“We will bring the woman,” Sayk answered, unruffled by my aggressive stance. “Your fate still remains to be decided.”
The growl ripped from my throat as I assumed my fighting stance. No one was taking Serena from me.
“This is how it’s going to be, then.” Sayk lifted his upper lip, exposing the long, snake-like fangs that curved inside his mouth, already dripping with poison.
“I guess it is.” Aggression rippled inside my muscles like a poison, readying my body for the fight. My vision became more acute as the years of training settled in my bones, turning my body into a deadly machine. Only this time, my opponent was as deadly as I was. As deadly, yes, but not as motivated.
The Huugwor stood between a Muharib and his mate. This was a mistake he would not live to make again.
The human warrior eyed us with a doubtful, worried expression, still holding his blaster up, but not daring to fire as his leader had forbidden him to act. I knew from his expression that he would only obey until a certain point.
Then all bets were off and he would attack. This meant I had to kill Sayk fast, then him.
I could follow their trace back to Tartarus after that.
I moved, my stance low on the rocky ground, my footing confident. Sayk crouched, the spikes growing longer along his limbs, their color changing until they were a deadly black against the gray of his skin.
Time was suspended in the surreal moments before violence.
Down on the sand, Serena fussed, her eyes fluttering. A soft, feminine moan broke from her lips and she lifted a weak hand up.
“No,” she cried out. “Please don’t. We’re only seeking shelter.”
Her weak voice broke through the air like a sword, slicing the tension with a single sentence. I surged forward, forgetting all about Sayk, about Ry. All that mattered was Serena and her broken, wonderful voice.
The next heartbeat, I was at her side, lifting her body onto my lap. Her blue eyes locked with mine for a single second, then they closed as she had exhausted what little strength we had left.
I felt the other males stand closer behind me, but didn’t turn in aggression in response.
“We only seek shelter.” I echoed Serena’s wise words, realizing perhaps too late that this was what was needed. “For my mate and me. Shelter.”
“And shelter you will receive,” Sayk answered. “Whatever happens next, I cannot yet say.”
Chapter Twenty-One
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