Jared led me through the village away from the party going on in the background. I stopped walking when we reached the kitchen garden, then had to hustle to keep up with him as he walked right past the house and toward the sparse woods beyond.
The “good" woods, I noted, not the scary forest to the north, void of light and filled with beasts, according to the man himself.
“Where are we going?" I asked as we started down a slow descent, the lights of the village fading until we were blanketed in pale violet light, the sun all but set.
“It's a full moon tonight," Jared said, not looking back at me.
“Oh," I said with a hint of annoyance. His answer had given me absolutely nothing. “Are you going to shift and eat me, then?"
He glanced at me over his shoulder, looking me up and down.
“You wouldn't be much of a meal."
I pursed my lips and followed him further into the woods for several minutes. Was this another one of his punishments?
“Jared?" I panted, trying my best to keep in step with him. He didn't answer, so I reached out and grabbed his shirt sleeve.
He whirled on me so swiftly that I had to dig in my heels to stop myself from running right into his chest. “What?"
“Archer and Scarlett. I didn't say or do anything–"
“I know," he breathed, giving me a sympathetic look. “He's defensive of her."
“Because they're mates," I added, and he nodded, but his face was cast in shadow. “And after her baby was taken from her–"
“He fought in the war in the Realm of Light, yes."
I found it a little hard to breathe. Archer? He fought… he would have fought alongside my cousins and uncles. Had Jared as well?
“I didn't," he said as if reading my mind. I was sure the question was clear on my face. “But I heard it was brutal." He turned and began walking again, but he'd slowed his pace so I could keep up. “I had responsibilities that kept me home," he added after a moment.
“I did too," I said softly, my heart stuck in my throat.
Jared glanced back at me, and to my surprise he gave me the softest, most knowing smile. It caught me off guard, and I hastily looked away from him as we continued along a well-beaten trail leading away from the village.
He got ahead of me again after a while. Night was falling, and he carried no lantern. We were blanketed in nothing but moonlight now. I fell even further behind when I eventually looked up, letting the light of the full moon dust my cheeks.
Tommy was a lucky man to have his twenty-first birthday fall on a full moon.
“Keep up," Jared said several yards ahead of me.
I pursed my lips and took a few quick steps to catch up to him so we were walking side by side again. He was very tall, and keeping up with his long stride had me panting with effort by the time we walked out of the woods and onto a bluff. I gasped, looking out onto a wide, sweeping plain broken only by a distant river.
“Woah," I breathed, taken aback by the view. I hadn't realized something like this was so close to Jared's house.
“Come on," he said hoarsely.
I heard the briefest hint of excitement in his voice, which made me excited as well. He took my hand and led me down a step trail that wove down the bluff. Water dripped on our heads as we ducked into the trees at the bottom of the bluff, the last of the snow and ice melting from the branches. Jared kept a firm grip on my hand, his almost feverish warmth thawing my chilled, ungloved fingers.
“Really though, where are you taking me?"
“Patience," he replied, pausing to help me over a large rock blocking the trail.
I could just make out a clearing in the distance, moonlight illuminating what looked like ruins of some kind.
“Jared–" I began, but then gasped, unable to move.
A circle of standing stones lay before us. I almost dropped to my knees in shock.
“This is what I wanted to show you–"
He turned me to face him, and I hastily wiped away the tears from my eyes.
“Are you crying?"
“No," I choked, then glared at him, my vision blurred by fresh tears.
“What's the matter with you?"
“Nothing!" I turned from his gaze and walked to the circle, but I stopped at the edge, examining the ancient markings etched into the outer faces of each stone that towered several feet above my head.
I knew better than to walk between them, especially on the full moon. But that was only based on the story my aunt Maeve had told me about her experience with a circle in what was once Dianny.
The circle in Dianny was suspected to have been the only one of its kind in my realm. Dianny was long gone now, buried under miles of stone. I never thought I'd ever see one.
“I can't believe it," I said to myself.
“Do you like it?" Jared asked, coming up beside me. He reached out to lean his weight against the rock I was examining. I swatted his hand away.
“Don't touch it! Not right now, not with a full moon. Do you even know–"
“How powerful these things are? Yes. Maybe at some point in time they were, but not anymore."
I turned to him, somewhat surprised he knew anything about these places and their significance.
“I do read the books I have in my study, you know," he continued, giving me a wry smile.
I looked up at him skeptically then turned back to the circle, slowly tracing a finger over one of the etchings that had softened with time. I felt no jolt of mystical electricity. I felt nothing, actually, but the cool touch of the stone against my fingertip, and then Jared's hand against my lower back.
He reached into his pocket, leaning into me so the top of my head briefly brushed against his shoulder. He held out his fist, and I instinctively opened my palm to accept whatever he'd just taken from his pocket.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Sold as the Alpha King's Breeder
Yeah sorry full of crap clichés skipping chapters...
Really oh fn....off another weak heroine roll, her pack hated her, she was abused, why would she do this .... pfghhj off at another cliche novel. .... Nope...