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Tied to the Barbarian Warrior

Page 91

by Abella Ward


  But she didn't regret the decision to get pregnant. She wanted a baby, and she was going to have one.

  Iduna inhaled the fresh air. Her small Bear Shifter community was fairly isolated, made up mostly of farmers and orchardists, and they preferred to go about their business on foot or with their Bears. Rarely did people around here use vehicles, even though everybody had a car. The result was that the air was clean and fresh, and the community cozy and quiet. It was one of the reasons why Iduna enjoyed living here so much. She could breathe without worrying about the effects of pollution on her lungs.

  An unfamiliar scent caught her nose and she turned.

  Her eyes widened and her heart rate spiked when she saw the man walking towards her. He wasn't a Bear. That was clear. He walked with a certain amount of dominance and grace, not the heavy-footed steps that she was accustomed to. His dark hair was just starting to gray at the ends, and crow's feet spread from the corner of his eyes. Iduna guessed he was around forty. His skin was a milky color, indicating he was more of an office worker than an outdoorsman.

  And he was beautiful. Iduna willed her heart to slow down, a little concerned about her reaction. There were plenty of good-looking men in the community, so why were hormones flooding her system now? That in itself was odd. She could count on one hand the amount of times she had been sexually attracted to someone.

  Well, it would be over soon enough. As soon as they started talking he'd start sounding like an idiot and her attraction would die as suddenly as it had blossomed.

  "Hello," she said.

  "Hello." He took off his ball cap. "Are you Iduna Hudson?"

  Iduna blinked in surprise. "Do I know you?"

  "No. I… this is weird, I know, and I apologize if I make you uncomfortable. But I'm the donor."

  What donor? Iduna gasped as her baby kicked again, eyes going wide. Of course. "You mean the sperm donor that I chose when I was artificially impregnated?"

  "Yeah. I'm that donor."

  "I see." She peered at him closely and nodded once. He was just as she had been assured of at the clinic. "How did you find me?"

  "You signed some papers that let the clinic tell me how to contact you. May I sit?"

  Iduna nodded, shifting to give him room. The man sat. Now that he was closer, the Bear could smell ink toner and a spicy scent to him. She leaned forward unconsciously, sniffing. Her heart rate picked up again and she felt her hands start to tremble. Her reaction surprised her and frightened her a little bit.

  She had ultimately decided to go ahead with AI at her young age because she wanted to be able to do the things with her baby that her parents had never been able to do with her. Everybody had asked why she chose AI instead of finding her mate. The answer was simple. She had met every Bear shifter for miles around, and quite a few humans, too. None of them were for her. None of them had her blood roaring like this man.

  And she didn't even know what his name was.

  "You're a Wolf!" she cried in surprise, detecting the distinctive scent of dog around him. "Or you live with one."

  "I'm a Wolf," he confirmed. "Didn't the clinic tell you?"

  She shook her head. She had requested a Bear Shifter's donation, but apparently either the sperm samples had gotten mixed up, or they didn't care. Given the way she was treated after revealing she was a Bear herself, the latter wouldn't surprise Iduna. Anti-Shifter tensions were high around here.

  "So." Iduna looked at him. "Who are you?"

  "I'm sorry. My name is Stephen Jackson."

  "Stephen. It means crown, honor. A kingly title. It's Greek."

  "Is it? I never knew." Stephen's smile was relaxed. "I don't think I have any Greek ancestry, but my grandfather's name was Stephen. Strange, come to think of it. The way names end up so far from their origins."

  Iduna nodded. "Yeah, it’s strange how names can spread through cultures. But why are you here? All your donation records were sealed. I thought it meant you didn't want to be contacted."

  "I didn't. When I made the donation I was feeling… frustrated. I don't have a mate, and the idea of having a child anyway was appealing to me."

  "And why look me up now?"

  Stephen looked away. "I was in an accident recently. It left me infertile."

  "Oh." Iduna clasped her hands on her knees. A rush of sympathy went through her, mixed with some disappointment as well. But what did she have to be disappointed about? "Just infertile or impotent as well?"

  Stephen's jaw dropped. "What?"

  "Are you still able to have sex?"

  Iduna's brow furrowed. It was a simple, straightforward question, wasn't it? Why was he shocked? Sometimes people baffled her.

  "I, uh…"

  "I said something wrong, didn't I?" Iduna bit her lip. "I'm always doing this. Mommy says I don't have a filter."

  "Mommy? How old are you?"

  "Twenty-five. I like the phonetics of Mommy better than other maternal nicknames."

  "I… see." Stephen ran a hand through his dark, graying hair. "Well, to answer your question… I can't have children anymore. And that's why I sought you out. I was hoping that I could be part of this baby's life somehow. I always wanted kids, and this is my only chance now."

  Iduna bit on her lip, stopping herself from blurting out an immediate yes. She couldn't just answer based on the sexual attraction she felt towards him. A commitment based on hormones was not a chance worth taking.

  "We need to get to know each other better first," she decided. "If you are going to be a part of the baby's life, you'll be a part of my life as well, and I want to make sure that our personalities are compatible before any decision is made."

  "Fair enough," Stephen said. " I mean, I understand if you don't want to. You must have a reason why you chose to go with AI rather than with your mate…"

  A scowl crossed her face. Her parents had made her wait two years after she decided to go with AI to make sure that she was certain she didn't want to wait for her mate. The fact was that everybody else she knew already had found their mates by the time they were her age. Twenty-five wasn't old by any means, but she had her life planned out and it didn't involve pining around for somebody she didn't even know. The chances that there was even a mate out there for her were slim to none.

  Besides, she didn't like to be around people. She would want to share everything with him, and she'd drive him crazy like she drove everybody crazy. A mate would only be one more person who didn't really understand her.

  "I don't have a mate and I'm not looking for one," she replied, a little more harshly than necessary. "I was just heading home. You can come meet my parents."

  Stephen had the familiar surprised look that people had after talking with her for a little while, but he smiled at her invitation.

  "Good." Iduna nodded. "Let's go, then."

  ***

  The Hudson home was in the middle of town. Well, the residential area of town, at least. It was only a ten-minute walk from the grocery store, fifteen minutes from Main Street, twenty to Iduna's favorite restaurant, and forty from the library. Sixty-five if Mrs. Hart saw her walking and decided to demand to know every little detail of how her father's business was going.

  Stephen insisted that he drive her, even though Iduna had told him that exercise was vital to a healthy pregnancy and that she was far enough along that if labor was induced the baby would still be plenty developed. For some reason, that didn't change his mind at all.

  Her parents were working in the greenhouse garden like they did every day since the two of them retired as teachers at the local high school and started a flower nursery. Both her parents looked alarmed when Iduna introduced Stephen to them and told them who he was and why he was there. Her mother, Charity, shook her head when Iduna was finished.

  "I know that this is all a surprise," Stephen said. "It's a surprise for me as well. But I want you to know that everything is up to Iduna. I'll respect her decision, no matter what decision she makes."

  Iduna c
lasped her mother's hand. "I invited Stephen to stay for supper."

  "I hate to intrude," Stephen said. "I don't want to put you out at all."

  Iduna's father, Tyson, made a low noise in his throat the way he did when he was upset, but her mother intervened, smiling at Stephen.

  "It's no trouble. And you," her mother pointed at Iduna. "Go sit down and put up your feet. Don't argue with me, just because you've read every baby book written doesn't mean I don't know what I'm talking about. I hope you've been drinking water today."

  Iduna sighed but went inside as her mother followed. Her father and Stephen lingered outside.

  "Mr. Jackson and I will talk a little," Tyson said.

  Iduna couldn't help but be disappointed. The last thing she wanted was for Stephen to be driven away by her father, who could be a little overprotective at times.

  In the living room, her mother made her sit on the couch with a pillow under her feet and sat next to her. She had the 'we need to talk' expression on her face and Iduna flinched. She was twenty-five years old, but her parents still treated her like she was a teenager–or even younger–sometimes.

  "What are you thinking?" her mother asked.

  "That water retention is paradoxically caused by not drinking enough water."

  Her mother sighed. "I mean with this Jackson man. He's far too old to be your mate."

  "Mommy, I never said that he was my mate. I said that he was the sperm donor who fathered my child."

  "I heard what you said. But I also saw the way you looked at him. He's old enough to be your father!"

  Iduna frowned. "He can't be more than fifteen or twenty years older than me. I suppose technically he's old enough to be my father, but on average—"

  "Don't get smart with me."

  That again. Iduna folded her arms and was silent. She wasn't trying to 'get smart', she was just being logical. Her parents were teachers, they should know these things. Unfortunately, Iduna had been cursed to live in a community that thought she was a know-it-all. Just because she knew more than them. But there was so much she didn't know and wanted to. If they only knew what facts she kept inside her head…

  "The point is that I saw how you looked at him. It's the same look you get when there is a new shipment of books in at the library. He's too old. You tell Mr. Fancy Pants to pack up and go, do you hear me? I'm not going to have a man like that take advantage of a naive girl like you."

  "I am not na—"

  The crack of a gunshot interrupted her.

  Chapter Two – Stephen

  Stephen had just finished explaining his intentions, and reiterating that ultimately his involvement in the baby's life was up to Iduna when a gunshot made him jump. Before he could even process it, more gunfire erupted. He dropped instinctively. A hail of bullets rushed over his head. A truck, splattered with mud, drove by. Half a dozen men were in the back of the truck firing hunting rifles and semi-automatic weapons into the air.

  There was a ground-splitting roar beside him. Tyson sprang to his feet, more lithely than Stephen would expect from someone with such white hair, and charged the truck. His form shifted smoothly into that of a giant bear, brown fur glistening.

  Another roar sounded from inside the house, and Stephen was just able to roll out of Charity's path. He pushed himself to his knees. Bears were tearing out of their houses all down the street, charging the truck from every direction. The men with the guns, faces obscured by goggles and mud, laughed and continued to shoot their weapons.

  Stephen scrambled to his feet and rushed into the house. "Iduna!"

  She was on the floor in the living room, wrapped around her belly, her eyes wide. "Stephen?"

  He threw herself over her as more bullets tore through the air. Glass shattered. Stephen cupped her head with his hands, using his body to shield her. His Wolf growled and beat against his chest. Normally it wasn't this strong except during the Full Moon.

  "I should be out there," Iduna whispered. "I should be helping drive them away. Or catch them. We need to catch them. They're always coming. Nobody has died yet but last time three of the children were injured."

  Stephen crouched, focusing on the sound of the vehicle outside. It was fading into the distance. He stroked Iduna's tight black curls, a sense of protectiveness rearing its head. He had never wanted to be part of violence and for that reason had elected not to participate in the Alpha trials that his Wolf community had held when the old Alpha died without an heir. It just wasn't the kind of Wolf he was.

  But if any of those gun-toting idiots came into this house, he'd kill them before letting them hurt Iduna.

  "Are you hurt?" he asked her as the gunfire stopped abruptly, replaced by the sound of squealing tires.

  She shook her head. "I just haven't been able to shift since I got pregnant. I don’t know why."

  "Does this happen often?" He pulled back and helped her sit.

  Her liquid black eyes were wide and a gleam of perspiration coated her dark skin, but she seemed remarkably calm. "Often? Perhaps. It's becoming more frequent and more destructive."

  "Who are they?"

  "Humans. Anti-Shifter zealots. We think they're from the nearby human city, but we can't get the police to take us seriously. They say it's just harmless pranks or that it's out of their jurisdiction. Most of the people in the community have started talking about shooting back, but I think—do you smell smoke?"

  Stephen raised his head. There was a distinctive scent of smoke and gasoline in the air. His Wolf growled again. He wrapped his arms around Iduna's slender waist, hefting her to her feet before he rushed to the door. Red flames were licking up around the porch of the house across the street.

  Harmless pranks? How could anybody not take this seriously? Stephen threw the door open.

  "Fire!" he shouted, running towards the building. "Fire!"

  The sound of an engine made him whip around. The mud-splattered truck was screeching down the street again. The humans in the truck laughed as they lobbed out small, smoking containers at the houses and bushes. Wherever these hit, flames burst into the air.

  Stephen had turned back to the house before he realized what he was doing. There was only one thought in his head. These humans were out for blood, and he would not let them hurt Iduna.

  She stood in the doorway to the house, eyes wide, a hand pressed to her mouth. He lifted her bodily, racing for his car. They had only seconds before the truck would be on them. A stream of curses flew from his mouth as he kicked open the car door and slid Iduna in. She was saying something, but he couldn't hear her over the noise of the truck. He jumped into his own seat.

  The car roared to life. Stephen slammed the gas pedal to the floor, and they shot off. The whine of the engine filled his ears.

  "My parents," Iduna gasped, leaning between the two front seats. "I don't have my phone!"

  Stephen hesitated a moment, slowing down. He glanced in the rearview mirror. They were on the road that headed out of town, which was the same road the truck and those zealots would follow.

  He could see that a horde of Bears was almost on the truck now and it sped up, heading straight for them. Stephen stepped on the gas again. There wasn't time to swerve out of their way. He would just have to outrun them, find a place to get out of their way.

  One of the men hung out of the window, aiming his rifle at them as they fled. Stephen's lungs locked. This was no harmless prank. These people wanted to kill. Iduna whimpered something about her parents.

  "Get down," Stephen shouted, pressing the gas down as far as it would go.

  He gripped the steering wheel, his knuckles white as he flew by buildings. The truck gained on them.

  Crack!

  The window shattered. Iduna screamed.

  Stephen smelled blood. It curled around his nostrils, sweet like honeysuckle, raw as a fresh kill, as biting as a winter's wind. His Wolf rose howling, fury in his bones. His teeth sharpened in his mouth and a growl rose in him as his Wolf stopped just below t
he surface. He had never wanted to kill before. He had never wanted to tear out someone's throat and watch as the life faded from their eyes. Not until that moment.

  Another gunshot rang in his ears, but all he could hear were Iduna's soft whimpers of pain.

  He yanked hard on the steering wheel, slamming on the brakes at the same time. They swung in a circle, just avoiding being rammed by the truck. The hunters shot past him. Stephen didn't wait to see if they would slow down or come back for them. He leaped from the car and ran at them, howling as fury poured through his veins.

  The familiar sensation of his Wolf surfacing spread through his body. His skin prickled, sight sharpened. He could see the blue eyes of the man with the gun widen as the Wolf made one tremendous leap. The human shouted. The truck swerved.

  Stephen landed with all four paws on the bed of the truck. His howl was cut short as he seized the first man by the leg and yanked hard. The human yelled, his rifle slipping from his hands. Another of the hunters aimed but Stephen rolled, snarling as his body stretched over the first man. The second hunter pulled back.

  The Wolf rolled again, shifting as he did so. He grabbed the gun, swinging around to point it at the other hunters. The one he had brought down lashed out. A fist slammed Stephen's face. The Wolf swung the gun blindly, grinning when it connected with flesh. But his triumph didn’t last long. The hunter that had hit him grabbed him by the throat. His teeth were bared in a savage snarl, gray eyes burning with hatred. The human all but threw Stephen off the truck.

  The ground tore at his arms and shoulders as Stephen rolled on impact. The rifle was still clutched in his hands. He struggled to draw in breath as he aimed for the truck and let off a wild shot. The sound of a slug hitting the truck echoed between the trees. Tires squealed as the hunters fled. Stephen scrambled to his feet, firing the gun again and again, not even realizing when he ran out of bullets until the truck was no longer in sight.

 

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