Page 28 of Renegade


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“Stop!” Balkazar snarled, shaking Sickle by the lapels of his fitted leather jacket. “Think, boy. If her slick is in the water, what does that mean? Where will we find our bitch in heat?”

For several long moments, Sickle could do nothing but blink, straining toward the dilute slick. And then, “The water. She’s upstream.”

“To work, then,” Balkazar grumbled, grinning.

Oh, he was going to enjoy this…

Chapter 12

Sprinting as fast as his legs could go, Sickle ran with his brothers. Their feet falling sure and even, thighs whispering over well-worn leathers. Anhur before and behind, hybrids covering his flanks.

It was the safest he’d felt since he’d been taken by the scruff and tossed out. Unprovoked.

The new recruits to their sorry pack of six were hybrids. Big, as the mongrels often were, and bred for war. To defend their Alpha and his interests. Thundering along at his side, yet not daring to outpace him, they protected the weakest member by running at his speed.

It had always been this way for Sickle. The knowledge that he was less—smaller, slower, and not nearly as strong as even the female Anhur—had been the only real constant in his life.

Traded amongst the queens, he’d served several dozen mistresses before his twentieth birthday. Only three had bothered to learn his name before growing bored of his talents.

And eventhey’dtraded him for another without a hint of regret.

Trained and conditioned from birth to relish the honor of service, their lives were elegance and heartbreak. Joyous and cruel. All any Hathorian male would ever know was to kneel for an Anhur queen. To sing and to please, to be submissive when his queen needed an outlet.

Except for him.

Sickle’s last queen hadn’t uttered a word of protest as he was cast out on a cruel whim. Not one word. She’d laughed along with the rest as her husband made a mockery of his entire species.

“Here.” The mistress’s husband took Sickle by the nape, two claws curving around and hooking into the sensitive shell of his left ear. “A parting gift to see you through the withdrawal.”

For weeks after they’d been cast out, Sickle had looked to the Firstborn with glassy-eyed terror. Certain the son would heed the father’s advice and vent the dregs of a lasting rut in his body. It was known to happen, after all. To those foolish enough to defy their mistress, who stole, or dared to strike at the clawed fist that held their leash.

Those unfortunates were discarded, left to die in the streets. Abandoned in the farthest slums, they were snatched up by packs of roving, unattached males. Desperate for a soft touch…

But Sickle had been banished beyond the wall no matter how prettily he begged.

Grinding his teeth, he redoubled his effort, nipping at the war chief’s heels.

No, he’d been cast out. Exiled. But there were mercies. Balkazar had a hurtfully low opinion of his kind—especially females. But he’d fought just as hard as the Alpha to win Sickle’s trust. Instead of taking liberties, they’d given him weapons. Taught him to shoot, to hunt, and to track. To manipulate with his intellect, instead of letting others take from his body.

He’d learned to be useful instead of used.

But now there was hope!

She wasn’t an Anhur queen, but what did it matter? There was a female in the beyond! One to serve and cherish, like he hadn’t been able to do inmonths.

“Movement,” Balkazar hissed, bringing their headlong sprint to a sudden halt, the war chief crouched low in the shadows.

As one, the pack inched forward. Moved away from their chosen path to peer over the edge of a deep ravine.

Ferals.

A whole horde gathered on the banks of a distant river. And from their vantage point, Sickle could see that they were massive creatures who’d grown mutated and grotesque. Each one bigger than the last. All terribly disfigured from their constant contact with the Trax virus. The infection raging, overwhelming the immune system until the host was forever changed.

Mutated and abhorrent. Utterly unrecognizable as the creatures they once were.

Something akin to sadness tugged at his soft heart, Sickle watched a battle erupt between two gargantuan beasts. Transfixed.

For a moment, it seemed as if the smaller of the two had the upper hand—and Sickle dared a tiny smile for those who’d been born disadvantaged. Seeing a message of hope, out here where hardship was the standard. Where death was easy.