make the bullets.
If this was werewolf business, and, after the previous night, I had to assume it wasâI needed a bigger gun. I took down the .444 Marlin and loaded it for werewolf. It was a short rifle, and small unless you took a good look at the size of the barrel. The lipstick-sized silver bullets were guaranteed, as my foster father used to say, to make even a werewolf sit up and take notice. Then heâd put a finger alongsidehis nose, smile, and say, âOr lie down and take notice, if you know what I mean.â The Marlin had been his gun.
The rifle was a comfortable, fortifying presence when I quietly opened my back door and stepped out into the predawn night. The air was still and cold: I took a deep breath and smelled death, undeniable and final.
As soon as I rounded the corner of the trailer I could see the body on my front porch, blocking my front door. He was on his face, but my nose told me who it wasâjust as it had when I first opened the door. Whoever had dumped him had been very quiet, wakening me only as they drove off. There was no one else there now, just Mac and me.
I climbed the four steps up to my porch and crouched in front of the boy. My breath fogged the air, but there was no mist rising from his face, no heartbeat.
I rolled him onto his back and his body was still warm to my touch. It had melted the frost off the porch where he had lain. He smelled of Adamâs home; a fragrant mix of woodsmoke and the pungent air freshener favored by Adamâs housekeeper. I couldnât smell anything that would tell me who had killed Mac and left him as a warning.
I sat on the frost-coated wood of the porch, set the rifle beside me, and touched his hair gently. I hadnât known him long enough for him to have a hold on my heart, but I had liked what Iâd seen.
The squealing of tires peeling out had me back on my feet with rifle in hand as a dark-colored SUV shot away from Adamâs house like the fires of hell were behind it. In the dim predawn light, I couldnât tell what color it was: black or dark blue or even green. It might even have been the same vehicle that the villains had driven last night at the shopânewer cars of a similar make all look alike to me.
I donât know why it had taken me so long to realize that Mac dead on my front porch meant that something bad had happened at Adamâs house. I abandoned the dead in hopes of being of use to the living, tearing across my back field at a sprinterâs pace, the rifle tucked under my arm.
Adamâs house was lit up like a Christmas tree. Unless he had company, it was usually dark. Werewolves, like walkers, do very well in the dark.
When I came to the fence between our properties, I held the rifle away from my body and vaulted the barbed wire with a hand on top of the post. Iâd been carrying the Marlin at quarter cock, but as soon as I landed on the other side of the fence, I pulled the hammer back.
I would have gone through the back door if there had not been a tremendous crash from the front. I shifted my goal and made it around the side of the house in time to see the couch land half-in and half-out of the flower bed that lined the porch, evidently thrown through the living room window and the porch rails.
The werewolf Iâd killed last night notwithstanding, werewolves are taught to be quiet when they fightâitâs a matter of survival. Only with the broken window and the front door hanging wide open, did I hear the snarls.
I whispered the swear words I usually only bring out for rusty bolts and aftermarket parts that donât fit as advertised to give me courage as I ran. Dear Lord , I thought, in a sincere prayer, as I ran up the porch stairs, please donât let anything permanent have happened to Adam or Jesse .
I hesitated just inside the door, my heart in my mouth and the Marlin at the ready. I was panting, from nerves as much as exertion, and the noise interfered