Mating Fever

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Mating Fever Page 8

by Celeste Anwar


  There was nothing to do but wait and see if Gabriel would uphold his promise to her. She just hoped he didn’t do anything stupid--like getting killed before he could rescue her.

  The wry thought did little to ease the tension cramping her belly. In all honesty, she knew she had no one to rely on but herself. Smart people didn’t trust their fate to others. The urge to let Gabriel play her hero and sweep her into his arms went beyond tempting, but it was completely irrational. More than likely, they were outnumbered, definitely weaponless, and in the middle of nowhere.

  She was going to have to get free by herself and try to do something. She just wasn’t sure how much she could do if someone didn’t come back inside ... and by then, it would probably be too late....

  Chapter Six

  Nardo pushed Gabriel roughly, driving him ahead to the luna clearing where the pack met each cycle, when the moon sat fat in the sky and pulled them to shift with near irresistible force. Gabriel stumbled from the forceful push and whipped around, his voice a menacing growl, “You push me again, I’ll kill you, mon ami.”

  Nardo returned his menacing look, his eyes flashing in the dark, but he said nothing. He did not touch him again as they walked.

  Gabriel thought of Jessica being taken away by that bitch, Lavinia. He hoped she did nothing so foolish as to hurt Jessica, for if she did, she would regret it.

  His fury rolled inside, like the flames of a white hot blaze. He should have expected this. He had, but not so soon, and not when he was with Jessica.

  His brains fled to his cock every time she was near. Had he gotten a handle on his lust, he never would’ve been so foolish as to take her home, or any other place he’d ever been. The pack could sniff him out so easily. He should have known they were waiting to take him.

  Gabriel felt like hitting something. His fists tightened with the urge. He knew he’d soon have the chance to satisfy the bloodlust.

  They crossed the guardian-like trees into the clearing, moving toward the center. Nardo parted from him silently as they reached the center, moving back into the shadows of the trees. Gabriel stood in the placement of the accused. A mark of shame for the worst trespass on pack laws, the accused stood surrounded by the pack, yet alone.

  The last time the pack had met to try an accused had been a few months back, when Raoul had trespassed into vampire territory to claim a human woman for himself.

  Gabriel had done much worse, and he knew it. He didn’t expect to fair as well as Raoul.

  He expected to die.

  A dead calm settled over him. No matter their decision, he would not allow harm to come to Jessica. They’d taken her father. They would not take her too.

  Regret left a bitter taste in his mouth, vanquishing the lingering sweetness of her kiss. He’d wanted so much more, and he had no right to those desires. No right to her....

  Gabriel angrily thrust the thought to the corners of his mind, preparing himself for judgment. To help her, he must remain clear, focused. He could not allow thoughts of her to distract him in an already deadly contest. One false move could prove instant death ... no chance for survival.

  Yet still, she entered his thoughts. He knew little enough of her, but even his limited contact had him distracted to the point where he thought of nothing else. He resolved to destroy those urges. He couldn’t have her, but neither would anyone else. He would see to it.

  He looked up at the sky a brief moment, feeling the energy of the moon course through him. The moon shone down clearly, gilding his muscles with silver, days from ripeness. Had the moon been full dark, he would still have known he was not alone.

  Gabriel needed no light to see his brethren move from the shadows and into the circular clearing, ringing him until there was no opening for retreat.

  Low, feral growls carried on the air, angry rumbles of dissension. His beast tensed at their challenging voices. The air vibrated with their energy, moving like chain lightning through the crowd. His beast answered their challenge, eager to face them, unmindful of the odds. His brain clouded as the animal within him threatened to take control. It stretched inside, uncurling through his limbs, making his muscles jump with power and barely checked violence.

  It seduced, promised the euphoria only animalistic existence could provide ... the high of the fight, the rush of wolfen speed ... the taste of kill.

  Gabriel closed his eyes and gritted his teeth, his hands clenched tightly. The lure was as seductive as a woman, stronger, in a way that insanity beat the sane.

  With effort, he fought it back, until he was panting for breath. He opened his eyes and faced his pack as he would an enemy. What he saw confirmed what he’d already suspected. A shudder of remorse surged through him.

  They were all naked. Ready to shift.

  Ready to kill.

  He knew it with absolute certainty.

  More than anything, that fact brought home how serious his situation was--as if he could have ever been in doubt. And still, he did not regret finding Jessica, nor staking his claim to her. He regretted not warning her away from New Orleans, for not fighting her stubborn streak and getting her out of the city while she was still safe. The warding medallion would never hold now. It was a miracle the power had lasted as long as it had. Without it, she would be in danger wherever she went ... any place that neared a Lycan stronghold. She might not ever be safe again. She needed a mate able to fight for her, able to secure their place in the world. Perhaps an army would not even be enough....

  He told himself he could have made her go, even though it was foolish to think she would have believed anything he said.

  The menace of the pack quieted as their leader came forth, moving with stealth through the parted bodies and into the clearing.

  Gabriel faced him, shielding the anger from his eyes, tamping down his sudden, fierce urge to shift. Gabriel did not speak. Instead, he waited to hear what the charges were. They were not animals--not yet.

  Deron, pack leader, had forced them to retain some measure of humanity in the pack structure. He’d ruled them for over two decades, taken control when it looked as though the vamps would wipe out their race entirely in these parts. They’d been easy prey then, solitary. Deron had forged them into a group. Now Gabriel wondered how far Deron’s humanity extended. Ideally, Gabriel would be allowed to face his accusers and deny their accusations, and would be granted a fair trial by his peers.

  He nearly sneered at that thought.

  They were eager for blood, anyone’s blood--especially one who’d found someone precious and rare ... and dared to deny them equal chance to pursue it for themselves.

  The hunt for women able to survive Lycan mating and change was fierce, and usually deadly for the female. He’d heard of some Lycan communities to actually hunt their females in a competitions of sorts, where only the fastest and strongest won and the weak perished.

  Deron raised his arms, quieting the angry murmurs around them before he began to speak. “Gabriel Benoit, you stand before the pack charged with attacking fellow pack members John, Michael, and Cruz, and for claiming a female without fair contest. How do you plead?”

  “I am not guilty for attackin’ John, Michael, and Cruz. For claimin’ the female, I am.”

  The pack roared with disbelief, deafening him with angry howls and shouts. A wind rose, ruffling his hair, seeming to echo their fury.

  “Silence!” Deron yelled above them. The noise reluctantly died down. “Explain yourself, Gabriel.”

  “I found the female held down by the three members. Her legs were spread, and Cruz knelt between them, his cock hard and ready. They were going to rape her.”

  Cruz spoke up from his right with a nasty growl, “She’s in heat. The pretty cunt begged for what I had to give her. She didn’t want you--”

  “Enough, Cruz,” Deron said quietly, cutting Cruz off as effectively as if he’d slapped him. He turned his attention back to Gabriel. “The attack was only in the woman’s defense?”

  Gabri
el nodded, feeling his tension abate somewhat. Perhaps he would be given fair treatment. “She will attest to that fact if questioned.”

  Deron studied him several minutes before finally nodding. “This satisfies.”

  The crowd rumbled, but Deron cut them off with a fierce frown. “Do any here challenge my decision?”

  No one spoke. “Very well then, my decision on the attack stands. Now, Gabriel, what have you to say to the second charge of taking the female without consent?”

  Gabriel met his gaze steadily. “I am guilty. But I will not allow her to be taken from me. I issue a challenge here and now, to be settled tonight.” Gabriel straightened his fingers. Claws sprang from his fingertips like ivory knives, dull in the moonlight. “I will fight anyone here who thinks to claim what is mine,” he said, his accent fading with deadly soft menace.

  “In his form, the challenge stands. No shifting. Let it begin,” Deron announced and stepped back from the clearing to watch the games.

  No challenge such as this had been issued in decades. The pack rumbled with excitement, the air charged with anticipation.

  Gabriel stripped his jeans off and flung them away, out of the clearing lest they trip him in the heat of battle. He waited for the first challenger, his beast rolling inside with the expectation of tasting blood this night.

  He gave in to it, the swelling power, the quickening of his blood. It roared in his ears like a tempest. Strength bled into his pores, stretched through his every fiber in preparation for the fight. Some called the change the madness, for it was like that, animal instinct blotting out the human half’s rational mind. Even partial shifting was dangerous. He felt it now, felt the call of the moon and the wolf inside burning to be unleashed.

  His senses heightened ... smell, sight, hearing. The soft sound of crushed grass drew his attention to the right. He shifted his gaze and watched as the bodies of his brethren parted.

  From the shadows, Nardo stepped out. He looked bigger without his clothes, obscenely muscled. Naked as Gabriel and black as ebony, he rolled his neck and shoulders, stretching in a confident move as he strode cockily to the center of the ring.

  Gabriel crouched slightly, centering his body as he tensed and awaited Nardo’s attack. Nardo grinned, releasing his claws as he feinted at Gabriel, circling and feinting, circling and feinting.

  Gabriel’s nerves tightened, winding taut with each false move. He bided his time, preserving his strength for a long night, keeping wary. He knew Nardo’s style, knew Nardo relied more on brute strength than skill. Even his size hindered him somewhat, though Lycan grace had saved him before.

  In a predictable move, Nardo suddenly turned a feint into a full blown lunge. Gabriel caught Nardo as he hurtled toward him, stepping into the move with a sweeping kick that took Nardo’s feet out from under him and sent him crashing into the ground. The ground ruptured under Nardo’s immense weight, grass and dirt flying out from beneath him. Gabriel was on him before the chunks settled. He straddled his chest, pinning his arms with his knees. He bent low and pierced Nardo’s throat with the barest tip of his middle claw. A drop of blood trickled down Nardo’s neck, pooling in his clavicle.

  “I won’t regret killin’ you, mon ami. Do you yield?” Gabriel whispered with a deadly voice.

  Nardo’s chest heaved with his breathing, and he tapped the ground with his right hand. Slowly, remaining wary, Gabriel moved off him and helped him to his feet.

  Nardo shook the dirt from himself and strode angrily away without a word. Gabriel had humiliated him for taking him out so quickly.

  No sooner had Nardo left the clearing then the three youths came on to the field. Their hatred at being beaten on all fronts was palpable, evident in the tension of their bodies and the black looks they gave him.

  Gabriel cast a questioning look at Deron. Deron nodded, giving the go ahead.

  They surrounded him, claws extended, moving their hands constantly in a blur of motion to distract him. Their claws cut the air with the sound of wood ripping on a saw. Whipping the air with their own currents, they closed in, blocking him on all sides. Cruz stayed out of reach, the general commanding his troops as John and Michael converged on his flanks in a coinciding rush.

  Gabriel ducked beneath their swinging arms, felt the sprinkle of slashed hair fall in tickling strokes onto his back. Air rushed by his head. Talons dug into his exposed back as he twisted.

  Fire lanced down his spine. Sweat broke on his skin in an instant wave, salt driving into the wound. Gabriel roared, moving into the roll, continuing on his path. He came up under John, the claws still embedded in his back, deeper. Gabriel’s teeth clenched against the pain, and he drove his hands up, up into the exposed length of John’s belly. John’s face froze, his arms flew back, freeing Gabriel. He tried to catch himself, failed, fell back onto the ground, coughing up blood as he landed. The blood was black in the night, like thick oil, coating everything.

  Gabriel had no time for regret, no time for thought beyond that of survival. He turned toward Michael, caught him standing and looking down at John in stunned immobility. A strangled snarl came from Gabriel’s left, capturing his attention. He turned, ducking.

  Cruz lunged. His feet left the ground as he leapt over John, driving for Gabriel’s throat. Michael came back to life, took him suddenly from behind, trapped his arms so he couldn’t move.

  He was a fool. A god damned fool for not moving quicker, for ignoring Michael in favor of Cruz. Fingers dug into Gabriel’s biceps. Nails sliced his skin, deeply. His body healed itself, but not fast enough to prevent the flow of blood from escaping. Cruz smiled in triumph, twisted and raised his hands as though going to bat, moving into a death strike.

  Gabriel saw it in his eyes, saw that he meant to kill him, that there would be no mercy, no yielding in this game. He would have to kill the stubborn bastard, maybe the others too. He relaxed his weight, heard Michael grunt in surprise right before his grip failed. Gabriel slipped from his hands, dropping to the ground, his flesh in ribbons from the razor-like claws. He landed just as Cruz swung. Claws whistled through the air, unable to stop, unable to do anything but slash above his intended victim.

  Above, blood poured like heavy rain, saturating everything in its path down to the ground. Michael groaned, stumbling back, clutching his chest.

  Heart pounding with the fury of his beast, Gabriel flattened between Michael’s legs, driving razor tipped fingers up the thick meat of his thighs even as he kicked out and knocked Cruz’s feet out from under him.

  They each landed with a crash, bodies tangling in one heap of dirt and blood and torn flesh.

  Gabriel could think of nothing but Cruz kneeling between Jessica’s thighs, ready to impale her, beat her, even kill her. It built his fury, drove it to a fever pitch that blinded him to anything but the need for blood on his hands.

  Gabriel gained his feet just as Cruz freed himself and faced him. They looked at each other a bare moment, hatred emanating from each.

  They circled each other, panting heavily. Michael and John had crawled away, freeing the clearing of everything but the slickness of their blood on the ground.

  Gabriel jabbed, puncturing Cruz’s side, his arm, always darting back out of reach before Cruz could connect. His legs and arms ached, his back was on fire, trying to repair the damage. He felt his wounds cease to bleed, felt the flesh knit and heal itself, but it left his skin hot and feverish. Sweat and dirt and blood coated him.

  Mosquitoes feasted on his blood, but Gabriel could think of nothing but taking Cruz down. If it was the last thing he ever did, he would keep that bastard from touching Jessica again. She could not go through that again. He wouldn’t allow it.

  It sent his blood to pounding, his head swimming hotly. He stumbled on the muddied ground.

 

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