“Scientists!” muttered Dubh. Two of his fellow pack members nodded in agreement.
“Why do you people keep calling Alexia a curse-breaker?” wondered Ivy.
“Precisely. Isn’t she simply a curse?” said Felicity unhelpfully.
“Sister, you say the sweetest things,” replied Lady Maccon.
Felicity gave her a dour look.
The pack Gamma seized this as an opportunity to change the subject. “Speaking of which, I was under the impression that Lady Maccon’s former name was Tarabotti. But you are a Miss Loontwill.”
“Oh”—Felicity smiled charmingly—“we have different fathers.”
“Ah, I see.” The Gamma frowned. “Oh, I
He looked at Alexia with newfound interest. “I should never have thought
The Beta also looked at Lady Maccon curiously. “Indeed, and to produce offspring. Civic duty, I suppose.”
“You knew my father?” Lady Maccon was suddenly intrigued, and, it must be admitted, distracted from her course of inquiry.
The two werewolves exchanged a look. “Not personally. We knew
Felicity said with a sniff, “Mama always said she could never remember why she leg-shackled herself to an Italian. She claimed it was a marriage of convenience, although I understand he was very good-looking. It did not last, of course. He died, just after Alexia was born. Such a terribly embarrassing thing to do, simply to up and die like that. Goes to show, Italians cannot be trusted. Mama was well rid of him. She married Papa shortly thereafter.”
Lady Maccon turned to look hard at her husband. “Did
“Not as such.”
“At some point, husband of mine, we must have a discussion, you and I, about the proper methods of fully transferring information. I am tired of feeling consistently behind the times.”
“Except that, wife, I have two centuries on you. I can hardly tell you everything I have learned and about everyone I have met during all those years.”
“Do not trouble me with such weak excuses,” she hissed.
While they were arguing, the suppertime conversation moved on without them. Madame Lefoux began explaining that she felt the aethographic transmitter’s crystalline valve resonator’s magnetic conduction might be out of alignment. Compounded, of course, by the implausibility ratio of transference during inclement weather.
No one, except the bespectacled claviger, was able to follow a word of her explanation, but everyone was nodding sagely as though they did. Even Ivy, who had the look of a slightly panicked dormouse on her round face, pretended interest.
Tunstell solicitously passed Miss Hisselpenny the plate of potato fritters, but Ivy ignored him.
“Oh, thank you, Mr. Tunstell,” said Felicity, reaching across to take one as though he had offered them to her.
Ivy huffed.
Tunstell, apparently frustrated by Miss Hisselpenny’s continued rejection, turned in Miss Loontwill’s direction, and began chatting with her about the recent influx of automated eyelash-curling implements imported from Portugal.
Ivy was more annoyed by this and turned away from the redhead to join in the werewolves’ discussion on a possible hunting outing the next morning. Not that Miss Hisselpenny knew a whit about guns or hunting, but dearth of knowledge on a subject had never yet kept Ivy from waxing poetical upon it.
“I believe there is considerable range in the bang of most guns,” she said sagely.
“Uh…” The gentlemen about her drifted in confusion.
“Since we can go out during the day, we might as well take advantage and get a little dawn shooting in for old times’ sake,” said Dubh finally, ignoring Miss Hisselpenny’s comment.
“Is Dubh his given name or surname?” Alexia asked her husband.
“Good question,” he replied. “Hundred and fifty years I have had to put up with that blighter and he never told me the which way of it. I dinna know much about his past before Kingair. Came in as a loner, back in the early seventeen hundreds. Bit of a troublemaker.”
“Ah, and you wouldn’t know anything about secrecy or troublemaking, would you, husband?”
“Touché, wife.”
The dinner drew to a close, and eventually the ladies left the gentlemen to their drinks.
Lady Maccon had never much supported the vampire-derived tradition of after-dinner gender segregation. After all, what had begun as an honor to the hive queen’s superiority and need for privacy now felt like a belittling of the feminine ability to imbibe quality alcohol. Still, Alexia recognized the opportunity for what it was and made an effort to fraternize with Lady Kingair.
“You are fully human, yet you seem to act as female Alpha. How is that?” she asked, settling herself on the dusty settee and sipping a small sherry.
“They lack leadership, and I’m the only one left.” The Scotswoman was blunt to the point of rudeness.
“Do you enjoy leading?” Alexia was genuinely curious.
“It’d work a mite better if I were a werewolf proper.”
Lady Maccon was surprised. “Would you really be willing to try? It’s such a grave risk for the gentler sex.”
“Aye. But yon husband of yers didna care for my wishes.” Left unsaid was the fact that Conall’s was the only opinion that mattered. Only an Alpha capable of Anubis Form could breed more werewolves. Alexia had never witnessed a metamorphosis, but she had read the scientific papers on the subject. Something about soul reclamation needing both forms at once.
“He thinks you would die in the attempt. And it would be at his hand. Well, at his teeth.”
The woman sipped her own sherry and nodded. Suddenly she looked every bit of her forty years and then some.
“And I the last of his mortal line,” said Sidheag Maccon.
“Oh.” Alexia nodded. “I see. And he would have to give you the full bite. It is a heavy burden you ask of him, to end his last mortal holding. Is that why he left the pack?”
“You think I drove him out with my asking? You dinna ken the truth of it?”
“Obviously not.”
“Then it isna my place to be telling you. You married the blighter; you should be asking him.”
“You think I have not tried?”
“Cagey old cuss, my gramps, that’s for pure certain. Tell me something, Lady Maccon, why
It was clear what the Lady of Kingair thought. She saw Alexia as nothing more than some kind of pariah who had married Lord Maccon out of either social or pecuniary avarice.
“You know,” replied Lady Maccon, not playing into her trap, “I ask myself that question daily.”
“It ain’t natural, a blending like that.”
Alexia looked over to ensure that the other ladies were out of earshot. Madame Lefoux and Ivy were engaged in complaining about long-distance travel in the mild manner of those who had thoroughly enjoyed the experience. Felicity stood on the far side of the room, looking out into the rainy night.
“Of course it is not natural. How could it be natural when neither of us are?” Lady Maccon sniffed.
“I canna make you out, curse-breaker,” replied Sidheag.
“It is really very simple. I am just like you, only without a soul.”
Lady Kingair leaned forward. Those familiar tawny eyes of hers were set in an equally familiar frown. “I was raised by the