Frost Burned (Mercy Thompson #7)(90)
"Except that he can bring two former masters," Hao said. "And none of the vampires Marsilia has are capable of acting against him. Constance was strong, and he forced her to do his will. She was not quite his puppet, not quite, not even at the end. But Constance was stronger than any vampire Marsilia has to call except for Stefan and Wulfe."
"And Stefan is not hers to call," I said. Marsilia narrowed her eyes at me, narrowed them further when I held her gaze.
"And Wulfe would be a mistake." Marsilia looked away. "He is strong enough in power and a vicious fighter when he chooses, but ..."
Stefan broke in. "He is less stable now than he ever was."
"I have never been certain," Marsilia said, speaking to Stefan, "that he wasn't smack in the middle of the conspiracy that Estelle headed up. I know she thought so." She hugged herself and looked about fifteen. "To tell you the truth, I did ask him if he felt up to the fight. He said he felt that it would not be a good idea." She gave Stefan a gamine grin, an expression I've never seen her wear. "He called Iacapo and yelled at him. Said he was getting old and lazy if he couldn't bestir himself to 'squish' Frost."
Stefan snorted. "That sounds like Wulfe."
"I have heard it said that Wulfe made Iacapo," Hao said.
Marsilia shrugged. "Wulfe is the older - and Iacapo could never get Wulfe to obey him any better than I can. But that means nothing."
"Iacapo couldn't get Wulfe to obey him at all," said Stefan - which for some reason made both Marsilia and Stefan laugh. Stefan stopped laughing first. He rubbed the thigh of his jeans and looked away.
I followed his gaze and realized that he was watching for something. For Frost.
"Tonight," I said, feeling stupid because I'd been evaluating the basement as a fighting ground since I'd jumped in after Marsilia. "He's coming to fight you tonight. Here."
"Yes." Marsilia's eyes were dark again. And she still looked like a college student, young and vulnerable. I knew some of the people in Stefan's menagerie whom she'd tortured to death. She was not some helpless girl but a sociopath who had outlived most of her enemies.
I was her enemy. Stefan was my friend - and he wasn't Marsilia's anymore.
"You wanted Adam for your second," I said.
"How long has your fight been scheduled?" Asil asked.
"He picked the time, I chose the place," said Marsilia. "He challenged me two weeks ago."
Which gave Frost time to set up the attack on the wolves.
"They were supposed to hold the werewolves until the fight was over," I said, working it out. "Then what? He would come in to rescue the wolves and kill the humans? Vampires and werewolves unite?" I'd thought he wanted the wolves dead. But if he allied himself with Adam ... Not that Adam would ever be that stupid. If Frost came in as the rescuer, it would take Bran longer to understand that he had a new enemy. Maybe too long.
Asil growled, a subsonic sound that jangled my nerves. Then he echoed the gist of my thoughts. "At least until he feels strong enough to take on the werewolves as a whole - because Bran would never allow Frost to do as he wishes."
"That was probably part of Frost's plans," said Marsilia. She sounded like I was amusing her. Maybe it was supposed to irritate me - but I thought it was just habitual; she seemed too distracted to be her usual nasty self. "But he had something else in mind as his real target. Whom does the pack protect, Mercy? Who would be vulnerable if the pack were gone?"
There was a dramatic pause while I stared at her. I understood who she meant, but for the life of me I couldn't figure out why.
"He wants you dead," Stefan told me. "When his mercenaries failed, he sent a pair of half-fae assassins after you."
He'd known that someone had been sent after us?
Stefan made an impatient sound. "Don't look at me like that, Mercy. Remember, I'm not a part of the seethe anymore. How do you think Marsilia got me to come here?"
He'd been sounding pretty chummy with her, I thought uncharitably.
"We only heard about the assassins earlier tonight," Hao said, half-apologetically. "After they had already failed."
"They were supposed to kill me?" I said. "That makes no sense at all. Why go after me?"
Marsilia's lips turned up as if she'd had a pleasant thought, and her voice was velvet-soft when she said, "I would kill you if you didn't have the pack."
I made a frustrated sound. "I mean someone who didn't know me. I'm a lightweight."
"Clever coyote, to survive so many attempts to kill you." Marsilia sounded somewhat bitter.
"Really, why me?" I looked at them. "I get the whole vampires-hate-walkers thing, I do. But we're not talking about sending me out on a hunt to find where he sleeps. I'm just not that - "
"Like Coyote, you just keep staying alive," said an amused voice from outside of our makeshift, ash-coated arena. He'd been standing on one of those damned I-beams watching us for Heaven knew how long.
He hopped down and looked around, laughing silently to himself, a man no one would ever look at twice. At least not unless he were wearing metal gauntlets that looked as though they ought to be part of a torture museum display - as he had been the last time I'd seen him.