Royal Mate

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Royal Mate Page 30

by Juniper Hart


  They drank and danced all night. The music was elegant. She couldn’t quite pick it out, but it was some sort of soothing classical music that went with the feast and then the dancing afterwards.

  Reuben was an excellent dancer so Cara let him lead. They swayed across the dance floor together, up against each other. When she was looking up at the crystal chandelier high above and accidentally met Reuben’s orangish eyes, he gave her a wink. She felt warm feelings pulse through her. The night was a blur, but she would remember bright moments from it forever.

  Later, when the festivities were all over, he took her out to the balcony and looked out over the expansive wilderness. The moon was high in the sky, lending Reuben an almost supernatural look as he leaned against the balcony railing. A magical feel cooled the night air. Cara could still hear the party inside, but Reuben had closed the doors so nobody could see them. They were alone.

  “You look breathtaking tonight,” he told her, while taking her hand in his. “I think red is your color.”

  “You don’t look too bad yourself,” she replied, leaning up against her protector.

  “I think you mean I look damned handsome,” Reuben corrected.

  She laughed.

  “Yeah. That’s what I meant.”

  “Probably just lost in translation,” he suggested with just the slightest hint of a smile on his lips.

  He had told the truth. Cara had not seen him in formal clothing before. She’d only seen him in ragtag old clothes… or naked. In these clothes, he looked regal and powerful. With sudden ferocity, he turned to her and took her other hand.

  “You’re finally safe,” he said. He was talking fast, rambling again. “No matter what, you will never have to go through anything like what we’ve experienced the past few days. Nobody would dare attack the manor. It’d be a suicide mission. Ezekiel knows that.” He moistened his lips and looked around before continuing talking. “We could forget him,” he said. “We could be safe here. We could protect you.”

  “Ezekiel would come for us,” she told him. “He won’t give up.”

  “This place is a fortress,” he replied. “We’ve got thousands of werewolves all around us. Even Ezekiel wouldn’t dare invade us.” He got close to her, teasing her lips with his. “Let’s forget about him. Let’s live our lives, here, now.”

  “I want to fight. We can’t live our entire lives here, Reuben. Don’t you ever want to leave South Dakota? You know, travel the world?”

  “I don’t want to lose you,” he urged. “I want to keep you here. Safe.”

  “Reuben, I—”

  “Yeah. I know. I just wanted to give you a chance to get out of fighting. I feel the same way you do. I’ve already contacted the other packs and we’ll take him down.” Reuben lifted Cara’s chin and looked her in the eyes. “But until then, I’m just a man and you’re just a woman, and I’m madly in love with you.”

  She bit his lower lip.

  “What are you going to do about it?”

  He moved closer to her. She closed her eyes. He grabbed her shoulders, pulling the straps off her dress.

  Suddenly, she felt his hands tense up and he threw her to the ground. Her eyes flashed open in surprise.

  “Reuben, not so rough!”

  That’s all she managed to get out before something smashed through the railing right where she had been standing. Whatever the projectile was caught Reuben full in the chest and hit him with enough force to launch him straight into the doors that led back into the manor.

  “Reuben!” Cara shrieked.

  She afforded one quick glance over the edge of the balcony. She spotted something big moving through the trees. It caught the moonlight with a metallic glean.

  A tank.

  Ezekiel and his mercenaries were coming for them.

  9

  Cara dashed over to Reuben, who was coughing and hugging his ribs. The front of his suit had been disintegrated.

  “Fucker!” He stumbled up.

  “Are you okay?” he quickly asked Cara, with terror in his voice.

  “I’m fine, but you’ve been shot!”

  Reuben kicked open what remained of the doors that led into the manor.

  “We’re being attacked!” he bellowed at the top of his lungs. “Defend the manor!”

  The party guests didn’t even ask questions. They simply dropped whatever they were doing and shifted into their werewolf forms, with coats ranging from brown to black to cool grey. One by one, they bounded to the windows and looked out. One group of them caught a tank shot, which sent all of them flying and several motionless, strewn across the table that had been used for celebration only moments before.

  Somewhere an alarm was raised and started blaring loudly.

  Utter pandemonium ensued.

  As the tank got closer, it tripped up some of the defense protocols that the manor apparently had, hitting several minefields that rocked it around wildly and tore off part of the treads – but it kept rumbling along in a broken fashion. The part that mattered, the turret, was fully operational and kept pumping the manor full of bullets, shattering windows and bringing down ancient parts of the house. One caught a column, shattering the marble and causing part of the front of the house to collapse.

  Right after the tank came creatures – so many of them that they looked like ants emerging from a colony. Cara didn’t get a good look at them as Reuben was trying to get her away from the window, but she saw some vampires and goblins with some sort of other beasts mixed in. When they activated the defense mechanisms, they weren’t as fortunate as the tank. The mines detonated, sending bits and pieces of enchanted creatures everywhere.

  She heard shrieking from the advancing hoards, but they just kept coming. The werewolves, completely taken by surprise, scrambled to find weapons and took positions on the windows, firing into the oncoming hoards with assault rifles.

  Reuben got Cara as far away as he could. “Stay here!” he snarled.

  He shifted into his werewolf form just as Duke flipped the table to provide extra cover for the werewolf gunmen. He was in his werewolf form, but somehow Cara knew it was him. It made no sense, but she knew.

  “Get down, son!” Duke ordered before seeing the remains of Reuben’s suit. “Did they hit you?”

  “I’ll be fine,” Reuben said, accompanied by a fit of coughing. “I can’t believe Ezekiel’s doing this! He’s more obsessed than I thought!”

  Before Duke could answer, another tank bullet zipped through the ancient architecture, bringing down a shower of stone onto everyone inside. Duke shrugged off a piece as big as a man. Cara was starting to see why he was in charge.

  The next few minutes were a bit of a blur. Cara had been expecting to go to a nice party with her fiancé. Instead, the manor was ambushed by Ezekiel’s vampires and Widowmaker’s goblins. Reuben seemed certain that none of them would survive. The werewolves weren’t prepared. Soon, the attackers would manage to get through the minefields.

  Eddy showed up a little while later. Cara had spotted him at the party, but he still looked perfectly clean like he’d just put on a newly ironed suit. “I just saw outside! There are too many! Our reinforcements are coming from other manors, but they’ll be here too late!”

  “This place has its own reinforcements,” Reuben snarled. “Eddy, watch over her!”

  Eddy kneeled beside Cara and put his fist to the ground. A shimmering shield formed in the air over Cara and a small group of werewolves. The werewolves formed a circle around Cara, pointing their weapons towards the windows and doors. Where they had all gotten their weapons, Cara didn’t know. Maybe they had an armory hidden somewhere nearby. Not that she cared. She had more pressing things to worry about.

  “Give me a gun!” Cara demanded, amazed at how far the pack would go to protect her. They were willing to get between her and a bullet just because she was Reuben’s fiancée.

  Most of the werewolves that were at the windows were lying motionless or slowly dying. The grou
nd troops had silver bullets. Apparently, the oncoming hoards weren’t too bad of shots.

  A goblin poked its head over the window, using his long claws to scale the vertical wall. One of the werewolves popped off a small stream of bullets into his body. He fell off the tall building to the ground far below with a horrible scream.

  Cara couldn’t see much of Reuben, but she saw him running towards the fireplace, throwing off goblins and vampires as they quickly flooded the ballroom despite the best efforts of the werewolves. He got to the fireplace, yelled something, and slammed his hand against the stone fireplace.

  The fireplace peeled itself off the wall and collected itself into a huge stone golem. Nothing kept its stone skin together, but when it moved the rocks ground against each other and made a loud, horrible sound.

  After Reuben had touched the stone, he’d been utterly overrun by goblins and vampires. Cara jerked the gun up to her shoulder, hoped she wouldn’t shoot Reuben, and unloaded the clip into the attackers that were still coming in through the windows. They exploded into dust left and right, but each one that Cara or her defenders shot, two more piled in. Reuben hadn’t been exaggerating when he said Widowmaker had a “small army” of goblins.

  The fireplace monster bellowed and tore into the attackers, who squealed and tried to get out of the way to no avail. The fireplace creature wasn’t a beautiful fighter and was rather slow, but the gunshots simply deflected off the stone. It smashed some of the monsters that were covering Reuben, leaving Reuben to stumble up with streaks of golden blood all across him.

  “Get upstairs!” he ordered as he came back towards them. “There’s too many of the bastards! Go!”

  The remaining werewolves, Cara, Eddy, and Reuben all made a mad dash for the staircase that led upstairs with the attackers not far behind them as a swarm of attackers tackled the golem out the window, killing all of them and crushing a dozen more below. Cara was reminded of the Viking berserkers, who were known to ingest dangerous, hallucinogenic painkillers before battle, lending them nearly supernatural pain tolerance. The goblins and the vampires each took several shots before they evaporated.

  The surviving defenders stopped at a staircase that led up to the roof through a hatch. Eddy kept the shield up to stop the attackers from shooting at them, letting the werewolves focus on laying fire into the death trap of the long staircase. The attackers didn’t wait for cover. They just kept charging with fanatical devotion to either Ezekiel or Widowmaker, soaking up the bullets to let their fellow attackers get an inch closer every time one of them died. It was like a poorly made zombie movie, except there was no pause button. Cara was scared out of her mind; she kept shooting, but they just kept coming.

  Finally, a werewolf opened the hatch and everyone piled up to the roof. As Cara’s head broke through, the wind almost took her off the edge before she caught herself. They were four or five stories up, meaning they could see the land for miles around even through the waving trees. She could see that more goblins were coming.

  Most of the vampires had already been eliminated, but Widowmaker’s troops kept pouring out of the woods to scale the manor like bugs. Dangerous, bloodthirsty bugs.

  Reuben slammed the hatch down and several of the other werewolves helped to keep the door closed, but goblins had figured out how to get on the roof from the outside. Only a few of them had made it so far. It was a dangerous climb. Most fell before making it to the top, lending the dwindling number of survivors a brief respite.

  Cara could see at the tree line, by the tank, two distinctive men. One she guessed was Widowmaker. He wasn’t wearing a helmet and he was too far away to see his features, but he was clearly not a goblin and he looked like he was in charge.

  The other was Ezekiel, who was screaming at the top of his lungs for the goblins to kill anyone inside.

  “Ezekiel!” Cara announced. “He’s here!”

  Reuben snatched a gun from one of the werewolves and dropped to his stomach like a professional sniper. He looked down the scope, aiming presumably at either Ezekiel or Widowmaker, breathed deeply, and squeezed the trigger.

  In what was to be one of the most impressive and terrifying moments of Cara’s life, a goblin showed up out of nowhere and jumped onto her. She jerked up the gun and sprayed him with bullets. He exploded like a sandcastle in front of a jet turbine and drifted down onto her beautiful dress. She could just barely follow the bullet from Reuben’s shot as it zipped through the air.

  It vanished from her sight quickly, but she saw Ezekiel stumble, clutch his chest in surprise, and fall to the ground. He writhed a few times before he slowly disintegrated.

  “I got the bastard!” Reuben cheered. “Fuck yeah!”

  Immediately, Widowmaker turned and made some sort of signal. All the goblins nearby instantly stopped and retreated, except for the unlucky few that were already climbing the manor and had to continue the assault or that didn’t see the signal. Those few were met with deadly force from the team of survivors.

  Soon, the last goblin vanished into the woods. Even the tank was deserted, barrel smoking. The field was disturbingly quiet. The green grass was dusted lightly with the dust of dead goblins and vampires. Reuben scrambled up and checked Cara from head to toe.

  “Are you okay?” he asked urgently. “Did any of them bite you? Are you okay?”

  “I’m fine,” she choked. “I’m fine…”

  But she wasn’t fine, covered in the dust of a dead goblin with the memory of war still so fresh in her mind. She wasn’t fine, and a part of her doubted if she’d ever be fine again.

  10

  In the aftermath of the battle, small groups of werewolves returned. Duke returned with Sarah later in their human forms, covered in dust. They’d been busy, evidently. Thousands of reinforcements from around the mountain, all part of Reuben’s pack, came in about forty seconds after the goblins had all inexplicably retreated. Since nobody needed them anymore, they tended to the wounded and tracked the goblins to make sure they were really gone.

  Cara wandered through the trashed dining hall with her bare feet and ruined dress after they’d cleaned up the bodies. She’d lost her shoes somewhere… But some werewolves had lost their lives.

  Reuben came up beside her. He was still hurting, but he was healing. The guy was practically indestructible. He’d only been hit by the tank, not the silver bullets used by the ground forces.

  “I’m so sorry,” she said, prodding a chunk of marble that had fallen.

  “This wasn’t your fault,” Reuben replied. “Ezekiel did this. Do you hear me? Don’t put this on yourself. Most of us will heal. Werewolves aren’t easy to kill.”

  He laid a hand on her shoulder and brought her in close as he spoke, “Ezekiel was here for me. I was the one who killed his family when the spell was cast on me.”

  She sat down on the creaky chair that had been so solid during dinner. He sat next to her, letting her speak.

  “Why’d they leave? They could’ve killed all of us.”

  “Ezekiel died and the contract was nullified,” he replied. “Widowmaker didn’t want to waste his troops on killing someone for no money.”

  The entire manor had taken a beating from the assault, but most of the rooms had been spared. The great hall had been the one that had been mostly destroyed.

  The werewolves were given magnificent burials the day after the fight. It rained the entire day as the mass burial was performed. It was strange to say the least. Cara had expected a normal funeral, so she wore dark colors and somber makeup. When she emerged from the bathroom, Reuben was wearing a bright blue dress shirt with tuxedo pants.

  “What are you wearing?” Reuben asked her. “Too morbid.”

  “It’s a funeral.”

  He finally seemed to comprehend.

  “You know, I should probably have explained that. We don’t do funerals like humans. We celebrate the life of those who have moved on. It’s a happy time, full of dancing and celebration.”

  “Oh.


  For every defender that had fallen, there had been a dozen more attackers that were now dead, but it still hurt Cara to see them. She couldn’t help but feel that the attack was partially her fault, even though it wasn’t.

  She hadn’t forced Ezekiel to do anything. Nobody had. He’d made his own choices. Ezekiel had lost his mind in a disturbed obsession over Reuben. It was a sick form of revenge for something that Reuben hadn’t even had control over.

  Laughter returned to the manor months later, when the dead had finished being honored and they were preparing for Cara and Reuben’s wedding. It felt strange having a wedding so close to the battle, but nobody else seemed to think so. When she’d brought it up to Duke, her future father-in-law had patted her on the head affectionately.

  “Those who died did so that the rest of the pack could flourish,” he told her. “They wouldn’t want us to suffer. They did that for us. To not celebrate the union of two mates that they gave their lives for would be nothing short of an insult to their memories.”

  A weird way of looking at it, perhaps, but then again, nothing in the enchanted world made much sense to Cara.

  Soon after the battle, Adrianna had no bounty money or any of the money from Ezekiel’s bank account. Duke, however, rewarded Adrianna with a hefty sum of money and she left in peace. Duke met with the new vampire clan leader and signed a peace treaty. Neither party wanted to continue an unwinnable war. Eddy returned home, but visited often.

  Cara had been afraid that Reuben might become more distant after the battle, but if anything, he grew more affectionate. It wasn’t rare for him to randomly bring her gifts or tell her how much he cherished her. They were in bliss. There were horror stories about relationships that fell through after intense hardship, but Cara somehow knew they wouldn’t be like that.

  However, there was a part of her that wondered if she was making the right decision. Ezekiel was dead. The bounty was off. She could go back to the human world, where she would be safe from monsters and demons and any other problems. Maybe she’d rushed into things too quickly with Reuben. After knowing the guy for a solid week and a half, they were engaged. He had told her fate had brought them together and that he knew she was meant to be his mate. She had believed every word, but maybe it was just too soon.

 

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