“About time; I thought you were trying on Mrs. Daley and wearing her skin as a suit with how long you were taking,” Liam laughs. Katrina stares wide-eyed at me, turning my head to look at her, she hastily looks away.

Liam undoes his apron and sets it on the counter before pecking Katrina on the cheek. “Be seeing you later, doll face,” he says, sending her a wink. I shake my head as he walks toward me and stops at the door leading out to the hall. “On second thought.” He turns back and snatches the apron off the counter. “You don’t want this, do you?”

Katrina shakes her head. I’m pretty sure she would give him her kidney if it meant he would get away from her. Probably even cut it out herself.

“Good, good, it looks better on me, anyway,” he says, chucking it over his shoulder before sauntering out.

“Ah, Mrs. Daley?” Katrina asks me when I turn to follow him.

“No need to worry, I already hung her up to dry; just let her air out for a bit,” I assure her, following Liam back through the house. We pass Oliver and Logan, who are huddled under a blanket, watching the other children play with puzzles. “I will be back as soon as I can to pick you up, I just have an errand to run for my king. Then, I have someone I want you both to meet,” I tell them.

Oliver rests his head on Logan’s shoulder, sucking his thumb.

“Who?” Logan asks me, hugging his brother closer.

“A woman named Clarice. You willlike her, and she will love both of you. She will take good care of you,” I tell him as he chews his lip while gazing at his little brother. He nods, so I turn on my heel before strolling outside. When I do, I am confronted with Alpha Dean and Alpha Brock, who must have been having a heated argument with Liam.

“Can I help you?” I ask them, coming behind Liam and stepping over the small brick fence that runs along the footpath.

“Don’t you mean, can I help you? This isn’t your pack, and we were called here about a disturbance,” Alpha Brock states.

“Is that right? Well, last I checked, werewolves were lower on the food chain. So, I suggest you move along before you meet the real big bad wolf,” I snarl. Alpha Brock glances at Liam before focusing back on me, looking me up and down.

“Well, the king never informed either of us you would be showing up; if we had known, we would have prepared for your arrival,” Alpha Dean adds, glancing around nervously.

“No preparations needed. If you will excuse me, I have a butcher who needs butchering,” I tell them before smiling and shoving past them both. I open the driver’s door, and Liam tosses me the keys, I snatch them out of the air, about to climb in the car.

“Exactly why are you here?” Alpha Brock asks as I start the engine, I look over the roof of my car at Liam.

“Little slow, this Alpha is. No wonder the pack is going broke. Not one brain cell between the two of them,” Liam says, climbing in and shutting the passenger side door.

“The two rogue boys inside will be leaving with me when I return; touch them, you will be hanging alongside Mrs. Daley in the basement,” I tell them before climbing into the car.

They glance at the orphanage behind them as we drive off. Liam provides me with directions to the butcher’s shop. It is a stroke of coincidence that this establishment is situated in the heart of the small-town square, where curious glances welcome our arrival as we step out of the vehicle and make our way toward the storefront entrance.

A huge glass display fridge is out the front, taking up half the store, but I can see a room out the back behind the till. Pushing through the hinged door beside the fridge display, I go out the back of the small store to the freezer room. There is muffled yelling as I approach the enormous steel door. Twisting the handle, I yank it open and step inside. The room is freezing, and I shiver instantly.

“Quite frosty in here,” Liam remarks playfully, his voice laced with mirth. My focus snaps to the figure before me—the butcher himself. His gaze, wide and filled with a mixture of apprehension and curiosity, locks onto mine. A man in his mid-forties, he stands clad in plaid pajama pants, his disheveled hair defying order as it sticks out at odd angles. Chattering teeth and his lips tinged with a bluish hue betray the frigid temperature that surrounds him. His bare chest has goosebumps that adorn every inch of his skin.

Liam has skillfully bound him, ensuring there is no escape from his restraints. The butcher’s eyes dart back and forth between us as Liam pulls out his charming floral apron, while I grab one of the rubber ones hanging just outside the freezer room door.

“Bring him out,” I call to Liam, who obediently follows my command, his hands eagerly rubbing together in anticipation.

Untying the butcher, Liam sets him free, only to have the man bolt toward the door in a desperate bid for freedom. However, a swift blow to his windpipe quickly halts his escape. Gasping for air, he clutches his throat, but before he can gather his wits, I seize a fistful of his hair and forcefully slam his head into the unforgiving steel of a nearby table. He crumples to the ground at my feet, left defenseless and subdued. Liam emerges from the room, shaking his head disapprovingly before delivering a swift kick to the butcher’s ribs, eliciting a pained grunt.

“Now, listen here, pork chop,” Liam asserts with a weary yet firm tone. “I am old and tired, having just prepared over 100 pancakes. So do me a favor and hoist yourself up onto that steel bench. My back is aching.” Liam tells him while tying the back ofhis apron.

The butcher’s eyes widen with fear as he stammers in protest. “There must be some mistake! I don’t even know what I’ve done. You’ve got the wrong guy!”

I fix him with an unwavering gaze, my voice steady as I inquire, “Is your name Doyle?”

He nods hesitantly in confirmation.

“And do you happen to be acquainted with a young girl named Abbie?” I press further, observing the flicker of recognition in his eyes. “So, you do know Abbie?” I continue, watching as he glances between us before finally shaking his head.

“Well, now that’s quite the lie, isn’t it? Mrs. Daley spoke of you and your despicable act—how you paid her to violate that poor girl, robbing her of her innocence,” Liam interjects, tilting his head slightly as he studies the trembling figure before us.

“No, I swear! I never took her virtue!” the butcher pleads, panic evident in his voice. “Mrs. Daley lied! Abbie is still pure, I swear it. If she claims otherwise, she is nothing but a liar. I know better than to defile her. After all, a girl like her loses her value if she’s been sold off,” he blurts out, his words hanging heavy in the air.