wounded garou, Kevin.
“What happened?” Griffen said.
“Got hit,” Kevin said.
Griffen fought the impulse to throttle the life out of him.
“A little more detail please,” Griffen said.
“Well, we was talking about the investigation. And he said we couldn’t do it. Said we needed some fairy to bail us out.”
Griffen blinked and tried to rub some of the sleep from his eyes.
“What investigation?”
Kevin looked at him as if he were crazy.
“Us findin’ out who killed Slim, of course,” he said.
“I done tol’ you, ain’t gonna be done dat way,” Kane said.
“You mean it’s true!? You trust the fairies instead of your pack?” Kevin said, shocked.
“No, it ain’t like dat, boy…” Kane said.
One of the shifters, whom Griffen didn’t know, spoke up.
“How come Tail is talking for us now? Why is he stepping on Jay’s toes and keeping us out of things?”
“I only said that we aren’t trackers like that,” Tail said.
“Which we?!” another shifter demanded.
“Packless riffraff,” one of the garou muttered.
Several people started to talk at once, along the lines of traditional prefight rituals such as “What did you say?” A few of the garou and shifters took a step forward. Nails were starting to grow into claws.
“Hold it!” Griffen shouted.
He brought his fist down on the table, then had to recover as it went through the oak and he nearly lost his balance. He stood, trying to regain his control, watching his own claws fade away.
When he spoke again, it was dangerously soft.
“Tink, what are they talking about?”
Tink looked uncomfortable, and his eyes kept flicking to the damaged table.
“Well, it was maybe suggested that we do some investigating without the police knowing. See if we can’t find out what really happened. There was some question as to whether any shifter could do any good, and I suggested maybe Tammy could try to help.”
Griffen glanced at Tammy, but she seemed to have no comment to make. She crossed her arms over her small breasts and looked away from him.
“And no one thought about checking with me before sending packs of vigilantes through my town?” Griffen demanded.
“It wasn’t like that. We weren’t going to hunt that way. The rumors just sort of blew things up,” Tail said.
“We won’t be cut out,” the young shifter said.
“No one is cutting anyone out, this isn’t a game,” Tail said.
“You don’t speak for us, old man.”
Tail bared his teeth in an expression that no one would confuse with a smile. Griffen hadn’t seen anything like them before; they were all pointed and jagged, almost like a shark’s.
Jay put a restraining hand on his shoulder.
“I do speak for you, at least at this conclave,” Jay said.
The other shifter backed down, but the garou stepped up. “We don’t need a fairy to hunt for us.”
Some people, Griffen thought, have little survival instinct. Still, he was curious. After his talks with Harrison, he needed some help. He thought he would toss the idea around a bit.
“Really? You can find and track a scent, in a well-traveled public place, without knowing anything but it will cross Slim’s and maybe have a little blood spoor on it?” Griffen asked.
“Well… we could try,” said the garou.
“Werewolves. We can do it,” said one of the shifters.
“Oh? What’s your specialty?” Griffen said.
“Uh… I mean ‘we’ as a group.”
“You think like a group now? Things must have changed drastically this afternoon. Evolution at work, I suppose. Still, I’m curious. Always trying to learn, that’s me. What type of shifting do you do?” Griffen said.
“I can change my density,” the shifter said, and hung his head, his cheeks flushing red.
“That counts as shape-shifting, does it?”
Griffen realized he was feeling more than a little nasty and indulging the feeling too much. He moved on.
“Still, that doesn’t seem to be a lot of help in a murder investigation,” Griffen observed.
There were a few moments of awkward silence. Another shifter, Gustov, the one who had demonstrated with Kevin, spoke softly.
“Mr. McCandles, sir. If they want to help, can you… no, will you really stop them?”
Griffen stopped his knee-jerk reaction. Not only was he already getting a bad reputation, but that had been the most polite voice so far in the meeting. Griffen wanted to say it sounded like it would cause more trouble than it could possibly solve, but that would anger pretty much everyone. He was really beginning to hate politics.
He looked at the major players and saw reactions similar to his own thinking. None of them knew of a way out of this other than an iron fist. And the sad thing was, whatever the motivations behind it, these were people talking about helping Griffen. In their own backasswards way, they were trying to do good.
“If, and I mean if, I say go ahead with this nonsense, there will be some very clear rules. No public shifting or visible powers. No hassling locals or tourists. No more infighting. And if, God forbid, any of you encounter the police, you will be polite, helpful, fully responsive, and not have this come crashing down on everyone’s head.”
He looked at the shifters, who were nodding and trying to look harmless. The garou were doing likewise and failing miserably. Griffen sighed and went on.
“Since I know you won’t work together well, two groups. Garou and other shifters. No more than four in each group, so you pick your best. Everyone else will carry on as if the conclave were normal, get ready for the party, not butt in. Do you all agree to these rules?”
There was a scattered chorus of affirmative answers. Griffen spoke directly to the leaders next.
“Please tell me, do any of you have a better idea?”
No affirmative answers this time. Tink spoke up, again tentatively.
“I still think Tammy should help one of the groups; if they can find any trail at all, she can help focus on it,” Tink said.
“I already said I don’t want anything to do with this… disgusting murder business,” Tammy said, blanching noticeably.
Griffen sighed, and at the risk of her fixating on him again tried to move things along.
“Tammy, please? Let’s make this as painless for everyone as possible,” Griffen said.
She hesitated long enough, eyes blinking rapidly and looking around the room in a near panic. Every instinct Griffen had said that she would say no.
“Oh, fine! I’ll go with the garou.”
Apparently his instincts hadn’t quite figured out changelings yet.
Almost at once the loudmouth garou spoke up.
“We don’t ne—”
“Only a damned fool turns down a fair deal, ya hear? I got any fools in my pack?” Kane stepped in.
“No,” Kevin said.
“Den you be nice to da little lady here. You listen what she say. Less you ready to challenge me for my spot?”
The garou shook his head and looked away. Kane looked at Griffen and nodded.
“All right, if everyone could leave except the speakers and Tail. Go decide who gets into the groups. And I will say this once, I think I have been fair as moderator. Anyone who breaks these rules, answers to me,” Griffen