Outfoxed by Love (Kodiak Point Book 2)

Outfoxed by Love

By

Eve Langlais

 

(Kodiak Point, Book #2)

 

Copyright and Disclaimer

Copyright ©
July 2014, Eve Langlais

Cover Art by
Aubrey Rose © July 2014

Edited by Devin
Govaere

Copy Edited by Amanda
L. Pederick

Produced in Canada

 

Published by Eve Langlais

1606 Main Street, PO Box 151

Stittsville, Ontario, Canada, K2S1A3

http://www.EveLanglais.com

 

ISBN: 978 – 1927 – 459 – 56 - 0

 

Outfoxed by Love
is a work of fiction and the characters, events and dialogue found within the story are of the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, either living or deceased, is completely coincidental.

 

No part of this book may be reproduced or shared in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including but not limited to digital copying, file sharing, audio recording, email and printing without permission in writing from the author.

Description

Don’t
moose
with his fox.

 

A bullheaded moose doesn’t stand a chance when a fox decides to make him her mate.

 

Boris left to defend his country still a boy. He came back a changed man. A damaged man.

 

But Jan still wants him.

 

A man of few words, Boris has a firm way of saying
no
, but a determined vixen knows he’s her mate. Jan has not had much success in getting her bullheaded moose to notice her, but all that changes when her life is put in danger.

Suddenly the damaged soldier keeps finding excuses to come to her rescue
, but as far as Jan is concerned, her mate is the one in need of saving.

It will take some subtle maneuvering to outfox her moose into admitting he loves her, but
this wily vixen is more than ready for the challenge. And if that doesn’t work, Momma’s offered to loan her the shotgun used for her own engagement.

 

Welcome to Kodiak Point, where the wildlife might wear clothes, but animal instinct rules the heart.

Chapter One

There were times when a lady had to use strong language. Unladylike language. Times such as when someone blew the tire out on a girl’s awesome SUV and sent it careening off a steep embankment in the Alaskan wilds in the middle of the night. To add icing to that cake—the triple layered, buttercream frosted kind because the situation called for it—her uncontrollable descent had her skidding at a ridiculous speed toward a tree, a tree she was pretty sure wasn’t going to move. So was it any wonder Jan needed to vent a little?

“Fuck!” Okay, so it wasn’t a stream of invectives, but shouted at the top of her lungs, and the word stretched out, it was
stronger language than Jan preferred to indulge in.  Just one of her odd quirks, which tied in to her strong memories of soap and a momma who thought the best way to curb a dirty mouth was to wash it. Her dear mother didn’t have any tolerance for cussing, even the most banal kind. Jan quickly learned to not repeat the naughty words the boys at school taught her, and the habit followed her into adulthood.

But facing
injury or possible death, a lady could give herself a little bit of slack, especially since, “Uh-oh” and “Oh dear” just wouldn’t cut it. Not when the truck—
my beautiful, almost-paid-for SUV—
hit the tree and the screeching of metal twisting, the crunch of fiberglass crushing, and the crack of glass spider-webbing all meant she’d have to go car shopping again.

While she was at it, she might need a plastic surgeon to
get her nose re-adjusted. Goodness, but when that airbag deployed, it did so with speed and gusto. Sure, the inflatable bladder lessened the impact, but it hadn’t stopped her from squashing her face, much like a bug on her windshield in the height of summer.

Splat.

The hard knock disoriented her, and despite her shifter ability to absorb more damage and pain than a regular human, even she had to admit she was a tad dazed and shaken up, which was why it took her a moment to realize she had company.

And no
t the invited kind.

A
single sniff was all she needed to know the bodies trudging through the snow toward her, their blocky frames illuminated by the headlights on their snowmobiles, were shifters. Judging by the rifle slung over the shoulder of one, she doubted they were the friendly type and she was fairly positive they were idiots seeing as how they went after the unconscious and not very dangerous human who rode shotgun in her truck.
My poor pulverized truck.
A truck these guys broke.

It took a lot for Jan to lose her temper. People often commended her on her cool composure—a façade she’d practiced
often because of a certain bullheaded moose who refused to admit he belonged to her.
I will trap you yet, Boris!

However,
lose her temper she did because
they broke my SUV!
And cracked a few of her freshly manicured nails, but that she could have handled.

As they wrenched the
driver side door open, more like ripped it off its hinges given its warped shape, she didn’t pause to think. She fired the gun she always kept close by—a present from her dear daddy. She hit her mark in the shoulder and spun him away. He apparently had no qualms about using some very vehement cuss words, which, if momma were here, would have resulted in him foaming at the mouth.

Given she was a crack
shot, folks might wonder why she didn’t kill him. For one thing, on the off chance she was wrong about their intent, she should probably hold off on deadly force, and second, her daddy always said, in times of war, you should always keep one of the enemy alive for questioning.

Some might argue there was no war, just a lot of jostling for power between some unknown assailant and the alpha of her clan. Jan would disagree. By attacking her
poor defenseless SUV, someone had definitely thrown down a glove. Jan was more than ready to pick it up and slap them with it.

Just because she was a lady didn’t mean she didn’t know how to get even
, or how to defend herself. Daddy made sure of that.

Using the colorful screams and curses of her
downed victim as distraction, she threw herself out of her seat and hit the ground in a tucked ball, rolling to the side and popping up on one knee, gun raised.

One.
Two. Three armed bad guys. Goodness, but it seemed someone had gone all out when it came to attacking her and her human passenger. Jan would have preened if she was a stupid bird. Vain creatures. Thankfully, they mostly stayed down south in the warmer climates.

“Give
yourself up, fox,” said a stranger who bore the unmistakable scent of caribou. A rare shifter for these parts—but tasty in a stew. “Don’t make this harder than it has to be.”

Did he seriously expect
Jan to raise her hands and surrender? The first rule of survival, no matter your species? Never give up. Her daddy’s sub-clause to it was,
and make sure you take as many down with you as you can.

With a cheery, “
Not today, boys,” Jan fired in rapid succession. This time, she didn’t aim to maim.

Head shot.
Hit. Second, missed by a hair. A third missile went wide as something jostled her from behind.

Fetid breath washed over her.
Ew. The attacking men were also using wild wolves to help them which sucked. No reasoning with those untamed creatures. And they were chomp-happy, dirty creatures.

The one who ruined her aim latched onto her wrist, only the thick layer of her jacket prevent
ed it from breaking skin. However, given it forced her to tussle before it did some actual damage, she lost her hold on her pistol.

“My daddy gave me that gun,” she complained. While irritated at the loss, she now had both her hands free which enabled her to better fight.

Tucking her legs under the writhing body of the wild wolf, she sent it flying right into an approaching assailant. Bullseye. The both went tumbling. She didn’t waste the opportunity this presented.

With her g
un who knew where, numbers against her, and self-preservation screaming to get her butt moving, Jan did the only thing she could. She shrugged off her coat, loosened her pants and then shifted into her other shape, twisting free of the remaining garments.

Once upon a time, she’d pondered how her adult size could compact into her much smaller
arctic fox shape. She never did find a satisfactory answer but thanked the fact she had the ability as she could use her nimble and petite frame to bolt through a gap between encroaching bodies.

Beyond the initial ring of men, snowmobiles were parked haphazardly, their lights bright beacons in the dark,
crisscrossing and partially blinding her. What she could see didn’t bode well.

A
n unconscious Tammy was slung over the back of a snowmobile. Scruffy men, more than the few she’d initially counted, turned almost as one to face her and a wild pack of lean gray wolves snarled at her and ululated a battle cry.

Time to move her conditioned—and once a month hot
-oil treated—white fur out of here. It galled her to have to leave Tammy in the clutches of those miscreants. But she also recognized she wouldn’t do her friend any favors if she got caught in the same trap. At least if Jan remained free, she could perhaps find help.

As creatures went, Jan
’s vixen wasn’t the largest. Nor the strongest. Nor even the most vicious. However, when it came to speed, agility, and a knack for slipping traps, her arctic fox heritage came in handy. Her snowy fur blended well with the icy landscape. In the dark, despite a shifter’s enhanced eyesight, once she darted off, tracking her proved difficult. She gave a mental laugh as the curses mounted.

“Where’d
the bitch go?”

How rude. I’m a vixen not a dog.

“I can’t fucking see her.”

Of course not.
My fur is meant to blend in.

“Holy shit, I can’t believe she killed Brian.”

She would have killed more if given a few more minutes. She blamed her dazed state from the crash for not getting off more rounds before the wild wolf attacked. She could practically hear her daddy barking,
“Don’t give me no excuses, Janny-baby. The enemy’s not going to care if you’re tired or on your fucking period. You have to be tougher.”

It was only because of the intervention of her mother she managed to not become the son her daddy always wanted. But she was the only girl she knew who carried a gun alongside her makeup kit in her purse.

A gun she had to leave behind during her escape. Another thing they’d pay for. Her daddy gave her that gun on her sixteenth birthday, engraved with the loving words,
Shoot to kill, Janny-baby.
Just another reason for her to hate these thugs she was escaping.

But the men after her weren’t about
to let her slip their grasp so easily. On the contrary, her act of defiance—and perhaps the fact she’d shot a few of them—made those remaining a tad rambunctious and determined.

Judging by the various yells behind her, she’d better tuck tail and run as fast as her four furry feet could go. At least until she came up with a better plan.

Not familiar with this part of the untamed wilds, Jan didn’t know which direction to head in, nor could she stop to orient herself. She let instinct guide her. Bounding initially along packed snowmobile trails in the snow, she quickly realized she’d have to leave their relatively smooth surface if she wanted to shake her pursuers.

Off the path, she veered, weaving through the thin forest, her breath a steamy, panting fog.
She just needed to put a little distance between her and her pursuers, enough that she could lay a trap.

A deadly one, just like daddy taught her.

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