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Moon Burning

Page 23

by Lucy Monroe


  “Aye, and do not think you are going to change the topic.”

  “What do you want me to say?” Sabrine sat hard on the bed, causing the Clach Gealach Gra to bounce.

  “I do not want you to say a thing to me. It’s Barr you need to talk to.”

  “Nothing I can say will make our reality any easier to accept.”

  “What reality? That you love each other?”

  “We don’t.” He didn’t love her, at any course, and she should be glad.

  Why her heart insisted on bleeding, she did not know.

  “What is going on here?” Verica asked, her tone truly perplexed.

  “What do you mean? I came to find the Clach Gealach Gra. I have found it; now I must let the others know and return it to the Éan chamber in the caves at the sacred springs.”

  “So, get Barr to return it with you.”

  “I cannot tell him about our people.”

  “He is your sacred mate, you have to tell him.”

  “I will not betray my people.”

  “So, what? You plan to betray your mate? You’re leaving and not coming back—that’s why you’re so upset and Barr is so angry, isn’t it? He knows.”

  “He’s always known. I have not lied to him.” Deceived him, yes, but never actually lied.

  “And he’s hurt.”

  “Yes.”

  “So, don’t leave.”

  “I have no choice.”

  Once again, Verica looked far from impressed. “Of course you have a choice. If you were dead, then you would not have a choice. As long as you draw breath, you can fight for your future.”

  “This from a woman who did not even know the proper way to draw a dirk when I met her?” Sabrine had been fighting when Verica was still being coddled as a child in her mother’s household.

  Verica crossed her arms and glared, not giving an inch. “There is more than one way to fight.”

  “Is that what your mother told you?”

  “Aye.”

  “And it worked so well for her.” It might be a cruel thing to say, but the truth could not be ignored.

  “I think so. She had years with her sacred mate. They had children and she loved us both so much. She was happy; though it was wrong that happiness was cut short by Rowland’s evil, she still had it.”

  “That evil still lives in this clan.”

  “Wirp is dead.”

  “He was not the only one.”

  “Why do you say that?”

  “Do you think I am wrong?”

  Verica’s look said it all. No, she did not believe Sabrine was wrong. No doubt she would continue to hide her Éan nature.

  “You know I am right.” Though it gave her no pleasure to say so. “Yesterday, before Wirp attacked me, someone else shot at Barr and I with arrows.”

  “It was Wirp.”

  “No.”

  “You cannot be certain.”

  “I am. He could not have gotten past Barr to reach me in the forest.”

  “He was masking his scent.”

  “His Chrechte scent, yes, but his body odor? No, the man was rank with hatred. And he wasn’t moving stealthily. He would have left tracks if he had come from the direction of the arrows.”

  “Maybe Barr missed them.”

  “You think?”

  “But …”

  “I didn’t see him; for him to have gotten to me, he had to be coming from the other direction.”

  Verica’s eyes filled with fear. “Who would try to kill Barr?”

  “Those arrows were meant for us both.”

  “But not necessarily because you are Éan.”

  “You think someone is so angry with Barr’s leadership, they have tried to kill him?”

  “I haven’t noticed anyone but the elders with that kind of hatred and even most of them have settled into his way of doing things,” Verica admitted. “No one grieved Rowland’s or Wirp’s death with strong emotion.”

  Sabrine agreed and that led to one conclusion for her. “While no one truly grieved their passing, that does not mean others did not share the two’s unreasonable hatred of the Éan.”

  “You cannot abandon your mate because you’re afraid.” Verica’s shock and disbelief were a palpable presence between them. “You are no coward.”

  Barr thought she was and mayhap he was right.

  “I will not be the reason Barr is assassinated by one of his own clan members.”

  “Like my mother, you mean?”

  “No. Rowland was power hungry. He used your mother’s heritage as an excuse for his evil actions.” But someone in this clan wanted Barr dead and she did not believe that person was driven by anything more than a deep and abiding hatred of their brethren with a bird heritage.

  “You think it would be different with you and Barr?”

  “Barr is bringing this clan to a better place; I cannot get in the way of that.”

  “You are part of that.”

  For a brief moment, Sabrine admitted to herself that she wanted to be. So, so much. “I have made him hate me.”

  “You’ve made him angry. You are an intelligent woman; you can change that.”

  “I have never found appeasement one of my strengths,” it was her turn to admit.

  A mischievous smile shone on Verica’s lovely face. “Lure him to bed and then tell him the truth.”

  “The truths are not mine to tell.” Always, she ran up against that immovable wall.

  “They are if you trust Barr not to betray your secrets.”

  Her heart was desperate to believe that, but her training fought with the desires of her woman’s soul. “What if he tries to force a reconciliation between our people and leads our enemies to us?”

  “You really think I would do that?”

  Sabrine spun, not caring that he had once again come upon her completely undetected. This time, when she saw her mate, she allowed her deepest inner instincts to lead her. She rushed across the room and grabbed both his arms, as if she could hold him there.

  “I am not going anywhere.” He was not smiling, but something in his beautiful gray eyes said he knew the fear leaping in her chest.

  “I don’t want to, either, but I have no ch …” She stopped, unable to utter the claim again.

  Were the words even true? Verica’s earlier challenge demanded Sabrine rethink her defeated attitude.

  She was no meek maiden to accept a path that would only lead to more pain for both of them. She was a warrior, like generations of the Éan before her. She was a princess, though she had renounced her claim to lead.

  But most important, she was Chrechte and that meant she did not dismiss the gifts her nature bestowed, whatever they may be.

  Barr’s return had loosened her hold on the certainty there was no hope for their future. She did not know why, but his clear willingness to fight for their mating could be met with nothing less than her own warrior’s determination.

  Could it?

  “Wirp was not the bowman,” she said, not sure why those were the words that tumbled from her mouth first. Perhaps they were a test. To this point, Barr had repeatedly refused to acknowledge the very real danger some in his clan posed to her.

  “Why do you believe this?”

  She told him.

  He nodded. “I came to the same conclusion.”

  “You did not say.”

  “I expected you to realize it as well.”

  “And maybe you did not want to give me another reason not to feel safe here.”

  He shrugged. “You do not trust me to protect you.”

  The concept that she should had never occurred to her. “I am my people’s protector.”

  “As your mate, I am your protector.”

  “And I am duty bound to protect you.”

  “He won’t thank you for leaving because you believe doing so will stop whoever tried to kill him yesterday,” Verica said, showing not the slightest regret at revealing that confidence.

  “You thin
k your leaving will keep me safe?” he asked with the pure shock only a truly confident man would feel.

  “It is a concern of mine, yes.”

  “What exactly?”

  The door opened without a knock, Earc coming inside, showing no surprise at finding his laird and Sabrine with his wife. Niall and Guaire followed closely on his heels.

  The look Niall gave her left Sabrine in no doubt that Barr had shared her plans to leave with him. Guaire gave her a look that mixed compassion and censure so well, she thought he would have made a very good spiritual leader.

  Earc was looking at all of them with an expression of amusement that never seemed far from his features. “Should I be concerned? This is the second time I have found my wife entertaining my friend in a bedchamber.”

  Verica smacked his arm. Hard. And blushed even harder.

  Barr didn’t laugh, but some of the tension in his body fell away. The thing he invited his friend to do was anatomically impossible and intensified the heat in Verica’s cheeks.

  It was Sabrine’s turn to smack her mate. She did it right on the center of his chest. “Behave. You’ll have your healer’s cheeks catch fire and start smoking soon.”

  “I note you are not pink-cheeked.” Niall said it with a question in his voice.

  She had heard far worse among her fellow protector brethren, and not always from the males. “I am a warrior.”

  “Who was as innocent as any pampered daughter on our wedding night.” Barr’s satisfaction at that fact was far too complacent.

  And Sabrine didn’t know which part of that comment to take more umbrage at. “We’re not married.”

  “We’re mated. You spoke vows that night. So did I.”

  Niall was back to glaring. While she wasn’t looking at him, she could feel the fury directed at her from Barr’s brother.

  He forgets I do not need a defender, Barr said to her across their mating link.

  He hates me.

  Since you plan to leave me, that should not matter. Oh, there was no small amount of anger in Barr’s growling mental voice as well.

  “I will come back.” She said it out loud, wanting the others to hear her commitment as well.

  She would not betray her Chrechte vows, no matter the personal risk to her for keeping them. Though, she did not know how to reconcile this with her former pledge to her people. She knew only that mating vows superseded all others, no matter what her warrior’s training dictated.

  It had taken her long enough to come to terms with that fact, but she would not let herself forget it again.

  She couldn’t; her love demanded she remember.

  He stared at her, his eyes searching, and then seemed to realize those words were yet another vow. One she would not break.

  “I will go with you.” His were just as solemn of a promise.

  From the corner of her vision, she saw Niall cross his arms and nod with certain agreement. Earc made an approving noise, but neither Guaire or Verica said anything.

  Sabrine had no doubt that if she looked away from Barr long enough to assess their expressions, she would find agreement on them as well.

  None of them understood.

  “You can’t.”

  “Are you certain of that?” One sardonic brow rose.

  It should have irritated her, but all she felt was this awful wash of love go over her. No matter how annoying his obstinate refusal to comprehend their true differences, she found him entirely irresistible.

  But she would not let him suffer under the illusion that he could accompany her. “Barr—”

  “You are mine.”

  “Yes.”

  “I will go with you.”

  “My people would kill you.”

  “You’ll protect me.”

  He thought he was teasing her, but he did not know how true those words had to be.

  Of all the Éan, she was the only one who could. It was still a risk.

  “I am going.” There was no room for argument in his tone.

  She could not agree, but she would not deny him either. “I have much to tell you.”

  “Finally.”

  “Do not betray my trust.”

  “You are my mate, a gift I will never dismiss.”

  Oh, he was just piling on the guilt and he looked like he knew it. “I’m sorry.”

  “For what exactly? Believing I have so little value you could just leave me? Mistrusting me? Refusing to accept my wolf? Threatening to take my child?”

  Chapter 19

  Barr almost felt badly for the way his mate’s face drained of color and the utter shock that shone in her eyes, nearly swallowing the brown with the black of her pupils. But it was past time she came to terms with what being his mate meant. All of it.

  Her inability to accept his wolf had caused all of this. While he might understand her difficulty, he was not the Faol that had killed her parents or any other Éan for that matter.

  He was her true mate, the one male alive who could match her and protect her, and she should damn well realize that.

  “I’m … You think I’m …”

  “With child? Aye. My babe grows inside you.” How she would react if that baby was born Faol and not human or Éan, he did not want to consider.

  Her own deeply ingrained and formerly justified prejudices would have to be conquered by then. He refused to consider any other alternative.

  “But I … My menses …”

  He’d never seen her at a loss for words. It would be adorable, if it wasn’t due to her upset over carrying his child.

  “I am Faol, not Éan, but we have our gifts as well. Your scent has changed.”

  “No … It’s not …”

  “Aye. I noted it immediately.” Niall’s claim had her spinning to face Barr’s brother.

  “How could you tell the change in my scent? You’d never met me before.”

  “My brother’s scent is mixed with yours.”

  “I thought you meant you could smell his scent on me.”

  “You carry his babe and by your scent it is wolf.”

  Barr had suspected, but his own feelings were too involved for him to claim certainty.

  “You can’t know that.” She stumbled back, away from him … away from the news his brother had imparted. “The Faol’s change does not happen until they are on the cusp of adulthood.”

  It was all Barr could do to stop himself from grabbing her and pulling her back to him. He had had his fill of his mate moving away from him, threatening to leave him and rejecting the very essence of his nature.

  Niall shrugged. “Barr and I have always been able to tell things from scent that others could not.”

  Sabrine turned back to face Barr, her expression almost accusing. “When did you realize?”

  “Three days past.”

  “And you said nothing.”

  He clamped his jaw, refusing to speak.

  “Perhaps he wanted you to decide to stay without the knowledge you were pregnant with his child,” Verica said softly, now wrapped safely in Earc’s arms.

  Barr scowled at her. She could keep her observations to herself.

  But Sabrine’s eyes had widened with understanding. “I’m sorry,” she said again.

  This time, he chose simply to nod an acknowledgment of her apology. It made no difference what prompted her regret.

  She had promised to come back and he trusted her word. So, she had made her choice to stay without knowing she carried his child.

  “I did not want to leave you.”

  “You were set to betray my brother and your mating bond. No Chrechte should be so callous to the gifts our natures bestow upon us.” Niall’s tone left little doubt that he was still angry over the insult Sabrine had dealt Barr.

  Meeting his brother’s eyes, Sabrine swallowed and nodded. “You are right.”

  “So, you are finished dismissing our mating as if it is of no account?” Barr pressed.

  Sabrine’s eyes filled with hurt. “
I said I would come back.”

  So, she did not like having her word doubted. No more did he.

  And he was not about to let her leave the clan without him. He would not have done so before she became pregnant, but now there was no chance.

  Surely she was wise enough to realize that.

  “I have your child in my womb? Truly?” The look of wonder in her gaze went far toward appeasing his anger.

  “Aye.” He frowned, unwilling to trust her apparent happiness considering her revulsion toward his wolf. “Do not discount my brother’s words. It is likely our child will be Faol.”

  “And it will grow up believing no Chrechte an abomination.” The smile that broke over her face was like the sun coming out after a storm.

  It lit the room around them and made him ache to make love to her, but the time for revelations had come.

  This time hers.

  “You said you had much to tell me.”

  She nodded, her delight dimming. “I do.”

  “Then we should retire to my bedchamber.”

  “Verica and Circin deserve to know more about their people.”

  Shock went through him with lightning-bolt intensity.

  But it was Earc who demanded of his mate, “Circin has a dual Chrechte nature as well?”

  The look of chagrin that passed over Sabrine’s features left no doubt she hadn’t meant to reveal another’s secrets.

  Verica sighed and looked up at her mate. “I should have told you.”

  “But it is no easy thing to trust another with the secrets you do not consider yours alone, is it?” Sabrine asked. “I am sorry I revealed Circin’s.”

  Verica shook her head. “No. It is all right. I trust those in this room, if for no other reason than my sacred bonded does.”

  The underlying message of Verica’s words was not lost on Sabrine, who cast a sidelong glance at Barr with a disgruntled frown.

  He gave her a look that demanded she answer the implications of the healer’s statement. He took nothing for granted with his mate.

  Sabrine took a deep breath and then turned to look at him and only him again. “I trust you and therefore, I trust those you hold in high esteem.”

  He could see how hard the words had been to utter and once again, the urge to join with her nearly overwhelmed him. She was finally truly his.

  “Good.”

  She frowned, but her brown eyes twinkled with something other than annoyance. “You are arrogant.”

 

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