by Tasha Black
Bite This!
A 300 Moons Book
Tasha Black
13th Story Press
Contents
Copyright
Tasha Black Starter Library
Dedication
Prologue
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
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
BURN THIS! (Sample)
Chapter 1
Tasha Black Starter Library
About the Author
Curse of the Alpha: The Complete Bundle
One Percent Club
Copyright © 2016 by 13th Story Press All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
13th Story Press PO Box 506 Swarthmore, PA 19081
[email protected]
Cover design 2016 by Sylvia Frost
http://sfrostcovers.com
Tasha Black Starter Library
Packed with steamy shifters, mischievous magic, billionaire superheroes, and plenty of HEAT, the Tasha Black Starter Library is the perfect way to dive into Tasha's unique brand of Romance with Bite!
Get your FREE books now!
Now this is the Law of the Jungle,
as old and as true as the sky;
And the Wolf that shall keep it may prosper,
but the Wolf that shall break it must die.
As the creeper that girdles the tree-trunk,
the Law runneth forward and back;
For the strength of the Pack is the Wolf,
and the strength of the Wolf is the Pack.
-Rudyard Kipling, The Jungle Book
For My Pack:
My family.
Each and every member of the formidable & fun-loving Black List!
And for Heather, Deb, Iliana, Elle, Sylvia, Jessie, and everyone else who makes the world of books so much fun!
Prologue
Some people said Kate Harkness was a witch.
Others said she was an angel.
But to the very special group of foundlings in her care, she was just Mom.
Mom, with a long ponytail of frizzy yellow hair, smiling so hard that her sunburnt cheeks nearly covered her eyes. Mom, pushing a wheelbarrow or driving the pick-up truck that pulled the hayride at Harkness Farms. Mom, laying down the law when you messed up, and making you want to cry with pride when you had earned her gruff praise.
Any mom will tell you her children are special, but the kids who came to live at Harkness Farms weren’t exactly your run of the mill orphans. Kate’s children all possessed special gifts. Unique abilities, you might say. Each one had the unlikely power to shift into the form of an animal or magical creature.
And it was precisely because of these blessings that the children found their way to Kate Harkness. Most shifters didn’t have the power to change until adolescence. But rarely, a child would come into their gift early. And sometimes, this was just too much for even a shifter family to handle.
But not too much for Kate.
Bear. Wolf. Tiger. Dog. Butterfly. Dragon. It didn’t matter.
She made room in her home and her heart for them all.
To help them, every precocious young shifter brought to Harkness Farms was paid a visit by Gloria Cortez, a witch of no little renown, on the night of their arrival. Although Mrs. Cortez’s role in their everyday lives wasn’t as evident as Kate’s, it was no less important.
The tiny woman would cradle the child in her warm arms and whisper a sweet song, though none could ever remember the words.
“Three hundred moons, Kate,” she would say with a crinkly-eyed smile, handing the child off again.
“And then what, Gloria?” some of the children heard their Mom whisper one night, when they had snuck downstairs to witness the welcome ceremony of a new sibling.
“And then we wait,” Mrs. Cortez replied. “Magic always has a price. We’ll find it out soon enough.”
The children all believed that Mrs. Cortez had somehow given them the power to control their animals, to live a normal life among the rest of the world. But whenever they tried to ask Mom about it, she told them they would know well enough when they were older, and set them to work on one farm chore or another.
Eventually, they stopped asking. And the song was all but forgotten.
But now is a significant time for the first group of children who came into the care of Kate Harkness all those years ago. The 300th moon is finally upon them. Some memories refuse to stay forgotten forever.
And some prices won’t remain unpaid.
1
Darcy watched over the casino floor with the relaxed alertness of a lioness following the movements of a herd on the Serengeti. Darcy wasn’t a lioness, though she was a natural predator.
The soft glow of a thousand tiny faux-Chinese lantern ceiling fixtures provided the only light in the huge room, lending Stackhouse Casino’s poker room an air of perpetual twilight, no matter the time of day.
Nothing in a casino was ever by accident. Every twist and turn of the corridors leading in, each swirl in Stackhouse’s ocean of carpet had been painstakingly crafted to soothe or stimulate the clientele’s experience.
Darcy assumed that the sensation of fading light was meant to evoke the sense that something big was about to happen.
As easily as it convinced the players that they were about to win big, so the light left Darcy eternally convinced that something terrible was about to go down.
Which was probably the perfect state of mind for a cooler.
While her job title might be Executive Facilitator, Darcy held no illusions that her role was materially different from the job of barroom cooler that Patrick Swayze’s character had in that eighties movie. And while she seldom had to duck from a flying barstool, she’d taken down her fair share of drunk frat boys and sore losers.
Usually though, she preferred a much gentler approach.
And so far, tonight was no exception - just a typical crowd for a Saturday. Most likely, she could keep the peace by making sure everyone had a good time, and deftly convincing any undesirables that there was somewhere else they’d rather be.
Darcy was a very convincing woman.
In part it was because of her physique, a heady combination of hard muscles and ample curves. Darcy had a body like a pin-up girl turned assassin, and she was too straightforward to think that being modest about it would make her any more popular with her fellow women, or any less popular with the opposite sex.
But the truth of it was that her wolf gave her an even bigger advantage than her appearance.
Never seen, yet ever present just beneath the surface of her skin, the wolf heard with clever ears, saw even in darkness, and sniffed out lies from truths as easily as Darcy could discern bet
ween black and white.
“Hey, new kid,” one of the house dealers winked at her on his way to a shift on the tables.
“Frank,” she nodded coolly as he passed, studiously ignoring his denim blue eyes and wide shoulders.
Sooner or later they’d all catch on that she never fraternized with colleagues. Mixing business with pleasure was a huge no-no for a cooler. She’d learned that the hard way in Vegas.
As it turned out, what happened in Vegas did not always stay in Vegas.
As a matter of fact, sometimes it fled back to the east coast and did a long stint in Atlantic City - that purgatory of casino scenes - before finally being courted for an ideal gig with Stackhouse in Philly.
And boy was Darcy happy to be at Stackhouse.
It wasn’t just because the place was brand spanking new. The facilities were top notch - state of the art machines and pristine decor. But that wouldn’t last. Sooner or later, the glitter always rubbed off.
No, she was mostly glad to be close to home, or the closest thing to home she had ever known.
In spite of the sequin gown and the stilettos, Darcy felt most herself when she was curled up on the rag rug in front of the fireplace in the modest white stucco farmhouse at Harkess Farms, where her foster mother and siblings lived. And Stackhouse was only half an hour from Tarker’s Hollow, making it paradise as far as Darcy was concerned.
Besides, the Philly casino scene was quieter than Atlantic City - less flashy. Way fewer Sopranos and Goodfellas wannabes. It was still a pretty new thing to gamble here, a novelty in the land of Ben Franklin and the Quakers.
And tonight was shaping up into another comfortable evening. A couple of idiots at one of the lower stakes tables were trying to work together to increase their odds. She could probably bust them for collusion, but it wasn’t really cheating when you weren’t winning. She’d let them have their fun. For now.
The wolf huffed in her head and she turned back to the handsome middle-aged guy at table six she’d been keeping an eye on.
Not good. He’d just lost big for the third hand in a row.
Darcy could see the bad decisions he hadn’t made yet written all over him. He didn’t like losing. No one did. But he especially didn’t like doing it in front of the woman next to him. She had to be 20 years younger than he was, and he was trying so hard to impress her.
Darcy nodded to Mason, who was working the door. The huge guy in the black suit nodded back. He didn’t move, but she knew he was watching as she headed over.
Never work alone. It was a good motto in Darcy’s line of work. As much as she preferred to work alone, she couldn’t argue with common sense. She was good, but a situation could go sour fast. You didn’t want to start looking for help when the shit had already hit the fan. Confrontation upset everyone. And that was bad for business.
She eased up to the guy at the poker table, and placed a gentle hand on his elbow.
The wolf had begun noting signs of strain. The guy’s posture was stiff. There was a sour edge to his sweat. His heart, already beating too quickly, accelerated harshly at Darcy’s touch.
The man spun a bit too fast to face her, fury twisting his features.
She gave him a fraction of a second, then he responded just as she expected.
His anger ratcheted down a few notches as he took her in, his eyes inevitably sliding down her body and lingering at the place where her dress barely covered her breasts on the way back up.
The fit and hang of the dress was on purpose, its effect calculated by Darcy as much as the lighting had been calculated by the owners of the casino. Men found her attractive and she had no qualms about using that fact to do her job well. Even if it meant using double-sided tape on a plunge bra as if she were dancing in a cabaret instead bouncing at a casino. If she had sent the more linebacker-esque Mason over here, this interaction would be playing out very differently. Anyone could justify getting mad at the goon in the suit, but no one wanted to be the guy yelling at the girl in the pretty dress.
“Sir, your private table is waiting for you in our VIP dining area,” she said in her friendliest voice. Tone was important, it had to be soft enough that it wasn’t confrontational, but loud and clear, so everyone at the table could hear. “The chef has taken the liberty of starting you off with some complimentary oysters on the half shell with his own mignonette sauce. I hope that will be to your liking.”
He stared at her a moment, his anger turning to confusion.
Then there was the magical instant when she saw his expression relax into understanding and then relief. She had thrown him a safety line and he was going to be able to save face.
“Yes. That will be fine,” he said nonchalantly.
But the wolf noted that his voice was deeper than before, a telltale sign of gratitude.
Darcy gave him a winsome smile, then swept both the man and his guest off through the maze of gaming tables to the VIP dining area.
The casino was more like a wasp’s nest than a building. Though every inch was covered in shimmering chandeliers and plush carpet, Darcy still would have described the path to the safety of the dining room as a walk through the catacombs. Clientele could get lost in here. And with opportunities to bet around every corner, it was in the Stackhouse’s best interests that it not be particularly easy to find your way out.
At last they reached the VIP dining room. The subtle gold leaf on the wallpaper and the creamy white coffered ceilings made diners feel prosperous, and the complimentary drinks relaxed them.
Darcy was still feeling everyone out, but she was quickly realizing that Mason was good at his job. He must have had heard her conversation back in the poker room and texted the kitchen ahead, because when they arrived, they found their oysters on the table waiting, just as Darcy had promised.
The man held out a chair for his date and then sat.
Darcy leaned in over his shoulder.
“Mr. Panchenko is delighted that you could join us at the Stackhouse again, sir,” she murmured just loudly enough that the date could hear it.
“Enjoy your meal,” she told them, straightening up.
The man winked at her, clearly feeling happy again, and she took off hoping she hadn’t missed too much in the poker room.
When she was about to turn the final corner, a voice spoke from behind her.
“Hey there, beautiful.”
She didn’t have to turn to recognize it - deep, and a little rough, but with a playful Irish lilt around the edges.
“If it isn’t The Amazing Finn,” she teased, without turning to him.
“Fantastic, actually. It’s The Fantastic Finn. At least that’s what they tell me. But you don’t have to take my word for it, love.”
Jesus. She could actually hear the wink in his voice.
Finn was the casino’s magician in residence, if that was a thing.
He was also an immensely handsome and deeply masculine guy. Tall and muscular, with long hair that made him look like the man-bun video guy, Finn’s eyes were always full of mischief.
It was all just insult to injury that he made a mockery of himself by working as a magician. Only a ridiculous person would chose magic as a career.
Against her better judgment, she turned to him.
She could tell by the way he was dressed, like a pallbearer at Liberace’s funeral, that he must be between shows.
“I’m a little busy right now, Finn,” she said. “So if you were hoping to wow me by pulling a rabbit out of your pants, or whatever, it’ll have to wait.”
“I wouldn’t dream of wasting your time, love,” he told her, his hazel eyes flashing down at her conspiratorially. “But I thought you might like to know that the gentleman at Trish’s blackjack table just pulled a Savannah.”
Shit.
She dashed around the corner and used her wolf’s amped up hearing.
“Sir, you can’t touch your chips after the cards have been dealt,” Trish was saying, an edge of anxiety in her normally
sultry voice.
The man across from her was wearing a cheap suit that was probably meant to look fancy. He apologized, making drunkenly exaggerated hand gestures.
As Darcy approached, her wolf’s nose told her he was not even tipsy.
“Is there a problem here, Trish?” she asked.
Trish looked up at her in gratitude.
“This guy keeps messing with his chips after he bets. And all night long, he’s been betting 20 bucks. Now, all of a sudden, he wins a big hand, and there’s a $500 chip in his bet,” she explained.
That was how the cheat move known as the Savannah worked. You hid a big money chip in your bet once in a while, but then snuck it out if you lost. That meant touching your chips to hand them to the dealer, instead of letting her pick them up, which was a no-no. And the best way to cover it up was to be drunkenly enthusiastic and overly apologetic.
It was like this guy just googled how to cheat at cards and copied the first video he’d found.
Amateur.
“Everyone can see the chips on the table. I didn’t touch nothing,” the idiot spluttered.
Darcy could see the $500 chip peeking out from beneath the three $5 chips on top of it.
Now she was going to have to haul this guy in and scrub the security footage until she caught him cheating. It would be difficult to spot, even if the cameras had the proper angle and the resolution to distinguish one chip from another.
So much for her easy night.
“Why don’t we just count the man’s chips and pay him what he earned?” Finn’s deep voice came from behind her.
Darcy turned in surprise.
“May I?” Finn asked the guy.
“Be my guest,” cheap suit said with a huge grin.
Darcy watched in wonder as Finn pushed up his puffy sleeves, looking more than ever as if he had just escaped from a community theatre production of Macbeth. He picked the chips up and placed them on the table in front of the man, one at a time, counting as he did.