javelin Tad handed him and bolted past Adam and me. I let Adam go and rolled so I could see. The troll was down; the second pipe javelin had struck truer than the first, and the top third of the troll had turned an unhealthy gray color. Darryl, javelin held high, skidded to a stop when Joel, his whole body a bright flaming orange, leaped from the top of a car, over the cement divider, and landed on top of the troll. Darryl backed up until he was level with Tad, who had stopped next to me, asJoel attacked in a ferocious rage and a heat that I could feel from twenty feet away.
The troll didnât move when Joel tore into it, gulping down the green-and-red flesh. The troll was unconscious or dead, I couldnât tell which, and it didnât matter for long. Its flesh melted where the tibicena touched it, turning first black, then crumbling to gray ashes. The huge body was consumed by Joelâs heat in what could only have been a few minutes. The tibicena continued to eat, even when there was no meat left.
We didnât move, none of us, but still, Joel looked up suddenly, his mouth full of ash. He glared at us, his eyes a hot, iridescent red.
I stood up, using the walking stick, which was under my hand though Iâd left it a dozen yards away, for balance. I didnât like being on the ground with a predator so near.
I cleared my throat. âJoel,â I said. My voice sounded oddly wobbly to me, and I hoped no one else heard it.
Joelâs lips curled back, displaying black teeth and a red, red tongue. The fringe of stone mane around his neck rippled as he shook his broad head in open threat, and it made a clattering noise, almost like wind chimes. He growled.
âJoel,â
I said, reaching for Adamâs power.
âStop.â
Iâd done this before, called upon my mateâs power of domination to make someone do somethingâor not do something. But this time, there was no surge of Alpha magic in my words. There were a lot of possible reasons for the failure: the fact that Iâd never tried it with Adam unconscious came right to mind. Maybe he was too wounded to fuel my voice. But the reason didnât matter, only the result. The tibicena took a step forward.
Some motion at the corner of my eye attracted my attention. Itook a quick glance to my right and saw a kid, a boy maybe ten years old give or take a couple of years, climb over the cement barrier, just a few yards from Joel. I blinked, and it was still true. This stupid kid was dropping on the ground, his face calm, approaching Joel as if he were a friendly dog instead of a slathering tibicena with smoke and heat rising from his body in waves.
âStay back,â I shouted, starting forwardâbut a hand closed around my arm and pulled me back against a manâs body. He only controlled that arm, so I twisted toward his hold, desperate to get free so I could stop the poor dumb kid who was about to die. When I turned, I saw it was Tad who held me back, his face thin, grim, and bruised. I only just stopped the instinctive hit that would have broken his ribs and set me loose.
âLet me go,â I snapped at him. But I kept my voice lowâI didnât want to set the tibicena off. I jerked to get free, but Tad held me as if I hadnât been practicing how to break this exact hold just last weekâif Iâd been willing to hurt him, I could have broken away, but I couldnât make myself do it.
âWait,â he said.
âTad, Joel isnât running this show,â I hissed. âHeâs going to kill that boy.â
Joel had quit looking at me at all. His attention was focused on the kid, who was dressed in sweats that were too large for him. They looked suspiciously like the sweats we kept tucked around in the cars of pack and friends of pack members.
Joel wouldnât survive if he killed a child. The thought decided me, and when I started struggling again, I went for blood.
Tad grabbed my