Wolf Rock Shifters Books 1-5: Five BBW Paranormal Romance Standalone Novels (24 page)

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Authors: Carina Wilder

Tags: #Romance, #New Adult & College, #Paranormal, #Romantic Comedy, #Werewolves & Shifters, #Witches & Wizards

BOOK: Wolf Rock Shifters Books 1-5: Five BBW Paranormal Romance Standalone Novels
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16
Chapter Sixteen

O
ver the next weeks
, the pack managed a few innovations under Tristan’s watch and in conjunction with the local authorities: the town of Wolf Rock was to be firearms-free. Checkpoints were set up at all the roads leading into the area, approved by government officials who’d agreed to work, going forward, with the shifters offering input.

The Lion’s Head Pub received a new name and sign. It was now The Hunter’s Head, and its symbol was that of a not very bright man wearing a hunting cap, his head attached to a wooden frame. The establishment was going back to its roots; a welcoming locale for shifters of all kinds to congregate.

The biggest change, though, was the announcement to the world that shifters of all shapes and sizes were invited, welcome, to come to Wolf Rock to live. The hope was that the town would become a sort of refuge for their kind, where they were free to roam, to socialize, and to leave whenever they wanted to. With the arrival of Maddox and Corgan the world had opened up and Tristan and the pack had discussed the desire for schools for young shifters to help them socialize and learn to hunt, to protect, to excel in their roles.

Already new cabins were being built in the woods; new dens, new homes.

Kyla was filled with delight one day when, sitting with Maddox under the sun as he stroked her thigh, she watched a gigantic male lion and a crane make their way down the town’s main street. Over the days following they saw any number of creatures, from doves to elephants, roam through town. Perhaps the most beautiful and exotic shifter was a white tiger, a sleek man from Asia.

Shops were being leased to designers, who were coming up with innovative new ways to clothe the morphs, various garments fitting various shapes. A whole new industry was being established and the Longtooth Pack couldn’t have been happier to be at its forefront.

Maddox had been offered a job as a teacher in the new school, which was tucked away in the woods. His special ability to change into any conceivable creature was a skill that he was learning to control, and he was to work with the “gifted children,” to nurture their skills. Their gifts didn’t always match his, but occasionally they brought with them talents like heightened sight, as in the case of a pure eagle shifter, or extreme speed as in the case of a cheetah. Occasionally one would come along who had visions like Kyla’s, and these too were to be nurtured. She hoped also to gain control over her own mind and her own visions; to use them to help others.

K
yla went
by the cabin one evening to say hello to Nikki and Tristan and to plan strategy for the upcoming months. She had a new job for which she didn’t yet have a title, but Nikki referred to her as “Mistress of Everything,” since her duties seemed to cover every facet of Wolf Rock from the school to organizing yoga classes.

The three were having a quiet dinner when the door opened.

Maddox walked in, which was a surprise—a pleasant one for Kyla, who hadn’t expected to see him for hours as he’d said he had some errands to run—but it was Nikki who reacted. She stood up, tears filling her eyes, and Kyla looked at her, puzzled until she sniffed the air and realized that her man wasn’t alone.

From behind him, a small woman stepped out. She was about fifty years old and pretty. Her hair was a sort of dirty blond with hints of grey, and she looked an awful lot like Nikki.

“Mom!” The pack’s newest member threw herself across the room and embraced her mother.

Kyla looked at Tristan, whose eyes were also welling with tears.

“Thanks, Maddox, for picking her up,” he said to the grizzly man, walking over to shake his hand before offering Nikki’s mother a hug.

The woman hugged him back, looking apprehensive but content.

“I’m so glad you came,” said Nikki. “I wasn’t sure you ever would.”

“Well, it’s time for me to move on,” her mother said. “And you seem to love it here so I thought I should have a look around.”

“I’m so glad.”

With that, Kyla walked up to Maddox and put her arms around his waist. The next step, she knew, was to get his own parents to come. But for now she adored him for what he’d done for Nikki.

“I love you,” she said.

“You do?”

“Mm hmm.”

“I
am
a damn fine chauffeur,” he offered, which caused Kyla to smack him on the arm.

“What a response,” she said.

“Also, and this is important,” he continued, his large hands on her shoulders, “I love you. Massively, totally, incredibly, perfectly, Kyla Greene. I love you.”

Book Three
Part I
The Right to A Bear’s Arms
Wolf Rock Shifters, Book Three
Introduction

T
he tall
, elegant woman known as Annette Barber walked into a bank in the town of Terrence on a busy weekday afternoon, her sleek black hair and large sunglasses giving her an air of quiet mystery. Aside from a glance by the occasional man out running errands and casually interested in attractive women, she remained mostly unnoticed by the locals going about their daily routines. Her flowing dress was cinched at the waist, her lean form evident under the waves of fabric. Over her shoulder was a canvas satchel which contained nothing but some photo identification and a bank card.

After sizing up the bank’s employees, she approached the friendliest-looking teller that she saw, a broad, white-toothed smile plastered on her own face. Within minutes she had extracted every cent from an account for which she supplied all necessary paperwork and identification to prove that she was in fact the woman she claimed to be, a woman whose name she’d chosen only a year earlier.

The bag she carried as she left the building was suddenly more valuable by far than anything she’d ever owned. As she walked out of the bank, she found herself peering around at passersby, fearful that they would know what she carried. But all seemed fine. No one, she told herself, was out to get her. No one cared where she went. Except for one man, and he wouldn’t be walking down Main Street anytime soon, if ever again. She was free now.

A few blocks away, the town’s border greeted her and miles of dense woods began. It was there, concealed among the trees, that she removed her dress and stuffed it into the bag. Her shoes and Annette Barber’s identification were left under a pile of fallen leaves.

N
o one saw
the black panther that slipped away, leaving the town and its residents behind forever.

1


B
ye
, Mom. And don’t worry. I won’t end up dead in a ditch,” said Colson, giving the plump woman in front of him a hug before getting into his immaculate red pickup truck, his luggage on the passenger seat next to him.

“Don’t forget to call every week,” she said, “and make sure your cousin pays you properly.”

“I will,” he said, grinning. His mother always treated him as though he was still six years old and, while part of him enjoyed it, he always wished he could remind her that he had grown into rather a strong, independent young man. At six-foot-four, Colson found that there was little in the world that threatened him. Add to that the fact that he was a bear shifter and he enjoyed a life mostly devoid of conflict.

Mostly.

He took off down the road, driving slowly to appease his mother until he was out of sight, and then accelerated to the maximum speed he could sustain without guaranteeing himself a pricey speeding ticket. The truck was Colson’s pride and joy, with its powerful engine and enough upgrades to satisfy any man. It had cost him all his savings and paying for anything outside of gas, food, and possibly the odd beer, wasn’t advisable. So obeying traffic laws seemed like a decent plan, albeit a boring one.

The flat landscape of his home state looked more beautiful than usual under the rising sun, but it was the distant mountains that Colson was looking forward to. It had been years since he’d seen them and he’d always felt the most at home among the rocky peaks. He wondered if this had to do with the bear in him, but he knew the answer perfectly well: of course it did. It was his inner animal that craved the outdoors; the smells, the ice cold creeks. And even on the odd occasions when he found himself enjoying a fight, it was his bear that dictated his actions and that gave him strength.

Colson drove for several hours, cranking out old-school albums by groups that sang about traveling and being wild, young and free. These were his ideas of the perfect shifter anthems; representations of the dichotomy between animal and human, freedom and duty.

The music churned out through the speakers which had been worth every penny he’d paid for them, and he told himself that life couldn’t get much sweeter than this. A solitary ride to begin a new life in a beautiful locale. A solitary life, of course. But he could deal with that later.

Z
oe’s breathing
grew deep and controlled as she emerged from the woods after her lengthy run. She wrapped the dress’s flowing fabric around her and tied the long belt at her waist, which was now significantly softer and thicker around than it had been a few hours earlier. Regaining her balance after her spring on four paws, she stumbled across the road towards the bar which she’d only spotted a few minutes before, looking back towards the woods for any signs of a pursuer. If she had one, she knew that he’d in all likelihood be far behind her, hunting a taller, thinner woman with black hair. Only the dress she wore, which was a non-descript neutral blue, would be likely to draw any comparisons.

But no one would mistake the woman who’d been conducting business at a bank in a town miles away for the curvaceous redhead who was now about to enter a seedy bar, presumably simply looking for an afternoon beer.

Even her eyes had changed colour, from a rich chocolate brown to a sort of pale green. Her entire face was now a different shape than it had been; less lean and long, although it was still angular, and striking in its way. Her nose was small and delicate, her cheekbones high, and her upper and lower lips protruded in a manner which made her look slightly pouty. When she smiled, though, she became approachable.

The bar was called “O’Flanaghan’s,” although a few errant, missing letters made it look more like “O’Fanaan’s.” It sat in what seemed like the middle of nowhere along a long stretch of country road. No other buildings were in sight in either direction. It seemed like a perfectly stupid location for a drinking establishment, Zoe thought. One could only reach it by driving, which seemed inadvisable at best, or return home by stumbling along for miles in a drunken stupor since taxis were non-existent in this part of the country. But the dozen or so cars in the lot indicated that the clients were of the first sort: slightly irresponsible drivers who were no doubt escaping from some aspect of their mundane lives to spend a few sad hours in an establishment that smelled of liquor and air fresheners.

It would be the perfect spot to look for help from a lonely man. Those were always the easiest to manipulate, after all.

The dark of the room hit Zoe as she pulled the building’s door open, her pupils dilating as they attempted to adjust quickly to the change in light. The sound of men talking and pool balls colliding met her ears before she could focus visually on the scene before her.

She stepped barefoot towards the bartender when she could make him out to her left. Carefully she extracted a ten-dollar bill from her satchel, hoping the man serving drinks wouldn’t notice the large wad of cash in the bag next to the identification which would accompany her through the next phase of her life, or her lack of shoes, for that matter.

“A beer, please,” she said, smoothing her hair as she sat down on a tall stool, taking in the room and its inhabitants.

The bartender, a middle-aged man with tattooed arms and laugh lines, thrust a bottle at her. It was a generic brand that an old high school friend who spoke French used to call “pisse de cheval,” or “horse urine.” This was an accurate name for the stuff.

“Here you go, sweetheart. This one’s on the house. You look like you’ve been through the wars.”

Zoe smiled at him.

“I suppose I have, in a manner of speaking,” she said. “Thanks for the beer.”

With that, she got up and walked away, having no intention or desire to make friends. She was a good actress, and had a way of making people trust her as she had with the friendly bank teller, who’d asked no questions before handing her thousands of dollars. But she knew that it would be a bad idea to engage in conversation with a barkeep who could identify her to anyone asking questions later.

As for friendship, Zoe had resolved to provide her own to no one, but she wanted above all to seem non-threatening and normal, though she was anything but.

She’d known, as the tall raven-haired beauty called Annette, that she was an attractive woman; young, vital, intelligent. Now, in the body of the voluptuous redhead which was her own natural state, she felt less threatening to the male species. Men wouldn’t eye her as a sexual object, but perhaps more as a potential friend or sister.

This, she thought, was perfect; the last thing she wanted was to be hit on. And yet she knew perfectly well that, model body or no, she could flirt with and flatter a man to get what she wanted. That, she hoped, included a ride to somewhere far away from this place.

Grasping the beer in her right hand, she made her way to a table in a dark corner, making sure to give herself a view of the door and the room at once. Her only goal was to find her potential ally as quickly as possible, and with his help, to get as far away from what had been her home as she could. For that she’d need wheels.

Two rough-looking men were playing pool several feet from her table, and the abundance of empty bottles next to them indicated that they’d been at it for some time. Zoe assessed them rapidly: they would each be too drunk to be a useful driver, but on the positive side neither would register her presence, and indeed neither seemed to care about much aside from their current, sloppy game.

Another man sat at the far end of the bar, looking half-asleep, bedraggled and dirty. Still another, younger man and what appeared to be his strung-out girlfriend occupied a table about fifteen feet from the pool players, seemingly in the midst of a quiet argument.

As Zoe’s eyes wandered and took in the other customers, she heard the two pool players begin to raise their voices.

“You moved the fucking cue ball again, ash-hole. You can’t do that,” said the first, the beer causing a newfound speech impediment which would no doubt clear up by morning, if he made it home in one piece.

“No, I didn’t. You’re making shit up now because you’re sick of me taking all your cash.”

“I’m shick of your crap is what I’m shick of,” said number one, a middle-aged man with sweat stains under his arms, as he lunged at his friend, who could have been his brother for all the physical similarities.

As the awkward fight broke out, both men staggered around, taking swings at one another. Zoe smiled to herself, thinking how real-life fights always looked so different from the clean, crisp ones you saw in movies where a fist hitting a face sounded like the tidy ring of two pool balls colliding. In reality, it was a lot of soft-sounding flesh hitting other flab, more like a slapping brawl than anything else, and two drunks made for an amusing choreography of clumsiness.

The two pool players threw their punches, half of which seemed to miss, just as a third man emerged from the corridor that housed the washrooms. Unlike the other two, he looked sober, young and strong.

Not to mention incredibly sexy.

That, thought Zoe, was unfortunate.

A tight white t-shirt stretched across his muscled chest, revealing broad shoulders and pecs that begged to be pawed. What a creature he was.

“Sober and strong,” thought Zoe, wondering how to get him over to her table. “He’ll do.”

But just as Mr. Sexy-pecs walked towards the bar, his eyes caught sight of her. He seemed for a moment to focus entirely on her face and as he did so, one of the fighters swung and missed his opponent, landing a blow directly in the t-shirt-wearing young man’s stomach. This didn’t go over particularly well, in spite of the fact that it was no doubt weakened by the excess alcohol in the fighter’s bloodstream.

The young man, who looked bigger and stronger by far than either of the two fighters, pushed his assailant backwards, and the drunk went flying into a table, knocking it and several glasses to the floor. Zoe began to feel uneasy as she saw the bartender’s agitation grow. The situation was becoming far too memorable for her liking, and if nothing else, she knew that she needed to avoid being memorable.

The bartender raised the partition which separated him from his customers and began to make his way towards the fray, wanting, no doubt, to break up the fight before it cost him any more money.

The young fighter, who seemed to be enjoying the conflict that had arisen, grabbed the other pool player and seemed on the verge of throwing him against the wall when the bartender reached them both, grabbing the more sober of the two by the shoulders.

Zoe stood and walked towards the door, wishing to avoid being caught up in the middle of a fight that would no doubt end in a police presence. She turned towards the brawlers and caught the t-shirt-clad man’s eye again, but this time she caught sight of something else: a sharp, glistening set of fangs which retracted just as she spotted them, as though shy of her glance. Restrained by the large hands of the bartender, the man thought better of his plan and let his victim go before beginning an all-out assault.

That was the last that Zoe saw of him before she stepped outside, looking tentatively towards the woods across the road. Her eyes darted around the parking lot then, searching for a better solution. If only she had a set of keys to one of these vehicles. She began to wonder if her panther form had another long hike in her near future.

Seconds later, the young man, who was now glistening with beads of sweat, came careening out through the bar’s front door, no doubt flung out by the angry bartender. Zoe watched as he debated whether to re-enter the premises or to cut his losses. He opted for the latter, making his way to a nearby pickup truck and wiping his brow with the back of a large hand.

This, she knew, was her best chance. She followed him, hurrying her pace to catch up before he reached his vehicle.

“Take me with you,” she said.

The man turned and looked at her, irritation on his face. This woman had distracted him in the bar. It was her fault that he’d been involved in a fight with two low-life assholes.

“What did you just say?” he growled.

“Wherever you’re going. I need a ride. Please.” She attempted a friendly smile, though her usual instinct to be charming wasn’t kicking in amidst the desperation within her.

“You have no idea where I’m going,” he said, opening the truck’s door and looking her up and down. “And I don’t give strange women rides.”

“I’ll pay you,” she said.

“With what? You don’t even have enough cash to buy shoes, by the looks of things.”

“I’ll find a way. Just…please. Help me.”

The man saw Zoe’s eyes shifting towards the woods and, though he wanted nothing more than to get away from the bar and be on his way, he saw the fear in her expression and in a moment of weakness, said, “Get in.”

“Thanks. You won’t regret it.”

“Oh, I’m sure I
will
regret it. But get in before I change my damn mind.”

He opened the passenger door and extracted his bags, which he tossed into the back of the truck before gesturing to Zoe to climb in. Then he made his way around and got in himself, sitting down hard in the driver’s seat.

“What’s your name?” Zoe said, smoothing her skirt over her legs.

“Colson.”

“Colson, I’m Zoe.”

“Nice to meet you, Zoe. I suppose.”

“You too.”

“I’m headed to Wolf Rock,” Colson said as he started the ignition. “Heard of it?”

Zoe knew of the place. It was a shifter town; the first of its sort, and certainly the most famous. Run mostly by the local wolf pack, its residents were predominantly shifters themselves, or humans sympathetic to their kind.

“Yeah, I know of it.” Zoe looked sideways at him, studying his profile. Colson had light brown hair and eyes that were a combination of green and yellow. His jaw was square and strong, and his handsome face seemed to match his perfectly muscled frame very well indeed. It was really too bad, thought Zoe, that she had no intention of getting involved with anyone. And too bad that she’d chosen today to go back to her natural, less than perfect form.

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