USA Today bestselling author

Category: Series: Moon Marked (Page 2 of 3)

Popular werewolf quotes

I recently remembered the function on my kindle where I can turn on popular highlights. Last time I checked my books, there weren’t all that many quotes that had been selected by enough readers to show up. But, lo and behold, now there are a bunch more!

I thought you might enjoy seeing some of the reader favorite lines from my permafrees (all of which can be found within the box set Shifter Origins or within Wolf’s Bane if you want to keep reading). Some of the quotes aren’t by characters you’d expect. Pretty cool to see which parts of my stories stuck to the majority of people!

Half Wolf quote

“I joined your pack, I led your hunts, I kissed you, because I loved you.” — Ginger in Half Wolf

Huntress Born quote

“My greatest weapon — the mighty cupcake — had come through at last.” — Ember in Huntress Born

Jaguar at the Portal quote

“The woman in front of her didn’t own a pet because no one had ever stroked her ego and no one had ever showered her with love and affection. In the end, she wasn’t willing to accept even a non-human companion until she herself felt entirely safe.” — Finn in Jaguar at the Portal

Shiftless quote

“Halfies and full humans and a few crazy purebloods like me.” — Chase in Shiftless

Wolf's Bane quote

“Foxes are world-class climbers and pretty good jumpers. But I wasn’t just a fox. I was a kitsune — ten times better than that.” — Mai in Wolf’s Bane

Don’t see your favorite quote here? I’d love to hear which line stuck with you. Just click on the facebook post to comment:

 

2019 in review

I saw another author make a post about everything she’d launched this year and promptly decided to steal the idea. So, without further ado, 2019 publications just in case you missed one the first time around!

Aimee Easterling's 2019 releases

New releases:

Wolf Dreams — After spending several months wide, the first book in the Moon Blind duology went into Kindle Unlimited in November.

Moon Dancer — The second book in the Moon Blind duology is also currently in KU.

Thirteenth Werewolf and Other Stories — This wide anthology is full of stories that were originally written as newsletter-only freebies, but the first story is brand new.

Moon Stalked — The first book in a new series. This one launched on all retailers but soon thereafter I pulled it into Kindle Unlimited. It will be wide again at some point, though, so please don’t despair if you missed the official launch window.

Alpha’s Hunt — This will be on 2020’s list officially. But, just in case you want to jumpstart the new decade, book two in the Woelfin Awakening series is up for preorder now on all retailers.

 

2019 werewolf box sets

Box sets:

Moon Marked Trilogy — I recently bundled up my reader-favorite series, and the resulting box set will be at a special 99-cent price point for one more day. Grab it while it’s cheap!

Wolf Nights — This is a multi-author, free box set. I picked some of my favorite authors to include, so I highly recommend trying it out.

Magic After Dark — I’m afraid you missed this limited-time, multi-author, free box set if you weren’t reading along all year. I’ve linked to its Goodreads page in case you want to check out the included authors. Once again, I chose novels I thought my readers would particularly enjoy.

 

Aimee Easterling's 2019 audio releases

Audio:

Newly available on all retailers and via your local library: Wolf’s Bane, Shadow Wolf, and Fox Blood. (Well, Fox Blood is currently seeping into retailers. It is 100% definitely on Kobo, though, and should reach the others by the end of the year…I hope.)

Newly available on Amazon, Audible, and Apple: Lone Wolf Dawn, Wolf Landing, the Alpha Underground Trilogy bundle, Alpha Ascendant, and the Wolf Rampant Trilogy bundle.

 

What’s coming up in 2020?

I can definitely tell you I will write words! Not sure how many or in what form or when they’ll reach your ereaders/headphones. If you want up-to-the-minute release information, be sure to sign up for my email list. Have a great new year!

Falling into audio

As you may have noticed, this autumn has been all about audio. Since I posted last, the Alpha Underground Trilogy has been completed in audio — a great deal for Audible subscribers since you can snag three books for one credit! I’ve also approved the audio for Shadow Wolf and Alpha Ascendant, so those titles should be on or hitting your favorite retailers within the next few weeks.

Paranormal audio giveaway

Meanwhile, I’ve teamed up with a bunch of other paranormal authors to spread the audio love with a giveaway. Despite what the graphic above says, you have until November 21 to enter for a chance to win one of dozens of audiobooks.

What’s up next? There will be a box set version of the Wolf Rampant Trilogy coming down the pike in December, and the Moon Marked series will finish up in audio likely in January.

In the meantime, of course, I’ve been writing new books to hit your ereaders if you prefer not to listen. I’m really excited about Moon Stalked, the first chapters of which will show up here within the week. So watch this space!

Wolf Dreams: Chapter 1

(If you’re starting on this page, please click here to return to the beginning so you don’t miss any of the story.)

Fourteen years later….

Wolf Dreams“From the stunning renditions of horses in French and Spanish caves…” I started, only to pause as words drifted toward me from the fifth row of the audience at my Friday morning lecture.

“…walked out of the Peace Summit,” one student murmured, provoking a rustle of interest from those sitting nearby.

“Well, could you really blame them?” asked a young man who’d never once bothered to answer an in-class question. “I mean, our President acted like a hoodlum. He punched the guy. In the nose.

Of all the times for current events to pop the collegiate bubble, I would have preferred it not to happen right before final exams during my first semester in a tenure-track job. Of course, I couldn’t really blame the kids for their lack of attention. I’d been so shaken by the news this morning that I’d forgotten my meds for the first time in months.

Still, I was supposed to be the authority figure here. “Excuse me,” I said, pushing my glasses up on my nose then glaring into the cluster of chattering students. “As fascinating as political drama might be, this course is focused on the past, not the present.”

“Then you focus, Dr. Oblivia,” a third student countered. “We don’t care about caves on the last day of the semester.”

The earlier whispers had been a minor annoyance, but this was outright insubordination. No wonder my pet raven—Adena—squawked her ire from the far corner of the room. She spread her wings as if preparing to protect me and I raised one finger in warning, holding my breath until the raven’s ruffled feathers smoothed back down and her attention wandered toward the clouds outside.

Of course, the backtalking student took advantage of my distraction to continue with her tirade. “This is a class, not a wander through a museum. Tell us what’s going to be on the test.”

Patricia Owens—congressman’s kid and troublemaker from head to toe—was spiky with amusement. She had classic good looks combined with edgy modern style, and she used the combination like a duelist’s sword. Now, rather than fading beneath my scowl as any right-minded twenty-two-year-old should have, she raised her eyebrows and glowered back.

No wonder the monster inside me surged awake the moment our gazes made contact. Images of teeth and blood and submissive students flooded my interior landscape, and I clenched my fists to push back the horror.

Clearing my throat, I used words rather than releasing my inner monster. “Ms. Owens,” I started. “If your sole interest lies with the test, please pick up a copy of the handout by the door on your way out and leave the rest of us in peace.”

Then I clicked to the next slide in my PowerPoint presentation, trying to ignore the way my vision tunneled even as a hum buzzed angrily through my mind. Here it came—part two of the craziness. First the monster, then the trance.

Clutching the podium, I whispered a silent rebuke to my brain chemistry: Not now. The department chair was just waiting to catch a slip in classroom protocol so he could write me up.

In desperation, I shot a glance at the ringleader of all my teaching problems. If she was sitting, the monster would subside and the vision would fade along with it….

Patricia had risen so she could sling a messenger bag across one shoulder. And that did it. The monster grabbed me. I’ll make her sit, it started.

No, wait, I countered, terrified by the way my muscles bunched without permission.

Then the trance responded by slapping us both into submission. The monster subsided and I fell backwards into the silence and the dark.

***

Okay, so perhaps silence was a bit of an overstatement. Sunlight was obscured by overhanging earth and rock, so even the drip of distant water became as loud as a roaring school bus. My feet scraped against pebbles while my breath echoed in the enclosed chamber. And my hand moved without conscious volition to uncover a smoldering coal housed within a tallow-filled lamp.

Light emerged slowly as the body I inhabited fed moss into the minuscule fire. I was here, but not here. Present inside this woman, but unable to do anything other than watch her actions unfold.

The first time this had happened, I’d been terrified. A mere child, I’d thought myself transported into a nightmare and had spent the entire trance struggling to get back out again. Now, though, I was an adult obsessed with archaeology. I could do nothing to hasten my return to the modern world, so I relaxed and took in every wonderful vision as a many-thousand-year-old cave painting gradually flickered into life.

Red and black animals danced across the rock wall before me. Today it was horses, so many horses, with one big bison smack dab in the center. It looked similar to the French cave I’d visited on a research expedition one year earlier, but with different paintings covering the curved and irregular walls.

Even though I knew this experience was merely my imagination playing tricks on me, I began taking mental notes the way I always did. Perfect curves made the animals lifelike, overlapping legs gave the illusion of three dimensions….

Distantly, I knew that my living body would be catatonic and terrifying to my students back in the lecture hall. Distantly, I accepted the psychiatrists’ assessment that these visions were nothing more than a rehashing of materials I’d pored over and studied ever since becoming obsessed with archaeology as a kid.

I knew all this…yet I didn’t care what I was missing in the real world as I gazed greedily at images that both did and didn’t match current scientific knowledge. My hands were speckled with red ochre—the cave person’s favorite pigment. Words I didn’t understand tripped off the woman’s tongue. Then she sucked up a mouthful of paint in preparation for spitting it back out onto the rock face.

Meanwhile, her hand rose to clasp fingers around the eight-inch-long fang that had hung around her neck for as long as I’d been visiting. As always, this single jarring element pushed me out of the daydream. “Saber-tooth cats are from the Americas,” I protested. “This type of cave art was made in Europe.”

Only then did I realize I was speaking aloud, the cave flickering away as a bevy of worried students clustered around me. Meanwhile, tapping against my forehead, was the exact same tooth I’d worn a moment earlier, this time threaded onto a modern metal chain.

***

“Dr. Blackburn, are you alright?”

The name being spoken wasn’t mine, but I didn’t swivel to correct the speaker behind me. Instead, it was the silent man attached to the fang that snagged my attention and refused to let it go.

Unlike the body I’d recently inhabited, this tooth bearer was male instead of female. His features were craggy, his gaze so piercing it made me shiver despite the room’s sub-tropical heat. And was that a thin but very obvious scar completely encircling his neck?

Vaguely, I noted another stranger roughly the same age—early thirties—moving forward as if to assist me. This was the speaker, the one who was even now attempting to create a pocket of breathing space with me at its center. I appreciated the gesture and might have settled back into it if the chatter of surrounding students hadn’t spurred me into action.

“Do you think she’s okay?”

“What happened? I wasn’t looking…”

“Somebody call 911.”

Hospital visits never led in good directions. My father had lost faith in my ability to amount to anything after one memorable hospital visit. It wasn’t such a long shot to think the university might come to the same conclusion if my boss realized I popped three-times-a-day, maximum-dose anxiety meds to silence the voices in my head.

So I found my way to my feet and stepped away from the man who hovered above me. Then I raised my voice and regained control of the class.

“Nobody call 911,” I countered, forcing out a laugh that sounded like a mix between a pack-a-day smoker and the last gasp of an ailing hyena. “That embarrassing display of brain freeze was simply the result of low blood sugar. If you learn nothing else from my class, please write this down—always eat a complete breakfast before going to work.”

I think I actually saw someone recording my words of wisdom at the edge of the mob of students, so I didn’t blame the craggy-faced stranger for his snort. This was the most amusing part about being a professor. At my best, these students thought I was some combination of their mother and an all-knowing soothsayer. It was only when I assigned homework that certain students lost the rose-tinted glasses they usually perched on the bridge of their nose.

Right now, unfortunately, I was far from my best, and rose-tinted glasses were in short supply in the classroom. Which meant it was time to truncate the final lecture and send these students away with the handout I’d offered to the class’s least pleasant member a few moments before.

“It’s been a pleasure teaching all of you,” I lied. “Have a wonderful holiday. Grab a paper from the stack on your way out.”

I tensed, fully expecting some reaction to the bombshell waiting for them on those handouts. But I wasn’t prepared for the volume of Patricia’s shriek.

Neither, apparently, were the strangers in my classroom. Because even as Patricia bellowed her disapproval of the final exam changing into a five-page paper, the more ordinary of the two men yanked aside his suit jacket, hand landing on a pistol that gleamed dully from a holster beneath his armpit.

Click here to head straight to chapter 2.

A kitsune teaches me to hunt voles

Red fox in the wind

I have 700 photos and 20 pages of notes to pore over, so I almost didn’t know where to start. How about a snack to tide you over while I wait for dawn?

Listening fox

My group was treated to extended viewings of three species of “dogs” during our three full days touring Yellowstone. And all three shared one behavior — mousing.

Mousing coyote

Wolves were playful about it, with only pups taking part (and often doing so together). The coyote we watched (shown here) was intent and focused. But the fox was pure elegance…so I guess I should let Kira teach us how to take out voles.

Laughing fox

Kira: The first thing I do is find a nice, broad expanse of snow beside a road. In fur form, I’m absolutely stunning and bound to stop traffic. Gotta go with your strengths.

A fox braced against the wind

Me: Okay, Kira. That’s helpful advice. But I think what folks what to hear about is how you figure out the location of a mouse-sized rodent a foot or more beneath the surface of crusty snow while the wind is blowing and your nostril hairs are freezing together.

 

Digging fox

Me: Do you dig?

Walking fox

Kira: If you really want to make it hard for yourself, you can dig. But that’s pretty boring. I like to use my ears and my pounce.

Listening fox

Kira: Fox ears are pretty awesome things. All you have to do is walk around on the crusty surface, listening, and soon you hear that first little scratch.

Fox looking at the ground

Kira: Sometimes it’s handy to triangulate. You know, walk back and forth a bit getting your audience excited while also pinpointing the location of the gnawer underneath.

Pouncing fox

Kira: Then, when you’re ready, you leap…

Leaping fox

Kira: …up…

Fox in a hole

Kira: …and down…

Fox eating a vole

Kira: …and grab it in your teeth. Three voles in twenty minutes. Score!

A fox in the willows

And that is the story of how a fox catches a vole. Stay tuned for more excitement as I delve deeper into my notes in the days to come!

Wanna chime in? I’d love to hear your comments on facebook:

Aimee Easterling reading order

When I’ve read about 90% of the stories by a favorite author, I often get stuck trying to fill in the gaps. If that sounds like you, hopefully this page will help point you in the right direction. So, without further ado, recommended reading order:

(Books in parentheses are side stories. If you’re not a completionist and are not a fan of shorts, you can safely skip these.)

(Books in German/Bücher auf Deutsch)


ShiftlessWolf Rampant Trilogy: Terra’s series

Shiftless

(The Complete Bloodling Serial — Wolfie’s novel-length serial)

(Paradigm Shift — another short story from Wolfie’s point of view, included in the Hot Shift anthology)

(Scapegoat — Chase’s novelette, found in Street Spells and the Hot Shift anthology and available in audio)

(Pool Party — Chief Wilder’s tale, available by signing up for my newsletter and in the Hot Shift anthology)

Pack Princess

Alpha Ascendant

(The Tail End of Love — a short from Terra’s point of view, in the Hot Shift anthology)

(Bloodling Song — a different bloodling finds his voice in this flash fiction story, included in the Thirteenth Werewolf anthology and the Hot Shift anthology)


Half WolfAlpha Underground Trilogy: Fen’s series, minor spoilers for Wolf Rampant

(Tough as Nails — Fen’s prequel, originally part of the Beyond Secret Worlds anthology and now available in the Thirteenth Werewolf anthology and the Hot Shift anthology)

Half Wolf

(Dark Wolf Adrift — Hunter’s prequel novella)

Lone Wolf Dawn

Wolf Landing

(Yule Moon — five flash fiction stories, found in the Alpha Underground box set and in the Hot Shift anthology)

(Werewolf Recipe Swap — two recipes sent from Wolfie’s pack to Fen’s pack, in the Hot Shift anthology)

(When the Wolf Catches the Car — a link between Alpha Underground and Huntress Born, included in Wolf Landing and the Alpha Underground box set as well as in the Hot Shift anthology.)


Huntress BornWolf Legacy Quartet: Ember’s series; chronologically, this series is set after Moon Marked and before Moon Blind but I’m including it here in the order in which it was written and published; minor spoilers for Wolf Rampant

(First Blood — a link between Alpha Ascendant and Huntress Born, available to read on this website and part of the Hot Shift anthology)

(Hot Shift — Terra’s 50th birthday party, in the Hot Shift anthology)

Huntress Born

Huntress Bound

(In the Kitchen With Werewolves — short story about Ember’s childhood, available by signing up for my newsletter and in the Hot Shift anthology)

Rogue Huntress

(Macaroni Dreams — a peek into Sebastien’s history, available to read on this website and part of the Hot Shift anthology)

Huntress Unleashed

(Muffins & Moonlight — spoiler-filled short story involving Ember, told from the point of view of Claw in the Moon Blind series, available in Huntress Unleashed, in the Wolf Legacy Quartet, and part of the Hot Shift anthology)


Wolf's Pack

 

 

Wolf’s Pack is a massive box set that contains everything above this point. (Yes, extras too.) Due to its size, Wolf’s Pack is not available on Amazon, Hoopla, or on paper. But the box set is available in ebook form everywhere else.

Hot Shift & Other Stories includes all of the short stories above this point.

 

 

 

 


Wolf Dreams

 

Moon Blind Duology: Olivia’s series; minor spoilers for Wolf Legacy

Wolf Dreams

(First Sight — a newsletter-only scene from Claw’s point of view)

Moon Dancer

 

 

 

 


Matebranded

 

Rune Wolf: Elspeth’s series; no spoilers or overlapping characters (a great alternative entrance point!); Available in German/Auf Deutsch erhältlich

(Paws & Claus — a short story from Orion’s point of view)

Matebranded

Shadowmated

Packbound

Outpack

(Transit of Orion — a short story from Orion’s point of view, available in the Rune Wolf, Volume 2 omnibus)

(Off Leash — a short story from Hailey’s point of view, available as a bonus to newsletter subscribers)


Mate Market

 

 

Ghost Pack: Wren’s series; minor spoilers for Rune Wolf; Available in German/Auf Deutsch erhältlich

(Alpha’s Guide to Lost Wolves — a short story from Locke’s point of view)

Mate Market

Wolf Weaver

Bond Breaker

 

 


Wolf's BaneMoon Marked Trilogy: Mai’s series; no spoilers or overlapping characters (a great alternative entrance point!); Available in German/Auf Deutsch erhältlich

(Fox Hunt — prequel novella found in the A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories anthology)

Wolf’s Bane

(Library Werewolf — flash fiction found in the A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories anthology)

(Kira’s Tale — flash fiction found in the A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories anthology)

Shadow Wolf

Fox Blood

(Outfoxed — 20 page bonus epilogue bundled into both Fox Blood and Moon Marked Trilogy ebooks. The story is also available as a standalone audiobook and paperback as well as in the A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories anthology.)


Full Moon Saloon

No Fox Given Trilogy: Kira’s series; some spoilers for Moon Marked; Available in German/Auf Deutsch erhältlich

Full Moon Saloon

Rogue Moon

Moon Duel

(Slaying Solstice — a text exchange between Kira, Grub, and Mai, found in the A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories anthology)

(The Alpha Puzzle & Broke Truck, Lost Pup — two short stories from Thom’s point of view, available as a standalone in audio and paperback, bundled into the No Fox Given collector’s edition hardback, and available as an ebook in the A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories anthology)

(A Dog’s Dinner — short story from Pet’s point of view, can be read as a standalone but contains major spoilers for Moon Duel, available as a standalone in audio and paperback and available as an ebook in the A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories anthology)

 


Wolf Trap

Time Bites Trilogy: Tru’s series; some spoilers for No Fox Given; Available in German/Auf Deutsch erhältlich

Wolf Trap

(Undelivered Correspondence — letters between Tru and Drake, found in the A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories anthology)

Wolf’s Curse

(Family FTW — short story from Lynette’s point of view, found in the A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories anthology)

Wolf’s Choice

(Epilogue from Jack’s point of view — found in the A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories anthology)

 


Fox Pack by Aimee Easterling

 

 

Fox Pack is a massive box set that contains everything in the Moon Marked, No Fox Given, and Time Bites series. (Yes, extras too.) Due to its size, Fox Pack isn’t available on Amazon, Hoopla, or on paper. But the box set is available in ebook form everywhere else.

Meanwhile, if you’ve already read the novels and just want the shorts, you can find those in A Dog’s Dinner & Other Stories.

 

 

 

 


Moon Stalked

 

Moon-Crossed Wolves Trilogy: Honor’s series; no spoilers or overlapping characters (a great alternative entrance point!); Available in German/Auf Deutsch erhältlich

(Thirteenth Werewolf — available in the Thirteenth Werewolf anthology)

Moon Stalked

Alpha’s Hunt

Stray Shifter

(Reunion: Through Justice’s Eyes — newsletter-only bonus scene)

 


Moon Glamour

Samhain Shifters: standalone adventurous romances following side characters from other series; very minor spoilers as listed below

(Ambush — a scene included in the Shifter Secrets newsletter and the Fae Lights anthology, from Tank’s point of view with minor spoilers for the Moon Marked series)

Moon Glamour — Tank and Athena’s novel (very minor spoilers for the Moon Marked series)

(A Snowball’s Chance — short story from Rune’s point of view with minor spoilers for Moon Glamour, newsletter extra and also in the Fae Lights anthology)

Charmed Wolf — Tara and Rune’s novel (minor spoilers for Moon Glamour)

Fae Wolf — Storm and Ryder’s novel (minor spoilers for Charmed Wolf)

(Beastly — a standalone short story about an ordinary widow who shows up for a job interview and finds something extraordinary. Audio and paperback versions are available on retailer sites, ebook version included in the Hot Shift anthology.)

(Inappropriate — a bonus epilogue for Fae Wolf, included in the Fae Lights anthology)

(Fae Lights anthology – in addition to the three bonuses mentioned above, this collection includes three standalone short stories: Briar Moon, Small Change, and Second-Generation Changeling)


Seahorses & Sensibility

 

 

 

Disgraced Dukes: Neurodivergent Regency romance; no spoilers or overlapping characters to other series

Seahorses & Sensibility — Lydia and Dominic’s story

 

 

 

 

 


Incendiary Magic

 

Dragon Mage Chronicles: standalone dragon shifter romances; no spoilers or overlapping characters to other series

(Biological Clock — how plants came to take over the world; website flash fiction)

Incendiary Magic — Fee’s novella (was part of the Fire Kissed box set)

Verdant Magic — Amber’s novel

Cerulean Magic — Sabrina’s novel

(Flight of Fancy — I use a time machine to visit with the cast of the Dragon Mage Chronicles; website short story)

(Mop Magic — a wind witch finds her powers; available in the Thirteenth Werewolf anthology)

 


 

Fox Blood, Chapter 2 Scene 2

Fox Blood

If you’re just tuning in, be sure to start at the beginning….

“Kira.” The word emerged from both my and Gunner’s lips in perfect synchrony, but we didn’t have time to gaze meaningfully into each other’s eyes. Instead, I sprinted down the hallway, sword materializing in my hand in a blaze of blue-tinted glory even as Gunner rounded the corner three steps faster and dove into the melee of angry wolves.

Because, despite their alpha’s ultimatum moments earlier, two-thirds of the pack had donned their fur forms and turned their teeth into weapons the second they felt threatened. Those still human were more obedient but no less dangerous—they’d grabbed up cutlery, some of it as long as my forearm.

Meanwhile, the entire room smelled like a forgotten egg factory, the scent even worse here than it had been beside Edward in the hall. How did everyone manage to go against a direct order from their pack leader? Did Gunner forget to imbue his words with alpha compulsion? The questions hovered over me like a foul-smelling storm cloud. But I pushed premonitions aside, hunting for my sister instead.

There she was…then there she wasn’t as she shivered down into the red fur of her fox. Ever since Kira had melded with our mother’s star ball, she’d been unruly and snarky and prone to shifting at the drop of a hat. Which wasn’t helpful in the current situation…but the chain of events also meant that her unusual fur form hadn’t been what set the werewolves off.

So what…?

I waited only long enough to glimpse Tank—Gunner’s trusted second—tackling my sister and enfolding her in a werewolf burrito of protection before I thrust my way deeper into the crowd away from them. Because the growling mob wasn’t facing toward either me or Kira. Instead, they were pushing and shoving, trying to get into the kitchen, or perhaps through that to the dining room beyond.

Mindful of the fact that these were supposedly my pack mates, I used my elbows and knees rather than my weapon to open up a pathway. But it was slow going, teeth snapping and claws scraping as I pressed past. My favorite pair of jeans was going to be spaghetti by the time this was over…but on the plus side, Gunner would never know that Edward had been the one to leave a bruise on my upper arm.

With that heartening thought at the forefront, I thunked a werewolf on the nose with my sword hilt, taking advantage of the resulting pocket of space to press through the narrow doorway separating kitchen from living room. And my grin of triumph promptly faltered as I took in the scene on the other side.

Because there was a fox perched atop the stainless steel refrigerator. Its fur was puffed up like the pelt of a cornered cat while its body pressed back against the wall behind it. No wonder since a werewolf currently swiped toward it with human fingers, attempting to pull the stranger loose from its hiding place.

There were a dozen other werewolves in the room with a similar agenda. But I had interest only in the much smaller canine cowering above their heads. Because even though its fur was pitch black instead of blazing red like mine and my sister’s, I knew the moment our eyes made contact that this wasn’t any mere fox wandered in out of the forest who’d accidentally ended up in my new home.

No, this was a kitsune. A being the like of which I’d never met outside my own family. After all, what right-minded wild animal would willingly walk into a cottage full of wolves?

Want to find out what happens when Mai is faced with introducing a strange kitsune to Gunner’s pack? Keep reading via the retailer of your choice.

Fox Blood, Chapter 2 Scene 1

Fox BloodIf you’re just tuning in, be sure to start at the beginning….

“He’s besotted with you.”

The voice curling over my left shoulder sounded pleasant, but it wasn’t. Instead, my instincts screamed “Angry werewolf behind you. Careful!” one second before I swiveled around with a fake smile pasted on my lips.

“Edward. Left your posse behind, did you? Braving the scary kitsune all on your lonesome?”

Because the middle-aged male who’d been Gunner’s principal ally in the battle against Liam was apparently not my greatest supporter. Moments earlier, Edward had stood at the center of the huddle of unhappy shifters shooting angry glances in my direction. So the fact he’d come all the way across the room to engage me likely meant he had an ultimatum to drop on my head.

Meanwhile, the rotten-egg aroma that permeated my cottage was so strong now I could only conclude it emanated from this shifter. It couldn’t have been his signature aroma, however, or someone would have warned me about the foul stench.

“Bad choice of cologne,” I noted even as he grabbed my arm and drew me into the dimly lit hallway with a grasp so bruising I had to fight down a flinch.

“This pack is barely hanging together,” Edward growled as soon as we were out of easy earshot of the rest of the partygoers, not bothering to comment on my snarkiness about his scent. “Liam was important to us and now he’s gone. Ransom was an asshole, but the transition away from him is still difficult. We don’t need you here making things more complicated. If you love Gunner, you’ll leave him alone.”

I wanted to snipe right back…but, unfortunately, Edward hadn’t said anything I didn’t already believe to be truthful. On the other hand—“Gunner asked me to come here. So I came.”

As I spoke, I stared at the hand clenched around my arm until Edward realized what would happen if his pack leader saw the lines of parallel bruises welling up beneath his fingers. Reddening, he shrank back so rapidly I might as well have swiped at him with my sword.

“Shit,” the male muttered under his breath. “If he smells me on you, he’ll go berserk.”

This, at least, I was prepared for. Reaching into my pocket, I pulled out an aerosol can of scent-reducing compound, spraying it liberally across my injured flesh.

“I’m not here to make your life difficult,” I said as I worked, the chemical drifting up my nose in the process so I had to pause and stifle a sneeze before I could go on. But then I returned to the most important business—clarifying my place within the Atwood pack. “I’m here to support Gunner,” I continued. “And if you care about the clan, you’ll let me get on with my task.”

Which was all very true even though the words sat between us like a lump of brussel sprouts on the plate of a picky toddler. If Edward wanted the Atwood clan to hang together, he’d make nice and pretend he didn’t have a bone to pick with the pack leader’s mate.

I could tell from his scent—no longer quite so harsh and astringent—that Edward had gotten the message. Unfortunately, werewolves have a hard time dropping a juicy bone. “What happened four months ago…”

“Was the fault of an Atwood werewolf,” I interjected, not wanting to remember the awful battle of wolf against wolf fueled by the kitsune magic of my dead mother. “I would never do anything to damage this pack.”

The vigor of belief added volume to what was meant to be a private conversation, and this time I really did wince as my words rang a little too loudly in the echoing hall. Shit. I’d intended to say my piece to Edward then let him propagate it through the pack at the speed of werewolf gossip. I hadn’t intended to create a scene.

Ignoring the shifter beside me, I swiveled just as I’d done while walking up the path with Kira. Unfortunately, this time I wasn’t lucky enough to find our surroundings devoid of life. Instead, a tall, broad-shouldered werewolf towered in the open doorway between hallway and living room, silhouetted against the light behind his back.

“Something the matter?” Gunner demanded, taking in our proximity, our stiff-legged anger, the strange floral overlay of the de-scenting compound.

“Of course not,” I lied. “Edward was just giving me the recipe for his famous lasagna.”

Grimacing in what was clearly meant to be a smile, the male in question played along. “The secret,” he offered, “is in the sauce.”

“Hmm,” Gunner started, far from satisfied. Only he had no time to debrief us further, because the living room behind him erupted into howls, growls, and one long, quavering scream.

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Fox Blood, Chapter 1 Scene 2

Fox Blood

If you’re just tuning in, be sure to start at the beginning….

The boxes were on the ground and my sword was clasped in white-knuckled fingers before several sets of hands—at least they were furless—yanked my sister into the death trap. But I was four steps too slow to prevent them from enfolding her into their midst.

Enfolding her…and flipping on the light switch to reveal smiling faces and party banners. Apparently my attempt to move in after sunset hadn’t been as secretive as I’d initially supposed.

“Surprise!” werewolves howled, only some of the voices human. Then a whoosh of displaced air warned me of Gunner’s presence half a second before a large hand tucked itself into the small of my back. He guided me through the doorway, my sword reluctantly dissolving into the magical ether even as I did my best to paste a pleased smile onto my face.

“I take it surprise parties aren’t your favorite,” Gunner huffed into my ear while his free hand massaged tension out of my neck muscles. And even though I was bound and determined to give Gunner every opportunity to rebuild his splintered pack without our relationship derailing his efforts, I still found myself swiveling so his guiding arm turned into half of a hug.

“No, I’m not generally a fan of surprise parties,” I agreed. “But I am glad to see you.” After all, it had been nearly three weeks since we’d spent more than five minutes in close proximity. No wonder his fingers on my bare skin acted like balm. I melted into his arms, forgetting my worries as I tilted my head back in preparation for a kiss.

Only, no kiss was forthcoming. Instead, Gunner released me and pulled a small notebook out of one pocket.

“I’ll be sure to remember that in case it comes up later,” he said. And even though cold air where warm hands used to be explained the sudden rise of goosebumps along my exposed forearms, my shiver was out of proportion to the chilliness of the night.

Blinking slowly to tamp down my frustration, I stood up on tiptoes to peer at Gunner’s notebook. And what he’d written returned the smile to my face. “My place tonight once Kira’s sleeping?”

No wonder he hadn’t wanted to even whisper the words in the midst of the pack where shifter ears were bound to overhear him. My cheeks heated even as my head snapped up to peruse the partygoers. Somehow I was positive every werewolf present had read Gunner’s words right alongside me….

But the crowd looked just like it had previously. Werewolves partying. Werewolves laughing. Werewolves muttering in dark corners about the kitsunes in their midst.

“Maybe,” I answered, trying to decide whether I trusted Atwood shifters enough to leave Kira alone in the cottage after night fell.

“Oh, that reminds me,” Gunner interrupted, raising his voice until it was loud enough to be heard at the far end of the overcrowded living room. “New rule—all disputes must be settled with blades hereafter. Tournament rules, to first blood.” Then, as someone near us complained that he knew nothing about blades, that swords were archaic. “If you need instruction, I recommend asking our new sword master for tips.”

Gunner’s hand settled against the small of my back, subtly pushing me forward. And once every eye was upon me—exactly what I’d hoped to avoid by taking the walk of shame with my sister—the pack leader added: “Don’t forget to pay her. Old Red needs new brakes.”

Then just like that, Gunner left me alone in a room full of werewolves with nowhere to hide and no choice but to follow him deeper in.

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Fox Blood, Chapter 1 Scene 1

Fox BloodAre you ready for a sneak preview of Fox Blood? This final book in the Moon Marked series is now available on all retailers. Or you can try out the beginning below:

“I think this is called the walk of shame,” Kira suggested, her voice cutting through the foggy evening air like a sword through warm butter. I swiveled in unconscious reaction, peering through almost-raindrops hovering around us on every side.

Between the fog and the night, I couldn’t see anything, unfortunately. Which didn’t mean we were alone…just that visibility was painfully low. Unfriendly werewolves could be hovering just out of scent range, waiting for the perfect moment to pounce upon us. Good thing I wasn’t as oblivious as my pampered younger sister to the danger we were currently walking through.

So—“Shh,” I huffed out, hoisting a trio of cardboard containers a little higher in my arms while hoping the suddenly overwhelming aroma of stale beer wasn’t emanating from one of them. Perhaps I should have sprung for new boxes rather than begging for used ones behind the neighborhood liquor store….

“Well, it is, isn’t it?” Kira demanded, turning around to walk backwards down the gravel road leading up to our secluded cottage. “I mean, if we weren’t ashamed, we would’ve taken Gunner up on his offer to rent a moving truck. We would have come when it was daylight out. And we wouldn’t have parked twenty miles away so nobody would hear Old Red squeak her way up the drive.”

“Old Red isn’t so bad,” I rebutted, defending the new-to-me car. I’d never wanted a vehicle until I began living over a hundred miles away from a boyfriend who only visited in the company of needy pack mates. Skype had kept us in contact, but I had needs that weren’t being met via video chat.

Gunner had offered to throw money at the problem, but I wasn’t ready for that level of entanglement just yet. So I’d found a new job, had saved my pennies, and had bought a twenty-year-old, off-brand vehicle the previous week.

Old Red made it feasible to move into a secluded, rural village without feeling like I was trapping myself and Kira next door to a bunch of werewolves. The car gave me an easy out if we needed to flee and allowed me to spend time with Gunner without having to become monetarily indebted to him. Now, however, I was having second thoughts about the cleverness of my ploy.

Because my skin prickled with warning of hidden werewolves in the vicinity. Turning in a tight circle, I barely managed to keep Kira’s box of stage-magic paraphernalia from teetering off the top of the stack while I peered around the barrier. I knew they were out there. This was Atwood clan central after all. Even at the crack of dawn, there should have been patrollers out guarding the boundaries and early risers jogging down tree-lined paths.

Instead, the territory appeared empty even though it smelled far too strongly of wolf…plus impatient little sister. “And we didn’t park twenty miles away,” I continued, trying to get Kira off topic before I was forced to tell her what a walk of shame really was. “We parked a quarter of a mile away so Old Red’s brakes wouldn’t wake up the neighbors. It’s the considerate thing to do. You need to learn to be polite now that we’re denning with—”

“Whatever,” Kira cut me off, darting away to dance up cobblestone steps toward our cottage. The first dead leaves of autumn lay on the stones between us, and in daylight I suspected they would have glowed beautifully orange or red.

In the evening fog, however, the discarded plant matter merely appeared gray, slippery, and dangerous…like everything else about this place.

“Kira, wait.” I wasn’t in fox form, so I couldn’t be certain. But I got the distinct impression someone had marked his territory on the bottom step in the form of very lupine-smelling pee. Gunner had promised the pack was ready to welcome us into their midst, but urine wasn’t generally considered a sign of open-armed acceptance. More worrisome, however, was the fact that the liquid had been deposited so recently that it still puddled atop the cobblestones in my path….

Kira.” This time I snapped out her name as close as I could come to a werewolf compulsion. But, of course, we weren’t wolves and my sister saw no reason to obey me.

Instead, she turned the knob of our new domicile without even glancing backwards. Pushed the door open into darkness…and walked straight through an overwhelming cascade of strangely sulfurous eau de wolf.

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