Simon (The Clan Legacy Series)
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Table of Contents
Keep in touch!
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Simon
Teaser of Erik – Band of Bears
More Steamy Not So Shifter Stuff Right Here
Check out my other books!
Spoil the Shifter in you…
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[SBM2]
Copyright 2017 by J. S. Striker - All rights reserved.
In no way is it legal to reproduce, duplicate, or transmit any part of this document in either electronic means or in printed format. Recording of this publication is strictly prohibited and any storage of this document is not allowed unless with written permission from the publisher. All rights reserved.
Respective authors own all copyrights not held by the publisher.
Simon
The Clan Legacy Series
By: J. S. Striker
Tables of Contents
Keep in touch!
THANK YOU!!
Simon
Teaser of Erik – Band of Bears
More Steamy Not So Shifter Stuff Right Here
Check out my other books!
Spoil the Shifter in you…
Keep in touch!
Do you love bad boys? Alphas? Shifters? Witches? Vampires? ‘Cause I got them!! Click here to join my newsletter and get an instant freebie delivered to your inbox. Then wait for the goodness to keep rolling in.
P.S. I have included a teaser of my EXLUSIVE never been published before ERIK - Band of Bears in the table of contents. An alpha male bear shifter romance. Sign up for my newsletter and it’ll be delivered to your inbox.
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First off, I could not do it this without my amazing ARC team. Their expertise in the reading of hot steamy shifter books should never be undervalued!! You guys are seriously the foundation for every single book. Couldn’t be done without you.
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J. S. Striker
Maker of Sexy Shifters
Simon
CHAPTER ONE
“This has to be the best stakeout spot in the world.”
Simon Alison settled more comfortably in the spot on a low hill he and Robin Chesley had chosen to watch the ongoing movement in a big, wide warehouse. The front doors of the warehouse were wide open, and inside a few men were seated right at the entrance with a table and a few chairs, where they played some cards. They’d been at it for almost two hours now, and Simon couldn’t figure out how they weren’t bored yet just sitting there instead of doing something productive. He’d always been the type who became restless when he didn’t get to expel his excess energy.
Which was why Robin’s statement—said with utmost relish—was something that he met with a raised brow.
“Really? In the world?”
Robin shrugged, strands of her black hair falling on her face. She blew them off and glanced at him before focusing back on the warehouse. “In the world I know, at least. I haven’t traveled that much yet.”
“Hmm.” A smile tugged off his lips. Considering how much he and Robin had traveled over the past year as their missions took them all across the globe, he was pretty sure that was incorrect. But he understood what she meant. When one was working on a mission, you really didn’t get to explore the place much and couldn’t claim they traveled and explored richly. Still, he couldn’t help but make a playful remark. “I guess being in Paris isn’t considered that much of a treat, huh?”
Those big green eyes gave him a look that said somewhere between shut up and don’t be sassy, and Simon was yet to figure out which one. Robin had always been about the look.
When she didn’t respond, and he knew taunting her further would just get him hit with spells on his backside, Simon decided to keep his full focus back on the warehouse. The men had moved on from playing cards to getting out a bottle of Jack Daniels for them to share, which meant they were settling in for a longer night. Half an hour later, Simon inwardly sighed and opened his mouth to talk to Robin again, who was utterly still beside him.
A blur appeared in the sky—a flash, really, barely recognizable if one wasn’t looking. He straightened immediately.
“He’s here,” he whispered.
“I know,” Robin murmured back. She was staring at the sky, too—probably sooner than he was. The dragon shifter—the third part of their mission unit—barely stirred the air, but Simon could feel him lurking nearby. “They’ve arrived.”
Five minutes later, Robin’s guess was right. The vehicle the dragon shifter had been trailing finally arrived and stopped beside the warehouse’s entrance, and the men who’d been drinking stood at attention. It was a nondescript black van, a stereotypical kidnapping and other suspicious activities type van.
They watched with bated breath as the driver got out and talked to the men. Then electric shockers—Taser-like weapons that could electrify with a touch—were taken out as they surrounded the back of the van, indicating they were about to open it.
A flash appeared in the sky again. Then Charlie Takeshi’s dragon form went down and shifted into his half-human form, leaving behind his sharp dragon claws and teeth. He charged the men with a speed that was incredible, using his martial arts skills to take them down one by one. Simon’s shoulders tensed when one snuck up behind Charlie as he got busy fending off two men at the same time. The dragon shifter ducked at the last second and evaded the weapon aimed his way, his claws swiping into the man’s back and drawing blood. He then opened the back of the van—
And got blasted by a strong shock of invisible force.
Simon prepared to shift. But before he could, Robin was already standing up and sprinting forward, her dark cloak flying behind her. He cursed under his breath and went after her, yelling.
“Chesley!”
“Witch!” she yelled back. Then she ran faster.
Simon shifted to his wolf form instantly and caught up to her, and together they ran down. An invisible warmth surrounded him, and he knew right away that it was her magic cloaking them from being seen. They approached the fight as quietly as they could, with Robin almost stumbling and his body catching and nudging her before she hit the ground. Then, seconds into the approach, he heard her mutter under her breath.
“Now.”
The warmth disappeared, the spell gone. Simon leaped on the man clinging to Charlie’s back and yanked him off, feeling the weapon whisper an electric shock on his fur. He ignored it and kept going, watching out of the corner of his eye as Robin went for the van’s door. She held up her hands, and they lit her signature red and gold sparks as she fought with someone inside. Sweat poured down her forehead, but she might as well have been alone for all the attention she paid outside her magic. He did that job for her, making sure no men came close to attack as she kept up with the push and pull of power. Simon couldn’t see beyond the darkness inside the van, but he was sure that was where their target—the focus of their whole mission—lay.
More men were coming out of the warehouse, and Simon realized this was bigger than he expected. His and Charlie’s eyes met at once, and instantly they went into standard formation: back to back while still protecting Robin, whose hands were shaking from the struggle. Whoever was inside that van had to be powerful, because Robin was one of the most powerful teenagers Simon had met.
 
; They kept at it, and what was supposed to be a short fight turned longer as the men were more trained than they expected. Still, they beat them systematically, and three against almost fifty wasn’t that bad. A yell came from Robin, and suddenly she was diving inside the van, where more sparks lit, and a horrible shriek filled the air. Simon just about lost his breath when silence filled the van next—but just as he was about to rescue her, her head popped out.
“Target’s here. Hurry,” she said.
Simon and Charlie communicated silently, and Charlie handled the rest of the men as Simon slipped in. Their target, a kidnapped wolf shifter heiress named Lucy Marlow, was lying on the floor wrapped in magical chains, her eyes closed. She was unconscious. Beside Lucy lay ashes and a cloak stained in blood, and Simon’s eyes widened as he turned to Robin.
Robin shrugged. “The witch was playing dirty. I had to pull out a decent retaliation.”
Right. Only Robin would call a spell that turned enemies to ash a decent retaliation. Again, he was amazed at how someone so young could already do so much but kept it to himself as he hauled Lucy as gently as he could outside. He called out to Charlie, and Charlie kicked the nearest man in the abdomen before the three of them made a run for it. Just as they were about to reach the hills, Charlie shifted to his dragon form once more, while Simon shifted to his human form and hurriedly put on trousers while Robin was preoccupied. Then he and Robin climbed on Charlie’s back, with Lucy in front of Simon and Robin behind him. The dragon shifter took flight immediately, and the warehouse became a tiny little thing as they flew higher and higher in the air.
Charlie went at full speed, and Simon felt Robin’s hand tighten around his waist. She’d always been wary of open flights, complaining enough that they only used it for emergency purposes such as this one. Actually, this was only the second time she’d ever ridden on a dragon.
Half an hour later, Charlie slowed down enough for Simon to turn around and face Robin, then navigated Lucy in between them. Robin’s hands transferred their tight grip on Charlie’s scales while she studied the chains surrounding Lucy, which were glowing a bit. She nodded her head, then closed her eyes, muttering some chants under her breath. One hand came up to touch the chains, and soon the glow was gone, and she gave Simon the go-signal. Simon shifted his hand into claws and worked on the chains, eventually breaking them and tossing them down the ocean they passed.
“She’s going to wake up in less than an hour,” Robin said. “She just needs to gather her strength.”
Simon nodded. They rotated back to their original positions, and Robin clung on to his hips again, making him grin as he turned his head in her direction.
“What?” she asked defensively.
“Last mission,” he said.
“Oh, yeah,” she murmured. “It went well.”
It did. He and Robin had been working as a team for three years now, starting at the moment when she’d been lent by her witch mentor, the famous Red Denver, to the shifter community in New York—mostly to get her used to doing missions and physical activities. At the same time, Simon had just been starting, too, and they often went as assistants to the big dudes who handled big missions—just like Charlie Takeshi, who was his brother-in-law.
Thinking of his sister, who was Charlie’s mate, Simon turned to Robin again. “Don’t leave yet when we get to New York.”
“Why?”
“You have to try my sister’s famous pasta. She’s making it for when Chuck returns home.”
“We’re not Charlie,” she deadpanned.
Simon winked. “I’m her brother. We can gatecrash any time we want.”
Robin’s mouth quirked.
“So what are you doing after this? You’re going to do that travel thing you want?”
Robin shook her head. A determined expression crossed her face. “No.”
“Then what?”
“I’m going to practice until I’m the best witch there is.”
“And you are going to be,” he said sincerely.
Her lip quirking turned into a full grin, one that was rare and brightened those green eyes of hers. He grinned back, feeling it reach his heart as he realized he was going to miss her. They’d grown from acquaintances to friends, and he was comfortable around her. Robin was true to herself, and she had balls. She also had a mouth that could stab like a knife, which made being with her fun.
As far as he knew, witches who went on training rarely showed themselves to the public. That meant this was going to be their last dinner together for now.
As for him? He didn’t know where he was going after this. Maybe more assisting jobs. Maybe solo missions.
Whatever it was, he hoped fate was kind to him and Robin.
CHAPTER TWO
5 Years Later
“Congratulations, Robin Chesley. You’ve just achieved your goal of being one of my best students.”
Red Denver’s voice sounded proud and cheerful, and the words reverberated in Robin’s ears and had her standing up straighter. Red wasn’t much for giving out compliments, mostly because she wanted her students to work harder at what they practiced—which meant this compliment, despite how simply it was said, was one that was sincere and could never be doubted.
Robin smiled in response, thanking the older witch. “I couldn’t have done it without a great mentor.”
Like Red’s compliments, Robin’s smiles were rare. But she kept giving it now, feeling her body vibrate as they walked the halls of Red’s home. It was actually an extension of the home of Henrik Mikhailov, who was one of the few dragon shifters left in the world and the dragon clan’s leader. He was also Red’s mate and husband. Henrik and Red had opened this extension up just a few kilometers away from Henrik’s house in Africa, hidden by a charm that prevented ordinary people from seeing it. Along with Robin, there were many other witches residing here, too, practicing their magic for the purpose of good.
Robin knew that hadn’t always been the case, considering just less than ten years ago, most of the powerful witches around the world had been enemies of the shifters and vampires and had tried to do them harm. One of the leaders had been Red’s mother, Gloria, who started a group and encouraged them to kill and hurt, claiming that their enemies needed to be eliminated—when in reality, she really just wanted to be the most powerful being left in the world. Red had been on the run then for being accused of killing a shifter clan leader, but she’d teamed up with shifters and some vampires to eliminate the threat. She then gathered all the redeemable witches she could and stayed in the Altai Mountain to shelter them and give them a home, and it had become a turning point for the change of heart of their kind.
After a few years, Red had then built up a second home in Africa for the young witches who wanted to improve their craft. She picked up more witches along the way, and Robin had been one of those lucky enough to be picked up at eight years old. Robin didn’t remember much about her earlier life, except she had a witch father who was a drunkard and liked beating people up.
This life was definitely better.
When they reached the end of the hall, Red turned to her again, her gray eyes sparkling. “I will be giving you your first solo mission soon.”
“I would love that.” Actually, she’d have loved to be given one sooner, but she guessed their peaceful world at the moment didn’t really provide much opportunity.
“In the meantime, don’t you have other plans? I heard you wanted to travel. Maybe you can go on vacation while waiting. I can always contact you when I need your help.”
Robin nodded, and they parted ways soon after. Red was right—she did want to travel but hadn’t really gotten the opportunity as she was just so determined to master her craft. She remembered talking about it to a certain boy in her past—a wolf shifter named Simon, who had been her mission partner for three years when she’d been lent to the shifter clan for experience.
She wondered how he was doing now.
As she passed by yet another
hall in the stone-built establishment, Robin looked around at some of the other witches milling about. She tried to envision in her mind who she wanted to take with her to travel among them. Then she realized that in her busy schedule practicing day in and day out, she hadn’t really made any friends here.
Simon’s face came to mind again—a kind-looking boy who always tolerated the fact that she was different and insisted on being her friend, anyway. It had been five years since she’d last seen him…would he actually still consider her his friend? Would he be agreeable to a travel trip or two with her?
There was only one way to find out.
*****
Her return to New York via a witch portal got her even more revved up than usual. But by the time she got there, Robin felt overwhelmed at how busy everything was. When she’d been training in Africa in that remote forest area, she accepted some side missions that took her to some towns there, handling investigative work more than anything—and those had been nothing compared to the hustle and bustle here. She didn’t think walking in shifter headquarters unannounced would be appropriate, and she didn’t know Simon’s actual home address.
Deciding to just de-stress for the night and try to find Simon in the morning, she checked in at a motel in Brooklyn and left her bag there, then went to the nearest bar in the city. If she wanted to get used to crowds again, which was often a necessity to blend in on missions, the bar was definitely the place to be. The one she entered had a young crowd who were drinking and dancing to the upbeat music, and the noise was decidedly loud. It felt like a club more than a bar, and Robin steeled herself as she squeezed herself in the throng and found a spot on the long bar. The drinks were unfamiliar to her, so Robin ordered the safest one: orange juice.