Two Bears are Better Than One (Alpha Werebear Romance) (Broken Pine Bears Book 1)
Page 7
Rogue smiled an easy half-grin, and began nodding slowly. “Sure you did, sure,” he said. “I’m sure that’s exactly what happened.”
The two of them turned their attention back to Jill, who was still in more than a little shock. She let her arm flop limply down.
“Oops,” she said, as she squeezed where it landed, and realized what she had her hand around. King swelled larger in her palm, his shape apparent through the flimsy fabric covering he wore. “Sorry, I—”
Rogue silenced her with a kiss that forced her head backward against King’s chest.
The intensity, the power, with which terror had gripped Jill when the wolf was baring down on her melted away, replaced by a longing, a yearning, that was just as hard to swallow. “I want,” she whispered, then paused to gasp as a hand – she didn’t know whose – massaged between her legs, against the soft denim of her old jeans.
“What is it?” Rogue whispered as he kissed her neck.
“What do you want?” King asked, pulsing the fingers she just realized were his against her sex. “Tell me anything at all.”
Jill felt her mouth fall open again, but this time it was to draw in a hissing breath. “I want... this,” she whispered. “I want you, just like in the dreams.”
Rogue tilted her head backward with another ravishing kiss, and then nibbled on her chest. He grabbed her shirt and yanked the collar, popping the top two buttons off, sending them skittering to the ground.
His neck sucking kiss was halfway down her breast. He wrestled her bra off, ripping it slightly, and the kiss afterward swirled slowly around her nipple before he took her nib in his mouth.
She took a deep breath, inhaling the smell of these two massive creatures, as the cock in her hand swelled harder. Jill reached out with her other hand and found Rogue’s thigh. He adjusted his position, leading her hand to his bulge.
Her breath quickening, Jill tried to reach inside Rogue’s jeans, or underneath King’s strange garment, but instead found herself being moved and then laid backwards on the floor. “You’re big for a human,” King said. “But for a bear?” He smiled and kissed her foot, then slid a hand up her leg, before unbuttoning her jeans and sliding them off, over the gentle curve of her hips.
She tried to open her mouth and form some sort of reply, but before she could manage, a mouth opened around her, a tongue slid along her opening, warming her through the soft cotton of her panties.
“Her smell, brother,” Rogue said in a detached, intoxicated sort of way. He lowered himself between her legs, and inhaled her deeply. “She makes me feel things I’ve never felt before. She makes me burn, makes me ache.”
“She feels as good as she smells,” King whispered. “And she tastes...” he paused. Jill arched her back as a tongue slid down one side of her, and back up. She gasped when a finger pushed between her folds.
He groaned a long, low, rumbling groan that vibrated Jill to the core of her being. Delicious waves lapped up her stomach, raising a hot flush as they went. Rogue kissed her belly softly, then nibbled again at her breast before sucking her nipple in his mouth, swirling his tongue around her sweetly aching nib, and pushing a finger inside her, right alongside King’s.
Jill threw her head back, gasping at first, and then letting the attention, the pleasure, carry her away. She spread her legs, and took handfuls of both men’s hair, grinding both of them deeper.
Rogue’s tongue circled her clit, then flicked over the top. King sucked eagerly, harder than before. His hunger puckered her nipples, and before she knew it, the waves sliding over her body turned tight.
“Oh... oh God!” Jill gasped. “I can’t believe this, I’m... you’re making me.”
Another groan escaped King’s lips, as he and Rogue curled their fingers inside her.
“Squeeze,” she whispered. “Bite, squeeze, yes!”
The tiny muscles inside her pulled at the fingers. Every nerve in Jill’s body flared to life. For every bit of adrenaline that rushed through her with the wolves, her two bears, her two alphas – her two mates – made her feel the exact same, only with pleasure.
As the wave crested, Jill began to hum, to purr. She tried to speak, but no words came out, only more purring. Her hands fell to wood beneath, fists balling up as her climax erupted, and then relaxing as the afterglow washed over her.
“If it’s us you want,” King said, after a few blissful moments.
“Then fate has given you exactly what you – and we – need,” Rogue finished.
In the distance, another howl broke the silence. Rogue and King exchanged a glance that communicated more than words ever could. “We can’t stay,” Rogue said. “The lupines are... something’s got them riled up again. We have to get back to the cubs and make sure they’re safe.”
A last kiss, a last caress, and then Jill was alone with her thoughts, and the scent of her two bears lingering in the cool darkness.
-7-
“Run. And fast.”
-King
They shouldn’t be howling like this, King thought as he slid off his perch above the camp, and ordered the eldest cub to stand watch. Lupines don’t howl when there’s no reason. Either they killed something... or someone, or there’s something I need to know about.
His feet slapped against the ground, already bare, since he refused to clothe himself past a loincloth. He’d never seen the point, even though Rogue always wore ridiculous human clothes. What use did a clan bear have for all of that pointless fabric?
With each footstep, his body changed, twisting and contorting, until he was running on hands and toes, and then on four massive paws.
In the distance, the howling continued, growing more irritated with each passing moment.
Irritated? Or scared? He lifted his head to the sky as he entered a rare clearing in the Appalachian forest, staring at the moon for a moment, drinking up the light, taking its strength inside himself. Where are you, brother?
There was no telling. Even though they were connected, body, soul and blood, King hadn’t ever been the best at the psychic stuff. Overhead, a helicopter whipped past, black against the dark gray of the night sky. Clenching his jaws tight, King smelled the air, caught a whiff of distant exhaust, and smiled grimly to himself.
It’s a real good thing those damn lupines can’t keep themselves quiet. If not for them, I might have to actually try when I scout.
The chopper made a second pass. This time a spotlight boomed on, and flooded the woods on the other side of the grass-covered clearing King stood in. He could have retreated to the opposite trees, could have slinked off into the shadows, but he decided to keep his ground. He squinted up, barely able to make out the diffuse form of the aircraft against the sky.
The smell though. That exhaust, he’d know it anywhere.
As the helicopter disappeared against the horizon, the lupines howled again, and King re-entered the woods. His mind immediately transported back to the first time he smelled that scent.
Exhaust filled the air. His father, his mother, and the rest of the clan looked up, distracted from whatever their day’s tasks were. He and Rogue sparred, along with the rest of the clan’s warriors. Elsa, his first mate, had flipped him over on his back, and she was about to give him a claw across the chest when the first wave of odor filled the woods.
He blinked as he charged through the brambles, and low hanging branches scraped his eyes. He didn’t want to remember, but at the same time, he couldn’t forget. He could never forget, no matter how many years separated the tragedy and the present.
The smell preceded a lot of choking and sputtering and coughing, and then the cloud of smoke.
They were all taken – Elsa, Skye, and all the rest. He assumed they’d been taken, because if he considered the alternative, he couldn’t stand the pain in his heart.
King found himself walking slowly through the woods, and shook his head to gather his senses. There were other things to worry about right then, such as the wolves howling and
the helicopter overhead.
As he passed the small cabin where his mate was, he felt the familiar twinge in his chest. This time though, he knew what it was.
As he turned back to look one last time, a light in the cabin flicked on and then off.
And then, once again, the mark on his chest burned hotter. It couldn’t be. Could it? Could this feeling, this tight, sweet feeling of longing, one that he hadn’t felt for a long, long time, could it finally be real?
Doesn’t matter, he told himself. No time. Got howling lupines to deal with. Got a brother to find.
Again the wolves howled, probably a mile from where he was. But then, behind the baying, was another sound – a roar? Was that confusion or pain he heard? He took a deep breath. It didn’t matter. Whatever it was had come from Rogue. He’d know that voice anywhere.
*
Rogue thought only of his mate, who hadn’t yet realized that’s what she was, not really, as the wolves closed in. She said the words, she made love to them, and gave herself up, but she didn’t believe. Not yet.
Jaws snapped at his face, bringing Rogue back to the present problem – the wolves he thought were only a handful, turned out to be much more numerous. If only he hadn’t been distracted by thinking about Jill’s soft thighs, her floral-scented hair, her...
Not now, he told himself. Keep it together.
The wolf stood up on his back legs, took two swings, and then let his muscles thicken, so that he was stuck somewhere between wolf and man. Rogue took the swipe across his shoulder, roared in pain, and then closed his teeth on the wolf’s half-human claw when he swiped again. The scream didn’t surprise him, but the claw on his back, and then the fangs digging into his shoulder, did.
The other thing that surprised Rogue was how in the heat of the moment – in the fight that he used to live for; wolf against bear, snarling, biting, clawing, the only thing he thought of was Jill.
Her hair, her soft breathing, her smooth skin, and the way she smiled in her sleep when he bathed her with the cloth. He swung a paw, slashed another lupine across the face, sending him flying back into a tree with a desperate yelp, and then decided right that second, that he wasn’t just fighting for himself anymore.
He was fighting for her, and for his brother, and for the rest of the clan. He was fighting for the future, and the wolves – and that helicopter that kept circling overhead – weren’t going to do the first damn thing to stop him.
The helicopter came around again, lower than last time, spotlighting the woods fifty feet away from the brawl. Whatever they were looking for, he thought, they weren’t doing a very good job of focusing on the real action. It swept down low, but at just that moment, Rogue was busy fending off one attack and biting down on another leg that carelessly got close enough to his mouth for him to chomp.
A thump preceded a loud whooshing sound.
Something thumped against his hindquarters.
A sharp pain.
Coursing numbness that made one of his legs freeze, and then made his back ache before it, too went numb. He rolled to the side, dodging another sloppy, wild wolf claw, and shot an uppercut straight into the chin of the one who threw it.
Vision... blurring, he thought, lurching forward and taking another bite to the back of his head.
Without thinking about it, he shifted halfway back to human, and reached behind himself.
He cried out, stumbled twice, and clawed at the place where the numbness started. One of his gropes knocked loose a dart, but the damage was already done.
The world around him started to darken. Another claw ripped deep into Rogue’s leg, and he somehow turned aside at the last possible moment to avoid a swipe that would have cut his throat.
Nothing made sense.
Panic, seething and terrible, filled his mind. Jill fought for attention in his brain, but she was losing to the oblivion of agony.
A lupine lunged, and he took hold of its throat, his hand closing more from a muscular reaction to the drug than out of his own strength. Either way, it did the job. The monster whimpered and went limp.
Rogue’s knee hit the ground, squishing into the rotten leaves and broken twigs.
Rain, he thought, started to fall. Although it was hard to tell if it was actually rain, or just sweat pouring into his raw, dry eyes.
A lupine dove for him. Rogue tried to lift an arm, but it was no good. He was useless, helpless, a half-dead sack of skin and bones and muscle.
But as the creature went for his throat, he thought first of Jill, then of his brother.
Brother?
A roar split the night, followed by a massive tan body, followed by a wolf thrown backward by the impact of a shoulder. It yelped, it grunted, and then retreated, limping, into the woods.
“Brother!” King snarled. “Can you hear me?”
Rogue groaned incoherently, slobbering more than speaking. His eyes were mostly closed, his lips barely moving.
Numbness still gripped him, but instead of getting worse, second by second, the fuzziness eased. For a moment, the brothers fought together, slinging wolves from side to side, cracking skulls, breaking arms that healed moments later. Lupines are relentless, especially under the moon’s light.
The pack was weakening, but so were King and Rogue. Blood ran down their fur, but they kept fighting, kept clawing and biting. They couldn’t stop before the lupines stopped, or they’d have no chance.
Again the helicopter swooped around, but this time when Rogue stole a glance upward, he saw the man who’d darted him. Wearing a loose fitting, open collared dress shirt, he had some kind of device attached to his head that must’ve been how he saw to fire. He wore dark fatigues, combat boots, and was shaved clean from head to toe. His face was ragged, like he’d been torn apart and put back together.
There was something strangely familiar about him, but nothing Rogue could place – more a distant memory than anything else.
The man just watched, staring at the melee, but not moving. Then he stepped back, and the sliding door retracted. Just like that, he was gone.
King hadn’t noticed, he’d just kept fighting, which turned out to be a very good thing when he turned a wolf’s head aside at the last minute with a crushing swipe of his paw that sent the creature flying and screeching.
Still groggy from the drug, Rogue turned back to the action, barely dodging one thrashing, half-human claw. Another caught him on the jaw, turning his head with a painful wrench. He grunted in pain and fell to the ground in a semi-conscious daze.
“Brother!” King growled. “Get up!”
Rogue pitched to the side, rolling onto a half-shifted elbow. When he was injured, he found it difficult to concentrate on keeping one shape or another, so he went back and forth. Still, he shook himself, keeping his wits enough to knock a wolf off his brother’s back.
But it was going too long. There were too many lupines, and too few bears.
These fights weren’t uncommon, although in the recent weeks they’d grown more frequent. In years past, they’d have these wild throw downs once a season or so, but now? It was getting hard to remember a week that went by without something happening.
Another wild sweep of claw came from Rogue’s left. He stumbled backward, dodging out of the way and then throwing a hook that connected with wolf jaw, crunching hard.
Breathing heavily, his muscular chest heaving in the moonlight, Rogue unleashed a roar that shook the earth. The lupines froze, staring at him, eyeing him suspiciously. “Enough!” he shouted. King, for his part, stood on his back bear legs, and clawed himself before dropping back to the ground with a heavy thump.
The wolves ringed them, spreading out more and more as the moments ticked by.
“What’s wrong with them?” King asked. “Don’t you see their eyes?”
Rogue looked at the nearest one as he backed away, and squinted into the darkness. King stood again, shifting to the same half-bear form as his brother. His snout was shorter, his muscles thick and
burly, fur lining his tight, tanned, sweat-covered skin. “Look how they move. The lupines don’t normally act like this.”
“The helicopter?” Rogue asked. “The man who shot me? Do you think he’s got something to do with their frenzy?”
King shook his head.
The two circled, back to back, as the wolves retreated.
A breeze from overhead cascaded down onto the two. Rogue and King exchanged a quick glance, and then looked up at the underside of a metal beast they should have heard approaching.
Blinding, intense, white-hot light flooded the forest where the two alphas stood. Rogue shielded his eyes, stunned momentarily.
King backhanded his brother, snapping him back to reality. “Run!” he shouted. “Quickly!”
Their dash into the forest began with one brother dragging the second, but moments later, Rogue came back to himself. The two ran as men at first, then went to the ground as bears, shouldering through the thick, prickly undergrowth.
The wolves had stopped howling. All the noise, in fact, had stopped. The throbbing, whipping chopper blades seemed to fall silent. The whole forest was silent.
As they ran, generally in the direction of the clan camp, they whizzed by Jill’s cabin. “King!” Rogue shouted. “We can’t leave her!”
King nodded, but he looked distracted.
Rogue laughed bitterly, wiping blood from the corner of his mouth. Most of his wounds were closing, but the claw marks running down the side of his face still stung each time air kissed his broken skin.
“What was that?” King interrupted him, placing a hand on his brother’s chest. “Listen.”
Rustling leaves, crackling branches and roots. Something approached the modest cabin, something much closer to it than were the two bears. A faint whining sound met their ears. “A lupine?” King hissed. “How?”
The answer didn’t matter.
A snarl came first, and then the sound of shattering glass.
And then a scream.
-8-
“Seen one pile of fluff dust, seen ‘em all.”