Blurb
Can
two very different men find the love they need to survive?
Remi
Ginn’s an easygoing werecat with a love of snarky T-shirts who would be
perfectly happy with a human mate. Is that what the goddess Bast gives him? Of
course not. Instead she gifts him with Marshell, a Vetala: a snakelike
nonshifter who drinks blood to survive. A man who’s just as toppy as Remi—and
even more powerful than the West Falls Clowder’s Alpha and heir apparent.
While
Remi decides whether he can handle the fates’ choice, hunters attack Marshell.
In an explosion of passion, Remi and Marshell mate and Remi declares Marshell
his. Now they have to figure out how to make their relationship work as they
dance around each other.
The
clowder is in turmoil, and Remi’s acceptance of Marshell rocks the very
foundation of the insular group. The consequences will be far-reaching. And if
that isn’t problem enough, the situation with the hunters is far from resolved…
as the appearance of an Alpha werewolf proves.
Chapter
One—Remi
Fuck my life.
I’d have to check, but I was pretty sure
I had a shirt that said that somewhere in my closet. If I didn’t, it was next
on the list of things to get. Because it fit—my life was fucked.
Sighing, I turned the radio up in an
effort to drown out my thoughts. I rattled down the road in my old beat-up work
truck—which was another thing I needed to take care of. I’d owned a sweet ’69
Ford Mustang. Had being the key word.
It went up in flames not long ago… with the mate of Dolf, our heir apparent and
head beta, inside.
Kirk made it out alive. My baby wasn’t
so lucky, and I hadn’t replaced her yet. Yes, I was mourning a car. I loved her. Ugh. So much for drowning out
my thoughts. I turned on my blinker and made the turn onto Alpha Armonty’s
street for an emergency meeting he’d called.
Bad enough this was Monday, but it was
what humans called Cyber Monday, goddess help us. I turned the heat up a little
more. December had arrived with what the South considered abnormally cold
temperatures. Frankly I liked the cold—liked the snow, as long as we weren’t
buried under a mountain of the stuff.
As I pulled up in front of his house, I
saw Dolf’s truck was already there. Dolf, our head beta, was the Alpha’s son
and heir apparent. The other three betas—Heller, Aidric, and Brier—had arrived
too. That left me. I was also a beta for the West Falls Clowder.
I parked behind Heller and sat in my
truck, staring sightlessly at the house. One of the reasons we were meeting was
because I met my mate, Marshell Foles, a few days ago. Good news, right? Cue
the canned audience applause.
Now the bad news. My mate was possibly
stronger than my Alpha and the heir apparent together. Okay, now cue the canned
boos and hisses. Maybe I should’ve said life was fucked with a capital F.
I flashed back
to the night I found out he was mine and the heavy petting session we had on
his couch. Now my cock was hard. Wonderful. Just what I needed—an erection right before I met with my Alpha.
I pushed at
the bulge, frowning. “Down, boy. I’m afraid you’re barking up the wrong tree.”
In order for a
shifter to mate, we had to share come and blood during sex—which involved bottoming. For my mate I could
bottom. The thing was, I didn’t see myself doing it on a regular basis. I was a
top—which was not that big of a
deal, except so was Marshell.
Somehow I
didn’t see Marshell bottoming any more than I wanted to. The man screamed Alpha
male. That was another can of worms, and not the only one by any means. And
sitting here analyzing this was useless. I got out and walked
toward the front door before one of them noticed me sitting out here in my
truck like a dummy.
Just as I got to the door, Dolf opened
it, read my shirt, and promptly burst out laughing. “You have got to tell me where you get those.”
Smirking, I shook my head. “It’s a
well-guarded secret.”
Today I wore a black shirt with white
writing: Be careful when you follow the
masses…. Sometimes the M is silent. “Masses” was in light blue, as was the letter M, to draw attention to the play on words. I’d been known to
follow an ass or two in my day. Those days were over now.
Dolf nodded at my truck. “I was
wondering if I was going to have to come out there.”
“I had a feeling you’d be tapping on the
driver’s window if I didn’t get out soon,” I said as Dolf moved out of the way
so I could enter the Alpha’s home.
“I was counting down. Dad and the rest
are already in his office.”
“That’s where the food is, right? I just
got off work, so I haven’t eaten.”
Dolf clapped me on the shoulder as he
shut the front door. “Of course. Come on back before they eat it all—damn bunch
of vultures.”
I followed Dolf. The smells coming from
Alpha Armonty’s office made my mouth water. “Something smells good.”
“Mom got hot wings. There are fries,
coleslaw, and potato salad to go with it. And rolls too.”
“Your mom rocks.”
We entered the office. Everyone was
still standing around helping themselves. Good. That meant there was still
food, and I made a beeline for it.
“Hey! Look what the cat finally dragged
in.” Aidric shoulder-bumped me.
“Oh, such sharp wit. It cuts like a dull
knife.” I rolled my eyes. “And don’t think I didn’t notice you bumping me away
from the table, you hog.”
“Hot wings, man.” Aidric winked at me.
“Food of the gods and hungry werecat shifters.”
“You’re always hungry,” I griped,
shoving Aidric out of my way. “Stop blocking the table, dude.”
“Hey, Remi,” Brier greeted me.
“Hey, how’s it going?”
“Good, good. Just got through helping my
sister, Breanna, move into her new apartment here in town. I swear, how does
one person accumulate that much stuff?” Brier complained.
“Oh that’s right. I forgot she was
back,” I said. “Where was she living before?”
“Philadelphia. She moved up there for her
job, but she couldn’t stand the cold weather and endless snow. All she did was
gripe, gripe, gripe. I finally got tired of hearing it and told her if she was that unhappy, then she should move back
home. I was kidding, but I don’t think she got that. Next thing I know I’m
getting a phone call and a due date for her to move.” Brier scowled at a chip
on his plate. “Should’ve kept my mouth shut.”
“What did you tell me she did?” I asked.
“She’s an accountant. Now that she’s
settled into her new place, she’s started job hunting. She’s got some savings,
but that won’t last forever.”
“Is she still unmated?” I asked.
“Yep. She had a boyfriend, but they
weren’t mates. And speaking of mates, I heard you found yours. Man, sorry I
couldn’t attend the dinner. Congrats.” Brier sat down at the round table we
always used for meetings.
“Yeah, you should’ve seen his face.”
Aidric chuckled.
“Thanks,” I said, unsure if I should say
more. Did Brier know the situation? Aidric did. He was there that night.
“Welcome, Remi.” Alpha Armonty pointed
at the side table where the drinks were set. “There’s several different sodas
to pick from, and tea. Get yourself a plate and grab a seat.”
“Yes, Alpha.” I filled a plate and got a
drink. After we were settled, Alpha Armonty cleared his throat. All talking
ceased.
“We’re meeting for several reasons.
First let me congratulate Remi. As I understand it, Remi met his mate during
Heller’s Thanksgiving dinner, which I wish now the wife and I had attended.”
“Yeah, you never know what kind of
trouble Heller’s going to stir up,” Aidric joked.
“Again, let me remind everyone Lawson’s
to blame for the whole Thanksgiving deal. That’s my story, and I’m sticking
with it.” Heller nodded as though that was the end of the subject.
“You chickenshit.” Aidric poked Heller
in the ribs. “Look at you trying to throw it off on your mate, and the guy
isn’t even here to defend himself.”
“I’ll tell him,” I volunteered, flashing
Heller an evil grin. “Knowing Lawson, he’ll hide Heller’s hair-styling stuff as
revenge. Hmm, I might even have to suggest that. Just in case, you know.”
“He’d need a storage unit for all of
it,” Brier added and then took a drink of his soda.
“And a forklift to get it to the storage unit.” Dolf snickered, licking the sauce from
the hot wings off his fingers.
“Just a damn minute here.” Heller threw
his napkin at me. “How’d this discussion get off onto me anyhow? And Remi? You
might want to remember Lawson’s like a brother to your mate. Maybe I’ll tell Lawson to tell Marshell how you picked
on me… and I’ll have you in the doghouse, man.”
“Doghouse?
Really?” Dolf hooted.
“Sounds better than cathouse.” Heller
shrugged and then bit into a wing.