The dark hunters, p.638

The Dark-Hunters, page 638

 

The Dark-Hunters
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  Self-preservation must have finally kicked in. Without another word, the man quickly retreated from her warrior.

  With his head tilted down and his expression darker and deadlier than before, Makah’Alay watched the others with an unspoken threat that he was plotting their deaths. Even though he was terrifying to behold, there was something intrinsically hot and sexy about that pose. He was like a predator in the wild that was one breath from attacking.

  Any wrong move or word …

  And someone would be missing a throat.

  Finally, her warrior pulled the bow around his body to lie diagonally across his back. He held the string with both hands, then he walked away. Only when his back was to them and none could see his face did he let the hurt show. His eyes betrayed the depth to which they’d wounded him. But even worse was the shame and self-loathing that he didn’t deserve to feel. The tragic despair.

  And that brought tears to her own eyes.

  How could people be so mean to each other? She’d never understood what it was about some people that they couldn’t allow anyone else to have a moment of dignity. That they had to rob others of any semblance of pride or happiness.

  It was so wrong.

  “Teri?”

  She turned at the familiar voice, but she couldn’t place it.

  “Teri? Can you hear me?”

  It came from a distance. But she didn’t want to go toward it. She wanted to follow the warrior and make him feel better. To tell him that the others were wrong for what they’d done.…

  “Teri!”

  She jerked awake so suddenly that she had to grab the couch to keep from hitting the floor. It took a second before her gaze cleared enough to see her cousin Rain Runningwolf standing over her.

  Frowning, she tried to get her bearings. “What are you doing here?”

  Where was here?

  “Sunshine didn’t want you to be alone. She threatened the boys if I didn’t haul ass over to you ASAP. Since I’m rather fond of my boys”—he flashed a devilish grin—“here I be, cuz.”

  Tall, dark, and irritating, Rain would be gorgeous if (A) he wasn’t her cousin and (B) he acted like a man and not a five-year-old kid.

  She scowled at his short, military hairdo. He used to pride himself on his long raven locks. “When did you cut your hair?”

  “A year ago when I decided I didn’t want to work with my family for the rest of my life. You really never check your Facebook page, do you?”

  Without pausing he continued with his ADD, “Love them, but distance doth make the heart beat stronger. It also does wonders for my social life, since women tend to look down on men who work for their dads and live over their father’s club.”

  She pressed her hand to her temple as she tried to follow his train of thought. “I don’t understand. You still live over your father’s club.”

  “Yes, but now they don’t know it’s my father’s club. I went from being a mooch to interesting with one little job change.”

  Deep, masculine laughter drew her attention to the man behind Rain.

  Her heart stopped as she saw the one who’d rescued her. The one she’d wanted to comfort in her dreams. Only he didn’t look so vulnerable now.

  Rather he looked like the fierce warrior who’d been one step from carving the heart out of the man who’d insulted him.

  Not sure of his intent where they were concerned, she tried to get up, but Rain stopped her. “Easy. Ren said you were cut pretty badly.”

  “Ren?”

  He indicated her warrior watching them. “Intense dude over there, staring a hole through me. I know you haven’t missed his presence. Only Sunshine could be that oblivious.”

  So his name was Ren and not Makah’Alay.… Much easier to pronounce.

  But she still wasn’t ready to let her guard down. Especially not with someone so lethal. “He’s a friend?”

  Rain glanced over at him. “God, I hope so. While I’m tough, I’m pretty sure he could kick my ass. Don’t really want to test it. Know what I mean?”

  Yes, she did. “Where am I?”

  “Ren’s place.”

  She winced as pain lanced her side and reminded her of how nasty a wound she’d taken. “Shouldn’t I be at a hospital or something? Why am I here? And where is here?”

  “Vegas, and this place is protected to keep you safe. Hospitals aren’t.”

  Her head hurt so badly she could barely follow his rapid-fire weirdness, which left her feeling like she was in the middle of a puzzle with missing pieces.

  How had she gotten to Vegas from Alabama?

  No, she couldn’t be here. Rain was being stupid or playing a prank of some kind.

  “I’m not in Nevada, Rain. I can’t be.”

  “’Fraid so, hon.”

  No, no, no. Her head reeled over what he was telling her. It just couldn’t be. It wasn’t possible. She couldn’t get halfway across the country without knowing it.

  Could she?

  All of a sudden, thunder clapped so loud, it jarred the entire house.

  Squeaking in alarm, she shot to her feet, then winced at the pain in her side. “What in the world was that?”

  “Bad thunderstorms and flash floods are moving in.”

  A weird sensation went through her at Rain’s words. It was the kind of chill her grandmother would say came from someone walking on her grave.

  She caught the look on Ren’s face. “You felt it too, didn’t you?”

  But he didn’t respond. Rather, he turned and left the room.

  Rain shrugged at her. “He doesn’t talk much. I haven’t really gotten much more than a single word out of him. Talon said having a conversation with him is like pulling teeth. And here I thought Storm didn’t talk much. I think I’ve found the only person alive who speaks less than my bro. Who knew, right?”

  Was it because of the stutter…?

  No. That was a dream. Not reality. Just because she saw it in her head, it didn’t mean Ren had a stutter.

  It didn’t.

  Or could it?

  Curiosity settled on her back and rode her with spurs. “I’ll be back in a sec.” She headed after Ren, wanting some answers.

  “Bathroom’s the first door on the left,” Rain called after her.

  She barely registered that as she headed down the small hallway, looking for Ren.

  She found him in a bedroom that had been converted to a gym in the back of his small, ranch-style house. Probably no more than 1,800 square feet, the house was sparsely furnished and had few decorations. Some old pottery, rugs, but nothing on the walls except for a TV in the living room where she’d awakened and a smaller one here in the gym.

  Strange.

  Sitting on a weight bench, Ren was texting someone. He glanced up at her approach and cocked a puzzled brow.

  The beauty of his face captivated her. If not for that overwhelming masculinity, he’d be considered pretty. And even though he was sitting down, he commanded attention. Respect.

  Fear.

  A lot of fear.

  “I-uh … I wanted to talk to you.” Although now that she was alone in a room with him, that didn’t seem like such a good idea after all.

  Rising to his feet, he turned his phone over and slid it into his pocket, but didn’t say a word.

  Kateri swallowed hard. Why did you have to get up? He was absolutely huge in comparison to her. The power of his presence made her want to step back, but she refused to be intimidated by anyone. Even someone who could probably palm a basketball without fully extending his hand.

  Gah, he was massive.

  She cleared her throat. “I’m just trying to understand everything, okay? You were the one who rescued me, right?”

  He nodded.

  “Where was I? I mean, where did they take me from my office? How did I get there and how did you get me here? Did we fly or something?” Surely they wouldn’t have allowed a man on an airplane with an unconscious woman and no ID? But nothing else made sense. “We couldn’t have driven this far? Right?”

  Ren debated what to tell her. On the one hand, she needed to know if she was to fulfill her duties, but on the other …

  Without the Guardian’s return, her part of the ritual wouldn’t really matter. The Ixkib’s duties were to reset the calendar. The First Guardian was the only one who could choose new Guardians and reseal the gates.

  If he wasn’t here …

  “Are you not going to speak to me?” she asked.

  Ren hesitated. He wanted to, but he didn’t trust himself not to do something embarrassing … like stutter. God, how he hated that affliction. While it very rarely occurred now, it had been horrendous in his youth. So much so that he’d been relentlessly ridiculed—which had only aggravated the severity of it.

  Finally, he’d stopped speaking at all.

  For over three years, he’d remained mute rather than listen to the laughter and insults of others as they’d cruelly mimicked his stutter. But for his friend Buffalo, he’d have never spoken again to anyone.

  Unlike the rest of their clan, Buffalo hadn’t minded it, nor had Buffalo thought him stupid because of it.

  Together, they’d invented their own sign language so that Ren could speak without using his voice.

  Yet it wasn’t just his stutter that kept him silent now. He didn’t know what to say to her. He’d always been awkward with women. Buffalo used to joke that Ren could lead an army of men into battle and never hesitate. That he could face down an entire den of bears with his bare hands and not flinch.

  Put a woman in front of him and he trembled like an errant child facing an angry parent.

  If any clan wants to bring us down, all they have to do is send a woman after you and you’ll run screaming for the woods.

  That was because as bad as he hated to be mocked and insulted by men, it was even harder to take from a woman he found desirable. Nothing stung worse than to muster the courage to talk to a woman and then have her shoot him down before he could get more than a badly stuttered word out.

  And if they laughed at him …

  There were some humiliations no one needed.

  As much as he despised it, he was extremely attracted to this woman. All he could think about was tasting her lips. Of making love to her until they were both spent and dizzy.

  To have one moment in her arms …

  But he wasn’t brave enough to risk it. He’d been mocked enough in his life. Now, he only wanted to exist in solitude.

  Suddenly, his phone rang.

  Ren would have ignored it had it not been Talon’s ringtone. He still needed to tell them that the Ixkib was safe.

  Pulling his phone out, he turned his back to the woman and answered it. “Osiyo?”

  Kateri froze at how deep and resonant his voice was as he said “hello” in Tsalagi. It sounded nothing like it did in her dreams. It was much, much more masculine and baritone—like rumbling thunder.

  And while his back wasn’t as terrifying as that penetrating grimace he wore whenever he faced her, it was every bit as well formed as his front. The kind of back that begged a woman to run her hand down it so that she could feel those hard muscles flex.

  Her throat went dry as a wave of desire seared her. Stop it, Ter …

  That was much easier said than done. There was something about him that was absolutely magnetic.

  “She’s here.” Then Ren was silent again as he listened.

  Well, at least I’m not the only one he ignores. She was surprised he wasn’t tapping out his answers on the phone—one tap meant yes. Two for no.

  After a few seconds, he spoke again. “Later.” He hung up and closed the phone, then turned back around.

  “So, you can speak,” she teased.

  His face completely somber, he nodded as he slid the phone into his pocket.

  “Can I ask who was on the phone, since it was obviously about me?”

  “Talon.”

  At least she finally got a word from him that was actually directed at her. “You know … wow, these two-syllable answers … impressive. Can I ratchet it up to three? Oh heck, let’s go for broke and get a whole sentence out. What do you think?”

  Ren wanted to be angry at her, but for some reason he found her charming. She wasn’t attacking him … she was playfully teasing him about the very things Jess, Choo, and Talon got on to him for.

  Because of the way he’d been treated as a human, he never liked conversing with people. It was easier to pretend they didn’t exist. After all, he’d been invisible to most of them while he’d lived. Hell, even in death people rarely acknowledged him. It was why he kept to the shadows, out of their sight.

  “C’mon, big guy,” she said, rising up on her tiptoes so that she could lay her hand against his jaw.

  The moment her flesh touched his, his entire body went white-hot. Every hormone he possessed fired into overdrive. For a moment, he couldn’t breathe as that heat seared him and he tried to imagine what she’d taste like.

  With a smile that caused his stomach to flutter, she moved his jaw up and down. “You can do it. Look how easy.…” Then she deepened her voice to mimic his. “Wow, Teri. I never knew speaking would be so easy. Thanks for telling me. I might even want to try and do this on my own one day.”

  In spite of himself, he smiled at her antics. No one had ever been so playful around him. Most kept a wide distance out of fear.

  Pulling her hand away, he stared down at her. “Ha ha.”

  She scowled. “You really can’t go over two syllables, can you? What? Did you lose a bet with a sorcerer or something? If you let out three, does your head explode or do you get some form of ED?”

  Erectile dysfunction? She did not just go there.…

  ’Cause from where he was standing, there was no chance of that. He was harder right now than he’d been in a long time. And all he could think about was pressing her hand against the part of him that was begging for a taste of her.

  C’mon, Ren … just one small kiss.…

  Determined to keep her at a distance, he dropped his gaze to her arm.

  His breath caught as his gaze focused on something that couldn’t be right.

  No. Not possible. It couldn’t be. It was an illusion of the light. His mind playing some kind of sick joke …

  It had to be.

  His heart pounding, he reached out to take her right wrist. Turning it over, he saw the faint mark at the crook of her elbow that was in the shape of a spider.

  It’s a coincidence.…

  But what if it wasn’t?

  “Where did you get this?” he asked, brushing his hand over the mark.

  She looked down and her frown deepened. “I was born with it. And I’m impressed. See, you can speak a whole sentence and not spontaneously combust into flames. Amazing, isn’t it?”

  Honestly, he didn’t register a single word of what she was saying. He couldn’t. All he could focus on was a mark only one other person had ever borne.

  One that no one else should have.

  “What does your father say about this?” he asked her.

  She shrugged. “Nothing. He walked out on us when I was a baby and I haven’t seen him since.”

  His head reeling, he took a step back as everything started coming together.

  She wasn’t just the Ixkib. She was also the daughter of the First Guardian.…

  CHAPTER 6

  “What aren’t you telling me?” Kateri asked with a very subtle drop in octave that told him she suspected she should be afraid. But other than that, she hid her panic well.

  Damn. Ren should have recognized who she was the moment they met. Strange how the mind colored things and hid them from conscious thought. How something could be right under your nose and you missed it entirely …

  Now that he knew the truth of her, it was obvious, and he had no idea how he could have been so stupid as to have been blind to it.

  While her features and height were nothing like the First Guardian’s, she had his same eerie gold-tinged eyes that held a probing, deep intensity that seemed to strip away all lies, bravado, and pretenses so that their owner could see straight into the naked soul.

  The first time he’d met the Guardian, that penetrating stare had reduced him back to the cowering dog that had lived only to gain his father’s approval. The pathetic shadow of a human who’d allowed his own brother to walk all over him while he protected the bastard with his blood and bone. The dog that had accepted the kicks of everyone who came into contact with him, thinking he deserved nothing better than their contempt.

  For most of his life, Ren had honestly believed that rather than be angry or bitter, he should be grateful that anyone was willing to offer him a home at all. Dignity was something reserved for his betters.

  As much as he’d convinced himself that he hated his father and Coyote over how they’d treated him, the truth was he’d hated himself more. He had been the one to swallow their abuse and say nothing. The one who had allowed them to treat him as if he was lesser.

  All the while, he’d had the strength and skills to silence them. But rather than risk his “home” and what little security he knew, he’d taken their verbal assault and made himself believe that he couldn’t exist on his own.

  That he really was weaker.

  And the moment the First Guardian had looked into his eyes and stripped away the vengeance-seeking monster Windseer had awakened so that he was again a vulnerable human, Ren had unleashed that hatred all over the ancient for daring to see the truth. But in the end, the First Guardian had been right. It wasn’t the First Guardian Ren had ferociously battled for that entire year so much as himself.

  He, and no other, had always been his worst enemy.

  Anyone else would have condemned Ren for his past atrocities and demanded his life. Instead, the First Guardian had embraced him like a brother. You allowed someone you loved to blind you with her lies. You trusted in her to look after a fragile heart that had never beat with acceptance before. While you committed evil at her command, the evil wasn’t inside you. You took no pleasure or comfort from your actions. No pride.

 

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