Fateful
the monster?” Alec’s green eyes blaze, but with a wholly human fire now. “Or because you pity me?” I couldn’t guess which possibility he loathes more.
    I fold my arms. “I can’t leave because the door’s locked. Believe me, I would’ve gone hours ago if I could have.”
    “Oh. Of course.” Then he looks so abashed—so boyish, and so handsome—that I almost want to laugh.
    But the strangeness of the situation keeps me quiet. I am still frightened of Alec, knowing what he truly is. And yet this morning he is weary, bruised, naked, and exposed on the floor of the Turkish bath. Vulnerable.
    If I want answers, I had better get them now.
    “You’re a—” I hesitate on the word, one I’ve heard only in stories to frighten the gullible. “A werewolf.”
    Alec lifts his head to face me. His chestnut curls glint slightly red in the dawn light. “Yes.”
    “And Mikhail, too.”
    He grimaces with pure dislike. “Yes. Older. Stronger. More powerful.”
    “Did he . . . do this to you?” I wouldn’t put it past Mikhail to do something so wicked. “Or were you born a werewolf?”
    Taking a deep breath, Alec pushes himself up to a fully seated position, then struggles into the robe as I avert my eyes. Only now, as he puts something on, do I remember that I’m still in my underclothes, which are made of flimsy linen. Should’ve gotten myself a robe while I was at it, but now I simply draw my knees toward my chest, for a little modesty.
    Once the robe is on, Alec slowly rises to his feet. Movement still seems to hurt him, and he sways as he straightens for the first time. Before I can rise to help, though, Alec steadies himself.
    He looks down at me. “I’ve never told anyone this. Anyone besides my father, I mean.”
    Mr. Marlowe knows? I wouldn’t have expected that. But how would I have expected any of this?
    “I became a werewolf two years ago,” Alec says. “My father and I were on a hunting trip in Wisconsin.”
    I’ve never heard of this “Wisconsin,” which is apparently a dangerous place. So I imagine it like the great woods near Moorcliffe, where the Viscount sometimes goes to shoot—ancient trees that stretch up toward the sky, their leaves so thick that they almost blot out the sun. The ground covered with clouds of ferns and carpets of moss. A profound silence broken only by the flapping of birds’ wings.
    A bitter, rueful smile plays on Alec’s face. “It was just after sunset. My father had told me earlier to come in for dinner, but I hadn’t shot anything all day. I refused. I was going to prove what a great hunter I really was. But there was a better hunter in the forest, waiting.”
    “Mikhail?”
    “Another. I’ll never even know his name, or what he looks like as a human, unless he someday chooses to reveal himself.” Alec’s tone makes it clear that this would be extremely unwise for the werewolf to do; he wants revenge so badly that I can feel it in the room with us, as tangible as the walls. “I didn’t understand what had happened to me at first. I thought I’d simply been bitten by a wolf. But immediately I became sick—so sick—God, the fevers. I remember tossing and turning in bed, thinking that I knew what meat must feel like when people cook it on a spit.”
    I’ve been sick like that—well, not exactly like that, but I know what he means.
    “Then the full moon came,” Alec says. “And for the first time, I changed into the wolf. Luckily, I was in our stables at the time, and only my father was with me. He was able to shut me in alone. Of course, we lost all our horses.”
    Meaning, he killed them.
    He sounds so disgusted with himself that I feel more sympathy than horror. But there’s one thing that’s confusing me: Something from the old wives’ tales, and from what he’s just said, that doesn’t add up. “I’m sure last night wasn’t a full moon.”
    “You’re right. It wasn’t. The full moon is important to our kind—that’s when the

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