Filthy Beast

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by Liza Street




  Filthy Beast

  Junkyard Shifters, Book 1

  Liza Street

  Contents

  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

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Also by Liza Street

  About Liza

  Filthy Beast, Junkyard Shifters, Book 1

  by Liza Street

  Cover designed by Keira Blackwood.

  Copyright 2020 Liza Street. All rights reserved.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental or used fictitiously.

  1

  Grief was tangible. It had a weight to it. It pulled Lena down, made it hard for her to breathe.

  Sarah had been dead for two weeks, and Lena didn’t feel the grief abating. Something small, like catching a whiff of Sarah’s scent, set it off anew. Or like now, seeing an envelope addressed to Lena in Sarah’s writing. Sarah had a funny way of making her letter A’s. They were always rounded and happy. On the front of the envelope, the A at the end of Lena’s name still carried the buoyancy of life.

  The pride’s mansion was quiet. Shaw, the alpha and Sarah’s mate, demanded silence to mourn Sarah’s death. Yet Lena didn't sense any sadness in him. He had been entirely uninterested in going through Sarah’s things, which was why Lena did the job now. She was alone in Sarah’s room and Sarah’s scent was everywhere. Dusty, feline. Family. The last of what Lena had.

  And that newly-familiar ache of grief wrapped around her now.

  With shaking hands, she opened the envelope.

  Lena, if you’re reading this, I’m dead.

  Lena sucked in a breath. How could Sarah have known she was going to die? Her death had been a sudden accident, a fall during a pride run.

  She kept reading.

  Nothing I do for Shaw is right. He’s crazy. Violent, aggressive. I can’t give him babies, and I think he’ll end up killing me. If he does, you need to get out. He’s obsessed with our family, our bloodline.

  I love you, sis. Don’t waste any time. Run.

  Sarah.

  Lena sat back on her heels. What the fuck?

  She stared at the paper in her hands. Sarah had seemed so happy. She had been the perfect alpha’s mate. She had hosted pride meetings, stood tall at Shaw’s side, smiled prettily at everyone. Her perfection had actually started to get on Lena’s nerves.

  It had been a mask? Faked?

  Fake—just like her “accidental” death?

  Lena’s heart pounded double-time. She could leave this place forever, sure. Easily. Nothing held her here now that Sarah was gone. She’d grab some clothes, quit her waitressing job, and start a new life somewhere. She could find another pride to take her in, and maybe, someday, heal from Sarah’s death.

  She stood on legs that felt weak. There was no time to waste. Her poker face sucked, and if Shaw saw her in this moment, he might realize she knew something.

  Footsteps came up the stairs. Before Lena could reach Sarah’s door, one of her pride mates appeared. Brenna. Short brown hair, golden brown eyes. Attitude for days. She was Shaw’s only female enforcer.

  “Shaw wants to see you.” Brenna’s voice was snotty. She was close to Lena’s age. Lena used to try to be her friend, but Brenna had never allowed it.

  Lena walked to Sarah’s desk and set the letter down as if it didn’t belong to her, as if it wasn’t important. “I’ll be down in a second.”

  “Don’t keep him waiting.” Brenna left.

  When she could no longer hear Brenna’s footsteps, Lena folded the letter and tucked it into her back pocket. Then she followed Brenna downstairs.

  A few members of the pride sat around, lounging on couches or sitting on the floor and leaning against furniture. Brenna was among them, her golden brown eyes looking from Shaw to Lena and back again.

  “Lena, welcome,” Shaw said. His dark, shoulder-length hair was tied back. His well-trimmed beard below his narrow nose used to strike her as regal.

  “Thank you.” Lena wanted to spit in his regal face. No, she wanted to claw off his face. He stood there with that benign smile after he had hurt her sister?

  She had to keep it together. After this, she'd go upstairs and pack her bag, and then she’d disappear.

  Shaw cleared his throat. “I require a new mate.”

  “So soon?” Lena couldn’t stop the words, and she realized her mistake as soon as she spoke them. Shaw did not like to be questioned.

  “It isn’t natural for an alpha to be alone,” he said. “I treasured Sarah. Ours was a perfect match. And now you, Lena, are without a sister. I am without a mate. I’ve thought it over, and you shall be my mate.”

  He beckoned her forward. Lena’s feet obeyed. Just get through this. Then do as Sarah said—run.

  The alpha’s touch on her cheek made Lena shudder. Cold. Hard. Violent, even when it was the barest brush of skin.

  “It’s an easy enough choice,” Shaw said.

  Several of his enforcers sat around the meeting room. To an outsider, they’d look as if they were simply relaxing, but Lena could sense their attention. Each of these cougar shifters would be ready to leap to the alpha’s defense. An attacker wouldn’t have time to blink.

  She dared to look into Shaw’s eyes. The golden yellow was beloved by most of the cougar shifters in their pride—it was a sign of royalty, as far as they were concerned.

  Lena’s eyes were blue. Why would he want such a low-born lion for his mate, anyway? Sarah had said something about their bloodline.

  As if sensing her question, he said, “I like your spirit; it runs in your family. You’d do well at my side.”

  “No, I wouldn’t.” He’d killed her sister.

  His golden eyes flashed and his jaw tightened. “You will be my mate. My family has been monitoring yours for generations, and it’s finally time for us to join. Our offspring will be strong and pure.”

  Hyperconscious of the others in the room and their faked inattention, Lena whispered, “No. Never.”

  “How dare you refuse the position of alpha’s mate?” Brenna pointed an accusing finger at Lena. “You’re nothing but a bitch who doesn’t deserve him.”

  “Brenna, enough,” Shaw said, but his gaze never left Lena’s face. “This is your last chance. Your actions these last two weeks would be enough to land you in the Junkyard, should you continue to defy me.”

  Inwardly, Lena winced. He wasn’t wrong. She’d disobeyed the alpha’s order time and time again over the past week. Staying out late, returning to the territory with whiskey on her breath. Fighting with her pride mates. To everyone else, it would look as if Lena was out of control. In truth, though, she’d been reeling from Sarah’s death.

  Something hadn’t added up. Now Lena knew why.

  The letter was safely in her back pocket, proclaiming the truth.

  He’s obsessed with our family, our bloodline.

  Now Lena was seeing it, right here in front of her. A proposal to mate from a man who was so powerful, he didn’t believe a woman w
ould say no.

  “You disgust me,” Lena said.

  He spat in her face, the warm spray hitting her nose and mouth. She fought the urge to gag.

  “Take her away,” Shaw said.

  Brenna and another pride mate, Dillon, jumped up to do his bidding.

  “Where to?” Dillon asked.

  “Holding pen in the basement. She’ll go to the Junkyard tomorrow. Hutchins is sending along a transport.”

  Shaw wouldn’t have known about the transport unless he’d asked around—it wasn’t like the Junkyard transports were advertised. Which meant he’d guessed Lena would say no to his proposal.

  If he suspected she knew about Sarah, he wouldn’t let her live for long.

  “This is your last chance, Lena,” Shaw said in a growl. He faced away from her, his fists clenched at his sides. “Is this really the choice you want to make?”

  “If my choice is between you and the Junkyard,” Lena said in a cold, clear voice, “then I choose the Junkyard.”

  “Get her out of here,” Shaw said.

  Brenna’s fingers dug into Lena’s arm. Dillon held her more loosely. Still, there was no escaping their grasp. Even if she could tear away from these two, she wouldn’t get far. This mansion was full of cougar shifters who supported Shaw. He was everything to them.

  She wondered whether any of them knew the truth about Sarah. Probably some of them did, and didn’t care.

  The basement smelled like fur and discipline. It smelled like blood and despair.

  Three metal cages loomed side by side. Each one was tall enough for a person to stand in, wide enough someone could lie down.

  Brenna let go of Lena with one hand so she could open a cage door. Lena took advantage of the brief distraction, pulled loose from Dillon’s grasp, and shot a right hook straight at Brenna’s nose.

  “You fucking bitch!” Brenna shouted. Blood immediately started streaming from her nostrils. She hit Lena just as hard, clipping her cheek before pulling her fist back to hit Lena again. “I’ll fucking kill you!”

  Dillon turned Lena away from Brenna. He grabbed both of Lena’s arms and held them behind her back. Over his shoulder, he said, “Just open the cage, Brenna.”

  Lena twisted in Dillon’s grasp to watch what Brenna did next.

  Golden eyes flashing with fury, Brenna yanked open the cage door. Dillon shoved Lena inside. After Brenna closed the door, Dillon locked it.

  Brenna looked like she was going to stay and shout more obscenities at Lena, but Dillon said, “Go get your nose looked at before it heals crooked.”

  Brenna’s vanity won the battle over her need for revenge, and she went upstairs.

  The ache in Lena’s jaw had already begun to spread, creating the beginnings of a massive headache. She wondered why Dillon hadn’t left yet. Looking at him hard in the face, Lena spat, “What?”

  “Just wondering why you slugged her. You knew it wasn’t going to help you get away.”

  “That wasn’t why I did it.”

  “Then why did you do it?”

  Because she’s a bitch. Because she’s too happy that I’m in here. Because I’ll never get another chance. “I wanted to make her bleed. Call it a parting gift.”

  Dillon shrugged. “Just so you know, I think it’s messed up that Shaw put you in here.”

  “But you're not going to do anything about it,” Lena said.

  “Nope. Not my place.”

  Dicks like him let bad things happen every damn day. Lena shook her head and watched him disappear up the basement steps.

  Sarah had told her to run. She had told her to leave the pride. Getting sent to the Junkyard hadn’t factored into Lena’s plans, but she couldn’t deny that the result would be the same.

  She smiled to herself, appreciating the pain in her cheek. She was getting away from Shaw.

  2

  “Hey, Carter!”

  Carter looked up and saw Grant waving at him from his cabin. This guy. Again. Sighing, Carter said, “What’s up?”

  Grant trotted over from his porch to the gravel boundary of the Junkyard. “Caitlin was wondering if you might want to share a meal with us tonight.”

  Carter gave a pointed look at the gravel line between them. “Sure, you just get rid of this magical wall, and I’ll be right over.”

  Ignoring his sarcasm, Grant said, “We’ll bring a couple of chairs over to the side, you grab a chair from my old trailer over there, and we’ll pass you a plate. Home cooking, a nice visit, what do you say?”

  “Busy tonight.”

  “Dinner plans?” Grant’s eyebrows rose with skepticism.

  “Sorta.” Carter had a standing appointment every night with the fighting ring. In the nightly battle for dominance, he sometimes won, sometimes lost, but each night he walked away calmer than he’d been when he started.

  At least, that’s what he told himself.

  Grant rubbed the back of his neck. “I’m grilling corn on the cob and steak, man. You can’t tell me a fight is more important than that meal.”

  Shifters could sense dishonesty, which meant they also knew when someone was telling the truth. Staring directly at Grant, Carter said, “A fight is more important than any meal.”

  “Dude, that’s fucked.” With a sigh, Grant added, “Tell me if you ever change your mind.”

  It was getting even darker, and Carter knew the fighting would start soon. Still, he wasn’t a complete douche, and he knew how to hold a civil conversation. “How’s Caitlyn?”

  Grant’s pout turned into a smile. “She’s great. Really great. She found a job where she can give nursing advice over the phone. Picks her own hours and everything.”

  “That’s awesome.” Carter meant it. He genuinely cared about Grant and Caitlyn—as much as he could care about anyone or anything. But caring about them didn’t mean he needed to hang out with them. Especially not when there were fights to be had. His bear wanted violence. Luckily, being stuck in the Junkyard meant he could get that violence on the daily.

  A shout rang out over the darkened treetops.

  Grant gave Carter a look. “Sounds like your summons.”

  “That it is.” Smirking, Carter walked away without a goodbye.

  He heard Grant mutter something about Carter being an “asshole” as he walked away, but it was the truth, so it didn’t bother him.

  It wasn’t a huge group of guys hoping to fight tonight. Carter swallowed his disappointment. Alleman was here, and he was always good for a beat-down. Buenevista, too. The third guy was Jase. Mathers wasn’t here, unfortunately. Mathers was a better opponent than the others. He was bloodthirsty like Carter. But despite how fast they all healed, Mathers was probably still sore from his ribs getting broken last night. Carter grinned. That had been a good hit.

  “Carter,” Jase said in greeting.

  “Jase. Ready to get your ass kicked?”

  “Wow, man,” Jase said. “My second-hand embarrassment is gonna suck after I sweep the ring with your loser ass."

  Carter laughed, then faced Alleman and Buenevista. No greetings there. Those assholes didn’t make friends. They didn’t make allies, either, except with other assholes—meaning, with each other and with Mathers. At least they were good for a fight.

  Carter looked between them, from Alleman’s charcoal gray eyes to Buenevista’s angry blue eyes. Alleman looked dead inside. Nothing to lose. Nothing to gain, either, but he still fought hard.

  “Beasts or men?” Jase asked. There was a hard glint in his eyes, and Carter wondered what had pissed him off today. There was always something to piss someone off. The Junkyard life wasn’t easy.

  “Men,” Alleman said.

  No surprise there. Fucker liked to hit things. People, mostly. But his violence was all over the place, sort of like Mathers’s. Carter would never forget that time a couple months ago when they’d conspired to trick Caitlyn into coming across the boundary so she’d be trapped in the Junkyard with them. Alleman had impaled his leg with a
big-ass metal pole.

  “Men it is,” Carter said, tugging off his shirt. He didn’t fancy getting the shit clawed out of him by Alleman’s cougar, anyway. Cougars were vicious.

  His shirt had barely landed on the ground before Alleman charged. Carter knew to expect it, though, and he dodged at the last second. The scent of stale beer hit his nose. Alleman always smelled like what a brewery would smell like if it was turned into a locker room.

  “Look out,” Jase called, just as Alleman’s jab landed hard. Carter was knocked back but he kept his feet under him and countered with a kick to Alleman’s sternum. Alleman barely flinched, the tough bastard. Carter tried backhanding him with the momentum he already had, but Alleman grabbed his arm and twisted.

  “Fuck,” Carter grunted. He spun out of Alleman’s grasp and fell into a crouch.

  Alleman tried to take advantage of Carter being on the ground by coming after him, but Carter was expecting it. Lifting himself up on one arm, he spun around in a kick that caught Alleman in the chin.

  Alleman went down, flat on his back.

  “Fuck, that was brutal,” Jase said, delight in his voice.

  Carter didn’t have even a second to enjoy the knockout before Buenevista was on his back.

  Cheap trick, attacking right as the previous battle ended.

  “Too scared to attack me face to face?” Carter growled.

  Buenevista’s arm wrapped around his throat. Chokehold. Hell. Carter couldn’t get Buenevista off, and his lungs were protesting the lack of air.

  Maybe this was the end. Maybe Buenevista wouldn’t let go until Carter was dead. They didn’t usually fight quite that hard, but Buenevista was a violent motherfucker. Not unlike Carter, but there was something impure about Buenevista’s fighting.

 

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