Chasing a Wolf: Moonbound Series, Book Four (3 page)

Read Chasing a Wolf: Moonbound Series, Book Four Online

Authors: Camryn Rhys,Krystal Shannan

BOOK: Chasing a Wolf: Moonbound Series, Book Four
3.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He lowered his mouth to hers and kissed her, so fervently, with so much heat, he thought he might explode.

When he pulled away, he saw a deeper surprise in her eyes. Almost a flash of tears in her eyes.

She misses her mother, still
.

Lani pushed him back to the ground and rolled off his body. She picked up her tunic and slipped it back over her head, shrouding herself from his eyes.

“We should sleep,” she said to the air, not facing him. “As soon as it is light, we should find the path again.” She pulled a blanket out of the backpack.

She really had been prepared.

“I will happily accompany you to Choaca,” he said, scooting across the open space toward her. But she placed the blanket in his hands and then pulled another one from the spacious pack. It was like Mary Poppins in that thing.

“Sleep now.” Lani wrapped herself in the blanket and nestled up to a nearby rock. She turned her back on him.

Tomás stared at her back. She was so intimate one moment, and so cold the next. It dumbfounded him.

But it only made him want her more.

Chapter Three

C
itlani could feel
him staring at her. He’d agreed to help her find her mother. She hadn’t expected that argument to go quite so easily. The way he looked at her made her skin itch and tingle. When he’d reached for her, she’d done everything the way the old women had taught her, but he still seemed unsatisfied. Like he wanted more.

Then there was the kiss. She’d never been kissed before. Never seen anyone kiss anyone like he’d kissed her . It wasn’t done publically in the village. Kissing was an intimate act kept for the couple alone. When he’d kissed her, she’d felt more. More than just satisfying his male needs. She’d found pleasure in his touch for a second time.

He’d wanted to sleep next to her, but it was…too much. Perhaps his touch wasn’t as horrible as she’d thought it would be, but it was still so foreign. She couldn’t imagine sleeping with another person—feeling contact all night long.

She and her mother had shared a room in a hut, but they didn’t sleep next to each other. Her mother had night terrors almost every night. Sleep was not something Citlani took for granted.

Most of the time she napped throughout the afternoon to make up for the lack of rest she got at night.

Now, instead of her mother waking Citlani with horrified screams, there was a man a few feet away that brought a new type of turmoil to her mind and her body.

She’d married him by the laws of her village, without the blessing of the man she called father, all to avoid the touch of the one man in the village she couldn’t stand.

The man who’d lost her mother.

To find a way to save her mother, she’d given herself to a stranger in the most intimate way possible. Was there some magick about him that made her mind wander when he touched her? Something was different. She responded to Tomás in a way she’d never responded to any male in the village before.

There was no time for notions of feelings. Her mother told her every day not to trust a man to want more from her than sex. All men wanted sex. It hadn’t been as unpleasant as she’d prepared for it to be. She’d even go so far as to consider it pleasant. There were those who spoke of sex in the village as pleasurable. She may have spent most of her life hidden away, alone, in a hut with her mother, but she wasn’t deaf. People gossiped.

After the sex tent Citlani knew sex could be enjoyable. She just didn’t know how to get from where she was…to that again. Did she want to? Did she have a choice? He was her husband now. He wasn’t aware of the sacredness of the sex tent ceremony, but she was. She’d done the very thing to him she’d tried to escape—having the chance to find a Fated mate.

A tear rolled down her cheek.

She could make it up to him. Anything he wanted. Every time he wanted to have her body, she would be more than willing. Once they’d found her mother and taken her safely back up the mountain, she’d show him exactly how grateful she was.

Pulling the blanket around her shoulders, Citlani exhaled slowly. The stress of the last few days had her stomach in knots. On cue, it gurgled angrily reminding her she hadn’t had a full meal in days. That one little date cake she shared had only stirred her belly a little.

“Lani.”

She closed her eyes tightly. Why wasn’t he asleep yet?

“Are you awake?”

No. Go to sleep.

Tomás’ backpack rustled as he dug through it. “I have some granola bars in here. You should eat something.”

She tensed as he scooted across the flat rocky place where she’d chosen to lie down. It protected them from the wind. Fewer trees meant fewer animals considering them as prey, not that any predators on this mountain would make the mistake of hunting a werewolves.

Citlani jerked at his light touch on her shoulder and sat up straight.

“Sorry.” He apologized so quickly. “I didn’t mean to scare you.”

Scared?
She wasn’t scared. She just wasn’t used to being touched. Ever. Could he want her again so quickly? She pulled up the hem of her tunic, rose to her knees and reached for the edge of his tunic.

“What are you doing?” He caught her hand in his.

Her breath stopped. His grip was tight enough to make her take it seriously, but mostly, she was confused. He’d reached for her and now he
didn’t
want her? “You want sex. I give it to you.”

“We just had sex. Why would you think—”

Her gaze jumped to something cracking in the brush behind him. None of the villagers would think to come this way. Citlani had covered their tracks perfectly. Then a broad familiar male face came into view in the moonlight—Zolin. Her heart tried to claw its way out of her chest up through her throat.

How had he known to come this far off the trail?

The stranger released her wrist, and turned to follow her gaze over his shoulder. “Shit.”

“You took what wasn’t yours,” Zolin growled, pounding the stick end of his spear against the hard rock. “Citlani was promised.”

“Look, I didn’t ask for this. She just…” he caught her gaze for a moment begging for back up.

It wasn’t help she was prepared to give. In fact, every muscle in her body was coiled tightly and ready to flee.

Her stranger rose, squaring his body off with Zolin. They were an even match and it would be a bloody fight. A fight she didn’t have any intention of waiting around to see if Zolin once again took a claim on her.

These two could fight it out. Her mother needed her. Nothing would keep her from that mission, and now that Tomás had gotten her this far, she would go the rest of the way on her own before she would go back with Zolin.

The pissing match got louder and when the next few snarling remarks cut through the midnight air, Citlani slipped across the stream into the shadows.

It was better this way. She didn’t want anything to do with Zolin.

She could do this on her own. Maybe.

T
omás held
up his hands to the advancing warrior.

Zolin’s grip on the spear was expert. There was no way he could get to his knife in his pack, and even if he could, he wasn’t sure he would win the battle.

“I told you she was mine,” Zolin growled.

“To be fair, you never said
who
it was you’d been promised to.” Tomás juked to one side when Zolin’s spear shot toward him. “Besides, I didn’t know who she was when she came into the tent.”

“It doesn’t matter.” The big warrior stabbed toward him again.

He slid out of the way and jumped onto a nearby rock. “If you would put your spear down, then we could talk about this like grown men.”

“I don’t want to talk.” The translator swept the spear and Tomás jumped over it, back onto the ground.

With a swift kick, he aimed for one of his hands, and Zolin moved so quickly, he missed.

The Huichol swooped his spear again, but when he stepped forward, his foot caught on a rock and the spear struck the ground.

Tomás struck the wooden handle when Zolin was off his balance and the weapon went tumbling. “There. Now, we can—” Tomás was about to bend and pick up the spear when Zolin’s fist connected with his face.

“I said. I don’t want to talk.” He jumped toward him and caught him around his waist and they both tumbled to the ground.

They rolled over and over, landing punches, until Zolin’s head smacked against a rock.

With the wind knocked out of him, the big warrior shook himself, but Tomás had him pinned in a matter of seconds. He had brothers. He was used to this, and he always ended up on top.

His knees pinned the warrior’s arms. “Will you listen to me? I didn’t know who she was.”

“No talking.” Zolin struggled beneath him.

“She just came into the tent and jumped on me, and then said I’d defiled her and I had to run. And look, you’d put some kind of oil all over me and I couldn’t… I didn’t have a choice.”

With every word, his eyes got bigger and bigger until he finally whipped his legs up and knocked Tomás to the ground. The big Huichol was on top of him like lightning, big hands around his neck. “You had sex with her?” His dark eyes were on fire, his teeth bared, spit splattering from his mouth.

“You…told…me…to.” Tomás tried to breathe between words, but the hands relaxed just the tiniest bit. “You said it was a tent for sex,” he dragged out.

Zolin rolled off him and sat on the ground looking at his hands. The jungle was so silent around them, like the animals and the trees waited for the fight to resume.

“You had sex with her.” He dropped his head.

Tomás sat up and put his hands on his own throat. The skin ached and his throat burned. “Damn, dude. You could have killed me.”

“That was the plan.”

“I had no idea who she was,” he said, trying to keep his tone quiet to match the somber moment. “She didn’t say anything. She just climbed on me and—”

“You shouldn’t speak of it.” Zolin stared into the dark. His voice dropped like a brick in the night. “She is your wife.”

Tomás choked on his breath and jumped to his feet. “My what?”

“Your wife,” he repeated. “You should not speak crudely about your wife.”

“No.” Tomás backed up until the rock stopped his steps and sat down. “There was no…I mean, all we did was…”

“You claimed her.” The warrior stood and wiped at his legs. “She claimed you. This is the way the gods,” he made the volcano sign, “would have it.”

But the reluctance in his voice told Tomás their fight wasn’t over. He recognized that certain kind of hurt that was too deep to put into words. It was the edge under every move Zolin made.

“I didn’t claim anybody.” He sat on the rock and considered whether he should reach out to offer some sign of friendship.

Only they weren’t friends. Still, the broken look on the man’s face. He hadn’t stopped staring into the dark since the fight had stopped. Something was knocking around in his head.

“You did,” Zolin said. “That’s what the sex tent is for.”

Tomás couldn’t stop the chortle of a laugh that burst out of him. “You said the sex tent was for reading the magick.”

“Yes, and when you find your mate, you claim her and she is yours.”

A brave bird began to caw in the distance. In this kind of thick dark, any sound was an announcement. The two men continued to sit in silence, as though they waited for the jungle to join the conversation.

Tomás fumbled for his backpack and heard one of the straps lap into the stream. He’d forgotten they were so close to the water. It was lucky they hadn’t pushed each other into it, although the cool water wouldn’t have been altogether unwelcome in the muggy night.

He dug around for his phone. He needed to see what time it was. Maggie would be expecting him to check in with a phone call when he got back to Choaca, but he hadn’t anticipated the detour or the sex tent…or the wife.

When he found the device, he tried to flip it on, but it wouldn’t light.

The power button made a little chirping noise when he turned it on, not unlike the brave calling bird. The sound echoed around them.

“I just need to speak with your village elders.”

“Yes, I know of your quest.” Zolin’s voice was still low and dark. “And you would have spoken with them if you hadn’t married the Chief’s daughter.”

“Whoa.” He held up one hand. “How about we stick with defiled?”

The warrior grunted and went searching for his spear.

Tomás’ phone filled the small area with light. 1:14. Still several hours before morning light. He shone the light toward where Zolin’s hands finally found his spear.

“I’ll give her back,” Tomás said. “All I want is information.”

Only that wasn’t strictly true anymore, and every part of his heart knew it. He wasn’t quite at the
let’s fuck in the airplane bathroom
mode, but Lani was gorgeous, and mysterious, and most of all, she had asked for his help. She may be a quiet one, but she had hidden depths. He could just tell.

He turned the light to find her. He needed to see if she’d heard his suggestion that he return her to Zolin. She wouldn’t be too hap…

Wait. Where is she?

Tomás flashed the light in the other direction, then toward the stream. Nowhere. He swiped at the phone to get the flashlight to work and shone the beam all around the clearing.

Nowhere.

“What are you doing?” Zolin barked. “Turn that off before a predator sees us.”

“Lani,” Tomás yelled into the jungle. “Lani, where are you?”

The translator took a step toward where the light shone. “The princess. Where is she?”

“That’s just it.” He made one more swoop of the area before switching off the flashlight and then his phone. “I think she’s gone.”

“Gone?” He lifted his spear and walked forward. But Tomás couldn’t see him well. His eyes needed time to adjust to the dark.

“Wait. Zolin.” He held out his hands. “She’s got to be gone. She asked me to take her to Choaca to find her mother.”

The big man’s face whipped around and there was a blaze in his eyes that Tomás could see through the dark. “She told you about her mother?”

“Only that she’d been taken, and that Lani wanted to find her.”

The warrior crashed through the brush, headed away from the stream, and Tomás dug in his bag for his shoes.

Other books

Double Victory by Cheryl Mullenbach
The Sisters Grimm: Book Eight: The Inside Story by Michael Buckley, Peter Ferguson
Am I Normal Yet? by Holly Bourne
Clockwork Chaos by C.J. Henderson, Bernie Mozjes, James Daniel Ross, James Chambers, N.R. Brown, Angel Leigh McCoy, Patrick Thomas, Jeff Young