Free Read Novels Online Home

Tangled with a Shifter (Fayoak Romance Book 2) by Moira Byrne (3)

3

Sophie

Pound. Pound. Pound.

The sudden sound of someone banging on the side of my house jolted me awake. My heart pounded in my chest. Danger. I caught an unfamiliar scent and my cat roared to the surface of my mind. I sat up and swung my legs out of bed. What was going on?

Pound. Pound. Pound.

I glanced at the clock and shook my head as the red numbers told me it was eight o'clock. I groaned. I had planned to sleep in on my day off.

Pound. Pound. Pound.

I snarled. Who the hell was pounding on my house at eight o'clock in the morning? My heart beat frantically in my chest. What were they trying to do? Scare me?

Pound. Pound. Pound.

The only thing that kept me from shifting was the need for hands to open the door. I might be frightened, but I would defend my territory. And if it was some sort of joke, I would verbally flay the skin from whoever was making that irritating racket.

The never-ending noise was like a giant woodpecker beating on my house. What the hell was causing it? I grabbed my robe and slid it on as I raced down the hallway to the front door. It would be easy enough to slip out of if I needed to shift to fight. I was there in less than a minute, and that horrid pounding continued the entire time.

I threw open my front door, my claws out and a threatening snarl on my face. Maybe I could scare off this tormentor. I was brought up short when I saw Maddox standing to the side of my front door.

One look at me and he slipped his hammer into a loop on his wide leather tool belt. He took a wary step back and held up his hands, showing he wasn't armed and that his claws were sheathed.

I took a deep breath, then another. It took me a moment to reorient my thoughts and get my fear under control. If I had been more awake, I would have realized he was the one out there. I cursed at myself. What good were shifter senses if I wasn't going to use them? I was already known as the outsider in our pack. At least it was Maddox. Anyone else and it would only make my reputation worse.

Our pack. I still wasn't used to that idea. I had joined Maddox's pack shortly after I moved to Fayoak. I wanted nothing to do with my old pack. And that had been the first step.

I thought about my first meeting with the pack Alpha, Jack. He'd given me directions to the pack headquarters. I'd been sure I was in the wrong place as I drove through residential streets. I finally pulled in front of an unassuming house. I checked the directions and went back to the text to make sure I had the address right. This was it.

With nerves churning in my stomach, I approached the house. The door opened before I could knock and a man stood there, filling the doorframe. He was large, broad-shouldered with dark, shaggy hair that was way overdue for a haircut. He had creases in the corners of his eyes—the type people had when they smiled a lot.

A welcoming grin lit his face. "Sophie, right?" He thrust out a hand for me to shake.

I could tell by his scent he was a lion-shifter.

I forced a smile on my face and nodded as I shook his hand. "I'm afraid I'm at a disadvantage. You are?"

He laughed as he released my hand, and something in me eased as he didn't try to hold onto me, or rub my knuckles, or do any of those other "flirty" actions. It was a refreshing change from my old Alpha.

"Sorry about that. I'm Jack."

For a moment, my world stopped. My old Alpha wouldn't have been caught dead opening his own door. I met his eyes and felt his dominance instantly. I didn't try to hold his gaze—I didn't want to challenge him.

"Come on in, let's talk."

I followed him in, and he gently grilled me. I'd been hesitant to tell him much. I could tell by the look in his eyes that he knew he wasn't getting the whole story. He hadn't pushed, which I appreciated, and he accepted me into the pack.

Considering his warm acceptance, I felt somewhat guilty that I hadn't exactly been the most active member. Well, that wasn't really accurate. The pack was spread all over Fayoak, and Jack had monthly gatherings. They were optional, but I always attended. I hung in the back and watched. And listened.

I knew if I had paid attention, I would have recognized the disintegration of my old pack. I would have seen what was insidiously creeping in. I'd been so busy in my own world, I hadn't paid attention. And now, in my new pack, I couldn't stop myself from looking for those signs of rot. Thankfully, I had never found them.

I saw happy pack members, not people with fear lurking in their eyes. Arguments happened, as they do with any group of people, but they were resolved without bloodshed. If a fight started, it was quickly broken up. If punishment was needed, it was fair. All things I recognized from when my pack was healthy. Before Bruce, my first Alpha, retired.

My old pack had been so broken that it was hard for me to adjust, even after all these months. Even after witnessing for myself how healthy the Fayoak pack was. A part of me kept waiting for something bad to happen.

In the back of my mind, I feared Edward would show up someday. I clenched my teeth together and forced my thoughts back to the man in front of me. I didn't want to think about the past right now.

The most important thing at this moment was finding out what Maddox was doing pounding on my house at far-too-early in the morning.

"Good morning, Sophie." Maddox smiled cautiously, still holding his hands up.

"What the hell are you doing out here?" I snarled as my anxiety morphed into anger. The moment the words flew out, I winced and slapped a hand over my mouth.

That was no way to respond to a friendly greeting, but the adrenaline was still rushing through my body and made me cranky.

"Ah, I see." Maddox's smile changed into a grin of amusement. "I take it your landlord didn't tell you we were going to be here? He hired us to do some repairs."

"No, he didn't." I quickly agreed with his explanation. No sense in telling him I was afraid I was being chased by a ghost from my past.

Maddox nodded, his eyes dancing with suppressed laughter. I narrowed my eyes at him, daring him to laugh.

He cleared his throat. "Sorry it's so early."

The pounding started up again on the side of the house. I took a deep breath, using my natural-born senses to figure out who it was this time. However, I didn't recognize the scent. At all.

Alarm shot through me again. It wasn't because I didn't know who the person was. There were many people I didn't know. The problem was that I couldn't tell what he was.

Seeing my alarm, Maddox yelled, "Charlie!"

The hammering immediately stopped. A man in his thirties with bright orange hair and freckles appeared from around the side of the house. He smiled when he saw us, the corners of his eyes crinkling.

"What's up, bossman?" the man asked in a voice that was obscenely cheerful for eight o'clock in the morning.

"Sophie's landlord didn't tell her we'd be here this morning."

"Oh, darn. That must've been a heck of a wake-up call, ma'am." He tilted his head toward me, as if commiserating with me.

I nodded as I tried to figure out what Charlie was. The primal part of me classified everything as either predator or prey. It made me uneasy not knowing where he fit. Charlie winked at me, as if he could sense my confusion and it delighted him.

"I'll try to hammer softly," he said before he went back to his task.

I returned my attention to Maddox, but he was staring at the location where Charlie disappeared. The banging started up again.

"Well, I was going to ask him to pause so we could talk. But when he gets on a task, it's hard to get him to stop."

"What is he?"

I couldn't keep myself from asking. My primal side had to know. My cat peered out through my eyes, trying to assess the threat or lack thereof. When Maddox met my gaze, I knew he saw the telltale blue of my cat's eyes. His eyes shifted to panther-green as his own cat appeared.

"He's not a threat to us if that's what you're wondering."

"Fine. He's not a threat to us. Great. What. Is. He?" I leaned forward anxiously. I wished he would just tell me. It would drive me nuts if I didn't find out.

Maddox yelled, "Charlie!"

The noise stopped, and Charlie's grinning face appeared. Maddox looked at him but didn't say a word. The smile on Charlie's face grew wider. When I met his gaze, something wild looked out.

It reminded me of Alex, but more distant. In the same way that a house cat reminds you of a tiger. I wasn't sure which of them was the lion or the kitty cat, though. Alex could swing either way.

"Never met one of my kind, eh?" Charlie asked gleefully.

I narrowed my eyes suspiciously. He had to have incredible hearing to listen in on our conversation over all that hammering.

"I can't say that I have."

My cat was still in my gaze and my claws pressed against the tips of my fingers. It was on guard, ready to defend its territory against this unknown threat, even if Maddox insisted he wasn't a danger.

Charlie chuckled. "I'll give you some clues, alright? Here we go. We don't go into civilized areas much—it's odd that I do. We're strong. Usually solitary—it's weird that I like company. Come to think of it, I'm just strange all around. You got it yet?"

I shook my head, still in the dark. His clues weren't helping. I was only getting more frustrated.

"Charlie," Maddox chided, "it's too early for Sophie to play twenty questions."

Charlie laughed and nodded. "Right it is, right it is. I'm an ogre, ma'am."

He tilted his head and touched the brim of an imaginary cap before he slipped back around the side of the house. The hammering immediately resumed. I wondered if he even realized he had just dropped an information bomb that left me reeling. I had a feeling that he did and was pleased with himself about it.

"Ogre," I said slowly, feeling out the word. "I thought they were really big. How is he not? I don't get it. He's nothing like an ogre is supposed to be."

My cat wasn't ready to attack anymore, it was simply confused. Ogres were big and destructive and known to be strong predators. I'd never seen one, but they were supposed to be at least ten feet tall and as wide as an elephant.

From what I had heard, ogres broke things—they didn't fix them. They were dangerous and should be avoided at all costs. But Charlie wasn't threatening; he was like a mischievous kid.

Maddox shrugged. "Part of their magic. Somehow, they can fit into cars, houses, all of that. It's like shifting, but not. I don't understand it, either."

I ran my hand over my face. Now that the adrenaline had worn off, I needed coffee. And breakfast. Really, I wanted to go back to bed, but that wasn't happening with all that hammering going on.

"So, how long will you be working here?"

"Couple days, but we'll be done with your place soon." He gave me a sympathetic smile. "In fact, I'd better get back to it if I don't want the work to spill over to three. We'll be onto the main house after today."

"Sounds good," I replied briskly. I still wasn't in a very good mood. I needed to wake up and have coffee before I clawed someone's eyes out.

I stepped back inside and closed the door. I shuffled into the kitchen and started up the coffee pot. It began to brew, and the wonderful aroma soon perfumed the air. While I waited for it to finish, I poured myself a bowl of cereal and added milk.

The hammering seemed like it never ended. What could need that much pounding?

I sat down at my table and shoveled in spoonfuls of cereal in time with the hammering. I added milk to my coffee, cooling it barely enough for me to slurp down. I knew that I had to get out of here before I lost my mind. My head started to throb in time with the hammer as I raced through the last of my breakfast.

My skin itched and felt too tight. I felt caged. I couldn't breathe. I needed to do something. Something that wasn't anywhere near the hammering. The pounding had become unbearable. I knew it wasn't as bad as it felt, but that didn't seem to make any difference. My cougar wanted out. Now.

Moments later I was at my back door. I stripped and threw my clothes into a pile, then opened the door a crack and shifted. Finally in my cougar form, I could breathe again. Colors muted and my vision expanded. The infernal pounding continued, but it no longer threatened to drive me insane.

Impatient to be outside, I used my paw to push the door open wide enough for me to slip through. Once I was out of the house and on the dirt, I stretched, my claws digging into the ground.

The breeze brought me Charlie's scent from the right, and I was able to pull out the subtle nuances now—things my human self had missed. A sound to the left caught my attention. I met Maddox's gaze. I gave him a greeting chirp and he nodded back.

I was off running a moment later. I lived near the Greenhaven orchard and liked to run through their trees. The pull I felt in that direction had only intensified after I'd taken Alex home months ago when he'd gotten a bit drunk at the barbecue. It was difficult to resist in my cat form.

It had taken me awhile to figure out the pull wasn't the orchard, but the man who lived on the orchard's grounds. I couldn't figure out why my cat was so fascinated by him.

I approached the fence surrounding the property. It was not too high for me to jump over, and I easily cleared it. Not that long ago they'd had a problem with coyotes damaging their irrigation lines, but I took care of it. They wouldn't be doing that anymore.

My ears pulled back in displeasure at the thought of those coyotes. This was my territory now. The coyotes were not welcome.

They were simple animals, not shifters. Back when I had first noticed their presence, I hunted down a couple of them and made it clear this was my territory. I would defend it.

Coyotes could be persistent, so I continued to patrol the area, carefully marking my territory with my claws. The deep gouges I made were a clear message.

Only once had I caught their scent back here, though it had ended at my marked border and had gone no farther. It wasn't worth challenging me, so they moved on to a more hospitable location. I could hear them calling at night, safely off in the distance.

My cat huffed in laughter as I remembered when Petunia Greenhaven had caught me marking my territory. I was scratching away on a tree when the branches had suddenly wrapped around me and hauled me in the air.

My heart had raced in my chest. Trees did not simply wrap their branches around you and hoist you up. I'd hissed in alarm and tried to slip out of the hold, but she had me good and trapped.

It had been deep in the night and I had only recently chased off the coyotes. I still patrolled nightly back then. The stately woman with silver hair stepped out from behind a tree. Although hidden in shadows, I had no problem clearly seeing her with my cougar's vision.

Somehow she had managed to be downwind from me and I couldn't catch her scent. But given I was in the Greenhaven orchard and a tree had me in its grips, I had a pretty good idea of who I had encountered.

"Why are you damaging my trees?" she asked, her tone ringing with righteous anger.

Since I was in my cougar form, there was little I could do but chirp at her. I squirmed in the branches and let out a low growl, pawing at the branches with my claws retracted.

"I will release you, but this is my orchard. I expect you to shift and explain yourself. You will be unable to leave this area without my consent. My trees will stop you. Here I rule supreme."

Immediately after she spoke, the branches released me. I fell to the ground, easily landing on my feet. I shifted and stood before her, leaving my eyes unchanged so I could still see her clearly.

Shock crossed her face as she took in my naked state. It occurred to me she must not have had a lot of interaction with shifters. Had she thought I could magically form clothes on myself?

"How did you know I was a shifter?"

"Please. You were acting too intelligent to be anything but a human in an animal skin. Now answer my question. Why are you damaging my trees?"

"I'm not damaging your trees," I answered, insulted.

"You are. You're creating those giant scratches in them." Her eyes glowed with anger. "Why are you hurting my trees?"

The trees around her violently swayed as if blown by a strong wind, and I could feel her magic like a heavy blanket around me. It was like a strong storm about to break. Alex's grandmother was one scary woman.

A shiver of fear worked its way up my spine and I quickly answered her, "I'm marking my territory. This is the only way to keep the coyotes out of your orchard." My fear turned to anger at the thought of the invaders. "They need to know this area is mine."

Her eyes widened in surprise and the trees immediately stopped whipping around. Whatever answer she'd expected, that clearly wasn't it.

"You do know that I am the owner of this land, don't you?" Her brows lowered and she looked perplexed.

"Of course," I said. I wasn't stupid.

"Then explain why you think it's yours."

I blinked at her as I thought about how to explain this to someone who wasn't a shifter. Saying a fae wasn't a predator was inaccurate, but her instincts were different.

"In the animal kingdom," I said, feeling my way through the explanation, "I am the top predator around here. If I say this is my territory, I claim it and defend it. I chase off other predators. Those coyotes," I couldn't stop the snarl from crossing my face, "are not welcome in my territory."

She slowly arched a brow. "That doesn't explain the scratches in my trees."

"That's how cougars mark territory. Your fences are metal so I can't mark those."

"Well, I guess it's better than urinating in the corner." She looked off into the distance for a moment, then sighed. "Fine. Mark your territory. Keep the damned coyotes away. But not on the trees."

She turned around and headed away from me. I frowned at her back in confusion.

"If I'm not to mark on the trees, then how . . ."

"Come back in two days," she said over her shoulder.

My curiosity was so intense I could barely wait to see what she planned. Two days later, I had returned shortly after sundown to find thick wood poles firmly anchored into the ground around the perimeter of the orchard. I even climbed one to see how sturdy it was.

Now, I approached one of those poles and stood on my hind feet to set my paws up high. The feel of my claws digging in was immensely satisfying.

At first, I'd only come over to mark my territory in the dead of night, when there was no possibility of encountering anyone. These days, I came when the mood struck me, but I had to be careful. I kept a watch out for people as I didn't want to scare anyone.

Finished, I settled back to my feet and ran around the edge of the trees, then stopped when I approached the open area where her sheds were. My fur blended in with the shadows, and I knew I was practically invisible if I held still.

The breeze shifted and I caught the smell of plants and sunshine near one of the sheds. Alex. A moment later he stepped out into the sunlight, a smile on his face. I'd taken two steps forward before I stopped myself. My cat had no problems with wanting to be with him. My primal self didn't understand my human side's hesitation.

I stepped back into the shadows and forced myself to head back home. If I didn't, my primal side would take control and act out on the desire to be closer to him—a feeling that I felt each time I was around Alexander Greenhaven.

It didn't help that I'd had a lot of fun playing with him the other day. But he looked focused and I didn't want to distract him. Now was not the time for play.

I forced my mind off him and onto my run. The scents of the rodents, bugs, and earth. The feel of the wind through my fur. When my mind veered off into wondering what it would feel like to have his hands on my fur, I firmly shoved that thought away.

It didn't take me long to get back home. I circled my house but didn't see any vehicles other than mine, and couldn't smell Maddox or Charlie. A glance at the shadows told me I'd been out for several hours, so they must have gone for lunch.

I slid through my open back door, then went to my bedroom to shift and get dressed. I heard a car pull up and figured the guys were back from lunch. They'd knock if they needed anything.

I was about to head to the kitchen to fix myself some lunch when I heard my phone buzz. I hurried over and picked it up. My heart skipped a beat when I saw the display read Aly. I answered immediately—I would never ignore my sister's calls, not even for a second.

"Aly, what's up?" I asked, careful not to ask her if she was okay. Our talk the other night still rang in my ears.

There was a moment of silence before she spoke, "Hey, Soph."

Her voice was soft, as if she was afraid to speak too loudly. My heart sped up. Something was wrong, I knew it.

"Aly, are you"

"Soph, I'm fine. I'm sorry to scare you. I just . . . needed to hear your voice."

"What's wrong?"

"Nothing." She sighed. "Nothing," she repeated, her voice a little stronger. It was as if she was trying to convince herself more than me.

"Do you need"

"No," she said sharply. "I don't need you to come get me. I'm fine. I shouldn't have called."

There was something in her voice that told me she was lying, but I knew my little sister and she had a stubborn streak. She would tell me what was wrong only when she was good and ready.

"No, Aly. No. I'm glad you called. Did you get the money I sent?"

"Yeah, Soph, I did. Thank you."

"Aly—"

"I gotta go." Her words ran together like she was in a sudden rush. "I'll call you later. And, hey, Sophie?"

"Yeah?"

"Be careful."

Before I could say anything else, the phone went dead in my ear. I pulled it away from my head to look at the screen. It told me she'd hung up.

My stomach churned. Why did my sister tell me to be careful? What was going on? Was she in trouble? Did she think I was? I wished I'd had a chance to ask her about Edward. Had he returned to the pack?

I felt my claws prick my fingers and carefully pulled them back in. I had control of my emotions, they didn't control me. I took a deep breath, then another.

I had almost convinced myself that there wasn't anything I could do when I heard a knock on my door. My agitation rocketed sky-high all over again. I spun on my feet and stomped toward my door.

I took two steps when the scent of my visitor hit me. Alex.

My cat purred. My blood raced. This was the last thing I needed when I was already on edge. My cat didn't care. It knew of an easy way to calm my body down. It urged me to pull Alex inside and have my way with him.

Fighting my instincts, I took a deep breath. Alex's scent ran through me. Wrong move. Taking in more of his scent only made me want him more. I needed him to leave. Now. Before my primal side overrode my good judgment.

I flung open the door with a snarl. "What do you want?"