Winston (BBW Bear Shifter Wedding Romance) (Grizzly Groomsmen Book 3) (81 page)

BOOK: Winston (BBW Bear Shifter Wedding Romance) (Grizzly Groomsmen Book 3)
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Kitty laughed. “Yes, I guess we do.”

It was actually a lot easier than Kitty had thought it would be, meeting with the entire family. They were gathered around Mark and Abby’s dining room table, and Mark was generous as he poured wine for the ladies.

“Bear-Cat, huh?” Matt said then took a swig from his bottle of beer.

“I like it,” John said.

“Me, too,” Meg said. “It’s all of you and Addy and Kitty, all rolled into one.”

“Well, it just popped into my head when old man Konstantine asked, but if we come up with somethin’ better, that’d be okay.”

There were protests around the table, and so it was settled.

“To The Bear-Cat Agency,” Mark said, raising his bottle high.

Everyone lifted their bottle or glass.

“How are you doing, Kitty?” Meg asked.

Kitty took a deep breath. “All right, I guess, though I’ve never been unemployed and homeless before.”

Luke snorted. “You’re hardly that. What you and Mel cooked up is a great idea, and I’m bettin’ we can make it work in no time.”

“Getting clients won’t be easy,” Kitty said.

“You already have two,” Meg said. “The Four Saints and me.”

“Really?” Kitty said. “Are you serious about touring again, Meg?”

Meg shook her head. “Not touring—never that, again. It would take me too far from home for too long. But there are local gigs I could get, with your help—and by local, I mean Tennessee and surrounding states. I don’t want to go too far. This is my home, and I like it here. But surely there are universities and music schools who wouldn’t mind paying me something to perform and lead workshops.”

“I think that’s a wonderful idea,” Mel said.
 

“I could be your third client,” Addy said.

Kitty smiled. She liked Addy. The quietest of all six of the young Saints, she was soft-spoken, and oh so very talented as a song writer.

“We’d be fools not to take you on, Addy,” Bart said. “You write terrific songs, and some of them are just cryin’ out for a female star to sing ’em.”

“Hey!” Luke said, wrapping his arm around his wife protectively. “Candace, here, sings those songs real well.”

“Of course she does,” Addy said loyally.

“But I don’t
like
to,” Candace said, rolling her eyes toward her husband. “Not on stage. You know I don’t. So let Kitty, Mel, and Bart find some up-and-coming star to really do those songs justice. I mean, just ’cause the Saints don’t want to sing at the Grand Ole Opry, doesn’t mean Addy’s songs shouldn’t get there.”

There was a burst of enthusiasm around the table, and Kitty shook her head in wonder.

It is so easy for them,
she thought.

Mel and Kitty had outlined their preliminary plans for the whole family over pulled pork and coleslaw, and everyone seemed to want in on it. Bart had agreed that his front parlor was the perfect place for an office, and Matt had an idea about a possible joint venture with the owner of a small recording studio nearby who was currently in trouble financially. The brainstorm of ideas seemed never ending.

“You still with us, darlin’?” Bart asked after a time, his voice a soft murmur in her ear.

She smiled at him. “Barely.”

“I think Kitty’s had it for tonight,” Mel said, and Kitty felt the warmth of her smile.

And how good it feels to have Mel for a friend and colleague, now,
she thought.

“I think you’re right,” Kitty said, getting up from the table. “I can’t thank all of you enough for…” She broke off, suddenly at a loss for words.

Mel stood and gave her a warm hug. “I’m so glad you invited me to go with you, Kitty, she said. “I think we’re going to be great together.”

“You bet,” Matt said.

“I couldn’t even begin to succeed without all of you,” Kitty said.

Bart got to his feet and put his arm around her shoulders. “You were the spearhead on this one, Kitty, and deserve all the credit for it. And we’re all agreed it’s gonna be good for all of us, so let’s just call this a family affair and leave it at that.”

In another few minutes, Bart led her down the back stairs and into the night. They crossed the alley and stopped between their two cars.

“I don’t like the idea of you tryin’ to drive home tonight, Kitty,” Bart said.

She looked up at him, trying to see his golden eyes in the shadows.

“I don’t like the idea of going home at all,” she said.

Bart smiled and brushed the hair back from her face. “Even better,” he murmured, kissing her brow and turning her toward his door.

They didn’t bother with the lights, but let the moonlight and streetlights coming through the windows guide their way into the bedroom.

“We need to be more careful tonight,” Kitty said when he brought her to a stop at the foot of the bed and took her into his arms.

“Oh?”
 

He sounded worried, and she actually giggled.

“I don’t want to ruin Meg’s dress,” she said.

He laughed. “I’ll be careful,” he promised, loosening the belt that held the dress in place.

When the belt was gone, the dress flowed to the floor along with it, and Kitty’s breath caught when he opened the front of her bra, releasing her breasts. The air conditioning blew across her heated flesh, where his mouth left a damp trail, and she felt an answering tingle in her nether regions.

“Bart…”

“Don’t worry, darlin’,” he said, returning his lips to hers. “We won’t be takin’ as long to get there tonight.”

“Good!”

He chuckled, but when he would have laid her on the bed, she twisted and pushed him ahead of her. He landed on his back in the middle of the bed, and she rejoiced at the sound of his laughter.

“My turn,” she said, straddling his thighs and going to work on his shirt front with clumsy fingers.
 

“Just don’t take too long,” he said, groaning when she reached for his belt but stopped long enough to feel the bulge at the front of his jeans.

Kittle laughed breathlessly. “It won’t be long, now. Just scoot up on the bed.”

He did as directed, and she moved away just long enough and far enough to pull off his shoes and socks, as well as her own shoes, slip, stockings, and panties, before she quickly returned to his belt buckle and pulled it apart. Then carefully unbuttoning his jeans, she felt for the zipper.

“Careful, darlin’…”

“Don’t worry. I’ll be careful.” She pulled the zipper down and felt his member pulsing through his shorts.
 

“Lift your hips for me,” she directed.

When he did, she lifted up far enough to give her room to slide his jeans down. Once they were around his ankles, he kicked them off.

“Sit up, now.”

He did as she directed, and she peeled his shirt over his shoulders and threw it away, before pushing him back down onto his back.

“You are so beautiful,” she said, as she settled down over him and ran her hands through the dark fur on his chest. His muscles were smooth and hard under the soft coat, and she let her fingers roam, following the line of hair as it narrowed down to the waistband of his shorts.

“You got that wrong, Kitty,” he said through clenched teeth. “You’re the one who’s beautiful.”

He grasped her under her arms, then, and pulled her up over him until he could reach her breasts with his mouth. She held herself above him with her arms on either side of his head as he feasted on first one then the other, leaving her gasping. When she couldn’t stand it anymore she slid down him to lay her lips on his, taking their kiss deep, all the while feeling the huge presence of his member between her legs. He had pushed down his shorts while she hadn’t been paying attention, and she felt her own wetness as she rubbed against him.

“You need to sit up, now, darlin’,” he directed, placing his big hands under her arms once more and lifting her off him.
 

Kitty cried out in disappointment, until she felt the prodding of his member at her center. She reached down to take him in her hands, feeling him grow harder still, then guided him to her opening. It was bigger this way, and she felt some pain as she slowly sank down onto him.

Then he was thrusting up, hard, and pulling her down, her hips trapped in his big hands. Kitty squealed, arching back, her hands spearing through his hair, as she came down on him. He repeated the motion, first lifting then pulling her down, until the pain was eclipsed by a pleasure so big, she thought she would burst from it.
 

And in another moment, she did, shuddering hard on her climax, her cry swallowed by his roar as his seed filled her.

Later, she lay on him, her legs wrapped around his, his member still deep inside her. He had softened, but he was still there, still a part of her, and she felt complete. She sighed in contentment, and felt him pull a blanket up over her against the cool night air. When he turned his head to kiss her, she felt tears threaten.”

“Did I hurt you, Kitty?” he asked, and she heard distress in his voice.

“No! Well, maybe, at first, but then it was...it was perfect.”

She felt his smile when he kissed her again.

She sighed. “I love you, you know.”

“Yeah, I kind of figured you did. Convenient, that, since I love you, too.”

As his arms tighten around her, she felt his member begin to grow inside her, and in another moment, she felt herself quicken once more.

“I can’t believe what you do to me,” she murmured. “It’s never been like this before.”

“Good,” he said, the satisfaction in his voice unmistakable.

Kitty laughed softly and hugged him close, at home in his arms as she had never been anywhere else before.

“Are you gonna marry me, Kitty?” he asked after a time.

She sighed. “I think I’ll have to. Bear-Cat is supposed to be a family affair, after all.”

He laughed and rolled over, reversing their positions. Then he began to love her once more, and she let herself fly.

Bucking Bearback

Bear Ranchers Book V

by

Becca Fanning

Jeanie Buchanan found herself surrounded by pine and spruce. She loved spending time out in nature and it seemed that Sun Valley was as close to authentic nature as you could get nowadays. Birds sang around her as the breeze whispered in the trees. She stood for a moment and closed her eyes. Life was oozing out of the ground all around her as her feet crunched the needles that carpeted the forest floor. Behind her the mountains rose into the sky. It was beginning to get chilly in these parts and she zipped her jacket closed.
 

Strands of her long auburn hair waved in the breeze that carried a hint of ice. If she dragged this Environmental Impact Assessment out she might be able to get her company to sponsor her being here through the winter. She loved winter in the mountains. But it was quite clear that they really wanted a rush on things.
 

Petersen-Snow was a huge client of the Wilkes Environment Assessment Agency who were her current employers. Her manager, George Chavez, had made it abundantly clear that any deviation or delay would see Jeanie out on her ass. She couldn’t help that she did her job properly. It wasn’t her fault that she felt a sense of obligation to actually visit the sites before they became office blocks, mine dumps or landfills, or whatever else their clients had in mind. With Jeanie there was no compromise and she didn’t care about politics. She was however becoming vaguely aware that perhaps she should start to care about those things, if she planned to stay employed.

Originally from Chicago, Illinois, she had moved to New York right after graduating with the promise of work at Wilkes. She had been there for five years now and she thought she did a good job, but lately her manager had been irritated with her thoroughness.
 

George would often berate her for her travel account, her reports that were always more than competent and complete, and her flagrant disregard for specific instructions to ignore certain things.

“It’s not that you’re not good at your job, Jeanie. You’re too good,” he would complain. “You just don’t have to turn over each rock in the place to see if there’s some endangered species of butterfly or something.”
 

“Well, George, turning over each rock is kind of what this is about. And you will never find a butterfly under one. Unless some total douche has put it there,” she would retort.
 

And so it would go.
 

This time she was told to go out to Sun Valley, look around and then approve the deal.
 

Jeanie Buchannan had other ideas.
 

She took out her camera. Yes, she could use her phone, but she loved her Canon with its awesome zoom lens and it went everywhere with her anyway. Sighting through the eyepiece Jeanie captured the light as it slanted through the leaves turning the world around her a lovely shade of green. It was so peaceful here. She could forget just about everything. And even better, there was no mobile phone service here. No signal. It was like stepping back into the eighties but without the bad hair.
 

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