"Come on, babies, just a little farther." Xias was lying through his
teeth, but the cubs didn't need to know that. The longer they could remain
blissfully ignorant of the danger they were in, the better.
He nudged one with his nose when it started to fall behind the other two. He
knew there was a cave close by. He'd scouted it out while the cubs were still
sleeping, but with the snow coming down so hard he could barely see a step in
front of him, he was starting to wonder if he'd ever find it again.
The blizzard had come out of nowhere, hard, cold, and dangerous. Xias knew if
he didn't find shelter for him and the cubs soon, they'd be lost in the flurry
of bitter cold snow. They'd freeze to death by morning for sure.
Maybe he should have left the cubs behind where they would have been warm and
dry. Xias quickly dismissed that idea. His heart ached just thinking about it.
Everything in him balked at the idea of anything happening to his cubs.
They were his babies. He had carried them for four months, given birth to the
three darling little fur balls. Just because clan law stated they belonged to
their sire, didn't make it so, especially when the bastard decided to put two
of them to death because they hadn't been born male.
Xias grew enraged every time he remembered his alpha's declaration that two of
his cubs were defective. His cubs were precious, each and every one of them.
He didn't care if they were boys or girls or purple penguins. They were his
cubs and he'd fight to the death to defend each and every one of them.
Which was what had led him to where he found himself now. Racing through a
blizzard with his cubs as he tried to find a place to wait out the storm and
escape from the alpha intent of killing everything he held dear.
Xias jumped forward when Bai, the oldest of his litter of three cubs, tripped
and went face first into a snow drift. He gently grabbed the cub by the back
of his neck and lifted him out, giving him a little shake to get some of the
snow off of him.
He set Bai on the ground and then nudged him up to his sisters, Liang and
Ying. They needed to keep going. If they didn't find that cave, they would
perish out here in the snow, which was getting deeper by the second. The snow
was coming down in thick plumes.
"Come on, keep moving."
Xias had just about given up hope of ever finding the cave when he spotted a
familiar looking rock outcropping. He was almost giddy as he herded the three
cubs toward the towering wall of rock.
"Keep going, babies. The cave is just ahead."
By the time they climbed up the rock outcropping and moved toward the cave
entrance, the cubs were barely moving, sluggish. Xias knew once they got
warmed up and had something to eat, and then got some sleep, they would be
fine.
When they reached the mouth of the cave, Xias stepped forward and drew in a
lungful of air. He needed to make sure no one had found the cave and taken up
residence before he was able to bring the cubs back. He didn't want to escape
one dangerous situation only to take his cubs into another one.
When he didn't smell any other scent than his from inside the enclosed space,
Xias urged the cubs in through the narrow opening. It was dark inside, but
that was no surprise. It was a cave after all. Xias led the cubs over to the
far wall, away from the cave opening.
He laid down, smiling when his cubs hurried over to him. In a matter of
moments, they were snuggling in, each cub latching on to a teat. Xias began to
purr as he fed his babies, leaning down to lick the snow off of each of them
in turn.
By the time they were clean and dry, their little tummies were rounded with
milk and their eyes were drifting closed. Xias continued to purr until they
curled together in a kitten pile and nodded off.
He laid there for a few minutes, soaking in the peacefulness of the moment.
There was just something about providing for his cubs that filled him with a
calmness he couldn't find anywhere else. The world around him could go to hell
as long as he had his cubs right by his side.
Xias glanced up toward the entrance of the cave when he heard a noise. He
couldn't quite place what had made that sound, but it raised his hackles. He
extracted himself from his cubs and climbed to his paws.
When he heard the noise again, Xias took a few steps forward, placing himself
between the cubs and whatever was outside the cave entrance. When the strong,
unmistakable scent of an alpha male floated into the cave, Xias thought his
heart was going to burst with fear.
Alpha males were known to kill cubs not their own, especially those with
crystal blue eyes. They saw them as threats. It didn't matter if the cubs were
in their territory or not, it was instinctual to try and eliminate all threats
to their rule and the succession of their own offspring.
He tried not to whimper when what was quite possibly the largest white
Siberian tiger he had ever seen stepped through the opening. There was no way
Xias could ever beat this tiger in a fight. The large feline easily had three
hundred pounds on him, most of it muscle mass.
Xias shot his cubs a desperate look. They were partially hidden behind a small
outcropping of rock. Maybe the tiger wouldn't see them. Xias could only pray
they stayed asleep because he could think of only one way to keep the large
cat from attacking.
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