Dark WolfClaimed by Wolves #3

Callie Rose

Copyright © 2020 by Callie Rose

All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

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Contents

1. Sable

2. Sable

3. Ridge

4. Sable

5. Dare

6. Sable

7. Sable

8. Sable

9. Archer

10. Sable

11. Sable

12. Sable

13. Trystan

14. Sable

15. Sable

16. Sable

17. Sable

18. Ridge

19. Sable

20. Sable

21. Trystan

22. Sable

23. Sable

24. Dare

25. Sable

26. Sable

27. Archer

28. Sable

Books by Callie Rose

1

Sable

I’ve never buried a body before.

Most people haven’t, I’m sure. Most people don’t ever find themselves in a position to aid and abet a murder, and I definitely never thought I’d be in the latter camp. I can hardly bring myself to crush a spider, even one that’s taken up residence in my room.

But it’s not quite midnight, and here I am, standing over my uncle’s dead body while two massive wolves dig a grave in the woods. It’s only one more strange puzzle piece in my new life as a hybrid witch-slash-wolf shifter.

Hanging in there? Archer asks through mind-speak, his voice startling me as it cuts into my thoughts.

I glance across my uncle's body at the blond wolf sitting regally on the soft grass opposite me. Archer looks beautiful, almost otherworldly, with his pale fur surrounded by the pitch black of the woods around him. His pointed ears are perked as if he’s listening to the forest, and I know he’s probably monitoring for intruders even as he waits for me to respond. His green eyes study me as if he’s looking for any hint that I’m coming unglued.

His concern isn’t exactly unwarranted. That’s probably exactly what I would’ve done three weeks ago.

But I’m stronger now. Mostly.

I’m great, I tell him with more confidence than I feel.

Archer’s ears twitch, his eyes glinting in the moonlight. It occurs to me that it’s a lot harder to fib through mind-speak—or maybe it’s just the mate bond. Either way, I feel like he’s got a pretty good idea of how I’m feeling right now, and he knows “great” isn’t even close to the right word for it.

Shaking out my fur, I pace a couple steps toward Clint’s bloody head. Trystan’s powerful jaws damn near collapsed Clint’s throat, leaving a bloody, mangled mess that should turn my stomach but doesn’t. My wolf has a stronger constitution than me.

I’m glad Clint’s gone, I admit. Which makes me feel pretty shitty, if we’re being honest. Am I that cold that I don’t care a man is dead?

Don’t feel shitty, Archer replies, letting out a snuffle. Clint deserved what he got. The moment he tried to attack us in that sneaky, underhanded way, he signed his own death certificate. After he… after how he treated you? The things he did to you? He didn’t deserve to live.

I smile at Archer, thankful to always have him near me, calming me and piecing me back together. Although I’m not sure the way I’ve twisted my face even looks like a smile, considering I’m all wolf teeth and lolling tongue, and none of my parts operate seamlessly yet. I still have to get used to this whole shifter thing, including recognizing things like smiles and emotions on my men’s faces.

How he abused me, I correct him. It’s okay. We can call it what it was. He abused me.

He’ll never lay a hand on you again. It’s over now. I can feel the anger underneath Archer’s words, even though I can tell he’s trying to comfort me. I have a feeling if Clint weren’t already dead, each of my men would be happy to tear his throat out just like Trystan did.

Almost, I agree, then glance over at Dare and Ridge. It won’t be over until we have a grave, and we can cover Clint in six feet of soil.

Ridge’s wolf is long and wiry, full of hidden strength beneath his rust-colored fur. His massive paws dig expertly at the ground next to Dare’s upper body. Dare, a big, bulky black wolf, is half in the hole, his tail in the air and his head invisible beneath the edge of the grave as he kicks dirt up and out like a dog in a Saturday morning cartoon. I catch a glimpse of Trystan prowling the perimeter of the woods—a flash of chocolate brown fur and turquoise eyes that glow in the dark.

I have a feeling all four of my mates have buried bodies before.

My senses are in total overdrive. In my wolf form, everything is sharper, brighter, louder. The blades of grass under my paws are abrasive, and the scratch-scratch-scratch of Dare and Ridge’s claws in the dirt sound like gunshots. In the darkest part of the forest, I shouldn’t be able to make out Trystan’s shadowy form slinking around on watch, but I can. I can see him and hear him. All of it is almost too much to handle all at once, and I have to fight the urge to lie down and close my eyes.

I do the next best thing and lower my gaze so that I can’t see all the movement around us. Looking back down at my uncle’s body, I’m surprised—and a little bit horrified—to feel a tiny twinge of sadness.

Maybe I’m not being truthful with myself, I think, realizing as I do that I “spoke” the thought in my head to Archer.

He cocks his head at me. How so?

I feel kind of sad for him. He was my family, you know? I’m glad he can’t hurt me anymore, but it still feels bittersweet. The last of my family. Gone.

I

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