FLETCHER'S POV
Snap....
My bones crunched back into place, a symphony of agony.
Each vertebra realigned with a wet pop that echoed through the empty road.
A burning sensation raced down my spine, and I bit back with a scream. After decades of shifting, you'd think I'd get used to the pain. I never did.
I gasped, clutching my side. The skin knit together, sealing the deep wound Logan's men had left, but the phantom pain remained.
My fingers came away sticky with blood-some mine, some theirs. The silver traces in the wound made my skin itch and burn as my body fought to expel the foreign substance.
I stood up, naked and covered in dirt.
I didn't care about the nudity. Carlos and I had shifted in front of each other a thousand times.
My clothes were scattered across the road in shredded pieces, soaked in blood.
I'll probably need new ones before we reached Centro Villa, but that was a problem for later.
"I don't know whether to be happy or offended," I rasped, spitting blood onto the sand. "He left us alive."
The words tasted bitter. Logan had humiliated us. Beaten us. And then walked away like we weren't even worth finishing off.
"I blame myself," Carlos whispered.
"He thinks we're a joke," I growled. "He thinks the Belmont pack is so weak he can just toy with us."
I spotted the girl's knapsack lying in the dirt.
She'd come here with nothing, likely running from something.......came here looking for refuge.
And we'd failed her within minutes of her arrival.
I walked over and picked it up. I unzipped the side pocket and grabbed a water jug, draining it in seconds.
But it wasn't the water that satisfied me. It was the smell.
"I'm not going to be a toy for that fucker," Carlos said, his voice dropping an octave. But he wasn't looking at me. He was looking at the bag.
"We need to raid Port Alvarez," I said, watching him closely. "We need to get her back before Logan touches her."
The thought of Logan's hands on her made my claws threaten to pop out.
I had my own share of women but the idea of a "forever" mate always terrified me.
But this... this was different. I felt like I was starving, and she was the only food in the world. Like I'd been walking through life partially blind and had suddenly seen color for the first time.
"I felt it too, Fletch," Carlos whispered.
"Felt what?" I asked, though I already knew.
Carlos looked up at me. His eyes were glowing gold.
"The pull," he said. "I hope she's my mate."
My stomach dropped.
"Your mate?" I stepped closer, my voice dropping to a dangerous growl. "She's my*l mate, Carlos. I felt it the second I saw her."
"So did I."
Three words. Three simple words that changed everything.
We stood there, two Alphas, naked and bleeding, staring each other down over a girl we didn't even know. A girl whose name we hadn't even learned before she was stolen.
In the old world, we would fight. We would tear each other apart until only one of us was left to claim her.
But Carlos was my cousin. My brother in arms. We'd fought side by side for over a century. We'd saved each other's lives more times than I could count.
Could I kill him over a woman I'd known for barely five minutes?
Yes, my wolf snarled. Yes, without hesitation.
"Two Alphas," I muttered, running a hand through my hair. "Sharing one mate?"
The concept was foreign, unnatural. Alphas didn't share. We dominated, we possessed.
"It's rare," Carlos said, his gaze intense. "But not impossible."
He looked at the bag again, then at the horizon where Logan had taken her.
"There are stories," he continued, his voice rough. "Ancient legends of powerful wolves blessed by the Moon Goddess with twin mates. Or of mates so rare they needed multiple protectors."
"Fairy tales," I spat, but my conviction wavered.
Nothing about tonight made sense. Why would the Moon Goddess give us both the same mate unless there was a reason?
"We don't have time to argue about claim rights," Carlos snapped, his Alpha voice rising to meet mine. "Logan has her. And if he figures out what she is..."
"He'll break her," I finished.
The rage returned, hotter than before. It burned through the confusion, the jealousy, the territorial instinct demanding I fight my cousin for dominance.
None of that mattered if she died in Logan's fortress.
I looked at Carlos. I saw the same murderous intent mirrored in his eyes. The same desperate need to protect what was ours. We could figure out the sharing part later. Right now, we had a common enemy.
And Logan had made the fatal mistake of taking something that belonged to both of us.
"We share," I said, the words tasting strange but right. "She is ours."
Carlos nodded once. A silent pact. The kind we'd made a hundred times before in battle, but this one felt different. More sacred. Binding in a way that went beyond pack law.
"Ours," he agreed.
I grabbed the backpack, slinging it over my shoulder. It felt like carrying a piece of her heart. Her scent surrounded me, and my wolf settled slightly, content to have even this small connection.
"We go to Centro Villa," I commanded, my Alpha voice returning in full force. "We get the mercenaries. We get the guns."
The time for subtlety was over. Logan wanted war? We'd give him war.
I turned toward the north, toward the dark fortress of Port Alvarez.
Toward her. I could feel her through the bond now that I wasn't fighting it-fear and confusion and a stubborn spark of defiance that made me want to smile despite everything.
She'd need to be to survive until we reached her.
"And then," I growled, "we paint the streets with Logan's blood."
FLETCHER'S POV
"She's my mate as well," I finally conceded. My voice sounded certain, and I knew that the words I had spoken were an evident truth. I channeled all my attention to Carlos. He gestured, a soft grin showing on his face.
"I'm happy we share a mate," Carlos replied with a friendly smile.
"So am I," I chuckled.
This shared revelation meant that Carlos and I would be together, alongside the pretty damsel. It was a superb thought, realizing that I wouldn't have to be separated from my cousin. We were both joint Alphas of the Belmont pack, yet having a common mate would bring us closer to each other.
"Right now, because of that clown Logan, our mate is in harm's way. If you can run, we'd better head toward Belmont and start organizing our men for a rescue mission."
"Right. I'm all set. Let's run."
I buckled on my spurs, and Carlos did likewise. Then we began running along the street towards Belmont. I felt a sharp pain in my ankle, but I gritted my teeth and endured the torment. Getting the lady back was the main thing at this moment. With each moment, my injuries would heal more and more. I just needed to wait for them to heal completely.
After the next fifteen to thirty minutes, Carlos and I arrived at the borders of Belmont. The town we called a "safe haven" was encircled by a great wall that was impenetrable, with a broad way into the comfort of our home. It was a great sight to behold.
The town had once been a jail unit, thus the truly impeccable nature of the site. The guards at the city gate, Troy and Elmont, stood side by side, strapped with swords and a giant crossbow.
"Get everybody together. We have a very crucial assignment," I said in my Alpha voice, the tone that ruled out defiance.
The guards ran into the town, and we trailed closely behind them. The houses inside were terraced, one-story with orange tiled rooftops. They surrounded a town square with a well in the middle. Palm trees were spread around, swaying slightly in the breeze. Roughly eighty people lived here, everyone who had escaped the mutiny led by Logan.
We had no ex-convicts among us, and Carlos and I had to keep every visitor in check. There was a likelihood that someone who was a prisoner could despise the person who had kept them in the slammer, so we had chosen to prevent the chance of such a negative circumstance entering our pack by shutting our entryways to the convicts.
Others had come to seek shelter, of course, since the island had turned into a dead zone, just as the lady we called our mate had done. We welcomed such ones after ensuring they weren't criminals or some affiliate rebel group.
However, that very thought took my mind back to the lady. Who was she? Could it be possible that she was a bad person? I was unable to picture her being a killer or a hardened criminal.
Nonetheless, she had a profound scar on her face, which implied she was somebody who had seen some battle in her life. The disfigurement didn't irritate me; regardless, the scar added character to her already ravishing face.
Carlos and I entered our home, changing as we selected from the wardrobe. When we were dressed, we went to the village square. Quite a considerable number of the members of our clan had started to gather.
I rested against the well with Carlos standing right next to me, and we waited for every single person who was present in the town to show up.
"At this point, there's no turning back," I whispered to Carlos.
"If we don't embark on this mission, we stand a chance to lose everything we've worked for...," Carlos lamented.
"Indeed, it's our sole responsibility to keep this island safe."
"Logan shouldn't be underrated, remember how he humiliated us during our failed rescue mission?" Carlos asked.
"Definitely, it's high time we step up."
I'd enlisted a few archers to join our guerrilla army. Marching towards the peninsula, we had to reach Southwest Dartmoor before dusk. Our hunters were outside, occupied with bringing game back home; however, the others, including the kids, came consistently, until the village square was filled with a population of fighters.
When I believed that everybody we were expecting was finally here, I started explaining the circumstance in a loud, booming voice.
"Carlos and I left to check who showed up on the new boat. It was a lady, and we believed she should join our pack. However, Logan wanted her as well, and we battled."
They murmured among themselves. There wasn't a single person on Dartmoor Island who didn't know who Logan was and what could befall the lady if we left her with him.
"Logan is also planning to take over the entire island, so we need to do something."
Everybody was suddenly awestruck by what I said, but I had to emphasize that we were not taking any chances.
"We'll launch a full-scale attack on Port Alvarez to get the lady back." I stared once more at the crowd and felt sad for what was about to happen.
"Everybody, get ready for battle!" Carlos yelled at the top of his lungs.
This was going to be a bad day for some; we were going to lose some men, but it didn't matter to me. It was rather a turning point in my life, and most importantly, the strange lady needed to be saved.
I'd put her on a pedestal above everyone else, since there was something about her that kept us mesmerized. What could that be?