Read The Right to Bear Arms: BBW Military Paranormal Romance (Wild Operatives, #1) Online

Authors: Vivienne Savage

Tags: #bear shifter, #interracial, #alpha, #soldier, #military romance, #alpha male, #billionaire, #shapeshifter

The Right to Bear Arms: BBW Military Paranormal Romance (Wild Operatives, #1)

The Right to Bear Arms

By Vivienne Savage

All material contained herein is Copyright © Vivienne Savage 2015.  All rights reserved.

ISBN PENDING

***

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your preferred ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

Mailing List Sign-up

Vivienne’s Facebook Page

Edited by Hot Tree Editing

Proofread by J. Bird

Table of Contents

Copyright Page

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Saved by the Dragon – sneak peek

Chapter One

~Daniela~

T
he black bear appeared in my yard for the first time one late Friday night.

I had just awakened from a nightmare around half past three. The recurring bad dream of my home on fire left me too unsettled to remain in bed for long, so I slid from beneath the blanket and pulled a light robe over my nude body. I preferred sleeping au naturel, with nothing between me and the silk sheets.

After stepping downstairs to fetch a glass of cool water, I peered through the sliding glass doors for a look into the moonlit rear yard. My landlord, as of six months ago, owned enough acreage for a forest preserve. With my house situated at the very edge of the woodland growth, I was often treated to an array of beautiful creatures. It made me feel like a Latina Snow White.

It was a completely different atmosphere than my last home in the suburbs. I thought I’d hate the hour long commute to work each day, but it gave me time to unwind behind the wheel, sip coffee, and sing to the morning radio. On the way home, I chatted with my mom, usually trying to convince her I was all right on my own. She didn’t trust that Michael would leave me alone.

Officially, I was ending my first month as a single woman after eleven years of an unhappy, emotionally and physically abusive marriage. Michael judged every aspect of my existence, from the style of my hair to the weight I gained during our marriage. Nothing made him happy, and in the end, when he lost his job and came home drunk, he fell asleep with a lit cigarette in his hand and cost us our home.

My parents saw the signs, and when we turned to them for a place to live, they forbid Michael to come into their home. He raged and swore at them, cursed at me, and finally pushed me over the edge until I accepted their ultimatum. A month later, I filed for divorce.

I was alone since then with my share of the insurance claim, starting fresh with the life I deserved in a little rural town in Texas named Quickdraw. I sighed and sipped my water. That was when I noticed the dark shape in my brand new hammock.

“What the hell?” I flipped on the porch light, casting a yellow glow over the formerly dark yard. A bear lay in the hammock, sprawled on its back, so deeply asleep that the light didn’t even disturb it.

The sight was so ridiculous that I spent the first minute giggling crazily after I turned out the light. Russ, my neighbor down the lane, had warned me when I moved in that all kinds of predatory creatures came out of the woods and to be careful if I had any pets. I didn’t. Not anymore. Mimi, my Sphynx kitten, had died in the fire.

I slept easier after seeing the bear and imagined that if my ex came tiptoeing through my yard, he’d have Yogi to deal with for his transgressions. Following a night of more peaceful dreams, I showered and squeezed into a pair of yoga pants with a sports bra and oversized t-shirt. My hair, curly and black, fell in damp ringlets down my back. I shook them out with one hand and stepped outside onto my porch with my unopened mail, a book, and a steaming mug of coffee.

The kiss of a morning breeze touched my cheeks and rustled my dark hair, waking me before I even had the first sip of my drink. I dropped into a patio chair and grunted when I saw the bill collection notices for Michael Rodriguez. I set those aside, making the snail mail trash pile. Taking comfort in the chirping birds, my eyes swept over the yard and noticed... the bear hadn’t moved. In my head, I decided the laziness made him a boy. He lay there, so still in the hammock that I thought he was dead. Squinting, I could see the steady rise and fall of his chest. Was he ill? Should I call animal control? What if they shot him?

I gulped down a few hot mouthfuls of coffee as if it were liquid courage before rushing inside to fetch steak leftovers from the fridge. I warmed them up in the microwave just enough to knock off the cold then tossed them in a pan before returning outside. My furry friend hadn’t left yet. He groggily raised his head to look at me with his big brown eyes. Friendly eyes. Docile eyes. In and out with each steady breath, I steeled my nerves and slowly proceeded forward with my offering. He watched me as closely as I watched him, maybe feeling the same amount of fear. I approached in two step increments, judged his reaction to the human encroaching on his space, then continued closer. Once I was about twenty yards from the bear, I placed the pan on the grass. My heart had never beat so fast, not even when Michael terrorized me in my own home. My ex-husband had been a monster, but this wild animal could take me as a threat and kill me within seconds.

“Would you like a nice, delicious breakfast?” I asked him in my calmest voice, as if I were speaking to a puppy. I saw him drop from the hammock, and as he moved closer, I distanced until I was inside. I watched him from the other side of the glass doors until he finished his meal and walked away.

Early Monday morning, I found him in the hammock again but awake, seeming to wait for me to emerge from the house to see him. Scared out of my wits again, I brought leftover taco casserole this time.

Something about his chocolate brown stare assured me I was safe. He didn’t rush me or make an aggressive move, never coming closer than the place where I set his food. This time, I settled tentatively in the patio chair and watched him eat out of the pan. Michael had never appreciated my cooking so much as this wild animal.

I grinned and enjoyed his distant company until at last he ambled off into the woods and disappeared from my sight.

My newfound friend made visiting my lawn a habit. Each night, I cooked more than necessary and set aside a portion. Each morning, he waited for me in the hammock where he watched me approach with eerily intelligent eyes. Our daily ritual became something I needed, until I no longer remembered when the animal transitioned from being a bear to simply ‘my bear.’

“Daniela, it’s a wild animal. Hasn’t anyone told you that you shouldn’t be feeding them?”

“Why the hell not?” I demanded. “It’s been two weeks, Papa. If he was going to hurt me, he would have by now.”

My father sighed into the phone line. “You’re wasting food. Let the untamed, dangerous animal forage for his own meals, sweetheart, before he becomes too used to people. Do you know what happens when wild animals become used to eating from people?”

I didn’t answer him. “I’ll be careful, Papa, promise. Look, I have to go; I’m pulling in for gas.” He was right, but I didn’t care. This was something that was completely mine, and I enjoyed the company. It had become the one selfish thing I wanted.

The gas station was an older one without a debit card reader by the pumps. Forced to go inside to pay with cash first, I meandered to the ancient fridge and grabbed a cream soda before checking out at the cashier.

“Afternoon, Mrs. Rodriguez,” a friendly voice spoke up behind me. I glanced over my shoulder to see a broad chest beneath a striped button down shirt. Unconsciously, my eyes scanned down over Wranglers and dusty brown cowboy boots. They fit the body they adorned quite well, alluding to the muscular physique beneath. Once I swung my eyes back up over his muscular chest, I tilted my head to look up into a pair of warm brown eyes. Russell, the homeowner from down the road, lived alone with a massive German shepherd he’d brought back with him from the war in Afghanistan. The sexy Army vet was one flex away from bursting his shirt sleeves every time I saw him. His jeans didn’t fit him like a second skin, but he wore them right, fitted appropriately to his tall frame without sagging.

“Actually, it’s Reyes again now,” I told Russell with a tired smile. “But really, Daniela is fine.”

“My mistake, ma’am.”

“Daniela,” I corrected him again, laughing. He was such a sweet man. When the UPS guy dropped off a package for him at my house once, I drove my car down to the end of the lane to bring it to him. He’d answered the door in boxers and given me the thrill of my life. Thirty seconds of conversation on his porch while his face lit up red as a tomato, made the couple minutes of my time worth it. I grinned the entire drive back home that day, daydreaming about his tight pecs and healthy summer browned skin. He didn’t have a tan line on him.

“Habit.” Russell grinned back this time. If he wanted to be more of a country stereotype, he only needed the Stetson on his head and a Marlboro between his lips.

The gas clerk cleared her throat to lure my attention back to the fact that I was at the front of the line. I passed her a twenty with a quick request to put the change for my soda on pump three.

“Anyway, it’s been nice running into you, Russell.”

“All my friends call me Russ,” he corrected me this time. “Drive safe, Daniela. I hope you’re on the way in. There’s supposed to be one helluva storm tonight.”

“I’ll be home in a few minutes,” I assured him.

The Texas weather wasn’t so friendly lately, and I hoped my bear would be okay, that he had shelter wherever he lived in the woods. Dismal clouds swept in from the east as I hurried outside to pump the gas.

A few scattered raindrops pelted my windshield along the way home. The one thing I loathed was that my ex got our truck in the divorce settlement. I walked away with the older sedan. It made driving down the unpaved country roads a chore during the rainy weather, when the ground became a sea of orange clay and muck.

I made it home as the heavier rain began, just in time to see a lanky figure leaving the truck parked in my driveway.

Shit. Michael was here.

“What are you doing here, Mike?” I demanded hotly while springing from my car to confront him. He wasn’t my husband anymore, and I had nothing to fear from him. He couldn’t hurt me now, I told myself again and again.

My ex-husband had three years of age on me. We met at college a few weeks after I moved into the dorms when I was too young and doe-eyed to see through his charismatic act. Mike had dazzled me with his good looks, popularity, and position on our school’s sports team. Eventually, I fell for his game off the field, and we got married less than a year later. I believed every promise, and we tried to build a family after my graduation.

The first time he hit me was after I miscarried our son. The hospital bills made money run tight for the two of us, so I had made a dozen excuses for his short temper by shouldering the blame. I’d told myself I was so lucky to have a handsome, hard-working husband who would let me stay at home to recover, and that his stress was my fault. Years later, I finally saw past his good looks and realized he wasn’t the man I married. I didn’t deserve his abuse and he didn’t deserve
me
.

I’d probably still be with him if our house hadn’t burned down.


Hola
, Daniela.” He always spoke Spanish when he wanted something or was trying to butter me up. Back in the beginning of our relationship, I had loved his rich baritone and the sweet nothings he whispered in our families’ native language. Mike’s friends once joked that he could sweet talk the panties off a nun. “
Vine a hablar
—”

“No,” I cut him off. “I have nothing to say to you, and you can talk to my damned front door if you think I’m listening to anything you say.”

He flashed me a grin that reminded me of how I swooned in college. He’d made me feel so special then. “Don’t pretend you don’t miss me, Daniela. It’s raining. Let’s go inside and talk about—” The weather was ruining his perfectly gelled hair. Deep down, I knew his tidy appearance was probably for his new girlfriend and not for me.

“I said
no
.”

~Russ~

Rough weather was blowing in from the Gulf, yet another one of those storms that tended to knock down all the trees and leave branches scattered over my yard. I didn’t look forward to the work, but Trigger and I were bound to have some busy days ahead of us.

If not for the forecast predicting a 90 percent chance of rain, I would have left my dog to roam outside in the fresh air. Trigger would be waiting for me by the door by the time I got home to my cabin at the edge of the woods.

Other books

No True Way by Mercedes Lackey
Trickery & Envy by Johnson, D.C.
Keep Me Still by Caisey Quinn
The Book of Joby by Ferrari, Mark J.
The Rake's Mistress by Nicola Cornick
The Suburbs of Hell by Randolph Stow


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024