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Bearing It All (Alpha Werebear Shifter Paranormal Romance) Read online




  Also by Lynn Red

  The Alpha's Kiss

  Change For Me (Werewolf Romance)

  Shift Into Me (Alpha Werewolf Romance)

  Howl For Me (Alpha Werewolf Shifter Paranormal Romance)

  The Jamesburg Shifters

  To Catch a Wolf (BBW Werewolf Shifter Romance)

  Bearing It All (Alpha Werebear Shifter Paranormal Romance)

  Watch for more at Lynn Red’s site.

  Table of Contents

  Bearing It All | An Alpha Werebear Shifter Romance | by | Lynn Red | A Jamesburg Shifters Novel

  Bearing It All | -1- | Erik & Izzy

  -2- | Violet Larue, Werefox Extraordinaire

  -3- | “Crag” Morgan – Werebear Cage Fighter

  -4- | Violet

  -5- | Violet

  -6- | Violet

  -7- | Violet

  -8- | Violet

  -9- | Marlin Guatorre – Greasy, Grimy Were-croc

  -10- | Leota Barlowe, Jamesburg’s Most Dangerous Citizen

  -11- | Violet

  -12- | Violet

  -13- | Violet

  -14- | Ash

  -15- | Crag

  -16- | Violet

  -17- | Violet

  -18- | Erik, Izzy and Jamie

  -19- | Ash

  -20- | Violet

  -21- | Violet

  THE END

  For all of you, the readers who make this possible.

  LR

  Bearing It All

  An Alpha Werebear Shifter Romance

  by

  Lynn Red

  A Jamesburg Shifters Novel

  Thank you so much for taking the time to check out my new book. Click here to subscribe to my mailing list to keep up to date on all my new releases, giveaways, and free books!

  Bearing It All

  -1-

  Erik & Izzy

  Erik Danniken, the self-satisfied, tattooed, motorcycle riding Alpha of the tiny shifter-filled town of Jamesburg sat at his desk for the first time in two weeks and stretched his legs.

  In Jamesburg, Alphas were more than snarling, fighting, wild savage wolves or bears or even sometimes hedgehogs – they were something far more terrifying... something far, far worse.

  They were civil bureaucrats.

  He stretched his legs and laced his fingers together behind his head. Erik took a deep breath, filling his lungs. The scent of old drywall and air conditioning ducts that needed some work came along with it.

  Erik’s expense-account-paid Keurig made a hissing noise, then a gurgling one. He smiled, collected his Sea World Orlando souvenir mug, and inhaled the scent of Donut Shop Medium blend.

  “It’s good to be back,” he said to himself. He walked over to the window of his office and looked out, smiling.

  His view was straight out into the town square. Not a lot happened in Jamesburg, but most everything that did happen, took place right there. A couple of pharmacies, and what was probably the last Blockbuster Video in existence stared back at him.

  It was a Saturday, but he had to come in as soon as he got back from his honeymoon to sign some venue rental agreements. A fighting organization, which looked on paper to be legit, wanted to stage a few matches at the Jamesburg Civic Center, so he grudgingly showed up and signed them. After all, any money coming in was good money - he had to figure out some way to pay for new street lights.

  The little man who brought the papers wasn’t exactly savory – he was short, round, and had the strangest way of smiling all the time – but he also had a stack of hundreds, so the fact that the guy smelled like cigars and whiskey didn’t matter much.

  Whiskey, Erik thought, and opened his desk. Sometimes a werewolf’s gotta fight, sometimes he’s gotta sign property rental agreements, and sometimes he needs a couple shots in his coffee.

  Uncorking the bottle, he took a whiff. “Ahh,” he sighed. The sharp, spicy aroma of oak aged bourbon was his second favorite smell. The first was Chanel No. 5, because that’s the perfume Izzy wore.

  He poured a little sauce in his coffee, as his thoughts drifted to his mate and how her hair felt against his chest. Then, Erik shrugged and poured some more. Then he adjusted the picture of Izzy and him in front of Shamu’s tank. He hadn’t really wanted to go to a bunch of theme parks for his honeymoon, but it turned out to be a really good way to pass the time between, er, sessions.

  “Little early for that, isn’t it?”

  “Jesus!” Erik jumped up to his feet, spilling a little of his “coffee” down his chin. He licked it off. “How the hell did you get in here?”

  Jamie Ampton, newly-appointed head accountant for Jamesburg, and full-time were-bat, unfolded gracefully from the ceiling and lowered herself to the ground in front of Erik’s desk. “Oh, you know,” she said. “We always manage to get into places you thought you closed.”

  So quickly that Erik barely noticed, Jamie snatched the cup out of his hand and took a drink. “Whew,” she said, squinting. “How do you wolves do this and not spend half of every day recovering from the day before?”

  “Good metabolism,” Erik said. “Anyway, good to see you.”

  “Have fun on the honeymoon?” Jamie asked, grinning at the mug in her hand. “Sea World? Really? So you actually are a child, then? Did you have one of those fake ice creams shaped like Shamu?”

  Erik instinctively gave her one of his cocky half-grins. “Don’t hate, Jamie. It’s the simple pleasures that matter most. Fake ice creams, making love to your mate, holding hands under the stars... you know; the simple things.”

  “Right,” Jamie said. “Simple things like whales in aquariums.”

  With a comically smug look on his face, Erik nodded. “Shamu was awesome, by the way.”

  “Uh-huh,” Jamie said flatly. “Look, I hate to spring this on you right when you came back, but there’s a problem.”

  “Yeah?” Erik asked, taking his mug back, shooting Jamie a nasty glance and taking another sip. “Want some?” he offered his spiked coffee cup to Jamie.

  At that, Jamie sneezed, then she laughed. “As much as I’d like to start the party at... quarter past nine in the morning, I better say no.”

  “Anyway, what’s the problem? Don’t tell me Jenga’s somehow out on bail and making trouble again?”

  Jamie snorted a laugh. “No, nothing that easy to handle, I’m sorry to say. I’m not really sure who you’re going to fight to solve this, but...” she dropped a manila envelope marked POLICE REPORT on Erik’s desk. “You need to pay attention to this, Erik, and quick.”

  Erik’s leadership style was brash and headstrong. He preferred it when problems could be solved by beating the ever-living hell out of whatever the problem was, or whoever was the cause. He was about as subtle as a derailed locomotive, someone had once said, though he forgot who.

  They were right though, and he always liked that line, because locomotives were, in Erik’s mind, really, really cool.

  “Fill me in,” he said.

  “Fill you in? What is this?” Jamie sneezed out another laugh. “Jamesburg is a lot like Twin Peaks, I’ll give you that, but you’re no Agent Cooper.”

  Erik pursed his lips. “Just the facts, ma’am?” he asked.

  Jamie put her hands on her hips and sighed. “You’re an infant child, not just a normal child,” she said, stifling a laugh.

  Just then the door to his office opened. “Ah,” Erik said. “See, Jamie? That’s the right way to come into a room. Izzy!” he reached out, grabbed his mate’s hand and pulled her to him, twirling around in a mock dance.

  “You’re dri
nking already?” Izzy asked.

  Jamie gave her a “boys will be boys” look. “Good to see you back,” she said. “But what are you doing up here?”

  “I figured Erik was up here anyway, so it’d be unlocked. I was just going to clean my office out some before next week.”

  Since it wasn’t exactly a great idea for the alpha and his assistant to be mated, Izzy got herself a new job. Being city auditor came with a big office upgrade, so she was moving out of the closet next to Erik and into a big open place down the hall.

  “I guess I’ll leave you two to whatever serious town business you’re attending,” Izzy said. “And Erik?”

  “Hmm?” he kissed her neck on one side, then the other before Izzy batted him off.

  “You giant letch,” she giggled, twisting away from him. “Do me a favor?”

  “Anything, love,” Erik said.

  “Don’t forget lunch, all right? My parents are excited to meet you.”

  She turned and left, Erik unflinchingly and unashamedly watching her curves swish out the door.

  “Her parents?” Jamie asked. “That’s gotta be uncomfortable.”

  “They’re just passing through,” Erik said, distracted by Izzy’s hips. “What’s in the folder you dropped on my desk?” His mind, she knew, was about a billion miles away.

  “Well,” she offered, “it says police report on it.”

  Erik let out a heavy sigh. “She’s incredible, isn’t she?” he asked. “Just... I mean after the two weeks we just spent, I still can’t keep my mind off her.”

  “That’s great, Erik,” Jamie said. “Yes she is, Izzy is awesome, and you have a police report on your desk. Three girls got kidnapped two days ago.”

  “Wait, wait, wait,” Erik said, sitting up straight. “Why didn’t you say something earlier? This is... three of our girls are missing?”

  “Two of the girls are from Clinton, down the road. They weren’t... you know, weren’t like us. Meaning, they were just normal humans. The other was a country girl – a panther – from outside town.”

  “The Scottish one? Fergus’s daughter?”

  Jamie nodded. “I’m not sure if whoever it is that took her knows what he got.”

  “Shifter, you mean?” Erik asked, taking another sip of his coffee and rifling through the papers in the folder. There wasn’t much in there Jamie hadn’t already told him.

  Details were sketchy, no suspects, all of the kidnapped girls were between fifteen and seventeen.

  “I assume the hyenas are looking into it already?” Erik asked.

  In Jamesburg, Hyenas were the police. Their tenacity and their... unwillingness to ever give up, ever, made them perfect for the job. The town hyena families had made it a point of pride that they were unflinchingly good at what they did.

  Jamie nodded. “Been looking since the first report came from Clinton. But there’s just nothing to go on.”

  After they sat there for a moment, Erik thanked her. “Yeah,” he said. “Doesn’t make any sense. I mean why grab a girl from here? Two from Clinton? Unless the idea is just to hit towns no one will ever notice. And you’re being strangely cavalier about this.”

  Jamie shrugged. “Nothing I can do. I feel bad for them, but the hyenas are working the case, and there are cops from Clinton poking around too. I’d just be in the way. Anyway,” she said, “I have to go get ready. Big fight tonight, huh?”

  Erik quirked a scarred eyebrow. “You’re going? How did you know, anyway?”

  “That sleazebag crocodile who was in here twenty minutes ago has been putting up signs all over town for a week. Big fight, big night! I’m surprised you haven’t seen any of them, but Duggan’s been going crazy pulling them down.”

  Duggan, the part-time city manager, part-time professor, and full-time hedgehog went nuts over most anything. But he went the most nuts over people blatantly disregarding city ordinances, such as nailing advertisements to phone poles.

  Erik sighed. “I’ll get him some Xanax. But seriously, you’re going to a fight? I thought I’d never see the day.”

  “Yeah, well,” Jamie said, walking toward the door. “There’s a lot you don’t know about me, even after all these years. You gonna come watch it?”

  Erik looked through his door into Izzy’s office. She was still swishing around, and once again he unashamedly stared at her. His eyes were hungry as he took another drink. “No,” he said. “I think I’ve got something better to do.”

  Jamie coughed a laugh.

  “That sounded wrong,” Erik said. “Or maybe it didn’t. Either way, I’ll see what I can find out about this case. And Jamie?”

  She spun on her stiletto-clad heel and raised an eyebrow.

  “Thanks for holding the place down,” Erik said. “It’s good to know I have someone I can count on when shit gets real.”

  “Anytime, boss,” she said with a grin. “Though I’m not sure I could punch a zombie’s arm off quite the way you can. I’d sure give it a try, though.”

  Her chuckle echoed off the walls, accompanied by the clip-clop of her heels. Erik stuck his head out into the hallway a few seconds later, and looked both directions.

  “Izzy!” Erik hissed, making sure to check the ceilings this time. He’d made that mistake more than once. “Izzy!”

  “Yeah?” she asked, without turning to face him. She was still shoving stuff into a box on her chair. “What’s up?”

  “I, uh, I got something in here I need your help with,” Erik said. “Do you mind?”

  He was already unbuttoning his shirt when she turned around.

  “Oh my lord, Erik Danniken,” she said. “You’re unbelievable.”

  “I might be,” he said, pulling the poorly-tied knot in his tie loose. “I may very well be unbelievable, but here you are, coming toward me.”

  She pushed his shirt open, sliding her hands around his waist, and getting a handful of Erik’s muscled ass. “What can I say?” Izzy asked. “I guess two weeks at Sea World just wasn’t enough for me.”

  Erik grinned and pulled her inside his office. The door squeaked on the hinges as it closed, and then clicked shut.

  “I guess I should tell Duggan to order someone to get some WD-40 on those hinges,” Jamie whispered to herself as she gathered her things.

  Jamie’s office, which was directly above Erik’s, was only accessible via a bat-friendly passage in the ceiling which Erik seemed to constantly forget. It wasn’t technically a belfry, but it was good enough. She giggled as the noises from Erik’s office started, then got quicker, then got slower, then quicker again.

  When something fell off his desk, she had to bite a finger to keep from laughing. “Never change, Erik,” she said under her breath.

  She decided to take the window out, instead of disturbing the two lovers by walking down the hall. Jamie opened the window and stuck her head out, then climbed out, closed the window, and spread her wings.

  “Jamesburg,” she said, taking a deep breath, and looking back over her shoulder at the building as it vanished in the distance. “Gotta love it.”

  -2-

  Violet Larue, Werefox Extraordinaire

  “I’m pretty sure this would be going better if I was on a date with a literal stick in the mud, Henry.”

  My finger hovered over the send button. I really didn’t want to tell my friend she set me up with another lunk.

  I really didn’t.

  Henrietta tried so hard to hook me up with guys she thought I’d like. Tried so hard to hook me up with guys of a similar, uh, stripe to me. So to speak.

  It never worked.

  Eustace – seriously, his name is Eustace – stuck his head out of the bathroom door and looked around. He was so squirrely, so mousy and twitchy that it even made me seem calm.

  And, I am not calm. I promise.

  Were-fox with a supercharged sex drive? Pushing twenty-five with nowhere to turn said sex-drive? Holy hell, me calm? Please.

  Eustace poked his head around and th
en asked the obviously tired and not-very-interested-in-life bartender something. The poor guy who was probably just hoping no one would ask him anything before his shift ended took a deep breath and closed his eyes.

  “Violet Larue?” a voice, scratchy and unaware, came over the Applebee’s speakers, which I looked toward and laughed at the stock image of people clinking beers together. I doubt there are any other franchises run by a rhino who always wears a sky-blue blazer with gold buttons. “Violet Larue, your date is at the bar. He... got lost. Can you come pick him up?”

  My cheeks were just about on fire. I was so flushed I couldn’t tell if it was embarrassment or me being hot-tempered and sick of this dingus, but it was one of the two.

  “Violet Larue,” he repeated. “Date is, uh – hey! You can’t do that!”

  The speaker squeaked and hissed a nasty static sound. A second later, Eustace started talking, his voice booming through the whole restaurant. “Violet! I forgot where you were! I’m worried that you’re lonely.”

  “Over here, Eustace,” I called out. I tried to hide my irritation. I doubt I did a very good job. “It’s fine,” I waved to him. “Come on back.”

  I pushed send, and immediately felt good about my decision. On the one hand, at least I didn’t have to go fetch my date from the bar. On the other hand, that was actually a possibility.

  He was grinning when he came back to the table.

  I felt like I was gonna die. But, he was a nice guy. He really was. So, I sucked it up and smiled back.

  Eustace drank like half of his no-ice-add-lime water in one gulp. Little droplets stuck to his face for a second. At least I hoped they were from the water and not sweat on his upper lip. That would have been one step too far, even for me.

  “I’m sure having a great time,” he said. “Want to go out to the mini-golf place after this?”

  Eustace chugged the other half of his water. I wondered if his metabolism was so high that he was constantly thirsty. Then again, I kinda wondered if he was cranked up on something. He’s a sweet guy. All the ones Henry sets me up with are good guys. I always feel bad when I complain about them, but after my first real relationship fizzled out a year in, and the second one ended after three in a whole lotta tears... I was ready for something more.