“Cici.”
“Shh.”
“Cici.”
Cecilia whirled around, annoyance flashing in her bright blue eyes. “Olivia, really. We are supposed to be quiet.”
“Sorry,” she muttered. She hadn’t been very good at the whole escape-from-the-coterie routine the first time, either, but Cecilia hadn’t been quite so adamant about remaining quiet that time. “Why do we have to be so quiet?”
Cecilia nervously glanced around. “Well, we are far more exposed going this way, rather than through the woods to that small town located northeast of the coterie,” she explained in a hushed voice. “But to tell you the truth, I just feel…I don’t know. Like we’re being watched.” She couldn’t suppress a shiver.
Olivia frowned and looked around at the drenched, semibarren landscape. The lake loomed to the west, the swirling and frothing waters barely visible through the pouring rain. Everywhere else, there were sandy dunes, impressive mounds that were twice as large as they appeared. When the lightning flashed, they could see dark shadows that she determined were small clumps of trees.
There were no other lightbearers out in this weather. When they slipped through the magical wards of the coterie, Olivia had hardly noticed because there was so much electricity in the air from the storm. She and Cecilia had covered themselves with rain slickers, but the water-repellent clothing had not lasted more than ten minutes before each was soaked to the skin. As summer storms went, this one was impressive.
“Maybe we should go back and wait until the storm lets up,” Olivia suggested. She didn’t particularly want to wait a single minute longer to see Tanner, but Cecilia’s senses were rarely off, and she was awfully nervous. Sneaking away in the middle of a terrible storm had seemed like a brilliant idea several hours ago.
“You need to stop moping around,” Cecilia had chided.
“How am I supposed to do that?” Olivia retorted. “My mate is out there somewhere, beyond the wards of the coterie. How is he even supposed to get back inside? How am I ever going to see him again?”
“Maybe you are already with child,” Cecilia had commented as she cocked her head and looked at Olivia’s abdomen. “You are certainly acting as unreasonably as pregnant women do. If you are so concerned, why do we not go find him?”
Brilliant idea, while they’d been safely, warmly, and drily ensconced inside the sitting room at the beach house. Reality, unfortunately, was vastly different.
“We’re already outside the coterie,” Cecilia pointed out, pulling Olivia out of her musings. “If we go back now, they’ll never let us slip away again. Your father will chain you to your bed until Dane puts a babe in your belly.”
Olivia lifted her hand and pressed it to her belly. It wasn’t Dane’s babe she wanted in her belly. Before they left the coterie, they’d stopped by Alexa’s cottage and Olivia had asked her to confirm whether or not she was with child.
“Olivia, it has only been a few days since I pulled the remaining poison out of your system,” Alexa had chided. “Even if you are with child, I will not be able to tell so soon. Maybe next week.”
Disappointment lanced through her system, but Olivia did not let it deter her. When I find Tanner, we’ll make love three times a day, she told herself. Then I won’t be lying when I tell my father I am carrying his pup. The idea of making love with Tanner three times a day had spurred her to encourage Cecilia to leave the coterie in the middle of the raging storm.
“Fine,” Olivia said as she hunched her shoulders and ducked her head against an onslaught of wind-driven rain. “Let’s hurry and find shelter then, at least until this blows over.”
“Too bad we aren’t shifters,” Cecilia remarked. “We could just turn into a wolf or something and get to our destination three times faster.”
“Yeah, we are pretty damn fast.”
Both women whirled around at the sound of the male voice. Lightning flashed, and four figures were momentarily illuminated before the world went nearly black again.
“Run!” Olivia screamed, and she grabbed Cecilia’s arm and followed her own direction. She tried to turn back to run toward the safety of the coterie, but Cecilia ran toward the water instead. Not wishing to be separated from her cousin, Olivia turned and followed Cecilia’s lead.
She could hear the sounds of pounding feet behind her, and she knew they would never outrun their pursuers. Then she heard a thud and a shout of pain, followed by the sounds of a scuffle.
Olivia felt the brush of something against her leg, but just as quickly as she felt it, the hand was jerked away, and she heard more sounds, as if someone was fighting. Cecilia screamed and Olivia turned to see that one of the shifters had caught her. Cecilia fell face-first into the sand and quickly rolled and began kicking at her attacker. Just as it appeared he had the upper hand, another figure appeared behind him, grabbed his head, and sharply twisted it to the side. The attacker collapsed into a heap at Cecilia’s feet and did not move again.
Cecilia scrabbled away like a crab, staring not at the dead shifter but at the one who stood over her, not moving and dripping with rain, sweat, and blood. Olivia rushed to her cousin’s side and pulled Cecilia to her feet.
“I won’t hurt you,” the man said.
“W-who are you?” Cecilia stuttered.
“Finnegan Hennigan. Formerly of Quentin Lyons’ shifter pack.”
Both women gasped and took a step backward. Olivia recovered first. “Wait. What do you mean, formerly?”
“I left the pack.”
“When?”
“Just now.”
Olivia and Cecilia exchanged a wary look. “Why?”
“That isn’t important. Getting you to safety is. I’m pretty sure Ethan called for backup a few hours ago. We need to get out of here.”
“We’re going to Wyoming,” Olivia announced bravely.
Finnegan barked a humorless laugh. “Lady, that’s like walking into the lion’s den. Wyoming’s the last place you need to be.”
“Tanner’s there,” Olivia insisted. “I have to find him.”
“Tanner isn’t in Wyoming. He’s here, somewhere. I tracked him to here, and then his scent just disappeared.”
“Because I think he went back to Wyoming.”
“Why do you think that?”
Olivia hesitated. “He was upset when he left. I do not know where else he would go.”
Finnegan gave her a curious look. “You carry his scent, in the same way that mates carry one another’s scent.”
Olivia blushed and was glad for the darkness, so that Finnegan could not see it.
“What is behind that magical barrier over there?” he asked with a wave of his hand.
“None of your business,” Cecilia announced primly.
Olivia saw Finnegan roll his eyes. “That’s probably our best chance at hiding from whatever’s coming.”
Olivia glanced over her shoulder and then turned back to look at Finnegan. Lightning flashed, and she saw that his intense blue gaze was focused on Cecilia. “We cannot go back to the coterie,” she explained. “Not without Tanner.”
“What’s coming?” Cecilia wanted to know.
“Your worst nightmare,” Finnegan replied. “And this time, he’s really pissed.”
“Quentin.” The name burst from Olivia’s lips on a puff of air, while Cecilia blustered about Finnegan having no idea what her nightmares were about.
“Yeah. That’s the one,” Finnegan confirmed, ignoring Cecilia.
“The lake,” Olivia said, and without waiting for an answer, she lifted her soaked skirt and began running toward the great, angry lake in the distance. When Cecilia did not move to follow, Finnegan grabbed her arm and forcibly dragged her along.
“Stop touching me,” she snapped.
“Stop being pigheaded and move,” Finnegan suggested.
They argued all the way to the lake. Mercifully the distance was less than a mile. Just as they reached the point where dunes faded into rocky shoreline and cliffs began to protrude from the water’s edge, Finnegan clamped his hand over Cecilia’s mouth to cut off whatever scathing comment she’d been about to make about his person.
“Shh. Someone’s coming.”
Both women fell silent, but neither could hear anything over the crashing waves and pouring rain. To them, it seemed there was no warning at all when a great, angry lion suddenly leaped at Finnegan, knocking him to the ground and swiping one of its front paws across his chest. Four red streaks appeared instantly on his white T-shirt, quickly melding together until the entire front of his shirt was dark with blood. He tried to climb to his feet, staggered, and fell onto one knee, before tumbling over onto his side.
Cecilia screamed and dropped to her knees next to Finnegan’s body, instead of running, like Olivia had expected her to do. In the blink of an eye, the lion was a man, a dark-haired man with black eyes, who bore a striking resemblance to the man Olivia loved.
“Quentin.” Olivia gasped and shrank away, just as he snagged Cecilia’s arm and hauled her close to his chest. She struggled, but it was to no avail. The man had shifter strength, and Cecilia had never learned how to defend herself in this sort of situation. Olivia watched as Quentin dipped his head and sniffed at Cecilia’s neck.
“Such a tantalizing scent,” he murmured. When she whipped her head to and fro, Quentin grabbed her hair and jerked her head to the side so that he could sniff at her without hindrance.
“Why has my son not killed you yet?” he asked, sounding no more than mildly curious.
“Your stupid beliefs aren’t true,” Olivia said bravely. She had no earthly idea what to do at the moment. Finnegan was dying at her feet. Cecilia was completely at Quentin’s mercy. If she ran, Cecilia would surely die, and even if Olivia was willing to sacrifice her cousin—which she wasn’t—she was confident that she could not outrun the shifter anyway.
She looked down at Finnegan and noticed that he seemed to be a short distance farther away than he had been a moment ago. Then she noticed that he was slowly, carefully dragging himself across the wet sand toward Quentin. She had no idea of his intentions, but considering she was left with no other options, she decided to believe that he meant to protect them, not harm them.
She focused on keeping Quentin distracted, so Finnegan could do whatever it was he was trying to do.
“Killing us isn’t how you release our magic,” Olivia called out to Quentin. She took several steps to the side, so that when Quentin looked up from nuzzling Cecilia’s neck, Finnegan was essentially at his back.
Something in her voice clearly piqued Quentin’s interest. He lifted his head and studied her with his glowing black eyes. Cecilia struggled again and he twisted her hair more tightly in his hand, until she whimpered and stopped moving.
“You sound as if you know how to release your magic,” Quentin finally replied.
“I do,” she announced bravely, and then her mind furiously worked to try to come up with a feasible lie that he would believe.
Quentin watched her for a few more moments. He abruptly flung Cecilia to the side and strode to Olivia. Before she could even turn to run, his hand clamped around her arm and hauled her to him, just as he’d done to Cecilia. He dipped his head and breathed deeply of her scent. Her stomach roiled in protest at the intimate gesture.
Quentin’s head snapped up as if on a spring. His black eyes were glowing as brightly as the lightning that flashed across the sky. “You carry my son’s scent. Not only is it all over you, it is in you. Have you been fucking my son?” He looked incredulous. The incredulous look slowly turned calculating, however, as his mind processed this new bit of information.
“You are fucking my son,” he said, a statement now, rather than a question. “That is how I inherit your magic,” he said, far too quickly drawing a conclusion that Olivia knew did not bode well for her. Not at all.
“That’s not true,” she protested, but he laughed, a maniacal, gleeful laugh that sounded like a hyena’s. Olivia shied away from him, but she had nowhere to go. His hand around her arm was like an iron manacle. When he wrapped his other arm around her waist and pulled her tightly against him, she felt the ridge of what she knew was his erection pressed against her backside.
Not all shifters are alike. She fought back the urge to succumb to panic.
“Leave it to my son to figure it out,” Quentin said, a grudging note of pride in his voice. “How fucking brilliant. Do I inherit more of your magic each time I fuck you?” he mused, sounding almost thoughtful.
Olivia shook her head. Quentin laughed again.
“He’s only fucking one of you,” Quentin said. “I didn’t smell his scent on that other one at all. So he must get enough of your magic to sustain himself. Unfortunately for your friend over there, I’m a greedy son of a bitch. I’m going to keep you both, and fuck you both. As far as I’m concerned, there can never be enough magic in one’s system.”
He laughed the hyena laugh again, and turned, as if to grab for Cecilia with his free hand. When he did so, a booted foot connected with his face. He screamed in pain and released his hold on Olivia so that he could cover his face with both hands. Blood poured from between his fingers.
Olivia skirted around him and ran to Cecilia. As she tried to drag Cecilia to her feet, Cecilia said, “Finnegan. We have to take him, too.”
The kick to Quentin’s face had taken whatever strength Finnegan had left, though. He lay on his back in the sand, his breath coming in short spurts. His eyes were closed and his hands were clutching at the wounds on his stomach. Blood poured freely from the wounds and dribbled down his sides to pool in the wet sand.
Olivia pulled Cecilia with her as she rushed to Finnegan’s side. “I will heal him just enough for him to be able to gain his footing. Any more and I will be rendered helpless as well,” she warned her cousin. Cecilia nodded her understanding, and Olivia reached out both hands and placed them on Finnegan’s blood-soaked stomach. He feebly pushed her hands away.
“Stop fighting me,” she admonished. “I am going to help you.”
He cracked one eye and regarded her warily, but he stopped trying to push her away. She immediately sent the healing magic into his system. His eyes widened briefly, and then they rolled into the back of his head as he slumped against the wet sand.
“Oh dear,” Olivia murmured.
“What?” Cecilia asked.
She waved at the unconscious shifter. “I think I gave him too much too quickly.”
Cecilia peered down into Finnegan’s slack face. “He’s quite handsome, isn’t he?”
“Cici, this really isn’t the time or the—” Her words were cut off by a great roar, and Olivia turned just in time to see Quentin charging toward them. His face was covered in blood; his nose was obviously broken. Blood ran down his neck, intermingled with the pouring rain as it soaked into his black shirt. His eyes were glowing with unrestrained fury.
“You bitch,” he snarled, clearly determining that Cecilia had been the one to kick him in the face. Cecilia let out a cry of distress and then scrambled to her feet and began to run.
“No!” Olivia called out when Quentin shifted his position so that he could chase after her. She took a flying leap, spurred by strength and magic that she recognized was not entirely her own, and landed on Quentin’s back. She reached around and dug her fingers into the wounded flesh of his face. He howled in pain and began bucking, trying to dislodge her from his back. She felt the tingling of magic, felt the brush of wet fur against her arms and knew he was trying to shift into an animal.
She continued to cling to his back, even as his body distorted and grew, until he was a ten-foot tall black bear, a very angry ten-foot tall black bear. Her fingers fisted into course black hair and she shielded her face, knowing that she would not survive if she let go.
Then his powerful front paws lifted, one reached around, and she arched her back and screamed in pain as sharp black claws sliced through her back and one arm. She lost her grip and fell to the sand, landing on her back and crying out again as the sand ground into her gaping wounds.
As Olivia fought to remain conscious, she heard another great roar, felt a moment of strange calm, and she turned her head just in time to see the most magnificent, most beautiful lion fairly flying across the sand, its eyes focused on its prey.
Not me, she thought dully, just before the lion collided with the bear, sending it staggering a few feet before it fell to its side. The two animals fought, a vicious battle that had Olivia holding her breath, for fear that the bear would win. When she felt arms sliding beneath her, she turned her focus and her eyes widened when she realized it was a shifter who was trying to lift her from the sand.
“No,” she said feebly.
“It’s okay,” the younger man said. “I’m Tanner’s friend. My name’s Andy. We’re here to help.”
Olivia was hardly in a position to fight him, so the only thing she could do was hope that he spoke the truth. He carried her to a small alcove, right where the cliff jutted from the sand. There was an overhang, so the small area beneath was fairly dry. Cecilia and Finnegan were already there, and a man and a woman, both shifters, stood over them as if they were guards.
“I need to heal Finnegan,” Olivia said weakly, as Andy placed her as gently as he could onto the sand next to the unconscious shifter.
“You need to conserve your strength,” Cecilia admonished her. “You’re bleeding just as badly as he is.”
The eldest shifter, a male, said to the other two, “Leah, protect them. Andy, with me. Quentin brought a small group of guard dogs with him. We need to contain them.” Leah nodded and Andy and the older shifter turned and left the small covered area.
Olivia blinked at the female shifter, who stood over them, legs a shoulder’s width apart, arms crossed over her chest, a determined look on her face. “Who are you?” she asked.
Leah glanced over her shoulder at Olivia. “Leah Pantera. That was my dad, Rick, and my brother, Andy. My dad’s the pack master of the Iowa pack.”
Olivia frowned. “We were attacked in Iowa.”
Leah frowned as well. “Yeah, that was Chuck’s fault. When we figured out you were in Iowa, he called Quentin Lyons and gave him a heads-up.”
“Chuck?”
Leah’s frown turned into a grimace. “Another shifter from our pack. A complete moron. I can’t believe I didn’t see it sooner. He’s been banished, so we never have to deal with him again.”
Olivia heard something in the girl’s voice that made her curious about the relationship between her and Chuck, but she abruptly stopped talking and turned to focus on her position as guard once again. With a groan of pain, Olivia rolled onto her stomach and lay her head against the sand and tried to focus on willing the pain away. She hoped Dane or Alexa or one of the other healers had been summoned, because she knew she was losing far too much blood, as had Finnegan. Someone needed to save them both, and soon.
* * * *
It occurred to Tanner that he was battling his own father. He recognized that this battle would be to the death. Quentin Lyons would not allow Tanner to live, so long as he was able to take a breath himself.
Which was just fine by Tanner, because Quentin had hurt his mate and needed to pay. Fresh rage flashed through Tanner’s system, caused by the image of Quentin slicing his massive black claws through Olivia’s back. The image just kept rolling through his head like a slideshow stuck on repeat.
He leaped away from the bear, landing with catlike grace, and then danced to the side when the bear turned and lunged for him. The action briefly exposed the animal’s neck and Tanner leaped forward and clamped his teeth down onto fur and skin. He squeezed his jaw and tasted blood, indicating he’d punctured flesh.
The bear flung its head to and fro and Tanner lost his grip. He flew a few feet into the air and just barely managed to land on his feet again. He tried the exact same trick again, but Quentin was no fool, and his ploy was unsuccessful the second time.
Before Tanner could formulate a new plan, the bear slammed into him, its weight sending him crashing to the ground. He rolled to the side with just enough time to avoid being crushed by the bear’s significantly heavier body.
They continued to fight, neither giving an inch, until Tanner abruptly managed to gain the upper hand. Quentin was growing tired. He may still be equally as strong as Tanner, but he was nearly thirty years older, and his endurance was not what it once had been. Tanner’s powerful lion jaws clamped around one of Quentin’s front paws and then squeezed. Magic flared for a moment, magic that was not shifter magic. Quentin roared as the bones shattered. His form shimmered and then Tanner had his jaws clamped around a human hand. He shifted into human form and released his hold.
Quentin dropped to his knees, cradling his broken hand and breathing heavily. He made a rattling noise with each breath, a result of the broken nose someone had given him before Tanner arrived on the scene.
The rain was finally letting up. The steady drizzle mixed with blood and sweat on Quentin’s face.
“You forfeit your rights to the position of pack master,” Tanner growled. He stood over his father, his former pack master, the man who caused Tanner to second-guess his own intentions at every turn. Hatred bubbled up inside him, hot and thick, and he had a strong urge to break the man’s neck.
A moment ago he’d been so furious he thought he could kill the man, but now that he was faced with the prospect, he couldn’t do it. He wasn’t Quentin.
He’d realized it a long, long time ago, but there had always been that sliver of doubt, right there, in the back of his mind. It was gone now. His eyes shifted to the side, seeking Olivia. He could not see her, but he could feel her, sense her presence.
She was the reason the doubt was gone.
He wanted to go to her, to pull her into his arms, to tell her what a fool she was to come after him. He wanted to inspect her body for injury and then fix whatever was broken, even though he had no idea how to do so. But he’d done it before, so he figured he could find a way to do it again.
Most of all, he wanted to tell her he loved her, and he wanted to assure himself that she loved him too. He wanted her to tell him that she had not really mated with Dane, that the entire thing was a hoax, that she was his, forever and always.
First, however, he had to deal with Quentin.
“Forfeit,” he demanded when Quentin remained silent.
Quentin’s eyes lifted and flared as he spotted something behind Tanner. “Finnegan,” he barked. “Attack. Kill the lightbearer.”
Finn, who had been limping toward them across the rain-soaked sand, hesitated, clutching his hand to his chest, his gaze darting from man to man. He was clearly torn between obeying the pack master’s command as he had for his entire life, and standing by his friend. Tanner held his breath, worried that Finn would do as Quentin commanded. He well knew how difficult it was for a shifter to disobey a direct order from his pack master.
“Kill her,” Quentin commanded again.
Tanner saw the red stain on the front of Finn’s shirt. He looked weak, as if he were barely holding on, yet there was the unmistakable shimmer of magic around his person. Lightbearer magic. As Olivia and Cecilia were currently the only lightbearers in the vicinity, the only conclusion was that Olivia had healed him, at least somewhat. Enough, at any rate.
Tanner wondered about Finn’s allegiance. He was part of Quentin’s pack, and Tanner well knew how rigidly the pack master controlled them. Finn had obviously convinced Olivia that he was one of the good guys, or else why would Olivia have healed him? But was he really? Had it all been an act, to get her to heal him so that he could rejoin the fight? Tanner tensed and waited to see what Finn would do.
Finn’s gaze shifted between Quentin and Tanner. Several moments passed. The only sounds were of the waves crashing into the sand, and of the rain, steadily pouring from the sky. Finn finally focused his attention onto Quentin.
“Kill him then, goddamn it,” Quentin roared, stabbing his finger at Tanner.
Finn suddenly very deliberately strode across the sand, walked right up to the pack master, grabbed his head with both hands, and twisted. The sound of cracking bones was deafening against the backdrop of pouring rain.
He dropped the lifeless body of his pack master and then stood there, next to Tanner, neither looking at him nor moving, clearly waiting for Tanner to make the next move. For long moments, nothing happened.
Finn finally spoke. “He would not have forfeit.”
“I know,” Tanner said quietly.
Finn hesitated again and then said, “I’m not a pack master. I don’t want it. I’ll go back and tell them you killed him.”
Tanner understood what he offered. It was a great compliment in the world of the shifters. Finn was throwing his loyalty fully and completely behind Tanner. The problem was, Tanner didn’t want it.
He shook his head. “I’m not going back to the pack.”
“Why?”
Tanner glanced toward the lake. “My home is elsewhere now.”
Finn watched Tanner for a few moments, and then shifted his gaze to Quentin’s lifeless body. “Your mate healed me.”
“She isn’t my—” He stopped, didn’t bother to deny it.
“I swear my allegiance,” Finn said as he dropped to one knee. “To you and your mate.”
Tanner blew out a breath. Why was he so reluctant to accept his role as pack master, when everyone around him was so determined that he was their pack master?
“You’re welcome to join me in the coterie,” he said after a moment’s consideration. “I believe you’ve more than proven your loyalty. I have to warn you, though. It’s very different from pack life.”
“How so?”
“Well, first of all, we have to convince the king to let us stay.”