— Kaden —
I came out of the plane two hours ago, and was already through with the meeting. It hadn’t been that complicated. Nubinero had refused all our demands. This was the last minute-ditch effort to end things peacefully but their forces and mine were already in position for battle. Weeks of back and forth. I wasn’t that invested in the matter, but a few of my allies were, so I did them the curtesy of indulging them a bit.
There were nine packs in the end who stood here today. Warriors and Alphas. The battlefield would not be so far from Monaweard, the first pack to have raised the alarm about this whole mess, but far enough not to put at risk Mariqueen’s territory and non-warrior residents. But still close enough to be a respectable commute.
The place chosen was far enough from humans not to notice and get involved, in the nook of a small mountain range that would—along with its extensive forest—defuse the sounds of battle. Not all conflicts have locations this well prepared, but the extent of human society’s sprawl is considerable and it has to be taken in consideration, unless you want to trigger the human warning bells and find yourself facing a government’s military might, or find yourself locked in a facility of which you’ll never escape. It’s not only werewolf society that worries about that, but the entirety of the supernatural world. To take blatant risk with humans can have a lot of other species ready to rally upon you to take care of the threat. I’ve been part of such party before.
Thankfully, Nubinero has not pushed us in a situation where we had to readjust on the fly and risk for this to occur. They’ve been rational enough to know how problematic this could become, but also that making this conflict fought in a more risqué setting could lead to the involvement of others who were not originally willing to be involved, only to stop them from attracting human attention.
On the other hand, it also meant that they were confident enough in their capacity to fight us head on, without land advantages, surprise on their side, or guerrilla warfare, and still have a good shot at winning, or even taking us down.
We had to be careful about this one.
From what we found, the facility we shut down was mostly a source of income, and their victims aimed at the black market. But they had a few groups they controlled, like the one that attacked Ghealach, on the payroll. It was mostly what the facility was financing, and those were bringing in what was far more worrisome things to take into account about our enemy. Super-weapons.
That’s what a lot of powerful artifacts can become. Their use are sometimes extremely arcane and particular. Some could only be used by a certain person, some at a specific confluence of planets, others may have widely different result depending on who uses it or how. Knowledge about such artifacts is sometimes scarce, sometimes conflicting, and others completely lost to time.
On the up side, they targeted mostly smaller artifacts, in spiritual weight that is. Those were easier to steel and were not as strongly protected. Or so that was the information I had on them. I could be wrong and they could be holding the Lance of Destiny, or the Book of Thoth, or the Cintamani Stone. That would suck for us.
I’d manage to have a partial list of what they may be in possession of—we also found a few artifacts they sold either because they found no use for it, or were too strapped for cash, or in one case, the artifact attracted too much heat to keep it—and so far, nothing terrified me, but it got me very careful nonetheless.
We were moving in long convoys of off-road vehicles slowly on an old path through the thick forest. The hoods were whipped by branches and brush. It was a trail seldom travelled and it was narrower as we went in deeper. We knew we wouldn’t be able to reach our destination on wheels, but the closest the better.
I didn’t know how long that battle would be, but one thing I knew is that every battle is possibly the most difficult piece of exercise someone can perform, and everyone needed to save their strength as much as it was possible. I couldn’t afford to have my men exhausted before we even began.
It was a long endeavor. We had to stop often to take a fallen tree off the trackway, or readjust our driving to the rugged terrain. But we had calculated this in our schedule and would not be late to our final location.
We could have shifted and run in a fraction of the time, but again, I wanted everyone as fresh and rested as possible. And this way we could carry a lot more with us. Weapons, ammo, or medical supplies. We had food and water too. I’ve faced battles before that has lasted days. Though, those were generally more a series of small attacks over a period of time than a full on army against army type battle. Yet there were still so many unknowns, and especially when magic is involved, things can rapidly take a weird turn. I wanted to be prepared.
Preparedness is one of the best tools for survival.
It took us a few hours and we gain a lot of altitude, but eventually we had to continue on foot. So we set up camps with the trucks and supplies, and finally trekked the rest on foot.
Some shifted at camps, while others piled on their weapons and body-armour.
Jayson, my beta, was at the head of the team that would take the higher grounds. Many of them snipers, others were ready to charge from a different angle. Mariqueen and her husband were at the head of the smaller pack and allies. David stayed at camp, and with a team, was getting aerial visuals and was connecting to infrared cameras some of my men were installing around the perimeter as we spoke, along with an array of sensors and microphones.
Him and the team I gave him, would be our eyes and ears and would help us face any eventualities.
After a little under an hour of walking, teams began diverging. We had prepared for multiple directions assault. Ideally we could surround and overwhelm the enemy rapidly and be back for breakfast, maybe even earlier.
I would lead the main charge with a few of my most faithful men. Ylva was with me on this team, as was Sam and our newest recruit Mishka.
I didn’t know the guy much and I didn’t trust him yet. So I kept a good eye on him. But so far, he had failed to betray us and has proven himself quite a capable warrior.
The group I was travelling with was much smaller now that the other teams were moving toward their designated targets.
“Is everything okay?” asked me Sam in a hushed voice.
I looked at him confused at his question. It took me a few seconds to realize my feet were slowing down.
For a second I thought my health might be falling apart at the worst of timing. But I stopped for a few seconds and gave Sam a signal to wait. He signaled for the others to continue ahead and waited silently beside me.
I closed my eyes the length of a few heartbeats and tried to assess the situation. I moved my attention from my head to my breathing, to my limbs, nothing clicked.
Why was I slowing then?
I don’t generally do things like this without a good reason, so I shook my head at Sam and moved my attention to our surroundings. Were we observed? Followed?
Sam got the message and scanned the area himself, trying to catch any sign of an early attack.
Maybe this was a magical attack. I tried to feel the air around me, but magic as never been my strong suit.
I gave a quick comment in my earpiece for them to be vigilant and to send a few scouts ahead, just in case.
I found nothing that could have triggered my instincts to be careful.
I began moving slowly focusing on sight, hearing, and most of all smells. My nose was sharper than nearly everyone here, it could have been that my brain picked a smell that was worrisome, but not strong enough for me to really notice. So I put as much concentration in my task of sniffing the air as I could.
Sam let me track on my own, aware he could throw off whatever I’d find if he got too close, and had stayed behind. But I also knew he was keeping an eye on me. No matter how strong I was, or any of my men for that matter, the rule was you never leave anyone in a disadvantageous situation. Never near a battlefield, would one of mine travel alone, no matter how strong. I was not fond of unnecessary risks.
I was maybe ten meters away from my men when I noticed there was a faint undertone in the scents. Something that didn’t fit in this desolated forest.
It was an old smell. Whatever it was, was gone now, and had been so for a long time. I walked a little further, barely able to notice the difference. It’s only when I reached a little clearing empty of vegetation, with little other scents to hide it that my eyes widened.
My heartbeat was now beating frantically.
I took a few slow inhales, I needed to be sure I was right.
It reminded me of a drink I tasted in Indonesia. It was made with a rare flower, exotic and not from this realm, the flavours tingling in my mouth. It had been the most tasteful thing I’d ever ingested, yet the flavours subtle, and a little sweet, and intoxicating.
This smell had this faint exoticism to it. Shivers travelled all along my spine, and the hair on my arms stood on ends. My instincts were screaming at me to find the source of this smell and bury myself in it.
My breaths were heavy now.
I found my mate.
— Kaden — I began to panic.We were heading to battle, but I smelled my mate. I smelled my mate!I tried to track the direction the smell came from but the it was so faint I could hardly notice it. I moved in circles half in a daze. I found a line, a line she must have been traveling, but I couldn’t tell which way she came from and which way she was going. And I tried to sniff both ways to see which seemed the strongest, the freshest.Sam noticed my change in behaviour and got closer. When I noticed him, I raised my hand to make him stop. I was afraid his sheer presence would make me lose her scent.It wasn’t completely irrational either as my own scent on her tracks was enough to nearly destroy what little clue I had.I went in further.I followed one side of the track all the way to a small stream, then I lost her. I checked all over, on the other side, everywhere. The track ended here. My best guess was she walked in the stream for a while, the water masking her scent.I didn’t rea
— Kaden —I took a careful step in her direction.She didn’t try to stop me this time.I took another step, then another.I could see she was hesitant, s
— Kaden —Fuuuuuuuuuck!The battle was already underway. I was supposed to lead this. I started this. And there was a girl ready to bolt, right there in the middle of the woods, and I couldn’t do shit.Dawn.
— Kaden —“What the hell has gone into you?” asked Ylva behind me.I felt her foot land somewhere on my buttocks. Everyone around us cleared up. There aren’t many people who’d dare kick my ass, literally, without expecting severe retaliation.No one wanted
— Elaeya —I was walking back towards camp with a complete stranger in tow. I didn’t know who he was, nor what he wanted, all that I knew is that I consented to this. Again. Twice in so few hours, I did something I would not have expected of myself.I took slow deep breaths opening slowly my senses and instincts—fust not open enough to face the kind of uncontrollable urges I have felt when first we met.
— Elaeya —Mother would be able to track me with my blood, no matter how far I’d be. My parents could track his phone, it should be safe.Yet, these facts didn’t lessen the tension in my body. I had never willingly stayed away from my family for more than a day. I knew of no safer place.
— Kaden —The other bedroom also had an en-suite bathroom, which was convenient, so I used it, careful to wash all remnants of blood from my scent. Sam had brought my luggage up, so I changed and went down.I smelled the food first.There were a couple of domestic cooking—p
— Elaeya —I got up in the afternoon.The sky was still grey, and it was hard to tell the time of the day.There was tension in the air I could not originate. I knew I would not be able to sleep much longer, so I got up. I could hear a voice booming from below, muffled by various walls
— Elaeya —I woke in a familiar hospital room. Kaden was there. I tried to smile and tell him I was okay and to wipe those worries off his face, but the words caught it my throat. The place smelt clean and fresh, but there was this echo of filth, and blood, and gore that came back to me and refused to go way.
— Kaden —“What’s the report,” I asked Darren from a small room next to Elaeya hospital room.“First, how is she?&rdquo
— Elaeya —We grabbed the fuel. I opened the door and splashed it in the direction the men went. I knew there was no other way out. Tamarak came in after me and splashed another can. His hands were nearly back to their normal size now.
— Kaden —“We got words they know we’re coming and have called up the cavalry,” told me Jaxx.“Huh,” said Mishka
— Kaden —“I found it,” said Jean-Philippe on the other side of the line.The info we had found on Elaeya’s position had been
— Kaden —‘Hey boss,’ said Mishka through the mindlink.Everything was pa
— Kaden —I was covered in blood from head to toe.‘What’s the result?’ I mindliked the head of all my teams.
— Kaden —We were on the clearing where I married Elaeya.There were no fairy lights, no flowers, no decorations. All the trees were bare excep
— Tamarak —Seven hundred and fifty-nine days.I haven’t seen the sun or the moon since, but I feel it, every time the sun sets, every ti