“Hudson’s got this, Grace,” Flint murmurs quietly in my ear.
I swallow a scream as Wolf Head lunges at him again. Hudson, in the meantime, doesn’t even seem fazed. He just glances out at the crowd and asks, “Why is there never a newspaper around when you need one?” even as he pretends to smack the wolf on the nose. “Bad doggy.” Half the crowd gasps (I’m part of that group) while the other half cracks up—including all my friends. Even Jaxon chuckles, and that’s before Hudson continues in the most British voice imaginable. “Sorry to interrupt your little…ambush? But with all the foaming at the mouth going on here, it seems prudent to ask if you’ve had your rabies shots?” This time, it’s Marc who lunges straight for him, his hand shifting into a claw as he goes right for Hudson’s face. Hudson, on the other hand, must have decided that he’s taunted the wolves enough, because instead of dodging this time, he stands right where he is and leans back just far enough that Marc rakes his claws down the side of his neck instead of his cheek. I don’t even try to stop the scream that explodes from my throat—not that I could have if I tried. Jaxon’s hand clamps down on my right shoulder just as Flint’s clamps down on my left. Jaxon growls. “That was just about not getting into shit with Foster. He let them draw first blood.” “Well, he did a good job of it,” I snarl back, because blood is flowing pretty freely from the claw marks. Even worse, it’s emboldened Marc and the others, who are now closing in on Hudson—Marc and Wolf Head from the front, the third wolf from the back—with the look of people intent on ripping their prey limb from limb. I wait for Hudson to respond, wait for him to give some kind of clue as to how he plans to handle this latest attack. But for what feels like forever, he does nothing except watch them, his bright-blue eyes going back and forth between the two guys closing in on him from the front. I’m most worried about the one from the back—who he can’t see—but Hudson must sense him, because he shifts a little, making sure that his back is against the wall. But that’s the only move he makes as everything seems to happen in slow motion. Seconds feel like minutes as sweat rolls down my spine. Terror is a wild thing within me, and I’m positive if something doesn’t happen soon, I’m going to end up screaming the castle down or throwing myself between Hudson and the wolves. Or both. Probably both. But just as Jaxon tenses beside me—probably with shades of the same thoughts running through his head—and I reach down deep to find my gargoyle string, Marc rushes Hudson, with the other two hot on his heels. And Hudson…Hudson does the absolute last thing I would ever expect him to do. Ever. He grabs Marc by the shoulders and lifts him several feet off the ground. But instead of throwing him and moving on to the next threat, Hudson never lets him go. Instead, he pulls his arms up and to the side (while still holding Marc) and then swings the struggling, snarling wolf like he’s a baseball bat straight at Wolf Head, like he’s the ball. And apparently, Hudson is one hell of a batter, because Wolf Head goes flying. Like, bases-loaded, home-run-ball flying, straight across the foyer and out the still-open castle doors. Then, instead of dropping Marc like most players do their bats, he keeps swinging until Marc’s body meets the stone wall and the laws of physics go to work. A collective gasp rises up from the crowd as the sounds of both bone and stone shattering fill the room. Hudson drops him into a heap of broken limbs and ribs before whirling around to face the next threat. The third wolf obviously has a death wish or a God complex, because anyone with an ounce of self-preservation is backing away—including every other wolf in the room. I’m not sure if this guy is worried about losing face or having his ass handed to him by the rest of his pack later, but whatever it is, it keeps him barreling straight at Hudson like a vampire-seeking missile. Hudson doesn’t so much as blink. He just braces for the attack, feet grounded and arms loose by his sides until one second before the wolf shifter reaches him. Then he lashes out with his foot and kicks him as hard as he can in the kneecap. The shifter goes down with a high-pitched whimper, but Hudson isn’t done yet. He pulls back his hand and slaps him, hard, right across the face. The entire room recoils, and I don’t even have to ask why. I may be new to the paranormal world, but I don’t need to be an expert to know that right there is the biggest insult any male of any species could deliver to another. Even before Hudson leans down and says, “Next time you want to play, I suggest you bloody well make it worth my time. There’s nothing I hate more than being bored.” And then, to add insult to a whole heap of injury, he pats the guy on the head and says, “Good doggy,” before dusting his hands off and walking straight toward me. 40