A Shifter's Claim (Pale Moonlight Book 4) Read online




  A Shifter’s Claim

  Pale Moonlight, Book 4

  Marie Johnston

  LE Publishing

  Copyright © 2018 by Lisa Elijah

  Developmental and Copy Editing by Razor Sharp Editing

  Proofing by HME Editing

  Cover Art by Mayhem Cover Creations

  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, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  The characters, places, and events in this story are fictional. Any similarities to real people, places, or events are coincidental and unintentional.

  Created with Vellum

  A shifter without a mate is a shifter without a mind.

  It’s been five years since Shilo’s mate walked out on her and she’s been just a little, tiny bit unstable, a feeling that isn’t helped by the impending fight with a neighboring colony. She might not be all there, but even a crazed shifter knows waking up in a stranger’s bed hours from home to find the contacts from her pack murdered means she’s in trouble.

  Aimless and restless and unconcerned with anything beyond his next one-night stand, Waylon agrees to act as bodyguard for some shifter pack liaison embroiled in a power struggle. What could it hurt? He’s been aching for five years, and maybe this assignment will take his mind off all he’s lost. But when he meets his client, his world stops. It’s her. His mate. The one he left.

  Thanks to their history, he can’t just walk away and leave her as a target. Thanks to her instability, she can’t go home without backup. If either wants to survive the bloody present, both will have to set aside their heartbreaking past and fight for their uncertain future.

  For my readers. In case no one’s told you today, you are worth it.

  For new release updates, chapter sneak peeks, and exclusive quarterly short stories, sign up for Marie’s newsletter and receive download links for the book that started it all, Fever Claim, and three short stories of characters from the series.

  Contents

  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

  About the Author

  Also by Marie Johnston

  Chapter 1

  Shilo scrambled back, searching the scene as horror filled her. With a sated sexual appetite, common sense returned. Blood marred the sheets, splintered wood littered the floor, and a naked man lay in a crumpled heap at the base of the bed.

  Did I kill him?

  She remembered most of it. The flirting, the smiles, the lingering touches. The invite to a party at his place. She’d sent her envoy home against their wishes and hopped in with… What was his name?

  She also recalled thinking how five years ago, this guy wouldn’t have turned her head. He was too clean-cut, too arrogant, too lanky, and dressed way too nice with his tapered jeans, loafers, and snappy polo.

  Once, she’d searched for quiet confidence, shaggy hair, a muscular build, and clothing swiped from a pile on the floor to fill that empty ache she suffered each day.

  Now it seemed any male who could survive her would do.

  She prodded her fangs, then winced. The blood-tinged tips of her fingernails caught her eye.

  She glanced down at the prone body. What was his name again?

  Michael? Micah? Dave?

  She took in a calming breath, a steady inhale to fill her lungs. Hold two seconds, release. Okay, it wasn’t unusual for her kind to randomly and indiscreetly fuck without having to swap business cards. They were shifters with primal urges.

  But she couldn’t lie to herself. Her urges were getting more than primal. They bordered on rebellious and in her world, that way lay a shortened lifespan.

  What had set her off this time?

  You must be on your best behavior to secure the technology contract with the Covet pack. They’ve formed solid relations with the humans and can help us upgrade every facet of the colony, from cable TV to security cameras in the surrounding woods.

  Her mother had uttered one wrong word in that sentence. Must.

  Shilo pushed her long hair off her face and stared at the man. She’d gone home with another human again? Was he breathing?

  He was familiar. That’s right. He was the computer programmer who was best buds forever with Langdon Covet. Her mouth curled into a sneer.

  The programmer had been sweet and flirtatious. Langdon had disgusted her so entirely that she’d put her entire colony at risk by going home with the computer guy. All because Langdon had so smugly assumed she should be enamored with him.

  Sorry, she’d only lost her head over one male before, and all she’d gotten in return was his abandonment.

  Realization dawned that she was baring her fangs just thinking about the one that got away. Ran away was more like it. Coward.

  She sniffled and batted at a renegade tear. All these years and she still lost salt water to a worthless male.

  Glancing down at herself, she frowned. Naked. Her clothes were strewn around the unfamiliar room. The place was nice, except for the destroyed nightstand. It hadn’t been able to tolerate the full strength of her hold during an orgasm. She had to hand it to the human, he’d been good at least. His sheets had been clean—once they’d finally made it to the bed—and they hadn’t made her sneeze from chemical-laden cologne.

  So I’ve killed a decent guy. Perfect.

  The man groaned.

  With a gasp, she knelt by his side. He was breathing, and if she hadn’t been frozen in her what-about-me fear, she would’ve sensed his heartbeat earlier. Looking him over, she could’ve wept from the relief crashing through her. His wounds were superficial, and while one or two scratches might scar, was it arrogant to think he might enjoy the thought that he’d made a girl lose her mind in bed?

  No one could know that her mind was unstable on its own.

  “Hey.” She gently shook him. “How you feeling?”

  He blinked his eyes open and groaned again. Like her, he didn’t have a stitch of clothing on. The only thing he wore was her love bites.

  She worried her lower lip. One bite showed two deeper indents from her fangs. She hadn’t revealed them last night, had she?

  “Whoa.” His voice was hoarse. Hers would’ve been, too, but she was a shifter and had already healed. “You are a wild one in bed.” He squinted around the disheveled room. “And out of bed.”

  You don’t know the half of it.

  She gave what she hoped was a demure smile and not one that rivaled the big, bad wolf. “You made me that way,” she lied.

  He rolled to his back and sat up. She rested on her heels and reached for her cream-colored shirt, confirming with a quick inspection that it was blood free. Her nudity didn’t bother her, but she didn’t want him to think she was interested in more. She needed to get home. Her parents had probably waited for hours for her to come home with updates. As the Ironhorse pack’s ambassador and future colony leader, it was her duty to report to the current leaders.

  Twenty-six years old, and she had a curfew like a huma
n child.

  “I’ve gotta get home,” she said with another smile that was supposed to look regretful. “Thanks for the fun night. Can I grab you a water and toast before I go?”

  He should have something with protein, too. She found her charcoal-gray slacks and the red heels she’d worn to the meeting. Stepping into the pants, she spied her underwear and grabbed it. Those were shoved into her tiny pants pocket. Where was her bra? Why’d she have to dress in the most inconvenient clothing for these pack meetings?

  Professional wear was not conducive to one-night stands, but her colony was trying hard to be taken seriously in the shifter world. It was that or get incorporated into another colony’s leadership. She couldn’t be the cog that failed centuries of rule. And she wouldn’t turn her home over to slimy Langdon Covet.

  The man touched the tender scratches along his side. Snippets of the night were coming back to her. She’d raked her nails down his chest and thrown him to the ground when he’d taken too long bringing her to climax.

  He cocked his head, a sexy grin spreading across his face. “You don’t have to rush off so soon, do you?”

  A bloom of heat curled through her belly, but no. She had the upper hand over her instincts for now and she planned to hold on to the reins as long as possible. “Work beckons. Hang tight, I’ll grab you some juice.”

  With her heels in one hand, she found his kitchen easily enough. This wasn’t the first unfamiliar place she’d woken up in. Large windows lit the place up with late summer sunshine, and the cedar-toned hardwood floor was smooth and level under her bare feet. The unnamed man was doing well for himself. Langdon was paying him well to supply the Covet pack.

  Vile shifter.

  She couldn’t prove it, only that Langdon repulsed her. He’d always seemed to have his target set on her, even when she’d been with Way—

  Why today? Why was she thinking about the worthless male who’d obliterated her heart today?

  Duh. Because she wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for him. She wouldn’t be worrying about her sanity or her future with the pack. She wouldn’t be eyeballing males she’d grown up with, wondering which one was going to be tasked with hunting her down once she finally succumbed to the call of the wild. At least she’d be too crazed to care when it happened.

  She set her mouth in a line and opened the stainless steel fridge door and found orange juice. Perfect. Ooh, a packet with cheese and a hardboiled egg. Judging from Nameless’s muscular body, he ate a high-protein diet. She poured juice and took the glass and the food to her hookup.

  He’d moved to the bed and had a gray satin sheet pulled over his groin, but from his expression, he was open to moving it if she asked.

  “I’ll just set these here.” She deposited the protein and drink into his hands since the nightstand was defunct. Stooping, she picked up her black clutch, which held her phone and some cash. “Take care.”

  He frowned and moved like he was going to stand. “Shilo, how are you getting home?”

  Stiffening, she quickly relaxed her body language. This was nothing more than casual sex, and the better impression she left on the human, the fewer rumors would spread. “I have my ways. Don’t worry about me.”

  Once she stepped outside, she could figure out where she was in Freemont and make her way to one of her pack’s safe houses. Just like she’d done before.

  “But—” Bare feet shuffled behind her. She rolled her eyes since her back was to him. “I can give you a lift.”

  And show a man who worked closely with her colony’s biggest problem this century where her people were stationed in Freemont? Or worse, have him find out she lived in the middle of nowhere and give a human a reason to start asking questions? Rural was an understatement and Langdon Covet kept them as isolated as possible.

  Her colony was parked in the foothills far north of Freemont, the closest metropolis. It took a full tank of gas to travel to and from there. Langdon’s fledgling but surprisingly fortified colony was on the main road between her home and Freemont. A strategic decision, in her opinion. One that explained why there were so many transportation breakdowns and missing shipments of supplies between home and Freemont.

  But her parents had to prove it and Shilo had to help. And that’d been her task. Set up contracts, prove Langdon violated them, get him with the law. Instead, she’d probably risked angering a male who seemed obsessed with her by going home with one of his clients.

  Five years ago, she’d have never— Well, it didn’t matter now. Five years ago her destined mate had walked away, and now everyone assumed she had more time before an epic personality fail.

  “I don’t need a ride. Thanks for the offer.” She breezed out his front door. She peered left, then right. Identical entrances were on either side of her. This must be a condo or townhouse. He had neighbors. Good. Then he wouldn’t rush after her until he got dressed, and she’d be long gone by then.

  Her surroundings didn’t help her determine where in Freemont she was. She must’ve been prisoner to her needs last night to not notice where she’d been going after the meeting.

  There was a swell of traffic off to her left. She’d walk there and call a ride service. As long as her phone wasn’t dead. Charlie and Cass would loan her a ride from their used-car lot and Shilo would coordinate payment for the ride. It was becoming a routine.

  She should really establish a friend with benefits, someone she could hit up for regular sex who was good enough to wear her out and fool her mind into thinking she had a mate who hadn’t abandoned her. It seemed to help the bitterness and resentment, the constant desire to break pack rules and go against long-established laws. Maybe that’d prevent her from pushing her limits.

  If her family discovered she was on the brink of going rogue, they’d lock her up and find a mate for her ASAP. Shilo’s stomach twisted at the thought of mating another, even to save her life. To be dependent on another to such an extent that she’d be destroyed when he left?

  Been there, still doing that.

  And she didn’t care about a loveless bond to save her own life, she wasn’t willing to give up her independence. Not yet. She’d been making do. She could get through this until…

  Until what was the big question haunting her, but her instinct said to keep fighting.

  A gas station was six blocks away. When she got there, she pulled up an app and set up a ride. The fare to Charlie and Cass’s, or C&C as she liked to call them, wouldn’t cost much. The highlight of her morning was getting to see them.

  C&C were both lifelong friends, and they were the only ones who had witnessed her lowest point without attributing her behavior to his leaving, even if it had been a direct cause. They’d never said she was better off without him or that she deserved better. They’d just let her cry and despair in private, and they hadn’t questioned her when she’d moved on.

  It’d been hard when they’d decided to move to Freemont, but pack members living in another town wasn’t unusual, as long as their allegiance remained to their pack. Her friends had felt their career was being stifled in Ironhorse Falls and that they could better serve the colony as contacts in Freemont. If Shilo didn’t help her colony get with the times, C&C wouldn’t be the only shifters leaving for better options.

  As she sat on the curb and waited, she finger-combed her hair and ignored the curiosity of passersby. Her gray slacks were dusty and wrinkled, but she hadn’t shredded her shirt getting naked last night, so things could be worse.

  Her Uber pulled up and once she was inside she finally scrolled through her messages.

  Mother: Where. Are. You.

  Father: At least an update?

  Mother: Sweet mother earth, not again. What are you thinking?

  Father: You okay?

  Langdon: How was he?

  Shilo glared at the last message. How could arrogance travel through printed words like that? Langdon probably took credit for what’s-his-name. He’d hinted that they could keep their options open if
they combined their packs, if she mated Langdon.

  Nope.

  Mating Langdon seemed like a good choice in smart packaging. He was handsome, rich, positioned in an ideal location for her people. But her gut had screamed at her when he’d first alluded to it. She’d be a pawn, a puppet, and, probably, a prisoner. Langdon held all the power. Her people were strong and resourceful, but without ready access to supplies and technology, they’d lose in a direct battle for supremacy. Their people had a relatively new government tasked with leading them in the new world, but shifters still defaulted to a “might is right” mentality. She had no qualms that their government would uphold a hostile takeover by the Covets. Over the years, he’d set her people up to prove they weren’t strong enough to lead themselves.

  The car pulled up in front of C&C’s sizable two-story home. They lived on the outskirts of town, where the lots were measured in acres and the woods crowded behind them. As ideal for suburban shifters as it could get. Shilo paid and got out. The car was pulling away as the sense of wrongness hit her.

  She scanned the neighborhood. One neighbor cruised around his lot on a green riding lawn mower. Another was getting the jump on winter and stringing his Christmas lights up. July was nicer weather for the task. Kids’ laughter echoed from nearby lots, but C&C’s place was quiet. And a tint of blood laced the air.

  Shilo inched toward the door, her stomach plummeting with each step. The blood got stronger. No birds sang from around the house.

  Her throat constricted. She didn’t sense anyone nearby, but Charlie’s and Cass’s smells were too strong for them to be okay.