Read Scent of Valor (Chronicles of Eorthe #2) Online
Authors: Annie Nicholas
Tags: #alternate world, #werewolf, #shapeshifter, #vampire, #Fantasy, #second chances, #thriller
Benic didn’t see their quarry.
Ahote pointed to the stage. “We can’t leave them here.”
“I can’t afford to buy them all. Unlike common belief, I really don’t have gold running in my veins.”
“Not all of them. Those four at the end. Two of them are Payami and the others I recognize as Yaundeeshaw.”
Benic clenched his jaw until the joints popped. “We buy them, then what?”
Ahote bent his tall frame to meet his glare. “We set them free. Let them go home.”
“Very well.” He yanked his arm from Ahote’s hold. Maybe this small gesture could soften Sorin’s fury if he couldn’t find Peder.
They waited until those four came for sale individually and bought each one for a better price than he’d thought possible. The four were packaged in chains and handed over to Ahote, who held the chain as if it were coated in acid.
“My servant is greedy when it comes to his rewards.” He pressed his ring into the melted wax, sealing the transaction on the bill of purchase. “These four tell me you have a white wolf.” They’d actually said that Peder, Kele and Nahuel had all been taken away this afternoon and hadn’t been seen since. Had they already been sold?
The auctioneer shook his head. “Nothing exotic like that has passed through my doors in months.”
“I’m sure they didn’t make up such a story. They were captured with her.”
He shrugged. “Don’t know. Don’t care.” He handed him his slip of ownership. “Nice doing business with you, my lord.”
Benic rolled a gold coin over his knuckles. “If the white wolf, or a golden one, turns up on your block, you send someone to fetch me at my hotel before you auction them away.”
The auctioneer caught the coin and licked his lips. “Always like working with someone who knows what he wants.” He tipped his hat to them.
Chapter Nineteen
Peder sat in a small cell with Nahuel for gloomy company. When he had agreed to the challenge, he hadn’t known they would take the Yaundeeshaw hunter as well. It seemed foolhardy to send the two injured hunters to fight. They’d been given a good meal of fresh meat and bread with ale. Now, they waited under the fighting arena.
“What are your strategies?”
Peder gave Nahuel a slow blink. “For what?”
“When you fight, what strategies do you use?” Nahuel sat on the floor across from him. Eyes closed, he rested his head against the wall. If he hadn’t spoken, Peder would have thought he was praying.
Sorin’s teachings sprang to mind. “I’m as tall as most hunters, but I lack the muscle to take them down by brute force. My alpha has been teaching me to use my body to counterweight their attacks and to use pressure points in joints to immobilize them.”
Nahuel’s eyebrows both rose. He peered at him through cracked eyelids. “Most hunters would have just said to win.”
Peder gave him a sheepish grin. “That too.”
“What are your loss to win relations?”
There were no holes to crawl in. Nahuel didn’t know him except that he was Apisi. That he treated him like a hunter helped Peder act like a hunter. He couldn’t lie. Nahuel would smell it. “One one. You?” He said it as if all hunters should have such scores.
Nahuel lifted his head slowly. “One one? As in you’ve won a single fight and lost a single fight?”
He nodded, unable to voice anything due to the constriction growing around his throat.
“So you’ve only fought two challenges? Ever?”
“They weren’t exactly challenges. I’m including the fight in the holding pen and the one with Timothy.” He stared at the floor, not willing to look at the incredulity in Nahuel’s eyes. Peder thought he’d done pretty well so far. Timothy did place them in this event. He wouldn’t do that unless he believed they’d win.
Nahuel leaned forward and grasped his chin so he’d be forced to meet his friend’s wide-eyed stare. “So you’re not really a hunter?”
“I’m omega.”
“But you said your alpha’s been training you. Alphas don’t train just anyone—unless he thinks there’s alpha in you.” Nahuel was on his knees now. “And omegas don’t fight. You’re full of surprises, Peder.” He clapped his shoulder. Hard.
Peder clenched his teeth and held back the wince. His bruises from the caning were abundant. “I don’t know about alpha, but I’ve been changing.” He recalled the other shifters kneeling to him in the pen. Alpha of slaves. What a sorry title. “It doesn’t matter. We’re here now and have to win otherwise—” He swallowed hard. “You heard what he’ll do to Kele.”
Nahuel nodded, solemn again. “How do you want to approach this?”
“I don’t know. I’ve never fought in pairs before. What do you suggest?” Nahuel had more experience than he. Maybe they played such sports in the Yaundeeshaw den.
“Stay out of the fight at first. Let me test their strengths and weaknesses. I’ll call them out as I spot them.” He rubbed his ear. “We’re both young. We can tire them out before attacking.”
“Sounds good.” Any plan was better than no plan. He could follow directions well. “But that leaves you the target for most of the attacks.”
“You’re more injured than I am.”
Peder chuckled. “This is nothing. A few years ago, I walked around like this all the time.” Pain tolerance didn’t seem to fade with time. He hurt but it was like a faded bad memory. It made him uncomfortable but didn’t affect him.
Nahuel didn’t share his laugh.
Clearing his throat, Peder reached for the bucket of water the slavers had left for them and took a deep drink.
“I heard things about your pack.” Nahuel rolled a pebble back and forth between his fingers and crouched in front of him. “As a pup, I used to have nightmares about the Apisi.”
Peder passed him the water. “I won’t eat you in your sleep.” Would Nahuel’s nightmares compare to his? He doubted it. He had lived with the monster, not been told stories about him.
“No, that’s not what I mean.” He drank and looked away. “If I’d thought there’d been any truth to the stories…”
Peder frowned. “There’s nothing anyone could have done. He was our alpha. Any challenges to him would have been an act of war and I think the hunters would have followed him out of loyalty to the den.” He shook his head. “It’s done. Sorin saved us.” He had saved Peder. He wouldn’t let his teachings go to waste. They would win this challenge. If for nothing else than to prove to himself that he truly possessed a hunter’s heart.
The sounds of the crowd grew louder. Someone was making announcements.
Timothy arrived at their cell door. “Listen up. You’ll be in the second fight. It runs like challenges. First one out of the ring loses. This isn’t to the death. You kill someone then I have to pay for their corpse. That means I’ll take the price out of your hide. Am I clear?”
Peder nodded. “Sir?”
He raised an eyebrow. “What did you call me?”
“Master?”
“What is it, Goldie?” He folded his thick arms over his chest.
“Where is Kele?” She’d arrived with them, then Timothy had taken her away.
Timothy gave him a secretive smile. “She’s well. Don’t worry. I’ll keep my word.” Then he left Peder clutching the bars.
“You can’t protect her forever. In fact, I think you’re making it worse.” Nahuel rested his hand on his shoulder.
Peder thumped his forehead against the metal bar. “I know. I know. But I can’t help it.” Throwing his weight back, he released the cage door and paced the small space. “She’s been under my skin since the first time I met her. I’m like a rabid dog when someone tries to hurt her. I can’t think straight, I can’t sleep.”
“Love is a grand thing, isn’t it?” Nahuel had returned to his original spot with his back to the wall, his eyes closed.
The crowd cheered above them. Growls and a sharp whine broke through the other noises.
“I’m sorry. It’s callous of me to speak of her with you.” Peder chuckled. Nahuel and Kele’s mating ceremony felt like years ago instead of days. “I don’t mean any disrespect.”
Nahuel didn’t respond.
A sinking feeling crept into Peder. “Do you love her?”
Finally, the other hunter smiled. “No. I didn’t even know her name until a few moments before the slavers attacked, but she loves you. I can smell it on her. The whole ride here in that damn small cage. You both reeked of it.”
“I’m sorry.” He couldn’t stop saying it. Part of it was his omega conditioning, but part of it was he truly felt like he had stolen a treasure from Nahuel.
“You shouldn’t be. She’s beautiful and maybe one day we might have loved each other.” He shrugged. “Now all I can hope for is to survive another day.”
The announcer began speaking again, but his voice was too muffled to hear the words.
Guards opened their door. “You’re next.”
They filed out and were led to the ring. Torchlights surrounded the circle and kept the spectators in the shadows. The scent of blood and sweat tainted the air. Two large males made of gristle and rough edges stood in the center. They’d already dropped their clothes outside the ring.
He and Nahuel added theirs to the pile.
The announcer introduced them by name. The crowd cheered for their opponents, clearly the favorites.
Nahuel stood with a relaxed stance and leaned close to his ear. “We’re in trouble.”
Peder’s spine snapped straight. Kele couldn’t afford for them to lose. He turned to face Nahuel, but he’d already left Peder’s side and shifted to feral. The others had as well. He automatically thought of his trigger memory and embraced his body’s change.
The announcer raced from the ring.
As they had agreed, he kept to edges and observed Nahuel’s tactics. His friend feinted his first two attacks, one for each hunter.
They reacted differently. The first jumped back and the second jumped forward, attacking Nahuel in return and taking the fight to the ground.
Nahuel held the other’s head as he snapped his sharp teeth at his throat. The fight wasn’t supposed to be to the death, yet the pouncing hunter acted like he wanted life blood.
The crowd’s roar seemed louder than the previous fight, but he’d been under the ring at the time. It hit his ears as if the cheers were a physical blow. He spun and stared into the dark. Was Kele watching?
Peder couldn’t seem to draw in enough air. His chest heaved but the suffocation grew worse.
A sharp whimper of pain returned his attention to the fight. Both hunters were on Nahuel now. This wasn’t a regular challenge. The spectators wanted blood and the attacking shifters were animals—they’d lost what made them civil.
With a snarl, Peder leaped into the fray. Claws extended, muzzle open he landed on the closest hunter.
If they wanted blood, he’d make them drown in it.
Chapter Twenty
Kele sat alone in a cell under the fighting ring. The battle noises drifted down until she could focus on nothing else. Was that Peder’s howl of pain? Or his snarl? She sat by the barred door and pressed her face against the cool metal. Sometimes a guard would pass but none paid her heed, except one who’d told his comrade that she belonged to Timothy and wasn’t to be touched. She took small consolation in his words. After this event, she doubted the cat shifter would keep his word.
Dread anchored in her stomach and weighed her down. No matter what happened, she would not lie quiet like some omega female. They’d meet an alpha in training when they tried to touch her body. She held no illusion that she’d escape her fate but at least, she could travel to the dark and meet her goddess with her head held high.
If the Goddess existed…Kele wanted to pray. She found solace in it, but if prayers fell upon deaf ears—or nothing at all—she just couldn’t muster the strength to even try. The Goddess had turned her back on her people long ago and the last hope of her return had died in Kele.
Heavy footsteps treaded to her door and Timothy crouched in front of her, his dark gaze angry. “Goldie did well in the ring, but he’s hurt.”
She scurried to her feet. “I’m a healer. Let me tend him.”
His gaze narrowed.
She fell to her knees and bowed her head to the dirt as if he were her alpha. “Please, master.” Anything to see Peder, to care for him, as he’d done so many times for her. In her soul, she knew he’d fought for her, that he believed Timothy would keep his word about not raping her. Peder had such a noble heart, even after everything he’d been through.
“That’s better.” The lock clanked and the door squeaked open. “Come with me. Behave and I’ll let you tend to his fucking wounds.”
She walked next to him, silently urging him to hurry his steps, but the waves of fury flowing off his body held her tongue. She fisted the sides of her torn dress, somehow managing to swallow her sharp-edged words. For all she knew, Peder was bleeding to death. Alone.
Outside the arena waited a cart pulled by a mule. Nahuel sat inside.
She hurried to look over the edge. Peder lay on his side, his head cradled in Nahuel’s lap and his skin awash in smeared blood. “No.” She leaped into the cart and ran her hands over his bared chest. Someone had tossed his kilt over his hips but had not belted it.
He turned his head at her cry. “I’m fine.” The words came out strained and less than fine.
“You know better than to lie to me.”
He gave her a weak sheepish grin. “We won.”
Timothy whipped the reins and the cart rocked as they started forward.
Superficial cuts, the start of a few bruises, and swelling around his left eye. He didn’t look like he’d won. Where had all this blood come from? She rolled him on his back, even though he protested with a groan. There. A long slice ran along his flank. “He’ll need stitches.” The wound wasn’t deep enough to bleed this amount though. He shouldn’t even be conscious. She glanced at Nahuel. “What about you?”
He gave her a wan smile. “Nothing serious.” She noted his skin was covered in blood too. He caught where her gaze traveled. “Peder saved my life. He killed both hunters.”
Peder’s dull stare remained pinned to the side of the cart. “They were both mad and had to be put down.” The words sounded hollow. Sometimes when a shifter remained in his feral form too long he forgot how to act civil. And sometimes shifters were just born that way. They were usually killed as pups because of the danger to the pack when they grew too big and strong.
She stroked his matted hair. It couldn’t have been easy for him. He probably hadn’t taken another’s life before, but secretly, part of her was proud of him. This was an act of an alpha. Nahuel hadn’t felt the urge to kill, but Peder had.
They pulled into the slaver’s compound. Timothy rested his arms on the edge of the cart. “You both lost me a lot of money tonight.”
Peder snorted. “You sent us in to lose.”
“You proved me wrong. Didn’t you? Taught me a lesson about betting against my own. And on top of it, I have to pay for those shifters you killed.” He spat on the ground then gestured to his guards. Pointing to Nahuel, he said, “Take him back to the pen. Put these other two in a single cell and give her what she needs to fix him.”
She warned off the guards from touching Peder since she didn’t trust them to be gentle. “Can you walk?” Sliding her shoulder under his, she helped him to the side of the cart.
“Sure.” He stood and weaved, but with her guidance they made it to a hall parallel to the holding cage. Single cells much like the arena’s lined one side of the wall, all of which were empty.
She led them into the closest one and blinked at the cot. Why didn’t they give the slaves these cots if they weren’t being used?
Peder melted onto the bed and sighed as if bone weary.
“I need something to stitch his wounds, clean water, and bandages. Oh, and some hard spirits.”
The guard raised his eyebrow. “Anything else, princess?”
“No.” She waved him away and turned her back on them so they wouldn’t see how the title hurt. Peder had called her the same the first time they’d met, except he’d meant it as a compliment. She wouldn’t let them turn that endearment into something she’d hate.
Kele sat on the edge of the bed and stroked his hair. “I’m going to take care of you.”
Grabbing her wrist, he brought it to the gland behind his ear and gave her a temporary mark. It was how a male of their people let a female know he was interested in her as a mate. If she refused him, she only had to wash it off.
She stared at the spot where his scent now permeated her skin. No male had ever marked her.
“You’re mine, Kele. I mean it. I killed for it tonight.” A new darkness surrounded Peder. She’d seen it as soon as she’d laid eyes upon him in the cart. “They almost killed Nahuel when we stepped in the circle. But that’s not what made me do it. I needed to keep you safe and those shifters wouldn’t have cared about a silly ring in the dirt.” His glare never left hers as if he dared her to flinch as he told her what had happened. “When I attacked, I went straight for the kill. I didn’t even give them a chance.”
“You couldn’t have. They were a danger to everyone in that arena. It was foolish for the slavers to let them fight.” She brought her marked wrist to her nose and inhaled. He smelled of sunshine-warmed Eorthe, and she recalled what her father had said in one of their last conversations. Sometimes alphas have to kill to defend the pack. She wouldn’t have killed Tegrathe since their pack needed her, but Tegrathe would have killed her even though she was the pack’s only healer. At the time, she’d thought Tegrathe the better hunter, and maybe she was, but now Kele understood that she was the better alpha.
He leaned up on his elbow. “Do you truly believe that?”
“Being alpha means doing what’s best for the pack, not what’s best for you.” She caressed his cheek. “I know if you could, you would have spared them.” It was a mercy, not a crime, to have let those tortured souls free of their mad bodies. Staring into his spring-green eyes, she saw a part of her omega die and her heart broke. She loved him so much and unless they escaped, she wouldn’t be able to keep him. Just the thought of another touching him almost sent her over the feral edge.
The door to the cell opened and the guard set the things she’d asked for on the floor, along with a tray filled with food.
Timothy stood behind him. “I need him healed. We’ll begin battle training in the morning.”
She picked up what she needed to mend Peder. “That will tear his stitches. He needs a few days of rest first.”
“Stitch him well then because he only gets tonight.” Timothy closed and locked the door, leaving them alone with only the torchlight outside their cell for her to sew by.
“Bastard,” she shouted out the door.
“Kele.” Peder sat on the edge of the cot and waved her to him.
She hurried to his side. “Don’t move yet. I haven’t looked at your other wounds.”
“I don’t have any other wounds, just that one on my side.”
“But…” She gestured to all the blood and understanding finally dawned. “It’s all theirs.” She swallowed the hard lump in her throat.
“Something hungry lives inside me, Kele.” He set his hand over his heart. “I glimpsed it tonight and didn’t like what I saw.” He rubbed his chest.
“I feel bad.”
“Yeah, so do I.”
She grabbed a cloth and soaked it in the water then washed the cut in his side. It had stopped bleeding. “You were placed in a bad situation.” Seizing the bottle of hard spirits, she grimaced. It would sting and she loathed adding to his pain. She poured the fiery liquid over the open cut.
He hissed as it splashed over his flesh, then snatched the bottle and took a long drink.
She threaded the needle, then splashed more alcohol on it as well as her hands. Susan had explained this process to her and it had helped reduce infection within her pack.
Peder sat still as she sewed the edges on his wound together. He remained quiet throughout the process, just like when the vampire slaver, Huan, had branded him. “How do you do it?”
“What?”
“Not feel the pain.”
“Who says I don’t feel it?”
She stitched him again. “I do. You don’t even flinch.”
“If I start to scream because I hurt, I fear I’d never stop.” He took another swig of the bottle. “And this helps, though I know I’ll regret it tomorrow.”
She set aside the needle and examined her work in the flickering torchlight, deeming it satisfactory. She then wet the cloth in the bucket. “Stand.”
He gave her a confused look.
“I’m going to wash you and don’t want to wet the bed.”
He seemed to draw into himself but he rose to his feet without comment.
She started at his shoulders and worked her way over his fine-muscled back. His shoulders carried so much pain, no wonder they seemed strong. She ran the cloth down along his narrow hips and hesitated over his firm ass. With her hand, she caressed the smooth skin that covered the hard muscles.
He jumped and tossed her a heated look over his shoulder.
“What?” She fluttered her eyelashes like she’d seen so many omega females do in her den. “I was curious.”
“What else are you curious about?” He flashed her grin so charming her dress almost melted off her body.
She shook her head at his open invitation. “You’re hurt.”
He laughed, the sound so delightful in such a terrible place it seemed almost a sin. “You really are sweet, Kele, if you think that makes a difference to a male.” The welcoming heat in his gaze intensified.
She licked her parched lips and his gaze darted to her mouth. Kele resumed washing him before she succumbed to temptation. She had to let him heal like Timothy said. The slaver wouldn’t be easy on Peder in the morning. She washed the backs of his legs and moved to the front.
His cock jutted out and curved to his stomach, almost touching his navel. He caught her stare. “Do you want to touch it?”
“You’re incorrigible.” She rose and washed the smug grin off his face. “Behave.”
“Impossible.”
Now she was grinning. What a fool she’d become. A happy idiot slave. Goddess save her.
He rested his hands on her hips. “You’re beautiful.”
She washed a clean line in the center of his chest. The cut lines of his muscles drew her gaze like a lodestone. Hunters of her den were similarly built yet she hadn’t had trouble looking away when they’d been naked. She slowed her washing pace to fondle his chest through the cloth.
The nub of his nipple slid under the rough material and he moaned. “Bite it.”
She glanced up at him, unsure. He never appeared this tall before tonight.
He nodded.
A nervous laugh slipped from her lips. “Okay.” She sucked the rock-hard pebble in her mouth and rolled it between her teeth.
“Yes, like that. Now nip, but don’t bite it off.”
She did as instructed and sensed him arch his back. Kissing her way to the other one, she repeated the process.
Peder’s lips were parted as he watched her with intensity. Everything she’d dreamed of in a male was within her arms, dangled before her but unable to be kept. Cruel, that was what their Goddess had become. Unforgiving bitch finally granted her wish but only for single night.
Kele retreated from his arms and rinsed the cloth. Better to have one night in bliss than a lifetime of oblivion and what-ifs. She knelt before him and washed his legs again. Slowly. All the while his cock hovered close to her watering mouth.
“You’re killing me.” Peder moaned and rolled his hips. “Touch me, Kele.”
“I have been touching you.” She leaned forward and blew a light breeze over his shaft. Heat radiated from Peder and he shivered. With her tongue, she traced from base to tip.
One night, not long ago, she’d come across Ahote in the den’s inner gardens. An omega female was on her knees, sucking his cock. Many said omegas were the least powerful in a pack, but at that moment, the expression on Ahote’s face revealed he would have given her anything to never stop. That was a power in itself and she wanted to see that look on Peder’s face—except she didn’t have that female’s experience. It appeared simple enough.
Her heart had been transformed into a terrified bird, taking to fluttering uncontrollably within her chest. “I want to try something.”
“Anything.”
“Are you sure?” She rested her hand on his stomach and rubbed her cheek against his groin.
He sucked in a sharp breath. “You can’t do anything to me that I won’t like.”
“You’ll need to guide me. I want to do it right.” She angled his cock toward her mouth, sliding it inside along her tongue.
He hissed out a breath and stepped closer, burying his fingers in her hair. “There is a Goddess.” The skin covering his iron-hard shaft felt velvety soft.
She imagined it penetrating her body as it did her mouth and she moaned. The tip hit the back of her throat and she gagged a little. Horrified, she glanced up.
He didn’t appear to have noticed.
She slid him out and back in, increasing her pace.