wonât be able to accomplish much of an evening.â
âI enjoy being a wolf.â
Which was really all it took.
Lady Maccon, with an expression of profound relief, let go of her husbandâs hand.
Rue felt the snap back of the tether as it hit her own flesh like a physical wave of tingling. Then she was shifting and changing. And there she was, brindled wolf wearing her fatherâs power in her skin and the remnants of a rather nice tea-gown. It didnât feel unusual; whatever it was that made Paw Alpha and insane didnât transmit to her. She felt like her normal wolf self. No different from the night before when sheâd filched from Hemming. She wasnât surprised. While Rueâs wolf form looked like a smaller version of her fatherâs, she wasnât
actually
him. She never felt Alpha, either. No Anubis form, no urge to dominate, although as a female werewolf she should automatically be Alpha. It wasnât worth puzzling over, for even with her limited wolf eyes, Rue could see the profound relief on both her parentsâ faces. That was what mattered.
âYouâll have to stay within tether distance of your father, infant. Please donât forget. He canât be allowed wolf form at night, unless he absolutely must fight.â
Rue nodded her big shaggy head.
They were interrupted by someone knocking â loudly and persistently â on the parlour door.
Lady Maccon, freed up from her hand-holding obligations, went to open it.
Winkle stood there, looking sheepish. He was, as only to be expected from one of Damaâs drones, perfectly turned out for the evening. His dark glossy hair, a true glorious blue black, shone under the hallway lights and his up-tilted eyes gleamed.
He took in the family dynamic without comment. âLady Maccon, Lady Prudence.â A small bow to both the woman and the wolf. âLord Maccon.â
Lady Maccon smiled. âGood evening. Winkle, isnât it?â
âYes, my lady. I apologise for interrupting but itâs a matter of some delicacy. Itâs Lord Akeldama.â
Rue felt her stomach lurch.
Not Dama as well!
âIs he unwell?â Even Mother was worried.
Winkle grinned. âHim? Never. He has sent me with a message. Iâm afraid itâs not the best news. But there seems to be â oh dear me, I donât quite know how to put it â a
brawl
occurring down off Worple Road. Some species of croquet green or what have you is playing host.â
Rueâs ears perked.
My airship!
Lord Maccon grumbled, âWhatâs that to do with us? Mobs are constabulary business. What is that vampire about? Disturbing us with gossip of brawls andââ
Lady Maccon looked to her wolf daughter. âIsnât that where
The
Spotted Custard
is parked?â
Moored
, Rue wanted to correct her but couldnât. She nodded.
âIâm sorry to say,â Winkle continued, âthis brawl looks to be taking place between your pack, my lord, and Baroness Tunstellâs drones.â
âWonderful. Just wonderful,â said Lady Maccon while Rue and her father both pushed past Winkle and ran out of the front door into the street.
Rue kept pace with her father easily; after all, she was the one in wolf form. He was fit as a mortal human but was big enough to be built for taking a stand rather than moving fast. In fact, Lord Maccon running was more an act of falling at speed. So really, Rue only had to trot.
It came as no surprise to her when Lady Maccon drew alongside driving a shapely little bounder. The dogcart was of the sporting style, where the driver sits facing and the passenger at his back in a reverse position â plenty of room inside the box for hunting dogs. Or, as was its use in the Maccon household, prematurely shifted werewolves.
âGet in,â Lady Maccon ordered her husband.
âIâll drive.â
âDonât be absurd, Conall. Iâm a much better
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