Mountain
Wolf Protectors Series
by
Emilia Hartley
Genre:
Paranormal Romance
Get
the complete BESTSELLING Paranormal Romance Series packed with
Romance, Action, and lovable characters throughout!
The
Mountain Wolf Protectors Box Set is complete with all the drama,
romance and suspense your heart desires. By the time you reach the
end you'll be begging for more! This is one series you do NOT want to
miss!
Book 1 - Protected by the Mountain Wolf
Book 2 -
Adored by the Mountain Wolf
Book 3 - Mated to the Mountain
Wolf
Book 4 - Married to the Mountain Wolf
What are you
waiting for? Jump right into the adorable story of Nova and Amara
now!
Warning: This series contains lots of sexy shifter
action, irresistible mates and steamy love scenes. Tons of mouth
watering Paranormal Romance bonus content included!
The
Mountain Wolf Protectors Box Set is complete with all the drama,
romance and suspense your heart desires. By the time you reach the
end you'll be begging for more! This is one series you do NOT want to
miss!
More
about the books in the box set:
Protected
by the Mountain Wolf
Book
1
Amara's
life changed the moment she was attacked by a group of wolves. She
was only 15 at the time, who could blame her for ignoring her
grandfather's warnings? She quickly began to believe all those
stories he told her about the wolves who protected their town,
Strathford. The wolves who could turn into humans. Shifters, as she
learned they were called.
Ten
years had passed since then, and Nova still couldn't forgive himself
for letting the Valley Clan slip into their territory unnoticed. If
only he had been there in time. Since that day, he made a vow to
himself to protect her, no matter what happens. Though he didn't
personally know Amara, he felt a connection to her after watching
over her all these years. With his curiosity growing each day, he
finally decided to visit her at work. He'd talk to her for an hour,
settle his curiosity and then never speak to her again. Or so he
thought...
Adored
by the Mountain Wolf
Book
2
Two
weeks after she started living on the Compound - the home of the
Mountain Wolves - Amara was getting anxious to return to her life.
She had a job, friends and family to return to. Not only that, she
had to make sure her sister was safe from her psychopath boyfriend,
Kal. If only she could tell Sadie the truth, that he was the wolf
shifter who wreaked havoc on Strathford for all these years.
As
much as he wanted to protect her, Nova knew that he couldn't keep
Amara from her life forever. He and the Mountain Wolves have been
vigilant in the fight against the Valley Clan, but they begin to lose
their footing as the attacks increase in frequency. When Nova is
reminded he has to protect his pack he has no choice but to bring
Amara with him, for her safety.
Mated
to the Mountain Wolf
Book
3
Weeks
after the war between the Mountain and Valley clans ended, resulting
in Kal's capture, things were finally starting to get back to normal
for Amara. Well, as normal as they could be in preparation to marry a
wolf shifter. Before Nova and Amara they could officially be
considered mates, there were a series of trials that needed to be
passed. And if she were honest, the thought of failing scared her
more than anything. To make matters worse, her secret admirer just
began to tip the scale from flattery to all out stalker.
Even
after Kal was captured, and the horrors Amara had faced in her life
were over, she still wasn't completely safe. And that's what angered
Nova the most. He just had to work that much harder at protecting
her.
Married
to the Mountain Wolf
Book
4
The
day finally came. Ten years ago, Nova would have never imagined that
he'd be standing where he stood today. With the odds completely
against him, this wasn't even a thought in his mind. The first night
he saw Amara seemed like forever ago and now here he was, standing,
waiting for his bride to meet him at the altar. Amara. His Bride. His
Mate. With all of the shit that had happened over the past few
months, he was finally glad to see his woman happy, in all her glory.
He wouldn't let anything interrupt this day. Today will be perfect.
For Amara's sake.
Goodreads
* Amazon
Excerpt
Ten Years Later
Amara stood before her full-length mirror, gazing at her
reflection. Her long, dark hair fell around her shoulders in thick waves,
cascading down her back. Tugging on her black tee shirt, she tucked it into her
jeans, and threaded silver feather earrings through her ear lobes. No matter
what she added to her appearance, she couldn’t erase that haunted look from her
eyes, or the shiny mass of scar tissue at her collar bone.
Compliments of the wolf she had believed didn’t exist.
The attack had affected her more than she was willing to let on.
Her grandfather had been right, she’d known that now. They never should have
been out after dark. And Becca was nearly crippled because of it. Poor, sweet
Becca. It had taken her years to regain full use of her arm and for her to walk
again. She still had to use a cane. Amara had hardly been able to look Becca’s
parents in the eyes, she had felt so guilty.
And Zoe, well. Zoe had turned on her for a while, probably to
relieve her own guilt. She’d come around, eventually, though not until sometime
after high school. Now they only saw each other when Amara was at work and Zoe
came into the bar to get a drink. Their relationship was strained at best,
though they did try to behave cordially towards one another every year for
Becca’s birthday. The one and only time they got along.
It was hard to remember everything that had happened that night.
Zoe hadn’t seen or heard a thing before the first wolf attacked her. Then the
others had joined in. By the time the two wolves went after Amara, both Becca
and Zoe had been unconscious. Nobody had believed her when Amara swore up and
down that a boy had saved her. They thought she had gone crazy.
Maybe she had.
She’d gotten paranoid, she knew that for sure. She never went
anywhere without a knife and had long since learned how to use it. She now
believed every word her grandfather had spoken until his death two years back,
and had soaked up all the legends their people had ever passed through the
generations about the protectors of the town, of the tribe that once called
Strathford home. The wolves that could turn into men.
Her entire life, she had believed them to be just stories. She had
agreed with the rest of the town that her grandfather was a bit off his rocker,
and only listened to him to indulge him. But now…now she wasn’t so sure. She
knew what she’d seen. It had been wolves that attacked them ten years before,
yes, but it had been a human who had lifted her up and carried her back to her
friends. It had been a human voice she heard telling the other one to ‘Come
on.’ And it had been human eyes that had stared down at her, almost like an
apology. Dark, worried, human eyes, imploring her to understand.
That boy had saved her, she knew he had. She just couldn’t prove
it.
Grabbing her bag, she slung it around her shoulder before slipping
the knife into the holster on her leg and pulling her pant leg down once more.
Sufficiently armed, she pulled on her coat, locked her front door, and set off
at a brisk walk down the street.
Murphy’s was the local bar in Strathford, one of the main
attractions for the unencumbered, unemployed, and unattached. Amara had been a
bartender there since she’d returned from college to help her mother take care
of her grandfather. It was only a few blocks from her apartment, so she had
never worried about walking. No one ever bothered her, and she was armed, which
was the only way she felt safe. Still, there were times when she couldn’t shake
the feeling that someone was watching her.
Like tonight.
Quickening her pace, Amara was comforted that the only sound she
could hear was the click of her boots on cement until she hauled open the heavy
wooden door of the bar.
“Hey Sam,” she greeted the bouncer. Sam was a big, beefy man with
a bald head and a soft heart, whose company she enjoyed very much. He took the
I.D. from the girl in line and smiled at Amara with his big, goofy grin.
“Hey, Mara. Cold night tonight, huh?”
“Freezing,” she agreed, taking off her coat and hanging it on the
hook behind him. “Mitch in?”
Sam nodded. “Behind the bar.”
“Thanks.” Murphy’s didn’t usually get busy until at least eleven
o’clock, and tonight wasn’t any different. The usual suspects sat in the booths
having a late dinner, and a few of the college kids home on winter break sat at
the high, scrubbed wooden tables, with a few of the regulars perched at the
bar. When things picked up, every booth, stool, and table in the place would be
full, Amara knew. And if she was lucky, her tip jar would do just as well.
Mitch, the owner—and Amara’s high school prom date—was standing
behind the big oak bar, wiping down a set of glasses with a white cloth. He was
tall, his chestnut brown hair falling into his eyes, and a crooked grin curling
his lips. He nodded at Amara when he spotted her.
One of the regulars, a guy named Ole, turned around and leered at
her. She could already tell he was a few drinks in, and knew from years of
serving him booze that he was a sloppy drunk. “How ya doin’, Mara?” he asked,
his words already beginning to slur.
Amara put on her best bartender’s smile. “Doing just fine, Ole.
Doing just fine. Hey, Mitch, did my spirits order come in this afternoon? They
were two days late because of the snow, and we’re running low on tequila.”
Chuckling, Mitch set his glass down and reached beneath the bar to
pull out a bottle of amber liquid. “Checked in and unloaded. Shouldn’t have to
worry about it for a while.”
“That’s what I like to hear,” she said, tying a small, black apron
around her waist. She winked at the young guy at the end of the bar, knowing
she could weasel a big tip from him if she played her cards right. With a
smile, she asked for his order, then grabbed a bottle of whiskey and poured him
a shot. She slid it down the bar to him, praying he would catch it. “Nice work,
honey,” she purred, grinning when he blushed scarlet.
“Did you hear about the wolf sightings?” Mitch asked, keeping his
voice down.
“I heard,” Amara replied darkly, feeling the familiar trickle of
fear whisper down her spine. “How many is that this month?”
“At least ten.”
“Damn. And what’s the Mayor doing, anything? Or the Sherriff?”
Mitch shook his head gravely. “You know they’re trying, Amara.
You, better than anyone, know what wolves can do. They don’t want that to
happen again. Trouble is, for every wolf they kill, it seems like two more of
them come back. Don’t you have that one that keeps following you around? Have
you killed him yet?”
Amara shifted uncomfortably. It was true, she did have a wolf who
liked to lurk around outside her door. A gray and silver wolf, with dark,
troubled eyes. Yet, even for as much as she hated his kind, she couldn’t help
but think that this one was different. There was almost something…protective
about the way he watched her sometimes. Like she was his to look after, though
he never got too close.
Mitch eyed her knowingly. “Yeah. That’s what I thought.”
“Oh, bite me, Mitchell,” she shot back, but there was no heat in
it. Mitch just chuckled.
As the time got later, the bar started to fill up, and Amara’s
shift became the way she liked it: more work, and less chatter. She was just
handing a couple of beers to a couple on a weekend trip when a stranger sat
down in front of her.
He was dressed oddly for the weather Strathford was currently experiencing.
Only jeans and a short-sleeved navy blue shirt. No coat, no hat. Almost as if
the wintery cold didn’t faze him. His sleek black hair was slicked back out of
his angular face, and while she appreciated the chiseled physique on the tall,
muscular frame, it was his eyes that drew her in. Dark, tortured eyes that she
swore she had seen before. And yet, she couldn’t quite place why he seemed so
familiar.
“What will it be, honey?” she asked, taking the tip the couple had
left her and sliding it into the pocket of her jeans. It was coated in dripped
alcohol from the bar, but hey! Money was money.
The man stared at her for a moment, to the point where it was
almost uncomfortable, until finally, Amara cleared her throat. “Whiskey,” he
said, his voice deep and almost gravelly. She couldn’t help but find the
cadence extremely sexy. “On the rocks. Make it a double, please.”
Oh, yeah, she thought. Definite sex appeal. Too bad most men found
her wolf paranoia to be a turn off. She poured his drink and set it on the bar
in front of him. “There you go, handsome.”
He watched her for a moment, as if he was deciding something. Then
his lips curved in the echo of a grin. “Why don’t you have one for yourself?”
he offered. “It’s on me.”
Interesting. “Don’t mind if I do. Thanks.” She held a shot of
whiskey up, tapping her glass to his. She smiled. “Cheers.” Then she threw it
back.
Ten Years Later
Amara stood before her full-length mirror, gazing at her
reflection. Her long, dark hair fell around her shoulders in thick waves,
cascading down her back. Tugging on her black tee shirt, she tucked it into her
jeans, and threaded silver feather earrings through her ear lobes. No matter
what she added to her appearance, she couldn’t erase that haunted look from her
eyes, or the shiny mass of scar tissue at her collar bone.
Compliments of the wolf she had believed didn’t exist.
The attack had affected her more than she was willing to let on.
Her grandfather had been right, she’d known that now. They never should have
been out after dark. And Becca was nearly crippled because of it. Poor, sweet
Becca. It had taken her years to regain full use of her arm and for her to walk
again. She still had to use a cane. Amara had hardly been able to look Becca’s
parents in the eyes, she had felt so guilty.
And Zoe, well. Zoe had turned on her for a while, probably to
relieve her own guilt. She’d come around, eventually, though not until sometime
after high school. Now they only saw each other when Amara was at work and Zoe
came into the bar to get a drink. Their relationship was strained at best,
though they did try to behave cordially towards one another every year for
Becca’s birthday. The one and only time they got along.
It was hard to remember everything that had happened that night.
Zoe hadn’t seen or heard a thing before the first wolf attacked her. Then the
others had joined in. By the time the two wolves went after Amara, both Becca
and Zoe had been unconscious. Nobody had believed her when Amara swore up and
down that a boy had saved her. They thought she had gone crazy.
Maybe she had.
She’d gotten paranoid, she knew that for sure. She never went
anywhere without a knife and had long since learned how to use it. She now
believed every word her grandfather had spoken until his death two years back,
and had soaked up all the legends their people had ever passed through the
generations about the protectors of the town, of the tribe that once called
Strathford home. The wolves that could turn into men.
Her entire life, she had believed them to be just stories. She had
agreed with the rest of the town that her grandfather was a bit off his rocker,
and only listened to him to indulge him. But now…now she wasn’t so sure. She
knew what she’d seen. It had been wolves that attacked them ten years before,
yes, but it had been a human who had lifted her up and carried her back to her
friends. It had been a human voice she heard telling the other one to ‘Come
on.’ And it had been human eyes that had stared down at her, almost like an
apology. Dark, worried, human eyes, imploring her to understand.
That boy had saved her, she knew he had. She just couldn’t prove
it.
Grabbing her bag, she slung it around her shoulder before slipping
the knife into the holster on her leg and pulling her pant leg down once more.
Sufficiently armed, she pulled on her coat, locked her front door, and set off
at a brisk walk down the street.
Murphy’s was the local bar in Strathford, one of the main
attractions for the unencumbered, unemployed, and unattached. Amara had been a
bartender there since she’d returned from college to help her mother take care
of her grandfather. It was only a few blocks from her apartment, so she had
never worried about walking. No one ever bothered her, and she was armed, which
was the only way she felt safe. Still, there were times when she couldn’t shake
the feeling that someone was watching her.
Like tonight.
Quickening her pace, Amara was comforted that the only sound she
could hear was the click of her boots on cement until she hauled open the heavy
wooden door of the bar.
“Hey Sam,” she greeted the bouncer. Sam was a big, beefy man with
a bald head and a soft heart, whose company she enjoyed very much. He took the
I.D. from the girl in line and smiled at Amara with his big, goofy grin.
“Hey, Mara. Cold night tonight, huh?”
“Freezing,” she agreed, taking off her coat and hanging it on the
hook behind him. “Mitch in?”
Sam nodded. “Behind the bar.”
“Thanks.” Murphy’s didn’t usually get busy until at least eleven
o’clock, and tonight wasn’t any different. The usual suspects sat in the booths
having a late dinner, and a few of the college kids home on winter break sat at
the high, scrubbed wooden tables, with a few of the regulars perched at the
bar. When things picked up, every booth, stool, and table in the place would be
full, Amara knew. And if she was lucky, her tip jar would do just as well.
Mitch, the owner—and Amara’s high school prom date—was standing
behind the big oak bar, wiping down a set of glasses with a white cloth. He was
tall, his chestnut brown hair falling into his eyes, and a crooked grin curling
his lips. He nodded at Amara when he spotted her.
One of the regulars, a guy named Ole, turned around and leered at
her. She could already tell he was a few drinks in, and knew from years of
serving him booze that he was a sloppy drunk. “How ya doin’, Mara?” he asked,
his words already beginning to slur.
Amara put on her best bartender’s smile. “Doing just fine, Ole.
Doing just fine. Hey, Mitch, did my spirits order come in this afternoon? They
were two days late because of the snow, and we’re running low on tequila.”
Chuckling, Mitch set his glass down and reached beneath the bar to
pull out a bottle of amber liquid. “Checked in and unloaded. Shouldn’t have to
worry about it for a while.”
“That’s what I like to hear,” she said, tying a small, black apron
around her waist. She winked at the young guy at the end of the bar, knowing
she could weasel a big tip from him if she played her cards right. With a
smile, she asked for his order, then grabbed a bottle of whiskey and poured him
a shot. She slid it down the bar to him, praying he would catch it. “Nice work,
honey,” she purred, grinning when he blushed scarlet.
“Did you hear about the wolf sightings?” Mitch asked, keeping his
voice down.
“I heard,” Amara replied darkly, feeling the familiar trickle of
fear whisper down her spine. “How many is that this month?”
“At least ten.”
“Damn. And what’s the Mayor doing, anything? Or the Sherriff?”
Mitch shook his head gravely. “You know they’re trying, Amara.
You, better than anyone, know what wolves can do. They don’t want that to
happen again. Trouble is, for every wolf they kill, it seems like two more of
them come back. Don’t you have that one that keeps following you around? Have
you killed him yet?”
Amara shifted uncomfortably. It was true, she did have a wolf who
liked to lurk around outside her door. A gray and silver wolf, with dark,
troubled eyes. Yet, even for as much as she hated his kind, she couldn’t help
but think that this one was different. There was almost something…protective
about the way he watched her sometimes. Like she was his to look after, though
he never got too close.
Mitch eyed her knowingly. “Yeah. That’s what I thought.”
“Oh, bite me, Mitchell,” she shot back, but there was no heat in
it. Mitch just chuckled.
As the time got later, the bar started to fill up, and Amara’s
shift became the way she liked it: more work, and less chatter. She was just
handing a couple of beers to a couple on a weekend trip when a stranger sat
down in front of her.
He was dressed oddly for the weather Strathford was currently experiencing.
Only jeans and a short-sleeved navy blue shirt. No coat, no hat. Almost as if
the wintery cold didn’t faze him. His sleek black hair was slicked back out of
his angular face, and while she appreciated the chiseled physique on the tall,
muscular frame, it was his eyes that drew her in. Dark, tortured eyes that she
swore she had seen before. And yet, she couldn’t quite place why he seemed so
familiar.
“What will it be, honey?” she asked, taking the tip the couple had
left her and sliding it into the pocket of her jeans. It was coated in dripped
alcohol from the bar, but hey! Money was money.
The man stared at her for a moment, to the point where it was
almost uncomfortable, until finally, Amara cleared her throat. “Whiskey,” he
said, his voice deep and almost gravelly. She couldn’t help but find the
cadence extremely sexy. “On the rocks. Make it a double, please.”
Oh, yeah, she thought. Definite sex appeal. Too bad most men found
her wolf paranoia to be a turn off. She poured his drink and set it on the bar
in front of him. “There you go, handsome.”
He watched her for a moment, as if he was deciding something. Then
his lips curved in the echo of a grin. “Why don’t you have one for yourself?”
he offered. “It’s on me.”
Interesting. “Don’t mind if I do. Thanks.” She held a shot of
whiskey up, tapping her glass to his. She smiled. “Cheers.” Then she threw it
back.
Reading
wasn't always Emilia's passion, but over the years she developed an
irreplaceable love for books. She writes about large, protective
alpha males and their strong, sexy female mates.
If
you enjoy steamy shifters and fated mates, then you'll LOVE Emilia's
books!
Follow
the tour HERE
for exclusive excerpts and a giveaway!
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