Chapter 141 - 141 Walking the Line - Part 5
Mated to the Warrior Beast
141 Walking the Line â Part ~ JAYAH ~
Skhal had found her, approaching silentlyâwithout the bond she wouldnât have even known he was thereâbut he raced to her side and embraced her silently, then took the keys she held out on a wide ring, and darted to the prison door.
Jayah stayed kneeling over the guard, checking his pulse, and that of his friend next to him, both of them sprawled awkwardly in the dirt.
She begged their forgiveness, though theyâd never know it.
At the first sound of footsteps, she was confusedâthey came from the opposite direction from the prison tree.
Her hand tightened on the arm of the guard and she instinctively crouched, ready to fly into combat as a shift commander walked into the clearing, then stopped dead, his eyes cutting between sprawled males and Jayah, shock and anger flashing in his eyes.
âWhat the hellâ?â
âI donât knowââ But before Jayah could come up with something to say, a heavy arm wrapped around her middle and yanked her off her feet. She struggled immediatelyâbut then a cold, hard blade appeared pressed right under her ear, and she froze, her chest heaving.
And with every inhale her body screamed.
.....
Not Skhal. Not Skhal. Not Skhal.
The shift commander froze, stunned, his eyes locked on the male over Jayahâs shoulder.
Jayah trembled, trying not to panic. Those werenât Skhalâs hands on her, holding that blade. She reached for Zev in the link, tried to keep her voice calm.
âPlease⦠Iâm on your side, Zev. I didnât call him in, I donât know how heââ
A low, deep growl appeared in the linkâSkhalâs desperate distress.
âYou kill my mate, Zev, and I will kill you.â There was no ring of arrogance, no declaration of Alpha Male Bullshit, as Aymora had always been so fond of calling it.
No.
Skhal issued a threat, and Zevâs hand tightened on her.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âPlease⦠donât kill the commander. Heâs just coming to check his guards. He didnât know what he was walking into,â she begged, as Skhalâs growl continued to roll in the link.
âDonât. Move,â Zev instructed the Shift Leader, who nodded once, tightly, but his eyes narrowed and his upper lip began to curl.
âStay back.â Zev started to walk backwards, carrying Jayah and snarling at the Commander to stay away.
She knew that the soldier would appear to obey the command until they were out of sight. But thenâ
Just as they sank into the trees and their view of the soldier was obscured, Jayah heard a cry and a thud.
The shadow of Sasha, hunched over her son, joined them in the trees. She must have been behind Zev the whole time. But Jayah didnât have time to consider what else might go wrong, because Zev wasnât letting her go, and he still held that blade pressed to the skin under her ear at precisely the right angle to punch it into her brain if he chose.
Jayahâs heart hammered in her chest. Struggling to control her panic, she forced herself not to struggle, but fear screamed through her. âLet me go, Zev. Iâm on your side. Let me go.â
But he didnât. And Sasha didnât tell him too, hovering at his side as he hurried through the trees as fast as he could while holding her.
There was a brief momentâa shadow that shifted just ahead, then suddenly Skhal stood in between two trees just ahead, hands at his sides, his chest heaving.
âLet. Her. Go.â
âSheâs our shield!â Zev hissed. âIf we meet a patrol on the wayââ
âShe is my mate, and she saved you. Let her go or I swear on all thatâs holy, Zev, I will make you.â
There was a tense moment where the two males stared at each other past her⦠but all Jayah could do was drink in the sight of her mate, towering and furious, ready to go to battle with the leader he honored⦠for her.
The tension of the moment hung in the night like a bowstring pulled too tight and twanged.
But finally, Zevâs arm around her eased. Jayahâs feet hit the ground and she stumbled forward, to her mateâs waiting arms, as behind her, Sasha gave a sob of relief.
But Skhal apparently wasnât ready to simply relax. When Jayah reached him, he whipped her behind him, but remained facing Zev, chin down, but eyes locked with the younger male. He never took his eyes off of the wolf, who Jayah could now see, despite the night dark under the trees.
His jaw was tense and twitching, his body trembling. He was a force of nature held at bayâunwillingly.
âZev,â Skhal whispered, his voice dark with warning.
The maleâs eyes flashed and his hands closed to fists, but then Sasha leaned in and touched him, pressing into his chest, holding their son.
âZev, please. Weâre free. Look. Weâre free.â
The maleâs eyes reluctantly tore from Skhalâs down to look at his mate and their son pressed between them.
Jayah watched, shocked, as everything about Zev changed. It was like watching a stone turn to water.
The male breathed. He softened. The fire in his eyes didnât disappear, but it fadedâembers from a bonfire, instead of the flames themselves.
Jayah could see and sense the warmth and softness rise in him, the fierce protection of his mate, the loveâ¦
It affected a stunning transformation in his stance, his expression, even his scent.
âHeâs a good male, Jayah,â Skhal breathed in the link. âBut heâs been pushed to his limits.â
Jayah had known it from his scent, but she could see it now.
With a small whine, Zev wrapped his arms around Sasha and they both huddled together over their child, murmuring love and care.
âWe need to move, Zev. I knocked the soldier out, but weâve only got maybe ten minutes at best. I didnât want to kill him.â
Zev shot him a dark look for that, but then he nodded and pulled barely away from Sasha looking down at her. âWe need to shift and run in our wolves. Youâll have to ride me.â
Sasha nodded, but then looked down at Zan. âI need to hold himââ
âI can help,â Jayah blurted.
They both turned to look at her and Skhalâs hands tightened on her. She swallowed hard at the dark warning in Zevâs gaze, but plowed on.
âI can help you make a sling so heâs safe while you use your hands.â
It was a matter of half a minute, a torn shirt, and Skhal keeping watch over Zev while Jayah had to touch Sasha, but within moments, little Zan, his shock of black hair the only thing sticking out from the swaddling, was safe and tight against his motherâs chest.
Skhal stepped between Zev and Jayah when Zev shifted, but the moment Sasha was on his back, he began to run.
Skhal looked at Jayah, and they both shifted, then ran after him.
It had been instinct to go with her mate, and Jayahâs wolf was relieved when she didnât fight. But the further they drew from the WildWoodâand the further Jayah led them through the patrol routes, through non-descript creeks and under rock overhangs, the more her heart beat at her ribs and she had to wrestle against her wolf.
It was necessary.
It was right.
They needed to reach their people safely, and only she knew the safest route to the ravineâ¦
But it was also betrayal.