by Laura Wright
Vincent curled his lips in disgust. “They were humans.”
Bayon continued to stroke his finger along the dagger’s blade. “What help did they demand?”
Sweat beaded Vincent’s face. “They wanted to study the Wildlands.”
Keira scowled. “What?”
Vincent grimaced. “They said that they were ecologists who were afraid that there was some disease that was attacking our homelands. They were certain they could help if they had access to study the places where the magic was still strong.”
Bayon snorted. “And you believed them?”
“Yes,” Savoy breathed, tears in her eyes.
Keira folded her arms over her chest, in no mood to offer sympathy. Maybe they’d been driven to desperation at their inability to conceive. Nurturers had an inbred need to care for others. But unlike Bayon’s mother, who’d devoted herself to human children who needed her love, they’d thought of no one but themselves.
She didn’t believe for a minute that they hadn’t been well aware they were putting the Wildlands at risk.
“Then why keep it a secret?” she snapped.
Vincent flinched. “They said they’d approached the elders with an offer of assistance only to be denied because of the elders’ belief that humans are inferior to Pantera.”
Bayon’s low growl vibrated through the air. “So you brought them through the borders and allowed them access to our deepest secrets and vulnerabilities?”
“We thought they wanted to help,” Savoy said.
Keira grabbed the woman’s chin, forcing Savoy to meet her gaze that burned with the memory of twenty-five years of hell.
“No,” she ground out. “You allowed your own selfish desire for a child to blind you to your betrayal.”
Tears streamed down the female’s pale face. “I’m so sorry.”
Abruptly dropping her hand, Keira straightened. Beating them to a bloody pulp wouldn’t give them the answers they needed.
Unfortunately.
“What else did you do for the bastards?” she demanded.
“Nothing. I swear,” Vincent said, clearly trying to draw her attention away from his sobbing mate. “When we didn’t conceive we were determined to break our agreement with the priestess. She sent us a message to meet with her at the cabin, but there were human males there who threatened to expose us if we didn’t keep our promise. Then—”
“Then Keira appeared and we panicked,” Savoy finished for him.
“We only meant to disable you long enough for us to escape.” Vincent held Keira’s gaze, silently pleading for her understanding. Yeah. When hell froze over. “But the humans put a metal collar around your neck and told us that they’d kill you if we didn’t continue to bring them into the Wildlands.”
Parish stepped forward, his anger a tangible force in the air. “You should have come to me.”
“We couldn’t,” Vincent insisted. “They swore that as long as we did as we were told that Keira wouldn’t be hurt. Otherwise—”
Keira made a sound of disgust. “And you just trusted their word?”
“Of course not.” Savoy licked her dry lips. “They sent us pictures of you each week. They claimed it was to prove you were still alive, but we always understood that it was a warning that you were still in their clutches and that your life depended on us fulfilling our end of the bargain.”
There was an explosion of curses from Bayon and Parish, but Keira kept her attention focused like a laser on the traitors.
“Even if you knew I was alive, you couldn’t have possibly known they weren’t torturing me.”
Vincent cleared his throat. “The collar.”
Keira scowled at him in confusion. “What about it?”
“I had a chance to study it while we were in the cabin,” he admitted in a strained voice. “It was made of an unfamiliar metal alloy, but I could detect a magically-enhanced toxin coating the inside of the collar.”
Shit. Bayon’s suspicions had been right. There was something about the collar that had been poisoning her.
“That doesn’t explain why you assumed I wasn’t being abused.”
“The toxin was potent enough to cripple you, which meant it would be lethal to a human. Even touching your skin would have made them extremely ill.”
Keira grimaced. Now she understood why they’d gone to such trouble to avoid all physical contact. Even when they took her to the bathroom, they’d kept their distance, using the electrical shocks to warn her of the dangers of trying to escape.
And, of course, they couldn’t risk removing the collar. Not when they couldn’t know for certain how swiftly her strength would return.
Not until they were ready to kill her.
She shied away from the thought that the nasty Roger might have been contemplating raping her dead body.
She shuddered. She had no forgiveness for the two traitors. Not when they’d left her at the mercy of those animals.
“They might not have raped me, or beat me with their fists, but they tortured me every day I was in that cage.”
Vincent lowered his gaze. “I’m sorry.”
Feeling her tremble, Bayon stepped close enough to wrap her in the comforting scent of his cat.
“Did you ever watch to see what they were doing?” he demanded of the two.
Vincent gave a slow shake of his head, his shoulders slumped in defeat. “They claimed they were taking samples, but I fear they were performing some dark ritual.”
“They have to be the ones causing our homelands to rot,” Parish growled, his gun pointed directly between Vincent’s eyes. At that short distance it would be a lethal shot. “Did you tell them of Ashe’s pregnancy?”
Savoy made a low sound of distress. “No, they already knew.”
“But you told them where she would be?” the Hunter persisted.
Vincent gave a jerk of his head. “Yes.”
“Fuck.”
Keira lightly grabbed Parish’s wrist, keeping him from squeezing the trigger. They were all battling against the primal lust for revenge. For now they had to put the welfare of the Pantera ahead of vengeance.
She held Vincent’s wary gaze. “How many other traitors are there?”
The older Pantera frowned at the question. “None that I know of.”
Talon slapped the back of his head. “The truth.”
“That is the truth,” Vincent rasped, a spark of gold smoldering in his dull eyes. His cat might be cowed, but it wasn’t dead. “We never spoke of our bargain with any other Pantera.”
“Shit.” Bayon exchanged a frustrated glance with Keira. “There could be a dozen and we would never know.”
“There’s a way,” Savoy said in soft tones.
“Tell me,” Keira commanded.
“The priestess demanded that we be marked to prove our loyalty,” the older female admitted.
Keira lifted her brows. “What mark?”
“The soles of our feet.”
Together Keira, Bayon and Parish moved to stand beside Talon, all of them studying the outline of a raven that had been branded onto the meaty flesh of their heels.
Keira shuddered. It wasn’t the full Mark of Shakpi, but Vincent and Savoy should have suspected that it represented their ancient enemy.
Parish sent her a questioning glance, clearly asking permission to take control. She gave a discrete nod. She hadn’t just been trying to avoid confusion among the Hunters as to who was their leader when she said she was happy to let Parish remain in his position of authority.
It would take her time to fully recover from her years of being held captive by the humans. And just as importantly, she was determined to track down every bastard who’d been responsible for attacking their homeland and make them suffer.
“Talon, you need to find a way to begin searching for that mark without letting anyone know what you’re doing,” Parish commanded the younger male Pantera.
“Are you shitting me?” Talon protested. “I can’t s
tart randomly inspecting people for a brand without making them suspicious.”
“Just do it.”
“Christ."
Talon rolled his eyes, but obediently headed toward the doors. Keira was one of the very few who’d ever been a match for Parish when he was in full commando-mode.
Vincent cautiously reached out to take his mate’s hand. “What will you do to us?”
Parish nodded a head in her direction. “Keira, it’s your choice.”
She shrugged, the brutal need for revenge fading beneath the sight of Savoy’s cowering body.
The two would have to be punished; maybe they would even be condemned to death. But that was something that would be decided after the danger to the Pantera had been effectively destroyed.
“Take them to the elders,” she ordered.
Parish arched a dark brow. “No one would blame you if you want to—”
“No.” She leaned against Bayon, absorbing his strength as her knees threatened to collapse. It was going to take a few days for her to fully regain her strength. Until then, she had utter faith she could depend on her mate. It was a knowledge that banished the last of her bitterness. The past was the past. It was her future with Bayon, and the future of her people, that mattered. “Just before Bayon arrived, one of my captors let slip the fact that my time in the cage was coming to an end. He believed that whatever they were plotting was about to happen. And that they were going to succeed.”
Bayon rubbed a comforting hand on her lower back. “They never gave a hint what that plot might entail?”
“No.” She pointed toward the traitors. “But they might have information we need.”
“Fine.” Parish gave a grudging nod, his lust for blood still lurking in his golden eyes. Shoving the gun into the holster at his waist, he reached to grab the two kneeling traitors by their hair and jerked them to their feet. “Let’s go.”
She watched as her brother hauled Vincent and Savoy from the room before snuggling against Bayon’s chest, breathing deeply of his familiar scent.
“Are you all right?” he asked, wrapping his arms around her as he laid his cheek on top of her head.
She smiled, kissing the strong column of his neck. “I will be, once we have answers.”
“We will,” he said without hesitation. “The Pantera are nothing if not stubborn creatures.”
“True,” she agreed.
For now, a shadow continued to hang over the Wildlands, but she fiercely held onto the belief that someday soon they would defeat their mysterious enemies and the magic would once again heal their land.
And their people.
Bayon rubbed his cheek against her hair. “Can we go home now?”
She planted another kiss on his neck, needing to be alone with her mate. “The caves?”
“Actually I thought you might stay with me.” He lifted his head to study her weary face. “At least until we can decide where we want to live.”
Her hand pressed against his cheek, her gaze drinking in his male beauty.
She’d been an idiot to ever doubt her ability to be with an alpha male. Bayon didn’t threaten her independence.
He only made her stronger.
“I don’t care where we go as long as we’re together.”
His eyes held a love she felt to the very depths of her soul.
“For all of eternity, honey.”
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Alexandra Ivy is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of the Guardians of Eternity series, as well as the Immortal Rogues. After majoring in theatre she decided she prefers to bring her characters to life on paper rather than stage. She lives in Missouri with her family. Visit her website at alexandraivy.com.
JEAN-BAPTISTE
By Laura Wright
Chapter 1
The Suit looked like shit.
Jean-Baptiste stood with his back to the window of the Medical facility, and watched the blond male pace back and forth in front of a large cypress. The leader of the Diplomatic Faction had always given off a controlled, unruffled vibe, but as the sun died around them in a glow of pale orange fire, Raphael’s true state of mind was revealed. His clothes were wrinkled and hanging off his tall, lean body. The skin on his face was pulled tight over the bone, his eyes looked exhausted and sunken and desperate, and his hands were clenching and unclenching as he stalked from one end of the lawn to the other.
“You need to release your cat, Raphael,” Jean-Baptiste said, the irony of his words clawing at his guts, while the Nurturer inside of him—the one who was an expert on mental issues for the Pantera—pressed on. “When our minds grow weary with stress, our cats are trained to take over, give our human side a break. It’s how we survive, how we’re built.”
“Can’t,” Raphael muttered.
“I get that you want to guard your mate, but your cat can be just as effective.”
Raphael just shook his head.
Damned stubborn shifter. It seemed to be a personality flaw all Pantera males suffered from. “You won’t be able to remain in your human form the entire pregnancy without losing it.”
“You don’t understand.” The words were curt, and flung at Baptiste like they were coated in alligator dung.
Jean-Baptiste didn’t have a female—and it was looking more and more like he never would—but he knew how puma males were when something was wrong with their mate. The levels of crazy ranged from “manageable” to “batshit.” But for Raphael, and what he was dealing with, it might very well be “rocket ship to the moon” time. His mate, Ashe, carried the fate of the Pantera within her womb, and if she had truly been attacked inside the Wildlands as Bayon had claimed…
A low growl erupted from Jean-Baptiste’s throat, but he shut it down instantly. The last thing he needed right now was to allow his cat even one claw out of its cage. Even if it was to sniff out the bastard who’d had the balls to touch a Pantera’s pregnant mate on Wildlands soil. But the fantasy of catching and carving a long and deep “P” across the intruder’s chest was the kind of revenge Baptiste and his cat were hungry for.
“Bayon tell you what I want?” Raphael asked, his voice stripped of emotion as a breeze kicked up off the bayou, rustling the Spanish moss coating the Cypress.
Baptiste nodded. “Wish I could help.”
“You can.”
“Sorry, mon ami.” I’ve got problems of my own to deal with.
“This isn’t a request, Baptiste.”
“Maybe you’re forgetting, Raphael, I’m not Diplomatic Faction.”
“I don’t forget. Anything.”
“Then you know I don’t report to you.”
“True.” Raphael stopped pacing and turned to glare at Jean-Baptiste. “But what I’m proposing isn’t exactly official Pantera business.”
Baptiste’s brows shot together, and the skin on his neck, where he’d gotten inked a few days ago, started to burn.
“In fact,” Raphael said, his voice dropping as his gaze checked right and left for Pantera in the area. “I don’t think either one of us would want it to be.”
The urge to spring at the male, drop his frail-looking ass to the ground, ripped through Jean-Baptiste. But he’d grown used to the feral cat inside of him, and he forced patience into his already sour gut.
“I know you’ve been dealt a handful here,” he said coolly. “I respect that. Hell, I’m as concerned about what’s happening with Ashe as any Pantera. Maybe even more so. I’m a Nurturer after all.” He heard the bitter note in his own voice. “But I don’t have time to travel—”
“Why? Because you just got back?”
A flash of alarm moved through Jean-Baptiste, and he eased away from the window and started toward the male. He never talked with anyone about his personal trips into New Orleans. The fact that the leader of the Suits knew something like this was alarming at best.
“Was it a new piercing?” Raphael said, standing his ground as the male drew near. “Or did you get inked again?�
�
Baptiste’s jaw tensed. Play it off, Shifter. Don’t let him see one shred of your unease. “Didn’t know there was a problem with a puma who appreciates body art,” he said with a casual shrug.
“Not the art. But…maybe the reason behind it?” Raphael’s nostrils flared, and once again he checked to see if they had an audience. When he found the lawn behind Medical deserted, he turned back to Jean-Baptiste, his voice low. “I know about your little problem.”
Nostrils flared, Baptiste stopped a foot from the Suit. Inside his body, his cat screamed and clawed to get out. It wanted to attack. It wanted to rip the voice box from the male standing before it with all kinds of accusations swimming in his green eyes. But the only thing Jean-Baptiste allowed the feline to display was a cool, confused purr. “No clue what you’re talking about, mon ami.”
Undeterred, Raphael continued as though he hadn’t heard anything at all. “Just don’t know how it started. Or when. Few weeks ago? A month?” His eyes locked with Jean-Baptiste. “Considering how many tats and holes you have in that body of yours I’d say you’ve been trying to push down the fact that you have no control over your cat for some time now.”
The words sank so deep Jean-Baptiste didn’t have time to suppress his animal’s reaction. With a terrifying growl, he grabbed the male’s shoulders and rushed him like a linebacker. “Who the fuck told you?” he snarled, saliva forming in his mouth as Raphael’s back hit the trunk of the cypress.
“Perks of being a Suit,” Raphael said through gritted teeth, his green eyes flashing gold fire. “I have connections outside the Wildlands. That piercing there,” he jerked his chin forward, “through your eyebrow—the one coated in malachite—well, it was done by the brother of one of my spies’ girlfriends.”
Baptiste’s eyebrow twitched. So did his lower lip—the one with the twin silver rings through it. He’d been betrayed. By a foolish, foolish soon-to-be dead human male. He forced a dark laugh. The sound was hollow. “Proves nothing.”
“I don’t think so,” Raphael said. “Malachite is inside every tattoo and piercing you have.”