Shifting the Night Away (34 page)

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Authors: Artemis Wolffe,Cynthia Fox,Terra Wolf,Lucy Auburn,Wednesday Raven,Jami Brumfield,Lyn Brittan,Rachael Slate,Claire Ryann

BOOK: Shifting the Night Away
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Chapter Twenty-Two

Shifter Politics

The surviving sacrifices were pulled from the water dripping wet, glistening like newborn babes. There was no way of knowing who would live and who would die; by his count, at least two had drowned down there. Their bodies would be pulled further and further underground by the mysterious current, only to float away in some stream further south.

Riker stood at the edge of the group, opening himself back up to the clan. He felt Jonathan at the edge of his awareness, but the others were being kept in the center of a ring formed by leaders in the shifter community. He could only glimpse slivers of them between the closed ranks.

“What did they do?” Riker asked Jonathan, who was his second as well as his friend. “And why aren’t you in there with them?”

He looked down briefly, and Riker could tell through their bond that he was uncomfortable. “Things got a little strange after you… left. There was a lack of leadership. I tried to step in, but Darren just wouldn’t back down, and I had no leverage to go over him. So I kept things civil, tried to reason with him. But eventually he got his way, and started thieving again. In public.”

“The fucking idiot,” Riker swore. He glanced at Mara, knowing that there were still some secrets between them, but also that he didn’t have the time to explain everything right now. So he slipped into telepathy.
Where is Bree? Why isn’t she here with the others?

She left.
There was despair in Jonathan; though he’d never expressed his feelings, he’d always cared for the female werepanther.
Without you or Pierce around, she just stopped caring.

It was the first time they’d spoken of their former leader since the day Riker sliced his throat open and watched him die; at this point, he felt nothing at all when he thought of Pierce.

“We should get moving,” he said aloud, knowing Mara would get suspicious if they didn’t say something. “Mara, you stay here with Jonathan. This is something for me to handle alone.”

She opened her mouth to protest, but he shook his head and she snapped her jaw shut. “Fine. But if something happens to you, I’ll be pissed.”

Chuckling, he pulled her close with a hand at her waist and bent his head to kiss her. She was soft and pliant beneath his touch, her breath catching as their lips met. They were like fire and oil sometimes, but it made him feel alive—and human.

With her kiss still burning on his lips, he descended into the madness before him. The threat of violence seemed to hang in the air; now that the sacrifices had been made and the shift happened, everyone was focused on the werepanther clan.

“Daniel,” Riker said, calling out to the werelion boss. “What are you doing with my people?”

Kip, the lead werewolf, stepped up and spoke in his place. “What needs to be done,” she said, her eyes a piercing blue. “
Your
people, who have remained unclaimed for so long, are putting the rest of us at risk. They shift during the day, did you know that?”

“We just shifted during the day,” he pointed out, even though he knew this was different.

“This is different,” Kip said, echoing his own thoughts. “When we shift here, we put up a perimeter. We keep the humans out, and so does the cave’s reputation. But
they
walk into homes in the middle of the day and use their abilities in front of humans.”

Riker glanced between her and Daniel, who was standing stock still between him and his clan. He caught Killian’s eyes for a brief moment before Daniel shifted in front of him.

I’m sorry,
Killian said to him, before the power of the other shifters’ mind blocks shut them out. Though the telepathic bond shifters shared could be overwhelming, especially among their own kind and pack or pride, it was even more frustrating when other shifters used their powers to come between those bonded together. Riker glared at Daniel, who barely blinked back at him.

“We need to ensure our safety,” Daniel said, speaking up for the first time. “If you’re not strong enough to control them, the punishment for exposing us is simple: we’ll cut away their panther form.”

Riker ground his teeth. “That’s cruel and unnecessary, especially now that I’ve claimed them.”

“It’s too late,” Kip said. “The police are on our trail, and that’s gotten the attention of the feds. You know what will happen if they decide to hunt us again. It’ll be a bloodbath.”

He couldn’t argue with that; though he’d been young at the time, and still human, Riker could remember the mysterious news reports. To the human world, the arrests and killings of hundreds of supernaturals had been framed as gang and drug warfare; in reality, a federal task force dedicated to eradicating their kind had come to Belmont City and decimated whole communities. They’d even tried to fill in the pool in the Cave of Sorrows, but found that impossible. So they erected signs and fences to try to keep people out of the area—signs and fences the shifters ignored.

“Let me bring them back into the fold,” he urged Daniel. “If we really are about to face another witch hunt, we’ll need all the fighters we can get. The panthers are a unique species. Don’t destroy us this quickly.”

There was a breath in which he and Daniel seemed to be looking at each other across a great divide; he could almost
feel
the panther swish its tail at the lion.

“I may consider it,” he allowed; Kip started to protest, but he silenced her. “First, though, you’ll have to prove that you’re strong enough to carry out the task of leading them. They’ve been rogue for too long to be controlled by a weak leader.”

It was all he could do not to sigh with relief. “Anything. I’m here to stay, I’ll do whatever it takes to prove that to you.”

Eyes gleaming with triumph, Daniel smirked. “Fight me. Tooth to tooth, claw to claw. Whoever stays standing in the dueling ring the longest gets to decide your clan’s fate.”

***

I watched from up above as Riker went to confront a group of people in the middle of the clearing below us.
I wish I could understand what they’re saying,
I thought, glancing over at Jonathan and wondering if he could hear them from this distance.
Whatever it is, it can’t be good.

“He’s agreed to fight their leader,” Jonathan said, as if sensing my curiosity. “If he defeats the lion shifter, our people go free. If he doesn’t, bad things will happen.”

“What kinds of bad things?”

“The kinds that end in funerals.”

I swallowed roughly, watching as a space was cleared in the crowd below. “Isn’t there anything we can do to help him?”

“I wish there was, but if I interfere I’ll just get caught up in it, and you—well, you’re human.”

He sounded apologetic, but I understood why he dismissed me out of hand; now that I’d seen the sheer power and majesty of the shapeshifters, I knew I’d never be as strong as one of them.

I had to get my mind off of what Riker was about to do.

“What was it like, in that water? I was only at the edge of it, but even I felt something unsettling.”

Jonathan’s eyes were shadowed as he turned to me. “It was like being set on fire and flying at the same time. It was like falling forever in a nightmare, like breathing acid.”

“Oh.”

He sighed, drifting off into memory. “Really, it’s not the water I remember, but being pulled out of it. Seeing my friends, finding out they’d survived, that I’d survived too. That’s how we all wound up panthers, you know—it’s not exactly a common form to take. But we all jumped in together, and when we came out, we weren’t like any other shapeshifter who’d gone into the water before us. And we were all the same.”

“If you were that close, why did Riker ever leave?”

“That’s a question for him to answer.”

A sound from down below drew our attention back to the events unfolding. In the middle of what was now a fight ring, Riker stood in his human form, and a majestic male lion was at his feet. The beast roared, even louder than the first time; it was so huge that the sound of it seemed to rock the entire forest around us.

“Surely that’ll attract attention,” I said to Jonathan.

“Maybe on other days, but not today. The power of all the shifters in one place cloaks our kind from view. Unless a human is stupid enough to jump the fence that was built to keep them away from this place, we have the whole area to ourselves and no one is the wiser. It’s still risky, but it’s a tradition to meet here at least once a year. This is when we remind ourselves who we are and where we came from.”

I filed that information away, knowing it could come in handy at some point in the future. “So every shapeshifter is here?”

Jonathan cleared his throat. “No. Now watch the fight.”

Mouth clicking shut, I forced myself to look down at the ring, despite my nervousness. The lion was no longer alone; a jet black panther, sleek and low to the ground, stood facing him.

Riker is half the lion’s size,
I realized in horror, as it dawned on me that he could very well be eviscerated today.
Please don’t let that happen.
I sent a little prayer up to whatever god protected supernatural creatures from other supernatural creatures.

The fight started in a flash as claws met claws. They moved so quickly I could barely track their movements; it was all just a blur of golden and night-black fur.

“I don’t know if I can watch this,” I said, heart in my throat.

“Don’t look away for even a second.”

I couldn’t tear my eyes off them, in any case. For a moment it looked like the panther had the upper hand as he leapt on the lion’s back and dug his scythe-like claws into golden hide. But the lion twisted around, jaws wide open, and clamped down on the panther’s neck.

“Oh my god…” I covered my mouth, horrified at what I saw.
 

Riker was twisted to the ground on his back, belly-up. He screamed a blood-curdling animal sound of fury and pain. I wanted to reach out and
stop
it; every muscle at my body screamed at me to intercept.

I turned every thought towards them, willing the lion to open his jaw and let Riker slip away. Those teeth digging into his fur
seemed
to hesitate for a moment. A great breeze swirled around me, bringing with it a thousand wild scents; for a moment I felt like I could see two futures before me. In one, Riker died; in the other, he conquered. It almost felt like I could reach out and snatch the future I wanted from the jaws of fate.

The moment passed. Riker slipped out from underneath the lion, and with a great scream he launched himself at its neck. I could hear Jonathan muttering, “Do it, do it, c’mon,” as the panther’s teeth sunk into a golden-maned neck. Roaring his anger, the lion twisted back and forth, but he couldn’t dislodge the panther’s tight grip.

As he tossed and turned wildly, the lion stepped briefly out of the circle that’d been drawn in the ground.

“Forfeit!” a voice called. “The match is won by the werepanther.”

I let out a breath I hadn’t even realized I’d been holding. A huge weight lifted off my shoulders.

“I really thought he was going to lose for a second there,” Jonathan said. “I don’t even know how the tables turned.”

“Let’s not overthink it. Just celebrate.” I took a step forward, then hesitated. “Can I go to him now?”

He grinned. “Fly, lovesick birdie.”

I ran down the hill, trees streaming past as I rushed into the fray. It was easy enough to push through the loose crowd and into the fight ring, where the two opponents had separated and were turning back into their human forms. One glance at Riker in between the panther and the other was enough to convince me I never wanted to jump into that pool.

A moment later his whole form seemed to snap back into place, clothes mysteriously intact. I didn’t have time to question him about how that worked; I just threw myself into his arms, glad he was still whole.

“Careful there, princess,” he said, stepping back, “my ribs have known better days.”

“Oh! Sorry,” I mumbled.

“No worries.” With a heart-melting smile, he kissed me. It was brief, because of how public we were, but it soothed me all the same.

Chapter Twenty-Three

What Will Be

As soon as the fight was over, he felt a lessening of psychic control in the air. He could feel where his clan was, and he knew their general emotions. Stepping back from Mara’s kiss, Riker let himself slip back into the minds of his clan.

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