Chapter 181 - 181 Share the Fire
Mated to the Warrior Beast
181 Share the Fire
~ TARKYN ~
âWhy donât they approach me?â he asked Harth as they sat. Sheâd prepared tea for them and Tarkyn found himself somehow warmed by the strange, floral mixture. Harth was finding reasons for them to stay at the fire and he couldnât tell if it was because she wanted to talk to her pack, or if she just wanted to stay out of the cave.
âThey donât know what to make of you,â she whispered. âYou confuse them.â
âConfuse them?â
âYour position in the hierarchy confuses them. Because theyâre my kin, the wolves should be leading to show the others how to treat you. But they canât decide what you are, or where you fit. Youâre mated to a low-level wolf who stayed among the humansâweâre all still working out how we fit together after being apart for so longâbut you also have that Alpha strength. They can sense it in you. So they arenât sure whether to throw their own weight around, or submit.â
Tarkyn frowned. âIâm making myself as submissive as possible. I havenât beenââ
Harth snorted. âTarkyn, I love you, but youâre about as submissive as a bull being stung on its belly. The Chimera arenât watching your posture, theyâre⦠measuring you. Accurately.â
Tarkynâs lips twisted. He knew what she meant. Heâd been in leadership long enough to spot an Alpha at a quarter-mile spread. They were the ones he was always looking for, the young who carried themselves with presence. Whose confidence usually outstripped their achievements, but wouldnât for long.
He knew what she was saying, but heâd been actively working to make himself⦠unthreatening. He wasnât sure whether to be frustrated or flattered that he hadnât succeeded.
.....
âItâs a mark of your Queenâs inexperience that youâre the one she chose to send,â Harth said with a wry smile.
âWhy? Iâm in the perfect position toââ
âSure, but youâre⦠intimidating, Tarkyn. You must know that?â
He frowned. âDo the Chimera use their power so forcefully that no one can possess it without being trusted?â he rumbled.
Harth shook her head. âNo, but youâre a cat amongst the pigeons. Just like Zev was among you.â
Tarkyn tipped his head. He supposed that was true. But before he could explore it with her further, dark shadows and footsteps rose nearby and they both looked past the fire to see two forms approaching, silhouetted at first by the fires further away, but then they stepped into the glow.
Harth tensed when Kyelle and Lhars were revealed. But Tarkyn was relieved. At least he had a measure of these two.
âGive them warmth,â Harth hurriedly whispered in his head. âThem sharing a fire gives you⦠credibility. As long as it goes smoothly.â
Tarkyn nodded and squeezed her hand. He kept his chin low when the pair greeted them, and smiled, thanking them for their greeting.
Kyelle smiled at Harth and moved to sit at her other side, while Lhars kept more space, sitting on the other side of the fire, facing Tarkyn.
It was a joy to see his mate pleased by the attention of her leaders, and beaming at Kyelle. But Tarkyn had to watch Lhars carefully, trying to follow the maleâs lead.
While the females caught up quietly and happily, Tarkyn waited. But Lhars didnât say anything immediately, just watched him. Tarkyn could smell his apparent confusion.
âIs there something youâd like to ask me?â Tarkyn offered gently.
âWhat are you?â
âIâm⦠what?â
âWhat animal do you shift into?â
Ah. So that was it. âMy beast is a lion,â he said easily, assuming theyâd already heard this about the Anima.
But Lhars tensed immediately and Harth went quiet at his side.
Tarkyn looked between themâsurely this wasnât a surprise?
âThe Chimeran wolves have an⦠ongoing tension with the tigers,â Harth explained quietly. âOur predator groups naturally compete for territory and food⦠and our Alphas often conflict.â
Tarkyn nodded. âI can understand that. We have had a similar dynamic in the pastâthe wolves led differently, and some years ago those in leadership began to resent the difference in the approach of the pride.â
âWhat happened?â Lhars asked, sounding genuinely interested.
âWe went to war. The pride wonâbut we were led by a lion of great strength. The father of our current Queen. She doesnât come by her Alpha power accidentally.â
Lhars nodded, rubbing his jaw. âYou live at peace now?â
Tarkyn nodded. âThere was a time when it was difficult and the wolf numbers were⦠reduced by the conflict. But we learned that the wolvesâ leadership had been tainted by powers brought into our world by the humans. Those of us who remained live in peace, and we worked together to beat the humans.ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Lharsâ expression didnât lighten. âAnd now the lions remain rulers? Alpha of all?â
âYes.â
âSo⦠You bring with you the Queenâs authority.â
âYes. She wants peace.â When Lhars looked skeptical, Tarkyn pushed on. âIâve known Elreth since she was born. She is strong, and can be headstrong. But once she understands a problem and her role in it, she always seeks true solution. She agreed to me coming with Harth despite my role in her court because she deeply wants to explain herself and try to forge connections. Build bridges rather than conflictââ
âOf course she does. Now that sheâs losing control.â The voice was dark and cold.
Tarkyn startled. How had the wolf approached without him even knowing it? But sure enough, a moment later, Zev stepped into the glow of the fire, his eyes alight with fierce warning, his body tense.
And suddenly that sense Tarkyn had had, of tension rippling through the people at large was front and centerâthe tang of fear or unease in the communal scents.
At the presence of their Alpha? His presence should bring greater security, not greater fear!
Tarkyn filed that away for later scrutiny and turned his mind to stepping very carefully, because he clearly had Zevâs attention, but there was also the potential for this to blow up in his face.
Shifting his weight so that he sat relaxed, but in a position of strength, he held the wolf Alphaâs gaze.
âElreth planned to bring you to the peace table the day you escaped. She was going to speak with Sasha first, then bring you into the talks if you agreed to non-violent means.â
âSure she was,â Zev scoffed.
Tarkyn didnât waver. âScent me for truth.â
Zevâs eyes narrowed. âYou blindly follow that bitch. If youâre stupid enough to believe her, that isnât a measure of her honesty, but your naivete.â
Tarkynâs teeth gritted. If Zev had been among his ranks, he would have cuffed him and given him reason to try his strengthâbe reminded who had held power and strength for longer.
But that wasnât his place here, so he swallowed back the disrespect, and only held Zevâs gaze. âI worked to free youâyou know that. We spoke. We saw each otherâs lives. We shared pains.â
Zev growled. âMy pains were never truly shared by a male whoâs been free and powerful his entire life.â
Tarkyn had to give him that point. âPerhaps you could consider, though, that my freedom has allowed me to see the beauty of peace. The reason itâs worth fighting for.â
âFighting for peace?â Zev asked dismissively.
âStruggling for it. Sacrificing for it.â
âLet me guess whoâs going to be doing the sacrificing.â
âZev,â Lhars said quietly. Kyelle was staring at him too, and even though Tarkyn appreciated that they were trying to stifle Zevâs clear anger, he was uncomfortable, too. These Chimera were all very young, and he knew that if an already aggressive wolf perceived that his allies were shifting alliance, it wouldnât go well for any of them.
Tarkyn pushed to his feet, drawing all their attention back to him, opening his arms to offer himself for scrutiny. âI may not have endured all the pains you have, Zevâand I donât envy you yours, believe me. But I have lived as a warrior since I was adolescentâa true soldier. Every day given to the service and defense of others. And I can tell you, from that perspective, war suits no one. It benefits no oneâI told you that. No one truly wins when war is the result. I showed you the truth of that, and I believe you saw it. So⦠do you really want to put your people through that unnecessarily?â
Zevâs lips twisted, but his tone of voice was less aggressive when he spoke. âYouâll forgive me if your measure of ânecessaryâ force isnât my first guide.â
Tarkyn huffed as if they shared a joke, but his guts twisted, and he instinctively began to measure how heâd need to move to put himself between his mate and this male who simmered with such rage.
âI hope that we can find a way to⦠be closer to one mind,â he said carefully. The male was obviously tired. This wasnât the time to try to shift his mind.
But then Lhars got to his feet and took Zevâs elbow. âLetâs go for a walk.â
Tarkyn shifted while neither of them were watching him, putting himself in the best stance to defend his mate, who remained on the ground behind him.
âFine. I only came to find you anyway. Iâve been with the other Anima who arrived, and Iâd like to get your opinion on them.â
Tarkyn watched the brothers turn and walk away togetherâthankful that Zev didnât look back. That heâd clearly turned his attention from Tarkyn. And had left him free, too, he realized. That was⦠significant. Though the wolf was clearly resentful of the fact.
Then it hit him what Zev had said.
Suhle and Lerrin. They were here. Zev had spoken with themâbeen with them for some time it would seem. And he wasnât crowing about killing them or imprisoning them. Heâd come to find his brother to help assess them.
That was a good sign, right?
Tarkyn prayed fervently that it was.