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Portville Summer Series: The Complete Collection Books 1-4: (MM Nonshifter Omegaverse)

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by Xander Collins




  Portville Summer Series

  The Complete Collection - Books 1-4

  Xander Collins

  Portville Summer Series

  The Complete Collection - Books 1-4

  By Xander Collins

  © 2021 Xander Collins

  This collection includes:

  His Steamy Summer

  His Crazy Summer

  His Secret Summer

  His Amazing Summer and Christmas

  All Rights Reserved.

  This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express permission of the publisher.

  This book is a work of fiction and is intended only for adults over the age of 18.

  All characters are 18 or over.

  xandercollins.com

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  Contents

  About the Portville Omegaverse

  About His Steamy Summer

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13 - Epilogue

  About His Crazy Summer

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  About His Secret Summer

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  About His Amazing Summer and Christmas

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16 - Epilogue

  About His Biggest Secret

  Chapter 1

  About the Author

  Also By Xander Collins

  About the Portville Omegaverse

  The Portville Omegaverse has standard A/B/O rules, as well as some rules of it’s own.

  In the Portville Omegaverse some betas can turn into omegas as late as mid-twenties. This phenomenon has evolved over time due to the fact that women are no longer able to procreate.

  In the Portville Omegaverse male omega pregnancy lasts for 5 months.

  In the Portville Omegaverse being in the presence of a particularly compatible alpha can bring a super heat on in an omega. A super heat can cause an overwhelming need to mate, as well as symptoms like shaking, chills, blackouts, and both the alpha and omega being hypnotized by each other’s scent.

  These features don’t show up in every book, but can pop up here and there so it’s a good idea to be aware of them.

  About His Steamy Summer

  Can love really heal all wounds?

  A recent tragedy has taken almost everything from Nate and left him feeling empty and alone.

  His parents are gone, he has no home and no money, and he’s lost part of his leg in a boating accident.

  Being with Brian, Nate's childhood best friend and crush, feels like home, like his life before he lost everything.

  But Nate is worried that things are too different between them now and that Brian won’t want him when he finds out about his injury.

  Brian regrets not having made a move when Nate’s parents moved the family away during their sophomore year in high school.

  The kiss that never happened between them has haunted Brian for years.

  When he sees Nate again he realizes he’s been given another chance with the love of his life, and he’s not going to blow it this time.

  Can Brian convince Nate of his love?

  Can that love give Nate his life back?

  Is it possible for two boys who knew each other as childhood best friends to come together as men and find that they really were meant to be together all along?

  His Steamy Summer is a childhood crush/second chance romance of 30k words.

  It includes some tragedy and angst, a lot of feels, some incredibly hot sex and male pregnancy, and the kind of disgustingly optimistic HEA you've come to expect from Xander Collins.

  Chapter 1

  Nate

  You wanna hang?

  I saw Brian’s name and my first reaction to the text was excited. I could literally feel my heart pounding inside my chest at the thought of seeing him again. But then that feeling quickly switched to dread and seeped down into my stomach.

  It had been amazing seeing him at the Fourth of July barbecue at my neighbor Hank and Jason’s house after so many years. It was like going back in time. Like I was in high school again and nothing bad had ever happened. My parents were still alive and I was still in college working on my bachelor’s.

  But the reality of my life now was very different. I was going absolutely nowhere. Or at least that’s the way it felt. I was stuck in a group home for abandoned omegas and children; I had no money and no job. Plus, I was still waiting to hear back about my disability payments. Even though I didn’t want any more handouts, I was broke. I was twenty years old and I literally didn’t have a cent to my name. I wanted to be able to take care of myself, but everywhere I turned I kept running into nothing but bad luck.

  My phone vibrated in my hand again.

  Watch a movie?

  I sat there on my bed with my thumb hovering over the screen, trying to decide if I should text Brian back. I wanted to see him so badly. I missed his sexy smile and the way he made me feel so safe just by being near. He had been my best friend since I was three years old and he was very protective of me even before he came into his alpha status. That’s just the kind of person he was.

  As we grew up we spent almost every waking moment together, until my parents moved us across the country in my sophomore year of high school. After that Brian and I texted and emailed, but even that dwindled after a while.

  Especially after the accident.

  But, as much as I wanted to see Brian again, leaving my room was really hard. Sometimes I could handle being out in the common area with all the other omegas and kids, but most of the time I just wanted to be alone. And going out into the world was even harder. I knew people stared at the way I walked, and it just felt easier to stay in bed most of the day.

  Eat some popcorn?

  I smiled at Brian’s persistence. He’d always been like that—there to make me smile when I felt like crap. Always looking at me with bright, dazzling eyes that made me feel like I was the only other person he could see. The only one he cared about. But now things were so
different. I wasn’t sure there was anyone in the world that could make my life better now. Even him. And I wasn’t sure he’d still look at me the way he used to if he knew what was wrong with me now.

  Candy? I’ve got Reece’s!

  I laughed out loud and opened the text app. Brian knew how to sway me. I just hoped I could put on a happy face for him. I wanted so badly for things to be okay again. I wanted this horrible feeling inside me to go away. But no matter what I did, the feeling always seemed to be there. The knowledge that something was wrong with me. That I was broken and could never be fixed.

  Sure

  I’ll ride over

  See you in ten

  I jumped off the top bunk and landed on my good foot, then headed out of the room and down the hall. As I approached the common room I heard little kid music playing, as well as chattering and laughter. I stood in the doorway for a second and watched Daniel leading some kids around with plastic instruments. They were dancing and playing along to the music and following right behind him like he was the pied piper. It was adorable.

  My eyes glazed over as I watched them skip around the room. I knew that all those smiling faces were alone in the world, just like me. And my omega instinct was to play with them and comfort them and let them know how much they mattered. But I didn’t have the energy. I barely had enough to smile.

  I walked around the perimeter of the room, hoping to avoid having to talk to Daniel. He was a really awesome guy, he worked at The Sunnyside Home and spent lots of time with the kids, but I always felt like I had to put on an act for him. Like being anti-social and not smiling for everyone was wrong. I knew I should come out and hang with the little kids, that it would probably make me feel better.

  But there’s a big difference in knowing what would help and actually doing it.

  The thing is, it all sounded good until I was surrounded by a bunch of happy people, then came to the crashing realization that I wasn’t one of them. That maybe I was never going to be happy again. Sometimes I’d look around and wonder why these kids were all so happy anyway. This was a group home for the unwanted. Little kids and guys like me who were broke and homeless and had nowhere else to go. What was so happy about that?

  “Where are you headed, Nate?” I heard from behind me. I turned and saw Daniel’s warm smile and kind of hated myself for how much it bugged me.

  “I’m going over to a friend’s house,” I said, hoping that would be enough, but then forced myself to continue. “My friend Brian.”

  “Oh, yeah, Hank and Jason’s neighbor. Okay, have a good time!”

  I waved and ducked through the doorway. I knew he was a genuinely nice person, but for some reason it occasionally rubbed me the wrong way. Like right now.

  I got on my bike and took off for Brian’s. He didn’t live too far away from The Sunnyside Home, so I got there in less than the time I’d texted him. Even with my crappy bike I could get around okay. Not anything like I used to be able to—back when I had two whole legs—but I’d spent so much of my life on a bike that peddling and swerving in and out of traffic was like second nature to me.

  I pulled up onto Brian’s lawn and set my bike down, then walked up the stairs to the door. I hoped Brian wasn’t watching out the window because going up stairs was still hard for me. I wasn’t sure if I was ever gonna get the hang of it.

  “Hey!” Brian said, opening the door just as I was about to knock. I almost lost my breath when I saw his eyes. They were so bright and shiny and beautiful, and full of excitement … to see me. I’d dreamed about those eyes so many times over the last year and I thought I was still dreaming when I ran into him at the barbecue last weekend. When he grabbed me and hugged me for a really long time and looked at me like he wanted to start up right where we left off when my parent’s moved away.

  I just hoped that look wouldn’t go away when Brian found out about what was wrong with my leg and everything. I hadn’t been the same person since the accident and I was scared of what would happen if he found out.

  “Hey,” I said back. “Did you see me coming up the stairs or something?”

  “Nah, I was sitting on the couch and I heard the creaky porch. This house is super old.”

  “Yeah, I guess,” I said, letting out a sigh of relief. “It looks awesome, though.”

  “It is. Come inside and I’ll show you around.”

  I walked in and my eyes wandered around the huge living room. I immediately felt a little bit better being in Brian’s home. I knew he shared it, but his amazing cedar-wood scent was strong and it calmed me as I looked around. There was dark hardwood molding everywhere—around all the doors and windows, as well as where the walls met the ceiling. “Wow that’s an awesome built-in,” I said, gesturing at a huge cupboard and shelf unit that took up half of one wall.

  “Yeah, there’s lots of stuff like that all through the house.”

  “Craftsman.”

  “Yeah,” Brian said. “You know about that stuff?”

  “I took an intro to architecture class my first semester.”

  “Cool. Is that what you’re studying?” he asked.

  “Nah, I haven’t gone back. I had to leave my second semester, and there’s no money for college now.”

  “Oh.” I looked up at Brian and saw a flash of sadness, but I didn’t want him to feel sorry for me. The last thing I wanted was pity, especially from him. Not that I knew exactly what I wanted, though. I’d always felt that maybe he had the same thoughts about me as I’d had about him. But nothing ever happened between us. We were just friends, that’s all.

  But as I glanced away I wondered if he knew how close I came to kissing him the night before I left.

  “It’s just as well,” I said with a laugh. “I don’t think college is for me.”

  “Really?” Brian asked.

  The conversation was starting to make me uncomfortable, so I decided my only recourse was to distract him. “Yeah, I don’t know. What about the rest of the house? I really want to see the detailing.” He guided me from the living room into the dining room through a doorway with huge sliding pocket doors. “Wow, these are awesome,” I said, sliding the doors back and forth a few times. “Original wood.”

  “Yeah, the place is in great shape.”

  We made our way into a kitchen with one whole wall of french windows and a double door. There was a nook with a well-worn wooden table that had a corner booth surrounding it. The cupboards and trim and everything were all done in the same dark hardwood that was in the rest of the house. “So your neighbor owns both of these houses?”

  “Yeah, they were in his family. He inherited them.”

  “Must be nice,” I said, then cringed a little at my tone. I didn’t mean to sound bitter about my own family situation, but it was hard. My parents had only been dead a year. Some people would probably say that was plenty of time to move on, but it all still seemed like yesterday. When I had a real life instead of one where I was living off the government … and was completely alone.

  “So,” Brian said after a moment. He could obviously tell it was a sore subject. “What happened to your parent’s house? They moved back to Portville, right?”

  “Yeah,” I said, taking a deep breath. “I decided to transfer to Portville State after my first semester and my parents said they’d move back here. They missed Portville and my dad’s company said he could work out of this office. So they bought a house and I was gonna live there with them for my second semester. But then when the accident happened everything had to be sold to pay off bills.”

  “Everything?” he asked.

  “Yeah, the cars, the house, the TVs … everything.”

  “Even your BMC?”

  “Yeah, that bike was a few years old, but it was still worth, like, two grand. And since my dad bought it, technically it was his property. I hoped maybe there would be something left after everything was paid off, but no such luck.”

  “Damn, Nate. I’m sorry. That really sucks.”
<
br />   “That’s okay,” I said, forcing myself to give him a smile. “The people at The Sunnyside Home gave me one. It’s nothing fancy, but it works.”

  When I looked into Brian’s eyes again my heart sank. I didn’t think it was going to be this hard to be happy around him, especially after how amazing it was to see him at the barbecue. But my happiness seemed to be so fleeting these days. It would only last for seconds before I crashed back down into sadness again.

  All I wanted was to be able to relax and smile and let everything go. I wanted to be happy, I really did, but it felt so hard. Like it was actual work to feel good now, instead of something that just happened. It sucked because it was painful forcing myself to smile, but it was also painful seeing the look in Brian’s eyes when I didn’t put on an act. I knew there was no way he could handle the real me if I showed it to him, so I kept up with the charade.

 

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