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"Come on, Beatriz. You don't know her."

"I know what I see," Beatriz said.

"And what's that?"

"An entitled rich girl who doesn't have to follow the rules, and doesn't have to worry about consequences. What does she care if Julie and Jon get kicked out of here?"

"What do I care if Julie and Jon get kicked out?" Simon muttered, too loudly.

"You care about George," Beatriz pointed out. "And Marisol and Sunil. They're all out there somewhere, and they trust Isabelle as much as you seem to. But I'm telling you, Simon, it doesn't seem right to me. What she said about the Academy wanting us to screw up and get into trouble. More like she wants us to get in trouble. Or she wants something. I don't know what it is. But I don't like it."

Something about what she said rang true more than he would have liked--but Simon wouldn't let himself go there. It felt disloyal, and he'd been disloyal enough. This week was his chance to prove himself to Isabelle, show her that they belonged in each other's lives. He wasn't going to screw that up by doubting her, even if she wasn't here to see it.

"I trust Isabelle," Simon told Beatriz. "Everyone will be fine, and I'm sure they'll be back before anyone knows they were gone. You should stop worrying about it."

"That's it? That's all you're going to do?"

"What do you want to do?"

"I don't know. Something!"

"Well, I am doing something," Simon said. "I'm going to go back to bed. I'm going to dream of coffee and a shiny new Fender Stratocaster and if George still isn't back by morning, I'm going to tell Dean Penhallow that he's sick, so he won't get in trouble. And then I'll start worrying."

Beatriz snorted. "Thanks for nothing."

"You're welcome!" Simon called. But he waited until the door had slammed shut behind her to do it.

*

Simon was right.

When Robert Lightwood began his lecture that morning, every member of the student body was there to hear it, including a very bleary-eyed George.

"How was it?" Simon whispered when his roommate slid into the seat beside him.

"Bloody amazing," George murmured. When Simon pressed him for details, George only shook his head and pressed his finger to his lips.

"Seriously? Just tell me."

"I'm sworn to secrecy," George whispered. "But it's only going to get better. You want in, come along with me tonight."

Robert Lightwood cleared his throat loudly. "I'd like to begin today's lecture, assuming that's all right with the peanut gallery."

George looked around wildly. "They're serving peanuts today? I'm starving."

Simon sighed. George yawned.

Robert began again.

*

1984

The pack was small, only five wolves. In their deceptively human form: two men, one even bigger than Robert, with muscles the size of his head, and another stooped and aged with scraggly hair spurting from his nose and ears as if his inner wolf were gradually encroaching. One child in blond pigtails. The girl's young mother, her glossy lips and undulating curves prompting thoughts Robert knew better than to say aloud, at least where Valentine could hear. And finally, one sinewy woman with a deep tan and deeper frown who seemed to be in charge.

It was disgusting, Valentine said, werewolves stinking up a distinguished Shadowhunter mansion. And although the manor was decrepit and long abandoned--vines snaking up its walls, weeds sprouting from its foundation, a once noble estate reduced to rust and rubble--Robert saw his point. The house had a lineage, had been home to a line of intrepid warriors, men and women who risked and eventually gave their lives to the cause of humanity, to saving the world from demons. And here were these creatures, infected by their demonic strain--these rogue creatures who'd violated the Accords and killed with abandon, taking refuge in the home of their enemy? The Clave refused to deal with it, Valentine said. They wanted more evidence--not because they weren't sure that these wolves were filthy, violent criminals, but because they didn't want to deal with Downworlder complaints. They didn't want to have to explain themselves; they didn't have the nerve to say: We knew they were guilty, and so we dealt with it.

They were, in other words, weak.

Useless.

Valentine said they should be proud to do the job the Clave was unwilling to get done, that they were serving their people, even as they skirted the Law, and with his words, Robert felt that pride bloom. Let the other Academy students have their parties and their petty school melodramas. Let them think growing up meant graduating, marrying, attending meetings. This was growing up, just like Valentine said. Seeing an injustice and doing something about it, no matter the risk. No matter the consequences.

The wolves had a keen sense of smell and sharp instincts, even in their human bodies, so the Shadowhunters were careful. They crept around the decaying mansion, peered in windows, waited, watched. Planned. Five werewolves and four young Shadowhunters--those were odds even Valentine didn't want to play. So they were patient, and they were careful.

They waited until dark.

It was disconcerting to watch the wolves in human form, impersonating a normal human family, the younger man washing dishes while the elder one made himself a pot of tea, the child sitting cross-legged on the floor racing her model cars. Robert reminded himself that these trespassers were claiming a home and a life they didn't deserve--that they'd killed innocents and may even have helped slaughter Valentine's father.

Still, he was relieved when the moon rose and they reverted to monstrous form. Robert and the others clung to the shadows while three members of the pack sprouted fur and fangs, leaping through a broken window and into the night. They went out to hunt--leaving, as Valentine suspected they would, their most vulnerable behind. The old man and the child. These were odds more to Valentine's liking.

It wasn't much of a fight.

By the time the two remaining werewolves registered attack, they were surrounded. They didn't even have time to transform. It was over in minutes, Stephen knocking the older one unconscious with a blow to the head, the child cowering in a corner, inches from the tip of Michael's sword.

"We'll take them both for interrogation," Valentine said.

Michael shook his head. "Not the kid."

"They're both criminals," Valentine argued. "Every member of the pack is culpable for--"

"She's a little kid!" Michael said, turning to his parabatai for support. "Tell him. We're not dragging some child into the woods to throw her at the mercy of the Clave."

He had a point . . . but then, so did Valentine. Robert said nothing.

"We're not taking the child," Michael said, and the look on his face suggested he was willing to back up his words with action.

Stephen and Robert tensed, waiting for the explosion. Valentine didn't take well to being challenged; he had very little experience with it. But he only sighed, and offered up a charmingly rueful smile. "Of course not. Don't know what I was thinking. Just the old man, then. Unless you've got some objection to that as well?"

No one had any objections, and the unconscious old man was skin and bones, his weight barely noticeable on Robert's broad shoulders. They locked the child up in a closet, then carried the old man deep into the woods, back to the campsite.

They tied him to a tree.

The rope was woven with silver filament--when the old man woke up, he would wake to pain. It probably wouldn't be enough to bind him in wolf form, not if he was determined to escape. But it would slow him down. Their silver daggers would do the rest.

"You two, patrol a half-mile perimeter," Valentine told Michael and Stephen. "We don't want any of its grubby little friends catching its stench. Robert and I will guard the prisoner."

Stephen nodded sharply, eager as ever to do as Valentine willed.

"And when he wakes up?" Michael asked.

"When it wakes up, Robert and I will question it on the subject of its crimes, and what it knows about the crimes of its fellows," Valentine said. "Once we've

secured its confession, we'll deliver it to the Clave for its punishment. Does that satisfy you, Michael?"

He didn't sound like he much cared about the answer, and Michael didn't give him one.

"So now we wait?" Robert asked, once they were alone.

Valentine smiled.

When he wanted it to, Valentine's smile could worm its way into the most well-fortified heart, melt it from the inside out.

This one wasn't designed for heat. This was a cold smile, and it chilled Robert to the core.

"I'm tired of waiting," Valentine said, and drew out a dagger. Moonlight glinted off the pure silver.

Before Robert could say anything, Valentine pressed the flat side of the blade against the old man's bare chest. There was a sizzle of flesh, then a howl, as the prisoner woke to agony.

"I wouldn't," Valentine said calmly, as the old man's features began to take on a wolfish cast, fur sprouting across his naked body. "I'm going to hurt you, yes. But change back into a wolf, and I promise, I will kill you."

The transformation stopped as abruptly as it had begun.

The old man issued a series of racking coughs that shook his skinny body from head to toe. He was skinny, so skinny that ribs protruded from pale flesh. There were hollows beneath his eyes and only a few sorry strands of gray hair crossing his liver-spotted skull. It had never occurred to Robert that a werewolf could go bald. Under other circumstances, the thought of it might have amused him.

But there was nothing amusing about the sound the man made as Valentine traced the dagger's tip from jutting collarbone to belly button.

"Valentine, he's just an old man," Robert said hesitantly. "Maybe we should--"

"Listen to your friend," the old man said in a pleading, warbling voice. "I could be your own grandfather."

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