Eleanor looked at her, shocked.
“They asked that we bring no more than their pack—only three. I already agreed. Beau has to be one, I have to be one, and the other needs to be Carine.”
It was clear Eleanor was hurt.
“Is that safe?” Earnest asked.
Edythe shrugged. “It’s not an ambush.”
“Or they hadn’t decided to make it one. Not yet,” Jessamine said.
She was standing protectively by Archie, and there was something wrong with him. He looked a little dazed.
“Archie?” I asked. I’d never seen him look like . . . like he was behind things instead of ahead of them.
“I didn’t see them,” he whispered. “I didn’t know they were coming. I can’t see now—I can’t see this meeting. It’s like it doesn’t exist.”
I could see that this was news only to me. The others had heard it before we’d arrived, and Edythe had already picked it out of his head.
“What does that mean?” I asked.
“We don’t know,” Edythe answered sharply. “And we don’t have time to figure it out now. We want to be there when they arrive. We don’t want them to have a chance to change their minds.”
“It will be fine,” Carine said to the others, her eyes on Earnest. “The wolves are just trying to protect the people here. They’re heroes, not villains.”
“They thinkwe’revillains,” Royal pointed out. “Heroes or not, Carine, we still have to accept that they’re our enemies.”
“It doesn’t have to be that way,” Carine whispered.
“And it doesn’t matter either way tonight,” Edythe said. “Tonight Beau needs to explain to Bonnie so that we don’t have to make the choice between leaving Forks and raising suspicions, or getting into a fight with three barely legal wolves who are just trying to protect their tribe.”
“Archie can’t see if you’ll be in danger,” Jessamine reminded her.
“We’ll be fine. Bonnie won’t want to hurt Beau.”
“I’m not sure that’s true now. And I know she won’t have any problem watchingyouget hurt.”
“I can hear the wolves just fine. They won’t take us by surprise.”
“Tell us where to go,” Eleanor said. “We’ll keep our distance and only come in if you call.”
“I promised. There’s no reason to go back on my word. We need them to see that they can trust us, now more than ever. No!” Edythe said as Jessamine apparently thought of another argument. “We don’t have time. We’ll be back soon.”
Eleanor grumbled, but Edythe ignored her.
“Beau, Carine, let’s go.”
I took off after her, and I could hear Carine do the same. Edythe didn’t run as fast this time, and we both easily kept up.
“You seem very confident,” Carine said to Edythe.
“I got a good look at their minds. They don’t want this fight, either. There are eight of us. They know they won’t win if it comes to actual bloodshed.”
“It can’t. I won’t hurt them.”
“I’m not in disagreement with that. But it would cause problems, if we left now.”
“I know.”