Bulletproof
(Legacy Series Book 15)
Available on Audio!
Paranormal Historical Epic
*Chicago, 1924*
The twelve-year search for Ben Myers has proved fruitless. In a profound act of trust, Darren Dubose and Dustin Keith taken a detour to Chicago to hand their protégé, Logan, off to reliable werewolf, Will Croxen, and old friends from Devia. Though Will was once a rougarou, the alpha has decided to give his protégé a little more leash to see what Logan will do with the freedom he longs for. In the meantime, they have their list of packs and alphas to visit in their search for the elusive werewolf whose golden eyes won’t go away. But, it doesn’t take long for Logan to find out that Chicago, one of the most corrupt cities in America, would be far more dangerous and tempting for a rebellious werewolf-in-training than any of them could have predicted.
Excerpt from Chapter 1
“Fifteen minutes ‘til Chicago!”
Darren glanced up from his novel to the train attendant swaying down the center aisle of the passenger car. He repeated his announcement as he went, his voice booming over the rattle of the wheels rolling along the iron tracks.
Passengers throughout the car began their preparations for departure. Books were stowed in bags, children were told to put their toys away, women checked their hair and makeup in handheld mirrors, and many turned their eyes to the wide windows overlooking the outskirts of the city.
Logan, who sat across from Darren, hadn’t torn his gaze from the rolling countryside since they sat down. Steely grey eyes took in the sights from Cincinnati all the way to Illinois. This was the farthest north he had ever been in all his forty-three years. Anyone who passed by their seats would have assumed he was nothing more than an eager eighteen or nineteen year old looking forward to his first visit to Chicago.
Dustin, unimpressed by the scenery, sat beside his grandson and spent his time reading the newspaper or playing solitaire with a stack of battered playing cards. The other passengers might have guessed that Logan and Dustin were related by their similar features, but they would never suspect the full truth. Even though Dustin was his grandfather, the man hardly looked to be a year above thirty. No one would have thought that he was well over a century and a half old and a veteran of the Civil War.
Neither would they have thought that Darren was as old as he really was. Three hundred years did little to a werewolf. At least, not in the physical sense.
Darren bookmarked his place with the letter he had received from Will Croxen a week prior.
“You don’t need the directions?” Dustin asked, motioning to the closed book.
“I’ve already memorized them,” Darren replied as he folded his hands in his lap. “It doesn’t seem that complicated to get to Milwaukee Avenue from Grand Central Station.”
Dustin let out a derisive laugh. “It’s Chicago. If it’s anything like New York, it’s pretty easy to get lost.”
“Do you think that’s why Will chose to move there after what happened in New Orleans?” Logan’s input in the conversation was unexpected. “People like us can hide well in a big city, right?”
“We might be able to hide,” Dustin said, “but that doesn’t make it ideal. The noise, the smells, the crowds…” He shuddered at the picture his imagination painted for him. Years spent in Europe had provided enough experience on that score.
“Isolation doesn’t seem to work either,” Logan countered.
Darren took in a slow breath. They knew what isolation could do. There was a reason Will was granted guardianship over his nephew’s son. The late Robert Croxen had given explicit instruction that Forrest should be sent to Chicago if the worst should happen to them in Devia. The worst did happen twenty-six years ago and it was still fresh in their minds.
“To each his own,” Dustin said with a shrug. “Apparently a former pirate does well in a big city. Who knew?”
Darren had heard the stories from Robert first-hand. A reformed pirate and rougarou didn’t seem the ideal mentor for a young loup-garou – werewolf – like Forrest. But if Robert had confidence in the man’s abilities to look after his own son, then Darren had to trust that Logan would be looked after with the same care.
“You’re sure about this?” Darren secretly hoped that Logan would change his mind and decide not to take this chance for independence from his pack.
The young loup-garou shot him a look. “That’s the hundredth time you’ve asked that, and yes, I’m sure. I haven’t seen Forrest or Mitch in years.”
Darren looked out the window as the first signs of civilization came into view. He had thought allowing Logan some freedom from his training would do him good. Perhaps a change of scenery would make him appreciate all that Darren and Dustin had tried to do for him. Or maybe it would all backfire and Logan wouldn’t want to come back after they returned. He didn’t want to take that risk. He had let Dustin into the world too soon in his training and Logan became a casualty of his poor choices. Given Logan’s deficiencies, what kind of trouble would the youth cause in a metropolis like Chicago?
Dustin pulled out a shiny, golden cigarette case from his vest pocket along with a pack of matches. “You worry too much,” he mumbled as he lit up and snapped the case shut.
Darren slid him a glare. “If I worry too much, then why are you smoking?”
“It’s not like it’s going to kill me.” He took a long drag and blew the smoke toward the passenger car ceiling.
Knowing Darren’s detestation for the stench, Logan made quick work of the window until fresh air rushed through the top crack. Some vices ran too deep to be cured after almost fifty years away from his pack, and it might have been too much to hope that Dustin would revert to the man he was before they parted ways.
“Why are you so worried?” Logan asked as he sat down heavily on the upholstered bench. “You don’t trust Will?”
Darren shut his eyes and took a deep breath before choosing his words carefully. “I trust Will to do his best to keep you out of trouble.”
“You just don’t trust me.” The contempt was palatable.
He looked to the boy who had become like a son to him. “I don’t trust this city. Any place that manages to stay in the headlines of newspapers across the country because of its violence is no place to live.”
Dustin gave a sweeping gesture to the occupied seats around them. “And yet, they’re flocking to one of the biggest and grandest cities in the country.”
Curious eyes turned to the trio. Some disregarded Dustin as eccentric, but others stared and Darren disliked the attention. He passed a hard look to his beta before turning back to Logan.
“Promise me that you’ll take extra measures to stay safe and – “
“We’ve been over this.” Logan rolled his eyes. “I’ll watch my back. Will, Forrest, and Mitch will watch it too.”
That wasn’t much of an encouragement. He had watched Forrest and Mitch grow into young men, and while the former could conduct himself with dignity, he wasn’t too sure about the latter. Darren tried to convince himself that thirty years could work the mischief out, especially after living through the downfall of Devia.
The conductor pumped the train’s brakes, causing the occupants to gasp and lurch as they rolled through the outer limits of Chicago. Logan eagerly turned to the window, but Darren wouldn’t crane his neck to see the urban sprawl.
It came into view slowly, like the first trickling flow of a creek. A smattering of houses and businesses along well-divided streets gave way to something more expansive and industrial. The creek of civilization expanded into an ocean of towering brick buildings and congested avenues. Darren had never seen this kind of urban density on American soil. Mobile and New Orleans might have been the only exceptions, but neither city boasted ten-story office buildings that dominated the skyline.
“It’s incredible,” Logan mumbled. His forehead and nose occasionally bumped the glass as the train continued to rock along the tracks across the iron bridge that spanned the Chicago River.
“A lot different than the little towns we’ve been passing through,” Dustin replied, his eyes equally riveted upon the sights of the city. And this was just a taste of it.
They weren’t the only excited travelers. Children stabbed fingers at the window and exclaimed over the marvels to their parents. Smiles and starry eyes were on the faces of everyone on the train, except those who were already acclimated to Chicago’s wonder. Yet, even they could afford soft smirks at the sight of the city.
Right now, Darren wouldn’t mind being in one of those little towns in the middle of nowhere. Searching for a lone loup-garou who didn’t want to be found would be preferred over getting lost in a place like Chicago. At least they wouldn’t stay long. Just long enough to drop off Logan and be on the next train headed south.
The train continued to chug along the track, slowing significantly as they neared Grand Central Station and the giant open pavilion. Like the gaping maw of a mythical beast, the train was swallowed, and the racket of the train echoed against the network of steel supports high above them. The electric lights in the cab fought back the shadows as everything ground to a jittering halt at the concourse.
The platform outside their window buzzed with activity as station attendants rushed forward with carts to unload the passenger cargo. The engine of the train released the last of its repressed steam, hissing into the great chasm between them and the roof of the pavilion.
Logan was the first out of his seat, but Dustin grabbed at the tails of his jacket and pulled him back down.
“Not so fast, kid. Let the rest of them get off first. We’ve got time.” Dustin motioned to the other eager passengers with what was left of his cigarette.
Businessmen, couples, and families filed past, all talking about their big plans and schedules once they collected their baggage. When the passenger car became mostly empty, Dustin let go of his grandson and Logan jumped up to join the masses.
“One might think he was impatient to get rid of us,” Dustin muttered to Darren as they followed their youngest pack member to the end of the car.
Darren didn’t return the quip and pulled the brim of his hat low over his brow, stifling a grumble. How could he forget the last few weeks as they debated the wisdom of this decision? How could he forget the look of total excitement on Logan’s face when they finally gave in to his argument? Leaving him with Will had been one of the hardest decisions of his life this far. But Logan didn’t want any part of their search for Ben Myers, the man Dustin had turned into a loup-garou back in 1862 in order to save his life.
Ben wasn’t the boy’s problem. It was Dustin’s, and they had scoured the entire southeastern half of the country with no luck. Logan hadn’t voiced his complaints every day, but they were clearly telegraphed in everything he did. This break from the search would be good for the youth’s morale if nothing else. And he had come along far enough in his training that a bit of freedom might have been overdue.
They came to the platform and found Logan staring at the maze of beams and truces of the train pavilion. He was like a pup emerging from the den for the first time, wide-eyed and in awe of something so new. Having a sharp mind for architecture and engineering only fanned this excitement into near giddiness.
As Darren stepped to the side to allow the other passengers to make way, he saw Logan begin to wander off. “Logan! Don’t go too far!”
His words boomed over the heads of the civilians, but the loup-garou drifting toward the baggage claim acted as if he hadn’t heard a thing. Darren knew damn well he had been heard. A loup-garou with their keen ears would have heard him from a block away, even inside the station.
“Go watch him while I get the bags,” he ordered to Dustin.
“Aye, captain.” The taller of the two nodded and stomped out the stub of his spent cigarette before running after Logan. He had already made it to the glass paneled wall that separated the train pavilion from the carriage house.
The long queue to claim Logan’s suitcase tempted to annoy him, but Dustin was right. It seemed like half the world was clamoring to walk the streets of Chicago. Their own bags would be held until their connecting train left in just over an hour.
By the time he joined the rest of his pack, Logan was in the middle of a lecture about the engineering significance of the carriage house in relation to the rest of the station and Dustin was on his second cigarette.
Beyond the glass barrier, carriages and cars lined up to pick up disembarking passengers. Families waited eagerly for their visitors along the sidewalk platform that skirted the drive. The ceiling wasn’t nearly as high as in the train house, amplifying the voices and rumble of the motors. The exhausts from the engines were suffocating enough without Dustin’s cigarette smoke and Darren caught himself snorting and clearing his throat a few times as he approached. Sometimes he wondered which was worse, the fuel emissions or the stench of horse dung in the streets. He would never be used to big cities.
“You just had to buy him that architecture book, didn’t you?”
Darren smirked at his beta as he passed the suitcase to Logan. “The boy showed an interest. Why not?”
Dustin rolled his eyes and blew more smoke into the air above their heads. Logan took his bag, which contained all his worldly possessions. A couple of books, three changes of clothes, and his whittling knife. They had all agreed the moment they stepped foot on American soil that they would travel light until they could find Ben and settle down. With luck, that day would come soon and they could come back to collect Logan from this god-awful place.
Darren began to recite the directions to the butcher shop. Through one of the three bricked archways, they stepped onto Harrison Street and he directed them immediately west. Cars, buses, and pedestrians funneled across the bridge, crossing the Chicago River again to become immersed in the West Chicago scene.
Once more, Logan’s head was on a swivel. He took in everything, from the passing Ford roadsters and touring sedans to the soaring structures that made the grid-like pattern of the streets like a hedge maze. Dustin had his eyes on something else entirely. Women came under the beta’s lurid gaze, but instead of turning up their powdered noses at him, painted red lips spread into flirty smiles that only encouraged him. More than a few times, Darren had to forcibly steer Dustin on the right track to keep him from chasing those skirts that were entirely too short.
Once on South Canal, it was a straight shot north until they came to Milwaukee Avenue. They stayed just between the river and the true metropolis. On the edge, they could still hear the chaos within. The honking, the shouting, the music. Smells made their stomachs curious as it seemed the whole of European cuisine had been crammed into one city. Languages and accents drifted above the city noise, adding flavor to the scene that Darren hadn’t fully expected. Chicago was working overtime to create a history and culture all its own as the people of the world flocked to its overcrowded streets. He wondered what the city would come to offer in the decades and centuries to come.
Keeping his two packmates on track paid off and they were soon on Milwaukee Avenue. All three sets of eyes read the various signs, looking for “Billy’s Boucherie”. It didn’t take long. The noses of their wolves led them right to the corner of Milwaukee and Evergreen.
The striped awning shaded the windows that looked into the whitewashed interior. Upon them, written in straight golden letters was the list of what one could expect to find within. Many Darren recognized. Sausage, ground beef, pork loins, lamb, ribs, bacon, steak, and poultry. Others were foreign. Boudin being the first, followed closely by tasso ham and cracklins.
Above the awning was his storefront sign bolted into the brick façade of the two-story building. The savory and spicy aroma of the meats showcased in the window made their mouths water, and the nearness of a new loup-garou sent sparks from the back of their heads down their spines.
Logan’s hand was on the door handle before either Darren or Dustin could stop him. A bell announced their arrival, but Will would have known they were close. He would have felt their presence as strongly as they felt his. The four humans inside would have seen them as any other customers. They stood behind the long counter display, each busy with their own task. One was stuffing sausage casings, another grinding a slab of beef while his partner packaged it up in parcel paper, and the last was weighing an order on a giant scale at the opposite end of the counter.
The glass display case featured every kind of meat the window had advertised, while other selections hung from the ceiling toward the back of the lobby. Sides of pork and legs of lamb dangled from hooks near a cabinet of spice bottles and pre-packaged bundles. A thin, disturbed layer of sawdust covered the tile floor and there pervaded a distinct chill about the store. It took a moment for Darren to realize it came from the display case packed with sausage links and steak slabs. He had heard of the new refrigeration machines, but he had never seen one in person.
Darren checked Logan for any sign of a slip in control. He remembered the days when the first sign of raw meat or a fresh kill would bring out the hungry, golden eyes of the wolf. Not just in his protégé, but in Dustin and even himself. It was a craving they could never fully escape, but time and training helped them to cope with the instincts. Thankfully, Logan’s gray eyes never changed. He had learned so much in the last couple of decades.
Before any of the clerks had time to greet them, the swinging door that led into the backroom opened and their loup-garou host sauntered through. Darren shouldn’t have been surprised that they were close in age. Will Croxen had lived during the Golden Age of piracy, after all. He was still a hair younger than the alpha, but just as brawny as a beta in form and height. His rolled up sleeves displayed powerful forearms and a plain shirt stretched over broad, muscled shoulders.
Black hair was pulled back at the nap of his neck with one rogue strand curled behind his ear. Will had his hands turning in a stained and tattered towel, his white apron equally tarnished by the dark brown gore of his work. In his tanned face were the features Darren knew well. John Croxen’s prominent brow and square jaw were handed down to all his descendants from Bart to Forrest. Will was no exception. Darren caught himself in awe at the privilege of knowing so many Croxen men within his one lifetime.
He took a moment to assess the loup-garou on a deeper level. His appearance told the story of a hardworking man who earned every last bit of his muscle, but what did his wolf think of the loup-garou who had once been feral? Their wolves touched on a subliminal level and he approved. He had dominance, but there was nothing dark or overly intimidating in his presence. Earlier fears were put to rest as Darren decided, before ever speaking a word, that he could be trusted.
“Darren Dubose?” Dark eyes flitted between Dustin who stayed in the doorway to finish off his cigarette and the other two loups-garous in his shop.
Darren stepped forward and offered out his hand. “Will Croxen?”
The butcher shook it and smiled. “Good to finally meet you. And this is Logan?”
They both looked to the youth who had his eyes focused on the swinging door to the slaughter room as if he were expecting someone else to come running out. It took a light backhand to his stomach to draw his attention to what was more important than a reunion with his old friend. Standing in front of him was the loup-garou who would be his guardian. It was better to make a good first impression.
Logan finally looked to Will and extended the same courtesy as his alpha.
“Forrest has told me a lot about you,” Will said. “He and Mitch are running an errand, but they should be back soon.”
To Darren’s surprise, Will bore no accent. Perhaps it was forced into hiding, as Dustin’s Irish brogue had been, or maybe living in so many places like the Caribbean and New Orleans had negated it somehow over the years.
Dustin finally entered and it was his turn to shake Will’s hand. “So, you’re the man who’s going to take care of our boy?”
Will nodded proudly. “Like he was my own.”
Darren couldn’t help but smile whenever Dustin laid some sort of claim to Logan. In many ways, he was their boy. They had raised him longer than his own mother had, and they had become like a family since they all reunited in 1912. A strange, preternatural family, but a family nonetheless.
“Do you live above the shop?” Darren asked, motioning to the ceiling and second floor above. “I thought you mentioned that you had your own flat.”
“We do. On Maplewood. The upstairs is rented out by a friend as office space.” Will gestured to Logan’s suitcase. “Is that all you have?”
Giving a quick listen, Darren assumed Will’s friend wasn’t working that day. Upstairs was as silent as the grave.
“Everything I own,” Logan replied.
“We’ll have to fix that.” Will gave him a wink and turned his attention back to Darren and Dustin. “Do you know how long he’ll be with me?”
Darren slid a look to the employees who seemed to be absently listening to the exchange. If only they could have this conversation in a more private place. “We’re not sure yet. We’ll be sure to write and keep you both appraised of our progress.”
Will planted a firm hand on Logan’s shoulder and shook him a bit. “I’ll make sure to keep him busy.”
(End of Excerpt)