Read Big Game: Hunted Love #1 Online
Authors: Aden Lowe
Jakob double checked the latches on the truck kennels and shoved the tote into the tight gap between the kennels. The large tote was filled with vacuum sealed packets of dried meat, intended to provide the dogs with protein during the hunt. A second tote filled with chunks of rendered fat, also vacuum sealed, would help with the massive numbers of calories the dogs would burn. Uncle Frank was old school with his dogs, insisting on feeding them as close as possible to what they would eat in the wild. And on the trail, the dogs went to half rations, to ensure they would be driven by hunger to track down their quarry.
The once-familiar tasks of loading for a hunt fit like a comfortable old shoe, even after six years. Trying to figure out what to do with Uncle Frank's estate was about the last thing Jakob wanted to do with his first week back in the States. Having a few beers with the old man would have been a far better use of his time. Too bad it didn't work out that way.
His cellphone buzzed and he nearly ignored it. He didn't want to talk to anyone, least of all his mother. That stupid sense of duty he seemed stuck with dictated he at least see who was calling, and he was glad he did. At the end of the call, he had a hunting job. Looks like he wouldn't have to bluff his way onto the woman's property after all.
Satisfied, he went back to his preparations and started loading tack and feed for the horses into the beat up old four-horse trailer. His own gear followed, everything he needed to spend two weeks or more on the trail in nearly any kind of weather conditions. He would travel as light as possible, with little concession to comfort beyond what he needed to maintain his health and strength.
Weapons were the only thing for himself Jakob didn't skimp on. He'd prefer not to kill the lion, but he also wasn't about to let one eat him. The firearms were all cleaned and ready to go, as always, but he still checked each one as he slid them into the custom made carrier mounted behind the seat. The high-powered rifle and tactical shotgun were wicked looking pieces of armament, and the handguns could have possessed evil intent based on appearances.
The lesson about going fully armed had been a hard one. Most people would assume the firearms were sufficient and stop there. Not Jakob. He added a Bowie knife and a machete to his usual pocket knife and the lock-blade he carried on his belt. The hatchet that usually proved useful about camp also made a brutally effective weapon in the right hands. He had no intention of passing up perfectly good weapon just because it wasn't what someone expected to be anything other than a tool.
Finally, with everything ready except the horses, he led the four anxious animals from the corral and loaded them into the four-horse trailer. He had a pack animal and two spare saddle horses who could do double duty with light packs. It might seem like overkill, but that many horses would allow him to move as quickly and for as long as he was capable. An idea percolated in the back of his mind, suggesting that if he finished the hunt for the lion quickly, perhaps Miss Holt might allow him to spend a few days on her land, just relaxing.
Moments after latching the trailer doors, he pulled out, glad for the prospect of open road stretched ahead. Of course, he had to run the gauntlet that was Ewingsville first. If there was one single thing about home he had not missed during his deployments, it was the Ewingsville PD. More specifically, Chief Bellamy, who operated the Police Department for the little town where Jakob had grown up.
As a sophomore in high school, Jakob and two other boys had gone along with an idea Chief Bellamy's son came up with. Apparently churches frowned on having their vans hotwired by a bunch of high school boys. Especially when those boys hooked chains to the rear axles and played 'tug o war' with the vans until one ripped the rear-end out of the other. The stunt landed squarely at the feet of Chief Bellamy's son, and resulted in a vendetta against the other three.
Even after so many years, every single time Jakob went into Ewingsville, he could depend on Chief Bellamy or one of his men to pull him over and harass him. Last week, on his way into town after most of six years away, they cuffed him and put him in the cruiser while a K9 went through his rental car. During their 'search', they dumped all his belongings on the side of the road, emptied the four bottles of water in his cooler and crushed up the snack foods he'd bought moments earlier at the gas station. All in the name of searching for illegal drugs, based on his past so-called bad behavior.
If he could reach the highway any other way, he would have gladly avoided Ewingsville altogether, but unfortunately, that was not an option. At least not with the dually and trailer. The light at the entrance to town glowed red in the late evening gloom, and Jakob pushed back against the impulse to floor the truck and keep going. Instead, he got off the gas and let the truck start to slow itself well ahead of time.
True to form, blue lights flashed in his driver's side mirror as a cruiser swung in behind him. They would just have to get him at the light because he sure as fuck was not going to swerve off the road pulling a loaded four horse rig. The last thing he needed was for the stock to get banged up because a small town rent a cop had a hate-on for him.
The wait for the officer to approach his window felt endless, but finally he spotted the familiar bulk of Chief Bellamy swagger in his direction. Fucking wonderful. Getting pulled over wasn't bad enough, of course it had to be the head dick.
Jakob made sure to keep his hands clearly on the steering wheel, ten and two. Last thing he needed was for anyone to mistakenly think he was going for a weapon. Especially in a truck full of them.
Bellamy wheezed to a stop outside the open window. "Well, well, I heard you were back in town. Should have expected it, I guess, what with your uncle passing away like that. Where you headed?"
The impulse to roll his eyes like a sullen teenager struck hard and fast, and Jakob barely managed to not give in. Nothing like prodding at a mean bull to get your ass kicked, and that would have been the same result. "Out of town to cover a hunt for Uncle Frank." The less information he gave the better.
The old cop nodded, sharp gaze missing nothing about the rig. "Uh huh. That what they're calling it these days? Guess I shouldn't be too surprised. Always figured you for the kind to come in and clean out a dead man's house before the heirs can be contacted."
Fury shot through Jakob. One of these days the old bastard would meet his match. Unfortunately, that would have to wait. "What are you talking about? I'm his only heir, and you know that. I'm also his executor, so it's my job to settle his estate."
"Be that as it may, you can't just load up his property and hit the road before it's been settled in probate court. You'll have to head back to his place and unload."
Jakob shook his head and tried really hard to stay quiet. "Look, Chief, I'm not trying to do anything wrong. But the fact is, my name is already on the titles and deeds. There's nothing to settle. I can show you the registration of this rig as proof. I also have the animals' vet clearances to travel. With my name listed as owner. Weapons? Look them up, registered in my name. So if you don't have anything else, I'll be on my way. There's a mountain lion killing horses over in Johnson County, and I've committed to hunting it." The light went green and Jakob put the truck in gear.
Chief Bellamy glared but in the end, he tightened his mouth, took a step back and nodded. Jakob didn't wait for anything more. He lifted one hand in farewell and let the truck roll forward, gradually building speed.
That was pure luck. If Bellamy had decided to search him, with six dogs, four horses, all their gear and two weeks' worth of supplies, not only would it have taken all night and stress the animals, but dumping his supplies would've cost a fortune. He wasn't the same kid they'd intimidated for so long. He'd given them a one-time pass the last time, but he wouldn't stand quiet for them to harass him again, or destroy his property. And now Bellamy knew it.
Now he would have to be doubly careful. Either this encounter would have ended the trouble, or more likely, it had given Bellamy cause to hate him even more. The bastard had pushed as far as he was going to, though.
The truck rolled out of town and headed for the freeway, and Jakob scanned radio stations, looking for something besides pop or country. Figures. Nothing. He clicked the CD player on and the unique sound of Metallica filled the truck.
Early morning sun cut through the thin lace curtains and fell across the bed, just like it did every morning, and woke Kate, same as always. She allowed herself sixty seconds to stretch, then rolled out to head for the bathroom. Her bad hip was a little stiffer than usual on that particular morning, an unwanted reminder of the big chunk of the day before spent in a chair. Shouldn't be a problem today though.
The shower warmed up while she mentally went over the coming day. There should be time to work her morning string before the hunter showed up, then all her duties would go on hold for the duration of the hunt. No stranger was going traipsing around her land on his own, especially not with a mountain lion with a taste for horseflesh on the prowl.
Pounding hot water worked out most of yesterday's kinks, and a liberal dose of horse liniment took care of the lingering soreness in her upper thigh. All during her teen years, the doctors swore she'd soon pay for all the punishment she put her body through by remaining active despite the old injuries, but they'd also sworn she'd never walk. She stopped going when she was seventeen, after informing them her body would tell her in no uncertain terms when it was time to sit down. In the meantime, she had too much work to do to sit still. Stomping into her boots, she grinned at the memory of her dad's expression when she told the last doctor she was done. He hadn't known whether to restrain her or applaud her. He settled for following her out of the office and down to their truck.
Heading for the kitchen, Kate twisted her hair into a knot and secured it with an elastic band where it would be safely out of the way under her hat. The first sip of coffee sent energy coursing through her system and she fished a Danish from the box in the fridge waiting to be warmed in the microwave. It was a far cry from the breakfasts Mandy always fixed, but marginally better than nothing. Hopefully when she came back from the hunt, there would be a nice selection of qualified people interested in the job waiting for her to choose from.
Coffee and warmed Danish in hand, she went to stand by the window, continuing through her mental ToDo list for the morning. A horse switched its tail and stomped, a sound that rarely traveled far enough to be heard at the house. Loose horse? She leaned to search for the culprit and nearly dropped her coffee.
There in her driveway, by the
house
, stood a shiny black dually pickup, hitched to a beat-to-hell four-horse rig, with the stomping tail switcher tied to the side of the trailer, beside another horse munching hay from a net. What the hell? Who was stupid enough to park a rig and tie horses next to the house? Besides, no one was expected.
The half-empty mug and half-eaten Danish miraculously found a spot on the counter as Kate passed by at a half run, bound for the door. Momma dog peered up at her sleepily as she hurried past without leaving breakfast. Outside, she approached the rig cautiously, not wanting to panic the tied horses or get anyone hurt.
It was impossible not to pause and admire the unfamiliar animals, even though they weren't the type of stock she was used to seeing in the area. Slender builds and relatively light haunches stood in stark contrast to the stocky quarter horses with massive hindquarters she bred. It also confirmed the horses didn't belong to anyone she knew. A glance at the other side of the trailer revealed a third horse of the same type, and a
mule
, also similar in build. Who the hell hauled a mule around?
Continuing her wide circuit of the rig, Kate's attention fell to the custom crates built into the bed of the pickup. That explained it. Dog kennels meant the hunter had arrived hours earlier than she expected. But why bring his own horses? As far as she'd heard, most only brought their dogs, and the rancher was expected to provide whatever transportation the hunter preferred, whether it was horses or ATVs. She'd already had two heavy duty ATVs prepared, packed with provisions and extra fuel, in expectation.
And where was the hunter, anyway? Turning, she looked down by the barn, expecting to see a stranger poking around. Nothing. Puzzled, she examined the truck closer. Surely he hadn't slept in it? No one deliberately slept in a truck the night before hitting the trail with days in the saddle ahead. And yet, where else could he be?
She approached the driver's door carefully and stretched to try and see through the dark tinted window. Nothing visible, of course. A tap at the window should wake anyone inside, so she gave it a try, and stepped back to wait.
A heavy hand dropped onto her shoulder and she jumped hard, biting back a surprised yelp, and swung, her knuckles landing solidly on a hard jaw.
The deep male grunt confirmed she'd landed a good blow. Long fingers circled her wrist in a grip that promised to easily crush the small bones if she resisted.
Frozen in place, Kate glared up. And up, past a strong throat, beard-shadowed jaw, unsmiling mouth, and straight nose to meet a startlingly green glare. "I'll let go if you promise not to hit me again."
Kate nodded willingness to comply and took a fast step back as soon as she was free, while her lower body clenched in sudden tense awareness. "Who the hell are you? And why are you parked by my house?" Dammit, she sounded flustered and breathless, rather than stern and commanding. Damn hormones picked the most ridiculous and inconvenient times to wake up and kick her ass.
His lip quirked a little, as if he could read her thoughts as clearly as the newspaper. "Sorry to startle you, ma'am. I'm Jakob Barger. We spoke yesterday evening I think?" He waited for her nod of recognition. "I pulled in after two and didn't want to disturb your stock, so I parked up here. I hope that's okay?"
The combination of gravelly voice and contrite attitude set more hormones on the rampage by way of thundering her pulse through her pelvis. "Kate Holt. Sorry for the… uh," she brushed a hand over her own jaw to indicate the reddening mark on his. "I don't normally go around hitting perfect strangers."
The same long fingers that had circled her wrist gently probed the red mark. "Couldn't prove it by me." A sudden sheepish grin broke the tension. "I don't normally go around startling harmless women either, so I guess we're even. If you'll show me where to park my rig, I'd like to let my animals stretch their legs while I get everything ready."
"Of course. Can I hitch a ride? I'll help you unload." No way he'd get that big-ass rig parked without someone directing him either, but she didn't say that.
"Thanks." He efficiently loaded his animals back into the trailer, then rounded the front of the truck in long easy strides and opened the passenger door and stood waiting. Evidently he meant to hold the damn door for her to climb in.
Kate gave a little shrug. Whatever floated his boat, as long as he caught that lion, made no difference to her. Except he stood there watching her. "You know you don't have to hold the door for me, right? I can manage that little task for myself." Annoyance crept into her voice.
Reacting to what he probably thought was her resistance to being taken care of in any way by a man, Barger raised his hands and stepped away from the truck. "Suit yourself." He crossed back to the driver's side.
Kate took advantage of his attention being elsewhere to get to the passenger door. Now why the hell did she need to hide her limp? She never bothered with it, and he would see it sooner rather than later anyway, while she helped him park and unload. Certainly not vanity—she'd long ago given that up, settling for neat and clean, or hardworking when that wasn't possible.
So what on earth had her hiding her weakness from Jakob Barger? It wasn't like she had even a remote chance in hell at getting his attention, or even truly wanted to, despite the uproar he'd put her hormones into. Still, it might be nice to have a man like him of her own. Tall and solid with muscle, handsome in a rough sort of way, and evidently quick witted.
Kate shook the nonsense from her head and climbed into the passenger seat of his truck, realizing the error too late. The warm musky scent of healthy male blended seamlessly with horse, leather and hay, and stood up to introduce itself, much to the delight of her libido. Oh
shit,
she was in serious trouble here. Thoughts of a week or more on the trail alone with owner of that scent did something funny to her stomach.
He climbed behind the wheel and started the truck, and blasted the interior of the truck with a combination of hard beat and screaming guitar. He hurried to turn the volume down. "Sorry, forgot it was so loud."
At least his scent no longer consumed her awareness. "What the hell was that anyway?"
Jakob glanced at her as he backed the trailer slowly toward the split in the driveway. "What do you mean? You've never heard Metallica?" When she shook her head, he stopped the truck a moment to fiddle with the CD player. "This is called
'Enter Sandman'.
One of my favorites. Listen?" When she nodded again, he turned it up to just above normal listening volume for her.
The catchy tune quickly gave way to the hard beat from earlier, and a growling voice blended perfectly.
"Say your prayers little one, Don't forget my son…"
Kate listened, captivated, as something in that voice reached into her and gripped a part of her she hadn't known existed. By the time the last notes trailed away, she knew without a doubt, she'd found something entirely new and unexpected.
Jakob watched her, not hiding his knowing smile. "Gotcha." His exact duplication of the growl on the CD sent a shiver down her spine. "Not what you expected?" His voice had gone back to normal, but her newly trained ear picked up the sinister growl hiding within the gravelly tones.
The shudder of appreciation wasn't easy to conceal, but Kate thought she managed it fairly well. "Not at all. I've never been interested in that kind of music. Always just turned the dial as quickly as possible."
"Hang around me a while. I'll show you something far more interesting than what you're used to." The way his gaze swept over her features, paused at her breasts, and continued downward said he fully intended the double meaning.
Okay, she
really
needed to change the subject. The lane to the barn appeared, offering the perfect opportunity. "Go forward and bear left here. You'll round the barn to the right and pull around back. I have a shed back there if you'd rather park under cover, or you can park just to the side of the shed."
The truck stopped and Jakob nodded once before putting it in gear and following directions. "Do I get an answer now? Or do I have to wait until I catch you a lion?"
"An answer to what?"
"Will you hang around me enough for me to show you some interesting things?"
Oh…
boy.
Every more severe epithet she'd ever known fled right out of her head. So much trouble. "That—" She had to pause and clear her throat to get the breathy, wanton tone out of her voice. She tried again, "That depends." Better.
"On what?" The grin he flashed her way said he knew all about the pulse that suddenly pounded her core.
"I haven't decided yet."
It was a good thing he'd stopped the truck behind the barn, waiting to see where he should go next. She opened her door and bailed when self-preservation demanded she get the hell away from all that overwhelming maleness. The man absolutely oozed sex at the moment, and she wasn't equipped to deal with that sort of assault on her senses. Nothing in her life had prepared her for that.
Limp on full display, Kate crossed in front of the truck. "We can unload your animals here. The corral should suit the horses, and there's a pen over there for the dogs." Rather than wait for an answer, she headed to open the corral gate.
Jakob already had the first horse out when she returned to the trailer. He passed her the lead on the bright sorrel and white paint. After a quick pat to introduce herself, she started forward, surprised when the horse's big head went impossibly high. She stepped back, prepared to wait out a rear, but the horse just calmly followed. Okay, then.
Apparently witnessing her discomfort, Jakob spoke, "Sorry, I forgot to warn you. These are Tennessee Walkers. Their head carriage is naturally far higher than a Quarter Horse's."
In short order, the four horses pranced around the corral with excited, exaggerated movements, nostrils fluttering to take in all the unfamiliar scents. Surely he didn't mean to take those high-strung animals on the trail? That was a recipe for disaster.
The dogs, big hounds, white with black patches on their bodies and tan over their heads, came eagerly out of the truck kennels, whining and pulling at their leashes. Jakob made no attempt to bring them to heel, instead letting them half-drag him to the designated pen.
Every second undermined her faith in him as a hunter. If he handled his own animals that way, and made such poor choices before leaving the barn yard, what would he be like on the hunt? A sitting duck for a clever mountain lion, no doubt.