Muffled cries filtered through the double doors leading to the back of the balcony level of the auditorium: howls and the scents of thick, fresh blood and fear. The doors were slightly ajar.
On the short landing several yards ahead of Gemma, almost too swiftly for her to follow, Mac dove for the base of the entrance, twisting onto his back with a palm braced and extended over his head. As one hand slammed open the door, the other flashed blindingly quickly through the widening crack and bit into the raised, clawed foot of the leader of the wolves waiting to ambush them. His momentum sweeping him through the entrance on his back, Mac's shoulders heaved and he swung the enemy wolf in a vicious circle around the rest of the awaiting ring, the razor-sharp claws of his hapless scythe shearing through the ambush, sheeting blood.
Gemma didn't see what her mate did next. Up here, she had a clear view beyond to the events on the ground floor and her nose drew her eyes to what was happening below, near the stage entrance. The view shocked her into stillness. Nicolas Grey and Louise Faulk were standing side-by-side with their backs against the stage, a reception for ranks of chained wolf slaves who were being dragged in by several Faulk and Grey guards. Some of the chained wolves were fighting desperately. Others staggered in dazed, drugged. Either way, the efficient, indifferent claws of the Faulk and Nicolas Grey sheered through the jugular of each in turn, before the guards tossed the bodies onto a growing pile in front of the stage. A factory of slaughter - it was so efficient. Inhuman.
Why?
Her heart jolted as her mate speared a savage conveyance into her head: the Louse and Grey were killing their imprisoned enemies, wolves who Gemma and Mac had hoped to free.
Rage surged in Gemma's throat, and she darted forward.
Firm hands grabbed her shoulders, and Warren hauled her back.
"No," the warrior hissed under his breath. "
You
insanely angry are manageable.
He
is not." The other four of her pack who Mac had ordered to guard her formed a tight-packed shield wall around her.
"I can't just -," spat Gemma, and then she broke off as a piercing yowl sounded from underneath the balcony. At the same time an echoing shout thundered in her head.
All warriors to me
, Mac's incensed order reverberated through all her pack, together with a stark image of the slaughter in the room below. The conveyance was open, it was broadcast violently to all wolves within his range, judging from the winces creasing the faces of every wolf in the room - even the Louse flinched momentarily, and glanced up at the enraged Alpha slashing indomitably through the ranks on the balcony who were struggling to even slow his passage.
However, even as he called, Mac's mind was furrowed with doubt, racing through possibilities - why the hell this ostentatious
showy
killing? It would be simpler, quicker, to have the guards kill the dissidents in their cells. The reason, he feared, was to draw the rebels here, consolidate them for some sort of trap -
what
? He was dubious about calling them. Yet neither could he just leave the Faulk to her slaughter.
So he would just spring the trap and deal with whatever she flung at his wolves. Damn her. Damn Grey. They would regret this.
A flashing cloud of ash-blonde fur was fighting her way toward the stage below, leaping onto one of the guards who was dragging the next victim forward. Natasha was still limping, but lethal. At her back was the huge, feral-eyed bulk of the wolf who had been holding her wrists downstairs: the first wolf outside the Gems to receive the antidote. He was lumbering more stiffly than the lithe sjeste, limbs more accustomed to confinement than freedom, but no enemy came within his orbit and survived. The anger burning off the pair of them was hair-raising, even from this distance.
However, there were
hundreds
to Faulk wolves in the room; nearly all of the guards, all shifts, plus a small troop of Greys. The three Alpha warriors were struggling against the tide of such numbers, while the swift, brutal slaughter continued.
On Mac's call, the flickers of erratic thoughts from her pack had coalesced into one strong, coherent stream and Gemma could feel their rapid convergence on the auditorium, the pull of that command,
together with the reason behind it
, reeling them in effortlessly.
Moreover, the Gems had fewer opponents to fight through. The bludgeon of Mac's image of what was happening in here seemed to have floored many of the Faulk guards still fighting outside. Those who had not been selected for this duty -
because they would not acquiesce with this?
Rupert burst in the doorway at the rear of the stalls, at the head of a swirling troop of furious Gems and their new allies. Seconds later Andrea and Mo leapt through the emergency exit to the right. The screams and snarls of killers and defenders escalated in a crescendo, driving the black rage higher in her head while Gemma struggled against the limbs holding her back, crying in anger.
Then a new wolf scent materialised beside her and Alan's voice snapped urgently in her ear as he slapped one hand over her eyes, the other over her mouth: "This isn't your anger. Separate yourself.
One
of you has to keep calm!" The scent of his vinegar-soaked fingers shocked Gemma back into reason with a shudder of revulsion, and she heaved a deep, repulsed breath as she apologetically withdrew the claws which had automatically risen to sink into Alan's arm.
Both of her second's hands lifted, and she and Alan stood side-by-side for a moment, watching the bloodbath below. The view was shocking, but not as frightening as the fury of the storm clouds scudding through her head.
Through Mac.
Her Alpha was furiously slaying his way toward the front of the balcony, directly above the murderous pair by the stage.
What had happened to her Mac?
His control had always been so calm, so deep, a still silent ocean which nothing had ruffled. Yet in an instant, witnessing this soulless killing had whipped the ocean into a colossal, destructive medley of emotions, howling in a grip of a hurricane. Gemma staggered where she stood, leaning back against a pillar as she felt her mate giving free reign to the tearing maelstrom of his killing rage, unleashing it, pulling all of the wolves in his battle meld to respond with the same ruthless drive while he led them into the vicious melee.
Gemma's own emotions steadied, pulling away from Mac's brutal will to retaliate. For a moment, she had been able to sense
all
of his wolves: both her tiny pack in the battle meld here, plus layer upon countless layer of wolves clinging from the outside. The tendrils of their vows were knotted in his mind, thousands of gossamer threads straining together to follow the spear thrusts of his searing commands. The depth and number of their knots was excruciating, smothering.
Resentment rose in Gemma as she had felt the deep-rooted, jangling pain caused by the innumerable thoughts clashing through Mac's mind. The pain of the constant tearing at him was feeding the collective fury, drowning him in bloodlust: his, and theirs.
Then a cold douche of fear followed as she realised: without those threads, Mac would be lost. Battle brought a wolf's most primitive emotions to the fore, and a wolf needed to be stable, strong, in order not to sink into berserk rage. Or he needed an even stronger Alpha to hold him in a steady meld. Her wolves trusted Mac to prevent them from breaking apart, yet gouged through the Aster Warlord himself, splitting him in two, was the loss of his mate.
Mac should be disintegrating under the primal urge driving him. He
needed