Chapter 214 - 214 On the Way to War – Part 2
Mated to the Warrior Beast
214 On the Way to War â Part ~ GAR ~
They reached the valley ahead of schedule, but Garâs hair was already standing on end. As per tradition when a rite was held, or there was need for negotiation, the Alpha followed drummers who pounded a steady beatâto announce the arrival of the King, or in this case Queenâand to acknowledge the importance of the day. When they reached the valley the drums didnât stop. Instead, the drummers spread out in the trees of the wood, their deep, rolling bass setting a rhythm in the air that prickled his skin and raised his hackles.
It sucked at him, drew at himâwhich was probably good. Without something to snap fingers in front of his face he was only halfway present. Everything in him yearned to be back at the fishing cave, holding his mate and grieving with her.
Heâd woken her earlyâbefore dawn, because he needed to leave. And after holding her and whispering his promises, heâd told her.
Elreth was pregnant. It was early. Very early. But there was no doubt.
Rika had tensed in the circle of his arms, biting her lip. âIâm happy for her.â
Gar had flushed, disappointed in himself, because that wasnât the response heâd had when he scented that flicker of richness underlying his sisterâs scent.
But he hadnât missed the spear of grief that shot through his mateâs chestâor the ache she carried, even as they said goodbye and she kissed him and pleaded with him to be safe.
He hadnât missed the salt and tears in her scent, the shivering fear, or the rage⦠the burning, simmering rage that bubbled in his mateâs chest at the injustice of it all.
.....
Running back to the Tree City had been fleeing, if he was honest with himself. Fleeing his mateâs emotionâand his own.
He didnât have time for that right now. No space to give it room to breathe. It was right that he put that aside and focus.
But his mind didnât want to. And his heart had never left Rika.
So it was good, he decided when they stood on the edge of the valley where theyâd been told to position. It was good, and right that he give his attention to this conflict, here and now.
He was one of the lucky ones. His mate was far away in a place entirely unknown to the Chimera. Even if this went horribly wrong, she would be safe until he could get to her.
He was blessed. He should have been grateful.
Instead, his skin itched.
Elreth stood at his left, scanning the valley for the moment the Chimera appeared.
But her scent, usually so solidâtoo solidâwas wavering today as well.
What was wrong with all of them.
Oh, thatâs right. They were all still fucking children, but now their toys were the life and death of their people.
After theyâd made it to the valley, Aaryn turned away from Elreth and disappeared into the trees behind them. Which must mean the time was approaching.
Aarynâs role today was to stay at the back, behind defenses, far enough away that he could return to the Tree City at any moment if it became clear that this day wouldnât end in peace, but in conflict. Then even if the others were harmed in the fight, he would remain back to lead the people in the event that Elreth was lost.
And he was pissed about it.
But Elreth hadnât seemed to notice him go. Her brow was furrowed, her eyes scanning the valley below. They stood that way, both of them examining this space that was surrounded by trees, but wide and long enough that neither party could approach the other without being seen.
There would be no covert attacks today. Gar wasnât sure whether to be relieved, or terrified.
Had Elreth made the right decision in coming to these talks? For the first time, Gar second guessed the decisions theyâd made.
But as they stood there for close to an hour, nothing changed. No one appeared, and he told himself over and over, there was no point examining the what-ifs. They were just his fear talking.
The sun had moved in the sky before Elreth sighed.
âWhat should I do, Gar?â she breathed so quietly, only he was close enough to hear her. âHow the hell are we going to do this? I canât see any way⦠What⦠what do you think Dad would do now?â
Garâs breath whooshed out of him and he almost broke. Almost turned on his sister and told her, point blank, that if their father had been here, they never would have reached this point.
But he knew that thought for the bitter, pointless attack that it was.
Still⦠what should he say?
His mind turned back over all the endlessâusually irritatingâmoments his father had given unsolicited advice. To all the moments heâd spoken about leadership and choices andâ¦
And he landed on the day when he was fourteen years old and just beginning to truly resent his father.
Theyâd been trainingâhis father putting him in the dirt effortlessly, again and again.
He never had believed in going easy on someone who asked to be trained.
But after eating dust for the dozenth time, Gar had leapt to his feet, blushing and embarrassed by his fatherâs taunts, and spat something about perfection.
Something about his dad being the only one who could attain it, so it wasnât a fair measure.
His father had been stunned, his eyebrows crawling highâand so had Behryn who was also there giving advice and poking at Gar as well.
Then Behryn had burst out laughing.
âYour father? Perfect? Holy shit, Garâthatâs a good one.â
His fatherâs lips had thinned and heâd grimaced, though there was a hint of amusement in it, too.
While Behryn held his stomach, heâd spluttered about all the times Reth had been wrongâall the times. Over and over again.
âHa ha, yes, Behr, thank you.â
But uncle Behryn hadnât stopped crowing until Dad finally ankle hooked him and dumped him on the ground.
Then, while Behryn protested and leaped back to his feet, Gar watched his dadâs face go entirely serious.
âGar, donât misunderstand, Iâm deeply touched that you think I know everything and do everything rightâhey, maybe next time I tell you something, you might listen?â
Behryn snorted again, but Gar only folded his arms. âI didnât mean you are perfect. I meant that everyone else thinks you are.â
His father had raised an eyebrow and shot Behryn a glance, whoâd finally straightened his face. Then his dad had turned back to him and put a hand to his shoulder in a gesture Gar was coming to realize he used both to connect with people, and to press something in when he felt it was important.
âSon, you knowâand everyone else does too, especially your motherâthat Iâm far from perfect. But I am a damn good leader. The Creator made me with the capacity for thatâjust like Heâs done with you. But being truly good as an Alpha⦠well, I can tell you what I learned the hard way when I was just a few years older than you: The best leaders are the best listeners. The best leaders are willing to see when someone else has a strength or quality that they donâtâand has the humility to rely on them for it.
âIf you really want to be strong, Gar, if you want to succeed in the hierarchy, youâll have to stop trying to do everything yourself. Lean into your strengths and bring others along with you who can be trusted, not only to help you, but to fill the gaps that exist in you. Because we all have them.â
Gar had grimaced. His father was forever spewing this kind of advice, and even though he knew there was probably some truth to it, it didnât help him as an adolescent trying to find his strength in the first place.
But then Behryn cleared his throat. âAnd donât try to fight what you canât control,â he said. âThe Creator didnât allow it without a purpose.â
Jolted suddenly, Gar shoved the memory away, along with the pain of missing his father, and the relevance of that advice to his own situation. His and Rikaâs.
He couldnât focus on that now. He had to figure out how to help his sister get through to that fucking wolf.
While Elreth waitedâshe knew him well enough to know when he was thinking through somethingâGar cleared his throat and tried to get his thoughts in order.
What were their strengths? And what did they need? What could they control about this situation that would help them?
Then he blinked and took a deep breath.
He turned to El with a simmering mix of dread and hope. âI need to tell you something,â he said quietly.