My Estranged Lover (Middlemarch Shifters Book 5)

Read My Estranged Lover (Middlemarch Shifters Book 5) Online

Authors: Shelley Munro

Tags: #paranormal romance, #rurual romance

BOOK: My Estranged Lover (Middlemarch Shifters Book 5)
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MY ESTRANGED LOVER

Shelley Munro

Middlemarch Shifters, book 5

Table of Contents

Blurb

Note to Readers

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Bonus Chapter

Excerpt – Seized & Seduced

About Shelley

Other Works by Shelley

Copyright Page

Blurb

Mistakes are easy. It’s fixing them that can make or break a marriage.

Caroline Rutherford is at the end of her marriage tether. As much as she loves her husband, it’s time to admit defeat. Their long-term, love-at-first-sight relationship is no longer working, and they’re hurting each other and their two young sons by continuing the happy family farce.

Feline shifter Marsh Rutherford knows his relationship is in trouble, and he and Caroline, his human wife, haven’t shared a bed for months. He made a mistake at the start of their marriage, omitting to tell the truth, and now the secrets are strangling their happiness. Admitting the reality to himself is simple, but finding a solution to fix the problem is tearing him apart because reality has the potential to destroy what little trust remains between him and his wife.

Their future looks murky until a new opportunity presents itself—a fresh start for the entire family, a means for husband and wife to reconnect in and out of the bedroom. Caroline and Marsh agree to grasp the chance for a new future. Things are going well and their sex life has never been better, but those mysterious secrets hover in the background like pesky flies. Marsh must discover a way to make everything right because Caroline is his mate and the only woman who can make him happy. Losing her isn’t an option.

Warning: contains a sexy feline shapeshifter felled by a good woman. He’s confused and befuddled and makes mistakes, but it’s not too late, folks. We can fix this mess with love, with tears and a few humorous mishaps during the romantic journey. Fingers crossed…let’s go!

Note to Readers

Welcome to Middlemarch!

My Estranged Lover
is a brand new addition to the Middlemarch Shifters series. You’ll meet new characters, spend time with old favorites from previous stories and get a peek at one of my favorite parts of New Zealand—the Mackenzie Country. I hope you enjoy Marsh and Caroline’s story.

I always love hearing from readers. You can visit my
website
or
join my newsletter
to learn about upcoming releases, news and contests. You’ll also receive two free books (a contemporary and a paranormal romance) when you sign up. See you there. *grin*

Shelley

Chapter One

Caroline Rutherford reclined in her double bed and stared at the pages of her romance novel, despite the lateness of the hour. Instead of following the raven-haired Scottish lass as she led her hunky Highlander on an adventurous dance, her mind kept sliding to her own life.

Where was Marsh?

Out again.

With another woman if her mother-in-law’s barbed hints held truth.

She hadn’t summoned the courage to ask Marsh.

Yet.

Sighing, she shut the book and set it aside. Caroline rearranged her pillows and flicked off the light, plunging the bedroom into darkness.

With sight obscured, her other senses worked harder. The tick of the alarm clock sprang into focus, beating off the seconds, the minutes, the hours her husband stayed away from the house. The nights he slept in the spare bed. She sucked in a breath and caught a whiff of laundry powder, a trace of cinnamon from the candle she’d burned earlier, the spicy hint of her green tea perfume.

With a trace of embarrassment at her weakness, she reached beneath the pillow on the other side of the bed and pulled out a T-shirt—one of Marsh’s. She’d behaved like a stalker to get this, stealing her husband’s favorite T-shirt from the laundry hamper. Her throat tightened even as his comforting scent wrapped around her senses.

Tears stung her eyes as the truth loomed in her mind.

It was time.

Their marriage couldn’t continue in this fashion, not if she wanted to retain her sanity.

A vehicle pulled up outside the house—one of the farmhouses reserved for workers. At least she’d won that argument and insisted they have their own home instead of moving into the large Rutherford homestead. Caroline’s stomach rolled, the knots twisting, turning, tightening until she wanted to scream in frustration.

But she remained silent.

She froze, tension in every muscle, in every slow, even breath.

The back door squealed open, squealed shut.

Her hands curled to fists.

The old wooden floorboards creaked under the weight of footsteps.

Her fingernails dug into her palms.

Another door squeaked, softer with less of a protest.

The grip around her heart softened, emotion spilling a tear free.

Marsh was checking on Ricky. No matter how wide the gap yawned between them, she knew he loved their two boys, which made this situation even more difficult.

The door squeaked again. Footsteps neared their bedroom, stilled outside the ajar door.

Caroline’s breath caught, held. Sharp teeth bit into her bottom lip.

The pause lengthened.

Her heart hammered.

Then the measured footsteps resumed, the creaks retreating as Marsh walked to the bedroom at the far end of the passage.

Maybe he was checking on James. Maybe he’d return.

She waited and waited and waited.

Marsh didn’t make a return trip, choosing to sleep in the spare bed in James’s room instead of sleeping with her. A long-standing habit.

Tears slid down her cheeks, one after the other.

She couldn’t go on this way.

She’d talk to Marsh.

Tomorrow.

* * * * *

The early morning light struck his face, and Marsh groaned. Every muscle ached and his cheek—grazed by an exuberant tackle during the madcap rugby game the previous night and still tender—stuck to his pillow. Despite his feline genes and ability to heal fast, he felt like a flat tire. He peeled the cotton from his face and rolled over to see his oldest son staring at him from the twin single bed.

“Hey, sport,” Marsh whispered. “You’re awake early.”

James crinkled his nose, his action reminding Marsh of Caroline. “You were making noises.”

“Me?”

“Yeah. Like this.” James wrinkled his button nose again and let out several loud snorts.

“I made those noises?” Snoring. He shouldn’t have stayed for two beers after the run with his friends. He’d known it, but he’d enjoyed being himself, embracing his feline form without worrying Caroline might discover his secret.

Marsh slid from the bed and stood, stretching with caution as he tested his limbs. Not too bad. He turned to his son and smiled. “Go back to sleep, huh?” Marsh stooped to tuck the covers around his son’s slight form. Although James took after him in appearance, Marsh saw so much of Caroline in his five-year-old son. Another topic of conflict with his parents.

Marsh drew back with a sigh and left the bedroom, pulling the door closed before heading to the kitchen. Coffee. Caffeine to clear his head and give him divine inspiration. He needed it.

His marriage was dying.

Oh, he could blame his parents for the way they belittled Caroline behind her back. He could blame them for giving him advice that had placed his marriage in danger. He could blame them for rejecting the human he’d introduced to the Rutherford family.

Marsh swiped a hand through his hair and admitted the truth. The mess his marriage had become was all on him. He’d been the one who had listened to his horrified parents in the early days of his marriage. He’d been the one who agreed to conceal their feline shapeshifter heritage. He’d been the one who kept feline secrets and business from his wife.

Damn it. He’d kept himself from marking Caroline and making her his mate and wife in truth.

Marsh made the coffee, doing the mundane actions by rote. A noise from behind had him whirling to face the doorway. Caroline stood there, looking as exhausted as he felt.

Strawberry-blonde hair lay in waves, long enough to reach her shoulders. Tall and always big-boned, two pregnancies had added to her curves and size. She was beautiful, and still did it for him, even though his mother derided Caroline for her lack of willpower with food. Her light blue eyes appeared wary and he forced a smile, forced himself not to drag her into his arms. Sex obscured the problem, made it worse.

“Coffee?”

“Please,” she said, her gaze scurrying over his bare chest, flitting to his boxer-briefs then darting to his face and settling on his grazed cheek.

Marsh willed his body not to react to her presence. Thought of cold showers and decided to flee and regroup. “Coffee won’t be long. I’ll grab clothes.” He strode from the kitchen and turned toward their bedroom—Caroline’s bedroom now. Somehow, they’d fallen into the routine of him sleeping elsewhere. Either on the couch or the spare bed in James’s bedroom.

Hell, this couldn’t continue.

He needed to grow a pair and fix this.

Marsh grabbed a pair of worn jeans from the wardrobe and pulled on a black T-shirt before returning to the kitchen. Caroline sat at the scarred kitchen table, a mug of coffee cupped in her hands. James’s green lunch box sat on the counter. Several colorful pots filled with herbs jostled for space on the window ledge.

Everything in the kitchen screamed old and well-worn. No dishwasher. No slick cabinets. No gadgets. Yet despite this, Caroline had made the kitchen, the entire house scream welcome. It was the haven and home he’d never had while growing up. His parents’ house, ten minutes down the road, seemed stiff and formal in comparison.

No, Caroline didn’t deserve this crap.

It was up to him to fix this wreck of a marriage because Caroline had tried. She’d tried so hard.

Marsh reached for a mug and poured a black coffee. “Do you want a refill?”

“No, thanks.”

God, so polite
.

Marsh pulled out the wooden chair opposite Caroline and sat.

“What happened to your face?”

“I went to rugby training last night. Felix Mitchell tackled me hard and I’m wearing the marks to prove it.”

“I didn’t think you had time to play rugby this season. Your father said he couldn’t spare you on the farm.”

His father didn’t want to pay wages and preferred the slave labor provided by his son. “I’m playing.” He lifted his gaze from his coffee. “As long as you’re okay with me spending a couple of nights a week training and playing on Saturday. I can take the boys with me during the early training night because a lot of the wives bring the kids and organize games in the school hall. Or, you can come to training too. It’s up to you.”

Marsh caught her surprise, the slight widening of her blue eyes, the wrinkling of her nose and the parting of her pink lips. Then, she tensed, her mouth firming, her spine hitting the back of the chair.

“We need to talk, Marsh.”

Marsh nodded.

“We…I can’t go on like this. I—it’s soul-destroying.”

Marsh came to a quick decision. Nothing important on his schedule today. He had to shift the cattle closer to the yards since they were selling a hundred head at the Wednesday sale, make sure they had water. “I have to shift the cattle, but why don’t we spend the rest of the day together? Go for a walk on the beach or have lunch in Dunedin.”

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