Authors: Colleen Gleason
Tempted by Fire by Erin Kellison
Her Sinful Angel by Felicity Heaton
The Resurrection of Sam Sloan by Erin Quinn
Rebel's Desire by Laurie London
Raging Dawn by Colleen Gleason
Bree has just decided to give up trying to be a Shifter groupie when a lion Shifter slams into her truck and tells her to
drive
. Seamus is on the run from hunters, other Shifters, and who knows who else. All Bree knows is that he’s compelling, needs her help, and most intriguing of all, wears no Collar...
Other Books by Jennifer Ashley
Pain
. Too much pain and too much blood.
Seamus heard snarling, vicious and deadly, felt his own throat sore. Had the sound come from him? Or whatever was attacking him in the dark?
Seamus fought like mad, the strength of his lion against whoever the hell it was. He thought he smelled Shifter, but in the dark and the madness of frenzy, scents were confused, whirling.
Seamus couldn’t see, couldn’t think. He clawed, bit, until his mouth was full of blood, his fur drenched with it.
He couldn’t remember exactly where he’d been before this, only ducking and dodging through the fields, drawing whoever followed after him. He dimly remembered tucking those in his care safely into a house where no one would think to look, and then returning here to fool their enemies and lead them astray.
His
life didn’t matter. Those he protected did. Seamus was a tracker, a soldier with a job to do.
Except that his brain kept blanking out, fighting instincts taking over and making everything a blur.
Feral
. The word whispered through his brain—the fear every Shifter had, especially those who’d never taken the Collar.
Seamus had been feeling it for a few weeks now, ever since the bunker had been taken over and the Shifters within forced to scatter. His assignment, protecting those put in his charge from the wide, bad world and everyone in it. The task had heightened his wariness, shooting high the nagging feeling that
something
was just on the edge of his vision, waiting.
Edgy, paranoid, easily provoked into fighting, Seamus had moved his charges from one safe house to another.
Now his raw animal instincts had taken over. Maybe
this
was what going feral was like. No thinking, just reacting, wanting to fight, hurt,
kill
.
Seamus struck and struck again. He smelled blood, heard desperate male screams. And then, whatever battled him ... vanished.
Seamus forced his way back, second by second, to sanity.
Cool November wind rippled his lion’s mane, bringing the scent of dust and weeds, and the faint smell of exhaust from the trucks and motorcycles around the roadhouse in the distance. Music drifted from the building, and the sound of Shifters, the kind with Collars.
He changed. Seamus’s bones ached as they shrank and moved, sinews twisting and readjusting around the new form. His sight went from a concave, wide view that picked up all shadows, to a narrow focus that didn’t see as well in the dark. He straightened his back, hearing vertebrae pop, and turned around.
Two men lay dead at his feet. Human, not Shifter. A Shifter had ripped them apart—the brute strength that had pulled them inside out could only have come from someone like Seamus. Pieces of the hunters’ broken shotguns were scattered about the dried Texas grass.
Seamus’s breath clogged his throat. The scent of death and blood was horrific, blotting out all thought.
He’d believed he’d smelled Shifter as he’d fought, but the only Shifter within sight, hearing, and scent, was himself.
Seamus, un-Collared, on the run, fearing that the craziness he’d been feeling in these last weeks was the beginning of the feral state, was standing over a couple of dead bodies.
His clothes—T-shirt, jeans, boots—lay in a simple pile a few yards away. Barely able to breathe, Seamus quickly pulled them on as he pondered what he should do.
“There!” someone shouted in the darkness of the fields. “Get him!”
Shite
. Seamus figured he knew exactly who the human voices were yelling about. He turned and ran.
A shotgun boomed at the same time he heard the retort of a rifle firing then firing again. Pain blossomed in his side, but Seamus kept running. He headed to the edge of the roadhouse parking lot, knowing he’d have to steal a vehicle to get away.
Kendrick, his leader, would shit a brick, but then, life sucked for an un-Collared Shifter on the run.
***
Bree Fayette vowed to give up the life of a Shifter groupie. That was it—over—she was done.
She decided this as she looked into the eyes of three fanatical women outside the back door of the roadhouse, where they’d dragged her. Two had their faces painted with the usual Feline makeup; one wore Lupine ears and a T-shirt with a wolf on it.
“This is
our
place,” the wolf woman said. “Time to go, honey.”
Bree had come here tonight to meet people who shared her interest in Shifters, but she’d decided, as soon as she’d walked into the roadhouse between Austin and San Antonio, that she’d made a mistake.
She’d had time to order one drink, which she hadn’t even finished, for crying out loud, before the other women converged on her. The Shifters, who seemed a bit wilder than the ones she’d encountered in New Orleans, hadn’t come to her aid. They didn’t know her, and Shifters avoided humans they hadn’t vetted.
Before Bree could decide that retreat was the better part of valor, the groupie women had taken her by the arms and forcibly dragged her out the back door. She fought, but lost.
“Is this how you greet new people around here?” Bree asked the women as she tried to catch her breath. “Real hospitable of you. I’m so glad I ventured out tonight.”
“Just take a hike,” one of the women with cat’s ears said. “These are
our
Shifters. We take care of them.”
Meaning they were very protective. Of course—Bree might be a spy for the police, reporting on which Shifters were breaking the many rules they had to follow.
“I’m not a threat,” Bree said in a hard voice. “I’d never do anything to hurt them.”
The three women weren’t convinced. “You come here with a Shifter of your own, and maybe we’ll believe you,” the wolf woman said. “For now, get out while you can.”
Bree heaved a sigh. She’d never win a full-blown fight against these three and knew it. She decided to leave while she still had some dignity. “Fine. I’m going.”
She had to push past them. The women folded their arms, expressions unyielding as Bree bumped by them and headed to the end of the lot where she’d parked her truck. She felt their gazes on her all the way, then she heard the thump of the back door slamming. She looked back to find the women gone, the door closed, shutting her out.
So …
that
had gone well. These Texas women were crazy bitches. Not like the fun-loving Shifter-stalkers that were her New Orleans friends. Bree and her girlfriends weren’t Shifter whores or anything—they just liked to
look
at the tall, gorgeous alpha guys who could turn into animals. They wanted to talk to them, hang out with them, be around them. One of Bree’s friends even kept a website about Shifters and a much-read blog.
Bree and her mom had moved out here from Louisiana this winter, but between Bree making sure her mother was settling in, not to mention both of them coping with Remy’s death, she hadn’t had a chance to get to know many people. She’d thought she could come here tonight and meet ladies, and guys, who shared her interest in Shifters, but apparently, she’d been wrong.
Her loneliness rose up on her wave of anger, and she blinked back tears.
Damn, I miss you, Remy
.
Bree’s cell phone rang as she climbed into the black F250 pickup that had belonged to her brother—
God rest his soul and keep him safe
. She knew that ringtone.
Figures
.
Bree answered as she settled into the driver’s seat. “Hello, Mom.” She sagged back and studied herself in the rearview, dusty light reflecting from the parking lot. “Yes, I’m fine.” A slight exaggeration. Her makeup was smeared, one of her fake cat’s ears torn, and her tail had been pulled off, lost somewhere in the darkness of the bar. “Yes, I’ll remember to stop and pick up your smokes. No, I didn’t make any new friends, not yet.” Another pause while her mother really got going. Bree started the pickup. “No, Mom, I’m
fine
. I swear to you, it’s a perfectly normal Shifter bar.” For one with a bunch of maniacal groupies and crazy Shifters in it. “No meth heads, no drugs at all. It’s a nice, quiet little place … Really quiet and nice—”
Something hit Bree’s pickup full force.
Bree whipped her head around as a man landed in the pickup’s bed and swarmed up to the cab. She watched in numb astonishment as he swung his long body feet-first into the cab through the open passenger window.
“Bree? Are you still there?” came the strident tones of her mother. “If you’ve hung up on me …”
The man landed on the seat, closed a huge hand around Bree’s cell phone, and threw the phone out the open window.
Bree’s frozen moment of amazement broke. She clung to the steering wheel, opened her mouth, and screamed as loudly as she could.
The man was across the seat in a heartbeat, clapping a strong and dirt-streaked hand over her mouth. “Drive,” he said, his voice so guttural she could barely understand the word. “
Now!
”
No way in hell was Bree going anywhere with this guy. She’d fight him off, run back inside the bar, yell for help. Who cared that the groupies were unfriendly? She’d hide out in the bathroom and let the bouncers deal with him.
Two more men materialized out of the dark. They had shotguns, and they pointed them at the man and at Bree.
“Go!”
the man roared.
The shotguns boomed. Bree’s truck wasn’t there to receive the blast, though, because she’d stomped on the gas.
The pickup jumped forward and hit the ground, wheels spinning. A thick cloud of dust boiled up behind them as Bree shot out of the parking lot to the road.
The road itself was dirt, washboard rough, slippery with dust that weeks without rain had made bone dry. Another shot rang out behind them, and Bree’s right mirror shattered.
She screamed again and pushed harder on the gas. The truck shimmied and danced, but Bree had helped Remy rebuild this baby, and she knew it inside and out. She expertly maneuvered up and down the washes and out to a paved road.
Bree raced down this empty stretch of back highway for a minute or so, until multiple glances behind them told her no one was following. Not yet, anyway.
She swung to the grass at the side and slammed the truck to a halt. “Get out,” she said firmly.
The man who looked back at her in the dark didn’t move. He was a Shifter—she’d guessed that the moment he’d leapt with the grace of an acrobat into the cab. His large body took up most of the passenger seat, dark T-shirt stretching over a tight chest and arms that could lift this pickup if he wanted to. His hair was cut short but a mess, black, she thought, though it was hard to tell in this light.
His eyes … They were golden, intense, pinning her as Bree stared at him in shock.
Lion eyes
, whispered through her head.