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Lost To The Bear (BBW Bear Shifter Romance)

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by Ariana Hawkes




  Lost To The Bear

  Ariana Hawkes

  Contents

  Note from the author

  Also by Ariana Hawkes

  Get your free book!

  Lost To The Bear

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  A Thank You from Ariana Hawkes

  Also by Ariana Hawkes

  Bonus Story - Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love (Kristin)

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Your free book is waiting!

  About the Author

  Copyright ©2016 by Ariana Hawkes

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events and businesses is purely coincidental.

  This is a standalone, 34,000-word HEA romance, perfect for a lunch break, bath time, or a little dose of me-time, wherever you are!

  Created with Vellum

  Note from the author

  Hi there!

  Thank you for your interest in reading my latest BBW bear shifter romance book! I hope you will enjoy it!

  I’ve also included a free bonus book for you here. It’s Shiftr: Swipe Left For Love (Kristin), the second instalment in my Hope Valley Dating App series.

  Please note: The main story finishes at about 60% because the free bonus story follows. So don’t be confused - the main book is a novella of 34,000 words.

  Yours,

  Ariana

  ALSO BY ARIANA HAWKES

  Shiftr: Hope Valley Dating App Romances

  Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love – Book 1 (Dina)

  Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love – Book 2 (Kristin)

  Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love – Book 3 (Melissa)

  Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love – Book 4 (Andrea)

  Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love – Book 5 (Lori)

  Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love – Book 6 (Adaira)

  Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love – Book 7 (Timo)

  Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love – Book 8 (Jessica)

  Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love – Book 9 (Ryzard)

  Broken Hill Bears

  Bear In The Rough (Broken Hill Bears Book 1)

  Bare Knuckle Bear (Broken Hill Bears Book 2)

  Bear Cuffs (Broken Hill Bears Book 3)

  Ravished by the Ice Palace Pack

  Get your free book!

  A 4.5-star rated, comedy romance featuring one kickass roller derby chick, two scorching-hot Alphas, and the naughty nip that changed their lives forever.

  The only thing missing from Aspen Richardson’s life is a man who will love her just the way she is. In the small town she calls home, bullies from the past remain, making her wonder if it's ever going to happen. But, things are about to change in a major way, as the secret Aspen’s parents have been keeping from her comes out…

  “This book definitely needs to be added to your MUST read list – you will quickly fall in love with this steamy and fast paced story.”

  Get your free book now!

  (If your device doesn’t support links, go to www.arianahawkes.com/freebook)

  Lost To The Bear

  1

  In the middle of Midwinter Creek was a lonely back road that was rarely disturbed by a single human being. Except for two times per day when a pickup truck passed through. That pickup – a battered red Ford – was driven by Paige Flanagan, at high speed, with hard rock blaring through the open windows and the lucky fuzzy cherries that hung from the rearview mirror bouncing like crazy. She had long, jet black hair with a russet ombre and poker-straight bangs, a maraschino cherry of a mouth, a flattish nose that she was always wishing was narrower, and slanting, gold-flecked eyes, carrying more than a hint of mischief.

  If you’ve never seen another living soul on the road, what’s stopping you from having a little fun? she reasoned. Her brakes were good and her reactions were fast, and this was her little moment of freedom every day, between caring for her mama and tending bar. She loved the way the wind whipped through the windows, making her streaked hair fly everywhere. Loved the way that there was no-one to hear her powerful, yet tuneless voice, so she could sing along to her favorite bands to her heart’s content. She knew every turn and bend in the road as well as she knew her own generously proportioned curves, and she barely needed to concentrate as she rocked out to Iron Maiden, System of a Down and Korn, drumming her hands on the wheel and tossing her head back and forth.

  She always played the same songs in the same order, because she loved the anticipation of knowing what was coming next, and if she drove faster than usual and arrived at work before the playlist was finished, she’d stay in the car, put the seat right back, close her eyes and listen to the rest of it.

  As she turned dry creek corner, Lie With Me Another Day began to play.

  If I get to the first chorus before I hit lightning tree bend, I’ll do it. I’ll give mama the ultimatum, she promised herself. I’ll tell her she’s moving to the city with me so I can go to college. Either that or I’m leaving her behind in that moldering old house. The stretch ahead was straight, visibility was perfect, and Paige hit the gas hard, the truck’s engine complaining as it gathered speed.

  It was going to be close. She was doing a little over 120, the music was pounding, and Paige was singing her heart out. The black, twisted stump of the lightning tree was just coming into view, and… A second too soon there was a clash of cymbals, and the chorus began. With a groan of defeat, she stepped on the brake.

  “Better luck next time, kiddo,” she muttered as the speed of the truck dropped sharply and she navigated the tight bend. It was the third time she’d entrusted her scary future to the engine of the battered old truck, and the third time it had let her down. And then, just as she came out of the turn and pressed on the gas again, her eyes widened as she she saw something – a huge something – directly in front of her. It was right in the middle of the road, approximately human-shaped, and moving very slowly; almost staggering.

  “What the hell?” Cursing loudly, she dragged the steering wheel to the right and punched the brake. The truck juddered off the side of the road and collided with the trunk of a big old pine tree.

  “What is that?” Paige muttered, squinting into the gloom of the forest canopy. The figure fell to its knees, then keeled over sideways and collapsed in a heap. She climbed out of the truck and walked over to it cautiously. It made a sound, a kind of drawn-out groan. Pain, she realized instantly, and she received a stab of pain in her abdomen. It was her unfortunate lot in life to empathize with the sufferings of others. Mama called it her gift, but most of the time it felt more like a curse. She tiptoed closer, her heart pounding. It was a man; lying on his side, his body all hunched up in a protec
tive position. And he was covered in blood. A lot of blood. Black and tarry, and soaked into his clothes. She laid a hand on his shoulder.

  “Hey there, mister? Can you hear me?” The man had black hair, thick black brows, and black-lashed eyelids, sealed closed. At the sound of her voice, his eyes snapped open and he blinked several times. They were blue-gray eyes, dulled with pain.

  “Mmmmphh,” he groaned.

  “Are you okay?” she whispered. Of course he’s not okay, idiot. Something real bad has happened to him. Slowly, he began to move, and as he gradually unfurled himself from a tight ball, she registered that he was a very big, powerfully-built man. His face was streaked with dirt and sweat and blood, and his massive forearms were covered in long gashes. “Did you get hit by a car?” Instead of answering, he tried to pull himself up into a sitting position, but she pressed on his shoulder, trying to make him stay down.

  “Wait – you’re hurt bad. Stay where you are. I’ll call 911.” But as she got up to run back to the truck for her phone, he reached for her arm, and made another mmmphh sound. “Huh? You don’t want me to call the cops, and an ambulance?” He shook his head, then winced in pain.

  “But why not? You’ve most likely got broken bones. You could have internal bleeding.” He shook his head again.

  “No,” he gasped, in a hoarse, broken voice.

  “But why?”

  “Please – no. Just leave me. I’m fine.”

  “Mister, you’re not fine, any fool could see that. You’re all fucked up, and if I leave you out here, you’ll probably die.” His irises cleared and he flashed her a fierce look.

  “No cops. No hospitals,” he said, forcing his words out between painful rasps. Paige sunk down onto the ground, dumbfounded.

  “Then what can I do with you?”

  “Just – leave me.” He doubled over again, and a jolt of pain shot through Paige’s body in sympathy.

  “I can’t do that. It’s not humane.” He made an undecipherable sound. “At least tell me what happened?”

  “I don’t know.” She frowned.

  “Maybe it was a hit and run. Where were you coming from?” she asked. It was his turn to frown. “I don’t know.”

  She raised an arched eyebrow.

  “Then where are you going to?”

  “I don’t know that either.”

  “You’re serious?”

  “I am.”

  “What’s your name?” He shook his head, and distress flashed across his eyes.

  “You can’t remember?”

  “No. I don’t know. I mean, I don’t know anything.”

  “Hey, it’s okay. You most likely hit your head and it made you forget. Everything will come back soon, I’m sure. I’ll take you to the emergency room, and they can figure out where you’re hurt.” Suddenly, his hand shot out and encircled her wrist in an iron grasp.

  “No!” His voice was suddenly much stronger, almost a growl.

  “But why? If you can’t remember anything, what’s the problem?”

  “I just know. I can’t explain it, but it’s the one thought I have in my head now. It’s dangerous.”

  “For you, you mean?”

  “Maybe.”

  “Are you dangerous?”

  “No.” He flashed the ghost of a smile. She ran her eyes over his injured body in dismay.

  “But what if I drive you there? No ambulance. I’ll just bring you right up to the door?” he doubled up in pain again.

  “No. I just – need – sleep.” His voice was so low that she could hardly catch his words. Paige cast a worried glance back at her truck, thinking. What could she do? Leaving him wasn’t an option. Neither was taking him home to mama. Men were strictly banned from the little house they shared. Mama hated every one of the ‘dirty, deceiving bastards,’ as she was fond of saying. Paige wasn’t even allowed to refer to men in her presence. There was a room upstairs at the bar where she worked though. A bedroom left over from when it used to be a lodging house. No-one ever went up there. But the last she’d seen of it, there was still a bed in there. That could be an option, I guess. The man had closed his eyes again, his eyelids fluttering with evident pain. Goddamn him. How am I even in this position? Why can’t he just go to the emergency room like everybody else? She bit down on her bottom lip.

  “Okay, I guess I do know someplace where you could sleep for a while,” she said slowly, wondering at the same time if she was crazy. “A quiet room where no-one will bother you.”

  “Thank you,” he muttered.

  “But you’re going to have to get into my truck, and I don’t think I can lift you.”

  “That’s okay.”

  “Wait, I’ll bring it closer.” She climbed back into the driver’s seat and said a silent prayer to the goddesses as the engine started first time. She reversed away from the tree trunk, the bumper grinding and creaking, then put the truck in drive and pulled up right beside him. Then she ran around, opened the passenger door, and tried to help him as he hauled himself to his feet and dragged his huge, muscular body into the truck.

  “It’s about another half hour,” she said, starting up the truck.

  “Okay,” he rasped, slumping down in the seat. She knew instinctively that she needed to drive real slow on the dirt road so the bumps didn’t jolt him. She cast a glance at him. Fresh beads of perspiration were standing out on his forehead and running down the side of his face, cutting a trail through the blood and grime. What the hell am I doing? she wondered. This man needs to get checked out in a hospital. But something about him persuaded her to follow his wishes. A kind of desperation – no, more a conviction. And she did have one idea. There was an old veterinarian who hung around the bar most afternoons. He was semi-retired and foul tempered, but he treated people’s animals when the urge took him. He was also known to treat the occasional human for a small fee, no questions asked.

  Paige drove on in silence. The man was either sleeping, or trying to block his pain out. She looked at him at least once every minute, checking that he was still alive.

  As she pulled up by the back door of Darlene’s Bar and cut the engine, he opened his eyes.

  “We here?”

  “Yup.” She looked around. There was no one about. Good. She had a hunch that the fewer the people who knew about this injured stranger, the better. “Let me check the coast’s clear, and we can get you upstairs.”

  “Okay.”

  She ran up the back stairs to the old guest room. It was just as she remembered it. Kind of dingy, with chipped paint and yellowing walls. The bed wasn’t made, but there were some blankets piled up on a set of shelves. She spread them on the bed, then went back down and began the slow and difficult task of helping the man up the narrow stairs.

  The journey seemed to have revived him a little, and with her tucked under his arm and him clinging to the walls, he managed to heave himself all the way up. When they reached the room, they were both breathing hard.

  “There you go, big guy,” Paige panted, leading him to the bed. He sat down heavily.

  “Thanks,” he said, in a dry, cracked voice.

  “Oh, you’re thirsty. Wait.” She went into the en-suite bathroom and filled a glass with water. He drank it straight down. “Okay, why don’t you lay down and rest. I’ve got to start my shift now, but I’ll come check on you when I can.”

  He did as she suggested, stretching out on the bed, his huge frame several inches too long for the mattress. Then he closed his eyes.

  Now, to find that veterinarian, Paige thought, closing the door behind her and running down the stairs.

  2

  He opened his eyes. He was in a room. It was dark. There was a faint scent of a man and a woman. He wasn’t wearing a shirt and his chest felt tight, as if something was wrapped around it. Touching it gingerly with his fingertips, he discovered that it was a bandage, right where he’d been hurting before. I’ve been out cold and someone’s seen to my injuries, he realized. His pulse quickening, he sa
t up and instantly felt dizzy. He lay back down again and stared at the ceiling. He was in the room that the beautiful, kind-hearted woman had brought him to. That much he knew. Before that, he’d been staggering along a forest road, badly wounded. But before that, everything was dim. He searched his memory again, trying to look into nooks and crannies, but there was nothing. He knew the names for things like bed, blanket, woman. But he seemed to have no past. As he tried harder and harder, desperate to regress beyond that moment in the forest, he began to panic, and his skin prickled and tingled. Something or someone hurt me. But was it deliberate or an accident? He had an overwhelming urge to get up and leave. But where could he go? He thought about the outside. He knew what towns and forests looked like. But nothing presented itself as a memory. There was no image jumping out and saying ‘this is your home.’

  He needed the bathroom. He hauled himself to his feet, gasping at the pain that racked his body, and hobbled through the almost perfect darkness to the bathroom. He flicked the light switch. There was a terrible-looking man in there, staring at him. He let off a snarl, then laughed at himself. This is me, he realized, gazing in the mirror. He looked like hell. He was filthy, bloodstained. He had black hair, gray eyes, a square jaw and strongly defined cheekbones. His skin was deeply tanned and he’d shaved a couple of days earlier. How do I know this, but not know who I am? he thought, stress and confusion rolling through him in waves.

  His ribs were taped up and several of the gashes on his body had been stitched together. He needed to get clean. As carefully as he could, so he didn’t mess up the handiwork, he washed partially at the sink and partially in the shower, scrubbing until the water first ran red, then slowly turned clear. Just as he was climbing out of the shower, he heard the door of the main room opening. He dried off quickly, put his pants back on and opened the bathroom door.

 

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