by Lucy Monroe
Caelis let go of Shona’s wrist and withdrew his own sword from the scabbard on his back. “Get between us.”
“What’s happening?” Shona demanded even as she moved to obey his urgent instruction.
“Trouble.”
She’d figured that much out when he’d drawn his weapon. She resisted the urge to say so though.
She and Audrey instinctively placed the children between them, turning with small daggers in their hands to face whatever trouble was approaching. It never occurred to her to doubt that something dangerous was indeed coming. If the man who shared his nature with a wolf said it was so, and his friend who could take to the skies as an eagle agreed, there could be no doubt in her own mind.
The Sinclair soldier stopped and turned back. “What are you doing? We must heed the laird’s orders.”
“We’ve a wee bit of trouble to take care of first,” Caelis answered, his keen gaze fixed on the treeline to their left.
The soldier’s eyes widened and he looked around as if expecting the bogeyman to jump out from behind a rock. He too seemed more than willing to take the warrior’s word for it.
Audrey whimpered and Shona’s craned her neck to see what had her friend so upset.
It was not the bogeyman. Rather, it was six enormous wolves coming at them from all directions, each one giving a low-throated growl.
“These are more of your brethren, I take it?” Shona asked, proud when her voice did not waver with the fear she felt.
“They are no brothers of mine,” Caelis barked. “Not now.”
Vegar spit on the ground. “Nor mine.”
The young soldier started praying, his eyes going wild, his muscles tensed for flight. Or mayhap he intended to fight alongside the Chrechte warriors. He’d drawn his own dagger, but his fear was much more pronounced than Shona’s.
“Get you between us,” Caelis ordered the young man. “You will protect the women in case one of these rogue wolves gets past Vegar or me.”
Shona didn’t think the clearly untried soldier would be much defense, but she said nothing. Caelis was giving the man a way to relative safety that would spare his pride.
Somewhat.
“Can’t he run for help?” Audrey asked, her own voice trembling, the terror there turning Shona’s own trepidation to fury.
The past months had been difficult enough on the young Englishwoman, Faol or no.
“He would never make it before they tore him to pieces,” Vegar growled.
Caelis nodded without looking away from the wolves. “He is not Chrechte.”
That must have been for Shona’s sake as he would know Audrey would already be aware of that fact. Her friend must be truly frightened out of her mind to have made the suggestion, knowing, as she did, the wolf abilities better than most.
The Sinclair soldier visibly shook at the idea of being torn to pieces by wolves as he rapidly made his way to stand with the women. Shona did not blame him.
And she held even greater respect for him when he helped her and Audrey create a triangle barrier around the children, his dagger to the ready, further supplications to “On High!” falling from his lips.
She was surprised the children were being so quiet. She spared a glance down and her heart swelled with pride.
Eadan was comforting Marjory, his arms around his sister. “All will be well, Margie. Da will protect us.”
Then he started singing to her and his sweet little boy voice about broke Shona’s heart. How incredibly blessed was she to have such amazing children?
She looked up and around, noting that the wolves…all six of them…had gotten closer.
No matter how intimidating they appeared in both size and number, she refused to believe Caelis and Vegar would not win in the coming confrontation.
When they were but a few yards away, the biggest of the wolves shifted to his human form. Right before their very eyes. The snarling expression on his face was just as malevolent as it had been on his beast. “For your sins against the Fearghall, you will die this day, Caelis the Betrayer, and everyone with you.”
Caelis stood firm, no sign of fear or even anger at the insult showing on his features or sounding in his voice. “The Fearghall are wrong, Maon. Chrechte are meant to be brothers, no matter the race.”
Maon snarled, “Only the Faol are strong enough to survive.”
“Explain then, my people living all these generations despite the Fearghall’s most despicable efforts.” Vegar was clearly angry, but like with Caelis, no sign of intimidation showed in him.
“Dirty Éan!” the big—and naked—warrior spat.
“I am a Chrechte warrior with true honor. Something your laird has no knowledge of. He withheld Caelis from his true mate.”
The MacLeod Chrechte sneered. “So you say.”
“So I say.” Shona spoke up, all the anger she felt at how these miscreants were frightening her children and Audrey in her tone. “I am his true mate and my son is proof of that.”
“You told a human about us?” Maon asked with disgust. “She will have to die.”
“You already said that,” Shona pointed out, her own tone scathing.
Audrey elbowed her. “Do not antognize them.”
“Why not? They’re bent on attacking us, aren’t they?”
“I don’t know why they would be,” Audrey said and looked at Maon. “Your laird’s daughter is not with us.”
Either Audrey had forgotten the denouncement of Caelis made only seconds before in her agitation, or she was deliberately ignoring it.
“We’re not here for the female. She had no wolf, no value to the pack. Not like you. We’ll take you back with us and you can breed for the pack.”
Vegar let out a sound that sent chills down Shona’s spine.
Maon acted as if he had not heard. “Uven received word that two of his soldiers who had been sent here live but are no longer loyal.”
“I still wear clan colors.” Caelis stood proud, in no way intimidated by the other man’s indictment.
“You have no right to them!”
“I have more right than Uven, and soon enough, you’ll know it.”
“When you are dead, I’ll shred the plaid you wear and burn it on top of your corpse.”
Now that sounded like a man who had been trained by Uven. Shona didn’t say so though, since Caelis had been as well, initially.
The sound of her son humming loudly gave Shona the comfort of the hope that her daughter at least could not hear the awful words spoken. With his enhanced hearing, Eadan was bound to have.
And still he remained strong and brave.
Motherly love and pride burned in her chest.
“Am I so valuable that Uven sent six of his strongest warriors to wreak his twisted justice?” Caelis mocked.
“A warrior does not have to possess honor to be a formidable foe.”
“He has more honor in him than you,” Shona spat. “He does not threaten innocents and children.”
“He has cast you in the shadow of his guilt. Blame the betrayer for your fate.”
“You sound like Uven, taking no responsibility for the evil you commit.”
Maon’s eyes darkened with something that might have been doubt, but he shifted back to his wolf before Shona could be sure.
Suddenly, with no signal she could see, all six wolves leapt to attack.
Chapter 14
No good will come from Chrechte fighting Chrechte, but human nature must be appeased.
—ANCIENT SAYING ATTRIBUTED TO FIRST CELI DI
The battle was bloody, but Vegar and Caelis were amazing warriors, tossing the giant wolves away with one hand each and slashing at them with swords in the other. They drew blood but made no deep wounds. It was clear Caelis and Vegar were actually trying not to kill the wolves, but the MacLeods had no such compunction.
One managed a deep claw strike to Caelis’s chest as another three attacked Vegar at once, bowling him down under them.
A
udrey screamed, the horror she felt testament to the mate bond already forming between her and the eagle shifter.
One of the wolves scratched at Vegar’s thigh, drawing blood.
Audrey broke away from their defensive triangle and ran toward the pile of wolves and warrior. She stabbed with her dagger at one of the wolves. He turned on her with a snarl and took a swipe at her, sending her stumbling back with blood soaking her dress from gashes in her shoulder and arm.
An inch over and the wolf would have cut her artery. Shona’s dearest friend would have bled out, Chrechte or not.
Fury-tinged horror washed through her, but unlike Audrey, Shona would not move from her position of protector to her children. She could not.
One swipe of any of the wolves’ lethal claws and her children would be dead.
That would happen over her own dead and bloodied body, and not one second before.
Audrey shifted into her wolf, a beautiful white creature about half the size of the ones trying to kill them.
Her dress fell away from her and despite the difference in their sizes, she attacked the wolf again, this time with teeth and claws.
Vegar erupted from the pile of wolves, a battle cry resounding in the air around them. One went flying. The other rolled in the opposite direction. His sword came down and straight into the heart of the wolf still fighting with Audrey. So much bigger, and obviously with greater experience, the now dead MacLeod wolf could have killed her in a moment, but hadn’t.
Shona could not make sense of it.
Despite the chaos of the battle around them, Vegar pushed Audrey gently away. “Return to your heart-sister. I thank you for your help.”
The uncouth man rose just slightly in Shona’s estimation in that moment.
Audrey the wolf obediently trotted back, the blood on her fur attesting to the fact that shifting had not immediately healed her wounds. That was a question Shona would have to save for another day. It was clear, however, that her injuries were not bleeding near as profusely.
Still in wolf form, Audrey again took up her position as protector to Shona’s children.
Vegar had returned to battle already, the glint of death in his eyes for those who might go near his mate again. The two wolves he had tossed away now fought for their lives, rather than trying to take his.
Caelis had been fighting with the other three, but his obvious desire not to kill them was doing him no favors. There were small nicks all over his body from fang and claw, but nothing grievous. Shona’s heart rejoiced and she did her best to convince herself ’twas because he stood between her children and the wolves that would harm them.
While two kept him occupied, the other came running toward Shona, its sharp, drooling fangs bared.
The young Sinclair soldier moved in front of her just as the wolf reached them, taking the first bite to his forearm. He grappled with the wolf valiantly, but Shona knew he would not hold the beast off for long.
She readied her dagger. She could not send her children running, though the temptation was great.
There was no way little legs could outrun those intent on doing them harm. Eadan and Marjory had grown quiet. Their eyes round with shock, they clung to each other and huddled near Audrey.
They should have been terrified, but they seemed more dazed and clearly held no fear of the woman who had become a wolf.
Though Shona’s son had been seeing such things in his dreams, for goodness knew how long.
Audrey moved closer to the children, standing over them protectively. Her own teeth bared, growls sounded from her throat that were suspiciously similar to those Audrey used to make when she was angry with the baron.
It put a new light on claims she had made that she was angry enough to scratch the man’s eyes out.
Shona shifted her stance, prepared to enter the fray between the wolf and the soldier trying so valiantly to protect her.
An unholy roar sounded, and a second later the wolf fighting the young soldier went flying, landing in a broken heap nearly fifty feet away. The great beast had snapped its neck and tossed the giant wolf as if he weighed no more than a ball of yarn sniffed toward Shona, his eyes the same gentian blue as Caelis.
And she realized this, this…man-wolf was her former beloved.
She could hardly believe what her eyes told her to be true. This creature was nothing like the wolf Caelis had shown her and yet there could be no doubt in her heart they were one in the same.
Shock coursed through her, leaving her lungs empty of breath and her heart racing.
Standing over seven feet tall and twice as wide as even the biggest warrior…like Caelis as a man, hair covered his face and body, his features that of a cross between wolf and man. His hands had five fingers, like a man’s, but each digit ended in a daggerlike claw. His feet were the same: five toes tipped with sharp-pointed nails that would gouge a hole in man or beast with brutal efficiency.
He stood upright, like a man, his torso, arms and legs shaped much as they were when in his human form but bigger. A lot bigger.
The long canines that showed when he growled toward one of the wolves inching forward on its belly were like his canine counterpart, but his snout was only slightly protruding, the man behind the beast there to see if one was looking.
And Shona was looking.
She wanted to reach out and touch him. Badly.
This wondrous beast was the father of her child. Children, if she believed his intention to claim Marjory.
The young soldier beside her crossed himself with his good arm before cradling the other close to his chest and starting to mutter fervent Hail Marys.
The wolves had stopped their attack, three of the four surviving Chrechte approaching Caelis on their bellies. The last one—she thought mayhap it was Maon—stood off at a distance, his hackles raised, his low growl at once fear-filled and menacing.
Caelis ignored them all as he moved within a breath of Shona. He did not touch her, but she could sense his desire to do so.
She reached out and took one of his great hands into hers and brought it to her face, laying the claw-tipped fingers against her cheek.
The huge body stilled completely, air barely moving his chest in and out. “Mate?”
The guttural voice was not quite human, but the word was understandable. What he was asking was not.
She did not know what he needed, so she gave him what she wanted. She stood on her toes and reached up to touch the light hair covering his face. It was soft to her touch, his jaw beneath strong and firm.
She trailed her fingers down his neck to his enormous, muscular chest, covered in the same soft short brown hair. “’Tis a wondrous monster you are.”
“Monster?” he asked in that growly voice.
“Wondrous.”
“You do not fear.”
“I have naught to fear.”
The sound of vicious snarling made Caelis tense.
“He challenges you,” Vegar said.
Caelis nodded, though his attention remained on Shona.
She stepped back. “You have things to attend.”
His gaze finally moved from hers, but not to where Maon was making his continued anger clear. No, Caelis looked down at Marjory and Eadan.
Their son was looking up at him with awe and a deep happiness Shona was not sure she understood. Marjory didn’t look any more worried than Shona felt.
’Twas as if her small daughter sensed that the great beast was their ally and seemed comforted by it.
Caelis dropped to one knee and Shona had to stifle the urge to laugh. Did he think that made him less intimidating? He still towered over her, much less the children.
Marjory didn’t seem to care. She let go of her brother and approached Caelis with no sign of trepidation.
The Sinclair soldier made as if to grab her back, but a growl from Caelis had him scurrying away. His courage showed, however, in the fact that he did not keep going but remained nearby.
“He doesn’t
know you are nice,” Marjory declared with a frown for the soldier.
“I am not always nice, little princess.” The words came out a little garbled in Caelis’s guttural tones, but Marjory didn’t seem to have any difficulty understanding.
“You are nice to me.”
“Always,” he vowed.
She nodded, popping her thumb in her mouth and reaching for one of his pinkies. He let her wrap her hand around it, giving Shona a bemused look.
It was a strange expression on such a fearsome countenance to be sure.
Eadan approached. “I will be like you one day, Da.”
Shona whipped her head around to stare at Caelis. “Is that true?”
“I dinna ken.”
“I do,” Eadan said as he sidled right up to his father and climbed onto the bent knee. “My dreams said so.”
“Then it will come to pass.”
“I have to save the Paindeal celi di,” Eadan said matter-of-factly.
“What?” Shona asked, her voice going faint.
Eadan smiled reassuringly at her from his perch that made him almost of a height with his grown mother. “Not for a long time yet, Mum. Do not worry.”
She nodded, inexplicably glad her son was only five years old. Whatever destiny called to him, she had years yet to love and live with him as her own dear boy.
The snarls had not stopped the entire time Caelis interacted with the children and now they grew louder, the challenge in them obvious even to Shona.
Caelis lifted both children into his great arms and turned to face the one remaining defiant wolf.
“Submit,” he barked in unmistakable command.
Maon shook his wolf’s head, hackles raised, his fangs bared in threat.
The stupid Chrechte stared Caelis in the eye until Shona’s man-wolf let out a bone-chilling growl. The other wolves, including Audrey, whimpered, but the big one just turned and ran away.
Caelis lowered the children to the ground and ordered Vegar, “Watch over them.”
“Aye.” The Éan did not appear offended at the other man’s imperious tone.
Caelis turned to the three cowering wolves and pointed to the ground. “Stay.”
None so much as raised a head in inquiry, but all dropped to their bellies completely and…stayed.