Author's note: this chapter is one of a series, and does not contain erotic elements.
-rb
06.
Reunited
When Min stepped into Sergen's tent, she pressed her fist to her mouth to silence herselfâshe didn't know whether to cry or laugh, but both of them seemed like equally bad choices. Standing there, head down, she closed her eyes and listened to the noise outside: for a long time, nothing seemed to move or stir. Then something broke the spell of the momentâshe heard people talking, the sounds of feet moving in the brush, even the birds began to call again.
Min sighed, raised her head and opened her eyes.
Sergen was standing right in front of her.
She jumped, gasping aloud. "Don't
do
that!" she hissed, stepping around him. The tent was large enough for someone of her size to stand upright. The grass and underbrush were soft under her feet, and his bedroll was unfurled.
"Don't do what?" he said, turning to look at her. "This is my tent."
Min took a second to observe her man in his human shape. He was almost as tall as she remembered, as solid as if he'd been carved of a mix of dark rock and chiseled bronze. His manhood was soft, lying amidst his grey curls, but that and the hair on his head was different from Erkin's, as if Sergen had gone prematurely grey for some reason. He did
not
look fleshy or gangly in the least bit, something she was thankful for.
"So I've been told," she said. Min felt a new rush of anger and jealousy left in the wake of confronting that womanâshe didn't even want to name her, for some reason. "I was also told that you
chose
me." She turned towards him, crossing both arms. "Is that correct?"
Sergen nodded. "As I told you the day we met. I made no secret about that."
"You failed to mention your 'choice' of me was as your
mate
!" She hissed the last word, stepping closer to him, pushing a finger into his wide chest. "You could have told me that much before...before you claimed me in that hole." The memory of it was one that Min fought to repress, even if it made her chest tighten and something warm kindle in her belly.
He seemed to consider her words and nodded. "Very well. I could have told you, but did not. I apologize."
"Youâ" Min tipped her head in surprise, looking up at him. She blinked. "You're saying that you're sorry?'
Sergen shook his head. "No. I could have told you that laying claim to you would make you my mate. I did not do that. I am
not
sorry for doing so."
"Why not?" She frowned. "My mother is probably worrying herself sick because I'm gone. I got
this
because of you." She tapped the rough patch of flesh on her shoulder, surrounded by Ilay's intricate magic and ink-work.
"I hoped to remove its infection, but was unsuccessful," Sergen said. "You were wounded because an infected bear attacked youâmy claiming you or not claiming you had nothing to do with that." He was insufferable, unflappable, as if he had an argument for every complaint.
Unfortunately, on that count, he was right. Min looked down, sniffed. "Well...maybe not. But why did you do it?" She looked back up again. "You were the first man I ever met. You didn't
have
to mate with me at the first opportunity."
"No, but I
wanted
to." Now it was his turn to tip his head, tilting it in confusion. "You were desirable and available; you were injured, which I attempted to heal; you were a witch woman, which I had a need of for the reasons I explained. I brought you here and sought a healer to tend to your injury. Have I not been an acceptable mate to you?"
"'Acceptable?'" She threw up her hands. "You didn't even know my name when you brought me here!
I
asked for
your
name; you couldn't even bother to do that much!" She took a seat on the bed, but her frown didn't fade. When he stepped up next to her, took a seat beside her, Min resisted the urge to scoot away. "And now I find you with some woman in your tent, and I don't know what she did with you when I wasn't looking. I've never been away from home in my whole life, and I..." Min closed her eyes, took a deep breath to calm herself.
"Who, Selin?"
She opened her eyes, giving him a flat look. "Do wolves take multiple mates?"
He blinkedâa very wolfish sort of reaction, she thought. "Some might;
I
do not."
"Have you claimed her? Lain with her?"
"Not for a long time," he said. Sergen didn't flinch or look away.
"She wants you. She wants your cock so bad I could see it in her eyes. Do you understand that?"
He nodded, not speaking.
"I don't know how wolves
do
things." Min took a moment to compose her thoughts, choosing how to say them aloud. "I know how my mother and I lived together, and I believe...I could be comfortable here. Ilay was very kind; her husband and son seem the same."
He nodded again. "They're good people."
"Let me finish."
Sergen closed his mouth, and again, he nodded. His gold-brown eyes were so intent, so focused on her that she had to take another calming breathâthe man had a stronger effect on her than she wanted to admit. "They may be good people. This whole place might be filled with good people. But I will
not
share a tent, a bed, or a man with a woman like Selin. Ever. If you can't make peace with that, I'll help you against the bears as much as I can, and if we both survive, I'll let you have her and go home when this is done."
"I don't want Selin."
"...You don't?"