Free Read Novels Online Home

Midnight Wolf (A Shifters Unbound Novel) by Jennifer Ashley (7)

CHAPTER SEVEN

“New Orleans.” Angus’s words came out a grunt.

“Oh, that sounds nice,” Tamsin said, pretending her fears weren’t rising. “I can go shopping. And grab some great food. Food’s the best part of Nawlins, isn’t it? While I love walking in Jackson Square and doing the music scene, it’s the food that brings me back.”

Angus glanced at her. “You go there often?”

“If you call twice in my life often, then yes. Last time was with my sister . . .”

The words died as Tamsin’s throat closed. She couldn’t keep up her false chirpiness when she thought about her sister.

Angus glanced at her again. Goddess, he wasn’t going to ask about Glynis, was he?

“What happened to your sister?”

He was. “She died,” Tamsin said in clipped tones. “Shifter hunter. We were trying to avoid being rounded up. Happy now?”

“Why the hell would I be happy hearing that your sister was killed by a fucking Shifter hunter?” he asked with a Lupine snarl. “We all had shit like that happen. No one was spared a tragedy when Shifters were outed.”

“Which is why we need to fight them,” Tamsin said, sitting up straight. “Get ourselves the hell away from Shiftertowns, Collars, rules, Shifter Bureau. You know it.”

Angus sent her a glare. “If you start the freedom-fighting Shifter shit in this car, I’m throwing you out. While it’s still moving.”

“So you don’t want Shifters to be free?” Tamsin asked, eyes wide.

“I didn’t say that. This is where Gavan and I disagreed. His stupid rhetoric and raging only got Shifters killed. Including cubs. Is that what you want?”

“No,” Tamsin had to admit. “But . . .”

Angus swerved toward the side of the road, gunning the car as he did so. “I mean it. I’ll tell Haider you fell out trying to escape. Nothing I could do. Got it?”

Tamsin took one look at the fury in his eyes and realized she’d touched a nerve. A terrible, raw nerve that brought up a lot of pain. She glanced at the side of the road rushing past her and made her decision. She shut up.


• • •

New Orleans, even in the morning, was a busy place, with tourists flocking to Bourbon Street and Jackson Square, hoping to get a glimpse of the stereotype of life in the Big Easy. Were there really voodoo priestesses and scantily clad ladies, Dixieland jazz bands going full blast?

For the tourists there were. Tamsin remembered coming here with Glynis, walking arm in arm through the hot nights, eating fabulous shrimp and crawdad concoctions in every restaurant they entered, dancing to the bands set up in the middle of the street.

That had been a long, long time ago, before Shifters were outed. Tamsin and Glynis had pretended to be human tourists, no shifting, no teeth and claws.

“Except this one time.” Tamsin had started telling Angus the tale as soon as they hit the main streets of the city, as though the stories had taken over her tongue. “A guy and his friends tried to pick us up. Four of them, and two of us. They wouldn’t take no for an answer. So we let them chase us into a dark alley—seriously dark, no lights back there at all. Glynis changed to her bobcat form and just stood there, snarling. One guy had a flashlight, and he shone it over this tough-looking wildcat with yellow eyes and bared teeth. While he and his friends stood there gibbering, I ran behind them and started biting their asses. They were screaming bloody murder. We’d never seen anyone run so fast . . .”

Tamsin trailed off, laughing, but tears gathered in her eyes and threatened to spill out.

After a period of silence, Angus cleared his throat. “I’m sorry about what happened to her.”

Tamsin wiped her eyes. “Hey, it wasn’t your fault. It was Shifter Bureau who gave the authorization for un-Collared Shifters to be hunted down.”

“They killed my brother too,” Angus said quietly.

Tamsin knew that. Gavan Murray had been caught, arrested, interrogated, and executed. His secrets were supposed to have died with him.

She flipped her hand. “There you go.”

Angus growled. “Sweetheart, I’d love it if the whole pack of Bureau agents disappeared, Shiftertowns vanished, and these stupid Collars were off our necks. But we have to be careful. Not long ago, a group of Shifters got so desperate to be free they made a deal with the Fae. You hear me? The Fae. They went from one slavery to another. I tried to help bring these Shifters back home, but most of them didn’t want to come. They wanted to stay in Faerie and be the Fae’s Battle Beasts. How fucked-up is that?”

Tamsin frowned. “Your brother never had anything to do with the Fae.”

“I know.” Angus’s voice rose to a shout. “It’s an example. It’s what can happen.”

“Sure, what can happen if you’re stupid and gullible.”

“Exactly,” Angus snapped. “And who is being taken to Shifter Bureau now instead of puttering at home in her Shiftertown?”

“Under a curfew, wearing a Collar,” Tamsin pointed out.

“Taking care of her family!” Angus said, voice hard. “That’s what we do. We take care of the people we love so when shit happens, if another Shifter-Fae war comes, if Shifter Bureau moves against us, we can be there to defend them.”

Tamsin thought of her mother and flinched. She could be with her now, if she’d meekly taken the Collar and moved with her to her Shiftertown. But then, some clans and families had been split up. There was nothing to say she’d have been housed with her own mother.

“I couldn’t have prevented Glynis’s death,” Tamsin said, “if that’s what you’re accusing me of. Glynis made a run for it when Shifters were being rounded up by Shifter Bureau, interviewed, and ‘processed.’ I wasn’t with her. I couldn’t do a thing.”

“Did I say that?” Another glare. “Quit putting words in my mouth. I meant in general. We stick together. We help each other.”

Tamsin flushed. “You know what? You’re a shit. I’m sorry I kissed you.”

“I’m not.”

Tamsin opened her mouth for more hot words, but they died on her lips. “What?”

“I’m not sorry you kissed me.” Angus stretched, pushing his hands against the steering wheel. “It was a good kiss.”

Tamsin tried to think of a snide retort—she had one for every occasion—but nothing came to her. She could only say faintly, “It was?”

Damn it, she sounded like a Shifter girl just past her Transition, thrilled a hot guy had noticed her.

“Yes.” Angus’s frown returned. “It was.”

Tamsin cleared her throat. “You rate your kisses? It was awesome, pretty good, or meh?” There, that was more like her.

“No.” He resumed his harsh tone. “Take the compliment. Don’t ruin it.”

He had a point. Tamsin clamped her lips shut and looked out the window.

Streets went by, bringing back memories. This town had seen a lot of damage since she’d been here with Glynis, but its spirit hadn’t been broken. They drove slowly through an area where wrought-iron balconies on stucco buildings hung over brick sidewalks.

Clouds had gathered, and it started to rain, a gentle autumn rain. Farther along, they passed parks and gardens open to walkers, the pavement damp and the greens lined with brilliant flowers.

Angus thought Tamsin was a good kisser, did he? A warm shiver went through her.

What is wrong with me? He’s taking me to this Haider guy, who I’m going to kick in the balls and run away from, after Angus’s cub is safe. I’ll never see Angus again. Safer for him if I don’t.

The regret that thought brought unnerved her. With the life Tamsin had chosen, any connections she made could only be temporary ones. She knew that. She should be used to it by now.

But she wasn’t. She was lonely and disheartened, tired of the people she met who shared her outrage turning out to be completely crazy. Tamsin wanted Shifters free but safe, able to live life on their own terms. She didn’t want to overthrow human governments or join up with Fae or slaughter every man in Shifter Bureau. Rough them up a little maybe, because they’d done some horrible things, but that was all.

Mostly she wanted Shifters to have true freedom—to live where they liked, with whom they liked, go where they liked and when.

Many Collared Shifters she’d met had thought her a dreamer. Look, they said, we’re not starving anymore, women don’t die bringing in cubs, those cubs have a better chance of growing up, and we’ll live longer than the humans around us anyway. One day, we’ll have what you want.

Maybe, but she hated seeing cubs given their Collars when they hit their teens, hated that Shiftertown rules kept her mother from seeing her own daughter. Tamsin was convinced that waiting would only give the Bureau time to come up with some new way of keeping Shifters under their thumbs forever.

She pushed the thoughts out of her head. Now was the time to come up with a plan of escape. She’d save idealism for later.

“Where are we meeting the dirtbag Haider?” she asked.

“He wants me to go to the cemetery in the Garden District.” Angus kept his eyes on traffic and turned the giant car through small streets. Tourists were everywhere in spite of the rain, rambling on foot, riding in horse-drawn carriages, even sitting at sidewalk cafés.

“Sounds ominous,” Tamsin said.

“I’m not meeting him there. He told me to go there and call in.”

“Still sounds ominous.”

“I know that,” Angus said sharply.

Tamsin fell silent as Angus navigated the streets. The walkers through the old district stared at their incongruous car as much as they did the lovely, well-preserved houses around them.

How Angus would find a place to park, Tamsin didn’t know, but somehow he managed to squeeze between the front and rear of two cars against the curb.

Beside them was the wall that separated the road from the historic cemetery. Across the tree-lined street were houses, stately and large, with trimmed lawns and gardens.

“Have to wonder how spooky it is to live across from a cemetery,” Tamsin said as Angus turned off the engine. The lack of the engine’s roar didn’t mean silence—plenty of cars rushed past, and people walked up and down the street, while cyclists pedaled by serenely. “Must be creepy at night.”

Angus didn’t answer. He climbed from the car when the traffic was clear and came around to help Tamsin out.

She could run now. She could make a dash for it before Angus took her into the cemetery, blend in with the people strolling through the neighborhood, leap onto a bus, and lose herself in the throng of downtown New Orleans.

From there she could figure out a way to get the hell out of town, out of the state, out of the country if necessary. She could go to Mexico and regroup—Mexico had enough problems with drug cartels and border violence that they didn’t have time to pay attention to stray Shifters. She’d have to dodge the drug runners and human traffickers, true, but one thing at a time.

But if she made a run for it, Shifter Bureau might keep Angus’s cub to coerce him into going after her, or maybe they’d hurt the little guy to punish Angus. Tamsin had seen the terrible fear in Angus’s eyes—he hadn’t been lying about Shifter Bureau holding Ciaran hostage. Why was Haider torturing Angus like this? Retribution for the trouble his brother had caused?

Tamsin made her decision. She’d let Angus take her into the cemetery and call Haider so he could have his cub back. She’d at least wait for that. Once the cub and Angus were gone, then she’d get away and hope the backup Angus promised appeared. Maybe he’d talked Zander into helping her—the thought made her spirits rise.

As they walked through a gate that stood half open, the noise of the street traffic died behind them.

The main path was lined with small stone buildings, their facades decorated with pediments, some curved, some triangular. Plaques adorned the walls with faded names and dates, or words about death and finality. Some of the tombs were in disrepair, some deliberately damaged. She shuddered. Who would be weird enough to vandalize a tomb?

Tamsin shared the Shifter wariness of burying the dead, and sensed the ghosts that lingered here, the chill of souls left too close to their bones.

“Give me a Guardian anytime,” she said in a low voice to Angus, and he nodded.

Tourists moved in a clump down one of the walks as though huddling together for comfort. Cemeteries could be spooky, or they could be peaceful. This one was a little of both.

Angus led Tamsin down an empty lane, tombs closing in on them. Some of the monuments were simple flat graves with markers, which looked even more exposed and lonely than the enclosed tombs. At least people had left flowers to brighten up some of the graves, even though the dates listed on them were nearly two hundred years in the past.

Angus looked as uncomfortable as Tamsin felt. “I hear you,” he said.

“They have to bury people aboveground in New Orleans,” Tamsin said, chattering to break the humid silence. “The water table’s too high for them to dig graves. So they brick up their families in these buildings instead.” She shivered.

“I know.” Angus’s answer was subdued. “I’ve lived in southern Louisiana for twenty years. I know all about the water table.”

“Can’t wait to get back north,” Tamsin rattled on. “I bet you’d be happier in dry woods too. All this humidity must play hell with your fur.”

Angus’s dark hair was damp with perspiration and misty rain. “You get used to it. If you like northern woods so much, what were you doing running around the bayous?”

Tamsin shrugged, but her heart beat faster. “If I don’t tell you, they won’t be able to beat it out of you later.”

“Mmph.” Angus grunted. “Whatever.”

Tamsin had no intention of confiding the real reason she’d been in Shreveport with Dion—she wasn’t wrong that it would be dangerous knowledge, dangerous to Angus and his cub. Besides which, Angus was Gavan’s brother. Angus struck her as an entirely different person from Gavan, who’d been a total asshole, but maybe that side of Angus’s personality just hadn’t manifested yet.

Dion had claimed he’d known about Gavan’s plans, and she’d been trying to prevent him from finding out if he was right, not assist him. And then he’d gone insane and attacked the Bureau agents who must have been following him, instead of simply evading them and disappearing. She’d had to run before checking out whether the information she had was still good. And now she’d have no chance, with Shifter Bureau all over her ass.

The quiet grew more intense. Angus halted under a tree, which rained droplets upon them. The tomb next to the tree held seven people, Tamsin read, a whole family buried there from 1878 to 1934. Their names were fading, forgotten. Sad.

“Like I said, I want the Guardian’s sword when it’s my time to go,” Tamsin whispered.

Angus opened his flip phone. The beeping as he pressed the numbers sounded irreverent in this place.

“I’m here,” Angus said into the phone, his tones clipped. “Where’s my cub?”

His eyes narrowed as he listened. Tamsin couldn’t hear the person on the other end, which was strange. Was there such a thing as a Shifter hearing baffling app?

“Fine.” Angus’s word was sharp. “Just hurry up. I’m getting wet.”

He closed the flip phone without a good-bye and bent a gaze on Tamsin.

“Well?” she asked.

“He wants us to stand here. He’s coming.”

“He’s bringing your cub here?” Tamsin folded her arms, pretending she wasn’t shaking. “That’s kind of mean.”

“I don’t care. As long as he brings him.”

Angus closed his mouth and looked away.

Another opportunity to run. She could shift into a fox and stream around these tombs and over the wall into the city before Angus could turn around and see her go. Humans weren’t quite as amazed when they saw a fox, even one larger than most wild ones, as they were when they caught sight of a wolf or a leopard or a lumbering grizzly bear. How many grizzlies ran through the swamps of Louisiana?

Foxes were far more common in the wild. The downside was that, instead of fearing foxes, people tried to shoot them. Foxes ate chickens and generally made nuisances of themselves. It was a popular sport in England to dress up in fancy riding clothes, gather about fifty hounds, and ride twenty horses over the countryside in pursuit of one itty-bitty fox. Obviously that fox was a terrible monster that must be subdued at all costs.

Tamsin had always wondered if the Fae had created a few fox Shifters as a big joke. They’d think it funny to let loose fox Shifters in front of an English hunt.

Her mind was babbling these things to keep herself from thinking about what was to come. Her instincts were coming alert, looking for her chance to get away. She’d wait until Angus’s cub was safe, and then—gone.

But who knew what Haider would do? Would he try to tranq her right away or wrap her in spelled cuffs so she couldn’t shift? Were his guys carrying Collars? Or would they not bother with a Collar and take her straight to a firing squad?

Four men materialized out of the trees, one in a suit, three in black fatigues. A suit? Really? In this weather?

But yes, the lead man wore a suit with a coat and tie, and shoes that looked like they’d cost a wage worker a month’s salary. His own stupid fault if they were ruined by rain and mud. The man in the suit had dark hair and blue eyes, and a pistol in a holster just under his coat.

The three guys in fatigues had tranq pistols in hip holsters, and probably more weaponry hidden on them somewhere. They all carried radios that for the moment were silent.

The leader stopped about two yards from Angus and Tamsin. The men in fatigues circled around behind them.

Angus fixed the leader with a hard stare. “Where’s my cub, Haider?”

He didn’t mess around, Angus. Haider met his stare, then gave a brief nod to one of the guys in fatigues. The man turned away, his radio crackling to life. “Bring him,” he said.

Behind them, down the row a little, a door in one of the larger tombs opened. A man in black fatigues emerged, another following. Between them, the second man’s hand on his shoulder, came a boy of about eleven years old, dark haired and gray eyed, with the squared features of his father. He’d be a heartbreaker when he got older, Tamsin thought. He even had a scowl that matched Angus’s in intensity.

Angus’s scowl was vividly present as he glared at Haider. “You kept my son in a tomb? What the hell is wrong with you?”

“Relax, it’s empty. We put a bed in there, and Ciaran got to play video games and watch movies.”

“Lame ones,” Ciaran muttered. Tamsin wanted to burst into nervous laughter. He sounded just like his dad.

“Let him go.” Angus’s eyes were turning lighter gray, his wolf wanting to come out and play. If he turned himself into his between-beast and struck out hard and fast, he could take out all six guys very fast.

His Collar would go off and burn him with pain if he did. Then the guys with the tranqs would land him on the ground, and he’d be chained and hauled away. What they’d do with Ciaran, Tamsin didn’t like to speculate.

She lifted her hand in a friendly wave at Ciaran. “Hi there. I’m Tamsin, the big scary Shifter all these guys are after.”

Ciaran looked her up and down, his dark brows rising, then turned to his father. “You mean I was stuck all night in a crypt with Shifter Bureau, and you were with her? Not fair.”

“I didn’t have a choice, son.” Angus’s voice held a gentleness Tamsin hadn’t heard in it before.

Ciaran gave Tamsin a once-over again. “Good taste, Dad. She’s hot.”

“Hey.” Tamsin gave him a mock frown. “I’m old enough to be your . . . aunt.”

“Yeah. My hot aunt.”

Tamsin winked at him. “I was right. You’ll be a heartbreaker. I bet you already are.”

Ciaran looked puzzled by this, then turned back to Angus. “I’m all right, Dad. Just bored.”

And scared. Tamsin scented that on him, but he wasn’t about to let on in front of the Shifter Bureau goons how afraid he was.

“Let him walk over here,” Angus said. “Then we’re leaving. Right? I did what you wanted. Now my son and I are going home.”

“You took your time.” Haider motioned for the men with Ciaran to walk him forward. “Where did you disappear to?”

“Running after her.” Angus jerked his thumb at Tamsin. “Where do you think?”

“Hm.” Haider looked skeptical but didn’t pursue it.

Ciaran reached Angus. The goons stepped back, and Angus crouched down and pulled his son into a smothering hug. “You all right, little guy?”

Tamsin’s throat went tight as she saw the relief and love on Angus’s face. Ciaran, who clung to Angus a long moment, clearly loved and trusted his father. She remembered her own cubhood with her mom and dad, the family hugs that could make every trouble melt away, and her heart ached.

Angus unwound himself from Ciaran and straightened up, keeping hold of his cub’s hand. “I’m taking your car back to the club,” he told Haider. “My motorcycle is there, and I’m not walking with my cub across the city. Pick it up yourself.”

Haider nodded, as though he didn’t care one way or the other what happened to the car. “Leave the keys on the front seat. I doubt anyone will steal it.” His lips twitched.

Angus showed no amusement. He tightened his hold on Ciaran and walked him past Haider, past the men in fatigues, and down the walkway between the tombs.

Ciaran glanced back at Tamsin, worry on his face, but Angus never turned around.

Because he feared any look would give away what he’d told Tamsin to do? Or because he was absorbed in Ciaran and ready to put this situation well behind him?

Either way, they turned a corner, father and son gripping hands tightly, and disappeared.

Tamsin did not like how watching them go made her feel. Empty. Lonely. Mournful that she’d never see Angus again.

She stopped herself from analyzing these feelings and concentrated on the fact that she was alone with six guys from Shifter Bureau.

Her chest tightened, and her fight-or-flight instincts rose. She’d be fighting or fleeing very soon. Probably both.

“Ms. Calloway,” Haider said. “Shall we go inside?” He motioned to the tomb in which they’d kept Ciaran.

“Nah, I like the weather.” Tamsin stuck her hands into her jacket pockets. No way was she entering a confined space with Haider. She’d be able to get away much more easily if they remained in the open air.

When Haider didn’t move, she continued, “So why did you send a master tracker like Angus after little ole me? What have I done? This time, I mean.”

The quirk of Haider’s lips hadn’t left him. Tamsin hated people with the I-know-something-you-don’t look.

“You interest me,” Haider said. “I could reel off the list of your crimes and your associations with known agitators, but I’ll do that later. You’ll tell me where they all are in time. You also know a few things about Gavan Murray I will make you tell me. But I’m also very curious about this.”

He dipped his hand into his pocket, and Tamsin tensed, but what he pulled out was an ordinary smartphone. He tapped an icon, gave it a few swipes, tapped again, and held it up facing her.

The screen of the phone was dark for a moment, then a greenish light spread over it, giving the trees and plants it showed a strange fuzzy outline. In the middle of these trees was Tamsin, her skin glowing in the green light. She was naked.

Before she could voice her disgust that someone had spied on her with a nightscope and filmed it, the Tamsin on the screen morphed rapidly and smoothly into her fox.

Shit.

Haider smiled as he turned the phone around and tapped it to make it dark again.

“What are you going to do with that?” Tamsin asked, pretending nonchalance. “Post it on a Canine porn network?”

“I’m going to find out what makes you tick,” Haider said. “I want to know why there are fox Shifters when no one knew it, and how there are fox Shifters. I’m going to find out everything about you.”

“How, by dissecting me?” Tamsin’s voice went shriller than she meant it to.

“Not right away,” Haider said smoothly. “I’ll want to talk to you first. About Gavan and his little group. About everything. We will do quite a lot of talking.”

Interrogation, he meant. With torture, drugs, whatever he could think of to make her spill all she knew.

Then he’d cut her apart to find the secret of what made Tamsin herself.

He was crazy enough to do it—Tamsin saw that in his eyes. She noticed that a couple of his goons weren’t thrilled by what he was saying, but she figured they’d obey orders no matter what. If they had true scruples, they wouldn’t be here at all.

Only one thing to do. She wasn’t sure Angus and Ciaran had made it to safety yet, but she couldn’t wait.

Tamsin launched herself at Haider.

She knew he’d be expecting something like that, so she turned in midair to hit the guy five feet away from him instead. She rammed into the startled man in fatigues, then jumped away from him, his tranq pistol in her hands.

The problem with tranq guns was that they only had one shot. Tamsin picked her target, and fired the tranq dart into Haider’s neck.

He swore at her the second before he crumpled into an unconscious pile, and in that second, she was gone.

Tamsin dodged the goons before they could coordinate to grab her. She heard their tranq guns go off, but none hit her, and then came the pop of pistol bullets.

Tamsin thrust the tranq pistol into her jacket and nimbly leapt from the ground to an ornamented frieze to the top of a tomb, then ran, jumping from one tomb to the next, dropping down at the end of the row to another walkway. The large human men in combat boots would have to run around, but they were trained, and they were fast.

Tamsin bolted down the main walkway toward the open gate, running with all she had in her. She emerged onto the street where Angus had parked. The station wagon was still there, Angus and Ciaran about ten feet from reaching it.

The Shifter agents were right behind her. No time to search for whomever Angus had arranged to pick her up.

“Change of plans!” Tamsin shouted as she barreled toward them and the car.

Angus and Ciaran exchanged a startled look, and then they were running.

All three reached the car at the same time. Tamsin yanked open the back door of the station wagon and dove inside. She hunkered down on the seat as Angus and Ciaran slammed themselves into the front, and Tamsin sent up a fervent prayer to the Goddess.

“Awesome!” Ciaran shouted. “Go, Dad! Go!

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Alexa Riley, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Bella Forrest, Mia Ford, Delilah Devlin, Dale Mayer, Sloane Meyers, Amelia Jade, Nicole Elliot,

Random Novels

Love in Dublin by Jennifer Gracen

The Hound of Rowan by Henry H. Neff

Professor with Benefits by Mickey Miller

Because of You by Sam Mariano

His First by Jenika Snow

Beast: A Scifi Alien Romance (Galactic Gladiators Book 7) by Anna Hackett

Moonlit Harem: Part 2 by N.M. Howell, Nicole Marie

Filthy Love (Renegade Souls MC Romance Saga Book 4) by V. Theia

Lucky Number Eleven by Adriana Locke

Thousands by Pepper Winters

Riggs (Hell's Lovers MC, #3) by Crimson Syn

Trust Us (Sons of Sinners Book 5) by Erika Reed

Country Cop, City Boy by Mia Terry

A Baby for the Viking Wolf: Howls Romance (A Howls Viking Romance Book 2) by Gwen Knight

Brothers Black 4: Braxton the Charmer (Brothers Black Series) by Blue Saffire

The Shifter's Desire (Shifters of the Seventh Moon Book 4) by Selena Scott

Stolen: A M/M Shifter Romance (River Den Omegas Book 2) by Claire Cullen

The Blacksmith: A Highlander Romance (The Ghosts of Culloden Moor Book 38) by L.L. Muir, The Ghosts of Culloden Moor

Racing Dirty, L.A. by J. Lynn Lombard

Miss Dane and the Duke: A Regency Romance by Louise Allen