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Lucky Charm Special Edition + The Newly Released Fake Relationship Series Bundle
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From cowboys to royal castles, these swoony standalones all have one thing in common: the relationship is fake... until it's definitely not.
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Featuring a broody cowboy, mistaken identity with a billionaire, a trapped prince, a high-profile football star, a best friend’s brother, and even an ex with unfinished business—this series is full of chemistry, chaos, and all the slow-burn, just-kisses romance you crave.
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SWEET TEA AND A SOUTHERN GENTLEMAN SERIES
Love Gilmore Girls? You’ll adore this Southern small-town romance series full of charm, heartfelt friendships, and slow-burn love stories.
Think Lorelai and Sookie’s bond, Lorelai and Luke’s romance, and the emotional depth of healing family — all wrapped in sweet tea and second chances.
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THE RULES OF LOVE SERIES
A YA ROMANCE SERIES
This binge-worthy sweet romance series includes 11 standalone novels, each filled with just-kisses chemistry, swoony cinnamon roll heroes, and the tropes we all adore—enemies to lovers, fake dating, forbidden romance, friends to more, and brother’s best friend.
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Sweet Tea and a Southern Gentleman Series
Love Gilmore Girls?
You’ll adore this Southern small-town romance series full of charm, heartfelt friendships, and slow-burn love stories.
Think Lorelai and Sookie’s bond, Lorelai and Luke’s romance, and the emotional depth of healing family — all wrapped in sweet tea and second chances.
Get the BRAND NEW Honey Bee Library release!

Paperback Bundle
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The Inn on Harmony Island Synopsis
After I returned to my small hometown six months ago to attend my estranged grandmother's funeral, I swore I would never go back. That is, until my grandmother's lawyer calls me up. If I don't return to Harmony Island and fulfill my grandmother's stipulations, the generationally owned family inn will be turned over to the state and sold off to the highest bidder--my grandmother's rival and mother to the man who broke my heart, Missy Willis.
I'm not sure I'm strong enough to return home, but I also know, I can't let Miss Willis win. So I pack up my belongings and head for North Carolina.
I'm determined to stay distant, living in the small cottage next to the inn, and keep my head down. But in a small town where everyone knows your name, that becomes difficult. Soon, my past catches up with me and I'm faced with the history I've buried for so long. Just when I reach my breaking point, Miles, the single dad living at the inn, swoops in to my life to rescue me. He was my protector in my childhood, my enemy in my teenage years, and now?
Now, I'm not so sure. Especially when his love for his daughter is contagious, or the way he looks at me when he doesn't know I see him. I'm so confused and I want to run away like I did in the past, but I can't. And when Miles touches me like that...I don't want to.
Luckily, I find a friend in Abigail, the local bookstore owner. She's one of the only residents who doesn't know about my past and seems to be looking for the same thing I am, a place to belong.
This story is told through 3 different points of view. Shelby, Abigail, and Miles. It's a story of romance and friendships between women. If you liked the Netflix show, Sweet Magnolias, you'll love this series!
The Inn on Harmony Island is chock full of romance, redemption, and forgiveness. If you're looking for your next summer read, grab your copy today! It is the first book in the Sweet Tea and a Southern Gentleman series and ends on a cliff hanger.
Chapter 1 Look Inside
Shelby
I’d never noticed the way rain looked as it fell into puddles. The tiny splashes each drop made caused smaller drops to spray around it. The ripples would go for only a moment until another drop would fall, and the effect would happen all over again.
A low murmur of amens drew my focus away from the puddles. I wrapped my black shawl tighter around my shoulders as I turned to the pastor who was standing behind my grandmother’s coffin. He was speaking, but in all honesty, I couldn’t hear what he was saying. My stomach was a bundle of nerves since I drove the rental car into my small hometown, and I couldn’t sort out anyone’s words.I’d left this place 10 years ago, never to return. That was, until Gran up and passed away. I couldn’t very well not go to her funeral. So, I packed my carry-on and flew down from New York to face the past that I’d tried so hard to forget.
And here I was, staring my history straight in the face.
I sighed as I ducked my head down. Miles’s body tightened next to me when our arms brushed. I glanced over at him to see his jaw muscles flex, but his gaze never wavered from the pastor’s face.
Was it strange that my ex-stepbrother was more broken up about my grandmother’s passing than me?
I pursed my lips and turned my attention to my lap.
Yes, that was strange. And sad. And pathetic.
Even though I wanted to console my ego and convince myself that it was okay that Miles had cried more times than I had during the funeral planning. That the funeral director handed him the box of tissues and never offered them to me. Nothing I could say to myself would fix the cold, hard heart my past had left me with.
I wanted to cry. I really did. But it was as if my tears were dried up. There was nothing left. I’d cried so much in the past that it was as if my body was completely incapable of producing tears. I was broken, and this was proof that I was never going to be fixed.
My body turned numb as I watched the cemetery owner lower the coffin into the ground. Even though it was raining, the early spring heat surrounded us. Mr. Jorgenson, the town’s mayor, wiped his forehead with his handkerchief before stuffing it back into his suit coat. Most of the other guests were leaving, sprinting to their cars with their hands or purses over their heads. The women were slowed by their heels digging into the soft ground.
I glanced down at the dark oak coffin in the ground, wondering for a moment if Gran would have been disappointed with what we’d chosen. Even though it had been years since we’d spoken, I still wanted to please her. To settle her into her final resting place in comfort.
Movement next to me drew my attention over. Miles was standing a few yards off, shaking hands with the pastor who then nodded and turned to hurry through the rain to his car.
We were now officially alone.
Miles hesitated; his gaze focused on something in front of him. But then, as if he could feel my gaze, he turned.
I knew I should look away. Facing Miles—facing Harmony Island—was the last thing I wanted to do. But I couldn’t drop my gaze. The familiarity in his stormy blue eyes as they peered into my soul paralyzed me. Miles had been my protector when we were kids, but then our parents divorced and something in him changed in high school. Our relationship was never the same. Especially now, when he seemed closer to my grandmother than I could ever be. That stung as bad as the wasps from the nest we knocked down as kids.
I shivered and focused on the hole in front of me. I was done thinking about Miles. I was finished thinking about our past. But as soon as I saw Miles approach me from the corner of my eye, I sucked in my breath.
I cursed myself. Why had I allowed our gazes to meet? I’d spent most of my three days here giving short answers and keeping to myself in the only motel in town. The other lodging options, Harmony Island Inn and the Apple Blossom B&B, were places I swore I would never go.
Too many bad memories roamed the halls.
“You okay?” Miles’s voice was low and rumbly. I wasn’t sure if it was because of our history or the situation we were in.
I nodded, tightening my grip on my upper arms. “I’m just glad it’s over. I’m ready to get out of here.” Miles remained quiet. I peeked over at him, worried that I’d said the wrong thing. “I mean—”
“I know what you mean.” Miles slipped off his suit coat, folded it in half, and rested it on the chair behind him. Then he yanked at his tie and loosened the top two buttons of his white shirt. After ruffling his gelled hair, he began to unbutton his cuffs and roll up his sleeves. “She never wanted you to stay away, but she understood why you left.”
His words were like poison to my soul. It was easier to believe that my grandmother hated me than to think she’d spent her life waiting for me to return. When I was in New York, I could pretend that we had a mutual understanding. Our family was toxic. A broken mix of flawed people that fate stupidly threw together. My grandmother, my mother, and me.
We were the opposite of the three musketeers. We were a mixture of oil, water, and alcohol. Three pieces of a puzzle that would never fit together. Now, they were both gone. My senior year of high school, Mom ran away with her yoga instructor and died in a car crash.
With Gran in the ground, I was the only one alive.
I was the only one left carrying the burden of the failure that was our small, dysfunctional family.
“I doubt that,” I whispered as I tucked a few strands of hair behind my ear that the cool ocean breeze had managed to free from the tight bun at the nape of my neck.
Miles finished rolling his sleeve and glanced over at me. I could see that he was fighting his response, and the truth was, I didn’t want to hear it. It was easier when I didn’t think anyone cared.
“So, are you leaving us for good then?” His question caught me off guard. Leaving us. I hated that he’d moved into my life, my hometown, and my past like this. If I had my way, we would sell Harmony Island Inn and never look back.
“Yes,” I responded, nodding my head.
“And the will? Are you going to come back for the reading?”
I took in a deep breath and tipped my head back, closing my eyes. “We both know that she didn’t leave me anything.”
“We do?”
I opened my eyes, looking up at the white canopy that protected us from the rain. “Despite what you say, she wrote me out of her life a long time ago. There’s no point in pretending otherwise.”
“Shelby—”
“Miles, I’m tired.” I pulled my phone out of my purse and opened my rideshare app.
Miles stepped forward with his hand extended. For a moment, I caught what looked like desperation in his gaze before it disappeared. “Why don’t I give you a ride? I mean, the church organized a dinner and everything.” His half smile was weak and did little to dissuade me from what I’d already decided. “The town…misses you.”
I snorted as I looked up at him. Then I shook my head and returned to filling out my information and sending in the request. “I seriously doubt that.” I sighed. “I’m going to go back to my hotel room and jump in the shower. My flight is early in the morning, and I can’t be late.”
“Oh.”
I hated that he seemed disappointed. But I needed him to move on. Returning to my one-bedroom apartment in New York where I could bury my memories until they were good and dead was the only thing holding me together.
“Listen, I know my grandmother meant a lot to you, but let’s not pretend that there’s anything left for me here. Our family is finished.” My voice cracked at the last word, which threw me off guard.
I hoped Miles didn’t hear my last sentence, but after seeing the small quirk of his eyebrow, regret filled my chest.
He’d heard.
I cleared my throat. “Thank you for taking care of my grandmother in the last moments of her life.” I brushed my hands down my black dress, desperate for something to do. The mixture of my grandmother’s coffin in front of me and the way Miles was studying me, tugged at the fraying strands that were barely holding my life together.
But I knew if I didn’t thank him, the pressure to acknowledge that he was the better grandchild would gnaw at me until I would eventually buy another plane ticket to come down here and confess it. I wanted this to be the last trip I made to my godforsaken hometown. I needed to make sure I tied up all my loose ends with a pretty little bow.
“Of course,” Miles said. “She helped me a lot.” His voice deepened as he turned to face the hole where my grandmother now lay. His shoulders slumped, and I suddenly felt sorry.
I felt sorry for him. I felt sorry for my grandmother. And I felt sorry for me.
No one had it perfect. We’d messed up so bad that, sometimes, the best thing to do was to call a foul and walk away.
And that was what I was determined to do.
My phone dinged, startling us both. I lifted it up so I could see the screen.
“My ride’s here,” I whispered.
Miles pushed his hands through his hair once more and nodded. “Yeah, okay.” Then he paused.I could see in his body language that he wanted to say something more, and I had a sinking suspicion as to what that was. Problem was, there was no way I was ready to hear any of it.
“It’s been nice knowing you,” I said. And before I could stop myself, I reached out and rested my hand on his arm. His warm skin shocked my fingertips, and I blinked and pulled my hand back, cursing myself for doing that.What was wrong with me?
Miles’s gaze dropped down to the spot I had touched before he brought his gaze up to meet mine. His dark blue eyes had turned stormy, which caused my stomach to flip-flop.
My phone chimed again, pulling me from my thoughts. I pushed my purse strap higher up onto my shoulder and then gave him a weak smile.“Goodbye, Miles,” I said as I stepped around him.He didn’t say anything as I passed by. It wasn’t until I’d stepped out into the rain, raising my purse up over my head that I heard his response.
“Goodbye, Shelby.”
Like a dam breaking inside of me, the tears began to flow. I was grateful for the rain now more than ever. My tears mixed with the water running down my face as I crossed the cemetery lawn and pulled open the door of the black SUV.
The man asked for my name, and I managed to get that out. He didn’t say much else as he put the car into drive and took off down the small, one-lane road that led to Main Street.
Thankfully, he didn’t ask me what was wrong. Being picked up at a cemetery seemed to be all he needed to know. Hiding under that excuse, I allowed the tears that had refused to fall all of this time to flow. I was hurt. I was broken. And for this moment, I was going to allow myself to be weak.
As soon as I got back to New York, I’d forget. But for now, I didn’t have the strength.
The Rules of Love Series
This binge-worthy sweet romance series includes 11 standalone novels, each filled with just-kisses chemistry, swoony cinnamon roll heroes, and the tropes we all adore—enemies to lovers, fake dating, forbidden romance, friends to more, and brother’s best friend.
Perfect for mood readers and hopeless romantics alike, this limited-time bundle is your next bookish obsession.

Paperback Bundle
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$80.95 $241.95
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Rule #1 Synopsis
My dad has forbidden his entire football team from speaking to me, but the quarterback needs a tutor.
The entire football team at my high school lives by one rule, they're not allowed to date the coach's daughter. Lucky for me, I'm the coach's daughter. If the players ever come close to flirting with me, Dad makes them run laps until they puke.
What Dad doesn't know, is that I spend every last second of practice staring at Tyson Blake. He's six foot three, incredibly tones, smells good even when he sweats.
So when Tyson asks me to tutor him, I can't turn him down. After all, what Dad doesn't know won't hurt him. But the more I get to know Tyson, the more I realize there's something deeper. And I can't walk away. Even if what we are doing breaks every single one of Dad's rules.
If only my heart understood the rules, I wouldn’t have fallen for Tyson Blake. Stupid heart.
Some rules are meant to be broken.
Chapter 1 Look Inside
The California heat beat down on me as I stood next to the table. Five minutes left and then football practice was done for the day. That meant I only had five minutes to stand there and pretend that I wasn’t staring at Tyson Blake.
But how could I not? He was the epitome of perfection in his six-foot-two, incredibly toned, smells-good-even-when-he-sweats, senior body. And he was off limits. If dad even got a hint that I liked Tyson, I’d be sent off to Catholic school, where I’d be forced to become a nun.
Nope. I had to be discreet. Which I had gotten pretty good at. I’d spent years convincing Dad that boys were the last thing on my mind.
Ha.
“Hey, Tiny.”
I jumped at the sound of Dad’s voice. Tiny. The lovely nickname given to me by my father that has carried over to the entire football team. Nothing like being reminded everyday just how short you really are.
I whipped my gaze over to find Dad staring at me. I’d been filling the last-minute water cups. Nerves raced through my stomach. Had he been reading my mind? Did he know that I was thinking about Tyson?
I shrugged, trying to look inconspicuous. “What?” I called out.
“You’re watering the grass.”
I glanced down at the cup I had been filling. Apparently, I was terrible at multi-tasking. I’d been too fixated on Tyson as he jogged across the field with his helmet off and his damp hair clinging to his forehead. The water had sloshed over the side and all over my Converses.
“Sorry,” I yelled back, raising the cup to show that everything was good. I set it down on the table and sighed. What was the matter with me? First day of school and I was already slipping up. Thankfully, I’d convinced my dad that I didn’t have to go to all the summer football camps with him, trading in my water-girl apron for one at In–N-Out.
It was really an act of self-preservation. Dad needed to think that I didn’t like boys. And going to a camp where they only wore football pants and strutted around with their shirts off? Nope. I only had so much self-control.
Keeping him believing that I wasn’t interested was really the only option. It kept his overprotective tendencies from spiraling out of control.
I set the last cup down on the table and straightened. Heat crept up my neck, so I reached up and pulled my long and—most of the time—frizzy brown hair into a bun.
“That’s brutal, Tiny. Having your dad around all the time,” a deep, joking voice said from behind me.
I squeaked and turned. I knew that voice. Tyson Blake was standing inches away from me. My gaze met his brilliant blue eyes, turning me speechless. Now I knew what it was like to be a deer in headlights. My brain screeched to a halt.
“I—um—da—” I slammed my mouth shut before I let more nonsensical sounds escape my lips.
Tyson raised his eyebrows as he leaned toward me. My heart hammered in my chest. What was happening? Was he going to kiss me like I’d played out so many times in my head? Was he going to hug me? Do I hug him back?
Before I could stop myself, I raised my arms. There was no way I wasn’t going to give Mr. Popularity a hug when offered one. Just as I began to close my arms around him, he stopped and straightened.
A water cup came into view. Heat raced across my skin, and I pulled my elbows in tight, praying that he hadn’t seen my humiliating blunder. Thankfully, all he did was glance down at me as he drained the cup, crumpled it, and threw it—swish—into the trashcan behind me.
“Thanks, water girl,” he said as he gave me a wink and turned away.
That’s when I realized that my dad, the head coach, was standing behind him with a very unpleasant expression.
“Boss,” Tyson said, nodding toward my dad.
My mind swirled. Even though Tyson hadn’t seen my aborted hug, my dad had. And he was not happy about it.
“Mr. Blake, what’s taking so long?” he asked, straightening. Even at his tallest, he was dwarfed by Tyson.
Tyson smiled at him and then flicked his gaze over at me. I shot him an I-don’t-know-why-my-dad-is-acting-crazy look.
“I was just getting some water,” he scoffed as he motioned toward the table.
My dad did not look convinced. He snapped his gaze over to me. “This true?” he asked me.
“Why would I lie about that?” Tyson stepped forward.
“It’s true,” I blurted out, praying that my dad wouldn’t ask me why I’d just tried to hug the star quarterback.
He must have sensed my plea, since he turned his attention back to Tyson. He held up a finger. “What is the number one rule?”
Tyson glanced over at me and then back to my dad. “Never hit on or try to date the coach’s daughter,” he said, holding up his hands.
Dad stepped forward. “And don’t forget that.”
Tyson laughed. “Trust me, I wouldn’t dream of it.” Then he took off, jogging over to where his minions stood, waiting for him so they could head back to the school.
Once Tyson was gone, I turned to my dad, who gave me a satisfied nod and then made his way over to Xavier, the assistant coach. Dad picked up his clipboard, and they bent their heads together.
I glared at him. I couldn’t believe that he’d completely embarrassed me in front of Tyson like that. I was never going to forgive him.
“Thanks a lot,” I muttered as I started handing out cups to the football players who had jogged over. Tyson was never going to be able to look at me without seeing my huffing, angry father. I was a social pariah. I might as well call in sick for the rest of the year.
Once the entire team was hydrated, I lifted the jug and set it on the grass. Then I turned back to the table and started folding it up.
“How’d practice go?”
I glanced over to see Rebecca, my best friend, walking up to me. Her cheeks were pink, and she was sweating. She was cheer co-captain and my best friend since we were in diapers. How she stayed with me through my frizzy, short hair and braces boggled my mind. We were literally Beauty and the Beast.
I groaned in frustration as I slammed down hard on the brace of the table leg and it folded in. “Terrible. I almost hugged Tyson, and my dad was here to make sure he knew that I was off limits.”
I slammed the other leg down and yelped as I caught my thumb in the folding bracket. I lifted my hand to my mouth, wincing as the pain shot through my thumb.
“Oh, no. Man, your dad isn’t going to let off this year, huh?” Rebecca asked. She finished folding the table for me and turned it on its side so she could grab the handle.
I grabbed the bag of cups and the now-empty jug and followed after her. “Nope, doesn’t look like it. First day back with the team, and he’s already on high alert. I don’t get it. It’s like he blames me for my mom leaving. He’s convinced that a boy is going to woo me and lead me down the path of, I don’t know, whoredom?”
Mom dropped a bomb three years ago when she announced that she was leaving my dad to live in Cancún with her massage therapist, Pedro. Ever since then, when it came to me and guys, Dad was less than thrilled. He—on many occasions—has declared that he would rather experience a root canal with no anesthesia than see me date a high school boy. Or any boy. Ever.
And since he was the gym teacher and head football coach, he made it his life’s mission to make sure that romance and I never collided.
“It’s not that bad, Destiny. At least your dad cares enough to watch out for you. My dad? He couldn’t be bothered to pick up the phone to wish me a happy birthday. Instead, he calls to tell me the twins are now a yellow belt in karate, which means they can poop rainbows or something.” She rolled her eyes.
“I’m sorry, Bec.” I sighed, blowing a loose strand of hair from my face. “Dads suck sometimes.”
She nodded. Then an excited smile spread across her lips. “You’ll never believe who I have in my pre-calc class.” She wiggled her eyebrows. A look only reserved for Sam Wilson.
“Really? That’s lucky,” I said, shifting the bag and jug to one arm so I could pull open the door that led to the gymnasium.
“I’d say. And, I get to sit next to him because Mr. Dawson is all, ‘everyone sit according to the alphabet.’ Wilson. Williams.” She shrugged her shoulders. “Bless that strange, OCD man.”
I smiled at her as we walked to the door in the far wall. Just on the other side was my dad’s office. And just beyond that. The boy’s locker room.
Where Tyson was.
Showering.
I cleared my throat as I forced all the thoughts that would have my dad boiling mad at me from my head. “Well, I hope you guys finally talk.” I gave her a serious expression. “It’s time.”
Rebecca walked through the door that I held open. Once we were in the small hallway, I stopped in front of my dad’s office, grabbed the key from my pocket, and unlocked the door.
“Baby steps, little one,” she said leaning the table against a wall in the office.
“Well, don’t wait too long. He’s headed for college next year.” I set the bag of cups on the shelf and the water jug underneath it. I never understood why she was so nervous around guys. She was tall and blonde. And she’s had curves since middle school. When she walked down the hall, boys had to pick their jaws up off the floor. I was sure she could walk up to Sam, demand that he let her wax his legs, and he would lay down in submission. “Besides, he’d be an idiot not to date you.”
Her cheeks hinted pink as she studied her nails. If I didn’t love her as much as I did, I’d hate her. She was like a Disney princess. When she sang, wildlife collected around her feet.
“I just want it to be right,” she said.
“Okay,” I said nodding to her. Truth was. I had no idea. She had more experience in the guy department. She’d even kissed a guy before. Me? Nothing. Nada. Zilch.
Well, unless you count Porter Jones in the second grade. But that was more of a bite, on his part, than an actual kiss. I’m pretty sure that kissing involves lips colliding, not teeth. Porter didn’t seem to have gotten that memo.
She glanced down at her watch. “I gotta go. I have homework, and then my dad’s picking me up because I have to see the twins do…something. I really don’t know. I stop listening when he mentions those brats.”
“Thanks for helping me, Bec.”
She gave me a quick hug and sprinted from my dad’s office.
Now alone, I glanced around. Dad was still a half hour from leaving, and even though I’ve had my license since last summer, he insisted on driving me home.
I sighed and made my way over to the wall of team photos. There was one for every year that my dad had been coach of the football team, tacked up with tape.
Somehow—I don’t know how—my gaze found Tyson in last year’s photo. His hair was shorter then. And he looked skinnier. But he was as handsome as ever. I leaned in closer, studying his lips and his perfect nose.
“You okay?”
For the second time that day, Tyson’s voice filled my ears. I yelped and turned to see him leaning against the doorway. He had his eyebrows raised and a hint of a smile on his lips. He was dressed in jeans and a t-shirt that hugged his chest. I could smell his soap. It had a woodsy hint to it.
“Yeah. Um-hum,” I said. Finally, coherent words. Sort of.
“I was looking for the Boss, but I’m guessing he’s not in yet.” He scanned the office.
“You guessed right, sir,” I said, saluting him. Then heat rushed across my skin. What was I saying? What was wrong with me? I pinched my lips together to cut off any other ridiculous reactions.
He studied me for a moment and then glanced down the hall. “Bummer.” He sighed. “Can you let him know I need to talk to him?”
I nodded.
Tyson studied me for a second longer before he turned. He took a step forward and then held his hand up. “Could you just tell him that I talked to you with other people around? I don’t want him knowing that we spoke alone in his office.” He grimaced. “I really hate running laps.”
My stomach sank. It was confirmed. No boy was ever going to talk to me. Ever.
My name, Destiny “Tiny” Davis, was synonymous with pain and vomit. Well done, Dad. Well done.
“Sure,” I said. My voice came out in a whisper as a defeated feeling settled in my chest.
There went any chance I would ever have to show Tyson that I was a cool person—that he was crazy not to get to know me. All he saw when he looked at me was the large, neon red sign my dad had placed above my head that said DO NOT TOUCH. In large capital letters.
“Thanks.” He smiled and then disappeared around the corner. And probably out of my life forever.
I sank down onto one of the stained chairs in my dad’s office and blew out my breath. This was going to be my life. My big, fat, sucky, junior year life. I might as well get used to it.
Smoky Hills Academy Series
For all the Team Jacob girls who never moved on… this one’s for you.
This complete wolf shifter romance series follows a group of football players who just happen to turn into wolves—and the human girls who steal their hearts.
Filled with swoony, protective heroes, fated love, and just-kisses heat, it's the perfect blend of small-town romance and supernatural tension.
Available in sprayed and unsprayed edges.
Grab them now because when they are gone, they're gone!

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$46.95 $95.95
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The Quarterback Alpha Synopsis
#1 in Football #1 in Wolf Shifters
Cora
Mom and I just needed a place to start over. Somewhere to move on from the past that haunts us.Smoky Hills, Tennessee seemed to be exactly what we needed.Here, I could be invisible.
That is, until quarterback Liam Bronson decides I’m important.
Even though there are plenty of girls who would love his attention, he doesn’t seem to care. The way he stares at me is like I’m the only one that matters, even in a room full of people.
Like he chose me.
Then I discover his secret. The animal that lives inside of him. He tells me to leave. That it’s not safe for a human.
If only my heart didn’t pound when he was around. If only he wasn’t so kind. If only he wasn’t exactly what I need in my life, I could honor his wish.
Lucky for me, I’m not part of his pack.
I don’t have to obey.
Chapter 1 Look Inside
It amazed me that no matter how much we cleaned Mom’s old yellow VW bug, it always smelled like stale french fries. It was probably because we’d taken one too many trips in this car. We used to pack up and drive across the country every summer.
Back when Dad was alive. Back when things were simpler.
The wheels made this strange thumping sound against the asphalt as Mom drove down the highway, pulling me from my thoughts. A piece of the ceiling fabric tickled my face, and I swatted it away.
So many memories—good and bad—were wrapped up in this car. Even though it was falling apart, I loved this beaten-down, stuck-together-by-duck-tape vehicle.
It was ours.
It was home.
I stuck my hand out the open window and let the cool night air rush over my skin, causing the hair to stand up on my arm. The sweet smell of summer and rain wafted into the car as I stared out at the dark forest that flew by us.
We were on our way to Smoky Hills, TN.
A few weeks ago, Mom accepted the veterinary position in the small town of Smoky Hills. The founder was retiring and wanted to hand the keys to a younger, more energetic vet.
Enter Mom.
So we packed up our small apartment in Waco, TX and hit the road with everything we loved crammed into the trusty VW bug.
Mom tried to make it exciting—according to her we were starting over. A fresh start to our lives.
Ever since Dad died five years ago, we’d been living in the past. And honestly, moving away from all the pitying stares and sympathetic smiles sounded like heaven.
It was hard to move on when everything around you reminded you of the person you lost.
“It will be perfect for us,” Mom said as she reached over to turn down Neil Diamond. She was blaring “Sweet Caroline” and humming as she tapped her fingers on the steering wheel.
I smiled. It was like we were in sync with each other. She knew exactly what I was thinking.
Pulling my hand back into the car, I wrapped my arms around my chest and turned toward her. “Yeah, I know,” I said, drawing one knee up and hugging it.
She gave me a quick grin and then returned her gaze to the road. It was dark now, our headlights illuminating the black road ahead of us. “And Smoky Hills Academy sounds amazing. I mean, their football team is first in state,” Mom said.
I rolled my eyes as I turned my attention back out the window. Mom knew just how to get me to lose my interest—talk about sports. “Yeah. That’s what I’m excited for.”
Mom chuckled. “Hey, fresh start. Who knows? Maybe cheerleading is in your future.”
I stared at Mom. Was she serious? I was all legs and no curves. “I think you need boobs to do that,” I said, tightening my arms around my chest. Sure, they were there, but they weren’t, like, there.
Mom shot me a sympathetic smile. “You’re perfect.”
Ugh.
I needed to move the conversation forward. I wiggled in my seat until I was sitting straight. Then I curved my back, stretching my arms out. “I’m just excited to sleep in a bed tonight.” I squinted at the GPS. “How much longer?”
Mom flicked her gaze to the GPS as well. “Ten minutes.” Then she looked at me. “Think you can last?”
I nodded. But before I could speak, I was flung forward. My neck cracked as my head whipped down, narrowly missing the dash.
I groaned as I reached up and rubbed my sore muscles.
“Geez, Mom,” I said as I turned to study her. She had her gaze fixed on the windshield. Why the heck had she stopped so suddenly?
I turned to see a wolf standing in the middle of the road, staring at us.
“Cora, do you see that?” Mom’s voice was low with reverence.
“Yeah,” I said. The wolf was grey and white. It was tall. Bigger than the wolves I’d seen in local zoos. Its ears were perked up, and its head was tilted.
I met the wolf’s gaze, and a shiver raced down my back. Its dark eyes fixed on me. Like it was staring into my soul. Like, he knew he was looking at me. Studying me.
Fear rushed through me as I reached out and quickly rolled up my window. Once it was secure, I pushed my red hair behind my ear as heat flushed my skin. The wolf’s gaze penetrated mine and made me feel raw and embarrassed at the same time. I mean, who has ever felt like that when a wolf stared at them?
Me, apparently.
“It’s like, he’s watching us,” Mom whispered.
The wolf’s ears twitched like he was listening to our conversation.
“Can he hear us?” I asked.
The wolf tipped his nose in my direction. Well, that answered that question.
“Wolves have incredible hearing,” Mom said.
Feeling like my privacy was being violated, I leaned toward her. “Just drive. I’m sure it’ll move.”
Mom glanced over at me. “Cora, come on. It’s a wild animal. I’m sure it’s more scared of us then we are of it.”
Of course. The curse of living with a vet. Every animal was precious, and we were the big, bad humans invading their lands.
This was a fight I couldn’t win, so I leaned back in my seat as Mom continued to watch the wolf. It didn’t seem like it was in any hurry to move on. Instead, he leaned down and sniffed the road.
Then, he began walking toward us. He sniffed the car as he made his way around to my door. I pushed away from the window as his nose appeared. He sniffed the window and then rose up on all fours to stare at me.
I yelped, practically jumping into Mom’s seat. She, of course, thought this was glorious and had her phone out, taking pictures.
“This is amazing,” she exclaimed.
“It is not,” I hissed, trying to stare at the animal. Maybe if I looked threatening enough, he’d leave.
“It’s like he’s not even scared of you,” Mom chuckled.
“Great.” Mom didn’t think I was threatening enough to scare off an animal.
His breath shot streams of fog across my window as he stared in at me.
“How do we get it to go away?” I asked.
Mom shrugged. “He’ll leave when he wants to. Besides, when will this ever happen again? I mean, it’s a real, live animal. Enjoy this.”
I shook my head. “Nope. Mom, come on. This isn’t normal.” I raised my hand and tried to shoo it away. It just cocked its head as it continued to stare at me.
“Well, it’s not like it’s densely populated here. I’m sure it’s not used to humans.” Mom snapped another picture.
Suddenly, the wolf bared its teeth, and a deep growl sounded in his throat. It startled me, and I jumped a few inches in the air.
The wolf leaned its head back and let out a deep, throaty howl.
A few seconds later, the same deep howl sounded from the woods. Followed by two, then three.
“Mom, he’s calling more,” I whispered, reaching out to grab her arm.
But Mom wasn’t worried. Instead, she was gleefully readying her camera.
Bright yellow eyes could be seen in the foliage next to us. The wolf in the road had dropped back down to all fours and was facing the creatures that were sheltered by the forest.
He leaned his head back and howled again. Then he tore off across the road, followed by three more wolves. They were different colors. Some lighter, some darker. There was one large one, and the other two were definitely smaller.
In a matter of moments, the entire pack was gone.
I sat there, my heart hammering in my chest.
Mom was chattering on about how incredible it was and how it was exactly what she’d needed. This move was exactly the fresh start she’d been claiming it would be.
I stared at her, trying to figure out how almost getting attacked by a wolf pack was exactly what she needed. But if she saw the question in my gaze, she didn’t address it.
Instead, she pressed on the gas, and we began making our way down the highway again.
“That was amazing,” Mom said.
“Yeah. Great.” I turned my gaze out the window to stare at the trees that whipped past. What else lurked in these woods?
“I mean it, Cora. This is a once in a lifetime experience.”
I turned to shoot her an annoyed look. “I think I would have been just fine living my whole life and never having a wolf stare me down.”
Mom shrugged as the sign for Smoky Hills, population 4,000, came into view. “It wasn’t just any wolf.”
I snorted. “It is a werewolf?” I asked.
Mom laughed. “No. Werewolves don’t exist.”
Good. At least Mom hadn’t completely lost her mind.
Lights shone through the dark as we drove further into Smoky Hills. I could make out a few streetlights and buildings lining each side of the road.
My stomach growled when I saw the sign for Jordan’s Diner. Mom seemed to have the same thought as she flipped on the turn signal and pulled into the parking lot. She turned the engine off and slipped the keys from the ignition.
I moved to grab the handle, but Mom’s hand stopped me.
I turned to see her study me. She had a serious look on her face.
“I’m excited because I think…” Her voice drifted off as her gaze turned hazy.
“Mom?” I asked. She was scaring me. Why was she acting like this?
She blinked a few times and shot me a smile. She cleared her throat. “I’m excited because I think we saw the alpha.”
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The Quarterback Synopsis
He thought he knew what he wanted.
Turns out, all he wanted was her.
Collette
I’d kill to be the kind of dancer my mom wants me to be, but it’s just not in the cards. I’m sick of dieting. I'll never fit into the perfect ballerina mold and I’m tired of wishing that I could.
I’m over it. I’m done trying.
I’m perfectly content to dance alone in the dark while the rest of the school is sleeping.
Ethan
Coach says our football team needs discipline. That dancing alongside a bunch of prissy prima donnas is how we’ll learn our lesson.
Only problem?
I don’t have time for ballet. Not when I’m busting my butt to be the star quarterback, the dutiful son, and the perfect student…all so I can achieve my father’s dream.
When I meet Collette, I can’t help but take notice. She’s a vision of grace and beauty all wrapped up in snark and sass. And she helps me see that my own dreams aren’t so stupid after all.
I just wish she could see that in herself. But when I try to bring her out into the light, I can feel her slipping away. Her walls are built up so high, I fear they’ll never come down. I want to love her like she deserves—but that’s just the problem.
She doesn’t believe she deserves it.
Chapter 1 Look Inside
When Coach Reynolds told me what he’d planned as punishment for my teammates, I’d thought he was joking. The entire starting lineup for the Oakwood High football team taking ballet lessons? He couldn’t be serious.
I stared up at the tall gray building that took up half a block in the nice area of town, my buddies piling out of the cars that had pulled up behind me. Academie de Ballet was etched in big, bold letters over the arched entryway at the top of a set of stairs.
Coach had not been kidding. I probably should have known he was serious. In the three years I’d been playing for him, the old grouch had never once cracked a joke. Still, I’d thought he’d calm down. I figured he’d come to see reason…
“Dude, the old man has lost it.” Cooper Jenkins, our wide receiver, came up to stand beside me. At six feet he was the same height as me, but he was roughly twice the width and that was all muscle. The guy lived and breathed the weight room. Watching Cooper prance around on tiptoe amidst a bunch of petite girls was the one thing that might make this punishment almost seem bearable.
Almost.
“Can’t you talk to him?” Cooper said. “The old man loves you.”
“Yeah, Ethan,” Ryan said from behind me. “You’re Coach’s favorite little pet. If anyone can make him see reason, it’s you.” Despite his mockery, Ryan was one of my best friends. He came to stand on my other side, crossing his arms as he too took in the sight of our prison for the next three months.
Until the end of the semester, that’s what Coach had said when he’d spelled out our punishment in the locker room.
Cooper turned his glare from the building to me. “Talk to him, Ethan.”
“I tried,” I said for the millionth time. They’d been pestering me in the halls all day today, seeing if I could get our coach to change his mind. For the record, they came to me because I was the captain, not because I was coach’s ‘little pet’—whatever that meant.
“Try harder.” Cooper’s voice was as forbidding as his giant body, but I’d been playing ball with him since middle school so I knew better. Underneath all that muscle, he wasn’t all that scary. I mean, he was a little scary, but not out of control. If the coach said dance, the big guy would totally dance.
“Come on, dude,” Ryan said. “You’re the quarterback. You’ve got to have some sway over the old man. Just…threaten to quit the team or something.”
Unlike Cooper, Ryan actually was something of a wild card. He took nothing seriously, least of all football. Good thing he had mad skills as a running back or he’d have been off the team years ago. As it was, Coach threatened to cut him at least once a week.
“I’m not quitting the team.”
“Why not? You don’t need the scholarship money.” And that right there summed up Ryan’s life philosophy to a tee. He didn’t understand why anyone would do anything unless there was some sort of financial gain—or a chance to score with girls. Money and girls, that was pretty much all he seemed to care about. And maybe music, I supposed. He did have a band. But again, I was pretty sure playing guitar and forming a band were just another way to get the money and girls.
Music was really the only thing we had in common—we both played guitar. Sometimes we jammed together, and the rest of the time he just tried his best to annoy the crap out of me.
The rest of the guys were out of their cars and starting to gather around me. For a bunch of alpha jocks, none of them seemed eager to lead at this particular moment. Myself included. I eyed the entrance warily. I’d never been to the ballet, I’d never dated a girl who was into ballet, and I sure as heck never danced ballet myself. I had no idea what the coach had gotten us into. He’d been light on the details, just telling us to show up here after practice today.
Everyone was looking to me to lead the way.
“What would he do if we bailed?” That came from Alex, a linebacker. “I mean, it’s not like Coach can bench all the starters right?”
I shot Alex a sidelong look that made him squirm. “He can and he would if he thought we were blatantly undermining his authority.”
“The guy’s a freakin’ dictator,” Cooper said.
More like a former marine who ran this team like his own personal brigade, but he wasn’t too far off base.
“The guy lives to make us miserable,” Alex said. “It’s like he’s just looking for an excuse to ruin our lives.”
I turned to face Alex. “Maybe you should have thought of that before you threw a party the night before our first game.”
Alex scratched at the back of his head. “It wasn’t supposed to be a rager, it just sort of…got out of control.”
“
Yeah, well, that tends to happen when you invite every person in our school to a house party with no parents and a full keg.”
“Okay, Mom,” Ryan said, clapping a hand on my shoulder. “What’s done is done, right?”
I shrugged him off. “Right.” I tried not to be resentful, I really did. But this was not the first time I found myself thinking how unfair it was that I was paying for their mistake. I’d been the only guy on the team with enough foresight to leave before things got crazy.
The others? They’d been caught when the cops showed up, and while the cops let them off with a warning, our coach…well, he’d sent us here.
To our very own personal hell.
“Let’s get this over with,” I said.
“That’s the spirit,” Ryan said as I led the way up the stairs to the front doors, the rest of the guys dragging their feet behind me.
“Maybe it won’t be so bad,” I added. “I mean, some pro players take ballet classes, right?”
“It’s supposed to be good for flexibility,” Cooper said.
“See? There you go,” I said. “Maybe it’ll be good for us.”
“Couldn’t we have just watched some YouTube videos or something?” Alex said from behind. “Do we really have to take classes?”
Ryan shook his head. “Have I taught you fools nothing?” He turned at the top of the steps to face the others, like he was about to make a speech. “Ballet classes are usually filled with girls, right? The way I see it, the coach did us a favor sending us here. Think of it like a field trip to hottie heaven.”
I stared at him until he looked over. “What?”
I shook my head and opened the glass door leading to a sterile foyer. It smelled like cleaning products and I had to blink as my eyes adjusted to the dim lighting. I heard distant music and looked to my right to see a glass-lined wall so anyone in the entranceway could watch the dance class in action on the other side. The guys kept filing in behind me but I paused for a second at the sight of ten leotard-clad girls bending and stretching and—
Oof!
I’d taken a step forward to get out of the doorway and ended up tripping over something in my path. “Hey, watch it!” a girl’s voice shouted.
No, not something.
Someone.
“I’m sorry,” I said as I disentangled my arms and legs from the girl who was now sprawled out on the ground. I got a flash of an oversized black hoodie and long brown curls as I reached out to help her up. She turned to face me.
Ouch! She smacked my hands away as I tried to reach for her to help her up.
“I’m fine,” she mumbled.
“Way to go, Ethan, taking out one of the dancers before we’ve even begun,” one of the guys joked.
When we were both standing, she turned to face me with her hands on her hips and I fought the urge to grin. She was just so…little. And cute. Especially with that fierce scowl she wore like she was a little warrior about to do battle. “Can I help you?” she asked, though there was nothing hospitable about her tone.
“Yeah, uh sorry,” I said, gesturing to the ground where we’d tumbled. “I didn’t see you there.”
She stared at me.
“I’m sorry,” I tried again. “I really didn’t see you.”
“Nah, it was my bad,” she said evenly, looking down at her hoodie and T-shirt. I followed her gaze and felt like the wind had been knocked out of me. It took all of my will power not to leer at the sight of her obvious yet hidden curves and rounded hips. “I must have forgotten to take off my cloak of invisibility,” she finished.
Ryan choked on a laugh next to me as I dragged my gaze back up to see her watching me steadily, her eyes fathomless and unreadable.
I couldn’t tell if she was teasing or really annoyed so I opted to ignore that comment altogether. “We’re here for a, uh…ballet lesson?” Oh man, that sounded even lamer when I said it aloud. I looked around, distinctly uncomfortable under her watchful stare. “Is this the right place?”
She stared at me for another heartbeat, her lips twitching a bit before that placid, unreadable mask was back in place. “For ballet lessons?” She moved her head slowly and pointedly to the left where the dance class was still in session. Then she looked up at a large sign above a bulletin board announcing the ballet class schedule. When she looked back at me her big blue eyes were wide with feigned innocence. “Nope, no dance classes here. This is the post office.” She shrugged. “Sorry.”
Ryan was the only one to laugh. “Ethan, I think I love this girl.”
‘This girl’ glanced over at Ryan and I could have sworn I saw a little smile.
What the…? So Ryan got a smile, and all I got was mocked? I tried not to feel jealous. I mean, obviously I wasn’t jealous. Why would I be jealous? I didn’t even know this weird little girl.
“Look, if you could just tell us where we’re supposed to be—”
The door to the classroom opened behind me. “What are these guys doing here?” a girl’s voice asked. Suddenly our little band of brothers was surrounded by the leotard-clad girls we’d been watching through the glass. They were eyeing us with curiosity as they headed over to the girl in the hoodie, whose gaze hadn’t veered away from me.
“I don’t know,” hoodie girl said. “They say they’re here for a class.”
“We are,” I said, not loving the way she said ‘they say’ like we were suspect or something.
“Really.” A pretty, tall blonde stopped beside the tiny warrior in the hoodie, turning in our direction with a sniff. “The most prestigious ballet academy in the Northeast, and we’re now opening enrollment to…these people?” Her gaze moved over the lot of us and she pursed her lips when her gaze landed on Ryan beside me with his too-long hair and ripped jeans.
“These people,” Ryan repeated softly. Turning to me, he said louder, “You were right. Ballet dancers are a bunch of stuck-up—”
“I didn’t say that,” I interrupted, my eyes seeking out the little brunette. “I never said that.”
“Why not?” the brunette said. “It’s true.”
Ryan laughed and I couldn’t stop a grin, especially when the snooty blonde rolled her eyes in irritation. “Ugh, Collette.” The blonde turned to her with a sigh. “Don’t encourage them.”
So mystery girl’s name was Collette. I mentally filed that away.
One of the other girls, shorter but no less skinny than the rail-thin blonde, stood on the other side of Collette, partially hiding behind her as she eyed us. Her eyes lit on Cooper and her plain features turned pretty when she smiled. “Hi, Cooper.”
We all turned to Cooper, whose expression hadn’t changed. It rarely did. He was glowering at the timid, petite girl with the bun that looked painfully tight.
“You know him, Eve?” Collette asked.
Before Eve could respond the blonde turned to Collette. “Better question, how do you know them and why did you let them in?”
I took a step forward, ready to stand up for Collette, but I should have known she didn’t need my help. “I didn’t let them in. They walked in. This isn’t a high-security fortress, it’s a school. And as for how I know them…” She shot me a look. “I don’t. One of them just ran me over.”
I let out a huff of exasperated amusement. “I told you, I didn’t see you there.”
She opened her mouth to respond but the blonde beat her to it. “How could you miss her?”
As if her taunting tone weren’t enough of a clue, I heard some of the girls beside us giggle. I looked over to see Collette hugging the hoodie tighter around herself, a splash of color in her cheeks.
“What are you guys doing here?” The question came from one of the girls to my left.
Before I got a chance to explain, a woman’s voice came from behind us. “I invited them.”
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The Quarterback Alpha Synopsis
#1 in Football #1 in Wolf Shifters
Cora
Mom and I just needed a place to start over. Somewhere to move on from the past that haunts us.Smoky Hills, Tennessee seemed to be exactly what we needed.Here, I could be invisible.
That is, until quarterback Liam Bronson decides I’m important.
Even though there are plenty of girls who would love his attention, he doesn’t seem to care. The way he stares at me is like I’m the only one that matters, even in a room full of people.
Like he chose me.
Then I discover his secret. The animal that lives inside of him. He tells me to leave. That it’s not safe for a human.
If only my heart didn’t pound when he was around. If only he wasn’t so kind. If only he wasn’t exactly what I need in my life, I could honor his wish.
Lucky for me, I’m not part of his pack.
I don’t have to obey.
Chapter 1 Look Inside
It amazed me that no matter how much we cleaned Mom’s old yellow VW bug, it always smelled like stale french fries. It was probably because we’d taken one too many trips in this car. We used to pack up and drive across the country every summer.
Back when Dad was alive. Back when things were simpler.
The wheels made this strange thumping sound against the asphalt as Mom drove down the highway, pulling me from my thoughts. A piece of the ceiling fabric tickled my face, and I swatted it away.
So many memories—good and bad—were wrapped up in this car. Even though it was falling apart, I loved this beaten-down, stuck-together-by-duck-tape vehicle.
It was ours.
It was home.
I stuck my hand out the open window and let the cool night air rush over my skin, causing the hair to stand up on my arm. The sweet smell of summer and rain wafted into the car as I stared out at the dark forest that flew by us.
We were on our way to Smoky Hills, TN.
A few weeks ago, Mom accepted the veterinary position in the small town of Smoky Hills. The founder was retiring and wanted to hand the keys to a younger, more energetic vet.
Enter Mom.
So we packed up our small apartment in Waco, TX and hit the road with everything we loved crammed into the trusty VW bug.
Mom tried to make it exciting—according to her we were starting over. A fresh start to our lives.
Ever since Dad died five years ago, we’d been living in the past. And honestly, moving away from all the pitying stares and sympathetic smiles sounded like heaven.
It was hard to move on when everything around you reminded you of the person you lost.
“It will be perfect for us,” Mom said as she reached over to turn down Neil Diamond. She was blaring “Sweet Caroline” and humming as she tapped her fingers on the steering wheel.
I smiled. It was like we were in sync with each other. She knew exactly what I was thinking.
Pulling my hand back into the car, I wrapped my arms around my chest and turned toward her. “Yeah, I know,” I said, drawing one knee up and hugging it.
She gave me a quick grin and then returned her gaze to the road. It was dark now, our headlights illuminating the black road ahead of us. “And Smoky Hills Academy sounds amazing. I mean, their football team is first in state,” Mom said.
I rolled my eyes as I turned my attention back out the window. Mom knew just how to get me to lose my interest—talk about sports. “Yeah. That’s what I’m excited for.”
Mom chuckled. “Hey, fresh start. Who knows? Maybe cheerleading is in your future.”
I stared at Mom. Was she serious? I was all legs and no curves. “I think you need boobs to do that,” I said, tightening my arms around my chest. Sure, they were there, but they weren’t, like, there.
Mom shot me a sympathetic smile. “You’re perfect.”
Ugh.
I needed to move the conversation forward. I wiggled in my seat until I was sitting straight. Then I curved my back, stretching my arms out. “I’m just excited to sleep in a bed tonight.” I squinted at the GPS. “How much longer?”
Mom flicked her gaze to the GPS as well. “Ten minutes.” Then she looked at me. “Think you can last?”
I nodded. But before I could speak, I was flung forward. My neck cracked as my head whipped down, narrowly missing the dash.
I groaned as I reached up and rubbed my sore muscles.
“Geez, Mom,” I said as I turned to study her. She had her gaze fixed on the windshield. Why the heck had she stopped so suddenly?
I turned to see a wolf standing in the middle of the road, staring at us.
“Cora, do you see that?” Mom’s voice was low with reverence.
“Yeah,” I said. The wolf was grey and white. It was tall. Bigger than the wolves I’d seen in local zoos. Its ears were perked up, and its head was tilted.
I met the wolf’s gaze, and a shiver raced down my back. Its dark eyes fixed on me. Like it was staring into my soul. Like, he knew he was looking at me. Studying me.
Fear rushed through me as I reached out and quickly rolled up my window. Once it was secure, I pushed my red hair behind my ear as heat flushed my skin. The wolf’s gaze penetrated mine and made me feel raw and embarrassed at the same time. I mean, who has ever felt like that when a wolf stared at them?
Me, apparently.
“It’s like, he’s watching us,” Mom whispered.
The wolf’s ears twitched like he was listening to our conversation.
“Can he hear us?” I asked.
The wolf tipped his nose in my direction. Well, that answered that question.
“Wolves have incredible hearing,” Mom said.
Feeling like my privacy was being violated, I leaned toward her. “Just drive. I’m sure it’ll move.”
Mom glanced over at me. “Cora, come on. It’s a wild animal. I’m sure it’s more scared of us then we are of it.”
Of course. The curse of living with a vet. Every animal was precious, and we were the big, bad humans invading their lands.
This was a fight I couldn’t win, so I leaned back in my seat as Mom continued to watch the wolf. It didn’t seem like it was in any hurry to move on. Instead, he leaned down and sniffed the road.
Then, he began walking toward us. He sniffed the car as he made his way around to my door. I pushed away from the window as his nose appeared. He sniffed the window and then rose up on all fours to stare at me.
I yelped, practically jumping into Mom’s seat. She, of course, thought this was glorious and had her phone out, taking pictures.
“This is amazing,” she exclaimed.
“It is not,” I hissed, trying to stare at the animal. Maybe if I looked threatening enough, he’d leave.
“It’s like he’s not even scared of you,” Mom chuckled.
“Great.” Mom didn’t think I was threatening enough to scare off an animal.
His breath shot streams of fog across my window as he stared in at me.
“How do we get it to go away?” I asked.
Mom shrugged. “He’ll leave when he wants to. Besides, when will this ever happen again? I mean, it’s a real, live animal. Enjoy this.”
I shook my head. “Nope. Mom, come on. This isn’t normal.” I raised my hand and tried to shoo it away. It just cocked its head as it continued to stare at me.
“Well, it’s not like it’s densely populated here. I’m sure it’s not used to humans.” Mom snapped another picture.
Suddenly, the wolf bared its teeth, and a deep growl sounded in his throat. It startled me, and I jumped a few inches in the air.
The wolf leaned its head back and let out a deep, throaty howl.
A few seconds later, the same deep howl sounded from the woods. Followed by two, then three.
“Mom, he’s calling more,” I whispered, reaching out to grab her arm.
But Mom wasn’t worried. Instead, she was gleefully readying her camera.
Bright yellow eyes could be seen in the foliage next to us. The wolf in the road had dropped back down to all fours and was facing the creatures that were sheltered by the forest.
He leaned his head back and howled again. Then he tore off across the road, followed by three more wolves. They were different colors. Some lighter, some darker. There was one large one, and the other two were definitely smaller.
In a matter of moments, the entire pack was gone.
I sat there, my heart hammering in my chest.
Mom was chattering on about how incredible it was and how it was exactly what she’d needed. This move was exactly the fresh start she’d been claiming it would be.
I stared at her, trying to figure out how almost getting attacked by a wolf pack was exactly what she needed. But if she saw the question in my gaze, she didn’t address it.
Instead, she pressed on the gas, and we began making our way down the highway again.
“That was amazing,” Mom said.
“Yeah. Great.” I turned my gaze out the window to stare at the trees that whipped past. What else lurked in these woods?
“I mean it, Cora. This is a once in a lifetime experience.”
I turned to shoot her an annoyed look. “I think I would have been just fine living my whole life and never having a wolf stare me down.”
Mom shrugged as the sign for Smoky Hills, population 4,000, came into view. “It wasn’t just any wolf.”
I snorted. “It is a werewolf?” I asked.
Mom laughed. “No. Werewolves don’t exist.”
Good. At least Mom hadn’t completely lost her mind.
Lights shone through the dark as we drove further into Smoky Hills. I could make out a few streetlights and buildings lining each side of the road.
My stomach growled when I saw the sign for Jordan’s Diner. Mom seemed to have the same thought as she flipped on the turn signal and pulled into the parking lot. She turned the engine off and slipped the keys from the ignition.
I moved to grab the handle, but Mom’s hand stopped me.
I turned to see her study me. She had a serious look on her face.
“I’m excited because I think…” Her voice drifted off as her gaze turned hazy.
“Mom?” I asked. She was scaring me. Why was she acting like this?
She blinked a few times and shot me a smile. She cleared her throat. “I’m excited because I think we saw the alpha.”
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