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One Insatiable
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One Insatiable
Tia Louise
Contents
One Insatiable
Warning
Books by Tia Louise
Dedication
Copyright
Fight
Unexpected
Staying
Discovery
Boundaries
Exploring
Lost and Found
Sharing
Full Moon
Fated
Old Debts
Answers
Questions
Vows
Crossing
Digging
Searching
Helpers
Deep Magic
Judgment
Revelations
New Start
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Acknowledgments
Books by Tia Louise
Sneak Peek: One Immortal
Sneak Peek: One to Love
About the Author
One Insatiable
Koa & Mercy
One wounded panther, one restless lynx, one insatiable hunger.
Mercy Quinlan is a whip-smart lynx and the youngest in her shifter clan. She’s tough and independent and dreams of escaping her alpha sister’s control and living life on her own terms.
When a lone black panther shows up in her hometown, Mercy is intrigued. He’s just passing through, which makes him perfect… Along with his broad shoulders, defined muscles, and sexy fighter moves.
Koa “Stitch” Raiden is picking up what’s left of his broken life. Exiled from his black panther clan, he’s running from Princeton to Seattle when he’s drawn to Woodland Creek.
He’s aware Mercy is watching him. What he doesn’t know is the sexy little vixen who sneaks through his window each night is both the trouble he doesn’t need and the hope he can’t live without.
A STANDALONE Woodland Creek Novel with an HEA, loosely related to the One to Hold series. Contains alluring alpha heroes, scorching-hot shifters, and panty-melting sexy times. Keep the fans nearby... Readers 18 and older only, please.
WARNING
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Books in the One to Hold series:
Derek & Melissa: One to Hold, One to Protect, One to Save
Patrick & Elaine: One to Keep
Kenny & Slayde: One to Love
Stuart & Mariska: One to Leave, One to Take
Marcus Merritt & Amy Knight: One to Chase, “Runaway”
Paranormal Romances:
Derek & Melissa: One Immortal
Koa “Stitch” & Mercy: One Insatiable
All are stand-alone novels.
For the fans of One to Love, and to
everyone who loves a sexy shifter tale as much as I do!
And always, to Mr. TL.
If you are reading this book and did not purchase it or win it from an author-sponsored giveaway, this book has been pirated. Please delete it from your device, and support the author(s) by purchasing a legal copy from one of its many distributors.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
One Insatiable
Copyright © TLM Productions LLC, 2015
Printed in the United States of America.
Cover design by J.M. Rising Horse Creations
Photography by Perrywinkle Photography
All rights reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means — electronic, photocopying, mechanical, or otherwise — without prior permission of the publisher and author.
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Fight
Mercy
He’s strangling me…
The pressure on my neck grows stronger, and I’m pinned against the man’s chest. His arm is an iron band around my waist holding me trapped against his doughy body.
Harder…
The sour stench of his perspiration fills my nostrils, and I start to choke. Adrenaline spikes in my veins, my eyes heat, my nose runs. I’m going to shift.
Fight it…
He would never see it coming. I’d rip his arms out of their sockets, and the pain would saturate his brain before his eyes even registered what happened.
Focus, Mercy.
I can’t blow my cover. As far as the humans in Woodland Creek know, I’m just as normal as they are. My shifter clan is deep undercover, and we have to keep it that way.
Scenting the air, I can tell he’s nervous. He lacks the conviction of what he’s doing. Closing my eyes and calming my thoughts, I use the crude human movements I’ve mastered — grasp his wrist and jerk it down.
Thrusting my elbow sharply back and up, I plant a solid hit to his solar plexus. At the same time I do a quick twirl under, positioning myself in front, facing him, still holding his wrist. It’s a perfectly choreographed escape move, and I execute it with ease.
A muffled grunt, and the man pitches forward at the waist gasping for air. I hold his neck and pretend to jam my knee into his nose to break it. But I stop before making contact.
“And that is how you escape an attack from behind.” I release Jim’s wrist and turn to the small audience now clapping.
A low murmur ripples across the group of mostly college-aged girls, and my assistant circulates a clipboard holding the signup sheet for Saturday’s class.
Smiling, I turn back to my demonstration partner. “You okay?” I grasp Jim’s shoulder, giving it a brief massage.
“It’s okay. I’m used to it, Mercy,” he grunts.
It’s true he’s experienced playing the role of my attacker, and while I might have winded him slightly with that elbow to the ribs, he doesn’t show any signs of discomfort now. Jim’s a big, fleshy guy, perfect for our demonstrations.
I adjust my black sports bra and smooth the waist of my black yoga pants as the clipboard continues through the small group of young women.
“Classes are every Saturday starting at nine a.m. sharp. Your life is important and so is my time.” My voice resonates with authority the way Andy taught me. “All payments are in advance, and there are no refunds for missed classes.”
I’ve just put on a show of being a badass, and the young women watch me, eyes round. When I first started this job, it used to make my insides squirm knowing I’m the same age as them or occasionally a little younger. I’m the baby of my shifter family, and not used to ordering people around, which doesn’t mean I’m a pushover. It just means I’m used to minding my own business and letting others mind theirs.
“You have to command your class,” Andy had said. In time it became easier to play drill sergeant.
Andy taught me the self-defense moves I now teach them. I hadn’t really needed to learn them, since as previously noted, I’m a shifter and stronger than any human man. Still, I suppose they’re good techniques to know.
I started hanging around the gym a few years ago during a particularly harsh winter. I tried teaching myself to kickbox, trying to burn off my excess shifter-energy. I’d spent some time punching and kicking with zero form or technique. After a while, Andy asked if I’d like to take over the self-defense courses at the gym.
I like to think it gives me a purpose, something I can do to help these human girls. The truth is, I’m bored. I want to leave this god-forsaken town so badly it hurts. I want to move to California where it’s always sunny and never snows, where I can get a small studio and a pottery wheel, and launch my career as a cera
mics artist.
“Miss Mercy?” A timid blonde pulls me from my dreams.
I smile. “You can just call me Mercy.”
“Okay… Um…” Her eyes drop nervously to the mat. “I’m Sally. I’m not sure if I should sign up or not. I’m not very strong.”
I scan her body. She’s an inch shorter than I am, skinny, and her arms show zero muscle mass — unlike mine, which are lined and tight like my exposed torso.
“Strength isn’t as much a part of self-defense as technique,” I say, repeating the response Andy taught me. “It’s about surprise and evasion. Running away is as much a part of self defense as avoiding dangerous situations.”
She still looks worried, and I add, “If you want, I can work with you before or after classes on strength training.”
I’m not sure what made me say that. I’ve never offered to train anyone before.
Her pale brow relaxes, and she even smiles. “Would you? That would help me so much.”
I’m about to set up a time when the bell above the front door rings out, and a man in a suit, no tie, top button undone saunters in the gym. He’s clearly not dressed to stay.
“Dude, your boyfriend’s here,” Jim says under his breath.
Irritation flashes hot in my cheeks. “He’s not my boyfriend, and you need to wash your gym clothes. You stink.”
I instantly regret being irritable with Jim, but Hayden Cross has been the bane of my existence for the last two years, since I turned twenty-one, with his entitled attitude and knack for showing up when I don’t want to see him, which is pretty much always.
Going to the door, I ignore the appreciative rise of his pale eyebrows at the sight of my body. “What are you doing here, Hayden?”
“Your sister sent me to fetch you. She’s concerned you’ll be late for dinner tonight.”
Anger tightens my throat. “I’ve never been late for Thursday night dinner before. I don’t need your help now.”
He smiles that annoyingly sexy grin. “Either way, I don’t mind giving you a ride home. Save you from that germy tin can.”
My family (and Hayden) complain often and loudly about my use of the one city bus to get around our small town, but I don’t give a shit. I’m preparing for my life in San Francisco, when I won’t be a member of the town elite. I’ll be just like everybody else.
“Sam will worry if I don’t show up for my ride home.”
His perfect lips curl in a sneer. “And Sam would be?”
“The bus driver, of course.”
“Get your things.” His teasing manner is gone, which makes me grin. “I told Dylan I’d see you home.”
“I guess I can explain it to him tomorrow,” I sigh.
Infuriating Hayden might be the highlight of my day. I walk to the back of the large, front room. A narrow hall leads past the offices, the juice bar, and the entrances to the locker rooms, ending at the large weight room in the back. My boss is there working with a new client.
“I’m taking off, Andy!” I call. “Looks like we got a full class on Saturday.”
He gives me a brief nod between spotting the man lying back on the push-up bench. I head to the locker room to grab my bag, rolling my eyes as I go. God knows I can’t be late for Thursday night dinners at the mansion.
* * *
Koa
Running. Pushing. Harder. Faster. Run until the pain is only a distant memory.
Stretching out in my full panther form, I revel in the healing sensation of heat surging through my muscles as my powerful strides consume the miles.
I shouldn’t have gone back to Princeton. I should have left the past in the past. Still, I had to see what he was doing now, the ice-blue-eyed wolf whose life had ended the same night as mine.
Slayer had been my best friend back in those days. We were two shits in a pod, strutting around like we owned the city. Because we did.
Designers gave us clothes for free. Hotels gave us rooms for free, and the chicks fell back on the beds with their legs wide open, panties long gone. Everybody wanted a piece of us. They all wanted us to say we liked their shit or we stayed at their place or we wore their watches.
We were champion middleweight boxers and the only shifters. Of course, that part of the equation was not on the books. Until the night it all ended. The night our world came crashing down. Seven years later, I’m hoping to pick up the pieces.
“You look good,” Slayer had said when I entered the fancy-assed office where he now worked. “Keeping in shape.”
As if shifters have a choice. “It was a long time to do nothing.”
His wolf-eyes narrow, and I can’t resist a verbal jab. “So you’ve joined the dark side?”
“I’m a private investigator.”
Glancing around the mahogany office with its straight lines and stainless accents, I simply nod. “Pretty fancy for a private dick.”
“My boss is an important guy.”
“Right.” Clearing my throat, I say his name. “Derek Alexander.”
It’s a name as bitter on my tongue as wolfsbane, and I can’t get over the sight of my old friend working in that man’s office.
“Mr. Alexander” had made a reputation for himself in both human and paranormal justice. I’ll never forget the day he stood in the front of the panther council and had me cut off from my clan. He’d presented the evidence that left me a rogue — no family, no money, no hope for a mate.
“Is this some kind of… community service gig or something?” To say Slayer and I had diverged would be putting it mildly if he now worked for that guy voluntarily.
“What happened to us was our own fault. Derek gave me a second chance here.”
The framed picture on his desk fills in the rest of the blanks. A beautiful young woman with blue eyes and purple hair smiles back at me. On her lap is a tow-headed little boy with dimples in his cheeks.
“Well… I’m happy for you,” I lie. “Anyway, I’m taking off, headed home. Just stopped in to say goodbye.”
He leans forward in his chair and stands, rounding the desk to shake my hand. I notice he’s dressed in dark jeans and a black tee, and the old tattoos show down his arms. I guess not everything has changed.
“Take care of yourself, Stitch.”
“I go by Koa now.”
He nods as we shake, casting his eyes down to our hands. “I went to Bayville thinking I’d disappear. Instead I found everything I’d lost.”
I’m not sure what to do with that, so I simply nod, releasing his hand. “I’ll keep that in mind. See you around, Slayer.”
“It’s Slayde now.”
“Slayde,” I repeat.
Walking out, past waxed walls and etched glass, I feel a fist tighten in my chest. I’m not sure if it’s the fact my former best friend and partner in crime is now working with the man who ended my life or if it’s the fact he’s clearly found a new and better one while I remain an outsider — alone, with nothing.
All I know is the burning rage will only get out one way. I’d bought a bus ticket to California, but I won’t be using it. I don’t have anything I care to take with me, so I leave it all behind. I’ll figure out my next moves when I get to the coast.
It’s true, I’ve fallen from a great height, but if Slayde Bennett can turn his fortune around, so can I.
Stripping off my clothes, I crouch at the side of the road and spring into the darkness, disappearing in a streak of midnight, headed west.
Unexpected
Mercy
I shower quickly, dry off, and slip a thin, black cocktail dress over my head. Since I didn’t have time to exercise this afternoon, I never broke a sweat. Shaking out my long, wavy hair, I dust a bit of powder over my nose and smooth beige lipstick over my lips. One quick look, and I’m ready to descend the staircase for our weekly dinner with the Cross brothers.
After my parents died ten years ago, Dylan assumed the role of alpha of our family. She’d only been twenty-two at the time, and we’re only a small clan
of lynx shifters. Still, as one of the oldest families in Woodland Creek, we have money and status, and we’re expected to associate with “the right kind.” I’m repeatedly reminded of this, even though I have zero interest in dating anyone in this town.
My middle sister Autumn escaped all the nonsense when she moved to the East Coast for college. She has never returned, and for some reason, no one seems to care. No such luck for me.
“Ah, here she is.” Hayden sits to the left of my sister at one end of our formal dining table. It’s long enough to seat twenty, but these dinners only host five.
I slowly enter the gleaming wood-paneled room and quickly survey the crystal wine glasses, the vase overflowing with harvest flowers, and the small salad plates at every place, including mine beside Hayden’s.
Dylan holds a flute of sparkling wine to her lips. I catch her mid-sip, and her blue eyes narrow. My aunt Penny gets out of her seat on the other side of Hayden’s brother Grant and trots toward me.
“Mercy, I don’t know what we’re going to do with you,” she laughs. “First you insist on taking lessons at that dreadful little pottery studio in town, and then you join that cheap little gym… Now you’re riding the city bus!”
Aunt Pen and I have always been close, despite her ridiculously old-fashioned ideas of how I should behave. For instance, private tutors are the only source of any instruction.
When Dylan took our parents’ place as leader in our house and in society, Penny gladly assumed the role of caregiver to Autumn and me. Autumn was eighteen at the time and already had one foot out the door, but I had just turned thirteen. I hadn’t had my first period or come into my shifter powers. Dylan couldn’t be bothered with such matters, but Penny held my hand through every change in my rapidly developing body. It causes me to be more tolerant of her opinions.