Den of Sorrows
Page 44

 Quinn Loftis

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Alina suddenly came up out of the open sewer drain, having used her wolf strength to jump straight up. She too had a child in her arms, a little girl. The Alpha female stroked the child’s hair as she spoke softly to her.
All those that had been in the sewer began jumping up and out until they were all standing there staring at the two young children.
Peri walked over to Vasile. She saw the glint of rage in his dark eyes. It was a look she'd seen before, but only a handful of times. "You know about the dormants I take it?" she asked him.
He nodded. "We managed to keep a vampire alive long enough to extract the information from him."
"Tyler was able to do the same," she told him.
"Any children?" Vasile asked.
"One," Peri answered. "I used his memories to find his family. Once I determined that they were indeed his parents, I stripped his memory, told him I was his guardian angel, and left him on their porch. I waited to make sure they found him."
Jen must have been listening because she was abruptly beside them frowning. "So we're just going to send the dormants back to their human lives? Don't you think they need to know who they are, what they are?"
"Maybe if they were older," Peri conceded. "But so young, like that." She motioned to the children in the arms of Sally and Alina. "They are too young to process such information, not to mention they do not need the memories of the things done to them. Peri turned away from them and walked over to where Alina and Sally sat. The others seemed to be trying to give them room, though she could tell it was taking all of Jacque's control not to just wrap her arms around them and refuse to let go.
Peri noted that Sally was doing a remarkable job of keeping the children calm. They weren't wailing like the boy Peri had found. She knelt down in front of them and placed a hand on the boy’s forehead. She dug through his memories and nearly jumped back when she saw what was hidden deeply inside of him. It was so deep that he probably didn't even know it was there. This little boy had no family to go back to—no parents at least. His parents had been killed by the vampires, right in front of the child. She whispered in her fae tongue and pushed her magic into him, binding the memories. She left some of the memories of the vampire, however; he would need to understand why he was in the company of werewolves after all. He was three years old, still young enough to heal, and Sally would be able to help him deal with the trauma he'd been through.
Peri opened her eyes and met Sally's. "This one needs to stay with you, Sally." Costin was standing a little behind his mate, unsure of what he should do. Peri looked up at him. "Let Sally introduce you to Titus."
Costin walked around his mate and knelt down slowly next to Peri. He smiled at Sally and then looked at Titus. "Hey, little man."
"Titus, this is Costin. He's not a bad man. He's a safe man who chases away the monsters," Sally said in a voice that was so soft and sweet that a frightened deer would have trusted her.
Titus looked up at her and then at Costin. He seemed to be examining the male while all the rest of them were holding their breath.
After what felt like forever, Titus took a tentative step toward Costin, who stood as still as a statue. Peri watched in awe as the little boy stepped even closer until he was right in front of the imposing figure that was a Canis lupus male. Titus leaned forward as he spoke. "Sally said she would keep me safe."
Costin nodded, still not daring to move too much. "She will. Sally doesn’t lie."
The boy looked back at Sally and smiled and then turned back to Costin. "She is small. You are bigger. You can keep us both safe. You won't let the monsters get us." The last part was whispered, as though mentioning them too loudly would cause the monsters to appear.
Costin looked at the small boy seriously. "I will keep you both safe."
Titus seemed to be weighing his words and, with a small nod of his head, appeared to come to a conclusion as he walked into the shelter of Costin's larger frame. The dumbfounded wolf wrapped his arms around the boy and tucked him in closer.
Peri was pretty sure there wasn't a dry eye in their vampire killing party. She wiped her own tears away as she turned to the little girl who had been watching intently. Peri laid her hand on the girl’s forehead and searched for the information she needed. They were too young to know their addresses, but their little eyes soaked up images that were stored in the brain. All Peri needed was a glance—a number and a street name as the girl sat in the backseat while the car pulled into or out of the driveway.
Once she had the information she needed, Peri flashed, her mind picturing the home and address. She re-appeared in a neighborhood not unlike the one where she'd returned the little boy. The high fae cloaked herself as she flashed into the home. She looked around, needing to verify that these were indeed the girl’s parents. She had her answer in a matter of seconds. The little face that smiled back at Peri in all of the photographs was the one that belonged to the girl currently being held by Alina.
Once again she flashed, returning to the group still huddled near the sewer entrance.
"Found her family," Peri said quietly as she stepped up to Alina. The Alpha female took a step back, her jaw tightening.
"Mina," Vasile said softly, "she has to go home."
"She's one of us. She should be raised with her own kind," Alina challenged her Alpha.
"She's also human," he pointed out. "She misses her family."
"We could be her family," Alina said tenderly as she looked down at the little girl who'd fallen asleep in her arms. "She would be safe with us."
"It would not be right, mate, and you know it," Vasile said, meeting her eyes and holding her gaze. "Please, give the child to Perizada."
A tear ran down Alina’s stricken face as she finally relented. Peri reached out and took the small bundle. "Any child would be blessed to have you as their mother, Alina," the fae told her. "But this one is not meant for you."
Alina nodded but didn't say anything. Peri flashed and, as with the earlier child they’d rescued, she altered the girl’s memories and left her on her parent’s doorstep.
When it was finished she returned to the group and froze at what she saw.
 
 
"How many more?" Thalion asked Cyn as they stood just outside headquarters of the Colorado pack.