Gage

Home > Other > Gage > Page 125
Gage Page 125

by Emilia Hartley


  Connor roared into Alex’s ear, Alex gave no ground. A punch flew out, striking the truck and leaving a fist shaped dent in the side of the door. Two wolves appeared from the shadows to back up the alpha, Alex felt the noose tighten. The pair readied themselves to pounce should the order be given. It didn’t come.

  “I’m going to give you two options, you idiot. You can either tear this piece of shit bear’s throat out right now, or you can get the fuck out of this den.”

  He’d never seen Connor blinded by rage before. Why was he acting this way?

  Samantha whined with fear. She came here of her own free will but that didn’t seem to matter to Connor. He was out for blood.

  “I thought you were a leader, not a killer,” Alex said. The conflicted feelings on his face showed clearly. Alex had struck a nerve but he wasn’t sure it was enough. “Don’t be like your father.”

  That was it; that was the moment that his expression began to fade. His hand rubbed at his forehead, trying to brush away his rage.

  “Lock her up,” he exhaled, “let her taste the fear we’ve been savoring for the past two months.”

  She’s an ally you moron.

  At least she wouldn’t die today. Alex couldn’t take his eyes off Connor. Even as Samantha was taken to the cage that just two months ago held Connor; Alex could do nothing to repress the anger that choked the back of his throat.

  “You are just as bad as they are,” Alex said.

  “And you betray your own kind!” Connor retorted.

  The cage locked shut behind them. Alex wanted to free her but he knew nothing he said would convince Connor. He had to do this on his own.

  “I’m done,” Alex said, “I’ve had enough of this pack. I’ve had enough of you.”

  Alex stamped away while Connor watched on. Samantha sat uncomfortably inside the slightly too small cage, shivering against the growing cold of the evening air. Alex removed his leather jacket and shoved it through the bars. He waited for Connor to reprimand him, but Connor said nothing. Instead he just turned and shoved his way back inside the farmhouse.

  “Don’t worry, I’ll get you out of there,” Alex reassured Samantha. He was going to show Connor, there was no need for all this unnecessary bloodshed. “Keener heads will prevail in the end. What did you come to say?”

  “The bear alpha,” she started, “a wolf took his wife. If you can find the killer he might come around.”

  “That’s enough,” the guard said, smacking the cage, “Shut up.”

  Alex growled at the guard, before turning back to Samantha who still shivered even inside the jacket.

  “You better make sure she’s well fed,” Alex threatened.

  Cynthia stood by the motorbike and Alex joined her, pulling the fallen motorcycle upright. His guilt at the transaction made it hard to look at his woman. She had watched him get yelled at by the pack alpha. He needed to lick his wounds. She wouldn’t let him. Her hand caressed along his cheek and pulled his eyes to meet hers. She leaned over and kissed him on the lips. Her tenderness melted his heart, causing him to choke down the lump of emotion he’d found in his throat. This small gesture reassured him that she was still on his side. For that, he was especially grateful.

  The familiar stamping of his father’s walking stick made him pause and he turned to see the man hobbling toward him from the farmhouse. His arm was bandaged and his head was wrapped tightly over his right eye where blood pooled on fresh gauze, he used his walking stick as more of a crutch than usual.

  “Leaving?” he asked.

  “I have some things that need to be figured out, and I won’t be able to do that with Connor breathing down my neck,” Alex said. “Besides, he’s got his pride. If I stick around the asshole won’t let me hear the end of it.”

  His father nodded and stepped closer to Alex. He winced with pain at each step and as Alex reached out to help him he was swatted away by the walking stick. After taking a second to steady himself at the bottom of the steps his father spoke.

  “You’ve become strong, Son,” he said, “I wondered if you’d end up like her. And, you have. Your mother was the strongest and proudest woman I’d ever seen in my life and I was lucky to have her by my side,” he coughed into his hand, “I had a feeling you’d go down this road at some point. I saw the strength buried deep down inside you but you never let it out. I thought if I kept pushing you it would show.”

  He laughed heartily before breaking down into a coughing fit. Alex reached out to help him but again was swatted away.

  “I’m an old dog, and I’ve lived a good life. But, you…” he looked back and forth between Alex and Cynthia, “you look like you’re just about to start your own.”

  Alex couldn’t keep himself in check any longer. Tears slowly streaked down his cheeks but still, he did his best to choke them away. He took his father in his arms and held him close.

  “I’ll be back,” Alex said, “Before everything is done, I’ll be back.”

  “And, I’ll be here waiting for you,” his father replied.

  They hugged for a moment and Alex was glad to receive his affections. When they separated, Alex saw Cynthia waiting by the bike.

  “You don’t have to come with me,” Alex said.

  “You’re not going to keep me here,” she replied. Cynthia kissed him on the cheek. “I was born a biker girl anyway,” she said, “And I’m starting to get used to the fashion.”

  I’ll say.

  Alex swung his leg over the motorcycle. Cynthia joined him, her delicate hands clasped around his waist. The engine sputtered to life and with a final wave to his father, Alex started down the muddy driveway.

  As they drove down the road, Alex couldn’t keep his mind off the fight he’d had with his alpha. Connor was blinded by rage. One day he’ll see.

  Cynthia squeezed tighter around his waist, almost as if she could sense his distracted thoughts, and with that his mind was clear. He could always count on her. Together, they would figure out a way to end this war. He was sure of it.

  Alpha Wolf Guardian

  Alpha Wolf Series Book 2

  Emilia Hartley

  CHAPTER 1

  Silver.

  Of course it would be a silver bullet.

  The tiny hunk of misshapen metal clanked on the kitchen table. The blood was still fresh on it, but drying quickly. Only one type of enemy used silver bullets and that was the only thing on his mind. The only real question was how many would he have to kill.

  “Hunters,” Connor growled, “Of course it would be hunters. Shit.”

  Connor punched his fist on the table. Any more weight behind his fist and the table would have toppled under his strength; instead he left a dent that wouldn’t be easily mended.

  “Dug it out of the bear this morning.”

  “Dammit … er …”

  “Billy,” he said.

  “Billy,” Connor sighed, “gimme a second to think.”

  The bite in his tongue shut Billy up quick. Connor was still lost in the last battle; the grim, bloody, war of attrition that had cost him a few great soldiers. But, why did the hunters help the wolves in the last fight.

  Connor couldn’t get over the helplessness he felt being surrounded by bears. He could still see the bears with their salivating jaws and sharpened claws waiting to end his meager existence. Only to watch them flee into the trees as hunters opened fire, ending their attack.

  What was it that their pack master said? How did we cause all the fighting? They were the ones that started everything!

  Why did it have to be hunters?

  The greatest weakness of all shifters, wolf and bear alike, was silver. It could punch right through the thickened hide of a bear like it were paper.

  What a fool’s death.

  Only hunters used silver bullets to take down their prey. Anything else would be a waste of time. A regular bullet might sting a bit, break the skin, but the taught muscle would stop it like a tank. Silver, however, was always a deat
h sentence.

  Sunlight began to beat through the window. Another nice day ruined by bad news. Good riddance to the bears, there were less to kill later. Now, the only question on his mind was how many hunters he would get to taste.

  The only road that led to the farm house was crimson stained from the blood of the most recent battle that had yet to fully wash away. The ramshackle houses that normally lined the sides of the street were battered and broken. Those that remained were empty and quiet. By this time of day the children were usually playing about, or being herded into the farmhouse for study, but now they were gone. At least they were safe.

  Then there was the matter of his prisoner, Samantha. She sat lazily in her cage. She was a bear shifter and, according to Alex, a willing prisoner. Her auburn hair was tangled and knotted from spending the last few days confined. She was rather attractive, with youthful good looks, barely over 19 years old if he had to guess. Her leg was still bound in a cast, a wound that Alex gave her or so he claimed.

  Just looking at her made Connor’s blood boil; he could feel the wolf inside beckoning him to be released. He fought against it, even as it crept across his brain. Now wasn’t the time.

  “Why don’t we use silver bullets?” Billy asked.

  Why don’t you ask me another stupid question?

  Connor turned his head to get a better look at Billy who stared back with a dumb look on his face. Connor slowly walked closer like a predator looming in for the kill.

  “Where are we going to get the silver,” Connor asked, “How would we pay for it?” Billy backed away as Connor continued to advance. “Where would we get the guns to fire those bullets?” Connor continued, “All of these things cost money, Billy, money that we don’t have. This farm produces enough food to get us through some hard times. Hell, we can barely pay the mortgage as is. What kind of a mongrel are you, anyway? You wanna be some coward, hiding behind a shotgun, go for it. But, the only people I know that use silver bullets are hunters. If you wanna try to take one of their guns then be my guest,” Connor said, poking Billy in the chest.

  It was clear that Billy got the hint. Connor returned to the kitchen table, questions still burning in his mind. Samantha was a threat but she claimed to have information that might help. He could question her but he’d just as soon bite her head off.

  What would Tess do in this situation? She was the light of his life and the only thing that kept him together in difficult times. He barely even knew if she was alright. Who knows what could have happened on the way to the other den. If only she were here right now, she would know the right words to soothe his frazzled mind.

  What the hell am I supposed to do?

  The silence in the room was broken by the clack of walking stick against the old wood floors. There was only one person that used such a thing and that was Tess’s father Marcus, the old Alpha of the pack.

  “You can stare all you like, but that won’t help anything,” Marcus said. He was Alex’s father as well. The sting of Alex’s rebellion sat uncomfortably in Connor’s mouth. He wondered if he should speak kindly to the father of his future wife, or if he should speak down to the man that was the father of a deserter?

  Just after the bears attacked their den, Alex had defied him and left the pack. Good Riddance, we don’t need any traitors amongst us.

  Connor slumped into his shoulders in deep thought. Marcus had more experience with leadership than anyone else in the den. Any advice he could offer would be useful.

  “What am I supposed to do,” Connor asked, teeth clenched and fists full of rage, “there’s no way we can last against the bears.”

  “Looks like I chose the right person to become an alpha,” Marcus said, laughing right in Connor’s face which did nothing to calm his nerves. He eased himself into a seat at the table, “an unworthy successor would do what he wanted without considering all possibilities.”

  Connor fell into his chair at the table, the legs squeaked against the ground, groaning against his weight. Sitting face to face with the old pack alpha, and seeing the lines of stress on the old man’s face made Connor wonder if he really wanted to be, or should be the one in charge.

  “I’m not so sure,” Connor remarked sarcastically, “I can barely keep my head on straight right now.”

  “I picked the man who would be right for the job,” he said. The old man let out a sigh and stamped his walking stick on the floor. “I’m sure your father felt the same way before he passed on.”

  Connor hadn’t thought much of his father lately. His death became the catalyst that brought the shifters back together in the first place. If he’d been alive, Connor wondered how the fighting might have ended. His father was relentless when it came to battle. He would charge headlong into an entire pack of wolves to come out the last one standing. Nobody would dare challenge him for leadership. Connor used to be amazed at the strength his father exhibited, but everyone dies. That was the truth. He pushed his thoughts of his father from his mind; there was only one alpha in this room and that was him.

  “Why would you bring him up now,” Connor asked.

  Marcus toyed with the silver bullet, the blood stained his fingers. It was such a tiny piece of shrapnel, yet it had caused the death of a powerful shifter, only to become a play thing.

  “Your father was a proud man,” Marcus said, “But in a way he was too proud.”

  “What does that have to do with anything?” Connor barked back.

  “Everything,” he calmly replied.

  “Are you trying to say I’m acting like my father?” Connor demanded as he stood to his feet. He leaned over the table dominantly and eyed the old dog closely.

  “No,” replied Marcus, who didn’t even flinch, “what I’m trying to say is that you’ve become your own man. The only man you looked up to for so many years was never willing to compromise. I hear he tried to train you to be a great leader one day, well now is your chance; lead.”

  Connor let his head fall and sunk back into his chair with a heavy sigh. He’d never imagined the burden of leadership would weigh so heavily, nor how well his father managed to carry the load. He never understood the decisions he would have to make when he was top dog, or how many lives depended on him making the right one.

  “I didn’t know you before you dated my daughter. But, I did know your father. You act just like him when you’re alone but you change completely when Tess is there, you become a different man,” he said.

  Connor lifted his head to look at Marcus’s old wrinkled face. A smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth, as though he could see right through Connor and knew the decision he was about to make.

  Dammit, he knows me too well.

  Connor needed to see Tess if he was going to make the right decision. He needed to know that the woman bearing his child was safe from harm. He needed to hold her and have her calm the aching muscles and shaken nerves. Perhaps she would have the words of wisdom that he needed to hear.

  “I’m going to see Tess,” Connor said, “I can’t make the same mistakes my father did. If she makes me a better man then I need to see her. However, I’ll need you to watch the pack while I’m gone.”

  Marcus used the table to return to his feet, cracking his back as he stood. His injuries persisted; he ripped at the blood soaked rags that still covered half of his face, tearing them from his skin. Bear claw marks streaked at an angle across his eye, still cut deep, but healing quickly. Never doubt a wolf’s resilience, especially an alpha’s.

  “They were safe enough when I was in charge, I’ll make sure they’re here when you get back,” he replied.

  Connor clasped a hand over Marcus’ shoulder and held it firm as a sign of thanks, a gesture that was returned in kind. Connor, not satisfied, reached over the table and pulled his father-in-law into a strong hug and Marcus disappeared beneath Connor’s bulging muscles.

  “I’ll return as quickly as I can,” Connor said, “Thanks old man.”

  “Get out of here before I chang
e my mind!” he said as a raspy laugh escaped the old man’s mouth.

  Connor pushed his way outside and inhaled the morning air, only to be distracted by Samantha in the cage. She sat still, silent, and she stared with eagerness at Connor. He scowled at her with disgust, clenched his jaw, and tore his eyes away.

  Again, his heart raced as the wolf cried to be released, but he inhaled deeply and exhaled to calm himself. He had someone he needed to see.

  Outside the farmhouse was a familiar truck. The old yellow paint was chipped and gave way to more rust with each passing day. The body was still in a bit of a mess from old battles, but it would still start reliably as it always had. He got inside and patted his hand along the dashboard.

  Thank you.

  And, with a turn of the key and a press of the gas pedal he left the farmhouse in his rearview mirror.

  CHAPTER 2

  “How ya holdin’ up, Tess?” asked an old familiar voice.

  “I’m fine,” Tess lied with a smirk, “Thank you.”

  Ever since they left their den with all the young in tow, Tess had done nothing but worry and she was tired of holding those feelings. She was about ready to march into the bear den by herself.

  Tess spun into the face of Gloria. Her old wrinkled face was scrunched into a worried grin and Tess didn’t want to do anything to worry her more. So, she sipped at her cold tea, immediately regretting doing so; the taste was bitter and disgusting.

  With a thud she rested her head on the cold bay window she’d posted herself beside. The snow kept her company. It fell hypnotically down only to disappear into the rest of the snow that covered the rolling hills by the den.

  Gloria eased into a nearby rocking chair and brushed her silvery hair from her face.

 

‹ Prev