Chapter 10: Claiming Instinct
Magnus made it two miles up the mountain before his bear forced him to pull over. GO BACK. MATE. OURS. […]
She’s the sunshine café owner in a sleepy mountain town. He’s the grumpy bear shifter who doesn’t believe in fated mates—until he scents her.
Magnus made it two miles up the mountain before his bear forced him to pull over. GO BACK. MATE. OURS. […]
Briar woke to the smell of coffee and bacon, and for a disoriented moment couldn’t remember where she was. Then
Briar woke at midnight to the sound of wind howling and her own heart racing. The nightmare had been vivid—Tyler’s
The snow started falling at two o’clock on a Tuesday afternoon, fat flakes that looked picturesque through the café windows.
Magnus was gone when Briar woke up. Not just gone from the couch—gone gone, like he’d never been there at
The sink started leaking two days after the heating incident. Briar stood in the café kitchen at six in the
Magnus made it three days before the boiler failed again. He knew because Calla called him at seven in the
Three weeks after opening day, Briar stood in the middle of The Honey Pot café and felt something dangerously close
Magnus Wolfe had survived a wildfire that killed twelve men. He’d lived through the guilt, the nightmares, the endless loop
The morning Briar Locke drove into Pine Haven, the mountain town looked like something out of a postcard she’d never