Chapter 31
Mated to the Warrior Beast
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~ TARKYN ~
âWe have to find out if heâs communicating with anyone outside the Tree City,â Elreth growled, then looked at Tarkyn. âThe guard... we sent so many out to find you and to circle their territory when we found it... the patrols... itâs why we have so few guards here in the City. I want to believe theyâll catch it if any of the Chimera escape their perimeter. But how can we know?â
âWe canât,â Tarkyn said sadly. âBut... I think weâll learn pretty quickly if heâs communicating with someone outside. How long has he been here in the Tree City?â
âTwo days.â
.....
Tarkyn rubbed his chin. âIt seems like if they didnât follow immediately, and you havenât had any word of followers or patrols following your trail, Iâm guessing they arenât going to be quick to come this way unless he calls them. And he canât if heâs not close enough. But itâs something we need to be aware of.
âHarth says theyâve been here two or three months already. They didnât come close enough in that time-â
âAn entire season already? How did we miss this, Tarkyn?â
âI donât know,â he growled. âI can only assume theyâre far enough out of the territory that they didnât breach our patrols. We donât patrol the entire WildWood every month, El. We havenât had need to.â
âClearly we have! At least to the East-three hundred of them for three months and we didnât even know?â she snarled, cutting a dark look at Tarkyn who was supposed to have managed the patrols and guards.
âWeâve never had a threat from that direction. We always assumed with the humans gone the only risk to watch for was a rebellion from within the people-â
âI cannot believe that weâre here again!â Elreth growled. âCreator, why?!â she snapped, her eyes skyward. âWhy do we have to do this again? I thought this was done?â Then she whipped around to Tarkyn again. âHow the hell did they get here?â
Tarkyn sighed, so weary he wanted to weep. But he made himself stand at attention and answer his Queenâs very valid queries.
âHarth told me that they came through some kind of portal that opens and closes without a fixed location. She claimed that they couldnât open it again now that theyâre here. That theyâre stuck. That the whole idea was to escape the humans.â
Elrethâs jaw went tight. âThatâs essentially what Sasha told me, as well,â she said quietly.
Tarkyn blinked. Sheâd been testing him? Cold anger burned in his stomach, but he pushed it down.
âConsider, El, that if itâs true... these people may be more like allies than we realized.â
El didnât look like she believed that.
âI think weâd do well to take this very slowly,â Gar piped up from behind him. âWe donât want to create war unnecessarily, especially if there are many warriors like this one. Even if we outnumber them, that maleâs strength and speed is aligned with the best of ours.â
Tarkyn nodded. âAssuming that theyâre still establishing their society, weâd win in a war of weapons for us to keep a safe distance and take them down without engaging face to face.â He hated saying it, but he could see the strategy in his mind-taking advantage of their greater numbers and resources. And avoiding as much Anima bloodshed as possible.
But that was the Captain within him speaking.
The male, the mate... that heart grieved the idea of any conflict at all. They were his mateâs people!
âBut, El, I have to tell you... if Harth isnât deceived about her own people, it does not need to come to war. These arenât invaders. Theyâre refugees-from the very enemies we defeated ourselves.â
âIf sheâs not deceived. But we know the humans are incredibly deceptive. Have we forgotten Hannah?â
âOf course not,â Gar growled at his sister. âBut we also have Rika-sheâs been loyal from the first.â
Elreth cut her brother a look and glanced at Tarkyn as well, but her expression was unreadable. Her mate stepped to her side, taking her elbow and leaning into her ear to murmur something below Tarkynâs hearing.
When he leaned away, they looked at each other and Tarkynâs stomach clenched. The understanding there, the intimacy in that gaze... it was everything he yearned to share with Harth, and in a rush of emotion, he reached out to his mate again.
âAre you well.â
âIâm safe, Tarkyn. Just come back as soon as you can.â
Tarkyn swallowed. The truth was, he would leave in that moment if he could. But as Elreth seemed to relax just a hair, Gar spoke up again.
âHarth is the key. As Tarkynâs mate, either sheâs going to win this for us, or be the bridge to make certain the people are peaceful. The creator didnât put them together by accident. There has to be a reason that they connected just as we discovered them.â
Tarkyn wanted to hug the male, his brother of the pride. But all of Garâs attention was on Elreth, who was considering that. But then... âIf she actually is his mate,â she muttered. âIf the humans havenât figured out how to... counterfeit our bond. Thatâs what Behryn said, right?â
Then she lifted her eyes to Tarkyn and measured him. Tarkyn held her gaze without flinching, but for the first time in his entire service to the crown, he felt the weighing sense of a judge in the eyes of the royals pointed at him.
She was deciding whether or not he could be trusted. Him. Tarkyn. Her most loyal servant-and servant to her father before her. Since he was little more than a cub.
Anger and disgust churned in his chest. He wanted to leap forward and shake her, demand that she remember his service, his dedication, all the ways heâd been trusted and included in her family because of his proven loyalty. Would she really throw all of that away because he found a mate?
But he made himself stay still and just hold her gaze, unwavering.
âI think you and I need to speak alone,â she said.
Tarkynâs heart clenched.