He checked the directory for the FBI offices and found that they took up the sixth floor. Most of the elevators were coming down packed. The only challenge getting on one going up was getting in before the doors closed once the prolonged stampede of down passengers ended.
On the sixth floor he asked the receptionist directions for Indigo's office. He had to surrender his weapon and submitted to a quick search before he was allowed to wander off to find her.
Another female agent was standing in Indigo's door, her body a picture of relaxed friendship as she
leaned against the door frame. She spotted Ukiah coming, inventoried him completely with a smile, then whispered into the office. “Stud muffin alert! You should see what's heading our way.”
“Fisher.” Indigo's voice came from the office, slightly scolding.
Agent Fisher stepped back, expecting him to pass, and was taken aback when he stopped even with the door. “Can I help you?”
Indigo looked up and a smile bloomed across her face. Ukiah's knees felt weak, and he found himself grinning back at her.
Agent Fisher saw his grin, glanced at Indigo, and tsked. “Oh, he's
your
stud muffin. Too bad.”
Indigo blushed slightly, and Agent Fisher went away laughing.
“Hi.” She gained control of the blush and became her normally composed self.
“Hey. I'm not too early, am I?” Ukiah asked, leaning against the door frame, eyeing her office with interest. The surfaces were almost clear of paper. There were Japanese silk prints on the wall and a red maple bonsai tree before the narrow window.
“I'm almost done.” She filed the few pieces of paper into one desk drawer, and produced her helmet from another. “Where would you like to eat?”
“Any place, as long as it's with you.”
It earned him the slight Mona Lisa smile.
The phone rang and she picked it up. “Agent Zheng.” She listened and then glanced up at Ukiah. “Actually, he's right here.” She listened a moment longer. “I don't think that makes him an expert, but I can bring him over.” She hung up the phone. “The police would like you to come look over a Pack member for them.”
He was slightly startled. “They caught one of the Pack? Who?”
“They didn't say.”
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Nor did Ukiah recognize the Pack member when they arrived and were shown the two-way mirror with a view into an interrogation room. The member was a tall lanky man, grizzled long hair, and dark eyes, like so many of the Pack. He was clad in a worn pair of leather pants, high biker boots, and a leather jacket with a stylized running wolf.
Ukiah shook his head, watching the man pace back and forth in the small dim room. “I don't recognize him.”
“We'd be surprised if you did,” the police captain that met them explained. “We believe he's a West Coast member, of the Wild Wolves. He won't admit it, won't tell us his name, and has no ID. We were hoping you could verify if he was a Pack member or not.”
Ukiah looked in surprise at the captain. “How would I know?”
“You're the only person in this building that's actually dealt with the Pack. We're going off mug shots and old reports. So, what do you think? Is he a Pack member?”
Indigo was silent and unreadable. Ukiah shrugged and walked up to the glass. As if he knew Ukiah was watching, the man came to stand before the mirror, his lip curling back almost in a snarl. Ukiah studied him, looking for any clue yes or no.
“He looks like Pack,” he finally admitted. “But he isn't. I don't know why. There's some gut reaction missing. He's not Pack.”
“Are you sure?”
“Almost. I've only dealt with the Pack once. But I'm almost positive he's not.”
The captain turned to a plainclothes detective standing beside him. “Bring him in.”
The detective walked into the interrogation room, caught the fake Pack member, and brought him snarling out. The fake Pack member glared at Ukiah as the detective parked the man in front of him.
“Take a good look,” the captain said. “Are you sure he's not Pack?”
The man glanced at the captain, then sneered down at Ukiah. “Who the hell are you?”
Ukiah gazed at the man. Why was he so sure that this man wasn't Pack? He thought back to Rennie, Hellena, and Bear. There had been something about them, something he had never felt in the presence of other people, something that had gone unnoticed till now. He shook his head as he tried to place it. “No. I'm positive now. This man isn't Pack.”
The fake gave him a Pack-like glare for a moment longer. Then the look vanished. It was like watching an actor take off his mask. “How the hell can you tell?”
Ukiah shook his head, still unable to pinpoint it. “You just know the difference.”
“This is Detective Robert Cecil.” The captain perched on the corner of the table. “He's one of our best undercover agents. He's spent weeks researching the Pack. We wanted to run one last test before he tried to infiltrate the Pack.”
“They would eat him alive,” Ukiah murmured.
“Are you sure?” the captain prodded. “I've heard about you, that you can be downright creepy the way you can spot things. Are you sure that you're spotting something that would slip past the Pack?”
Ukiah considered the question. He certainly could
tell things that other people couldn't. But what about the Pack? He remembered the way he could tell what had been on Coyote's mind, the clarity of the thoughts as if they had been his own. He shuddered and remembered too the test, the way Hellena seemed to flip through his memories, how he felt the Pack watching, experiencing it with him.
He didn't believe in telepathy, but there was no other way to explain the phenomenon. It was the very reason he never even questioned if the Pack had identified him rightly. The very reason, most likely, they had been so dead sure of who he was. There was a knowing down to the core of one's being. You couldn't deny it. Pack knew Pack. He looked at the waiting policemen. If he didn't convince them without sounding crazy, they would send this man to his death.
“They would know.” He wet his mouth, searching for something to add, and found it. “When Rennie Shaw first saw me in Schenley Park, he didn't come any nearer to me than fifteen feet. It was night. There were no lights. It was raining. I was laying facedown in the mud. And he had never seen me in his life. But he recognized me as a Pack member's son.”
There was still doubt in their eyes and the way they held themselves.
He found another nail and drove it home. “Everything you've heard about me holds true for the Pack.”
They looked at each other, doubt still there, but no longer of what he was saying.
Behind Ukiah, the door flew open. A uniformed policeman in his early twenties stood in the doorway, his eyes wide with excitement. “They've brought in a Dog Warrior! They stopped him for speeding and found one of the missing FBI agents in his trunk! It
took about five officers to get him in the wagon, and they've got him in booking right now.”
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Ukiah was carried along with the flood downstairs. The rookie cop ran most of the trip down backward, explaining details of the arrest. The Pack member had been driving a late-model sedan and gone forty through a twenty-five mile per hour speed trap. There had been two marked cars, a motorcycle policeman, and an unmarked car manning the speed trap. One of the officers had noticed a bloody hand-print on the trunk, and they wrestled the Pack member out of the car, handcuffed him securely, and then searched the trunk. Wil Trace was in the trunk, recently dead, covered with vomit. Needle marks covered his forearms. Cans of gel fuel were tucked in around his body, and the speed trap had been mere blocks from a row of abandoned houses.
“The coroner's office already picked up the body, and they're requesting police protection.”
The captain grabbed another uniform as they hurried through the halls. “You two go to the coroner's office and make sure nothing happens this time.”
They came into booking. Two officers had a tall lean man between them, pressing his fingertips to the mug card.
All the hair on the back of Ukiah's neck went on end, and he slammed to a stop.
Oh, my God!
It was as if fear was poured from a bucket over him, drenching him suddenly and completely. This was the enemy. This was the one to be feared. This was the one to kill if he could. This one would kill without hesitation.
Even as Ukiah started to backpedal, the man gave a pure howl of anger and exploded into a whirlwind of movement.
The man caught Detective Cecil, slammed him to
the wallâthen frowned. “You're not Pack!” The man snarled and flung the undercover cop aside, scanning the room. His eyes locked on Ukiah, and knowledge registered there.
Ukiah skittered backward, half falling, half climbing over desks as he encountered them. In his head was Rennie's warning.
If the other side found out about you, they wouldn't rest until they had you.
Like an arrow of death, the man came on, straight at Ukiah, smashing everything in the way to reach him.
Policemen leaped to tackle the killer. Even as the cops reached him, they were snatched up and sent flying, rag dolls before the man's rage. The killer vaulted a desk in a standing jump, landing before Ukiah.
Ukiah yipped in surprise, leaping backward. His memory told him there was an exposed I-beam above him. He caught hold of it. Momentum swung him up and back, and he kicked his pursuer full in the chest. The man tumbled backward onto the floor, and a crowd of policemen piled on top of him. Ukiah dropped down to the floor beyond the cops, jostling to pin down the man's arms and handcuff him.
For a moment the man seemed stopped. Then he came heaving up out of the pile of bodies, shedding policemen. There were screams of pain, the crack of bones, and blood scented the air.
“He's got a gun!” someone shouted.
The man held a service pistol in his hands. He turned toward Ukiah, bringing the pistol up. A dozen officers were yelling, “Put down the gun! Drop it!”
Ukiah stepped back and found himself up against a wall. Behind the man was a ring of police officers and Indigo, all with their weapons trained on the killer. If they missed, though, they would hit Ukiah.
The man leveled the pistol.
A single gun roared behind the man. A hole the size of Ukiah's fist sprouted from the man's forehead. The bullet struck the wall a foot from Ukiah's head. Angry blood and bits of brain sprayed him across the face. The man's knees folded, and he fell hard onto the floor. There was smoke coming from Indigo's gun. Her face was featureless with concentration. Everyone stood, frozen into position, and silence held the room.
The captain broke the silence. “What the hell was that all about?” The room burst into activity again, a sudden roar after the calm. Officers surged forward to pluck the gun from the lifeless hand, check for a pulse, cringe at the spray of gore covering Ukiah.
Ukiah slid down to sit on the floor, leaving a neat outline of himself in blood above him.
The man sprawled dead on the floor. A neat hole punched in the back of his head and the massive wound in the front. His eyes were open, a sightless angry stare at Ukiah. There was, however, the sense of life within him. Just like there had been in Janet Haze.
Indigo came around the desk, her gun still ready. She considered the carnage and uncocked her gun. “Are you okay?”
“I'm fine. Thanks.”
She picked up a box of tissues and crouched down to wipe the blood from his face.
“What the hell was that all about?” the captain asked, this time clearly of Ukiah.
“The hell if I know,” Ukiah said truthfully. “He knew I was Pack and he wanted me deadâbut I don't know why.”
Indigo glanced at the dead man and back to Ukiah. “Was he one of the ones that kidnapped you?”
“He's not Pack.” Ukiah closed his eyes and focused on her hands on him. “He's part of the other gang Rennie warned me about. The Ontongard. Rennie failed to mention that this other gang could spot me in a crowded room.”
“He knew you were in the room before he spotted you,” Indigo murmured. “He went at Detective Cecil because of the clothes, but then he realized his mistake. How did he know?”
He opened his eyes and lost himself in her concerned and confused gaze. “The same way the Pack knew I was one of them. The same way I knew Detective Cecil wasn't Pack. There's something I can't describe or explain, but you know.”
And then he suddenly understood.
Pack knows Pack. They can spot their own kindâand humans aren't their kind. Everyone in this room was humanâexcept me.
I'm not human.
It was like taking a fist to the gut. The hard truth forced the air out of him. Facts cascaded down on him, supporting this awful knowledge. His perfect memory. His tracking ability. His heightened sense of smell, hearing, taste. His ability to read people's DNA. Even the fact that he had been raised by wolves and yet became a fully functioning member of society within a few short years.