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“This way, Alice.” Brent chugged downhill. His tall,
well-muscled frame dislodged small boulders and mini snow avalanches. Longish
red hair was escaping from the piece of cloth he’d tied around it.
“I don’t think that’s right,” she protested and dug her
crampon points into the steep slope more firmly. The metal spikes didn’t stay
very well because the snow was too soft. She looked at the angle of the sun,
nearly hidden by the steep flanks of an unnamed peak. Hardly any of the Sierra
peaks had names. The one they’d just climbed certainly didn’t.
Damn!
It would be dark in less than an hour. Even though it was
early March, days were still short.
“I tell you, this route will work,” floated up to her.
“Bullshit! It’s suicide,” she shouted back.
“You have the skill for this. Just take your time. There’s
something I, um, need to do, I’ll wait for you on the far side of the creek. If
you don’t find me, head for the car as fast as you can. Lock yourself in if
you’re too tired to drive.”
“What?” Her throat tightened. “You can’t just leave me.
It’ll be dark soon.”
“You’ll be fine, Alice. We’re past the worst of things, and I
don’t have any choice.” The sound of him thrashing downhill nearly obliterated
his last words.
She clamped her teeth together. What the hell had he meant
about heading for the car as fast as she could? Maybe he was losing it. She’d
read about climbers who edged into madness, but today hadn’t been that
difficult.
She was cold and tired too, and convinced they were lost.
Their ascent route hadn’t been all that great, so Brent suggested they try a
more direct line going down. The first thousand feet had worked fine, then
they’d run into a band of cliffs. She glanced up. It did seem the cliffs were
above them now, but the terrain was perilously steep. She jammed her ice axe
into the slope and turned face in. Brent may have been comfortable barreling
down like one of the rocks he’d displaced, but she wasn’t.
Alice moved carefully. She planted her axe into the slope,
and then found lower purchase for both feet. It took a while. By the time she
moved off the steepest part, it was nearly full dark. She cupped her hands
around her mouth and called, “Brent.”
He didn’t answer. She yelled his name again. Silence. Panic
made her heart thud dully against her ribs, its echo loud in her ears. She felt
sick and dizzy. They should’ve taken the known route down. Why had she let him
talk her into something so foolish, especially with so little of the day left?
And what was so all-fired important he had to go off and
leave her?
Alice slid her rucksack off her shoulders and felt around
for her calcium carbide lantern. She poured a little of her precious water into
the lantern’s upper compartment, gave it a moment, and flashed the flint. The
lantern flickered and sputtered, but then a warm, blue flame steadied. She
drank some water and worked at convincing herself not to think too much while
she clipped the light to a broad band and settled it around her head.
Shouldering her pack, she picked her way downhill.
After about an hour, thick timber surrounded her. The
terrain had eased off to maybe thirty degrees. Fallen branches crisscrossed over
one another were more of a problem now than steepness. She dropped below the
snowline and sat on a downed log to take off her crampons. They snagged on
things, reducing her already-slow progress. Bundling the steel spikes, she
secured them to her pack, and then called Brent’s name again.
And again.
Anger gave way to fear something hideous had happened. He’d
careened down the slope like a madman, but she hadn’t heard him scream. Surely,
she’d have heard something if he’d fallen. His exhortation about heading for
the car rattled in the back of her mind.
Was there some sort of danger she wasn’t aware of? Was that
why he’d abandoned her? She shook her head. It didn’t make sense. If danger
lurked nearby, he should’ve stayed to protect her, not taken off like a bat out
of hell.
Alice shivered. The temperature was somewhere south of
freezing. Her wool top, jacket, and pants were wet with sweat on the inside and
wet from falling in the snow so many times on the outside. Between the two, it
would take hours for the thick cloth to dry. Thank God it wasn’t windy.
Wind-chill would add to her woes. She set her lantern off to one side so its
hiss wouldn’t drown out something important and listened.
The welcome sound of water cascading over stones sounded
from below. If she just kept on downhill, she had to come to the North Fork of
Big Pine Creek. “Even if it’s the South Fork, it’s not the end of the world,”
she muttered. “Come daylight, I’ll recognize something.”
She settled her lantern back in place and pulled a pair of
wool mitts out of her pack. When she got to her feet, she groaned. Everything
hurt, but tomorrow would be worse once her over-taxed muscles stiffened up.
Cursing under her breath, she gathered her things together and worked her way
through increasingly thick deadfall. As she down climbed, she thought about
Brent. All they were, really, was friends. She’d tried to make it more than
that, to flirt with him, but he’d never been interested. He made a most
excellent climbing partner, though.
At least he had until today.
None of the women she knew had the least interest in the
mountains, and men thought it unwomanly for her to don climbing regalia and
take to the hills—except Brent. He understood the pull of the Sierras and
didn’t think it at all odd she felt the same. She pressed her tongue against
her teeth. It was the nineteen-thirties, after all. Women were more than baby
machines and unpaid cooks and housekeepers. She’d been practically the only
female in many of her college classes, especially the math and science ones.
Even with a degree, it hadn’t been easy to get a job in civil engineering.
”It’s not your credentials,” she’d been told over and over.
“You’re just going to get married and all the time and money we put into
training you will go to waste.”
She’d been so grateful to the Orange County firm that
finally hired her, she’d come perilously close to breaking into tears. Alice
shook her head, but gently. No point in making the lantern go out. It was heavy
strapped to her head. She’d be glad to get to somewhere she could stop for the
night. She called Brent’s name every few minutes. If he’d been knocked
unconscious, maybe something would get through since hearing was the last sense
to go.
The sound of rushing water grew louder, so loud she worried
how she’d get across it. If it was the right creek, and it pretty much had to
be, the trail was on the other side. She and Brent had crossed the turbulent
flow using a rough wooden bridge much farther up the narrow canyon. The
hillside steepened again. If it got any worse, she’d need to face into the hill
to keep going.
She stopped on the uphill side of a fat tree bole long
enough to lash her axe to her pack to free both hands. Alice used thick timber
to control her descent, wrapping her hands around branches to keep herself from
sliding down the muddy mountainside. Bark poked through her mitts and hurt her
hands.
“Holy shit.”
She tightened her fingers reflexively on slick bark. The
creek, running at close to flood stage from an early snowmelt, was right below
her. She’d nearly fallen into it. Her heart raced. She’d been careful, but she
was tired. Too tired to be in a place where every step required thought. Water
swirled around huge boulders ten feet below her. No way in hell to cross there.
She looked downstream, but she couldn’t see very far. The beam from her lamp
was broad rather than deep. It looked like the water disappeared into a
cascade, though.
Only one choice left.
Alice picked her way upstream over bushes and branches,
staying as close to the creek as she could. Her strength was nearly at its end,
and she felt ill and shaky. She hadn’t let herself dwell on animals that might
attack or Brent being dead, but both rose to taunt her. Just when she was
considering getting out her rope and lashing herself to a tree to sit out the
night, the angle of the slope eased and she found herself in a small meadow.
The water was still rushing fast, but the terrain was level
enough, she could cross here if she was careful. Several flat stones looked
promising, though they might be slippery. Alice looked around for something to
sit on. She needed to take off her pack to unstrap her axe. She’d need it for
balance crossing the creek.
“I should eat and drink something,” she murmured,
understanding how close to the end of her tether she was. She called Brent’s
name again, but the noise of the water obliterated her voice.
She shucked her pack, got a glass water bottle, and bent
near the water’s edge to fill it. Alice drained the bottle and filled it once
more, then staggered back to her meager stack of supplies. She blew out her lantern
to conserve fuel. She didn’t have any more of the calcium carbide crystals, and
she’d need light to cross the water. She gathered her thick, heavy dark hair
and braided it to get it out of the way. Lacking something to secure it with,
she stuffed the end of the braid under her jacket. The thought of the trail—and
safety—less than two hundred yards from her was seductive, but she knew better
than to rush things. Climbers who got in a hurry ended up dead.
Brent, oh Brent...
His tall, broad-shouldered frame and sparkling green eyes
rose before her. Even if he hadn’t wanted to date her, they’d been the best of
friends and she’d miss him terribly—if the unspeakable had happened.
Yeah, if he’s dead, I
suppose I’ll have to forgive him for running off and leaving me. But if he’s
not, I’m going to give that man a piece of my mind.
Her gaze scanned the darkness. She blinked and looked again.
A light shone through the trees across the creek. Joy swooped through her.
Brent.
He was okay after all and had set up camp to wait for her.
Drawn by the prospect of not being alone anymore, she bundled the rest of her
food and stuffed it into her rucksack. When she settled the pack over her
shoulders, it rubbed on sore spots, but she ignored the pain shooting down her
back and upper arms.
Soon. I can take it
off for a few hours very soon.
The lantern was fussy. She had to clean some of the sludge
out of the lower chamber to get it to light. Finally, with the lantern on her
forehead and the axe in one hand, she set out for the far side of the creek. If
she got really lucky, her feet wouldn’t get any wetter than they already were
in their clunky, two-layer, leather climbing boots. She blessed her six-foot
frame. If she’d been smaller—more woman-sized—she’d never have found climbing
clothes to fit. Bespoke tailoring was expensive.
Alice kept her gaze on the light. By the time she was
halfway across the water, she knew it wasn’t a fire. The beam was too steady.
No, it burned like an electric light, or a kerosene lantern. That gave her
pause. Her earlier elation faded. Probably not Brent. Maybe some hunters who’d
packed a camp in with mules or horses.
If it’s a bunch of
men, they can help hunt for Brent come morning.
She moved from rock to rock, sinking her long-handled axe
into the riverbed for support. It was easier than she’d thought. The last rock
wobbled, but she caught herself and leapt to the far bank. The water was a few
inches deep, but didn’t slop over her boot tops. Alice didn’t take time to
congratulate herself on making it to safety. She headed for the light. A thick
stand of trees blocked her vision momentarily, but she kept moving in a
straight line. Fifty feet past the trees, she saw a cabin set in a glade. The
light was indeed a kerosene lantern hanging from a hook near the door.
Her eyes widened. Lon Chaney’s cabin. She and Brent had
passed it on their way in. The thick fieldstone walls were unmistakable. The
story of how Lon Chaney, Senior, had built it around 1930, using mules to drag
the huge fieldstones the last distance after the road ended, was legendary. A
shudder ran down her back, followed by another. All the creepy roles played
first by Lon Chaney, and then by his son, poured through her mind.
I’m just tired. It’s
only a cabin.
Yes, but who lit the
lantern?
Suddenly cautious, Alice turned the dial to douse her light.
It made a small whumping sound and went out. She faded into the stand of trees
between the cabin and the river and worked her way around to the other side of
the building looking for evidence of hunters. A complete transit of the cabin
with no horses or mules tethered for the night scared the shit out of her. Had
whoever was inside come on foot? How had they carried enough supplies?
Her breath whistled loud in her ears. Brent had told her to
hightail it for the car, but she had a feeling something bad had happened to
him. No matter how she felt about him running off, it wasn’t right to just
leave him. It had been dark for hours, and she wondered how late it was. Even
if she stumbled the few miles to her car waiting next to Glacier Lodge, she was
too tired to drive anywhere. The lodge wasn’t any help. It wouldn’t open for
the season for another couple of months. There might be a phone inside, but
she’d have to break in.
Alice considered her options. If she made the lodge, she’d
crawl into her car and fall on her face from exhaustion. It would easily be
mid-morning before she got back up here to even begin searching for Brent.
Survival in the mountains often hung by a thread. She was the only one who knew
where he was.
He may have abandoned her, but she couldn’t do the same and desert
him. Not and live with herself afterward.
Alice moved toward where she thought the trail was, intent
on setting up a fireless camp to wait out the night. She had enough food and a
full water bottle. No tent or sleeping bag, but she’d survived worse
conditions. A fire would’ve been welcome, but she couldn’t risk—
“Hey there. You. Show yourself, man,” a deep voice called
from behind her. Light flared, illuminating the forest. Footsteps crunched over
rocks and twigs as the person approached.
Alice stiffened. People looked at her build and assumed she
was male. It had happened to her before—and more than once. She considered
running, but burdened with her heavy boots, climbing hardware, and the moonless
night, she didn’t want to chance a headlong flight. Besides, the man might have
a gun.
“Why should I?” She spun to face him, ready for almost
anything.
“What? You’re a woman?”
Alice grasped her ice axe in both hands. “Leave me alone,”
she grunted through clenched teeth. “I’m tired and my friend is...lost.”
“Whoa.” The man held up both hands, one of which gripped a
flashlight. “Put your axe down, sweetheart. I’m not going to hurt you.” He was
tall, maybe six-feet-four, with straight, red-blonde hair. Despite his height,
he had a slender build. A well-defined jaw and sharp cheekbones suggested
Nordic blood. It was tough to tell in the reflected light, but his eyes looked
blue.
“Go back inside. You can see I’m not any kind of threat. I’d
head down, but I need to be moving at first light to hunt for my friend.”
The man cocked his head to one side. “Big guy with red
hair?”
Terror gripped her. Her throat narrowed. Breathing became a
struggle. Since she couldn’t manage words, she nodded and steeled herself to
hear the words, he’s dead. Alice bit
her lower lip and gazed mutely at the stranger.
“Look, I think he’ll be okay. We were out hunting and heard
something big falling. Thought it was the deer we’d shot at. Turned out to be
your friend—”
“Awk! You shot Brent!”
The man waved his hands in front of him. “Calm down, woman.
Christ, you’re strung tighter than a fiddle. Take a couple of deep breaths. No,
we didn’t shoot him. Your friend was unconscious because he hit his head on a
rock, so we carried him back here. My two buddies took the horses and hauled
him down to the lodge. We only had three horses which is why I’m still here.
Anyway, they were planning to drive him to the hospital in Bishop. I don’t
expect they’ll be back much before the middle of tomorrow.”
At least that explains
why there’re no horses here.
Alice shook her head, digesting the information. “I need to
get moving, then. I can drive to the hospital and meet them.”
The man held out a hand. “I’m Jed. Jed Starnes. You look
beat. There’re mountain cats on the prowl. Shot one a few hours ago. They get
worse at night. More aggressive. You got a gun?”
She shook her head and ignored his outstretched hand. He
looked chagrined and dropped it to his side. “Well, then, handshake or no, you
need to come with me. Got a nice warm fire going inside. You look wet clear
through. Nothing you can do tonight, anyway. Get a few shots of Irish whiskey
in you, a little soup, and some sleep. Come morning, you can go after your
friend.”
It sounded good. Too good. She kept her ice axe poised.
“How’d you get access to Lon Chaney’s cabin?”
Jed threw back his head and laughed. “That’s easy. Ever
since Chaney senior died in nineteen-thirty, his son’s been letting some of us
who work with him have the keys. All we have to do is ask. Damn shame the old
man died right after he got this place built. It’s a beauty. You really should
take a look inside.”
She blew out a breath. “What is it you do?”
“I’m a production manager for Paramount.”
“I thought they were in receivership.”
He laughed again. “We are. But we’re still making movies.”
Something about Jed put her at ease. Or maybe she was just
too weary to think straight. She slowly dropped her hands. Tethered to her
wrist, the ice axe dangled, not quite hitting the ground.
“That’s better, sweetheart,” he crooned. “Follow me. I
promise I don’t bite.”
She trailed after him and climbed the broad steps leading to
the cabin’s heavy wooden door. He unlatched it, took the lantern from its hook,
and motioned her through ahead of him. Alice scanned the large room. One end
was an enormous stone fireplace. The other held a kitchen of sorts with a pump
mounted next to a sink. A curtained alcove probably contained a bedroom. The
lower walls were the same large, flat fieldstones mortared together she’d seen
on the outside. The upper walls were wooden planks. Alice sighed. It was warm.
Truly warm. She didn’t realize how chilled she was. Her face stung from the
sudden temperature shift.
She took off her headlamp and set it on a table. Next she
unbuckled her waist belt and dropped her pack in a corner, followed by her axe.
The click of a deadbolt falling into its metal hole snapped her to attention.
She made a grab for her axe, but Jed beat her to it. “Don’t know about you,” he
said, hefting the axe over a shoulder, “but I’m not fond of weapons inside.”
She’d been right about his eyes. They were a rich midnight
blue. Something about them made her tingle deep inside. Alice pushed the
thought away. She was still a virgin at nearly thirty, and likely to stay that
way at the rate things were going in her life. Almost as if they’d been
listening in on her thoughts, her nipples pebbled into points of awareness.
What am I doing?
She shook herself back to reality. A stranger she’d just met
had locked her into this cabin and taken her only means of defense. Trepidation
trumped lust. “Why’d you lock us in?” Because she tried hard, her voice only
shook a little.
He flashed the key in front of her and dropped it into his
pants pocket. “Never know who might wander by. I wanted to make certain we’re
safe is all.” He made a huffing sound. “Most women appreciate that sort of
thing.”
“No one would come up this trail in the middle of the
night.”
“Hey, I’m sort of a city boy. We believe in locking the bad
guys out.” He shrugged. “If you want to hang your jacket, there’re hooks by the
fire. It looks pretty wet to me.”
Alice crossed her arms over her chest and stared at Jed. He
stared back. Tension sizzled in the air between them. She held out a hand. “My
axe.” She gestured to guns on racks along the walls. “Looks as if there are
plenty of weapons in here. Besides, my ice axe isn’t a weapon, it’s a climbing
aid.”
“Let’s just say I’m not enamored of watching my back. Look—”
he balanced her ice axe against a wall, stepped away from it, and spread his
hands in front of him “—you’re apprehensive because you don’t know me. How
about if I’m feeling the same way?”
She sidled past him and tucked her axe behind her pack where
it had been before. “I have no idea how I’m feeling,” she muttered, “other than
tired.”
Jed moved past her to the sink and pumped water into a
glass. Crossing the cabin, he handed it to her. “Drink this,” he suggested.
“Once you’re done, let me hang your jacket near the fire where it can dry a little.
It’s so wet, steam’s rising from it.”
Earlier
That Day
Jeddediah stood off by the side in a cave deep under the
Palisade Range in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Rush torches lined the walls.
Stalactites and stalagmites glistened wetly. Some were so large they met in the
middle, creating twisted pillars. Clan leader for wolves, Jed watched with
pride as his shifter pack comported themselves well against bears, mountain
cats, and coyotes.
A number of contests were in progress, requiring both
strength and wits. Every gathering closed with games to defray the seriousness—and
stress—of hours of discussion. The last challenge, paw to paw combat where the
fighters couldn’t draw on their magic, was the hardest of all. Usually, the
bears won because of their superior bulk and almost impenetrable coats. But
this time, it was looking like his wolves just might triumph.
He sidestepped nimbly out of the way as a coyote and
mountain cat tumbled by him locked in a flurry of teeth and claws. The contests
ran until first blood stained the ground. He and the other three clan leaders
were quick to call a fight if it became too destructive. They needed every
single shifter. To lose even one in a mock skirmish would be unforgivable.
Jed moved farther from the battling pairs. He needed space
to think. The last two days had hosted a special meeting of the clans. Their
survival was threatened, and it was time to act. Ancient beyond reckoning,
their four shifter groups drew power from the four directions and the four
elements. Wolves were west and earth, mountain cats south and fire, coyotes
east and air, and bears north and water.
For centuries, each clan kept to themselves. As North
America filled with people, shifters migrated west in their search for freedom
to roam in animal form. When that didn’t work anymore because the western
states filled with people, they spent more and more time as humans to disguise
their true natures. Soon it became obvious the clans had to work together, or none
of them would survive.
Much like their forbearers in Europe, humans in the United
States had little tolerance for shifters. After the First World War, things
escalated dramatically, maybe because the troops in Europe ran into men who
shimmered into other forms and used magic to both kill and protect themselves.
Europe was more compact than the States, with fewer places to hide.
Jed snorted. Regardless of the reason, after centuries of
near anonymity, shifters had re-entered human consciousness and been labeled a problem. Hunters—religious zealots who
embraced chastity—came after them in droves.
“Do you think there’ll be any of us left to meet next year?”
The leader of the bear clan, Keir, sidled over while Jed was lost in thought.
Jed nodded. “Sure, but maybe not a hundred years from now.”
Keir shook shaggy black hair away from his weather-beaten
face. He was a couple inches taller than Jed and outweighed him by a good fifty
pounds. “We must prioritize mating.”
“Easier said than done. We have to run free to spur the
mating urge. When we’re locked in our human forms for weeks and months on end,
it mutes…everything.”
“I tell you, we should all move to Utah and Arizona. We’d
blend right in with the Mormons and their group marriages. Lots of open country
too.”
Jed blew out a breath. Keir had a point. Shifters formed
family groups with two or three males and a female. The male contingent formed
first, and then went in search of their mated female. Of late, there were lots
of male duos and trios that lacked females to produce the next generation.
“Maybe you’re right.”
“I know I am. Only problem is if we all ended up in the
southwestern states, we’d be too visible.”
A growl bubbled from Jed’s throat. He could almost feel his
tail swish back and forth. The urge to shift was irresistible, so he did. He
was already naked, so ruined clothes weren’t a problem.
Keir joined him. They switched to telepathic speech. “I may have found a woman,” he confided.
“Really? One who is
willing to join your family group?”
Keir nodded. “Yes. I
explained everything. How she’d become one of us through the mating ritual.” He
grunted. “At first she said she had to
think about it. But I wasn’t worried. The mate bond snared her. She was so hot
she came just rubbing up against me. She stopped by right before we were
getting ready to leave.” He chuckled. “Wanted
to do the mating ritual right then. Said she couldn’t wait.”
Jed laughed right along with the bear, but then said, “Chancy to let her leave your side with
knowledge that could sink us.”
Keir scratched deep furrows into the cave’s floor with his
long front claws. “I had my lieutenants
watching her. They would’ve brought her to me if she turned into a liability.
Some of the clan who remained behind are watching her now.” He reared back
on his hind legs. “I’m desperate for a
mate for my family group. Willing to take chances I wouldn’t have taken a few
years ago.”
Jed’s heart went out to the bear. He understood because he
felt the same way. Hunters had gotten cagy. They knew more about shifters than
they ever had in the past. It was entirely possible they knew about their
dwindling numbers. Jed had no doubt they’d stoop to anything, including using
women as bait. All full-blooded shifters were male. Human females who mated
with them absorbed some shifter magic through semen, but not enough to change
form.
“Oh, look.” Keir
dropped to all fours and shoulder butted him. “We need to go to the judges’ table. They’re calling the games for this
gathering.”
Jed shot Keir a wolfish grin, his tongue lolling. “Yes, and I do believe we won for a change.”
“Only because it’s
gotten harder and harder to find places to shift. Some of my guys hardly
remember what their animal side feels like.”
Keir spoke true, and it made Jed sad and angry by turns. He
followed the bear to the judges’ station and stood by while the winners were
announced, but fury simmered just below the surface. Dropping into his wolf
form and killing small rodents muted his rage, at least for a while, but now
wasn’t the time.
He drew his jaws back into a snarl. They’d lost so much
ground, he feared they’d be forced to keep right on hiding until the last of
them was Hunted to extinction.
He reached for his human body and trotted to where he’d left
his clothes. Dark wool pants, a tan cotton shirt, and a multi-colored woolen
jacket lay in a heap. He dressed, pushed his feet into socks and well-worn
leather boots, and gathered his two lieutenants. Both had won awards and beamed
proudly at him. The other fifty or so wolf shifters who’d attended the
gathering milled about. A few of them had mates, but females never came to
shifter gatherings.
“Come on.” Jed walked up the sloping ramp to the cave’s
well-hidden entrance. It was still early in the day, not much past mid-morning.
He pushed magic out, fanning it about. No one. They’d figured the Sierras would
be empty this time of year, and they were. He ducked beneath a low overhang and
came out into bright sunlight. Jed shielded his eyes and squinted against the light.
He beckoned to his clan members. “Grab your rifles.” He
pointed to a group of long guns hidden in the lee of a large boulder. “Until
next time.”
“Until next time,” echoed back to him. The group dispersed,
taking off downhill in long, loping strides. Soon only Jed and his two
lieutenants were left. Like many shifters, they were a female-less family
group.
“Do we really have permission to kill those who Hunt us?”
Terin asked. His lips curled in a feral grin. Amber eyes gleamed.
Jed rounded on him. “Only if your life is in imminent
danger.”
“Okay, okay.” Terin held up both hands. “I get that part.” A
bit shorter than Jed, red hair fell to the middle of his back. All wolf
shifters were built the same: tall and rangy with long, lanky limbs and a
limber stride.
“I still say it’s an improvement,” Bron growled. He shoved
black hair out of his face. Dark, bottomless eyes masked his feelings.
“Hurry. There’s time to chase down some game before the day
ends.” Jed bounded downhill with an easy lope. He picked his way through talus
blocks and around cliffs. Their special cave sat more than a mile from the main
trail that wound into the Palisade Basin. The rough terrain provided strong
advantages. So far no one had stumbled onto their meeting place.
They could’ve made better time as wolves, but it was too
chancy in broad daylight. If they ran into hunters of any variety, they’d be
done for. The common kind would kill them for their pelts. Church-trained
Hunters would kill them for their immortal souls.
“I smell a Hunter.” Terin careened down the steep slope and
caught up to Jed, panting a little.
Jed sniffed the air. He’d been lost in his thoughts again.
He needed to mate. The urge was strong now that he’d spent time in his wolf
form. He shoved his erection to a more comfortable position and sorted scents. Damn
if Terin wasn’t right. He slammed a fist against his thigh.
“Good call. I’m ashamed I didn’t notice.”
Terin eyed the tented front of Jed’s trousers and laughed.
“Understandable. All that talk of mating at the gathering got to me too. We
need to find a woman. It’s been too long since we’ve had someone who liked all
of us.”
Jed eyed his lieutenant. “What we need is a mate, not casual
sex.”
“Whatever you say, boss.” Terin rubbed his crotch, a wistful
look in his eyes.
“Hey!” Jed snapped his fingers in front of Terin. “Enough of
that. You fondling yourself isn’t helping me focus at all. What about the
Hunter?”
“Trail’s not all that fresh, but it’s not that old, either.
I’ll bet he traveled by this spot sometime in the last few hours.”
Jed narrowed his eyes to slits. “It could be coincidence. Do
you think he was after us?”
Terin shook his head. “Nah. Scent track follows the trail.
If he’d been after us, he’d have been crawling around up here.”
“Not necessarily—”
Bron chugged alongside. “I smell—” he began, but Jed waved
him to silence.
“We already know.” He sucked in a breath and looked from one
to the other of his lieutenants. “There’s only one of him and three of us. If
we run into him, we’re just a bunch of guys out for a spot of early season
hunting. If he figures out what we are—and that’s likely because they can scent
us—we jump him.”
“And kill him,” Terin snarled.
“Maybe,” Jed cautioned. “Wait for my command on that. I know
the clans are out for blood, but I can’t see where it furthers our cause to
engage the enemy in an all-out war. There are way too many of them, and we’d
lose.”
* * * *
Jed sat in a wooden chair on the generous front porch that
wrapped around Lon Chaney’s cabin with his legs splayed in front of him. He
rubbed a hand over his pleasantly full stomach. Terin and Bron were out back
butchering the remains of the deer and mountain cat they’d killed. There hadn’t
been any sign of the Hunter they’d scented earlier. Maybe he was going across
Jigsaw Pass and out over Bishop Pass. It was a popular route.
His hand strayed lower, stroking himself through his
trousers. His cock had been giving him nothing but grief since the up close and
personal discussion on mating at the gathering. He shook his head. What a
difference a few hundred years made. Before humans decided shifters were a
threat, women vied with one another to see who got to have sex with them. The
pairing gave a woman power and status.
Not anymore. Mate bond or no, Keir would be lucky if the
woman who said she wanted him didn’t turn him in to collect one of the bounties
lavishly offered for information about shifters.
His cock jumped against his hand. It didn’t give a shit
about philosophy. It had liked it a whole lot better when it had a woman’s body
to bury itself in. He tilted his head and listened with his wolf senses. Terin
and Bron chatted while they worked. It was unlikely he’d be disturbed in the
few moments it would take to satisfy himself.
Jed unbuttoned his trousers. His cock sprang out, and he
closed a hand around it. His other hand toyed with his nipples, tweaking and
teasing them, before he lowered it to cup his balls. He stroked his shaft,
starting with a soft, tormenting touch. It didn’t take long before the feathery
strokes turned into the firm rhythm he preferred. His heartbeat sounded loud
against his ears. He heard himself make a growling, grunting sound and knew it
had been far too long since he’d come. He thought he should be quiet, but then
he didn’t care. His lieutenants would leave him alone once they figured out
what he was doing.
His hand pumped faster as he swelled against his fingers.
His hips thrust hard upward, and his head fell back. Bouncing breasts and wet,
gleaming pussies half-hidden by curly hair filled his mind. Jed imagined
shoving deep inside a woman, taking her from behind. The firm globes of a
perfect ass banged against his thighs, and he held onto her hips as he drove
himself home inside her. His cock bucked in his hand, and then did it again.
Heat spilled through him, setting his nerves on fire. Semen arced and spattered
the ground. He stroked himself some more, wondering if he could come again. He
was still rock hard. His climax had barely tapped the tip of his lust.
He panted, breath harsh in his throat, and tightened his
grip on his penis. He worked it some more, swirling semen around the sensitive
head. He moved the hand cradling his balls back just a little and put pressure
on the spot right behind them. Perfect!
Jed fucked his hand harder and harder until another orgasm roared through him. More
intense this time, his cock jerked and spasmed as waves of lust blasted through
him.
He lay in a gasping, quivering heap working at getting his
breath back.
“I thought I smelled sex.”
Jed’s eyes snapped open at the sound of Terin’s voice. “Show
a little respect,” he growled.
Terin snorted. “I would, but you’ve got to pull yourself
together. That Hunter is closing on us. Before you ask, it’s the same one we
smelled earlier.”
Jed leapt to his feet. “Tell me.” He grabbed an old towel
draped over the chair next to his and wiped himself off before stuffing his
cock back into his pants and zipping up.
“It’s only been the past couple of minutes. Bron smelled it
first. There are two people.”
Jed narrowed his eyes. “I thought you just said it was the
one from this morning. How come we didn’t sense the other Hunter earlier?”
Terin shook his head. “Sorry. I wasn’t clear. Only one
Hunter, but he has a woman with him. They’re probably still a couple thousand
feet above us, but they’re coming right down that mountainside.” He pointed
across the river.
“It’s ridiculously steep and clogged with deadfall. Who the
hell would be that stupid?”
Terin shrugged. “Does it matter?”
“I suppose not. Except if they break their damn necks it
will mean a hell of a lot of trouble for us. This mountain will be crawling
with authority figures and search parties.”
Bron trotted around the cabin and glanced at Jed. “We
finished packing the meat away. What’s next, boss?”
Jed ran options through his mind, grateful for his brief
sexual respite. It really helped clear his thoughts. “We stay here doing just
what we’re doing. Unless he bothers us, we ignore him.”
“What about the woman?” Terin asked.
“Same deal. Besides, if she’s his girlfriend—” his voice
trailed off. Hunters were celibate. They didn’t have girlfriends.
“She could be like a sister or something,” Bron offered.
Jed made a decision. “We’re going to go around back. I don’t
want him to think we’re staring at him. In fact, if we escape his notice, all
the better. Maybe we’ll get lucky and the pair of them will cross the creek,
hit the trail, and head downhill without bothering us at all.”
“He’ll smell us,” Bron protested.
Jed shook his head. “Not if the wind keeps up. It’s blowing
away from where we are.”
“I hope you’re wrong.” Terin snarled low in the back of his
throat. “I want to kill that son of a bitch.”
“We all do. Come on.” Jed led the way to the far side of the
cabin so its thick walls stood between them and the Hunter.
They were pitching horseshoes when the unmistakable sound of
a large object crashing through timber snapped Jed’s head up. He took off
running for the flat, open glade where it was relatively easy to cross the
creek. Bron and Terin followed.
“What are we doing?” Terin asked.
“Seeing if whoever fell is dead,” Jed called over one
shoulder.
“Might’ve been a boulder,” Bron said.
Jed didn’t think so. With his wolf senses dialed in, it
didn’t take long to locate the man’s position. It took a while to get to him, though.
The mountainside was a forty-five degree slope clotted with thick deadfall. At
least the body was below the snowline. Terin got there first. He was hunkered
next to a tall, unconscious, red-haired man when Jed climbed up to him.
“Not dead,” Terin spat.
“He could be,” Bron muttered, panting as he joined the other
two.
Jed knelt next to the Hunter and reached out with his
shifter magic. The man was deeply unconscious. Jed probed his skull and found a
large lump at its base. “Looks like he banged his head on a rock.”
“Great. We can leave him here. Since you seem ambivalent
about us killing him, the elements will do it for us.” Terin pushed to his
feet. “Or maybe the local mountain lions.”
Jed shook his head. “No. He’s too close to the cabin. Last
thing we need is the sheriff and coroner and a bunch of their boys around here.
Remember, if any of them are Hunters, they’ll be able to smell us if they get
close.”
“We could leave earlier than we planned,” Bron suggested.
“Yeah, we could, but I have a better idea. Let’s drag him to
the cabin and chuck him over a horse. You two can haul him to the truck parked
by Glacier Lodge. From there, it’ll be easy enough to drive him to the hospital
in Bishop. That way we come off as good Samaritans, and if bozo—” Jed thwacked
the unconscious man with the back of his hand “—starts raving about smelling
shifters up here, no one will suspect it was us.”
A faint cry caught Jed’s wolf senses.
“Brent. Brent.”
The woman.
He’d forgotten about her. Judging from the sound of things,
she was still a long way up the mountain. He traded gazes with his lieutenants.
“Yeah, we hear her too,” Bron muttered. “Let’s get moving.
We can deal with her later.”
“Sure. She’ll thank us for getting her brother—or whoever he
is—to medical care,” Terin said.
“Each of you take an arm,” Jed instructed. “I’ll get below
you, and you can lower him to me. We’ve got gravity on our side. It shouldn’t
take all that long.”
* * * *
It took longer than Jed anticipated, though. Lots longer. The
man, Brent, was heavy, maybe two hundred pounds. They’d dropped him a time or
two, but hadn’t managed to kill him. Jed breathed a sigh of relief once the
Hunter was bundled across a horse and on his way down the trail with Terin and
Bron riding beside him.
Jed glanced at himself. His clothing was splattered with
gore. The Hunter’s hands had scraped over rocks and sharp branches. They’d been
slick with blood before the three of them managed to maneuver him off the
mountainside. Jed’s pants were soaked to the thighs. It had been impossible to
balance on rocks crossing the creek, so they’d waded, burden suspended between
them.
Jed sighed and set his jaw in a firm line. Killing the
Hunter had been tempting, but their current plan was better. He’d lived long
enough to know killing never solved anything. He shucked his clothes and rinsed
them in the creek before draping them over the wooden railing that spanned the
front porch. He’d move them inside once he got a fire going.
He scented the air, rich with the scents of small rodents
emerging from their dens. It had been dark for a while. Time to hunt and be
hunted. He ducked inside and pulled on fresh wool trousers, a blue sweater, and
a gray, boiled wool jacket. He focused his shifter magic on sticks of wood in
the massive, stone fireplace. Once they caught, he fed larger pieces until he
had a respectable blaze going. The heat felt good.
Even from inside the cabin, the woman’s scent grew stronger
as she worked her way down the mountainside. He’d had to hold himself back, every
instinct on edge. Maybe because he’d indulged himself earlier, her bouquet was
intoxicating. Musk and wildflowers and something unique and womanly bombarded
his enhanced sense of smell. She was right across the river, had been there for
maybe half an hour. He’d heard the subtle sounds of her settling in to rest.
Time for him to slip back outside, into the darkness. He
wanted to be there when she got close enough to talk with. He wasn’t sure what
he’d do if she bedded down across the creek. It would be hard to come up with
an excuse for disturbing her camp.
I’ll come up with
something.
His cock had been hard for the last half hour. It was a long
time since he’d been this aroused by a human woman. Maybe that meant she was
slated to be a shifter mate. Bron and Terin would be delighted. They’d all been
lonely. What a delight it would be to welcome her as the one who’d complete
their family group…
Stop! What am I going
to do, tie her up and hang onto her until she capitulates?
If that’s what it
takes, a pragmatic inner voice answered.
Shut up. She has to
want me as much as I want her—and accept the mate bond. Otherwise, she’ll bide
her time, escape, and bring the hordes of Hell down on us.
Jed shuttered his thoughts as he slipped outside and took a
position in the shadowed recesses of a grove of pine trees. He was desperately
lonesome. Had been for years, but that didn’t excuse pretending. Either the
mate bond would be there. Or it wouldn’t. It was never a one-sided affair. If
the mate bond was present, she’d want him as much as he wanted her. Of course,
it would be difficult for her to accept it, no matter how much she lusted after
him. Most humans were programmed to see shifters as one step up from monsters.
By the time he heard the woman slog across the creek, he’d
formed a rough plan. He’d charm the socks off her to keep her by his side long
enough for her to accept the mate bond—if it was there. He’d know almost
instantly, but it would take far longer to ease her into the idea. Jed flexed
his fingers. Excitement raced through him. If her scent was any indication...
If there’s no bond,
I’ll send her on her way. No point in indulging myself in a fling, no matter
how good she smells.
Part of his magic was telepathic suggestion. It was how
shifters managed to elude Hunters some of the time. He’d have to tread softly.
She had to come to him of her own accord, not because he pushed in any way. And
he’d have to tell her about what he was before anything happened. She was a
virgin. He’d determined that by smell.
Not for much longer.
Jed hoped he wasn’t deluding himself about the mate bond. He
wiped a broad grin off his face, aiming for a return of rational thought, but
clear-headedness fled as soon as he pictured the woman, imagining what she
might look like. Once she’d had him, of course she’d want Terin and Bron. After
all, they were a package deal… The mate bond magic would make her want them
just as much as she wanted him.
Stop! I’m getting way,
way ahead of myself. I don’t even know for sure yet if the bond is there.
Jed couldn’t rein in his hope, though. It burned like a
beacon in his mind. He considered how to tell her he was a shifter. It would be
so much easier if he could bed her first, but the rules were excruciatingly
clear. The human female had to know ahead of time what she was getting into.
Once he’d had sex with her, she wouldn’t be able to keep her hands off him. It
wasn’t fair if the woman’s mind and body weren’t in full agreement.
“Sweetheart, there’s something I need to tell you,” Jed
murmured. “Everything you’ve heard about shifters isn’t really true—” He shook
his head. No, too defensive. He tried a few other tacks, but wasn’t satisfied
with any of them.
Hold up, buddy. He
chided himself again. I need to wait
until I lay eyes on her and am sure before I plan how to convince her to stay.
He
held himself in check, waiting until she made a less-than-stealthy circuit of
the cabin before he approached. Even though he knew her sex beyond any doubt,
he called out, “Hey there. You. Show yourself, man,” to make her feel they were
more evenly matched—both being men and all.
She
was so tall, anyone could’ve made that mistake. Jed was certain it had happened
to her before. He was good at manipulating subtleties. Even so, his mouth was
dry. Something about the cautious way she’d worked her way around the cabin
told him he didn’t have any margin for error. If he spooked her, she’d flee.
She
was his mated one. Now that she was only a few feet away, he knew it without a
shadow of a doubt. His cock knew it too, achingly hard and straining against
his trousers. No matter how much he wanted her, he wouldn’t run her down and
hold her against her will. He had to take this slow and help her trust him. His
heartbeat pounded against his ears. This wasn’t going to be easy. He wanted to wrap
his arms around her and crush her against his body.
“Why should I?” She spun to face
him, and he saw her clearly in the beam from his flashlight.
Even exhausted, she was
stunning, with high cheekbones and tip-tilted green eyes. Cat eyes. Bulky
clothing hid the lines of her body, but he could imagine the swell of breasts
pushed against the front of her jacket and lush hips flared below a slender
waist. Strands of long, dark hair fell around her face. The rest was gathered
behind her. He wondered how long it was. She brandished an ice axe at him, her
eyes glittering dangerously.
Good, this one has spirit. She’ll need it to accept the mate bond.
“What? You’re a woman?” He stepped closer and imbued his
words with surprise.
She grasped her ice axe in both hands, holding it in front
of her. “Yeah. So what? Leave me alone,” she grunted through clenched teeth.
“I’m tired and my friend is…lost.”
“You don’t have to be afraid of
me.” He extended both hands.
“Why the hell not?”
Jed offered her credit. She
sounded furious, and her voice didn’t tremble at all. If he hadn’t had wolf
senses to hand, he’d never have known how scared she was.
“Never mind my questions.” She
jerked her chin upward. “Get out of my way. I’m headed for the far side of the
trail, now I’ve finally located it.”
“Please.”
He dropped his hands back to his sides. “I won’t hurt you. You look exhausted,
cold. I know it’s good trail back to Glacier Lodge, but it’s the middle of the
night. Surely morning would be a better bet for travel. After you’ve rested.”
He inhaled shallowly and sent a small net of shifter persuasion after his
words. “Put your axe down, sweetheart. I’m not going to hurt you.”
She shook her head, trying to look tough, but weariness
poured from her in waves, and his heart ached for her.
“Go back inside,” she said. “You can see I’m not any kind of
threat. I’m not going to the lodge. I would, except I need to be in this area at
first light to hunt for my friend. Late as it is, it doesn’t make sense to do
the round trip to Glacier Lodge and back.”
Jed cocked his head to one side and called on whatever god
watched out for actors to help him pull this off. “Big guy with red hair?”
The woman bit her lower lip and gazed mutely at him,
pleading in her eyes.
“Look, I think he’ll be okay. We were out hunting and heard
something falling. Thought it was the deer we’d shot at. Turned out to be your
friend—”
“Awk! You shot Brent!”
Jed waved his hands in front of him. “Calm down, woman.
Christ, you’re strung tighter than a fiddle. Take a couple of deep breaths. No,
we didn’t shoot him. Your friend was unconscious because he hit his head on a
rock, so we carried him back here. My two buddies took the horses and hauled
him down to the lodge. From there, they’ll take him to the hospital in Bishop.”
She nodded once, sharply. “I need to get moving then. I can
drive to the hospital and meet them. If not tonight, then first thing in the
morning.”
The man held out a hand. “I’m Jed. Jed Starnes. You look
beat. There’re mountain cats on the prowl. Shot one a few hours ago. They get
worse at night. More aggressive. You got a gun?”
She shook her head and ignored his outstretched hand.
Jed did his damnedest to look harmless, non-threatening. “Handshake
or no, I have a nice warm fire going inside. You look wet clear through.
Nothing you can do tonight, anyway. Get a few shots of Irish whiskey in you, a
little soup, and some sleep. Come morning, you can go after your friend.”
She kept her ice axe poised. “How’d you get access to Lon
Chaney’s cabin?”
Jed threw back his head and laughed at the unexpected
question. “That’s easy. Ever since Chaney senior died in nineteen-thirty, his
son’s been letting some of us who work with him have the keys. Damn shame the
old man died right after he got this place built. It’s a beauty. You really
should take a look inside.”
She blew out a ragged breath. “What is it you do?”
“I’m a production manager for Paramount.”
“I thought they were in receivership.”
“We are. But we’re still making movies.”
She slowly dropped her hands.
Relief she wasn’t going to bolt sluiced through him. “That’s
better, sweetheart,” he crooned. “Follow me. I promise I don’t bite.”
“Okay, I guess so. As soon as I’ve had a bite to eat and
dried out a little, I’ll bed down on the porch. Not inside with you.” She
slitted her green eyes his way, waiting for his response.
Jed’s tight muscles relaxed. She wasn’t going to make this
easy, but one step at a time. “Whatever makes you comfortable, sweetheart.”
“So long as we’re both clear about that.”
“We are.”
“Oh yeah. Stop calling me sweetheart.”
“Fine.” He smothered a smile. “What’s your name?”
“Alice. I’m Alice.” She finally lowered her ice axe.
When he gestured, she walked in front of him into the cabin.
Jed waited until she was inside and putting her things down
before he turned the lock and pocketed the key. In case she had a change of
heart, he wanted the extra few minutes that locked door would buy him to
convince her to stay.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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