Read Eventide of the Bear (The Wild Hunt Legacy #3) Online

Authors: Cherise Sinclair

Tags: #Fiction, #Paranormal, #erotic, #Romance, #Erotica, #Contemporary, #BDSM

Eventide of the Bear (The Wild Hunt Legacy #3) (6 page)

BOOK: Eventide of the Bear (The Wild Hunt Legacy #3)
11.97Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

H
alfway to the
bathroom—and the mirror there—Emma steadied herself on the back of the sturdy wooden chair, pushed it forward again, and hopped to it on one leg. Every thump seemed to echo through the house.

She stopped and listened. Only silence met her ears.

Half an hour ago, Ben had checked that she had food and water, and made sure the disgusting commode was close to the bed. He’d left to get groceries, but would be home all too soon. This was her only chance.

Oh, Goddess, she hurt. Every jump jarred her leg so badly her clenched teeth were probably going to fracture.

It was better though. Really. Today her leg only throbbed as if a dwarf was thumping the wound with a giant hammer. Uncomfortable, yes, but far more tolerable than when her imaginary torturer had used a
knife
.

She sighed. Couldn’t the pain stop? Just for a little bit so she could have a break?

Break
.
Cute, Emma.

She rolled her eyes toward the ceiling. At one time, she’d loved playing with words. Only when alone though. Her mother believed a child should be silent. Very, very silent. Moreover, when allowed to speak, her manners had better be impeccable. She half-smiled. Her mother’s training had been effective enough that the master bard had teased Emma for being too shy and reserved. Those weren’t common songster traits. Now, she was so unused to being around people that speaking aloud at all was difficult.

But she certainly hadn’t forgotten how Daonain were supposed to treat a banished shifter. No one should even acknowledge her presence, let alone speak to her, yet they had.

And, oh, it was wondrous to hear other shifters, to smell their scents, to be spoken to. She’d found herself singing little tunes under her breath. Still…no one had commented on her scarred face or even looked at her strangely. She hadn’t said anything, either.

What if they suddenly comprehended she’d been banished? What if they kicked her out before she could walk again? Why hadn’t they noticed the banishment scars? The long, black scars along her jaw could hardly be invisible, could they? She could feel them, after all.

She needed to see them.

She eyed the distance to the bathroom. Maybe seven gut-wrenchingly painful hops. She could do it; she had to know.

One hop. Her teeth gritted together.

Ben would growl if he found her out of bed. He’d been so concerned. No one had ever treated her as he did, as if she was important. When she’d been hurting, he’d read to her to take her mind off the pain. He brought her treats to tempt her appetite. By the Mother, he’d brought her chocolate ice cream. Just the memory made her smile.

Although he’d looked frustrated at the way she’d evaded his questions about her past, he hadn’t growled. However, she had a feeling he hadn’t given up.

Another hop.

The Cosantir hadn’t returned to question her. Ben said he’d gone into the mountains to the territory’s Elder Village and wouldn’t be back for a couple more days.
Reprieve
.

Another hop.

Another.

A few minutes later, she leaned on the sink, gulping, and trying not to vomit. Agony roared through her body. Cold sweat ran down her back.

Eventually, she wiped the tears from her face and pulled in a slow breath. Anticipation and dread filled her as she leaned forward to peer into the mirror.

She blinked.

It had been three years since she’d looked at her reflection in…anything. How gaunt she’d grown. Her wavy, light hair was longer and almost reached her butt. Her face was awfully pale.

Enough stalling. Her fingernails dug into the sink enamel as she turned her head and angled her chin. The light shone on her lower cheek and jaw, and on the thin, white scars from a werecat’s claws.

White.
She felt as if she’d run into a tree and knocked the air out of herself.

The scars weren’t black. But marks of banishment were always black…unless…the Mother forgave a shifter and erased the darkness.

Emma ran her fingers over the healed wounds. When had the thin scars changed from black to white? They’d never felt different from one day to the next. It could have been any time, since she’d never looked, not even in the lake when bathing. To see the black of a Cosantir’s Judgment staining her skin would have sent her into a depression from which she’d not have recovered.

For all she knew, she might have been forgiven a year ago. Two.

Her fingers traced over the thin scars as she stared in the mirror. She was forgiven. No longer banished or shunned.

Slowly, then faster, exhilaration filled her like a spring flood, washing everything clean before it. She couldn’t stop touching the scars. The beautifully white, white scars.

Had she ever seen any shifter who’d returned from banishment? She couldn’t recall. Did healed scars from a banishment look different? Maybe no one would know she’d been banished.

Maybe she could live with her own people again.

Hope swelled in her heart, so painfully she had to wrap her arms around herself to hold it in.

Could she stay here in Cold Creek? Find something to do? Maybe…maybe even sing?

“What the hell are you doing out of bed?” Ben’s deep bass filled the bathroom as he stopped in the doorway.

Hopping away from the mirror, Emma tripped and fell backward.

He closed strong hands around her waist and caught her easily. His chuckle was a low rumble as he said, “Sorry, li’l bear. I didn’t mean to scare you.” With no evidence of exertion, he scooped her up and carried her to her bed.

“Um, thank you.”

“Not a problem. Just don’t do it again, or Donal will bite my head off.”

“Right.” As he swept the covers over her, she looked around. “Did I ever mention how beautiful your room is?”

His gaze took in the furnishings. “I’m sorry I didn’t have time to do better. But you’re lucky. Aside from my bedroom and this one, the rest of the upstairs is still being restored. Two weeks ago, you’d have been bunked down on the floor.”

“I’d have been fine.” She laughed. “Floors are softer than caves.”

He stilled, surprise in his expression, and she realized she’d never laughed. She’d been so worried about people’s reactions, expecting someone to tell her to leave, that she hadn’t been able to relax.

But her scars were white. No one knew her here, so far from the Mt. Hood territory. No one knew she’d been banished.

Mother’s forgiveness or not, she didn’t deserve to live among the clan, and she shouldn’t, but how could she not savor this boon for a little while? Hearing the rumble of Ben’s voice, smelling his faintly wild shifter scent, seeing the warmth in his eyes…she felt like a parched desert plant greedily embracing the first drops of rain.

Her mind was made up. She’d stay as long as they’d let her.

Chapter Seven


N
estled in the
white-capped North Cascade Mountains, the tiny town of Cold Creek looked as if it hadn’t changed since the early 1900s. Past the two-block-long Main Street, Ryder drove to the edge of town, down a smaller road, and parked at the end. The road had a rural feel with oversized lots and older two- and three-story homes. He could see why Ben had chosen it.

“We’re here, Minette.”
May the Mother be with us.
He lifted his daughter from the kiddie seat on the passenger side of the SUV.

Settling her on his hip, he ruffled her silky brown hair. “Gonna need you to sit on the step for a few minutes, kitten.”
While I see if we have a welcome here or not.
Anticipation, hope, and worry welled inside him in an unsettling brew.

She blinked up at him, thumb firmly in her mouth, green-brown eyes wide. No answers forthcoming. Considering he hadn’t heard her speak at all in the last six days, he wasn’t surprised, but he still hoped. By the Mother, he’d never hoped so hard in his life. If only he’d known Genevieve had born a child. Or not fallen for her in the first place. His jaw clenched. Fuck, he was an idiot. Nevertheless, that trail was in the past, he had a new one to follow now.

And amends to make.

He stared up at the three-story Victorian house. The dark green siding contrasted pleasantly with the white trim and a dark brown, shingled roof. The covered front porch butted up against an octagonal tower on the left. Although the grounds looked as if no one had tended them in a decade or more, the house had been recently restored. Lumber off to one side indicated Ben wasn’t finished.

Ryder’s shoulders relaxed. His littermate hadn’t changed beyond all recognition. Building was one of the loves they’d shared. Ben preferred to work on a large scale by building and remodeling houses. Ryder favored customized finish work and handcrafting furniture.

“Let’s see how loud the bear will roar.” His gut was tight as he carried his cub up the sidewalk. When she was settled on the porch steps, he handed her a picture book to look at.

With a small smile—her only kind—she opened the book. Minette never moved much. Never got in trouble. Never had a tantrum or disobeyed. He hoped, prayed to the Mother for her to grow confident enough to be a normal, feisty cub.

She needed a stable home and family. Worry gnawed at his guts as he moved past her to the front door.

What if his brother had a mate? What if he was still angry with Ryder for leaving? Every second of the last five years weighed down his shoulders.

His rap on the door was answered by Ben himself.

Pleasure surged through Ryder at the sight of his littermate. The world hadn’t felt right without his brother at his side.

“Griz.” Fuck, it was good to catch his brother’s scent—bear and male, along with hints of sawdust and pine.

“Ryder?” Ben’s voice was hoarse, as if he didn’t believe whom he was seeing.

Ryder hadn’t changed that much. Sure, he’d put on the heft and weight of a mature male, but not much else. He wanted to laugh—whoever heard of Ben being silent—but he had to struggle to get air into his lungs. It felt as if the bear had pinned him with a heavy paw. “I—fuck, Ben. I’m…”

The broad, strong face closed up.

Ryder’s words shriveled into dust. His brother should have yelled. As small cubs, they’d tussled and argued; as adults, they’d shouted and fought, yet united together against all comers. His littermate had never shut him out before.

People who saw Ben as easygoing hadn’t seen his steel backbone. Injustice and cruelty brought out the bear’s fury. Apparently, so did being hurt.

Ryder’s hopes sank faster than a rock in the lake.

“What the fuck do you want here?” Ben’s voice was a low growl, deeper than it had been before.

“I came to—”

“No.” The growl grew to a shout. “No word from you for five fucking years. Bad enough you chose a female over me, but then you walked away as if I was old scat. You made your choice,
bro
.”

The emphasis was ugly—and showed the damage he’d done to his littermate.

My fault. My obsession with a female. Fuck.

Ryder let out a breath. Nothing left to say, was there? “Right. I’m sorry, Ben.”

Ryder’s footsteps thudded hollowly on the wood as he crossed the porch. “Let’s go, kitten.”

She gave him a worried look, her thumb in her mouth.

His heart twisted. By the God, he’d give his left arm, both arms, if it meant she’d be safe. Never have to worry again. Carefully, he picked her up.

Behind him came a sound as if Ben had gotten a fist in the gut.

Ryder glanced back.

Ben stared at Minette. His voice shook as he asked, “You have a cub?”

*

An hour later,
in the kitchen, Ben watched his littermate at the sink. By Herne’s heavy balls, Ryder had grown even better looking over the years. Maybe four of so inches short of Ben’s God-given six feet six, his brother had the lean musculature and grace of a panther shifter. Classically handsome, he’d drawn the females like bees to spilled honey.

Although he and Ben shared the angular cheekbones, straight nose, and thick hair of their mother, Ben’s broad features and frame showed his Scottish/Welsh heritage. His light skin held a tan only because of hours in the sun.

BOOK: Eventide of the Bear (The Wild Hunt Legacy #3)
11.97Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Gob's Grief by Chris Adrian
1971 - Want to Stay Alive by James Hadley Chase
Kapitoil by Wayne, Teddy
Godslayer by Jacqueline Carey
Lassiter Tough by Loren Zane Grey