Perhaps a little more aggressively than needed, Megan jabbed at the elevator button. Then stabbed it again for good measure, even though the light illuminating the down arrow showed her request already in progress.
But she needed the cab to arrive faster.I need out of here.Now.I should have never come. How had she let herself get talked into it?Oh yeah, she remembered, Broderick with his husky purr and genial smile. She’d happened upon him by accident exiting from her attorney’s office, her vision flooded with tears because she’d stubbed her toe on the way out, anger making her clumsy. Why the ire? Because the courts saddled her with an idiot for a lawyer, one who wanted her to plead guilty. Even though I’m damn well innocent.Peeved, her toe throbbing, her eyes watering in the most annoying fashion, and then her colliding clumsily with a broad-shouldered man, when he’d asked, “What’s wrong, sweetie?” she’d replied.“Wrong? What isn’t wrong? That idiot is talking twenty-five to life. But I didn’t do it.” Although she was tempted to murder her public defender for his treatment. Then at least she’d deserve incarceration.Who knew blurting her woes to a stranger would result in a chance to make things right? Next thing she knew, Broderick had dragged her—almost literally, since he wouldn’t take no for an answer—to a café and plied her with a whipped-cream-topped café mocha. Sugar and sympathy soon had her spilling her story, which was totally unlike her. She didn’t usually unburden to strangers. She blamed it on stress.It felt good to have someone to talk to. Someone who didn’t assume the charges against her had any merit. Good to vent and have someone pretend to believe in her innocence.She wouldn’t have thought any more of her chance encounter with the man or his promise he’d look into her case. What did Broderick think he could do? He wasn’t a lawyer or a cop, just some kind of numbers guy who worked for an agency that investigated fraud.But apparently he knew a lawyer, some hotshot, who could maybe help her. While charity didn’t sit well with her, with almost nothing in her bank account Megan knew without help she was going to jail or going to have to flee to a country that didn’t allow extradition—all to avoid a conviction for something she didn’t do.Hope for a different outcome meant she let Broderick lead her to the impressive chrome-and-glass building downtown. Hope also let her perch in the outer reception area of the lavish penthouse office.Talk about swanky. Furnished old style in polished wood, thick carpeting, and leather club chairs, Megan had never felt more out of place. A swanky, high-priced lawyer who could afford this kind of work space wouldn’t want to take on her case pro bono. But she couldn’t extinguish the tiny flame of hope that hoped he would. She’d run out of other viable options—other than flight, which meant ducking the law the rest of her life.Her current lawyer’s optimistic prognosis? “If you plead guilty, then maybe we can whittle down the verdict from life to something like twenty-five years and eligible for parole.”As for her retort of, “But I’m innocent,” “Not according to the evidence you’re not.”Framed. Just like a certain rabbit.It was while thinking of rabbits that she heard the office door open and a guy stuck his head out.He stared at her. She stared right back because, really, who in their right mind wouldn’t? The man was freaking gorgeous. Tall, way taller than her five-foot-eight frame, and while she couldn’t see his body, he bore the face of a god, chiseled from stone—square-cut jaw, aquiline nose, and a regal air. Add to that bright blue eyes, short, layered dark hair, and a frown, which creased his slightly tanned brow, and she locked her jaw, lest she gape.Before she could take a breath and say hello, he ducked back into his office and the door slammed shut.It stayed shut, and her nerve fled.I knew this was a bad idea. Her gut yelled at her to leave.Up she popped from her seat, and she quick-stepped to the elevator. For some reason, it suddenly became imperative she escape. That instant.While she didn’t hear sound of pursuit, the hairs on her nape tingled. Again she jabbed the button.“Why is this taking so long?” she muttered. A more athletic girl might have tackled the stairs, but Megan’s rounded thighs, formed from a love of donuts and French fries dipped in ketchup, protested loudly against this plan. Much easier to poke a button and bitch. “Come on, damn you. Hurry.”“Leaving so soon?”The low, husky tone, coming from right behind, startled a small cry from her. With her pulse racing, she whirled and confronted a chest. A nice chest, mind you, wide and covered in a suit that she could swear cost more than she made in a month as a secretary, but also a daunting wall that blocked her view.How could a man so large, with an unmistakable presence, sneak up on her, especially given how she’d been raised by a father and large extended family who preached constant vigilance?Forcing her gaze upward, she fought not to gape. Even in close proximity, the guy appeared gorgeous. Too bad he was such an ass.Slam a door practically in her face indeed.Tilting her chin at a stubborn angle—her fighting angle, as her dad would say with a chuckle—she netted the butterflies in her stomach and managed to say, “Sorry if I disturbed you. It seems I visited the wrong office.”“You’re the woman Broderick wanted me to see.” He didn’t ask. He stated.Should she lie? What was the point? “Yes, but I see now this was a mistake. Sorry to have wasted your time.”A ding from behind and a swish of a door sliding open indicated her ride down had arrived. It left empty, as she found herself propelled down the short hall back to the opulent office, not of her own volition. As if she were a piece of flotsam, he left her no choice but to go where he shoved her.“What are you doing?” she managed to say instead of reacting in a more childish manner, wanting to duck out of his grasp and race for the stairs. Chubby thighs be damned.“What does it look like I’m doing?”Other than firing up her libido?The big guy, with his rather large hand firmly placed against the small of her back, firmly guided her in the direction of his office. It wasn’t too late to protest or to give in to her instinct for flight. However, given the insistence of his push and the uncompromising set of his jaw, she doubted she’d make it far.The guy had a lot in common with a giant boulder. She got the impression that once he set his mind, not much budged it. Perverse as it sounded, it made him more attractive. She rather liked decisive people.Two other reasons compelled her to follow him. One, that darned flicker of hope that refused to die. And second, at the touch of his hand, everything in her both tensed and relaxed at the same time.That a thrill of excitement could ease her anxiety didn’t make much sense, but it did confuse her enough that she found herself quick-marched through his reception area and into the most ridiculously awesome office she’d ever seen outside of a television drama.Jaw surely hanging yokel-wide, she stared in fascination at the wall of glass that conveyed a panoramic view of the city.“How the hell do you manage to work here? Isn’t that distracting?” Good to know she wasn’t tongue-tied around him, but it made her cringe to note her awed compliment.“When you work long hours, having a view and a flood of daylight is a must. Especially for a guy like me. But we’re not here to discuss my amazing view but rather your current situation. Broderick says you’ve been charged with the murder of your former employer.” He pushed her in the direction of a fabric-covered armchair before his desk. He circled the massive wooden expanse and seated himself in a smooth-appearing leather chair.Ah yes, the reason for her being here. How should she handle it? “I didn’t do it,” she blurted out. Way to shout her innocence. Heat infused her cheeks as she found herself the focus of his piercing blue eyes. He drew the oddest responses from her. She really needed to find her balance and start acting instead of reacting.“Why not?”The odd question saw her blink. “Excuse me?”“I said why didn’t you kill him? Was he a good boss?”“Not really. But he wasn’t the worse one I’ve had either,” she hastened to add.“Were you fired?”“No.”“Fucking?”She couldn’t help a wrinkle of her nose at his profane question. “Most definitely not.”“Are you seeing anyone?”A frown creased her forehead. “What does that have to do with anything?”“I’m going to take that as a no then. Did you owe him money?”“No.”“Was he cooking the books?”“Not that I know of.”“So, in other words, you have no motive?”“No, I don’t have a motive. And even if I did, I still wouldn’t have killed my boss.”“Too squeamish?”“What? No. Yes. What the hell is wrong with you? I wouldn’t kill him or anyone because it’s just not something normal people do. Something you’re apparently unaware of. What is it with you lawyers? Whatever happened to innocent until proven guilty?” She had managed to only stand before she found herself pushed back down. Her ass hit the chair and she stared in consternation at the man. He’d leaped over his desk to stop her from departing and now towered over her.How did he manage to move so fast? Only her daddy ever moved as quick.“I think you need to tell me everything, from the beginning. Starting with how you came to work for the guy.”“I saw an ad online looking for a secretary.”“And that was how long ago?”“Not long. I just celebrated my one-month mark.”“So you weren’t referred to this job? Subcontracted in any way?”“No. Does it matter?”“Maybe. Maybe not. When it comes to establishing motive, these are questions that will arise during the course of your trial. The prosecution might attempt to show premeditation, which is why these little details are important. Speaking of details. What do we know of the evidence gathered that implicates you?”Instead of replying, she dug into her voluminous purse—a secondhand Prada that she loved dearly, even if she paid way more for it than she should have. But nice secretaries didn’t buy hot Pradas from the back of a truck. Being nice sucked.“I brought a copy of my file.” A folder filled with papers the lawyer gave her detailing the circumstantial evidence pointing her way. Even she had to admit it appeared damning.Her fingerprint on the weapon, mysteriously located in her closet when the police executed their search warrant. Traces of her deceased employer’s blood on her clothes in the hamper. The facts shone a bull’s-eye on her, and yet … I didn’t do it.Forget the truth. Her assertion fell on deaf ears. No one had listened to her when she told her story. She’d gotten home from work with her take-out Thai food, and from that point on she didn’t remember a thing until she awoke the next day, face-first on her bed in bra and panties, when the cops came pounding on her door to arrest her and toss her apartment.Gavin took the thick bundle of papers from her and tossed them onto his desk. “I’ll read those later. I’m less interested in what the reports say and more in what you have to say.”“So you believe me when I say I’m innocent?”“I’d like to”—she perked up in her seat—“but I barely know you.” She slumped back down. “Which is why you and I are going to dinner.”“We are?”“Now.”“But—”He fixed her with those amazing eyes, and her mouth snapped shut. “If you’re going to be my client, then you need to start doing what I say without argument.”Not argue? Ha. Like that would happen. “Who says I’m your client?”“I do.”“Even though you don’t know if I’m innocent?”“I enjoy a challenge. Besides, defending only the innocent is for the altruistic.”The word “altruistic” reminded her that her bank account was hovering awful close to zero and she refused to call her daddy. “I have no money to pay you.”“Don’t worry about it. We’ll figure something out.”The way he stared at her, his gaze smoldering and his body intruding on her personal space? A lightbulb suddenly illuminated.Megan’s lips pursed. “If you think I’m going to sleep with you to pay for your services, then you’re sadly mistaken. I’m not a whore.” She’d do a lot of things for money, if the price was right, but sell her body? Not one of them.White teeth flashed when he laughed. The sound sent a shiver, a pleasant one, racing down her spine. “I never said you were, and I guess I should have made myself clearer. I won’t be requiring payment for your case, at all. I have money. Lots of it. Which means if I’m intrigued I can indulge in the occasional pro bono case.”“So you’ll take me on?” The flutter of her heart now had more than one reason to stutter fast.“Oh, never fear, little rabbit. I fully intend to take you.”How did he make that sound both ominous and promising at the same time?Initial panic conquered, Gavin, while not resigned to his fate—yet—could now take a mental step back and analyze his situation.Less situation, more like dilemma, as he contemplated what role the woman who sat across from him would play in his life. Not just a woman, his mate.My mate.Even just thinking it made him want to run for the woods. Or get really, really drunk.Before anyone came to the conclusion he was blowing things out of proportion, perhaps a few facts would help. When it came to his kind, in other words, Lycanthropes—men who became werewolves if the wolf virus took a fancy to them after a bite—it was said that there was only one woman destined to share their secret and heart.One woman. One lover.Forever.One.Ha.Until now, Gavin had scoffed at the very idea. He’d spent the last ten-plus years as a werewolf, tasting the delights of the nubile fairer sex. Indulging in erotic pastimes—bad, bad wolf.Sex with whomever he fancied was part of his lifestyle. In his world, h
“Surreal” didn’t come close to describing her evening repast with Gavin. Megan had heard of slick lawyers with their legal talk meant to make your eyes roll back in your head. Met with a disinterested one who made her actually want to murder someone. Given her current experience, she didn’t hold lawyers in very high regard, so she certainly never expected to lust after one.I’m a grown woman. And yet, much like a moon-struck teenager, she clung to Gavin’s every word, trembled inwardly every time they innocently touched. Even worse, she couldn’t help hoping he’d touch her more.It completely and utterly annoyed her, yet she couldn’t stem the reaction, but she could make sure things didn’t go any further.Once dinner was over, again he led her with a firm hand in the middle of her back. He held open the door for her and tucked her hand in his arm as he walked them to the parking lot. His courtly gestures didn’t do anything to help her attraction.Why can’t he act the uncouth jerk? It mad
Making an appointment and giving warning was never any fun, which was why Gavin showed up on Fabian’s doorstep right after leaving Megan.Give the cameras that recorded everything that dared encroach on his territory, Gavin wasn’t surprised when the master of the house himself opened the door, a dark brow raised. Fabian presented him with a cool, “To what displeasure do I owe this visit?”At least the older wolf—who in his early forties counted as older than Gavin’s early thirties—no longer pretended a fondness for his creation. In the beginning, Fabian had tried to take Gavin under his wing, more like have him bend on a knee to his overlord paw, but Gavin would have none of it. The ruthless manner in which the crime lord had turned Gavin in the hopes of having a lawyer join his legal team had stroked Gavin the wrong way.Changing Gavin into a Lycanthrope hadn’t cured him of his stubborn nature, or his desire to be his own man—and now wolf.How dare Fabian upset the carefully ordered l
Tired and feeling kind of grubby, Megan couldn’t wait to get home, strip, and take a long, hot shower. When the police showed up in the middle of the night—which truly was a cruelty given even the birds weren’t awake yet—and dragged her away, they’d not given her time to bathe or dress properly. Why bother when they had her exchange her pajamas at the station for a lovely orange jumpsuit? Apparently, they’d expected her to stay awhile.She’d thought herself a tad bit screwed, too, until Gavin arrived with some good news. It appeared as if her new lawyer might prove himself useful after all. He’d manage to spring her with the most simple of logic, the truth.It seemed someone wanted Megan’s butt in jail. Question was, why? Wasn’t it enough she stood accused of murder? Did they have to compound the insult by taking away her freedom to find justice?As she bounced from one foot to another—clad in some truly comfortable purple fleece-lined Crocs—she almost wished she’d ask to keep the oran
This was bad. Oh so bad.In his defense, when Megan had told Gavin she wanted to go he’d tried to say no. Several times as a matter of fact. Then she leaned in close, placed a hand high up on his thigh, and whispered, practically against his lips, “I’m going, and you can’t stop me. So either we go together, or I go alone.”Bested. By a woman. Which was how he found himself in a den of iniquity, with his future mate, regretting his decision. Especially when he noted the interested leers of the men patronizing the place.His lip curled in menace, and he couldn’t help a low growl, which Megan, thankfully, didn’t hear. But it did force him to put a lock on his more primitive side.This wasn’t the time or place to get jealous. He knew on a rational level that he needn’t fear competition from the men in this place, but his possessive side, which until now he never suspected existed, really didn’t like the male attention directed her way.With a boldness he would not have suspected her capabl
Once again, Gavin insisted on accompanying Megan to her apartment door. Talk about dancing with temptation.Bad enough dealing with him in the closeness of his car, especially after that devastating kiss, then having the scent of his cologne enveloping her as other building tenants forced him to invade her space. But she doubted her willpower if he entered her apartment, a place that would offer privacy and a bed. A bed that hadn’t seen any exercise since her move here.I need him to go. Quickly. Exiting the elevator, she took brisk steps to her apartment, only to slow as she approached the door to her place, a door not quite closed.Key in hand, she hesitated.“Move away from the door,” he ordered, but she didn’t jump to obey.“Maybe I didn’t close it properly when we left earlier,” she muttered, reaching out with trembling fingers to push at the portal. It swung open.Before she could truly comprehend what she glimpsed, Gavin had inserted himself between her and the open doorway, blo
Megan fumed all the way to the hotel.I can’t believe they invaded my space like that.Did they really think the loss of some stuff would make her plead guilty?Like hell.But she did find it worrisome that someone would go to such destructive lengths to try to pin a murder on her. Who hated her enough to want her in jail? Or was it she was just that the most convenient scapegoat?Of other concern was the ardent interest of her lawyer. When he’d issued his invitation to have her stay with him, her first impulse was to say yes, especially since she got the feeling he didn’t mean in the guest room. Then sanity kicked in, and she found herself refusing.Getting involved with the man who was supposed to convince a jury and judge of her innocence wasn’t in her best interest. Neither was accepting any favors from him. But what choice did she have?She couldn’t very well pull money out of a secret offshore bank account so she could hire some other swanky lawyer. Poor little secretaries didn’t
How the fuck did a cat get in the room? was Gavin’s first thought when the caterwauling started. It took only another second to realize he was getting a call. His phone sang the old Purina cat commercial song, which involved a lot of meows, which drove his inner wolf mental.Bloody Broderick. The irritating feline had gotten his hands on Gavin’s cell somehow and put it as his ringtone. Gavin had yet to figure out how to change it.I’ve really got to try that brownie recipe I found on the Internet but replace the marijuana with catnip. The resulting blackmail video might atone for some of his pal’s pranks.Sliding out of bed, leaving the warm and cuddly body of his mate—after last night she’s mine, even if she doesn’t know it yet—he padded naked, but for the phone in his hand, to the bathroom and shut the door.“What do you want?” he answered, forgoing a hello.A tad grumpy? Damned right. He’d harbored other plans for waking up that didn’t involve speaking to his friend while a naked de
“Elaina! Elaina!” Blaze yelled into her face. “Wake up, dammit!”He was shouting, anger at the fear that he’d not only smelled as he’d slept in his own bed but that had also assailed him like a plague when he’d stepped through the adjoining door into her room. The sight of her flailing wildly into the air, pillows flipping off the bed, sheets tangled in her legs as she continued to scream had incited something deep and intense inside him until his muscles had actually vibrated as he moved quickly to get to her.Now his arms were holding her tightly, her back against his front, her head thrashing over his shoulders. The screams had subsided, but her fear was still live, still potent enough to have her eyes closed tight, tears trickling rapidly down her cheeks.“I’m right here,” he told her. “Right here. Nobody will hurt you as long as I’m with you. I promise you.”Her heart was still hammering against her chest. He could hear it and feel it as his hand stroked along her arms. He had no
“I don’t need a teacher,” she called after him, following him through the dining and living rooms and into an extended hallway.He took long, deliberate strides with his shoulders squared, authority oozing from his every pore. As agitated as that made her, she had to admit he looked damned good doing it.As the lycan had roared behind her in the kitchen she’d known it was him and had not been afraid but intrigued. Alphas possessed practiced control over their shifts, so why, when she turned around, had she looked right into the bright blue eyes of his wolf? Even with his teeth fully bared, hair where there normally was none, and his muscled legs spread wide in the prepared-to-fight stance, he’d awakened something inside her. Something that had immediately sat up and taken notice. It was arousal and a little bit more, which again irritated the hell out of her.Now he had the audacity to be ignoring her, which only pushed more of her buttons. What was it about this guy that had her so r
The sun had yet to rise, but Elaina was up, using the hairpin from her cosmetic case to pick the lock on the door. Her smile spread quickly at the click of its release. She had to tamp down on her triumph, focusing on moving quietly. Only when she was once again outside, in the deep covering of the woods, would she release the yelp of victory of escaping yet another overbearing brute of a leader.She would find her own place in this world, her own destiny. Her journey would not end here; it could not. No matter the pull she felt toward Edwards and regardless of that low hum of arousal that had stayed with her throughout the night, even after that mind-numbing orgasm. He was everything she did not want in a mate—if she were even thinking along those lines, which she was not. Elaina believed her mother’s words that there was more for her and she hoped with everything she was that Tora hadn’t simply been referring to her connecting with a male lycan. There had to be more to life for lyca
She was right next door.A woman.A lycan.An alpha female.Edwards had no idea where she’d come from or why she was on the run. All he knew for certain was that she carried the scent of the Hunters in the body of a goddess.From the moment he’d seen her through the trees, watched her strong thighs and long legs carrying her briskly over the wooded terrain, he’d known he would approach. He would touch and goddammit he would taste. He’d known and he’d been pissed the hell off at the thought.The women Edwards had sexual interactions with were studied and well versed in his preferences. They knew the rules, the limitations, the pleasure to expect, and the way out when he was finished. They came at his bidding, did what he required on command, and left without any complaints or further requests. It was the deal he’d worked out with them in the year since they’d moved to Blackfoot River. It was the way he preferred to handle his personal affairs because anything more, such as close emotio
The door had opened behind her and Elaina quickly backed away, going into the house instead of running when it was so obvious that she needed to get away from this male. Also quite apparent was the needle-point hardening of her nipples that she knew were visible through the thin material of her tank top, not to mention the thick cream now covering her plump folds that she knew the evil alpha could definitely smell.In that moment she hated the lycan species. Hated how their scenting capabilities was one of their strongest attributes and that it was so blatantly connected to the insatiable sexual desires that coursed through their bloodstream like an incurable disease.“Well hello,” another male voice, this one measurably kinder than that of the alpha who was currently staring at her with a haze of simmering fury surrounding him.She blinked at the sight as it reminded her of when they’d been in the woods and she’d thought there was some sort of light outlining his body. It hadn’t been
Two weeks laterThe more she squirmed the harder his dick became. His arms were wrapped around her tightly, the heavy weight of her breasts resting over them. His mouth watered, incisors biting into the skin of his lower lip, claws threatening to rip free.“What the hell are you doing here?” Edwards growled into her ear, his mind warring with his body to keep his shift at bay.“I was walking,” came her clipped reply. “How about you? Is grabbing strange women a part of your regular routine?”No, there was nothing routine about this. Edwards knew that for a fact. He’d been searching the woods, looking for something, following up on the feeling that had plagued him all afternoon. The one that had warned of danger.And he’d found her.Yet it was something else entirely clenching him at the throat just this second. Something so basic it might have been funny if he weren’t who he was and she weren’t where she should not have been.He blinked once more trying to clear his mind of the thick h
The full moonShe had no choice but to run.As a deafening howl ripped through her body, sounding throughout the small room she’d been allotted, Elaina’s long sharp black nails ripped through the curtains at the window until they fell to the floor in shreds. In an effort to release the pain burning deep inside she did the only thing she could, lashing out with wide swipes of her arms, deadly nails scraping along every surface they encountered.Her lips peeled back from her lycan teeth, elongated and piercing as her mouth opened wide, another grisly growl breaking free. Around her she could hear furniture crashing to the floor, material and papers being torn, and the rapid thump-thumping of her heart. It was there that the pain had originated, beginning with the day her mother died three months ago.Elaina had believed she could go on even through the daily agony of not knowing for certain who had shot her mother down as she ran through the familiar forest. Elaina’s father had told her
FridayAnne walked the last block to her apartment, convinced she might not make it. This had been the longest week at work she could remember, and the only thing that had kept her going was the hope that Cain and Brad might be here tomorrow.She hadn’t heard from them all week long, and she missed them with a fierce longing unlike anything she’d ever experienced in her life. Tonight she was going to take a long shower, have something easy for dinner, and then sleep. With luck she wouldn’t look like death warmed over if—no, when—the guys showed up.She had to believe. She couldn’t not believe!Normally she’d take the stairs—she was only on the fourth floor—but tonight she got into the elevator and made the quick trip to her level. She hung her tote bag over her shoulder and unlocked the door, closed and locked it behind her, and dropped the bag on the floor. Kicking off her shoes, she walked into her bedroom to get out of the long skirt and tank top she’d worn to the office.Thank goo
Sunday“Okay. We’ve got about four hours before the first of the new group show up. I want some answers. Cain? What the hell happened yesterday? You can’t talk to one of our guests like that and think no one’s going to notice.”Brad glared at Trak. While Cain had occasionally challenged their alpha, Brad had never before forced eye contact with the man, but he couldn’t recall ever being so angry before, either. “You’re right,” he said. “But only because calling her what she is, a bitch, is an insult to every single female wolf here. Trak, you spent most of the week with Fred. You, of all people, should have figured her out.”“It wasn’t by choice, believe me. I only stuck with her to keep her from leaving and taking her two friends with her. She’s the one who arranged for the private plane. Look, I know she’s petty, mean, and spiteful, but I have no idea what happened that put a bee up Cain’s ass. Or why your woman and her sister and friend bailed out at the crack of dawn.”“Only becau