Tiger Mine
Angela Castle
Excerpt Heat Level: 1
Book Heat Level: 5
Buy at Barnes & Noble: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/tiger-mine-angela-castle/1110297347?ean=2940014563079
BLURB:
Licking her wounds after
ending a six-year marriage to a serial cheating husband, Julia has run away to
her grandfather's house high in the Australian Mountains, hoping to fix the old
neglected building up while she contemplates her future, only to discover a
huge white Siberian tiger on her door step.
Tiger shifter Mohan has
escaped, jumped ship and is in hiding from the hunter who has ripped him from
his world and murdered those he loved, when a curvy Aussie woman turns up at
the old house he’s managed to shelter in these past weeks. He offers his
services as a builder by day, returning to her by night as a tiger. Despite the
strong attraction he has trouble fighting, what he discovers in Julia is a new
kind of warmth and kindness he is in desperate need of.
Julia knows her
gorgeous Russian handyman is harboring dark secrets, but can her heart stand
falling in love and losing again?
Can they help each other mend the
deeper issues which plague their lives? And bring hope of a new future. Or will
Mohan’s past hunt him down and tear the new fragile bond between them?
EXCERPT:
Desperation was becoming a prevalent emotion in Mohan's life. With each
passing moment, he slipped deeper into the unwanted state.
His food supply was limited, and he grew weaker with each passing week.
Soon, he would be forced into the situation of journeying back into the human
populace. It was dangerous for a creature in his situation.
As long as he remained in animal form, he had a chance of surviving.
Yet, with each necessary shift to his human side, he grew weaker. His body
ached with a gnawing hunger. Even in the warm climate of this new land, he was
cold.
Mohan had been fortunate to find shelter; an old, abandoned farmhouse.
It had several rooms and would have once been a comfortable home. Someone had
left it to the ravages of time and was in need of much repair.
He would restore it if he had the resources. For now, it was a roof over
his head and kept out the chill of the cold mountain nights. Still, even with a
full blaze in the solid stone fireplace, it only partially kept the chill from
his bones.
He had nothing with which to trade, nothing to barter, and he had
limited English. All he would need to do was open his mouth to speak, and they would
know he was not of this land. The clothes on his back he had taken from a pile
discarded next to a large bin on a seaside street, near where he had come
ashore. By day he had walked over many fertile, abundant fields through strange
forests. As darkness fell, he had shifted and used the strength of his animal
form. He hunted rabbits to help him continue on. As he moved further away from
people and higher into the mountains, the safer he began to feel.
Stumbling across the farmhouse had been an answer to an unspoken prayer.
He had collapsed in the old building, staying still until his exhaustion had
faded.
His sleep was fitful, filled with nightmare images. The smells and
screams in his head plagued him. He would never forget the pain and
helplessness of everything he'd been forced to endure.
Why did he fight for survival when he had nothing to
live for?
Mohan's natural instincts were more often a curse than a blessing. It
was only natural to fight to survive.
The late afternoon sun filtered through the mountain trees. Already the
air was beginning to cool.
Counting the days, he knew a few months had passed since he'd come to be
here. His clothes were tattered and worn thin. He balanced the heavy load of
wood he had collected for the fire. When dusk fell, he would hunt rabbits to
feed his hunger then settle for the night.
He was still a distance from his cottage. His feet easily found the
track back to his shelter. Deep in thought, he had not heard anyone or anything
approach. His hearing was less acute while he was in human form.
He froze at the line of trees surrounding the old house. There was a
large dark vehicle parked out front and attached to the back was a covered
trailer.
Quietly, he lowered himself into a crouch and set down the wood. His
eyes trained on the open door of the house. A figure appeared there. The baggy,
pale blue, short-sleeved top and jeans did not hide the fact the wearer was a
generously curved woman. A cascade of light auburn hair fell about her
shoulders, gleaming in the last of the fading sunlight.
He noticed the old tarp he'd been sleeping on was carelessly tossed out
and now lay by the end of the porch, along with a heap of old ruined and
unusable furniture.
Mohan's jaw clenched in displeasure. What was he going to sleep on now?
He waited and continued his observations.
There was no one else as far as he could tell. The woman proceeded to
unpack the trailer, carrying box after box into his current home.
It was clear he had just lost his shelter. There would be no fire to
warm his side tonight. He would be forced to move on.
Rising to his feet, Mohan curled his fingers so tightly around the slim
tree by his side his whole hand throbbed. He welcomed the pain as he battled to
bring his anger under control.
Forced. He was so tired of being forced to do things he did not want to
do. He needed to regain some control, take back the little comfort he had
managed to claim as his. Mohan faded unseen into the thick of the trees. He
would wait until dark. He would not give up his new home so easily, and one
lone woman would not stand in his way.
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