The dark hunters, p.653

The Dark-Hunters, page 653

 

The Dark-Hunters
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  Ren ground his teeth. She was wasting her time insulting him. He couldn’t care less what she called him. Those barbs had lost their sting a long time ago.

  The only one who could hurt him now was Kateri, and with her gone, his heart was broken.

  I can save her life.

  He looked down at the only person who’d ever made him feel welcomed. The only one who’d made him smile while hell rained down on him, and his gut wrenched with grief. He couldn’t say no to their offer, and they knew it.

  How can I be willing to sell my freedom for a woman I just met?

  The same way Buffalo had been willing to risk Ren’s anger and retaliation by visiting Butterfly during Ren’s brief reign. When Ren first discovered what Buffalo was doing, he had been furious. Not because he wanted Butterfly for himself, but because he felt betrayed that Buffalo had feared him so. That Buffalo had thought so little of him that he had honestly believed Ren would turn on him and kill him for loving her.

  That was what had taught him how ludicrous and unreasoning fear was. Had Ren wanted Butterfly, he’d have taken her once he held Coyote as his prisoner.

  Instead, Ren had left her alone. Even though she was beautiful beyond belief and he would have been proud to call her his own, he had envied his brother’s happiness that had been bought with Ren’s blood and dignity, not his bride. Even then, Ren would never have taken Coyote prisoner had his brother not poisoned him and then tried to cut his throat.

  And he wouldn’t have tortured Coyote had his brother kept his mouth shut and not insulted him day after day. Ren had gone insane from it all. Between being possessed and the pain of Coyote and his father mocking him, he’d lost it completely. All he’d wanted was for it to cease. For someone, just one person, to look at him like he was human and had feelings. Hell, even when he’d gone to kill his father, the man had laughed at him.

  “You’re not man enough, dog.” And then his father had spat in his face.

  When Ren had attacked, his father might have been able to survive had he taken Ren seriously. But he’d mocked him right up to the point Ren had stabbed him.

  In all his life, Ren had never felt treasured, not even by Buffalo. Theirs had been a relationship born out of a debt Buffalo thought he owed him and because he felt sorry for Ren. While they had grown close, Buffalo hadn’t befriended him because he liked him or because they had anything in common.

  Only Kateri had done that. She owed him nothing. Nor did she pity him. She actually liked him as a person and teased him playfully. He could see it every time she looked at him. Every time she touched him.

  His eyes watering, he met Windseer’s gaze. Save her. Whatever it takes.

  Windseer smiled cruelly. We told you you would come back to us one day.

  Damn them for being right.

  An instant later, Kateri took a deep, ragged breath and opened her eyes.

  His heart pounding in gratitude, Ren sank to his knees and pulled her into his arms to hold her as his tears finally fell.

  Windseer moved to stand between Cabeza and Jess, neither of whom could see her. Remember your word, Makah’Alay. If you fail us, we won’t kill her. Grizzly will take her as his own, and you know what he does to his property. She will be well used.

  Ren ignored her as he inhaled the scent of Kateri’s skin and felt her warmth against him.

  “Anyone else feeling really awkward here?” Sasha asked. “Guys, get a room.”

  Ren let out a puff of laughter before he pulled back to cup her face in his hands so that he could assure himself she was fine.

  She touched the tears on his face. “Did I miss something?”

  Sasha snorted. “Nah, nothing too important. Just your death.”

  “What?” she asked with a stern frown.

  Ren nodded. “You died in my arms.”

  “How?”

  “I don’t know.” But he had a good suspicion it was something Grizzly had caused. Just as he was certain Grizzly was the reason they hadn’t been attacked. The bastard had most likely allowed them that time knowing what Ren would do. Knowing what she’d come to mean to him.

  First Grizzly had sent Windseer to screw him over and now he’d done it with a woman who had no idea she’d been used as a tool against him.

  But that wasn’t her fault. He was the moron who couldn’t keep his heart and his body separate. He couldn’t just screw a woman and walk away. He’d felt too used by the world too many times to give that feeling to someone else.

  And now his enemy knew exactly how to cripple him. Grizzly knew his greatest weakness. Kateri.

  I am so fucked.…

  Kateri choked as Ren tightened his hold on her. “Sweetie, I can’t breathe. You’re killing me.”

  He loosened his arms, but still kept her pressed up against him as if he was trying to merge their bodies together.

  Jess cleared his throat. “Maybe Sasha’s right and we ought to leave them alone for a bit.”

  “Yeah, sure, what the hell?” Urian said snidely. “Not like the fate of the world hangs in the balance or anything important. You two take your time. There’s a clump of bushes over there that should give you some privacy.”

  Ren let go and got up with a look on his face that actually scared her. He leveled a killing glare at Urian. “If anyone should understand me right now, it’s you.” Bracing his legs into a warrior’s stance, he held his hand out to her as Urian looked away bashfully.

  Kateri took Ren’s hand and allowed him to pull her to her feet. She brushed the tears away from his face, amazed that he would allow anyone to witness them. Especially after all the visions she’d had where he went to great pains to make sure no one saw him weak or hurt. She placed a kiss on his cool cheek. “Are you okay?” she whispered in his ear.

  The burning sincerity in his gaze pierced her. “I am now.” He turned toward the others. “What are you waiting for? Don’t we have humanity to save? The Apocalypse waits for no one.”

  Sasha stroked his chin as they started forward once more. “You know, I have to wonder about that. Does it really wait for no one or do you think it would wait for the four riders? Maybe we ought to have someone kidnap them.”

  Urian scoffed. “That idea didn’t work out so well for Sisyphus. Last I heard, Hades was still making him suffer.”

  “Good point, and I learned well not to meddle in the affairs of gods, or pick one over another. You get seriously trashed.” Sasha started whistling “Heigh-Ho.”

  Until Urian grabbed him by the throat. “In case you have forgotten, we are in a hell realm that is inhabited by demons and some of those gods you don’t want to piss off. I suggest we draw as little attention to ourselves as possible.”

  Sasha knocked his hand away from his throat and made a face at him. “You don’t have to be an asshole.”

  “You don’t have to be an idiot.”

  “Enough,” Ren said sharply. “Let’s save our venom to fight the ones who want to kill us, and not attack each other.”

  While they walked onward, Kateri fell quiet, observing the men. They fascinated her. Such a mixture of personalities. Yet they came together as warriors to protect people they’d never met. The kind of people who hadn’t been kind to them in the past. Each of them had been bitterly betrayed by someone they trusted.

  Sundown shot dead by his best friend on the steps of the church where he’d gone to marry the woman he loved. Urian by his father and grandfather. Cabeza by the only woman he’d have died to protect. Sasha by his own brother. And Ren …

  Her heart aching for him, she took his hand in hers. Because he wasn’t used to anyone being so familiar, it startled him.

  “Are you going to jump every time I touch you?” she teased.

  Ren savored the sound of her light tone. He’d never get used to her being so at ease with him.

  “I wonder if he’s ticklish,” Sasha said, wagging his brows at her. “Not like I’m going to find out, as I’m rather fond of my non-gutted state. But you’ll have to test it out and let me know.”

  She gave him a playful smile. “Are you?”

  Ren shrugged. “How would I know?”

  Kateri winced at those emotionless words. There for a single heartbeat, she’d forgotten that such things hadn’t been part of his childhood. No one had ever played with him. He’d been all but grown before Buffalo had befriended him, and while he’d had a brother his own age, Coyote had played with friends and left him alone to watch them while they frolicked.

  Her mind drifted to a bright summer day in his past where it was so hot, everyone complained about it.

  “Hey, Makah’Alay, we’re going swimming. Want to come?”

  Around the age of twelve or thirteen, Ren had looked up from his chores to see Coyote with a group of boys his age, including Choo Co La Tah. “I-I-I-I have to f-f-f-finish.”

  “Oh c’mon, we won’t be gone that long. You can finish when we get back. It’s the middle of the day. Everyone’s taking it easy due to the heat.”

  Even though he sensed something about it wasn’t right, he nodded. Since they’d never invited him before, he was afraid to turn them down lest they never ask him again.

  Ren set his tools aside and wiped at the sweat on his brow before he joined them. The whole way to the bathing lake, they joked and laughed with each other and ignored him.

  Once they reached the small clearing where the lake rippled, they stripped down to loincloths, then jumped into the water.

  Ren hesitated. Would they mock his body? He’d never removed his clothes in front of anyone before.

  “C’mon, Makah’Alay,” Coyote called. “You’re missing out.”

  Bracing himself for the worst, Ren stripped to his own loincloth, then waded in. To his relief, they ignored him while they splashed and played.

  Ren ducked under the water and let the coolness ease the summer heat. For several minutes, he floated peacefully on his back with his eyes closed.

  Until someone grabbed him.

  Before he could recover, Choo Co La Tah had yanked his loincloth off and they ran for the shore, laughing.

  Ren went after them. As soon as he was on dry land, Coyote caught him about the waist and lifted him off his feet, then threw him back into the water. He came up, coughing and sputtering for air, to find them all gone. Along with all his clothes.

  He tried to call them back, but nothing would come out. His jaw spasmed and the words hung in his throat.

  Humiliated and angry, he swam back to the shore and got out. He should be able to make it back to town without being seen. There were several alternate paths that weren’t traveled much.

  Once home, he could …

  That thought died as he came face-to-face with a group of teenage women who had come to bathe. At the sight of his nudity, they shrieked and laughed at him.

  His face red, Ren cupped himself and ran to the woods to save what little dignity he could. But inside, he was mortified.

  By the time he made it home, his father was waiting for him. The girls had come straight back to tell everyone they had caught him masturbating in the public pool.

  “Where are your clothes?”

  “Th-th-th-th-”

  His father backhanded him so hard, it knocked him to the floor. “Answer me!”

  Ren tried, but he was so upset he couldn’t say anything in his own defense. No words would come out at all.

  His father yanked him up by his arm.

  Ren stumbled, his eyes filled with tears of pain. He tried to get his freedom, but his father wouldn’t let go. They were headed to the whipping post. Ren fought harder.

  Still his father hauled him naked through the house. As they passed Coyote, who watched them with wide eyes, Ren reached for him.

  “P-p-p-” He was trying to say please so that his brother would tell their father what happened and spare him his beating.

  Coyote ignored him and followed them to the back courtyard. His father tied him to the post, where Ren was given twenty lashes for defiling the pool.

  “You are never to go there again,” his father snarled in his face, “you understand?”

  Tears soaked his cheeks as his lips quivered from trying to speak.

  His father buried his hand in his blood-soaked hair and wrenched it. “Do you understand me, you retarded bastard?”

  Sobbing in silence, Ren nodded.

  His father untied him. “Now go clothe yourself and finish your chores. If there’s one thing left undone by sunset, we’ll be back here for twenty more.” His father stalked away and left him on the ground.

  Ren tried to push himself up, but he hurt too much to stand. His limbs trembled from the pain even worse than his lips did.

  He lay there for several minutes until Coyote brought him a blanket and covered him with it.

  “I’m sorry, Makah’Alay. We were just having fun. I didn’t know the girls would say that. We thought they’d laugh about it and tease you. We never dreamed they’d tell others you were doing something lewd.”

  Still, his back burned from the lashes. “W–w-why didn’t you s-s-say-”

  “I didn’t want to get in trouble. Besides, you know how Father is. He’d have found some reason to beat you for it. There was no need in both of us being punished.”

  His brother was right. Either way, he’d have been beaten.

  Coyote helped him to his feet. Placing Ren’s arm over his shoulder to help him, he started toward Ren’s room.

  Halfway there, their father met them in the hallway with a smile for Coyote.

  “My precious son, you’re ever kind to those least worthy. While I appreciate your charity, you shouldn’t have done it.” He curled his lip at Ren. “You can’t pamper wrongdoers after they’ve been punished. Otherwise, they never learn any lessons. Now let him go and take the blanket. He thought it was funny to be naked … let him walk to his room that way.”

  Ren waited for his brother to say something in his defence.

  Instead, Coyote nodded. “Sorry, Father. I won’t do it again.” He took Ren’s blanket.

  Ren struggled to stand alone. His eyes filled with tears, he watched as his father ruffled Coyote’s hair and kissed his head.

  “Come, my precious son, I have a present for you.”

  Kateri couldn’t breathe as the raw pain of that memory hit her hard. How sad that compassion was so rare for Ren that he hung on to his brother’s selfishness and defended it as good. How could Coyote have been so mean to him?

  A raw, bitter fury took hold of her. Before she even realized what she was doing, she quickened her steps and shoved Sundown.

  Shocked, he turned to stare at her as if she’d lost her mind. “What was that for?”

  “You bastard! Why did you wait to become his friend? You know, you could have been nice to him before you were obligated to!”

  “What are you talking about?” Sundown scowled. “Is she loco?”

  Ren turned her around to face him. “Kateri, he doesn’t remember being Buffalo. I mean, he has bits and pieces of it, but he doesn’t recall much. While they have similarities and they look the same, Sundown is an entirely different man.”

  Clenching her eyes shut, she nodded. “I’m sorry, Ren.” She looked up at the cowboy. “Jess. I just get so mad at all of them … She turned back toward Ren. They had no right to treat you that way.”

  “Did you have another vision?”

  She nodded. “Now I understand my grandmother. We’d be walking down the street and she’d flinch for no reason. Whenever I asked her about it, she’d say, ‘It’s the past, baby. For some people it’s so vicious that it creates a loop of bad memories that runs constantly inside their hearts. A loop so bad that sometimes it reaches out to those of us capable of seeing it to let us know to take extra care of the ones who were hurt. It tells us to let them know that just because the world is eat up with mean, it doesn’t mean we all are. That even though the past hurt them, it doesn’t have to destroy their future. Give as many smiles away as you can. They’re free, and they make the world a much prettier place. You may not have the best clothes or the latest in shoes, but everyone has a unique designer smile that is worth millions, especially to those who need its warmth.’” She clenched her hands in her hair. “Ugh! I think Jess is right. I am crazy.”

  Ren ran his hand down the line of her jaw, causing chills to rise on her arms. “You’re not crazy. You’re coming into your powers and you don’t have control of them yet. Trust me. We all think we’re going crazy when it happens. You should have been there the first time I turned into a crow. I flew straight into a tree and then had to figure out something to explain away the huge bruise I had in the center of my forehead for two weeks.”

  She shook her head at him. “You’re terrible.”

  “He’s right,” Sasha said from behind him. “When I was learning to teleport, I accidentally flashed some unknown wedding party. You talk about humiliating. And of course the powers that got me there decided to abandon me a blink later. So there I stood in all my glory, cupping my junk and wondering, ‘Why me, gods … why me?’”

  They all laughed.

  “I hear you,” Urian said. “I accidentally turned my brother into a goat for a week. I was so scared of what my dad might do that I didn’t tell him. It wasn’t until my mother figured it out when she found him in my bed that he was restored to his real body. I’m really glad he had a sense of humor about it and didn’t kill me. But he did guilt the shit out of me over it for the rest of his life.”

  Kateri felt for Urian’s brother. “Was he okay?”

  “Yeah, but he did have this strange craving to chew on leather after that. At least it kept his fangs sharp.”

  Cabeza drew up short and motioned for them to be silent. Without a sound, Jess pulled his gun off his shoulder while she and Ren each nocked an arrow.

  Off to the left something was running.

  And it was headed straight for them.

  CHAPTER 15

  “Use me for cover.”

  Kateri gaped as Ren moved to stand between her and whatever was approaching them. “Ren—”

 

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