SHARKBAIT #26
Her voice got high and whiny. “I thought you understood! I want to marry a SEAL. I want to live overseas. I want to be the wife of a Special Operator!” I laughed as I caught the take-off to the line from that classic old movie my Mom liked, ‘An Officer and a Gentleman.’ Richard Gere is over eighty years old, for crying out loud.
The visit was just what we both needed to cheer each other up. Amy told me about how wonderful Kai and his family had been to her, and I told her about modeling and fundraising. I asked her about school; it turned out she finished two of her classes, she’d have enough credits to graduate. The teachers agreed to let her work independently, and so she could finish school in a few weeks. “Maybe I should do that,” I said.
“You need to finish your project, Vicki. It’s been your dream to do something big for shark conservation, and you need to go for it. Mom said that you’ve already raised over two million dollars.”
“Yeah, it’s pretty wild,” I said. “We’ll have enough for the first production run, and we start aquarium appearances again next weekend.” The first appearance at the Minnesota Zoo had been, well, a zoo. I walked into the auditorium as a bunch of boys yelled, “SHARKBABE! OOH LA LA! SHARKBABE! OOH LA LA!” I blushed but got through the talk and signed photos and posters for hours.
We raised over fifty thousand that day.
Our team was thrilled at the exposure, and we put a million deposit down on the first units last Friday. The deliveries would start in two weeks.
Mom and Susan came to the door. “It’s time to go,” Susan said. She wasn’t allowed to stay past visiting hours, and she would be going back to the hotel with us.
“Dang it,” I said. “I miss you, Amy.”
“I miss you too, Vicki. Make sure those bastards pay for what they did at the trials.”
That was the next stop; Killington, Vermont, the winter playground where the Council was going to hold trials on the senior Pack leadership. I couldn’t give Amy her sight back, but I could make sure she got justice.
We landed at a nearby airport, and a van met us to drive us to the rural location where the Killington Pack resided. I felt my left forearm, where a silver-plated fighting knife was stapped under my long-sleeve blouse. My jacket had a holster sewn under the left shoulder with a Baby Glock inside, with silver-tipped bullets. The Kevlar vest I was wearing underneath did nothing to flatter my figure. Colleen and Mom were packing as well; Leo was not taking any chances with my security this time. We were not staying at the Pack; instead, we had rooms at a hotel in a nearby town.
“The Alphas will not allow weapons in the trial room, so that is a vulnerability,” Colleen said as she gave me her security brief. She had been in touch with our allied Packs and the Council while Mom and I were at the hospital. “You can keep the vest on, and we will be nearby with our allies around us. The Council will keep the defendants and their supporters away.” We would have a lot of allies in that room.
“You go NOWHERE without Colleen and at least one other Alpha or Luna we trust, and the more around you, the better,” Mom said. “Adrienne, Karen, and Carolyn will all sit by you when you aren’t testifying.” Carolyn was the Three Sisters Luna, which was Kai and Amy’s Pack. They were close allies now.Text content © NôvelDrama.Org.
Colleen nodded. “No one approaches you, not even to shake hands. It’s distasteful, but we can’t forget how Leo almost died at his trial.” The previous Stillwater Alpha had tried to prick him with a poison-tipped ring when I was five. “I’d prefer that you stayed in a secure location unless you were testifying.”
“No,” I said. “I have to be there for Amy, and I won’t hide from them,” I said.
As our van reached the gate, we picked up an escort. Leo and Adrienne joined us in our van. Another vehicle with Alpha Ivan, Luna Karen, and four others led the way to the Assembly Hall, where the trial would take place. Conversations stopped as we walked in the door, and I waved at a few people I knew as we moved to the hall. Security checked our weapons, giving us tags to retrieve them when we left.
Our allies had reserved a section of the chairs, and I saw Betas and Lunas taking seats around the room as I moved forward. The jury, the North American Alphas, had several rows of chairs set up along the right side. The witness chair was in front of me, left of the Council table, and behind the Prosecution table.
On the other side of the barricade separating the audience from the front of the room, Beta Lawrence Fenwick saw us and approached. Leo and Adrienne greeted him warmly; Lawrence had defended them in their Council trial thirteen years ago. Now, he would be prosecuting the case against the leadership of Killington. “You are going to be my first witness,” he told me. “I’ll lead you through the timeline you gave me in your deposition. Keep calm on cross-examination, as they will try to rattle you.”
“I’m ready for them,” I said. I sat and checked my phone as we waited for the trial to begin. Mercedes told me her management was thrilled with the shots, and her designers were already working to incorporate my style into a new line for next year. They wanted to schedule an event to kick off the line; I texted her that I’d be in Hawaii in late March on spring break. Kai texted me, thanking me for cheering Amy up last night. He was stuck at school for a few days, taking exams and making arrangements for distance learning so he could spend more time at the hospital with his mate. Susan texted me with a message from Amy that was short and sweet. “Burn their asses,” she said.
I snorted and sent back a thumbs up.
Mom elbowed me to turn the phone off when the Council room door opened. We all stood as they walked in; the Council Chair would be the judge, the Alphas the jury, and the Council would determine the sentence. I hadn’t even noticed the defendants were standing behind their table. I looked over at the Killington Alpha pair, their son Timothy and mate Traci; I wanted their blood in my teeth for what they did. The proceedings were scrambled and sent to all Packs for viewing, but it wasn’t like Amy could watch it.
Literally.
It took twenty minutes to get through the trial procedures, directions to the audience and jury, and dealing with last-minute defense motions. The defense team tried to get Beta Fenwick disqualified, saying his Pack stood to benefit from a guilty verdict, and he was too close to the Miesville Pack. Lawrence spanked him, quoting Barry Goldwater: “Moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.” In his opening statement, he laid out the conspiracy of the Killington Pack to steal a mantled Heir from a captive Alpha Heir.
The lead defense lawyer, Parker Stevenson, got up to give his opening statement. “You will hear a lot of stories today. The Prosecution will ask you to believe their theories of massive conspiracies, led by the Defendants. Do you know why they are theories?” He paused for effect. “Theories exist in the absence of proof. Proof beyond a reasonable doubt, the standard by which you members of the jury must decide guilt or innocence. Anything less than that is not justice.”
With that, the Prosecution case started. Lawrence had a sworn statement from Todd Mercer he wanted to have read into the record, and Parker immediately objected. “You must exclude the statement as the Defense has not cross-examined the witness,” he said.
“I offered to bring you to the Florida prison with his legal team, and you refused,” Lawrence countered. “The sworn statement is valid.”
After some discussion, the Chairman sustained the objection, and the statement got tossed. I didn’t like this, as Todd was the only corroborating witness to me.
I was called to the stand next. I moved through the barrier and up to the witness seat, where I swore to tell the truth, and Alpha Leo backed that up with Alpha command. It took almost three hours to get my story out, thanks to the near-constant objections. Parker remained silent as I described my treatment, interjecting when I related what Todd said about motives or when I talked about the reason for my abduction. According to him, it was hearsay or wild speculation. “It wouldn’t be hearsay if you heard Todd’s statement,” I said after he interrupted again. That earned me laughter from the crowd and a rebuke from the Chair.
I saw the looks of horror on people’s faces as I told my story; even my family hadn’t heard everything in my testimony. I laid out the logic that led to my release; that Timothy had gotten an Omega pregnant, taking his mantle with him. That Alpha Theodore was obsessed with keeping a mantled heir and was behind the plot. That Timothy and Traci were involved in the plot, as he had to inseminate me, and Traci needed to raise the child as her own.
On cross-examination, Parker was ruthless. On point after point, he asked me how I knew that to be true. He pushed for me to admit it was my opinion, but I wasn’t going there. “Look, Timothy fucked up,” I finally said. “Traci said in front of witnesses that Alpha Theodore was going to allow her to choice-mate Timothy if he didn’t find his mate at the Summit. Do you honestly believe he picked THIS year because he thought seven years was enough?” I looked around the room. “There are dozens of werewolves here that didn’t find their mates for decades, but they waited. Alpha Theodore knew Timothy had pissed the mantle away, and the only way to get it back was with ME. No other mantled female has come of age in the last five years, and I am the ONLY one coming of age for another twelve years. You moved the Summit back a WEEK just to get me to the scratch and sniff, so don’t insult me by implying it was anything but a chance to see if I was his mate!”
“Mr. Chairman, please instruct the witness to stick to the facts of the matter,” Parker said.
“Those ARE the facts. Everything would have been fine with Alpha Theodore if Timothy would have claimed me as his mate. Instead, he ruined everything and forced the Alpha and Beta to their backup plan. They ALWAYS intended to take me prisoner and use me to incubate an heir.”
“OBJECTION, Mr. Chairman! She is placing motives where she doesn’t have proof!”
“The witness can explain her logic with the permission of the Court,” Lawrence responded.