A
Wolf's Treasure
The
Kinkaid Werewolves Book 5
by
L.E. Wilson
Genre:
Adult Paranormal Romance
She's
the treasure he never thought he'd findā¦
Shifter
Duncan Kincaid enjoys dancing. Country dancing to be precise. After
all, the lasses love nothing more than a man who can swing them
around a dance floor. And that's the other thing Duncan loves- the
lasses. A wink and a smile is all it takes to have a partner for the
night, until a Faerie with dark curls and brazen curves throws him
off his game and shakes him to his core.
He's
a danger to her life, and a risk she's willing to take.
With
his I-know-what-you-look-like-naked green eyes, sexy brogue, and
cocky grin, Duncan is the type of wolf Ryanne wouldn't normally waste
her time with for more than a night. But underneath the playful
exterior, she senses a haunting sadness, one that calls to her own
dark soul and distracts her from her purpose.
The
murder will just have to wait.
Excerpt 1:
Duncan tried to slow his racing heart, but it was impossible
to do with his mysterious lass sitting right beside him.
Right there beside him.
In his Jeep.
Blethering on with him about the wolves who had come into the
club and ruined his night.
Not that it hadnāt already been ruined by the fact that his
mysterious stalker had been about to leave with someone else. A human, for
Christās sake. And one wearing one of those stupid hats.
However, whoever had started the brawl? Aye, heād be thanking
him the next time he saw him. Buy the man a beer. Because of him and his
temper, Duncan had had the perfect opportunity to hold the lass in his arms. To
feel her soft curves and smell her sweet scent.
It was as though fate had intervened to put the two of them
together. Aye, it was fate, and had nothing at all to do with the fact that
heād barreled through fists flying at his face and leapt over tables to get to
her. Luckily, everyone had been too busy either fightinā or fleeinā to pay much
attention.
A quick look in the rearview mirror confirmed the lass was
right. Those three wolves were running full out behind them now, not caring at
all who might see them. Duncan growled low in his throat and she looked over at
him, one eyebrow lifted in question. Gods, but she was bonnie. A braw female,
for sure.
And she was a Faerie. Of the na maithe tribe, if he were to take a guess. Because if she
were anything elseā¦
No. He wouldnāt even think of it.
Heād figured it out the first time heād seen her when sheād
run off with the speed of a vamp. If it wasnāt for the fact that it was day at
the time, he couldnāt have been convinced she wasnāt one. However, vampires
would never be running about in the woods in the middle of the day. Even with
the canopy of the trees, it was too risky. They could be exposed to the sun,
and anything more than a few seconds and theyād be a cloud of ash blowing
through the pines.
And heād known she wasnāt a shifter. He wouldāve scented
another of his kind a mile away out in the open like that. So, that left only
one other thing he knew of that she could be.
And tonight, when he had her wee self in his arms, heād
caught a good whiff of her. She didnāt smell like a wolf, or a vamp. She
smelled like primrose, blooms from his homeland.
And he would bet she tasted just as sweet.
Another growl rose in his throat, this one hungry with lust.
To feel this way again shook him through and through, and he cleared his
throat, trying to disguise the sound before the lass heard.
āTheyāre getting closer,ā she said.
Duncan closed his eyes for a second, letting the sweet tones
of her voice rain over him. āWeāre almost tae thā freeway. They will noā be
able tae keep up with us then.ā
āAre you sure about that?ā
Steel infused his back and he gripped the steering wheel as
he told her, āAye, lass. I will noā let them get tae ye. Dinna fash yerself.ā
āHow are you so certain theyāre after me?ā
At the last minute, Duncan spun the wheel, heading east
instead of north. Heād lead them out to the mountains. If this came down to a
fight, it would be better to be away from his home and out of sight of the
humans, and there would be less traffic this way. āI saw thā way thā leader
latched on to ye at thā club. They had no interest in me at all, and they knew
I was there.ā
āAre you sure about that?ā
āAye, lass. I can smell another wolf thā second he or she
comes into thā room. Miles away sometimes if weāre out in thā open. It would be
thā same for any shifter.ā
āReally? That far?ā
āAye.ā Duncan checked the mirrors and merged onto the
highway. Making his way to the far-left lane, he stomped on the gas.
āWhatās your name, wolf?ā
He opened his mouth to tell her, paused, and only said,
āDuncan. My name is Duncan. Whatās yours?ā
She repeated his name, then told him hers. āRyanne.ā
He felt her eyes on him. Watching him for a reaction.
āRyanne,ā he repeated. āThatās a bonnie name. It suits ye.ā
He felt her visibly relax beside him. It was obvious she
didnāt want him to know a lot about her. But if she was there on some kind of
secret mission, why follow him around? Why expose her presence when she did?
āThey shifted,ā she told him. āTheyāre coming,ā she added a
little louder. āDuncan.ā Facing front, she tightened her seat belt.
āAye, I see them.ā He stomped down on the clutch and shifted
into fifth gear, hitting the gas hard. The fookers were fast, but he knew these
roads. Knew these woods. And he was faster. He had to be. There was no way he
was going to let them get their paws on Ryanne. He didnāt know why they were
after her, but he assumed it was because she was Fae. Even though the war was
over, there was still a lot of packs who hunted them.
He, himself, was still somewhat wary of the forest people.
Although a few of his friends and pack mates had mated with Fae lasses, and
Duncan tried not to treat them any differently than any other, if he were to be
honest with himself, they still struck fear in his bones.
Even the sweet thing sitting beside him.
But that hadnāt stopped his wolf from rushing to her side
when danger arose. And once his beast had made itās mind up about something,
there was no stopping it.
Even if it meant taking on the three who were following
them.
It was a perplexing thing, that the beast inside of him was
so adamant about this particular lass, and it was definitely something to think
about when he had a momentās peace. However, Duncan quickly shoved the thought
aside. He had no time to worry about it at the moment. Right now, he just needed
to get her to safety, and then get back to his pack and tell them what he knew
about these wolves who were invading Cedricās territory without the alphaās
permission.
āI think weāre losing them,ā Ryanne said. The relief she felt
was evident in her tone.
Duncan checked the mirror. Then he checked again. He looked
to either side of the vehicle, then behind them again.
āWhatās wrong?ā
āThereās only two wolves back there,ā he told her. āI dinna
ken where thā third one is.ā Duncan floored the gas pedal. The police could
just add to the chase if they happened to see him.
Ryanne held one hand up the window, shielding her eyes from
any glare from the lights on the dashboard, though he knew she could see as
well as he could in the darkness. Twisting around, she searched behind them,
then leaned across his lap to look out his window, the dark curls pulled on top
of her head softly brushing his jaw.
He inhaled the sweet smell of her.
Fookinā hell.
His insides twisted, and for a few seconds, he completely
forgot where he was and what he was supposed to be doing. But then she was gone
again, back on her own side of the Jeep.
His wolf howled at the loss, pacing restlessly beneath his
skin. Duncan took a deep breath and focused on the dark road ahead of
him.
āWhere did it go?ā she asked him.
āI dinna ken. But this can noā be good.ā
āYou have to lose them. If they catch meā¦ā She let the words
trail away.
He knew well what would happen if they caught her. The Fae
werenāt ones he would ever mess with if there was no need. At least not one on
one. But there were three of those wolves. If he thought he could take them
alone, heād stop the Jeep and shift, but one against three werenāt very good
odds. If he took on one, or even two, that would leave the last one to go after
Ryanne. And it was very possible, in all the confusion of a fight, it would get
its jaws around her wee throat before she could protect herself. āIām tryinā,
lass.ā He glanced over.
She was looking at him with large dark eyes. Eyes full of
worry and something else.
Trust.
āThey will noā get their paws on ye,ā he promised her.
Motioning with his head, he indicated the āoh, shit!ā handles beside her seat
and along the top of her window. āHang on, Ryanne. Weāre aboot tae go off
road.ā
Checking behind them, he saw he was finally gaining ground,
although there was still no sign of the third wolf. Of course, it didnāt mean
anything. It couldāve broken off from the others in an attempt to cut them off
further ahead.
Or maybe heād gotten taken out by one of the big trucks, the
only other vehicles on this dark highway this late at night. It wasnāt likely,
but one could hope.
Perhaps if they fought togetherā¦
No, he couldnāt risk it.
He wouldnāt take the chance of getting hurt, or even killed,
and leaving his female defenseless.
Duncan frowned. Where the fook had that come from? The lass
wasnāt his.
Did he want her to be?
Och. Now was not the time to be thinking about such a matter.
Their only chance was to get out of their sight and lose them, then circle back
and get to his pack.
He watched the landscape as they sped down the highway. The
turn he was looking for would be coming up very soon. If he could get around
it, their pursuers would lose sight of them, and there was a turnoff on the
left. An old, dirt road that led up the mountain, completely unnoticeable if
you didnāt know it was there, half covered with overhanging branches and brush
covering the tire tracks. The highway began to weave in and out through the
mountains here. With any luck, they could disappear into the trees and be gone
by the time the wolves chasing them came around the corner.
āHang on,ā he told his passenger. āThe turn off is just
ahead.ā
Ryanne gripped the handles, leaning her body forward. āI
donāt see anything.ā
āOh, itās there,ā he told her. āJust a little ways moreā¦ā He
checked the mirror as they started around the curve. The wolves disappeared
from his line of his sight just as heād hoped. Cutting off the headlights, he
wrenched the steering wheel to the left, cut across the grassy medianājust
missing an oncoming truckāand drove straight into the trees.
Downshifting into low gear, Duncan crawled up the side of the
mountain, praying to all the gods the big engine of that truck would hide the
noise of the Jeep. He didnāt worry about them seeing him. His Vina was painted
the perfect color green to blend in with the forest around them, just like the
lady she was named after.
Ryanne laughed as they bumped along up the mountain, soft,
throaty notes that were music to his ears, and despite the danger they were in,
he couldnāt help a small smile in return.
About a mile or so up, he pulled off the trail, wedging the
Jeep between some thick pine trees, and cut the engine.
āWhat are we doing?ā Ryanne asked.
āWeāre waiting,ā he told her. āIf I keep going, thereās a
verra good chance theyāll double back and hear us. So, weāll sit. And weāll
wait. And stay inside where they will noā scent either oā us.ā
āFor how long?ā She sounded almost disappointed that the
excitement was over.
āAs long as it takes, lass. Sometimes, although it may noā be
as exciting, patience is thā best practice.ā
She didnāt look convinced, but she didnāt argue anymore.
Sighing loudly, she stared out the front windshield. Duncan did the same,
cracking his window a bit, but there was no sign of the strange wolves by
sight, sound, or scent. Only the pungent aroma of the pine trees, wet from the
misty rain.
Now that they were out of danger, at least for the moment,
Duncan found he could think of nothing at all to say. His usual sugary tongue
felt like it was coated in tar, heavy with bland and boring words, just like
the one other time heād tried to speak to her. It was a predicament, and he
didnāt know what to do about it. Talking to females was not a problem heād ever
had before. So much so, he was often accused of being a flirt.
And maybe he was. Though most of the time, he did it on
purpose just to rile up their males. And other times, he did it just to prove
that he couldā¦
He gave himself a mental shake. What had he been thinking
about?
Oh, aye. The lass beside him. She was a mystery. But more
than that, there was something unique about her. He found himself craving her
company at odd moments, and yet he could barely utter a word when he was
finally near her. He felt like a right eejit,
hoping every day to see her, and then not knowing how to act when he did.
āSo, what pack are you from?ā she asked, pulling him from his
contemplations.
Her question surprised him. āYe dinna ken?ā When she shook
her head, he told her, āIām part oā thā Pacific Northwest pack.ā He paused, but
only briefly, because for some reason he could only say nothing at all or
blather on like he didnāt have an ounce of sense in his head when he was around
her. āI live here. Iām supposed tae be here. Iām noāā¦ā he stumbled to a halt.
Och. Why could he not seem to form a coherent thought? It was better when the
wolves were chasing them. At least then, his own wolfish instincts had taken
over and kept him focused.
For the most part.
āDoes it hurt?ā
He frowned, wondering if she could read his thoughts. Aye, it
did hurt. Verra bad. He was not the stumbling fool she must think him to be.
And honestly, he didnāt know if his ego could take the beating.
āWhen you shift. Does it hurt?ā
Oh. That. āAye, it hurts.ā
āCan you stop it?ā
āStop it from hurting?ā
āNo. Stop the shift. Can you stop it from happening?ā
Duncan didnāt see the harm in telling her. āSometimes.
Sometimes noā.ā
āLike when youāre angry?ā
āAye, if my temper gets thā best oā me.ā
āCan you shift at will? Or do you have to be mad or
something?ā
He tried to guess the reasoning behind her questions. āIf yer
worried whether I can take care oā ye if those other shifters show up, dinna
fash yerself. Me and my wolf will do what needs tae be done, and all ye will
need tae do is run thā way I seen ye do before.ā
Something hit the windshield, and she jumped.
āItās just a pinecone, lass. Knocked down by the rain.ā
She watched drops hit the windshield, nodding. But he could
hear her heart pounding and her breath whooshing in and out of her lungs at a
rapid rate. Tentatively, he reached over and placed his hand over hers, still
tight on the hand grip. āRyanne, I swear tae ye, I will noā let them harm ye. I
will protect ye with my life if thā need arises.ā
Her head tilted, little lines furrowing the smooth skin
between her eyebrows. āWhy would you do that?ā
Why, indeed? He didnāt know, but he felt it with certainty
all the way down to his bones. āYerā¦ā He started to say something along the
lines of her being a female, and therefore needing his protection. But then he
stopped. That wasnāt right. She didnāt need his protection. He knew firsthand
what a Fae lass was capable of. Although three wolves at once would be a bit
much, she could easily outrun them if she had a head start.
Duncan thought about that for a minute.
Heat crept up his neck to burn his cheeks. Had she been
playing with him? Allowing him to play the big, strong male and lead her to
safety? āI dinna ken,ā he ground out. āYe obviously dinna need my help.ā
She gave him a funny look. āNo, I probably didnāt. But it was
nice to have it anyway.ā
If his face burned before, now it was so hot he raised a hand
to touch the skin of his cheek, just to check if it was melting from the bone.
Heād acted a fool. Involving himself in something he shouldnāt have, when what
he shouldāve been doing was hightailing it out of the club and reporting back
to Cedric.
Conflict rumbled deep in his chest, and he rubbed the center
of it. But what if something had happened to the lass? What if she wasnāt able
to get around the humans? What if sheād been seen as the supernatural she is?
Or worse, what if the wolves had caught her before she got out? She could be
lying in a ditch on the side of the road, the life seeping out of herā¦
Och. He was turning into his maw!
The gods rest her soul.
āDuncan.ā
He pulled himself from his thoughts. It was hard to look at
her, feeling foolish as he was, but somehow, he managed. āAye?ā
The smile that lit her face was tiny and sweet and stopped
his heart completely. āThank you. For helping me get out of the club and to
safety.ā
Words tumbled around on his tongue, but his throat closed and
he was unable to utter any of them. So, instead, he just nodded.
āDo you scent those wolves? Are they anywhere near us?ā
He turned his nose to the window and breathed deep. Turning
back to her, he shook his head.
She unbuckled her seat belt. Leaning toward him, she caught
his eyes. āItās very, very important you tell no one about me. No one,ā she
emphasized. āNot even your alpha. Okay?ā
Overcome by the sight and scent and warmth of her so close to
him, Duncan nodded. āAye, lass. No one will know ye were here.ā
āThank you,ā she whispered. Then she pressed a kiss to his
still-burning cheek. Before he could regain the ability to do more than blink
at her, she opened the door and hopped out into the rain.
Duncan jumped out his side and ran around the front of the
Jeep. To do what? Say something to make her stay? To see if he would ever see
her again? But she had left him as she had before, running away into the forest
faster than his eye could track her. The rain that kept them hidden from the
wolves also washing away her scent.
Arrows tore through his chest, until he was near doubled over
from the loss.
He found his keys and unlocked his door. āSo, where are we
goinā, lass?ā When she didnāt respond, he turned to her, keys dangling from his
fingers.
She was staring at him strangely.
āWhaā?ā he asked.
Her eyes narrowed in on his mouth. āDuncan?ā
āAye?ā
āWhy have you never tried to kiss me?ā
He looked at her perfect, bonnie lips and his breath caught
in his lungs. Och. He wanted to. The lass had no idea how much he wanted to.
Butā¦āItās noā that I dinna want tae.ā
āAre you afraid of me?ā
āNo,ā he answered immediately. But the word tripped on his
tongue. āNo,ā he told her more forcefully. āI am noā.ā
She stepped closer, and Duncan forced himself to hold his
ground. He wasnāt afraid of a wee Faerie lass.
āI want to kiss you,ā she said.
Before he could think of an argument as to why they shouldnāt
do this, Duncan found himself with his back pressed against the side of his
Jeep. Soft, womanly curves held him prisoner better than any steel bars ever
could, and he knew, in that moment, how his mated brothers had never stood a
chance against a Fae lass.
Staring down at her, he tried again to come up with a good
reason as to why they shouldnāt do this even though his heart was pounding near
out of his chest and the air was having a hell of a time getting into his
lungs. But all he could manage was, āI can noā, Ryanne.ā The words were little
more than a whisper.
āI think you can, wolf.ā
He gritted his teeth and shook his head back and forth.
She nodded hers. Then she put her hands behind his neck and
pulled his head down until they were eye to eye. āI need to get you out of my
system,ā she whispered, so close he felt her words against his mouth more than
heard them. āYouāre distracting me from killing my father.ā
He had no time to absorb what sheād just said, for then her
lips were pressed to his, moving against his mouth insistently. Duncan growled
low in his throat as her tongue swept in to tangle with his, and his fingers
dug into the hard sides of the vehicle.
He ached to hold her. Ached all the way down to his soul. Ached
to wrap his arms around her and pull her in so tight neither of them would know
where one stopped and the other began. And by the way she was biting at his
lips and digging her fingers into the back of his neck, she wanted the same.
But he couldnāt do it. It would be nothing but torture for him to hold her,
knowing thatās all he would ever be able to do.
Instead, he forced himself to turn his head, breaking the
kiss, and then, unable to stand even that much distance between them, pressed
his cheek against hers. He fought to get his breathing under control enough so
he was able to speak. āI can noā do this, lass,ā he whispered. āPlease do noā
force me tae. Ye will break me like nothing else.ā And this was something he
knew in his bones, though he could not have said how.
She pulled away, her wee hands letting up just enough that
she could look into his face. But Duncan kept his eyes downcast. He couldnāt
look at her. Heat suffused his face as his muscles began to tremble with the
urge to run. Run away from this female who made him wish so desperately for
things he couldnāt have.
āDuncanā¦ā
āPlease dinna make me confess things tae ye, Ryanne. I could
noā stand it if ye looked upon me as any less oā a male.ā He clenched his jaw
so hard his teeth ached and fought to swallow around the lump in his throat,
fighting the surge of loneliness that assailed him as she pulled away.
Loneliness he had no business feeling.
He stayed as he was for long seconds, muscles tense, fighting
his own cowardice. He wanted to jump into the Jeep and drive away. Run as far
as he could.
But he would not, could not, leave her here like that.
Finally, she said, āI would appreciate a ride, if the offer
is there.ā
He exhaled long and slow. āAye,ā he said, sadly. āOā course
it is.ā
āOkay. Thank you.ā But she stayed where she was. āDuncanā¦ā
He squeezed his eyes shut, the pain like a clamp around his
chest. āPlease, Ryanne. Do noā. I beg oā ye.ā
A few seconds later, he heard her boots walking away from him
as she went to the other side of the Jeep. He tried to inhale, to take a
breath, but the loss of her was like ripping the skin from his body.
Twisting his head to either side until he felt the bones pop
in his neck and his wolf settle down again, he shot a look around the lot, but
thankfully it was empty.
One hand on the door handle, he took a shaky breath. Then he
yanked open the door and climbed in.
and Ohhhh but am I glad I did.
One minute everything was flowing along and the next we were being tossed
about in a whirlwind of twisted suspense
I love š a good PNR especially when the series is built around a solid story line as this one is.
I was totally captivated by Duncan's sexy drawl (lawd a good Scottish man gets me every time)
and his sense of self was balanced - he enjoyed good conversation, making a woman feel special (there is a story behind that but you are going to have to read it yourself).
And the man can dance and four-wheel and...
You get the idea š¤.
He wasn't perfect mind you. He let past prejudices cloud his judgment occasionally
but I'm giving him a pass those few times - circumstances and all that.
Rayanne is the feisty overly curious female that seems to have taken an interest in him
or she just may be stalking him. Who knows?
When their paths finally intercept they find themselves not only battling the pull toward the other
but also trying to stay one step ahead of a nefarious enemy.
One who wants one-party annihilated and the other broken bent to their will.
These two together š
Duncan has some trauma from the war that Rayanne triggers memories of.
I may have shed a tear during this scene. He is so conflicted and she is so patient.
Can two opposing sides find a balance?
Can they work together to stop the enemy?
I can't wait to start this series from the beginning.
Even though I was missing a lot of facts and past events I still found myself easily connecting
with the cast. I was intrigued by the developing story line enough to want to go back and get the whys and hows.
L.E.
Wilson writes Paranormal Romance starring intense alpha males and the
women who are fearless enough to tame themāfor the most part
anyway. ;) In her novels you'll find smoking hot scenes, a touch of
suspense, a bit of gore, and multifaceted characters, all working
together to combine her lifelong obsession with the paranormal and
her love of romance.
Her
writing career came about the usual way: on a dare from her loving
husband. Little did they know just one casual suggestion would open a
box of worms (or words as the case may be) that would forever change
their lives.
Lattes
and music are a necessary part of her writing process, and sometimes
you'll find her typing away at her favorite Starbucks. She walks two
miles to get there, to make up for all of those coffees.
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#adult #paranormal #romance #books #lewilson
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