dimpled spot just behind her ear. As he breathed in, her sweet, luscious musk filtered through his body, warming him like beams of sunshine.
âGod, you smell good,â he gushed like an eager pubescent boy trying to get to second base.
âGet away from me.â The woman bucked, and the rub of her pelvis against his crotch ignited a craving that would culminate in an all-out home run if she didnât stop.
âBe still,â he rasped. âI only want to smell you. But if you continue thrusting your hips at me, Iâll lose what control I have and do more than scent you.â
She went limp, although the daggers in her eyes remained unsheathed.
Tired, horny and more than a little confused, Brice appreciated the reprieve. He wanted to gorge on her intoxicating scent without battling her and his super-charged libido. âDonât be frightened, Sunshine. I wonât hurt you.â
He rubbed against her. She was soft, spirited, with a mouth-watering scentâa combo like that could bring a wolfan to his knees. âYou have no idea how happy I am to smell you.â
A droning thud in his head joined the possessive thump in his chest. Resonating one beat, one word. Over and over and over again. Mine. Mine. Mine.
Oh, no. No, no, no. Fuck no.
âThis isnât happening,â he mumbled.
âYou got that right.â She jammed her knee against his crotch.
Excruciating pain screamed through Briceâs groin. The air swooshed out of his lungs. His body curled into a fetal ball.
The house was dark. His vision grew darker. Still, he saw the triumphant gleam in her eyes a second before she escaped.
* * *
Brice Walker, my ass!
Cassidy Albright jumped down the front porch steps. She had no idea who that dirt-streaked hobo was, but he certainly wasnât the Brice Walker she knew.
Well, had known from a distance.
She sailed past her car. The old clunker wouldnât have started on the first crank anyway, and sheâd have been a sitting duck if the naked imposter turned out to be a dangerous intruder instead of a drunken resort guest.
Shoes crunching the gravel driveway, she sprinted toward the Walkerâs Run Resort a mile and a half down the mountain. An easy stretch for Cassie, whoâd earned medals in track. Each time she ran, she simply imagined herself running until the layers of her motherâs bad luck and bad reputation peeled away, leaving Cassie free and clear.
She had a way to go before that happened. Only one more semester of college and Cassie could start over. In a town where Imogene Struthersâs past wouldnât wreck her daughterâs future.
She rounded the first curve of a hairpin turn. A creepy vibe spiderwebbed across Cassieâs skin. She glanced back at where sheâd been. The waning three-quarter moon provided enough light to see a man wasnât behind her, but a very large, very hungry-looking wolf.
Cassieâs heart slammed against her chest before spiraling to her feet. She could outrun a man on a dirt road. Outrunning an animal presented an entirely different race.
She veered into the woods. Zigzagged through the trees. Zipped around bushes. Leaped over a fallen pine. Sweat coated her skin. Her breaths grew hard, laborious. A stitch gnawed at her side. Her leg muscles began to burn.
Another downed tree lay ahead. Slightly larger than the last, though not so big that Cassie couldnât clear it. She sailed over it with ease.
The landing was harder.
Her foot slipped on a patch of moss. The belly flop to the ground unleashed an explosion of pain in her chest. Her lungs, shriveling into two tight balls, squeezed out every molecule of air and then some. She couldnât catch her breath, cough or even wheeze.
Cassie didnât want to die, not with a new life finally within her meager grasp. She forced her chest to expand. The muscle beneath her breastbone gave one final spasm and relaxed. Whereas sheâd had no