Authors: Rhea Regale
Tags: #Fiction, #Erotica, #General, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Inc., #Siren-BookStrand
dripped down her stomach, and moistened her hands. She reached the
den to find half of her favorite room engulfed in an orange-white
curtain. Edging along the wall, away from the roaring flames, Aya
forged ahead until she reached the gun cabinet.
Silver is always your best bet, little one, but a large-caliber bullet
can cause just as much damage to any were, if your aim is true.
Always shoot for the heart.
Charles’s words echoed in her mind. She coughed from the soot
settling in her throat. Her lungs ached. Her eyes throbbed within her
skull. Her flesh was hot and slick with sweat, feeling as if it would
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melt off her bones. Small pieces of burning debris drifted from the
ceiling, sizzling against her skin and searing her. Adrenaline surged
through her body, her inner wolf pacing restlessly just below the
surface. She had to get out.
She grabbed the handle to the cabinet and hissed, the scorching
metal branding her tender palm. Ignoring the stomach-churning agony
and the metallic scent of fresh blood, she threw open the cabinet door
and grappled along each weapon, near blind in the thick smoke.
Her fingers slid over warm metal. Shorter barrel. Small and
manageable.
Aya snagged the warm revolver. She dropped to her knees and
opened her book bag. With a quick sweep of her arm, she shoveled
several boxes of ammo off the bottom shelf. The bag jerked and
pulled, a sure sign she captured a few boxes. She yanked the zipper
closed and jumped to her feet.
Time to go
.
Timber yawned. The ceiling caved in an explosion of new flames
and sparks, crushing the far half of the room in a fiery pool of debris.
Aya shuffled backward, eyes wide as the ignition illuminated the
doorway through the dense smoke. Exit blocked, she hurried to the
closest window, struggling against the growing heaviness in her chest,
and punched out the glass. Sharp shards dug into her wet skin. Blood
mixed with salty sweat stung her open wounds. She knocked out the
rest of the pane and leaped into the cold night.
Aya dodged through the side yard, suppressing her urge to cough,
ever wary of her surroundings. She detected the methodical padding
of creatures hidden in the forest. She smelled their hunger and
excitement for a kill, as potent as the taste of burnt wood in her
mouth. A second-story window exploded, the wooden frame
splintering. Glass and smoldering debris rained down on her. She
sucked in deep gulps of fresh air, cleansing her lungs of soot and
filling them with the primal thrum of a chase. Her chest contracted
and she coughed.
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No, can’t give in to a coughing fit now. Charles needs me!
Coming around the corner of the yard, Aya searched for the
mauling wolves. Patches of grass had been torn up. Deep gouges
marred the dirt driveway. The evidence of a fight was laid out before
her, but there were no wolves. She drowned out the fire behind her
and listened.
Nothing. No yelps, barks, or whimpers.
Dead silence, except for the crackling flames that devoured the
days of her life from childhood until now. Her history, her memories,
were all being raked down by merciless claws of hell.
But where was Charles? Where did the wolves disappear to?
She jogged toward the Explorer. The hood of the vehicle had four
deep nail marks across it. The grill and bumper had a fresh, deep dent
where the wolves must have crashed against it.
Her heart leaped into overdrive.
“Charles!” she yelled.
More wood creaked and yawned. More glass shattered, and walls
crumbled, leaving her overheated body empty, cold. She spun in a
tight circle.
“Charles!”
“Go!”
Charles lunged out of the forest and slammed into her. She
stumbled to the Explorer with him at her back, trying to assess his
condition. Sweat, blood, and dirt stung her nose and left a sour taste in
the back of her mouth. He reached around her, yanked open the door,
and shoved her into the driver’s seat.
“Drive, and don’t stop,” he barked. Aya raised her gun. He
slammed the door with such force that the vehicle rocked on its
wheels. In a blink, he sprinted across the yard, toward the house.
“
No
!” Aya screamed.
The two wolves lunged out of the shadows of the forest and
chased after Charles. Her entire body shook as she watched the
spectacle. Horror clutched her spirit. Her uncle dove forward,
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Rhea Regale
transforming back into his wolf, gray fur melting into the tunneling
flames conquering the house. The two pursuing wolves followed
fearlessly into the inferno. Aya’s fingers trembled as she retrieved the
key from her jacket pocket. The keychain slid from her slick hand,
dropping to the floor. Her heart thundered in her chest and ears,
making her dizzy. She desperately felt around for the keys, found
them, and worked one into the ignition. Turning the engine over, she
drew her bottom lip between her teeth. The tangy taste of blood slid
over her tongue, anguish over her soul.
Her conscience screamed for her to help, while Charles’s demands
begged
her to leave. He wanted her to abandon him in his greatest
time of need.
How could she—
An explosion racked the truck. Deadly spears of debris rocketed
out from the house. She snapped the shifter into reverse and stomped
down on the accelerator. Fire balled into the sky like an ethereal
mushroom, stamping her vision with stars. She maneuvered the truck
through the tight line of trees. Thumps and plinks drew goose bumps
to the surface of her skin as pieces of her home slammed into the
Explorer. Something smacked into the windshield. The resounding
crackle of glass webbing scraped down her spine. Another projectile
tore off the right side mirror.
She reached the end of the driveway and jammed on the brake.
Nothing could calm the tremors coursing through her body. Nothing
could sooth the wide-open wound pouring grief from her heart. She
slowly turned to look back at her house, the only place she ever knew.
Twenty-six years of memories, gone. Stories, pictures, and home
videos, destroyed.
Charles, the only family she ever had, dead.
Her eyes remained dry of tears, her mind numbing to the tragedy
before her. Adrenaline continued to thrum through her, the powerful
reaction helping to keep her focused. She had to go; otherwise,
Charles would have given his life in vain. There would be time to
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mourn later.
Aya leaned over and opened the glove compartment. She found
the GPS unit, wrapped with the adapter wire, and plugged the adapter
into the cigarette lighter. The screen flashed on in vivid white. After
wiping her moist fingers on her damp pants, she scrolled through the
menu and brought up the programmed locations.
There was one, and the address would lead her out of Northern
California and into Oregon.
With a sigh, she attached the unit to the damaged windshield. Her
gaze drifted toward a flash from the tree line. Aya cracked open the
window and drew in a long, deep breath.
Wolf
. Her attention turned to
the creature as it slowly emerged from the dark forest. It stopped in
the center of the driveway, its sleek tawny coat seemingly absorbing
the glow from the fire.
Aya stilled. The wolf shifted and turned toward her. Its silverygold eyes focused on her. The creature was beautiful. Deadly. It
turned its snout up. Triangular ears pricked. Aya gasped out a breath,
unwilling to acknowledge the way her body reacted to the animal. She
warmed and weakened at the same time. Her breasts grew full and
heavy. Her womb coiled, excreting a different kind of moisture from
her core.
“You started the fire,” she whispered. The wolf cocked its head,
listening. Never once did its gaze lower from hers. It stared, stirring
strange feelings in her body. Feelings she despised.
Aya switched on the headlights. White washed over the wolf. Its
jowls pulled back, baring sharp, white teeth. She focused on the wolf
as she eased the Explorer onto the connecting side road. The instant
she knocked the gear into drive, she flicked the wolf her middle finger
and punched the accelerator. A new life awaited her in the wake of
burnt rubber, smoke, a pile of rubble, and the unknown.
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Rhea Regale
Chapter Two
Nox glanced up from the pile of wood he’d agreed to bring inside
for Mase, and wiped the sweat from his brow with the back of his
sleeve. The sun beat down on Wolf Creek this unusually warm fall
day, leaving a false sense of summer throughout the small town. He
couldn’t help but smile when he watched Mase’s two boys set up the
sprinkler and take to water games like summer had never ended.
The echo of tires crunching over gravel drew closer to his pack
mate’s bed-and-breakfast. Nox straightened up, shielding his
narrowed eyes against the blazing sun with his hand. He duly noted a
half-dozen members of his pack sitting on Mase’s front porch stop in
the midst of their numerous activities to watch the dark vehicle climb
up the windy street.
“Boys, go inside to your mother,” Nox called to the children.
They paused in their water fight and looked at him. He pointed to the
screen door and arched a brow. Even the pups knew better than to
cross the alpha. “Now.”
“Uncle Nox!” Ash whined. Nox pulled back his upper lip and
bared his human teeth. The boys’ shoulders slumped, and they
shuffled to the house. He dropped his hand from his forehead and
brushed the dirt on his faded jeans. He shook his head when he heard
the boys call him a “meanie uncle.”
Until he determined whether this rickety vehicle rapidly
approaching Mase’s homestead presented a danger, he’d lock those
kids in the basement if he had to.
“Hey, Nox,” Mase said, jogging up behind him. “Who’d you think
be coming up here? Can you smell anything? I’m getting a noseful of
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nasty.”
Nox’s nostrils flared as the poignant scents of burnt metal and
wood drifting along the uphill breeze struck him. He moved to the
side of the house, just behind the porch, and leaned against the
wooden slats, folding his arms over his chest.
“Smells more like that thing on four wheels trekked through a
damn welding shop,” he muttered. “Regardless where the truck’s
been, I’m not getting danger from this one. I’ll stay here. Go greet
your guest.” He chuckled, glancing at his dark-haired friend. Mase’s
green-gray eyes misted mischievously. “I’d be on your best behavior.
You can’t be callin’ this place a bed-and-breakfast if the only
occupants are your family and a few straggling pack mates. IRS will
be knocking on your door.”
“I’ll bite his hand.”
“I’m sure that’ll get you some dog treats.” Nox clapped Mase’s
thick shoulder. A loud pop split through the serene afternoon. He
growled as a residual ring lingered in his ears. Mase snorted, rubbing
at his temple. “I don’t think that piece of shit’ll make it to the front
door.”
Mase snickered a moment before what used to be an Explorer
stalled a few yards from the front porch. A whoosh preceded a heavy
cloud of white steam that poured from beneath the hood. Nox
swallowed back a laugh, but his fellow pack mates didn’t bother with
courtesy. Some howled, some cackled, and some just muttered
unfriendly terms to their cohorts. Hands slapped legs, feet stomped on
the porch, and one male tumbled off his chair.
Nox rolled off the wall and started back to the woodpile. The
hinges of the vehicle’s door shrieked in protest as the driver forced it
open, earning several snarls from the curious wolves.
Every muscle in his body stiffened. He stopped in mid-step and
inhaled the crisp mountain air, tainted by the foul odor of metal and
exhaust.
The sweetness that entwined through the less pleasant scents
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Rhea Regale
stirred his wolf awake.
Well, I’ll be fuckin’ damned.
Nox slowly turned back to the driveway. He honed in on the raspy
breaths of this newcomer, the throb of her heart hammering against
her chest. His gaze landed on a woman stumbling over to Mase. Dirt,
blood, and soot smudged a face built over impeccable features. Her
bottom lip was swollen, a newly scabbed wound marring the tender
flesh and her soiled chin below. In fact, as he observed every inch of
her otherwise beautiful face, he noticed her skin housed a bunch of
small cuts and light purple bruises. Dark circles hung thick and deep
under sky blue eyes that flickered with wild paranoia. A dead leaf
hung in the wispy flips of her black hair. She cradled her left arm