After he left the room, Rhys quickly convened the pack and reported the news; that he had successfully talked the werewolf hunter down from pursuing the pack, and in fact, she was interested in helping to protect them to a certain degree. It was something of an exaggeration, of course, but Rhys hadn't seen so much relief since thirty years prior when the omega males heard the news that they would be able to find mates. Rhys was actually a bit surprised by it all. He had been so busy trying to resolve these issues that he hadn't been around to experience the anxiety in the pack. All around him were announcements that they were safe, that the scare was over, that things would be even better now. He had frowned slightly at this. He wasn't sure that the worst hadn't yet come.
Analise was barely conscious for long enough to hold any sort of conversation in the days that followed and Rhys decided it was best to give her some space to cope with everything that had happened. In truth, he wasn't sure if it was her or him who needed the space more. And so, Harvey's return from France couldn't have been better timed and he handed the issue off to his younger brother, hoping that it would help him focus more on his work. Of course, it hadn't. Harvey had been hinting that things weren't going well and that he was having to give her drugs to help her sleep.
While this had disturbed Rhys, he hadn't fully considered it. His mind was busy elsewhere. Something she had said to him truly bothered him. It was her comment about the people she had killed. They had all been in self defense, but if he had understood her correctly, Analise did not believe that they deserved death. She honestly preferred a trial to the fate she had administered.
At first, Rhys thought this was foolish. Anyone who was stupid enough to attack him was asking for death. It was a given. If Analise was to become some super werewolf type, then this would be the same for her. Analise had even confirmed what Isa had said; that she would show her enemies no mercy.
Why then did it bother him that her ideas of justice impacted her this way? The more he thought, the more distracted he became by it. He had never once even questioned the deaths of the people he had killed. Analise was correct in her assumptions. Rhys had killed many times in his life, but it had always been in defense of his pack. If it had not been werewolf related, he would have reported it and handled it appropriately.
But to question whether they should have died? That had never occurred to him. A werewolf truly was a superposition of a wolf and a man. The wolf was just that; an animal, or so Rhys believed. Animals did not question the act of killing prey or even threats to their territory and Rhys's wolf was particularly brutal at times.
Analise's wolf was yet to be seen, but it would be an animal all the same. Animals didn't have regret. There was no concept of justice. That was a human concept.
And so, Rhys sat at his temporary desk staring at the wall as he pondered thoughts that were much deeper than anything he had considered in decades. This certainly wasn't the time for distractions, either. The attack on the precinct meant loads of paper work and the obvious media misdirection. There were mourning coworkers to deal with, and worse, the FBI was constantly demanding information on the retrieval of the girls, the cult, and Analise's condition.
Two days after the woman was hospitalized, a pair of agents showed up and set up shop in the conference room on the second floor of City Hall, sifting through Analise's notes and generally making themselves a nuisance. If he had thought Analise was arrogant, it was nothing compared to these two. Agent Peters, the taller of the two men, refused to talk to anyone but Rhys, and even then, it was only ever to send him on some demeaning errand, like making copies or fetching coffee. Agent Carter, on the other hand, was constantly explaining basic law enforcement knowledge to Rhys as if he didn't have a clue.
There was no doubt that Analise thought herself an expert, but at least she made an effort to include Rhys on her findings from the start rather than talking to him like a servant. He had to wonder, given what he knew now about her, if some of her previous behavior wasn't due to training rather than inherent snobbery.
Carter was irritating, but it was Peters who was the one that had Rhys worried. He rarely spoke, but when he did, he asked questions that obviously implied Peters had more intimate knowledge of weres than Analise did. Rhys found himself hoping her change would happen soon so she could take care of these men and get out of his hair. All of this interaction with the Bureau was decidedly bad for his pack, High Alpha potential aside.
"NO!" Came the impassioned protest of Harvey from down the hall. Rhys had nearly forgotten that his brother had returned the same day Analise was admitted to the hospital. Rhys let out a short sigh. This was probably going to push him over the edge. If Harvey was here it meant things at the Hospital were bad and that Harvey was about to let him down. Nothing was ever easy. "Now get the hell outta my way! Where is- damn it Rhys!" He let out in complete frustration as he burst into Rhys's make-shift office in City Hall.
Rhys offered Harvey a frown. Harv still had his lab coat on. The messy hair and tired eyes looked about the same way Rhys felt. Harvey's jaw was tight as he pushed his way into the office without being invited. Normally Rhys would have tolerated it, but things were far too hectic for this. "Get out," He ordered his brother.
"Absolutely not!" Harvey returned. "That woman is a nightmare. You are going to listen to me and stop ignoring my calls or we-"
Rhys had thrown the punch before Harvey could finish the thought. It landed perfectly on Harvey's jaw, tossing the man backward into the wall. "I told you to get out," he stated, barely able to keep himself from shifting due to anger. "You have a job to do now get out and go do it."
Harv's eyes flared as his own rage surfaced. Harvey leaped forward, barreling into Rhys like a linebacker, sending the two of them backward into Rhys's desk. Rhys turned mid air and slammed Harvey face first into the papers that were scattered across the surface. "I can't do it!" Harvey shouted furiously. "She's resisting and it's too painful for her. She's been trying to shift for a week and won't let it out."
"You told me it would be fast and painless you son of a bitch," Rhys hissed at his brother. "What the fuck am I supposed to tell those dicks on the second floor, huh? Oh excuse me, agent, while me and the other werewolves keep your injured agent drugged so she doesn't scream herself to sleep from the pain of turning into one of us?!"
"I'm doing everything I can!" Harvey protested as Rhys held him furiously down to the desk. He was morbidly curious if Rhys was going to kill him. He'd never seen his brother this furious before.