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“Her name is Elisa. And the rules needed breaking.”

“Rules are rules for a reason,” Cash said. “I’d have thought the Apex’s son would have realized that. Pack law rules here. And Pack law is inviolate, isn’t it?”

Connor didn’t answer, so Cash looked at me.

“We have a process here. Mechanisms for justice.”

Connor lifted his brows. “A process good enough for Elisa, but not the members of your own clan?”

“Members of our clan didn’t make an unwilling vampire.” He looked at me. “Your crimes will be heard by the clan elders, the coven, the violation of our rules considered.”

My stare was flat. I wasn’t naive enough to believe I’d get a fair hearing with Cash and Everett serving as two-thirds of the jury.

“A ruling will be made,” Cash continued, “and punishment will be decided. And administered.”

“Elisa’s not within your jurisdiction,” Connor said, his voice all business now. “She isn’t Pack.”

Connor saw the trap a moment too late. The frank admission that his romantic interest wasn’t like him, wasn’t like his family,wasn’t like his Pack. And, more important, that she was an outsider whom Connor had brought into sensitive clan discussions.

Miranda’s smile grew wider.

“She isn’t Pack,” Cash repeated. “And yet here she is, accompanying you into clan territory.” He looked at me. “You have a choice. She submits to our jurisdiction and the hearing, or we can decide her fate without your input. Your choice.”

“Have you lost your damn mind?” Georgia’s voice was loud, cutting through the noisy crowd and silencing it. “The clan is destroying itself from the inside. Someone is killing our members, assaulting humans, and you want to bring down the wrath of the Pack and Cadogan House on us because that girl saved Carlie’s life? I thought we were here to give them a talking-to, not to ensure our damn annihilation.”

“You’re soft because you’re family,” Everett said. “I don’t think you need to be part of this discussion.”

“Then let’s all thank the gods nobody asked you. Somebody with some goddamn sense needs to be in this discussion.” She looked at Cash. “I will not agree to mutually assured destruction.”

“You’re outvoted,” Cash said. “It’s time we take a stand.”

Her brows flew up. “Against the Pack?”

“Against those who disrespect our rules and threaten our way of life,” Cash said.

“Against the Apex’s son?” Georgia persisted.

Cash’s gaze flicked to Miranda, whose expression had gone intense. And I guessed Cash hadn’t come to this little plan on his own. Miranda, who wanted Connor—and maybe the Pack even more now—had made her first real move.

After a moment, Cash looked at me. “Do you want your say, or don’t you?”

I told Connor I’d trust him, but I wanted my say. We weregoing to have some very serious words about treating humans as collateral damage and the clan’s total absence of authority over me. And if words weren’t enough, I’d speak with steel.

I opened my mouth—and was interrupted.

“I forgot to mention,” Cash said. “If she isn’t comfortable agreeing to our terms, I’d be happy to invoke Obsideo.”

That wasn’t a term I knew, and I glanced at Connor to see if he understood. Given his furious expression, I guessed he did.

“What is Obsideo?” Ronan asked, brow furrowed.

Cash’s smile was thin. “Would you like to explain it, Connor, since you’re our resident Pack expert?”

“Archaic Pack law,” Connor threw out, without looking at Ronan. “In a time of crisis, Pack members can summon a representative of the Apex. That rep is obliged to show up and assist in the resolution of the crisis.” His eyes darkened. “And they’re obliged to stay until the crisis is resolved.” He turned his gaze toward Miranda, nailed her with a glance.

“Magicallytied,” she said, and her smile was reptilian. “And so handy that you’re already here.”

Connor looked back at Cash, and his voice was cold and hard as flint. “Obsideo isn’t a game.”

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