Winter Born (8 page)

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Authors: Sherrilyn Kenyon

BOOK: Winter Born
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He charged the downed panther, using his shoulder to drive it farther away from her and from the other two who snapped behind him.

His enemy tried to claw at his head, but the panther ducked his head and bit into his opponent's throat.

The opponent became wild, thrashing before she heard something break. It went limp.

Two more panthers vanished instantly.

The remaining four turned on the one panther that had been left behind and cornered it. It roared fiercely, then poofed out as well.

Terrified of what that meant, Pandora tensed as the four panthers turned to face her.

She watched them, determined to fight to the bitter end as they stalked nearer.

Three of them fell back while the fourth approached her.

“Dante?” she asked hesitantly, hoping it was him.

He collapsed at her feet before he placed one large paw on her foot and licked her ankle.

She sobbed in relief as she slid down the wall to pull his head into her lap.

The other three flashed into Romeo, Leo, and Mike.

“How badly are you hurt?” Romeo asked the twins.

They were a bit scuffed up, with bruises and bloodied lips and noses, but weren't hurt nearly as badly as Dante had been.

“We're okay, thanks to Dante.”

Romeo approached her slowly.

“He's unconscious,” she said quietly as she kept her hand on Dante's ribs to make sure he was still breathing. “There were eight of them in the beginning. He fought them alone.”

“Dammit, Dante,” Romeo snarled as he picked the panther up in his arms. “Why didn't you call us sooner?”

“Put him in my bed,” Pandora said, moving to pull back the covers.

“Are you sure?”

She nodded.

Romeo set him down, then ordered Leo to keep watch at the door in case the others came back.

“Mike,” he said to the other twin. “Go grab Acheron and tell him I need a favor.”

Pandora crawled into the bed beside Dante. Part of her was terrified to be so close to him in his animal state and yet the other part of her wanted only to comfort her mate.

She'd never been this close to a panther before. It was scary and yet not.

Somehow it seemed right to be here.

His black fur was so dark, it reminded her of midnight velvet. She carefully brushed the whiskers of his muzzle back, then sank her hand in the soft fur of his neck.

Even though she knew it was true, it was hard to believe this was the same gorgeous man who had made the tenderest love to her.

And he had risked his life to protect her.

Her heart swelled with joy and with something she thought might be the first stirrings of love. No one had ever protected her. Not like this.

Pandora placed her hand near one of the vicious bite wounds above Dante's shoulder. “Will he be okay?” she asked Romeo.

If she didn't know better, she'd swear she saw pride in his eyes as he watched her.

“He's had worse.”

“Really?”

“Really.”

Romeo reached out and took her left hand so that he could see Dante's ring. His grip tightened on her hand. “That belonged to our brother Donatello,” he said quietly. “I've never known Dante to take it off.”

“He put a spell on it so that I could come back to him any time I wanted to.”

Romeo smiled at that. “You have no idea just what a completely unbelievable feat that was for him.”

“No, I think I do know.” It ranked right up there with her lying beside him right now when she was terrified of panthers. This wasn't something she would have done even a few hours ago—and now …

Now she accepted the fact that this was her eternal mate. And for the first time in her life, she was beginning to understand exactly what that really meant.

Someone knocked on the door.

Pandora jumped.

“Relax,” Romeo said as he moved to answer it while Mike stood aside. “The bad guys don't knock.”

Pandora frowned as Romeo let in Leo and the gorgeous Goth man she'd seen downstairs. Leo went to stand beside Mike while the Goth came toward the bed.

“Pandora,” Romeo said, “meet Acheron Parthenopaeus.”

Acheron inclined his head to her.

She gaped. “You're the ancient Dark-Hunter?”

Acheron gave her that same wicked grin he had given her earlier. “The one and only.”

A weird ripple went through her. “You knew me downstairs when our gazes met, didn't you?”

He nodded.

“If you knew I was looking for you, why didn't you say something?”

His gaze went to Dante. “Because it wasn't time for you to meet me yet.” He glanced to Romeo. “And it's not time for you to lose another brother.”

Pandora watched as the wounds on Dante healed instantly.

Romeo smiled in relief. “What do we owe you for that, Ash?”

Acheron shrugged. “Don't worry about it. I'll call the favor in at a later date.”

Dante flashed into human form. He looked up at her with a tender expression that melted her.

“Ash,” he said, without looking at the Dark-Hunter. “Could I trade another favor for you to watch my mate for me while my brothers and I take care of something?”

“Absolutely.”

Dante placed one large, warm hand against her cheek, then chastely kissed the side of her face. He got up and gathered his brothers to him.

“We'll be back in a minute.”

Before she could ask him where he was going, they vanished.

“What is he doing?” she asked Ash.

“Knowing Dante, I'm confident he's going to guarantee that your ‘friends' never return to threaten you or anyone from your pack again.”

*   *   *

It didn't take
Dante long to find the rogue pack of Katagaria panthers. They were camped in a small, isolated commune just outside of Charleston.

Ironically, they even had a sign up declaring the area a wildlife preserve.

With his three brothers behind him, he walked through the wooded area until he found the first panther he'd fought. The panther was lying wounded with a human woman tending him.

“Who leads this pack?” he asked the pair.

The panther didn't answer, but when the petite, blond woman did, Dante recognized a voice that was almost identical in tone, accent, and cadence to Pandora's. “Aristotle is the
regis.
He's sleeping over there.” She pointed to a tree.

Dante inclined his head respectfully to her, then went to the tree to call down their leader.

Aristotle responded by only opening one bored eye.
“Who are you?”

“Take human form when you address me, you bastard,” Dante said harshly. “Or there won't be enough left of your pack to even start a new one.”

The panther flashed into human form, then moved to stand before Dante in a stance that said he was ready to fight. He was four inches shorter than Dante and had short black hair that matched his black soulless eyes.

“Who the hell are you?” he snarled.

“Dante Pontis.”

Aristotle's eyes widened as he took an immediate step back.

Dante's brutal, take-no-prisoners reputation was known far and wide, and it was respected or feared by all their kind.

“To what do I owe this honor?” Aristotle asked.

“A group of your
strati
tried to take my mate from me. Now I'm here for blood.”

Aristotle sputtered. “There was some misunderstanding. My men went after an Arcadian whor—”

Dante slugged him before he could finish the insult. “Pandora Kouti-Pontis is my mate. If you speak of her with anything other than extreme reverence in your tone, you piss me off.”

Aristotle turned pale. “I had no idea she belonged to you. Believe me.”

“Now you do, and if I ever see any of you near her again, I'll end all your problems. Permanently.”

*   *   *

Pandora was sitting
in the Grandstand Lounge with Acheron, his daughter demon Simi, and two gods while they waited for Dante's return.

This had to be the oddest moment of her life. The demon was busy eating an extremely rare hamburger drenched in barbecue sauce while the gods and Acheron were telling Pandora stories about how they'd all met Dante.

Apparently her mate had quite a rambunctious club that catered to all manner of bizarre clientele. The gods and Acheron made routine visits there.

Zurvan, who went by the name Cas, was the ancient Persian god of time and space. He was the elegantly dressed man she had followed earlier toward the elevators, thinking he was Acheron.

Ariman—not to be confused with the Persian god Ariman—had been an ancient Phoenician god who had had the misfortune of visiting Atlantis at the time the continent was destroyed. He'd been in human form, trying to seduce a young woman, and as a result, he was now trapped in human form with no god powers except immortality.

He wasn't happy about it either.

“I really wish one of you would take mercy on me and fix me or kill me,” Ariman said for the fifth time since he had joined them at their table.

Cas rolled his eyes, then turned toward Acheron. “I think we ought to banish him from our presence so we can't hear him bitch anymore.”

Ash laughed.

“You're such—” Ariman's words broke off as he spotted the women who weren't wearing anything except warning tape. “Later.” He bolted after the women.

Cas shook his head. “He is never going to learn, is he?”

Ash took a drink of beer before he responded. “Be grateful he doesn't. It gives us endless hours of amusement watching him screw his life up.”

Cas snorted. “Considering how screwed up yours is, that says something.”

“Let's not go there,” Ash said, his eyes flashing red before they returned to their spooky swirling silver shade.

Sometimes it was very scary to hang out with supernatural beings.

“Pandora?”

She froze at the sound of a voice she never thought to hear again. Afraid she was hearing things, she turned to see her sister Sefia running up to her.

Pandora shot to her feet to throw her arms around her sister. Oh, it was too good to be real! “What are you doing here, Sef?”

“Your mate brought me,” she said as tears poured down her cheeks. “He made them let us all go. Now it's up to us if we want to return to our mates or not.”

Pandora was stunned as she looked past her sister to see Dante and his brothers approaching at a much more sedate pace.

“Dante?” she asked as he stopped by her side.

He shrugged nonchalantly as if he hadn't just given her the impossible. “It wasn't right what they were doing to their females and I figured you'd rather travel with your own female kind than with mine.”

She still couldn't believe he'd done this. He had formed a new pack of female panthers for her to roam with. “What about the pact they made with our pack?”

“It's dissolved,” Dante said. “If they pull any more of your kin out of their time period, I'm going to send them a special welcoming committee.”

“Damn, Dante,” Cas said from behind her. “That's harsh. Last time you turned your brothers loose on a pack, they left no male standing.”

“I know.” Dante looked back to her. “And so do they. Your sister and her friends are all safe now.”

Pandora threw her arms around his shoulders and held him close. “Thank you!”

He hugged her back, then kissed her gently.

Pandora turned back to Sefia as another thought occurred to her. “What about your children?”

“Their father is raising them, per Dante's orders.” Sefia looked at Dante with glowing eyes. “Your mate took all of the women to La Costa and is paying for us to stay and be pampered there for as long as we like.”

“And we volunteered to guard them,” Mike said, indicating himself and Leo.

“Is that a good idea?” Pandora asked Dante. After all he and Romeo had said about the twins, she wasn't sure whether having them as guards would be a help or a hindrance.

Dante's face mirrored her skepticism. “I personally don't think so, but Romeo talked me into it. There's a large number of the females who aren't mated.”

“And Dante owes us big after the filking fiasco,” Leo said irritably. “There weren't any naked women there, just some guy singing about
Star Trek
and Romulan brew. It really pissed us off.”

Pandora had to stifle her laughter.

“Are you coming with us?” Sefia asked.

Pandora felt a lot more torn than she should have. Spending time with her sister at a resort or staying with a Katagari panther at Dragon*Con …

There shouldn't be a choice.

So why did she feel this way?

“It's entirely up to you,” Dante said quietly. “I told you I wouldn't interfere with your freedom.”

“C'mon, Dora,” Sefia said, taking her hand. “We're going to have a lot of fun.”

Dante's face was completely stoic and yet she sensed his sadness.

“I'll be back soon,” Pandora promised him.

He nodded.

“I'll take them upstairs to my room to flash them to the resort,” Romeo said.

Dante didn't speak as he watched his brothers disappear into the crowd with Pandora and Sefia.

He'd done a good deed and now he knew why he hated doing good deeds.

They were painful.

What did he get out of it? Not a damn thing except a pain so profound that he felt as if something were shredding his heart.

“Here,” Ash said, handing him a beer. “Have a seat.”

Sighing, Dante took the beer and grabbed the chair where Pandora had been sitting on his arrival. “I did the right thing, right?”

“No,” Simi said as she wiped barbecue sauce off her chin. “The panther woman didn't want you to leave her and now you made her go away. That was just stupid if you ask the Simi. Not that anyone ever does, 'cause if they did, then they would be smart. Some people are smart. But many, like you, are too stupid to ask me what I think. See?”

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