Shared for Love (Kagan Wolves) (18 page)

BOOK: Shared for Love (Kagan Wolves)
8.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Chapter Nineteen

The older home at the base of the hill drew Noah’s gaze. He scanned the grounds around it one last time, then focused on the patch of woods where he knew a Kagan pack protector lay hidden. Nic had introduced Noah to him. Chris was the shifter’s name. The male had appeared capable of defending Hannah if the need arose, but the deadened look in his eyes hadn’t invited conversation. Fine by Noah. He had no interest in uncovering anyone else’s demons. He had his own to contend with.

“Visit your mate’s grave, then leave.”

Noah turned at Nic’s sharp command. Arms crossed over his chest, the Kagan alpha leaned against a nearby tree. “I have every right to go to Mindy’s grave.”

After she died, her Aunt Nona had appealed to Michael for the right to bury Mindy on Kagan soil. Michael had agreed without batting an eye. Or getting Noah’s approval.

Nic dipped his head in acknowledgment. “I’m not arguing that, but the day of the full moon is a popular time for shifters to visit their loved ones’ gravesites. Seeing a Tanner male here will not be a welcome sight.”

Which was why Ethan had asked Nic to place a Kagan protector on guard over Hannah instead of allowing Noah to remain. They didn’t need the hostility, Ethan had reasoned. Noah had agreed only because he didn’t doubt the Kagan pack’s ability to keep Hannah safe.

“That’s not right, and you know it. I’m not a threat.” Noah motioned toward the open patch of ground dotted with headstones. “Besides, Mindy should not even be here. She was my mate, and she was born into the Tanner pack.”

Nic raised a hand. “I’m not going to argue. In fact, I agree. Doesn’t change anything.”

No, it didn’t, and he was done fighting the past. Letting it go was the reason he remained on Kagan land in the first place. Noah pivoted on his heel and strode toward the cemetery. It was time to put his demons to rest.

“There’s no reason why it should be like this. You should be able to come and go as you please.”

Nic’s statement froze Noah in place feet from the graveyard. He shoved a lock of his hair out of his eyes, then glanced over his shoulder. “Yeah, well, like you said, Tanner shifters aren’t welcome.”

“I’m going to work on improving our pack relations. I hope soon you won’t feel unwelcome.”

“That’s a very idealistic goal, but it’ll never happen. Our wolves won’t allow it. We’re urged to protect our own, and that involves keeping anything that might be a danger away from our weaker members.” Or at least that was how it was supposed to work.

Nic shrugged. “Our pack spirits might be different, but all packs are linked together through years of interpack matings. We’re cousins, uncles, brothers, and friends. Those are bonds we cherish, no matter which pack we belong to.” Nic motioned toward Noah with a jerk of his chin. “Are you going to tell me you wouldn’t fight to protect Sean or Quinn if they were in danger?”

“No, but that’s our human side. Our wolves—”

“Were always meant to supplement us, not dominate us. Did you know that?” Nic raised a brow. “They say the gods tried to create the ultimate warrior by binding animal and man. Their intention had been to make their warriors more cunning and aggressive. It didn’t work out the way they’d hoped.”

“So I’ve heard some of the elders say. Many shifters no longer care to hypothesize about our origins or the gods. Only the spirit wolf matters to us. Without it, we wouldn’t exist.”

Nic inclined his head. “True. The gods no longer touch our lives, but there was a time when they spoke to our alphas through the spirit wolf. Some even made deals with them like the first Jager male had.”

Noah tensed. “Deal? What kind of deal?”

“One that guaranteed they’d only be able to bond with their true mate.” Nic shrugged. “I don’t know the details of the story. Nona wrote down the tale. I can let you borrow it if you’re interested, but many viewed the deal as a curse, not a blessing, and called the Jager family fools.”

Ethan’s lack of response to women. And other men. In light of Nic’s revelation, it made perfect sense. Damn if it didn’t make Noah feel pleased too. He’d been right. Both Ethan and Hannah were his.

“Please do. I enjoy reading about our history.” And Ethan would devour the saga of his family.

“Of course. It’s interesting reading, but the time of the gods’ influence on our lives has passed. We’ve been left to fend for ourselves, which is why it only makes sense we look out for each other, especially with so many changes hovering on the horizon.”

“You mean now that some of the humans know about us.”

Nic nodded. “It’s only a matter of time before everyone learns our secret. When it happens, we need to be prepared. Not just the Kagan pack. All shifters.”

Noah wouldn’t argue that. “By building a safety net, one where shifters look out for each other, not just their pack mates.”

“Adapt, migrate, or die.” Nic smirked. “I heard a human say that at one of our board meetings. He was talking about the volatile marketplace, but it applies to our situation as well. There are few places left for us to hide, and giving up isn’t part of our nature.”

“So that leaves adapting.”

“Yeah, and one of the first things we need to do is let go of the strict separation between packs we’ve grown accustomed to. We need each other, now more than ever. We also need to keep those humans sympathetic to us close, which is why I approved of the Shifter Affairs’ building to be located here. I want humans to see us as their neighbors and friends, not an abomination to be feared.”

Noah sighed. “It’s a good plan, but it won’t be easy.”

“Change never is but I’m confident it’ll happen.” Nic pointed in the direction of the ceremonial circle. “Nobody ever thought the spirit wolf would bless a same-sex union, but it happened. So will this.”

Noah thought back to the sense of acceptance he’d experienced the night before while he’d loved Hannah. “Maybe the Kagan spirit wolf believes the same thing you do—adapt, migrate, or die.”

Nic chuckled. “Maybe. If our spirit wolf hadn’t blessed Chris and John’s union, they would’ve left the pack and moved to a human city. Homosexuality isn’t a choice. Acceptance is. My dad understood that.”

Noah hoped Nic remembered his words in a few days once word got out about Noah’s involvement in Hannah and Ethan’s relationship.

“I’ll support you. So will Hannah and Ethan.” Noah motioned to Mindy’s grave. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to visit Mindy before I’m kicked out.”

Noah turned his back on Nic and strode toward the small granite headstone near the center of the cemetery, then crouched next to Mindy’s grave. For a long time, he simply stared at her name and the dates marking her short life. Emotions choked him, but they always did whenever he thought about her. No matter how many years had passed, the loss of her hurt.

Part of him felt guilty for still loving her, as if his feelings for her were a betrayal to Hannah. They weren’t. He knew it. Hannah had only been a child when he’d been with Mindy, and their relationship had been different.

They’d been friends first and lovers second, even after they’d mated.

Maybe time would’ve changed that. Maybe not. They might’ve ended up resenting each other as some mated couples did. But they’d never gotten the chance to explore their relationship to find out.

Because of me.

He dropped his head into his hands and groaned. His thoughts weren’t healthy. He had to stop blaming himself. Nobody else did. Had he known she was in danger, he would’ve saved her. Given his life for her. How many times had he heard that?

Ethan hadn’t been the only one who’d tried to reason with him. Many of his pack mates and cousins had said the same things to him. They were right too.

“I’m sorry, Mindy. If I could do it over again, I would.” He laid his hand over her name. “You deserved someone better.”

The apology he gave was the same one he delivered every time he visited her grave. Usually, he hightailed it out of there immediately afterward. If he stayed longer, he’d end up breaking down and crying. He always did anyway, just in private. Instead of running, he settled in the grass and wrapped his arms around his knees. There was one more thing he had to do.

“I met somebody, Mindy.” He cleared his throat. “Actually, not just somebody. My true mate.”

He snorted. “I know. I know. If you were here, you’d be rolling your eyes and telling me that I was being foolish. That true mates weren’t real, but they are. Hannah’s mine. She bridged me and my wolf.”

He picked at a few blades of grass. More guilt squeezed his chest. He’d never told Mindy about Ethan. “She’s also Ethan’s true mate. She belongs to both of us. We’re going to live together. Love together. The three of us, you understand? Ethan’s my lover too. Has been for a long time.”

Silence stretched as he struggled with how to tell her about his plans. “And when they die, I’m going to follow them. Spend my eternity with them.” He squeezed his eyes shut. They burned. “Not you. I’m not going to seek you out unless you’ll let me be just your friend again. That’s all we should’ve been.”

He brushed the back of his hand against his eyelids. Wetness met his skin. He couldn’t work up the energy to care. “I hope you find your true mate soon, Mindy. He’ll be better for you than I was. Probably nicer looking too. Just…” He took a deep breath. “Don’t settle, okay? Even if it takes you a century or two, wait for him. The gods will bring the two of you together.”

He dug a picture of them out of his pocket, one of his favorites. It had been taken a few months before their relationship turned physical. They wore matching shirts that said…

Friends forever.

He propped the picture against the headstone and stood. “Friends forever, Mindy. Friends forever.”

Chapter Twenty

The scenery flew by. Lush green leaves topped the trees, and colorful flowers dotted the roadside. Hannah forced herself to take note of each different variety and tried to recall their scientific name. The mental exercise lasted all of five minutes. Thoughts of what Ethan would be facing in a few hours pushed everything else out.

She pressed her palms to her eyes and groaned. “What do you mean no one from your pack is going to back Ethan if Michael’s followers decide to attack him?”

“It’s not that they don’t support Ethan. Our pack loves him, but they won’t get involved.”

She dropped her hands and glanced at him. “I understand that. Considering what’s at stake, though, shouldn’t they—”

“They’re afraid. Ethan doesn’t blame them. Neither do I.”

“Well, I do. Michael’s a horrible pack alpha. He lets his more vulnerable members struggle to make ends meet and has been selling those he considers dispensable.”

“Until Maria got into his ledger, there was no proof. Michael is a lot of things, but above all that shit, he knows how to manipulate and lie.” Noah sighed. “He also wasn’t always a bad alpha. The first two and a half decades after he took over were good. Sure, our pack wasn’t rich, but we were safe. Happy.”

She’d known that. Michael had been respected, even by her father. All that changed in one night when…

“Ethan matured.” She turned in her seat. The certainty of her thoughts took root. “The spirit wolf wanted to be returned to its rightful bloodline. It only put up with Michael because it had no choice.”

Noah flashed her a pleased smile. “Exactly.”

“You told me about confronting Michael. So you didn’t know about Ethan’s parents, then?”

He shook his head. “No. Ethan had to be careful. He was the son of the old alpha and—”

“Michael’s wolf might’ve urged him to kill Ethan to prevent him from reclaiming his family’s pack.”

“Or kick him out. Neither was acceptable, so Ethan was raised by a beta family and purposely lived in the background of the pack to not draw attention to himself. It worked too. As a kid, we all knew he was strong and had the potential to be a dominant, but Ethan had seemed more concerned in his education than pack life. Many members of our pack, including Michael, dismissed him as being too human and therefore not a threat.”

“Including you?”

“Including me.” He flashed her a sheepish grin. “My reaction to Ethan confused me for a long time. He’s ten years younger than me and was in a lower level of the pack, so we never spent time together until I ran into him and Owen on their twenty-first birthday at a bar.”

He ran his fisted grip over the steering wheel. “One look at Ethan, and I wanted him, but I was drunk at the time. Really drunk.” He glanced at her. “I figured my attraction to him was because of the booze. I ignored it and kept drinking. Then Mindy showed up. She flirted with me like she always did, except I didn’t just harmlessly flirt back. I acted on it, and we ended up in bed.”

Hannah flinched, not because Noah was talking about another woman. No, what sent Hannah’s heart racing was the similarity in Noah’s story to the night she’d seduced Alex. Only he’d put an end to their relationship, whereas Noah had embraced his with Mindy.

Noah pulled onto the side of the road, then laid his hand on her thigh. “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have brought up Mindy. It’s—”

She covered his hand with hers. “It’s okay. You loved Mindy. Besides, I was only a kid. I can just see how you were confused. It must’ve hurt Ethan. Did he realize what you were to him?”

“No. He fought our attraction longer than I did.” Noah pushed the loose collar of her shirt to the side, exposing her shoulder, then skimmed his fingers over her bare skin. “He knew he’d need a mate in order to become alpha. Desiring me messed up his plans, but we couldn’t stay away from each other. We became good friends. It wasn’t until a few years after Mindy died that I acted on my hunger for him.”

“And if she hadn’t died in that fire, you never would’ve.”

He dropped his hand. “If I hadn’t run my mouth off that morning, Michael wouldn’t have had her killed. We can play the ‘woulda-shoulda-coulda’ game for the rest of our lives. It doesn’t change anything. Neither does wallowing in guilt.”

“The facts are…” He shifted in his seat to face her. Pain and loss didn’t radiate from him, not as it had the first time he’d mentioned Mindy. Acceptance did.

“I did taunt Michael, and he made the choice to order a woman’s death instead of facing his at my hands. But no matter how it happened, the fire that claimed Mindy’s life changed the course of our pack.” He leaned forward. “Now our members are beaten down. They’re afraid. Dominants and betas alike. They don’t trust each other or Michael. Remember, there was never any hard evidence against him. Actually, Michael hinted that it could’ve been any number of people who set that blaze, including the humans or members of our pack.”

He waited a moment, obviously giving her a chance to digest his words, then nodded slowly. “Sure. I could’ve screamed at the top of my lungs that it was Michael who was responsible for Mindy’s death, but I have no proof. Without it, I’d be labeled a troublemaker and a threat to the pack. He would’ve ordered me to leave and abandon not only Ethan but my friends and pack mates.”

He was right. Her dad had commanded a couple of shifters to leave the pack over the years. It had been painful losing one of their own, but when it came to the safety of their community, sometimes hard choices had to be made. She sighed. “Because it’s not as if we can involve the humans in our affairs.”

“Or in our criminal investigations. What happened to Jenna’s nephew a couple of months ago is a perfect example of what my pack has dealt with since Mindy’s death.”

Jenna’s nephew had been found shot, and the scent of his killers had been tampered with. Without human technology and resources, they had been stuck. Doubt and pain had been the only closure they’d gotten.

She closed her eyes. Shame and understanding settled over her. It was easy to judge the members of Noah’s pack and slam their actions, but she had been looking at it from the outside, from a pack who protected their own and wasn’t dysfunctional.

“So, do you see why our pack members won’t stick up for Ethan if Michael turns on him before midnight? If Ethan loses, they’re afraid of what might happen to them.”

“Yes. I understand.” It didn’t mean she was happy about it. She glanced out the back window. “Maybe you should take me back to my house. Ethan doesn’t have to mate me tonight. You should be there with him.” She turned imploring eyes on him. “Protect him if nobody else will. Please.”

“I can’t. Ethan ordered me not to change my routine. He doesn’t want to tip off Michael that anything is up, and I haven’t attended the full-moon ceremony in years.”

He leaned forward and kissed the spot on her shoulder where her mate mark would soon be displayed. “And Ethan wants to mate you while the magic of the night is strong. He’s hoping that somehow the spirit wolf will be able to bind the three of us if we’re together.”

She slid her hand to the back of Noah’s head and held him close. “Do you think it’ll work?”

He nibbled on her shoulder, then worked his way along the column of her throat to her ear. “Honestly, no. At least not the way Ethan wants. Love will bind us and help us find each other in the afterlife or the next one if we’re rebirthed. I’m certain of it, but I’m not against trying it Ethan’s way either. I’m looking forward to being with you again.”

Her breathing quickened. Thoughts of the previous night mixed with anticipation of what they would share after Ethan became alpha. She turned her head and caught Noah’s gaze. Desire burned in his green eyes. “So am I.”

“Hannah”—he dropped his heated stare to her lips—“I want you to belong to him. To me. So no one can take you away from us.”

“Nobody will. I’m your true mate and Ethan’s. Last night proved it. I brought both of you peace.”

“Yeah.” He dragged in a rough breath. “It did, and I want everyone to know it too. Last night after you fell asleep, Ethan and I talked about the future. How we’d share you.”

She frowned. “I thought we’d live together. Sleep together. Take turns being with each other.”

His lips lifted in a lopsided smile. “We will. That’s not what I’m talking about.”

“Then what are you saying?”

He took her left hand in his and stroked her ring finger. Her heart skipped a beat at the significance of what the simple caress implied.

“Ethan will be your mate in the shifter world, and I…” He lifted his gaze to hers. “I want to be your husband in the human world.”

Husband. He wanted to be her husband. He’d be
hers
, not just symbolically but officially. Legally.

“Noah.” She couldn’t say anything else. Tears clogged her throat.

He grinned, obviously seeing the happiness in her expression.

“Will you marry, Hannah? Will you be my wife?”

She threw her arms around him. “Yes. Yes, I’ll be your wife.”

He squeezed her tightly. A shudder ran through him. “We’ll have a shifter wedding. The three of us. We’ll all wear rings, but the legal paperwork for the humans will show you as my wife. That’s okay with you, isn’t it?”

She kissed him. “Yes. That’s okay with me. Ethan’s okay with it too, right?”

“It was his idea.” He eased back. “He loves us both, Hannah. We’re very lucky.”

“We are”—she caught her lip between her teeth—“which is why it’s hard for me to sit and wait while I know he’s in danger.”

“Trust him. He’s strong, and he’s planned tonight well. Michael expects him to show up at the circle for the mating run. Ethan will, but once it starts, he’ll stay behind and challenge Michael in front of the rest of the pack.”

She closed her eyes and focused on her racing heart until it slowed. Noah had told her the details of Ethan’s conversation with Michael and how he was convinced Ethan wanted to mate Maria. “I do trust him. This is ultimately his fight anyway.”

Mated to the alpha, she’d have to get used to his life being in danger. Challenges were rare, but they did happen. Violence was part of their lives. It was the harsh reality of being a shifter.

“Good. Now crawl behind the seats. It’s time to smuggle you into my house.”

She glanced at him. His grin fit the humor in his voice. She matched his smile. It was impossible not to. “Okay, but you do realize it’s a tight squeeze, even for me. I’m going to get a cramp.”

He unbuckled her, then tugged on her hand. “I’m sorry, but it’s the safest way. And I’ll rub any sore muscles you get.”

She worked her way into the small storage area between the front seats and the back of the cab. Noah covered her with a blanket.

“Are you okay?” he asked.

“Yes, but let’s make this quick. Okay?”

He patted her bottom. “Absolutely, love.”

The truck moved a moment later. The half-hour drive from the Kagan pack lands to Noah’s house felt longer, but nobody stopped them. Noah pulled into his garage, locked the truck with her inside, then disappeared into the house. She held her breath while he checked out the place.

Her worry for Ethan built without Noah’s calm presence, but she held his words close and took comfort from them. Ethan was strong. She didn’t doubt his ability to defeat Michael. The spirit wolf also wanted to be returned to Ethan. She would put her faith in the mystical animal too and trust that it would do what it could to protect him.

Several minutes passed. Finally, the truck door opened. Noah’s scent swept into the cab. He yanked the blanket off her. “Hannah, we have a problem.”

“What happened?”

He glanced over his shoulder, then met her gaze. “Maria’s inside. She got here a few minutes ago. Michael’s ordered her to participate in the mating run, but—”

“What? Why?” She stared at Noah wide-eyed. “I thought he expected Ethan to be there. Isn’t Michael worried Ethan will go after her?”

“I don’t know what he was hoping would happen. I just know why he did it.” Noah rubbed his thumb in a soothing back-and-forth motion over the pounding vein in her wrist. “He found out that instead of spending time with me, she’s been seeing Alex. Sleeping with him.”

“You were lying for her?”

“Yes. Michael demands to know where she’s at, who she’s with. Using me as an excuse was easy. I can’t mate her, so I’m not a threat.”

“Great.” She pinched the bridge of her nose. “Now what?”

“Michael gave her a choice—participate in the run, or he’d give her to one of his dominants. No way would he allow her to spend another night with a worthless human.”

She groaned. “This isn’t good.”

“Actually, for Maria it’s going to be okay. I just have to get her back to Michael’s house.”

“Excuse me? Why?”

“Because Nic, Quinn, and several dominants from your pack are on their way there as we speak to retrieve her. Quinn is claiming courting rights, saying he suspects she’s his true mate.”

The antiquated custom was rarely invoked, but given that Michael supported the old ways, it was a perfect reprieve for Maria. Hannah grinned. “And Michael can’t refuse.”

Noah took her hand and helped her from the car. “Especially not after Quinn sent an official request to Michael and copied all the alphas in the States on the email.”

She chuckled. “He’s smart, that’s for sure. I’d hate to be in Maria’s shoes, though. Living with a shifter male who wants her while her human lover is minutes away is not going to be easy.”

Noah shrugged. “She’ll figure it out, and while she does, she’ll be safe. That’s the most important thing.”

“Okay, but why do you have to go?”

He scrubbed a hand down his face. “I don’t, but she’s angry. I’m worried she’ll take off instead of going with Quinn. She didn’t come here for me to make sure she got back to the house safely. She wants me to help her get off our pack lands, so I lied to her and told her I would.”

She shook her head. “She’s going to be furious with you.”

“I know, but too many of our pack mates have disappeared once they left. Look at what happened to Owen. I wouldn’t be able to live with myself if Maria was taken too.” Noah pulled Hannah into his arms. “It’ll take me twenty minutes tops to drive out there and another twenty to get back here. An hour. That’s the most I’ll be gone. I hate the idea of leaving you alone, but nobody knows you’re with me.”

Other books

Her Special Charm by Marie Ferrarella
Razor Sharp by Fern Michaels
Bound to Her by Sascha Illyvich
A Bit of Me by Bailey Bradford
Territory by Judy Nunn