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Girl from Jussara

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by Hettie Ivers




  GIRL FROM JUSSARA

  Werelock Evolution Series Prequel

  Hettie Ivers

  Copyright © 2015 – 2016 Hettie Ivers

  www.hettieivers.com

  Ebook Formatting by www.gopublished.com

  Cover Design © 2016 Feather & Frame

  Cover Photos: © Honored | Dreamstime.com, © eaniton and © erika8213 | Depositphotos.com

  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.

  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 is purely coincidental.

  ISBN: 978-0-9973429-4-9

  WARNING

  Please be advised that this book contains sexually explicit scenes and graphic language. If such content offends you, please do not read.

  FBI Anti-Piracy Warning: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of a copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to five years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000.

  Advertencia Antipirateria del FBI: La reproducción o distribución no autorizada de una obra protegida por derechos de autor es ilegal. La infracción criminal de los derechos de autor, incluyendo la infracción sin lucro monetario, es investigada por el FBI y es castigable con pena de hasta cinco años en prisión federal y una multa de $250,000.

  CONTENTS

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Thank You!

  Excerpt from Slip of Fate

  CHAPTER ONE

  Reinoso werelock compound - Morumbi, São Paulo, Brazil - 1963

  “There’s a human girl from Jussara at the gates, sir. She’s demanding an audience with the Alpha.”

  “And?” Alcaeus scowled down the side of his shoulder at the guard as he continued his long strides through the gardens, forcing the young wolf to keep pace with him.

  “And … well”—the soldier cleared his throat—“we didn’t wish to bother you with such an inconsequential matter, but the girl has proven rather persistent.” When Alcaeus made no comment and displayed no interest in entertaining the topic further, the man added, “She’s slept on the ground curled up against the gate for three straight nights now, sir.”

  “Perhaps she’s a wolf?” was Alcaeus’ flippant reply.

  “No. She is definitely human, sir,” the soldier confirmed, not catching Alcaeus’ wry humor.

  Alcaeus sighed. “Let me guess, she has a terminally ill loved one she wants healed? She heard some rumors about our kind from a few superstitious villagers? Her town elder sent her here as a sacrifice for a good harvest?”

  “No, sir. She claims to be carrying your brother, the Alpha’s, baby. And she’s insistent that her condition be evaluated by our ‘wolf baby doctor.’ ”

  Alcaeus stopped dead in his tracks and then spun around, nearly knocking the young werewolf over before catching him by the shoulders. “What? No? There’s no way. Where is she? Is she truly pregnant?”

  ***

  He wore a path into the marble floor of his brother Alex’s unnecessarily palatial study while waiting for the girl from Jussara to be brought in. It was a far cry from how he’d planned to spend his morning.

  While Alcaeus assured himself the girl’s preposterous claim would no doubt prove false, it was nonetheless his duty to confirm this before denying whatever the imp’s true request and motive for the visit was and compelling her far from the property.

  And on the off chance her claim was valid? He wasn’t actually sure what he would do with her. His ire rose as he wondered whether there was any possibility his selfish, arrogant little brother and Alpha had already known the woman was pregnant when Alex decided to take off on an extended business trip to Nepal, leaving Alcaeus to manage things and clean up after his mess, as was typical of Alex.

  But no, it was impossible. Had to be. Alex maintained a general dislike for the pure human species, and Alcaeus had never known him to display even the slightest inkling of sexual interest in a human female before. He was quite sure Alex viewed coupling with a human as a form of debasement.

  A shrill female scream and great ruckus in the hallway had him racing from the study a moment later to find a wisp of a human girl yelling and batting her fists against one of his guards, who appeared to be holding a large machete just beyond her reach above his head, while a second guard attempted to subdue her.

  “It’s mine! Give it back! It belonged to my papai. Give it back to me!”

  At first glance, she appeared to be an unfortunate, wild street urchin. She was disheveled and filthy, caked with mud and grime.

  “It’s mine!” she shrieked at a pitch high enough to shatter glass. His wolf cringed. As did the man.

  “Give it back to her, Tomas,” he ordered.

  He hadn’t raised his voice, but his deep bass reverberated through the hall just the same. The girl’s screeching stopped as a sweeping silence fell upon the occupants of the hallway in response to the inherent weight of his command.

  When a head of unruly, waist-long, jet-black hair framing a delicate, heart-shaped face turned wary, translucent green eyes to him, Alcaeus feared the absolute worst might indeed be proved to have passed. Because while she wasn’t far enough along to display physical signs of pregnancy, the girl’s scent confirmed she was in fact carrying a werewolf fetus. And she was, hands-down, the most exquisite-looking dirty street urchin he’d ever beheld. Not even his idiot, supernatural-prejudiced little brother would dare deny it.

  “But, sir, she swung at us with it!” one of the guards tattled.

  Alcaeus wasn’t sure which coward spoke, because his eyes were glued to the girl’s.

  “Give it back to her,” he repeated, crossing the floor to get a closer look and whiff of her.

  Sea-glass green eyes widened in alarm at his approach. The smell of fear thickened in the air. He thought he might be sick. He stopped, not wanting to frighten her any more than he already was. What had his asshole brother done to this girl? Reluctantly, he tore his eyes from hers long enough to pin them on the guard who still held her machete, wordlessly letting the kid know there would be consequences if he had to give the order a third time.

  When Tomas lowered the weapon to her, she grabbed onto it with both hands, shooting the soldier a nasty glare before backing up several steps, her recovered weapon held defensively in front of her at the ready.

  “I’m Alcaeus.” He inclined his head in greeting. “Why don’t we talk in private?” He gestured to Alex’s office. She stared at the open office door, then back at him. Her eyes flew back and forth several times, sizing him up like a scared, cornered animal. He would murder his brother.

  Pride warred with self-preservation as she took in the size of the wolfman who appeared to be in charge of this pack. He was big—larger than the other guards. Tall and densely muscled, he was built much like the one who had ravaged her entire world. The beast who still haunted her nightmares.

  Brandishing the machete in one unsteady hand, she smoothed a wayward clump of dirt-matted hair from her face and fidgeted with the wrinkled folds of her shirt with the other, buying a few moments of precious time as she gathered herself and assessed her options.

  “You—you have a wolf baby doctor here?” she checked, pleased when her voice
came across steadier than expected.

  “Yes.”

  “I will speak to the wolf baby doctor,” she told him.

  “You will speak to me first,” he countered, once again motioning to the open study.

  She swallowed. “Alright. But I haven’t much time,” she tacked on. “And I have powerful friends who know I’m here. They will come looking for me if I don’t return within the hour.”

  Tomas guffawed outright at the absurdity of her bluff. “You’ve been camped outside our gate for days. Not a soul has come looking for you,” he sneered.

  “Tomas!” Alcaeus scolded. He jerked his head in dismissal at both wolves. “Leave us.”

  When they were alone in the hallway, Alcaeus assured her, “I’ll make certain we don’t keep you too long from your friends.” His arm extended toward the study in invitation. “After you?”

  But the girl worried her lip and refused to budge. “You first,” she challenged, pointing the blade of her increasingly unsteady machete at him.

  Hoping to ease her fear, he didn’t hesitate to offer her his back and walk on ahead into Alex’s office. Seating himself behind the desk, he waited, analyzing the pattern of her breathing and the music of her heartbeat for a full minute before she finally joined him in the room.

  Under the girl’s casual scrutiny, Alex’s office felt embarrassingly ornate and formal. Alcaeus shifted in his high-backed leather chair behind the large desk, belatedly wishing he’d ushered her into a less ostentatious lounge or sitting room instead.

  But after taking it all in with wide eyes, she swiftly rolled those eyes and, with a snort, plopped down into the guest chair on the opposite side of the desk, settling her weapon carefully across her lap. The girl was a mass of contradictions, and Alcaeus found himself wanting to unravel and dissect every single one. He forced himself back on task.

  “What’s your name?”

  She opened her mouth to answer, then shook her head, tossing a look of cool condescension his way as if to imply he was out of line for asking such a thing.

  His brow quirked. A brusque chastisement nearly rolled off his tongue, but he squelched it. She was plainly terrified and posturing for some semblance of control in a situation where she had none. Frightened as she obviously seemed to be of their kind, it was a testament to just how desperate for help she truly was that she’d been begging at their gates for four days and three nights. He noted the gauntness of her cheeks and the dark circles accenting her otherwise brilliant, hauntingly beautiful moss eyes. She was malnourished and exhausted. Alone and pregnant. And with a child of an evolved species, who would always belong to a different world than she did.

  “How did you meet Alex?” he asked instead.

  Her brows convened in puzzlement. “Who?”

  “Alex. The Alpha of our pack.”

  “You’re not the Alpha?”

  “Not lately.” It was his turn to frown. “Believe me, I would remember putting a baby inside of you. I promise you, you’d remember me doing so as well.”

  The girl’s expression volleyed between confusion, horror, and embarrassment, until finally her mouth formed a small “o.”

  “Ahh ... I um ... lied to the guards about that part.”

  Relief washed over him. “It wasn’t our Alpha who impregnated you?”

  Her olive skin turned an enchanting shade of summer turnip. “Uh-uh.” She fidgeted nervously in her chair, displaying her growing mortification. “I’ve never met your Alpha. I ... just … one of your guards the first night … he got … handsy. And I know how you dog people are territorial, so I thought he’d back off if ... ”

  One hand abandoned her weapon to settle over her abdomen in a protective gesture as her doe eyes appealed to the carvings on the ceiling, to the marble on the floor, to the knick-knacks decorating Alex’s desk. Everywhere but him.

  She was but an adorable, shy girl at heart—a precocious innocent on the cusp of becoming an enticing woman. The handsy guard would lose his hands.

  “Which guard?”

  Her restless eyes jumped to his at last. And when they held, the rest of the world stopped for him.

  That it wasn’t his brother Alex’s baby growing in her womb was a blessing indeed. But the fact that another male werewolf had thought to rut and impregnate such a small, fragile-looking human girl was more infuriating to him than he possessed the ability to mask.

  “How old are you?”

  He hadn’t meant to snarl the words, and realized he needed to get a grip on his emotions when she visibly flinched in reaction to his hostile tone, her knuckles whitening around the handle of her machete. He was about to apologize when she raised her chin and answered.

  “I will speak with the wolf baby doctor.” The haughtiness in her soft voice sounded forced.

  He nodded, pausing to take a calming breath. Then another. “Yes,” he agreed. “I will have our doctor examine you.”

  He thought a small measure of relief flitted briefly across her features at the prospect of him granting her what she so desperately sought.

  “How old are you?” he repeated the question, taking care to use a less threatening tone.

  She held eye contact but pursed her lips, saying nothing.

  Even in this she was refusing to answer him? He was … impressed. And frustrated.

  She was petrified. The stench of it saturated Alex’s office, overwhelming the scent of even her filth and the hormones that confirmed it was a wolf baby growing within her tiny belly. She was barely controlling her unconscious shivering. Yet she held firm, staring him down as if he were the one who was in no position to be posing questions or calling the shots. The hard set of his mouth softened in admiration.

  “Let’s start over, hmm?” he entreated with a gentle smile, casually leaning forward onto his elbows atop the desk. “Why don’t you tell me your name, sweetheart?”

  Green eyes narrowed and her petite nose scrunched in disgust. Gripping tightly to the machete in her lap, she straightened up in her seat until her spine bowed. “I am not your sweetheart,” she hissed.

  Alcaeus’ full lips parted. He’d been charming women for over three centuries. He was damn near irresistible when he set out to be, truth be told. Every female being on the planet he’d ever encountered, both the young and old, found him so. But there was no indication in her scent or her demeanor that this little woman from Jussara found him to be anything but terrifying … and repugnant, apparently. Her reaction to him disturbed and rankled him far more than he cared to analyze.

  “I won’t hurt you.”

  Her breath hitched.

  His concern was genuine. “Promise.”

  Her heart rate spiked. She caught her lower lip between her teeth.

  “You can trust me.”

  Her eyes shone with sudden dampness.

  “Please?”

  She shook her head, rapidly blinking back the hint of traitorous tears before any could fully surface.

  “I’d like to help you,” he offered, dumbfounded at how his attempts to reassure her seemed only to be frightening her worse.

  She continued shaking her head in refusal, eying him cautiously as she transferred the machete to one hand in order to fish through the pocket of her worn, mud-stained skirt with the other. When she retrieved a gold coin and slammed it angrily onto the desk, Alcaeus was surprised at the force with which her small hand smacked the solid wood. He was reminded that she hailed from a farming village. Possibly she was used to hard physical labor and sturdier than she appeared.

  “No,” she snapped. “Doctor,” she stated firmly, despite her voice cracking on the second syllable. “No help,” she insisted stiltedly after a beat. “I will pay.”

  Alcaeus wasn’t a man to be struck mute, yet he found he had no words. His mouth dried up. Then it watered. For the first time since puberty, he feared for an instant he would lose all control over his wolf, as the animal demanded to feel the proud girl’s body beneath his.

  But he w
as no pup. And she was a scared human child. Carrying another wolf’s child. He would never allow himself to touch her. Not even to comfort and shield her from the world of hurt reflected in her eyes, as his wolf was howling with the need to do. Not yet.

  Eventually he simply nodded his assent. Then he rose from Alex’s desk and went to fetch the house doctor for the girl from Jussara who refused to be charmed by him—not even enough to reveal her name.

  As he went he was assailed by the most profound premonition that he would let this tiny human stranger lead him around by the balls for as long as she was willing to. The disconcerting part of this epiphany was just how much the idea appealed to him.

  He decided then and there that he was keeping her. The complications and logistics of the situation mattered little to him. They were altogether irrelevant to his wolf. She would stay with them. Whether she wanted to or not.

  He would convince her. He would charm her. And soon she would no longer fear him. He would see her smile and hear her laughter. Often. Daily. And in those limpid jade eyes he would glimpse growing affection. He’d see trust. He would earn those. No matter how long it took. He could be patient. He would have those things. He would have her.

  CHAPTER TWO

  She fell in love with the wolf baby doctor’s touch the moment his probing fingertips first entered her vaginal canal. His name was Kai, and he was the sole reason Alcaeus was able to convince the girl from Jussara to remain with the Reinoso pack through her pregnancy. She knew instantly there was no other wolf-person she’d trust to deliver her baby.

  It was the way he looked at her. And the way that he didn’t. The way he saw what others missed, but left those observations unsaid. He never ask her to be happy, didn’t try to make her laugh like Alcaeus tirelessly did. She felt an instant connection to the house doctor, her heart identifying him as a kindred spirit. Perhaps because he was dead inside, and yet still breathing— like her.

  Even so, she declined to tell the doctor Kai her given name as well, steadfastly refusing to reveal her identity to anyone at the Reinoso compound. As such, Alcaeus took the liberty of christening her “Guadalupe,” after the patron saint of the Americas. Or so he’d said.

 

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