Author's Note: Aztec Treasure continues the Treasure, Buried Treasure, and Claiming Treasure book series.
You can read it stand-alone if desired.
This book does not have a high content of explicit sex.
Maria Meztli's POV
Sinaloa State, Mexico
"Maria, can you do something with Maritza? She won't stop crying, and it's keeping the others from sleeping."
"Sure, Aunt Celia." I walked over and took the six-month-old baby from her. I rocked the crying baby in my left arm while pulling the sling over my neck with my right arm. I could smell her diaper didn't need changing. "Is she hungry?"
"She just had a bottle ten minutes ago."
"I'll take her for a walk." I put the crying girl to my left shoulder and started to rock her side to side.
"Stay away from the courtyard. The men are doing business and don't need to hear a crying baby either."
"We'll walk the fence," I replied as I walked out the door. The Sons of Tezcatlipoca meeting site was at President Tupoc's home in the hills outside El Pozo. The estate was surrounded by high walls, beyond which were fences, steep hills, and jungle. It had taken them an hour to travel along the rough trails to get here. I reached the outside door, where a human member stood guard with an AK-47. "I'm trying to calm her down," I told him.
"Stay where I can see you," he said.
I nodded, moving on as I felt his eyes looking me over. He had no chance with me, though he didn't know it. My family would never pair me off with a human. I was seventeen years old, soon to be of mating age, and my father was dead. Denver Chapter President Pedro Meztli left home two weeks ago, heading to a meeting with the other Chapter Presidents of the Sons of Tezcatlipoca Motorcycle Club. A few days later, my father's severed head was hanging from the border fence with the United States, and the FBI and DEA were arresting every member they could find.
My mother didn't stick around. She cleaned out his bank accounts and his secret safe and grabbed the fake passports and documents he'd prepared for us in case we had to run. I packed almost everything I owned into two suitcases, leaving behind my phone, computer, and anything that could identify us. The registration on the Ford Explorer we drove was in her new name, and the fire she set burned everything we left behind. Four hours after we knew Dad was dead, we were miles away from our life in Denver. In cities across the country, other Jaguar mates and families did the same thing. We would seek shelter with our kin in Mexico.
We had listened to news radio the entire way down. The raids on the Sons of Tezcatlipoca clubhouses across the country had wall-to-wall coverage, and the body counts were high. I was a Club Princess, I'd visited many of these Clubs with my father, and the Presidents and senior leadership were all related. We were Jaguar Shifters, tracing our lineage to the time of the Aztecs.
The Goddess Tezcatlipoca gave our ancestors our dual natures, the cat that coexisted in our bodies with our human side. Jaguar shifters can shift from birth, walking on four legs within weeks. I can shift instantly between forms when I want. My cat has been my constant mental companion, and we look out for each other.
Werejaguars are superior to humans in every way. My nature gives me superior strength, balance, and grace in human form. My eyesight is sharp, and I can see in the darkness that would leave a human helpless. If I got hurt, I could heal much faster than humans; broken bones mended in two days, not six weeks. I learned to hold back most of my strength to keep from hurting my human sparring partners. It was no wonder that Werejaguars controlled the motorcycle gang; no human could stand up to us in a fight.
Compared to the werewolf pack in the Denver area, our group was smaller and more dangerous. Jaguars are stronger, quicker, have razor-sharp claws, and better reflexes. We are at home in trees and water. The werewolves had advantages in numbers, speed, and endurance. One on one, we would win, but the wolves rarely fought alone. We stayed out of each other's way.
I thought about our family's future as I walked along, singing to Maritza until she fell asleep. When I was sure she was down, I moved her to the sling and started walking back. "
Maria, come to the courtyard now,"
my mother sent.
"
I'll drop Maritza off at the nursery first.
She just fell asleep."
"No, come straight here."
Whatever it was must be important, so I walked past the cars parked under the trees directly to the gate leading to the courtyard. Inside, the remaining leaders of the Sons of Tezcatlipoca sat around a long table filled with food. There were only nineteen Jaguar leaders left to gather together.
"Mama?" She was standing near my uncle at the head of the table as the others watched.
"Ah, Maria," Carlos said. "Your mother is joining my household; I will treat her as a second wife, and with Tezcatlipoca's blessing, I will give her a male child to carry on your father's line." I looked at Mom, who was still grieving her mate's death. Her face showed only her resignation to her fate.
"Am I joining your home as well?"
"No. You will go to Nogales with Hector. At first, you will be his nanny and help take care of Maritza for them. When you come of age, he will mate you, and you will become his second wife."
As a second wife? My eyes got wide; I would have no legal rights, and his wife would rule me too. I was merely a breeder and side lover for the Nogales Chapter President. "I will not find a mate of my own?"
"We don't have enough males left for the women, and our numbers are dwindling in this war. For our kind to survive, we must all make sacrifices. Each man at this table is taking in widows and children of those who have fallen. It will take generations to rebuild our numbers, but we must do it."