Chapter 1

2483 Words
1 Rafe Moonlight glints off the black surface of Lake Como. The villas and their private estates are all silent as I slink past cypress trees and neatly trimmed boxwoods to my destination. “Alpha One, are you in position?” Channing’s voice is a whisper in my earpiece. “Not yet,” I mutter into the tiny microphone transmitter embedded in my collar. I’m wearing nothing but a stretchy black bodysuit that will allow me to shift into a wolf if I need to. If all goes to plan, I won’t need to. In the meantime, I look like a cat burglar. Which is appropriate. Tonight I’m a thief, and the target is the eighteenth century villa built into the side of the mountain. Gabriel Dieter's Italian mansion has layers of security. The first is its location in a secluded section of Lake Como. There’s only one road in and out, and it’s heavily guarded. But the guards are human, and somehow Colonel Johnson, the shifter commander who greenlit this op, learned their nightly route. I have two minutes to give them the slip and get down to the lake water. I already bypassed the guards, so now it’s time for me to swim. The lake laps at the rocks, a gentle lullaby greeting me. I slip into the water and grit my teeth against the chill. My wolf doesn’t really like the water. Werewolves are heavy and swimming isn’t easy. I swim in smooth strokes and keep to the shallows until the walled fortress of Dieter’s home is ahead. When I take to land again, I give myself a good shake and fling the water off me like a wolf. I’ve yet to find a more efficient way to dry off. “Approaching the house,” I breathe into my comm. I take a running leap and twist as I clear the top of the wall. I land silently on my feet. “Do we need the diversion?” Channing asks. “No.” A disturbance at the border of Dieter’s land would draw guards, but result in more heat. The further I can get without alerting Dieter to a security breach, the better. “Incoming,” Channing mutters in my ear, but I'm already turning. My wolf scented the new arrivals: thick-bodied guard dogs racing my way. Rottweilers. I let out a growl and bare my teeth, letting my wolf greet them. The dogs stop in their tracks, realizing they’ve met a bigger predator. Something about my alpha presence makes their primal senses overwhelm their training. Challenging and soothing them all at the same time. They tilt their heads to show their necks and shy away when I stride forward. I lope across the dark lawn to the house. There are no motion sensors in this area, probably because they don't want them tripped by the dogs. Mistake. I circle the house until I’m below the shining glass addition to the villa, the one modern touch in the centuries old architecture. Gabriel Dieter’s office. I find toeholds in the stone wall and scale the sheer face of the house until I'm on the roof. Here, I can make my way closer to the glass cupola. “Almost in,” I report. I have a glass cutter attached to my belt, but as I creep along the tiled roof, I spy an open window in one of the eighteenth-century towers. I scale the turret, climbing blind with my fingers searching painstakingly for holds. A breeze rises off the lake and chills my exposed skin. At last, I hug the stone, having climbed level with the open window. I push the ancient glass very carefully. Sure enough, it’s unlatched. Unbelievable. I slip through the open window and step into a hall. “I’m in.” Trepidation trickles up my spine as I pad through the hall towards Dieter’s office. Dieter is a paranoid sonofabitch. According to our reports, he sleeps in a safe room every night. His preferred home base is a fortress in the Swiss Alps. We tried spying on him there, but somehow he found out and sicced a small army on us. Since then, he’s gone underground, hiding in a hole too deep for even Colonel Johnson’s sources to find. Until last week, when we got reports of him staying here, in his Lake Como residence. This place isn’t as secure as his mountain chalet, but it’s belonged to his family for centuries. He must have arranged to meet someone here—probably a warlord or terrorist leader or similar customer hoping to buy Dieter’s illegal arms. I push my wolf’s unease away. The only thing bigger than Dieter’s paranoia is his conceit. He probably wanted to meet his customers here to impress them. This hallway is lined with priceless artifacts, enough to fill a small museum. I creep past giant gilt framed paintings, Greek statues, a Ming vase. This guy hoards treasure like a dragon. Who knows what other valuables are locked in the vaults below this house? My mission is simple. Break into Dieter’s office, grab the evidence of his next arms deal, plant a few bugs. The best time to do this is when he's in his house, thinking he’s safe, thinking all is well. I halt in the hall before the office door, listening for any incoming guards. Dieter’s security is excellent, but it’s not enough to deter a werewolf. My heightened hearing, night vision and sense of smell give me the advantage. “I’m at the office,” I murmur to my comm. “There’s no sign of extra security.” No fingerprint or eye scanner, nothing. I put my hand on the latch, and it opens smoothly. “Door’s unlocked.” “Noted. Security cams quiet. Proceed with caution,” a new voice chimes in. Lance, from the safety of his new home. He’s grounded from missions until further notice, but he insisted on being radio backup. The door creaks a little as it completes its arc, but the house remains silent. Somewhere in the house, Gabriel Dieter is asleep in his safe room. If it all goes well, it won't be until he awakes in the morning that he'll know anything is gone. The way before me is filled with red lasers. A hundred of them, crisscrossing the entire room. No wonder the door wasn’t locked. No human thief could weave through this labyrinth. But I’m not human. I back up in the hall and take a running leap. In a maneuver I’ve practiced for weeks on end, I sail head first over the lasers, high enough to brush the ceiling. My jump ends in a roll that deposits me behind the giant desk. I land close to the wall and freeze, every muscle tensed. Silence. Behind me, the red forest of lasers remains untripped. Two feet to my right is a small safe on a ledge built into the wall. I did it. “I’m at the safe.” “Roger that,” Lance murmurs. I sidle over to the safe and turn on the special blacklight built into the collar of my bodysuit. When I move the light over the safe’s keypad, Dieter’s fingerprints show up as blue and purple smudges on the keypad. I read off the relevant numbers to Lance. “There are no papers left out on the desk?” “No.” The lights in the office cut on. I whirl, blinking against the sudden brightness. “Welcome, Rafe Lightfoot, to my home.” Gabriel Dieter sits in the corner, lounging in an antique-looking chair that’s probably as old as the house. The bastard’s wearing an honest-to-God dressing gown. Red velvet, with black silk slacks and beaded slippers. Not everyone can pull off a Hugh Hefner look, but Dieter’s going for it. He has thick black hair and bronze skin, and the arrogance of a movie star. The bastard is wearing sunglasses. Inside. At night. The lasers have disappeared. One leap, and I could have my teeth at his neck. Except he's holding a gun with an elongated black barrel. “I wouldn't if I were you,” he says in smooth, unaccented English. My comm comes alive with a sudden crackle. “There are lights on in the office.” “Hello, Lance,” Dieter calls from across the room. There’s no way he could’ve picked up my comm unless he had shifter hearing, so he must have made a lucky guess. I remain still and watchful, weighing my options. “Took you long enough to get here,” Gabriel drawls. “I practically rolled out a red carpet.” He c***s his head to the side. “Did you kill my dogs?” “No.” He tsks. “So hard to find good help these days.” “I drugged them,” I lie. “It should’ve worn off by now.” I won’t have Dieter kill his dogs, thinking they’re worthless. I spread my hands to distract him. “So you caught me. Now what?” If he shoots me, it’ll hurt, but I should be able to escape. A few bullets won’t take down a shifter. “Now I teach you a lesson. I knew you would escalate after your little spy operation in Switzerland, but this breaking and entering is a bit too far.” “Did you think you could sell AK-47s to warlords, and we wouldn’t do anything about it?” “Hmm,” he pretends to ponder this. “I wonder what I could give you to drop this little crusade?” I stifle the growl that rises from my chest. “Nothing.” “Money, gold, jewels—” “Not a chance,” I interrupt. “The names of those who killed your family?” My muscles turn to stone. “What do you know about that?” My voice comes out hoarse. “You’d be surprised by how much I know about you, Rafe Lightfoot. I know you and your brother Lance were orphaned as teenagers. I know you want revenge.” My head’s reeling from this when he adds, “Oh, and congratulations. I hear your brother has gotten a human female with child.” Dieter’s lips draw back in a slow smile. It’s the creepiest thing I've ever seen. “Perhaps I should pay a visit.” My snarl bursts out before I can stop it. “You leave him alone.” “Perhaps that's what I'll give you.” Dieter says with a crocodile-like grin. “If you leave me alone then I'll return the favor.” “I don't respond well to threats,” I say, my voice thick with fury. “Enough. I've tolerated you for some time. How would you like waking up in the middle of the night to greet an uninvited guest?” He leans forward. “How secure is your little lodge near Wolf Mountain?” I turn my head and speak into my comm, “Get eyes on Lance, now.” “Roger that.” Channing says. “Mission aborted. Pickup in thirty.” In the distance, I hear the sound of a helicopter. My ride’s almost here. I spread my lips wide and show my teeth in my own wolfy grin. From the look on Dieter’s face, my smile is as disturbing as his. “Well, this has been fun, but I got to go.” I fake towards the window to my right. Shots ring out, and I dip left, ripping the safe from the wall. Above my head, glass shatters. I raise the safe above my head, shielding myself from the rain of glass shards. Dieter howls. “Somebody order takeout?” Channing hollers from above and cackles like a psycho. The helicopter hovers over the broken glass dome. I leap and catch the ladder waiting for me, cradling the safe to my chest. Channing’s just above me. We both climb up to the bird. Channing makes great time, but I’m struggling with the unwieldy weight of the safe. More gunshots ring out, piercing the night. Below, Dieter stands in the glass-strewn wreck of his office. His sunglasses have fallen off, and his face is a mask of fury as he fires the gun at me. Bullets slam into me, almost wrenching my hold from the webbing ladder. Fire explodes in my body, followed by a supernova of pain. I drop the safe. “f**k, no!” I shout. “Hang on, Sarge,” Lance’s voice hammers into my ear. “He’s been hit! Fly, fly, fly,” Channing screams at Teddy, our pilot. The helicopter swoops away. Cold air rushes around me as we fly across the lake. I grit my teeth and hang on. “I got you,” Channing shouts to me and starts to pull the ladder in. My vision swims, and my head floats above the throbbing agony of my body. The seconds turn into years. Finally, Channing grabs my arms. I bite back a roar and move my frozen limbs to help him drag me into the bird. My body is weirdly numb. All I can do is collapse on the floor of the chopper, gasping. “Fucker knew we were coming,” I report as Channing helps me lie flat and rips open my suit to reveal bloody bullet wounds in my chest. “He shot me.” “No s**t, Sherlock,” Channing rumbles. He reaches for a bullet and hisses, snatching his hand away. “Silver.” White fire streaks along my ribs. My lips are numb. The poison’s moving through my body. “f**k,” I grit my teeth. “f**k,” Channing agrees, snapping on gloves. Pain makes me dizzy as he starts to dig into my flesh. We've got to get the bullets out; otherwise, my shifter healing won't kick in, and the silver will poison me slowly but surely. After a millennia of excruciating pain, Channing’s done. “Five bullets,” he reports. I hear them clink against each other as he drops them in an evidence bag. “All’s well that ends well, Sarge,” Lance says through the comm. His stoic tone tells me he’s relieved. “Live to fight another day.” “Damn right.” I let my body relax. My body temperature rises as my shifter healing takes over, but after a few minutes I can sit up. Channing hands me a water bottle, and I thank him. “Silver bullets,” he says and shakes his head. “You know what that means.” “Yeah,” I gulp down half the bottle and splash the rest over my face and chest. “Gabriel Dieter knows our secret.” Somehow, someway, the arms dealer found out we’re shifters. The question is, how?
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