Chapter 183 - 183 Under the Surface
Mated to the Warrior Beast
183 Under the Surface
~ ZEV ~
Lerrin, whoâd been sharing his attention between Zev and Lhars, turned to face Zev, his expression flat and dark for the first time.
For a moment, Zevâs wolf roseâhe could see in those eyes, alight with both strength and confidence, in the older wolfâs way of moving, that this was not a male to be trifled with. He offered no challenge, posed no intentional threat, yet Zevâs instincts jangled caution.
He would not be easily beaten.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âI understand that thereâs been⦠conflict with Elreth,â Lerrin growled, unaware of Zevâs thoughts. âAnd youâre right to say that she has a very strong willâthat sheâs not always immediately willing to listen when youâre at odds. But I speak from experience when I say she was raised and groomed for Alpha by the single best and strongest male I have had the pleasure to knowânot a bully, or a power-monger. A male who⦠gave himself to his people, and his family. Who gave himself to anyone who needed him. He was a better example of Alpha than my own father, and I wouldnât stand here today if it werenât for his wisdom and strength. Elreth is young, but her strength is⦠formidable. However, any leader has to mature into their strength. Iâm guessing you did too,â he said dryly.
Before Zev could answer, he continued. âItâs my observationâof myself, and of others that I admireâthat a self-reliant Alpha will always be guilty at times of not listening when they shouldâI certainly was, when I was probably about your age, too,â he said, raising one brow. âBut the test of a true leader is what we do when our flaws become⦠apparent to us. And how we treat others when they express remorse because their flaws have become apparent to them.â
Zev had to roll his jaw. He didnât miss the implication. âThatâs a lovely moral to a childrenâs story,â he growled. âAnd often true. But we arenât talking about skipping responsibility or letting down a friend. I faced torment and imprisonment at the hands of your âstrong young leaderâ despite the arguments from those around her who were more accurate in their measure. My son and mate were threatened and harmed in the name of âcaution.â And even when I proved to her that I could have killed her and didnât⦠even then she didnât let me free.â
Lerrin tipped his head. âYouâre a strong wolf yourself.â
âI am.â
.....
âI take it youâve led since you were very young?â
âI have.â
Lerrin nodded. âI wonder if, in the first year or so of your rule, you made any mistakes that you now regret?â
Zev didnât move. He didnât even breathe. He held the maleâs gaze for a long moment, then forced himself to nod. âThe difference is, my âmistakeâ didnât imprison my enemies. It was the other way around. I gave them too much credit. I paidâmy people paidâbecause I allowed someone who shouldnât have been trusted to remain in leadership. And just as youâve suggested, I learned from that mistake. It wonât happen again,â he said emphatically.
Lerrin nodded. âI meant no offense,â he said finally. âI only want you to know that we are a real people. With real feelings and flaws. But we love and we lead. And our Queen admits her wrong. She sent us to reassure you of that. To tell you our own experience with her compassion and gratitude. And to, hopefully, find a way to avoid war.â
âMaybe,â Zev muttered. âBut if I were you, I wouldnât hold my breath.â
*****
~ TARKYN ~
After the wolves left their fire, Harth and Tarkyn had spent a pleasant hour sitting before the flames and just⦠being. The guards had stayed far enough back not to intrude, so it had been, for Tarkyn, a blessed relief to simply sit with his mate and not have to navigate any other conflictsâor suspicions. Though heâd felt the eyes of the other Chimera nearby, most had seemed to settle more after Zev left, and those who had passed close enough to be seen, seemed less concerned by Tarkyn after heâd been speaking with both Zev and Lhars and had remained free. But they still didnât approach.
Tarkyn wondered if it was only as Harth saidâthat they werenât sure where Tarkyn fit in their hierarchy and so didnât want to engage. Or whether there was something greater afoot.
Sadly, there were no answers to be found in the slowly dying flames.
The walk back to the caveâsurrounded by the guards, whoâd given them space around the fire, but hovered close when they were movingâwas quiet.
It wasnât until they got back to the cave and were readying to sleep that Harth finally spoke up.
âYou handled that well. Both Lhars and Zev.â
Tarkyn smiled at his mate as he pulled back the furs and crawled in, beckoning her to come join him.
Theyâd both undressed, but with their awareness of the guards outside, Tarkyn didnât think heâd take her tonight. He prayed theyâd receive more freedom and privacy in the coming days.
âI was surprised Zev let me stay free, honestly. I donât think he wanted to,â he said quietly, keeping his voice relaxed and calm. Let the guards hear him understand his position, but not be worried about it.
Harth frowned, sliding into the furs and turning to face him, laying on her side with her hand under her cheek, her eyes worried and fixed on him. âI donât think he wanted to either, but heâs always submitted to Sasha when sheâs made a direct instruction to the people so⦠I guess heâs still doing that.â
Tarkyn didnât respond. Sashaâs description of their sharing of the Alpha decisions⦠he admired it. Could see value in it. But the tension and anger in Zevâthe male was so on edge he made Tarkynâs teeth clenchâdidnât bode well. The way the people all around them had become more alert when Zev showed upâ¦
It wasnât healthy.
A good and healthy Alpha made their people feel stronger, safer. The packs, prides, and herds of the Anima were generally more relaxed, not less, when Elreth was present. Because in the back of their minds they knew their leader would handle any danger or conflict that arose.
It happened on a smaller scale within the groups and families as well.
Tarkyn had been blessed to be close enough to see Elrethâs father, Reth, carry the weight of the Anima for twenty years. When that male had walked the trails, Anima smiles grew broader. When he sat at market, all the tribes were happierâuntil the conflict with the wolves. But even after itâ¦
This was the side of Elreth that the Chimeran leaders had never seen, he realized. Elrethâs fierce defense of the Protectors. Her willingnessâsince childhoodâto stand in the gap for those who were weaker, or less valued.
When her stubborn strength was thrown behind a cause or group who needed her, they fell at her feet because she did not waver.
He hadnât really ever thought of what might happen if she took that strength against a weaker group. Hadnât expected to see the day, because he knew his Queenâs heart.
âTarkyn?â Harth whispered, putting a hand to his chest.
He blinked and pulled her into an embrace, sighing. âSorry, I got lost in my thoughts.â
âAbout Zev?â
âYes, some. About leadership. And its impacts on the people.â
Harth sighed. âEveryoneâs very tense. We couldnât talk about it properly, but I did talk around it a bit with Kyelle. Sheâs worried, even though she didnât say it outright, I could tell. Theyâre all worried.â
âThey have reason to be. That wolf is a bow string under too much tension. The weapon might be effective, but the wrong pressure and itâll snap.â
Harth nodded. âI could feel it when he came to the fire, could you?â
âYes. If that had been Elreth among my people, I would have pulled her aside immediately, spoken to her and Aaryn, warned them how the people were feeling. But somehow I donât think Zev would hear my caution,â he said dryly.
âNo, he definitely wouldnât. Iâll try to talk to Kyelle again tomorrow. Maybe even get a chance to see Sasha. Iâm sure they know it, but⦠letâs just pray that he can relax now. Heâs only just come back and his family is here for the first time⦠hopefully heâll settle down over the next couple of days.â
Tarkyn didnât believe so, but he didnât want to discourage his mate. It was good that sheâd speak with the females and try to soothe the tension. A people under stress because of their leader would begin to lash out and become aggressive themselvesâto each other, or others they perceived as a threat.
Not the right mood for peace talks. Not at all.
Tarkyn sighed.
Harthâs arms tightened around him and she kissed his collarbones as they both lay quietly.
But as Harthâs breathing slowed and her grip on him relaxed, as she drifted into sleep, Tarkyn found himself wide awake, his mind turning the entire picture over and over. And coming up with the same answer every time.
Something had to change, or this would not end well.