was enough wildlife in the area that if he were being stalked here, he would know it. The birds would
stop singing, the frogs would ease their early evening serenade.
“Do you have a way of contacting him, other than the cell phone?” he asked her.
She sighed, sobering. She was filled with laughter and hope, despite their circumstances. Her innocence
amazed and terrified him.
“No, not really.” He glanced back as she shrugged. “Kane secured the phones we were using before I
left so the calls couldn’t be hacked or traced. Both units have an indicator on them, in case the impossible
happens and someone locks onto the channel. He took every precaution with them.”
Merinus’ unit was tucked in his pack. He had felt the vibration of it earlier in the morning when he had
dug out the ammunition for his pistol.
“Either your brother or mine has betrayed us,” he told her, watching her face go blank with shock.
“We’re in trouble here, Merinus. The Council knows I’ve mated with you; they will stop at nothing to
take you now. They did everything to breed us while we were in captivity, thinking our children would be
easier to control than we were. If they take you, then they have me willingly, and they know that.”
He watched the fear that washed over her face. She swallowed tightly, her hands gripping the material of
the shirt at her waist, her fingers turning white with the tension that invaded her body.
“What do we do?” she asked him.
He breathed out roughly. “I have two choices, neither are secure. We could leave the country and
disappear, but that’s not a guarantee they won’t find us. We’ll never be truly safe and neither will our
children be safe. Or I could trust your family and do as you came to ask me to do, but still, no guarantee.
Both choices are rife with danger, Merinus. There will be no peace for us, whichever way we go.”
Hope filled her expression. She had such belief in her brothers and her father that she thought they could
solve any problem. He wondered what it would have been like to be raised in such a secure, protective
environment. To have such faith in someone other than yourself.
“Kane knows what he’s doing, so do the others, Callan,” she promised him desperately. “I have seven
brothers, each one of them has been working on this for over six months now. Gray is with the FBI,
Caleb is a private investigator, Kane has all kinds of contacts in the C.I.A. and across seas. They have
boxes of proof, but need you to back it up. You can do this, Callan. We can do it together.”
Her expression was beseeching, her eyes wide and so filled with confidence. This time in him. She
watched him as though he could solve this problem by his will alone. He wanted to curse her innocence,
but found himself desperate to believe in it as well. Surely, it couldn’t be so simple. After years of
running, decades of doubt and hopelessness, could it really be so easy? Of course it couldn’t, but what
choice did he have left?
“We will wait one more day,” he finally sighed, glancing back at the computer, the emails he had
received bothering him more than he wanted to admit. Tanner and Taber had done a copy of theirs to
each of the others of the Pride. Sherra had not. The email had come singly and carefully coded. She
trusted no one now, except Kane Tyler and himself.
“I believe Dayan has betrayed me,” he finally told her softly. “His scent was in the cave and on the
soldiers within it. He knew of the mating and has been furious over it. His instability may have driven him
over the edge.”
He hid his rage, his pain. If Dayan had betrayed the Pride, then it would fall to Callan to kill him. Dayan
would become the hunted, something Callan swore the others would never be again.
“Callan.” Merinus came to her feet, her expression bleak, filled with pain for him.
He shook his head, moving away from her. He didn’t want her tenderness right now, not while he was
filled with this rage.
“I took them out and covered their escapes with the deaths of scientists, soldiers and doctors,” he
whispered. “The screams of the dying still echo in my ears, the deaths of the babes incubating in their
tubes still tear at my conscience.” He dragged his hands through his hair, fighting the years-old horror and
regret.
“You did what you had to do, Callan.” She gave him total acceptance, when he didn’t even have that for
himself.
“I swore they would never be hunted again,” he whispered, fighting the ragged wound opening up in his
soul. “I would not like to hunt my brother, Merinus. To know that the beast overcame him does not give