Book Read Free

Seduced by the Highland Werewolf: An Immortal Highlander Novel

Page 1

by Mandy M. Roth




  Seduced by the Highland Werewolf

  An Immortal Highlander Novel

  Mandy M. Roth

  Contents

  The Druid Series

  Blurb

  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

  Sources

  About the Author

  Seduced by the Highland Werewolf (Druid Series) © Copyright 2019, Mandy M. Roth

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

  * * *

  All books are copyrighted to the author and may not be resold or given away without written permission from the author, Mandy M. Roth.

  * * *

  This novel is a work of fiction and intended for mature audiences only. Any and all characters, events and places are of the author’s imagination and should not be confused with fact. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, or events or places is merely coincidence. This book is intended for adults only.

  * * *

  The Raven

  Published by Raven Happy Hour, LLC

  www.ravenhappyhour.com ~ www.theravenbooks.com

  Raven Books and all affiliate sites and projects are © Copyrighted 2004–2019

  The Druid Series

  Sacred Places

  Goddess of the Grove

  Winter Solstice

  A Druid of Her Own

  Seduced by the Highland Werewolf

  And more to come…

  * * *

  (see Mandy’s website & sign up for her newsletter for notification of releases)

  Blurb

  Seduced by the Highland Werewolf by Mandy M. Roth

  * * *

  Alpha-male, wolf-shifting druid sorcerer Duncan O’Caha has one regret in his immortally long life—letting a demon escape his clutches years ago. Memories of that night have haunted him for decades.

  When the nightmares of old surface once more, he wastes no time returning to the scene of the crime. Deep down, he knows the demon is back with a vengeance. This time he plans to kill it—that is; if he can keep his head in the game and off the captivating young woman he finds in the small town that is full of dark secrets.

  Catrina calls to him on a base level, leaving him at war with the beast he carries within. He’ll have to keep his focus if he has a chance in hell of ending the demon’s reign of terror once and for all.

  Chapter One

  Duncan O’Caha lifted his beer and took a swig, letting the cool liquid move down his throat as he put his other hand on the old oak table. He tapped his finger to the beat of the music that was playing throughout the establishment.

  For as dumpy as the bar was, it had small touches that were far from low-end. Such was the case with the table. While it was old, it had been hand-carved. Time had been spent on the piece. Someone with a steady hand and a passion for the craft had labored over it. He could spot good craftsmanship a mile away, thanks to a number of his family members who were woodworkers in their spare time.

  The top of the table was extremely worn from use and age, yet the legs weren’t in such poor shape. They still held a good deal of detail. Small Celtic symbols were carved into them, each emblematic of power, battle, and eternity. Everything that reminded him of his kind.

  Of druids.

  He took another sip of his beer as he continued to survey the bar. For the most part, the crowd in attendance was much like him. Rough around the edges and not very chatty. Each had an air about them that said they didn’t want attention drawn to themselves unnecessarily, and he got the distinct impression it was because they didn’t want issues with the law.

  A common occurrence with the circles he ran in.

  It wasn’t as if Duncan wasn’t guilty of having his fair share of dustups with the authorities over the span of his exceptionally lengthy life. Seven hundred years was a long time to roam the earth. More than enough time to find trouble and have trouble find him.

  And it had.

  More than once.

  Over the course of his life, he’d spent time in various prison cells. Too many to really recall the number. Sometimes it was for legit reasons. Other times it was because of something stupid the person with him had done or simply from being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

  Guilt by association was a very real thing, and he associated with some guilty people.

  He snorted.

  From the looks of it, so did most of the people in the establishment with the exception of a few. Namely, a group of college boys near the front of the bar who did nothing but talk endlessly and were about as scary as baby lambs right before the slaughter. He knew the boys were in college because a number of them were wearing clothing from their university, and they’d been proudly telling anyone and everyone who would listen that they were fraternity brothers and students.

  Not that everyone hadn’t surmised as much for themselves from the number of times the boys had launched into their fight song. They seemed to take great pride in the fact they were from a Big Ten school.

  Assholes.

  There was a table full of bikers sitting close to the college boys, and Duncan had to laugh at the looks of annoyance the boys were drawing. If they didn’t stop with their entitled behavior, they were likely to end up on the wrong side of the bikers’ temperament.

  His gaze drifted in the direction of the entrance, as he awaited the arrival of his cousin who was running late—as usual. He was just happy Liam hadn’t been there to witness him taking a big gulp of shitty beer and nearly spitting it everywhere. No doubt his cousin would have recorded it and sent it to everyone they knew.

  Normally, Duncan wasn’t a fan of any locally brewed beers, especially with the hipster craze of blending flavors that he didn’t feel went together, but the one he drank now wasn’t bad. It had a hint of lemon to it. It was far better than the coffee-flavored beer the waitress had brought him by mistake some fifteen minutes prior. He could still taste it and wondered if he’d ever be able to wash the taste away or if it would stick with him forever.

  He shuddered.

  Coffee-flavored beer?

  What was next?

  Popcorn-flavored?

  Black licorice?

  They both more than likely already existed.

  Och, I sure the hell hope they’re nae something that’s real.

  Hipsters seemed to go to great pains to find things that should not go together and try to make them catch on. And to make the old relevant once again.

  His stomach twisted. Alpha men did not drink coffee-flavored beer. At least no alphas he knew did. Only skinny-jean-wearing boys did.

  Classic rock music pumped through the dive bar’s substandard sound system. There was a cracking every time a guitar solo came on. His guess was, the sound system was as old as the bar. It was more than likely held together by duct tape, dust, spider webs, and sheer willpower.

  Much like the bar.

  As the legendary rock front man Robert Plant hit a high note, Duncan moved his head along with the beat. That was as close to dancing as he got. Unless he was shit-faced and surrounded by his brothers and cousins. Anything was possible then. Once, he’d started off partying in Scotland and woke up in Australia.

  Thankfully, that was before the advent of social media, or he was sure hi
s misspent youth would have been viral by this point.

  Guid times.

  The music kept going and Duncan continued to do his version of dancing, despite never leaving his seat. The band sang about the elder race, and Duncan couldn’t suppress a grin, always having enjoyed the band, especially with their obvious like of magikal creatures, as noted by the themes and lyrics of a number of their songs.

  They’d fucking love him if they ever met him. After all, he was the real deal. Magik personified. What they’d see as the elder race, for lack of a better label. Duncan was more than met the eye.

  Something most humans couldn’t wrap their fragile minds around, beyond their comprehension.

  An immortal druid sorcerer.

  A man born in another time and place.

  A man who could change forms into a wolf and who struggled daily with the beast he carried within.

  And a man who possessed magik.

  At times, the wolf and the magik were at odds with one another. Thankfully, now wasn’t one of those moments. Although the wolf and his magik side had been butting heads more and more as of late.

  Duncan was in the home stretch of his mission—even though he wasn’t a hundred percent sure what that mission was. But he felt it in his bones that the end was drawing near. Hopefully that didn’t mean his death was on the horizon. That would certainly suck ass.

  If I die now, I die now.

  Shrugging, he drank more of his beer. He’d eluded death for hundreds of years. His time would come due. Maybe today. Maybe tomorrow. But it would certainly come to pass.

  As would everyone’s eventually.

  He waggled his brows at his “happy” thoughts.

  If his cousin Liam ever got his ass to the bar, like he was supposed to already be, he’d be the first to tell Duncan he was being morbid—again.

  He checked his watch once more.

  While the night was still early, the sun having only just set two hours prior, his wolf wanted to run free and frolic in the moonlight.

  He wasn’t entirely sure what in the hell frolicking entailed, but he was positive his wolf was into that shit. Regardless, the wolf wanted free. It wanted to run under the moon’s rays—something he’d denied it for five full cycles of the moon. It wasn’t pleased in the least with him, as noted by the pressure it created in his chest, letting him know it was still there, lurking just below the surface and, if Duncan wasn’t mindful, the wolf would take charge—despite the black magik runes he was using in an attempt to subdue the beast.

  His wolf was as old as he was. That meant the wolf was no slouch. No wimpy, sniveling animal. It was fierce. And it didn’t like being denied. He couldn’t blame it. He’d be pissed if roles were reversed. Which had happened more than once in his life span.

  His wolf could be as big of a dick as him.

  Sometimes an even bigger one—which was saying something for sure.

  They both had a lot of practice at perfecting the art and were Grade-A douchebags when need be—sometimes even when it wasn’t called for.

  A grin touched his lips as pride welled in him over being a dick.

  He wore the label with honor.

  Most days.

  Chapter Two

  While Duncan had been alive just over seven hundred years, he appeared to be only in his early to mid-thirties. It was typical for his kind to stop aging then, to be forever locked in that state. He would remain that way for eternity. Or until a dark mage or another of his enemies finally won and killed him. That, or his own people had to hunt and destroy him.

  That was a very real possibility.

  Especially with his calling: serving the side of good, policing its magikal community, while protecting nature, mankind, and aiding in the instruction of new generations of magiks. The perks were immortality and magik. The downsides were also immortality and magik. Both brought with them a set of challenges.

  For one, it was difficult to have any sort of meaningful relationships with a human. Not that he found any of them particularly interesting enough to bother with. Still, the not-aging bit tended to become noticeable after a time. And magik was a fickle beast. While he considered himself a master of the craft, there were times he felt as if he was no more than a mere custodian of power. That the magik was too wild to ever be tamed or fully harnessed. That it was simply biding its time with him, waiting for the perfect moment to burst free and control the man.

  As of late, that time felt as if it was drawing closer and closer by the second.

  Magik was both light and dark. After seven hundred years, the darkness ate at him. It had beat at his resolve slowly for centuries and had finally made an ample dent in his armor. He knew it wouldn’t be much longer before he fully succumbed to the lure of dark magik.

  The seductive pull to dabble already had him in its clutches. Already he felt the desire to cast another dark spell, to draw upon the darkness for additional power and strength. Just a little spell. Just enough to take the edge off his insatiable hunger.

  A hunger for what, he wasn’t sure. All Duncan knew was he wanted something more out of life. And if he didn’t figure it out soon, he’d be the next evil entity his family hunted.

  The next ultimate threat.

  Not that the world had a shortage of them or anything. There were plenty to go around. Some asshole was always waiting in the wings to make a power grab. They never learned. A fair number of the assholes had once been people he’d thought of as friends. Power had corrupted them past the point of redemption—just as it was threatening to do to him as well. The rest had been evil pricks to start with and only living up to their full potential.

  Their mothers had to be so proud.

  For as long as there had been evil, there were warriors of good, fighting to protect the innocent. Humans didn’t realize how lucky they were. Men like Duncan put their lives on the line to assure humans were safe, and they never even realized they were at risk. If mankind ever understood exactly what was out there, they’d shit themselves.

  “Aye, they’d totally shite themselves for sure.”

  Whenever he finally succumbed and lost his battle with his growing darkness, he’d be sure to avoid clichéd bad-guy moves. One of the worst was when they announced their intentions and made ridiculous threats. Rue-the-day types were long-winded and bored the hell out of him. He really wished they’d just shut up and do their evil-doing. It made killing them that much sweeter.

  If only evil would take constructive criticism.

  His life would be so much easier.

  A man in his early twenties walked past, in the direction of the restrooms. The guy didn’t exactly fit in at the dive bar. If Duncan was right, he and his buddies were slumming it for the sake of excitement.

  Probably a way to rebel against Daddy, who was no doubt footing the bill for their college education.

  The boy—because there was no way he qualified as a man—had on light blue skinny jeans and a T-shirt with a gaming logo. Over the T-shirt, he wore a button-up shirt, that was not buttoned. That shirt had small blue old-style bicycles all over it. Honest-to-the-goddess bicycles, paired with pants so tight Duncan wasn’t sure how the boy wasn’t singing soprano.

  Who on earth thought it was a good idea to squeeze a man’s balls in a denim vise? Did the maker have no desire to ever reproduce? Whatever it was, skinny jeans seemed as if they were a barbaric form of self-inflicted torture, and he’d never be caught dead in them.

  No thank you.

  He preferred his balls to be as free as possible, which was why he passed on wearing underwear. The only way he was ever truly comfortable was when he was in his tartan. Riding his motorcycle in a kilt was an issue, so he made do with jeans.

  The boy nodded to the row of empty beer bottles on Duncan’s table. “Nice. Have you tried the coffee-flavored one? It’s great.”

  Duncan let his gaze go hard. The boy was the reason he’d gotten a coffee beer earlier? The bottle of it had no doubt been headed in the boy’s
direction to start with.

  The bad taste in Duncan’s mouth was the kid’s fault.

  He now had a target.

  Someone to blame.

  A slow, deep growl emanated from Duncan as he set his sights on the man.

  The boy swallowed hard and took a step back before rushing off to the restroom. He was smarter than he looked, and he looked like he’d break in a strong wind. Not to mention he was sporting a handlebar moustache with a haircut that he’d no doubt paid too much for. One that didn’t know if it wanted to commit to long or short, so it mixed the two—poorly at that.

  Duncan set the empty beer bottle next to the others on the table, which were accumulating nicely, and leaned back, propping his feet on another chair. He picked up a dart from the row of them lying on the table, and aimed at the dartboard that was about fifty feet from him on the wall. He didn’t bother to stand. He threw the dart and it hit the board dead center. He repeated the action, this time hitting the previous dart, making it fall to the floor.

  Bullseye.

  Boredom gnawed at him as he took a handful of peanuts from the bowl on the table and ate them. Even with being immortal, he didn’t want to chance eating the food the dump served. Everything coming out of the kitchen smelled old and long past its date. How anyone could order and eat it was beyond him.

  His stomach twisted just thinking about it.

  Yet the proof that humans were dumb enough to eat anything went by him on the tray the waitress carried to a table in the back corner. The fools seated at it would all be dealing with a nasty case of food poisoning later.

 

‹ Prev