Page 39 of Let Us Prey

Delores, however, deserves none of those reactions. Emerging not only as a prey animal, but one of the weakest kinds has sullied our family name in a way I cannot forgive. The Council’s decision to force her to attend Apex chafed at first. If I’d had my way, Bruiser would have dealt with her, and I could have spread the rumor she disappeared into the night after we threatened to disown her. If she dies at Apex, they will treat it as a routine event, and they won't examine her scandalous heritage as closely. It’s still asatisfactory outcome, either way, so there was no need to meddle from the shadows.

I keep my paws clean and even though some will question why I didn’t save my only heir from the Council’s decision, they won’t be able to whisper behind my back about suspicious ‘accidents’. Back in the old country, my father preferred we handle our business swiftly and without remorse, which is how he built the impressive empire he did.

Yes, the skin trade is lucrative, indeed.

Shifters live all over the world, but the rarest breeds are notoriously difficult to locate. I’ve been working with my father’s traders and runners to find them. Their women and children fetch astronomical prices on the black market for everything from delicacies to breeding, to sales to private collectors. I’m not picky about who buys my products; their money is all green, and the Society has no qualms about where their cut comes from. My only concern is maintaining my family’s legacy, even if Dmitri Rostoff rarely acknowledges my invaluable contributions.

His approval is more difficult to locate than a dragon’s clash.

Unfortunately, even with the occasional rare shifter being exiled—including to teach at Society-run academies—none of their ilk has been furious enough to reveal locations of their homes. I have spies working on it, but given how insular most of their cultures are, it’s almost impossible to get them to socialize, much less spill secrets.

However, with my simpleton daughter at Apex, I might have an ‘in’. Her own pathetic sob story may entice the few living there to take pity on her, especially if I can further exploit her weaknesses. Those nitwit heirs should be able to continue their harassment, but they’re too soft to inspire true terror, so I need to gather additional allies on campus. Delores may not be a predator, but she is a Rostoff, and she won’t break easily. Bruno and I made certain she learned how to survive as part ofher upbringing, before she turned out to be a waste of our efforts.

“Mattie, if I finish this glass before a new one appears, I will assign you to Bruiser for a month!” I say, turning to glare at the useless bird with feline eyes.

The diminutive shifter looks as if she’s going to molt on the spot, and she rushes to fix another martini before I shift further. The abilities of a true alpha female vary by species, but I learned at a very young age to control my shift precisely—something no other female could. My father left me in the care of his lieutenants until I could shift every part of my body at will in order to intimidate people more effectively. It was a lesson I’d yet to teach our erstwhile daughter because she took her sweet time emerging, and Bruno’s mother wouldn’t allow me to send her to a shifter group who still practiced the old ways, like the Khans.

Perhaps if she hadn’t interfered with my plans, we wouldn’t be in the situation we are now—heirless.

All because of a twist of fate resulting from a physical issue, we paid heavily to keep secret for many years. This entire mess is because of a superstitious old Cajun gator who interfered with my plans to get rid of an unpredictable genetic result. Delores resulted from a solution I sought decades ago, after I could not find a believable stand-in to play my heir. The past is the past, but if I cannot resolve the rabbit situation in a manner befitting my family’s name soon, I will have to endure a future visit from my father.

That rusty old jaguar is the last thing I need right now.

No, the solution to my problems lies in my disappointing offspring. If I can back her into a corner, Delores will either get herself killed, or she’ll end up finding an idiot mate who will hopefully have rare shifter connections I can use to my advantage. Once that happens, I’ll be able to ferret out the information I need to weasel my way into profitable shiftersettlements.

Either way, I win.

The martini is cold, and I swirl it in the glass as I muse. In order for my scheme to work, I’ll need to pinpoint the most important exiles at Apex, in hopes the tactics of the other heirs drive my blonde bimbo of a daughter straight into their arms. The only way to do that is to… ah, yes.

That will do.

“Phone!” I bark, whipping my head around to glare toward my birdbrained assistant.

She comes running over with the object I threw not ten minutes ago, and I grin fangily when I note she has a similarly shaped red mark on her temple. Papa always said I had deadly aim, even when I wasn’t paying a bit of attention to my target. Using a clawed finger to scroll through my contacts, I find the one I need and press the call button. It rings several times, and by the time the bumbling headmistress answers, I’m seething.

No one keeps me waiting.

“Henrietta, I was unaware you’d developed a suicidal streak. Shall I send someone to fetch you, since you seem eager to bleed out on my carpet?” The squawks and flutters on her end are so intense, I can actually hear her panicking despite the lack of intelligible words coming over the line. Her fear sates my hunger for the moment, and I wait until she gathers herself enough to respond. Breaking the silence is a sign of weakness, and I won’t give this fool any ammunition.

“M-M-M-Madame L-L-L-Lucille… I… my phone… I was not.... I would never...” the eagle babbles, her words interspersed with screeches and beak chattering sounds.

As much as I enjoy her terror, this is getting tiresome, so I cut her off. “If you are eager to prove your allegiance, I am a reasonable feline. I will allow you penance for your grievous breach of protocol, headmistress.”

“How-how may I serve you, Madame Councilwoman?” Henrietta’s breaths slow, and I can sense her trying to calm her nerves.

This is why her own family—the Shirdals—excommunicated her to Apex. Henrietta may be an apex predator by birth and by lineage, but nothing they did could instill the spirit of ferocity necessary to survive as a Council heir. They sent her to replace the elder Headmaster once she emerged at nineteen, and she’s remained on campus since. Unlike the Drews, the Shirdals had several spares waiting in the wings, and their next heir stepped in with a vicious reign of terror.

If only I was as lucky…

Alas, I mistakenly chose not to gamble with the risks of creating extra heirs, and focused on beating our family expectations into the one I had. Annoyed, I snarl into the phone, taking out my frustration at my own choices on the frail eagle. “You will do precisely as I instruct, no deviation, and you will tell absolutely no one what we discuss when I contact you. Swear it, and know—if you break this oath, I will ship you to Bloodstone to be dinner for the ferals in their little jungle course.”

A sharp inhale tells me she understands perfectly, for once. “Y-Yes, Madame. I swear. I will not break the oaths of the Council.”

No, I don’t think you will, feather duster.

Even Henrietta isn’t cut off enough to have missed stories of the blood-soaked orgies and hunts that take place on Bloodstone. Criminals, spies, traitors, political prisoners, and various inconvenient innocents end up as fodder for their ambush’s ceremonies and sacrifices. The myths about what goes on at their prison and reform school are more than enough to keep not only our children in line, but the less ferocious adults as well.

That moron Barrington would have taken his wife there to have a little ‘accident’ so he could upcycle her for a new one, but his vapid daughter caused that scandal in the media, and now he’s stuck with her.