Authors: Sherrilyn Kenyon
“What's a
diki?
” Marguerite asked, her tone barely more than a whisper.
“Trial by combat,” Bill explained. “Wren confronts his accuser and they fight it out.”
She was aghast at the idea. “No!” she said firmly.
“We have no choice, Maggie. They'll run us into the ground. Neither you nor I will ever have rest from them. There's nowhere we can go they won't find us. Tell her, Bill.”
Bill sighed heavily. “He's right. As much as I hate to admit it. They won't stop until he's dead.”
Marguerite straightened up and eyed Wren with raw determination. “Fine. Then I go with you.”
“Maggieâ”
“No, Wren,” she said sternly. “You are not going to do this alone. You need someone in your corner.”
Wren stared at her. And it was then he knew the truth.
He loved this woman. He loved her strength and her courage. She was absolutely everything to him. Mated or not, he would never feel like this toward another female.
In truth, he didn't want to go alone. If he had to die, he wanted to die in Maggie's arms, with the touch of her hand on his skin to ease him on his way.
“Okay.” Wren looked at the receptionist.
Bill followed his line of sight. “Terry? Could you go grab the file I have on my desk and bring it to me?”
“Sure, Mr. Laurens. I'll be right back.”
Wren waited until she was out of their sight. Wrapping his arms around Maggie, he closed his eyes and teleported them to Savitar's home.
Wren didn't move for several seconds as he glanced around the large circular room. Even though he had a seat on the council, he'd never been here before. The room was large, almost overwhelming.
“Where are we?” Maggie asked as she gaped at the opulence of the place.
“A traveling island.”
She arched both brows. “A what?”
“It's an island kind of like Brigadoon. It vanishes and reappears at Savitar's whims.”
She looked even more confused “And who is Savitar?”
“That would be me.”
They both turned to see an incredibly tall man standing behind them. Dressed all in white like a typical surfer, Savitar had shoulder-length dark brown hair and deeply tanned skin.
Wren's jaw went slack as he recognized Savitar. “You?”
“You know him?” Maggie asked.
Wren nodded. “He's the man I met in the woods after my father died.”
“The one who took you to New Orleans?”
“That was me,” Savitar said again as he walked past them, toward a throne that was set against one wall.
Marguerite was gaping at the man's nonchalance.
As he sat down, the room filled with people who appeared to have been in the middle of doing other things. One man was even holding a fried drumstick against his lips as if he'd been in the middle of eating dinner.
“What the hell is this?” a dark-haired man asked as he quickly flashed clothing onto his naked body. “Savitar? I was in the middle of my shower.”
Savitar looked completely unrepentant.
Marguerite was about to laugh until her gaze fell to one of the tigers who had been pursuing them. The man curled his lip an instant before he changed to a tiger and rushed at them.
He leapt at Wren.
Just as he would have reached them, he slammed into what appeared to be an invisible wall. He fell to the ground yelping.
“Don't piss me off any more, you stupid punk,” Savitar growled. “Now get up, Zack.”
The tiger became human. His mouth was bleeding as he turned to face Savitar's throne. “I demand justice!”
Savitar laughed evilly. “Be careful what you wish for, you just might get it.”
Marguerite exchanged a completely confounded look with Wren, who seemed to understand about as much of this as she did. What was going on here?
“Animals,” Savitar said. “Sorry to disturb all of you. But it seems there is new evidence for you to consider.”
“He knows something,” she whispered to Wren.
Wren took her hand into his and held it tight.
“Nicolette?” Savitar addressed the bear who had been so nasty to them. “Care to share with the council what you told me earlier?”
“Oui.”
Zack growled a warning to Nicolette. “Think of what you have to lose, bear.”
“Worry about your own ass, tiger,” Savitar said snidely. His gaze softened as he looked back to the bear. “Speak, Nicolette. To be rather clichéd, the truth shall set you free.”
Nicolette glanced at Wren and Marguerite before she spoke again. “Zack Tigarian admitted to both me and my daughter that he knew Wren hadn't gone mad. That he and his father were accusing him only to get his money.”
Another dark-haired man frowned at Nicolette. “What about your earlier testimony? You said you had witnessed his madness yourself.”
Nicolette nodded. “He has been more hostile lately, I did not lie. And he has exposed us to unnecessary human scrutiny.”
Zack sneered. “He's standing here right now with the daughter of a senator. Tell me what kind of animal would do such a thing? It's obvious he is insane. He even launched himself into a tiger cage at the zoo, where he was filmed by the humans.”
Savitar looked at Maggie and Wren with a stoic expression. “Do you have anything to say, Maggie?”
“How do you know my name?”
One corner of his mouth twisted up wryly. “I know everything, kid. And the vast majority of it, I wish I didn't ⦠especially those girly thoughts you're having about Wren right now. They're really grossing me out, and I seriously wish Dante would stop thinking about Pandora's⦔ Savitar made a face, then appeared to shake it off. “Now speak if you have something to say that refutes these allegations.”
Marguerite let go of Wren's hand to step forward as she addressed the Were-Animals who were gathered at the round table. “In every event that you accuse Wren of, I was there as a witness. He never once attacked unless it was in defense of himself or me. He only jumped into the tigers' cage because a small boy's life was in danger and he knew he could save him. That wasn't madness, it was kindness.”
A blond woman sneered at her. “What does a human know?”
Savitar snorted. “Oh, I think our little human knows quite a bit about animals ⦠especially now.”
Marguerite frowned. By the tone of his voice she could tell that somehow Savitar knew she was part tiger.
Good grief, the man did appear to know everything. It was really scary to think about that.
Wren moved to stand in front of her. “I'm not mad or insane. There is no
trelosa
inside me. I'm here to be judged as the Omegrion sees fit, but only so long as you promise me that nothing will happen to Maggie.”
Zack scoffed at him. “I would fear more for my own life than the human's.”
Wren tilted his head as he felt something odd. He turned just as something flashed right behind him.
Before he could react, a man grabbed Maggie, then vanished with her.
Zack laughed an instant before he vanished, too.
“What the hell?” Fury demanded from the round table.
Savitar didn't react at all physically. He sat on his throne completely emotionless. “Well, that was certainly special,” he said, his voice laden with sarcasm.
“Are you going to allow someone to threaten the sanctity here?” the jackal representative asked.
“Oh no,” Savitar said. He checked his watch. “Let's give them a few minutes before I send the tiger in to finish this.”
“Where the hell did he take her?” Wren demanded.
Savitar gave him a droll look. “Hold your horses or, since you're part tiger, your tail.”
“She can't stand alone!” Wren roared as his anger boiled inside him. Savitar might not care about Maggie's well-being, but he most certainly did. “You have to send me to her now.”
“Fehrista nara gaum.”
Wren scowled at words he didn't comprehend. “What does that mean?”
“To make an omelette you must first break some eggs.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Marguerite was slightly disoriented as she found herself in a posh, overly decorated room. It looked like something one might find in a home-and-gardens magazine. Everything was highly polished and meticulously clean.
She tried to move, but the tiger still held her in a grip from behind that kept her from escaping. For that matter, she could barely breathe.
Closing her eyes, she summoned her powers and tried to make herself a tiger.
It wasn't easy.
But as Zack flashed into the room, she succeeded. The man holding her cursed before he turned into a tiger to attack her. Marguerite caught him a gash to his throat before she bit him hard in the neck.
They weren't going to take her without a fight.
He limped away from her as Zack lunged, then grabbed her from behind. She roared as she tried to bite him, too, but he held her in such a way that she couldn't.
A middle-aged man gasped as he entered the room. Dressed in an expensive black suit, he was the poster boy for the Fortune 500 set.
Marguerite cocked her head. It was Grayson. She knew him instantly due to the fact that he bore an amazing resemblance to Aristotle.
“You got him?” Grayson asked.
“No. It's his human companion.”
Grayson shook his head in denial. “How is that possible?”
“Don't ask me,” Zack said in an aggravated tone. “You're the elder, Dad.” He indicated where the other tiger was lying on the floor, dead and bloody. “She's already killed Theo, and I'm sure Wren will track her to us any minute now.”
Grayson approached them cautiously.
Marguerite snapped at Grayson, wanting to tear him apart for what he'd done to not only Wren but Aristotle as well. How could any man kill his own brother?
And over what?
Money?
It was ridiculous and both the woman and animal in her wanted vengeance for the undue pain Grayson had caused Wren.
She did her best to return to human form so that she could tell Grayson exactly what she thought of him, but her body wasn't listening to her at the moment.
Grayson moved toward her, with a deliberate intent. He manifested a butterfly knife in his fist. Twirling it open, he gave her an evil smirk. “Then I say we put her out of her misery and let Wren find her with her throat slit.”
“Don't you dare touch her.”
Marguerite, as well as Grayson and Zack, froze at the sound of a voice she was sure she'd never hear again.
It couldn't be â¦
She wasn't sure who was the most stunned as Aristotle appeared in the room before them. With his arms crossed over his chest he seemed strangely calm, and yet at the same time his anger was tangible. It was an eerie combination.
“You're dead!” Grayson snapped.
Aristotle laughed. “Do I look dead, Brother?”
“Karina killed you.”
Aristotle arched a brow at that. “I thought Wren killed me. Is that not what you claimed?”
Grayson moved away from her slowly, toward the door. “You're a ghost. You have to be. Your mate killed you more than twenty years ago.”
“Did she?” Aristotle unfolded his arms and threw a small Japanese throwing star into Zack's arm.
Cursing in pain, Zack let go of Marguerite.
His face a mask of malice, Aristotle turned toward his brother. “I told you a long time ago, Gray, never come between a tiger and his mate.”
Grayson changed into a tiger and lunged at Aristotle. Aristotle caught him in his arms and held him close to his heart.
He gave her a grim look. “Do what you have to do to protect Wren, Maggie. He needs you,” he said, then vanished.
Marguerite turned on Zack with a snarl.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Wren was livid by the time Savitar allowed him to locate Maggie.
He flashed into an unfamiliar house, ready to do battle with the devil himself if he had to.
But what he found absolutely floored him. Maggie was huddled naked in a corner, shaking and crying, while Zack's tiger body lay a few feet away from her.
Stunned and terrified of what had been done to her, Wren moved slowly toward Maggie until he could pull her into his arms. She looked up at him with tears in her eyes. His gut knotted as he mentally prepared himself for the worst.
“I killed him, Wren,” she breathed, “just as I killed the other one. It was so awful.” She wiped at her mouth so hard that he was amazed she didn't rub the skin off. “I can't get the taste of blood out of my mouth.”
“Did they ⦠are you okay?”
She nodded, then sobbed even harder.
Relieved that they hadn't raped her, he held her close and sent up a silent prayer of thanks. “Shh,” he said, pulling her into his lap and putting clothes on her. “You did what you had to do to protect yourself. There's nothing wrong with that.”
“But I killed someone.”
“You're a tiger now, Maggie. The animal inside you is stronger⦔ He paused as he thought that through. It wasn't true and he knew it. “No. The woman inside you is strong enough to know it had to be done. If you hadn't killed them, they would have killed you.”
Marguerite drew a ragged breath as she remembered Wren telling her about how harsh his life was. How brutal. At the time she'd thought he was just being melodramatic.
Now she understood.
He was right, the animal part of herself was satisfied even as the woman in her was horrified. The two parts of her were at war and at peace.
It was so strange.
How could she feel like this? Those had been people, kind of. And she had killed them.
For Wren and for herself. No, he was right. It was self-defense. Had she not killed them, they would have taken a lot more from her.
Wren got up and pulled her to her feet. His eyes were dark with worry, and it warmed her even through the pain and the horror. “Did you get hurt in the fighting?”