wasn’t the right moment. We were the ones caught off guard.”
Richard
took this heated exchange as a cue to leave the room. Once again he
was on the phone, relaying the orders.
“Are
you serious?” Pax sharply whispered. “You just gave an order to
kill Gabriel! That’s like killing someone on our side. You’ve known
him for years, well before SEVEN. Just because this shit seems to be
spiraling out of your control, you can’t sit back and decides who
has the right to live or die.”
“That
is what we do everyday! Or have you forgotten? You use to be the first
to fire your gun. ‘Fangs or fur,’ you always said. It didn’t matter
who they are.”
“Things
change,” said Pax, his voice losing strength.
“You’re
right. Things change. And as long as he remains alive, there will always
be a chance he’ll take her from me again.”
“You
know, in normal families the children grow up, move out, and sometimes
get involved with people their parents hate with a passion. And to me,
this isn’t that much different. If she doesn’t completely hate you
now, then what you’re planning to do will destroy that relationship.”
“I’m
doing this for her, not me.”
“Bullshit!
You’re doing this for you alone.”
“Quiet,”
Alex muttered.
“That’s
right. When someone speaks the truth around you, you never want to hear
it.”
Alex
calmly left the room.
Pax
sighed and leaned against the wall, lightly banging his head. “Bastard,
idiot, asshole…
Come on, Pax, just chose one.” Mentally choosing the right words,
he headed after Alex. As he left the house he saw his boss walking back
to the barn. Other SEVEN workers shuffled around, getting things ready
to remove the bodies.
Pax
yelled out, his words aimed at Alex. “Incompetent, egotistical, fool!”
Everyone,
including Alex, looked at him.
“You
heard me,” he continued, “and I’m not recanting.”
“Stand
down,” fumed Alex.
Pax
held out his hands. “They’re just words, old man,” he said as
he stepped from the porch. “Let’s call it a day and head back. They
have everything under control here. No need to nitpick their work.”
All
eyes went to Alex as they waited for his response. The man studied the
bold hunter, the anger flustering his face. He shook his head at Pax’s
attempt to stoke the flames. He then turned from him and continued the
short walk to the barn.
Shoulders
slumping, Pax was defeated again, this time, without a single word.



