by Terra Wolf
Table of Contents
Luke
Undercover Bear: Harrison
Luke
Bradford Bears Book Three
Terra Wolf
COPYRIGHT
©2018 Terra Wolf
Luke
All Rights Reserved worldwide.
No part of this book may be reproduced, uploaded to the Internet, or copied without permission from the author. The author respectfully asks that you please support artistic expression and help promote anti-piracy efforts by purchasing a copy of this book at the authorized online outlets.
This is a work of fiction intended for mature audiences only. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Some may be used for parody purposes. Any resemblance to events, locales, business establishments, or actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is purely coincidental.
All sexual activities depicted occur between consenting characters 18 years or older who are not blood related.
One
Luke
Normally, I wouldn’t have even considered closing up shop at five-thirty on a Tuesday afternoon, but it had been a terribly boring, slow day and I was ready to be done with it. I thought it might be too early to try my hand at picking up a woman in the next town over, but it couldn’t hurt to try.
Then again, I could always go home, shower, and veg out in front of the TV. That’s something I’d been doing more and more lately as I resigned myself to the curse.
Which is still a ridiculous name for it if you asked me. But I couldn’t deny that it kind of felt like a curse when I was staring it in the face. My kind — bear shifters — all have the same instinctive urges to mate. And when we mate, we mate for life. It’s almost a supernatural connection, what a bear has with his mate, and if he doesn’t find it that connection before his forty-fifth birthday, the bear went wild, the man crazy.
It wasn’t something I was particularly looking forward to, but at that point, I almost didn’t see a way out of it. At forty-four, I still hadn’t found someone to spend my life with and I’d given up years ago.
In the beginning, when I was younger, I told myself I should wait. Wait until after college. Then until after med school. Then I didn’t want to try to commit until I finished my residency. And by the time I got my position at Mountain Hospital, all I cared about was working towards opening a private practice. Once that was done, then I could think about a mate.
Only that took way longer than I thought it would. Now I had the practice, but I was on borrowed time. I’d wasted so much time working for a goal and I wasn’t going to get to enjoy the fruits of my labor because I’d lost sight of what was really important.
Served me right.
For a while, I tried to tell myself that it didn’t matter. I had good control over my bear and he never seemed inclined to mate. We had a good time with random girls from bars and conferences, but it never went beyond fun. Maybe he wouldn’t lose his shit. Maybe we’d be fine.
But as the fateful date grew closer, I felt him getting more restless and I knew. I knew that I’d made a terrible mistake.
So sue me if I wanted to wallow a bit in my own stupidity. I deserved to close the office early. I hadn’t had a patient since that morning. But the phone cut off my train of thought and I reluctantly answered it.
“Dr. Bradford.”
“Oh, Dr. Bradford, I’m so glad you answered! Muffin’s foot is bleeding and I can’t get it to stop, I was hoping you’d be able to take a look at it?”
I sighed.
“Mrs. Vanderburg, I’ve told you, I’m not a vet. I’m not trained to treat cats.”
“Oh but it’s just a little thing, and you’re so good with your hands. It’s four hours down the mountain to the vet. Please?”
I pinched the bridge of my nose and sighed away from the phone. Why me?
“Fine. But I can’t keep doing this, I mean it.”
“I know,” she said, almost sounding contrite if I didn’t know any better. “Apple or cherry?”
“No blackberry?”
“You’ll have to wait ‘til Friday for blackberry.”
“Hm. Apple then.”
“I’ll just bring you one of each. Thank you so much Dr. Bradford!”
She hung up the phone before I could say anything else, but there wasn’t anything else that needed to be said. I could probably have refused one of those pies, but who was I kidding? I’d eat them both. That week. Never underestimate the appetite of a bear.
But now I couldn’t leave like I’d been hoping to. Now I was stuck at the office for at least another two hours. Probably three. One hour for old Mrs. Vanderburg to get her mint green sixties bronco down the mountain, twenty minutes to bandage the cat, and another hour to an hour and a half to get her to stop chatting my ear off whilst simultaneously shamelessly flirting with me.
I really shouldn’t keep letting her bring her cat in, but those pies were damn good. And what bear can resist pie?
Besides, it wasn’t like I was drowning in business. I could use all the patients I could get, even if they did come with a couple extra legs.
By the time Mrs. Vanderburg got to the office, I was actually happy to see her. I’d been bored out of my mind with nothing to keep me company but old Reader’s Digest magazines in the waiting room and the world’s slowest internet in my office.
I headed out to her old bronco to find her juggling her cat Muffin over her shoulder while trying to balance my pies.
“Let me help you with that,” I said, swooping in to grab the pies. She could keep Muffin. I really wished she’d at least bring him in a carrier. It was bad enough to be treating a cat at my clinic, but to have one running around unrestrained seemed to be inviting trouble.
But Muffin didn’t run away before we got inside and once we did, I could see the thing was terrified, clutching to Mrs. Vanderburg with his claws buried in her.
“He hates that bumpy mountain road,” she said, cooing at the scraggly cat. He’d definitely seen better days. His coat was a dull, dusty gray, thinning on his head especially. He had the thin, gaunt look of a cat well into his teens and the perpetually grumpy expression that warned away everyone except Mrs. Vanderburg. And me, I guess.
“Muffin, you have to let go of Mommy so the doctor can take a look at you,” she said, wrestling with the cat whose claws were still buried in her. I winced, but didn’t offer to help. I knew that would just make him freak out more.
Eventually, she managed to separate her cat from her, but it wasn’t him I was worried about.
“How bad did he get you?” I asked, already seeing the bloom of red under her shirt.
“Oh, it’s nothing,” she said, waving me off. “It’s his paw, you see?” She lifted up Muffin’s paw, and sure enough, there was a cut on one of the pads, still bleeding slowly.
“All right. I’ll bandage him up, but then you’ve got to let me clean up those scratches, deal?”
She gave me a girlish giggle despite being old enough to be my grandmother and nudged me flirtatiously. “You cad. You just want to see me without my top on, don’t you?”
I rolled my eyes and shook my head, smiling at her. She knew as well as I did that that wasn’t the case, but I’d found long ago that playing along with these types went over much better than forced professionalism. “Caught me red-handed.”
“Do you always flirt with women old enough to be your mother?” she teases, fluttering her lashes at me as I wrestled Muffin to the table. Of course, I didn’t have any of the normal equipment to be treating a cat, so it was easier said than done. I managed to trick him into letting me clean the cut, and then laid out
enough bandages that he’d have to step on one and then quickly burritoed his foot before he could scratch me too bad.
“Only the repeat customers,” I said, once Muffin was bandaged and off in a shadowed corner cleaning himself. I needed to remember to do an extra round of cleaning to get all the cat hairs up before someone came in and had an allergy attack.
“Now, let me see those scratches,” I said, gingerly peeling her shirt back from the neckline. There were a few shallow scratches on her shoulder, but the surrounding skin was already blooming angry and red. “Does it burn?”
“A little,” she said with a shrug.
I washed my hands quickly and then started cleaning the cuts gingerly before applying a topical antihistamine.
“Take this allergy pill when you get home. But not before the drive. It’ll make you sleepy,” I said, giving her an over-the-counter tablet.
“I’ve never been allergic to my Muffin,” she said, not taking the pill.
“I don’t doubt it, but their claws and saliva have different proteins that can bring up symptoms in people that have never had them before. If nothing else, it’ll help with the inflammation and give me some peace of mind. Please?”
Her expression went from defending her pet’s honor to completely smitten in a minute. She grinned at me and took the tablet.
“Well, I could never deny you, Doctor,” she said, practically giggling.
“Thank you.”
“How much do I owe you?” she asked, pulling a checkbook out of her huge purse. I waved her off.
“The pies are enough, really.”
“I’ll bring you a blackberry this weekend, then,” she said firmly, and I could tell there would be no arguing with her.
“You know I’ll eat it,” is all I said, grinning. If I gave her any openings, she’d be there all damn night and I really wanted to close up shop. I was pretty sure at this point that I wasn’t going to go out trolling for women, but I was ready to leave the office and relax with a drink in front of the TV. Exciting night, I know, but it sounded pretty good to me.
“Muffin, come on sweetie, we need to leave Dr. Bradford to his other patients,” Mrs. Vanderburg said, crouching down to entice the grumpy old cat. He narrowed his eyes at her and swished his tail menacingly before going back to cleaning his uninjured paws. She sighed. “He’s always so headstrong.”
If I wasn’t so eager to get out of there, I’d probably mention that I don’t exactly have other patients waiting to see me, but I wasn’t going to do anything to encourage her to stay any longer. I knew from experience how much she liked to overstay her welcome.
Muffin yowled as she scooped him into her arms and I winced as I watched his claws extend into her flesh again, but Mrs. Vanderburg didn’t seem to notice at all and I wasn’t going to say anything. It’s her cat after all.
“Thanks for seeing us on such short notice,” she said as I held the door open for her.
“Happy to help. And remember to take that pill when you get home, okay?”
“Anything for you,” she said, giggling girlishly again. Luckily, she was already getting into her old bronco, so she didn’t see me rolling my eyes as I closed the door behind her.
After I watched her pull out of my parking lot, I swept the floor again and started shutting down all the computers to actually leave for the night. It wasn’t too early now — I was supposed to be open until seven and it was five after at that point.
I turned off all the lights and grabbed my bag just in time to see headlights sweeping through the tree line, illuminating the drive up to my office. They were coming up fast, bouncing along the gravel road almost recklessly, and I tensed, already out the door. Whoever it was, they would just have to wait until morning or head down the mountain to the hospital.
I locked the door and unlocked my car just as the strange vehicle skidded to a stop, sending up dust and gravel into the air. Up on the mountain, it was already dark at this time of night, and so it was only the headlights of the vehicle illuminating the parking lot as a woman hurried around to the door, carrying a little girl in her arms.
Two
Claire
“I can’t believe your Daddy didn’t realize how sick you were,” I growled, slamming my fist against the steering wheel as I took the bumpy mountain roads too fast. I had some other choice words for Chuck, but I wasn’t going to say them in front of Ella. For all my issues with the guy, he was her dad and everything I’d read about raising a child with separated parents said not to bad mouth the other parent in front of the kid. So it’s hard, but I had to do my best to not call him all the names that were floating up and burning the tip of my tongue.
She spent the whole day with him and he never once realized she was sick at all, let alone that her fever was over a hundred degrees. How was it even possible to be that unobservant when caring for a four year-old? Did he supervise her at all the entire day, or did he just plop her in front of some cartoons to ignore her?
My teeth ground together as I forced back another growl. Could I even trust him with our daughter?
When I picked her up, I immediately saw something was wrong. She was too sleepy, she was hot, and she was coughing a lot. She woke up long enough to tell me she didn’t feel good and that she threw up. I glared at Chuck, holding her tight.
“You didn’t know she threw up?” I’d hissed at him.
He just shrugged. “Was busy in the garage.”
“She’s your daughter and you were too busy with a car to notice that she’s sick?” It was all I could do to keep the shriek out of my voice, to keep it low enough not to disturb Ella from her fitful sleep. But Chuck had nothing to say for himself — as usual.
“Yeah, well, she’s your daughter too, and where were you all day?”
“At work,” I’d spat at him. “I have to make a living because the hundred dollars a month in child support sure as hell isn’t going to pay our bills.”
“I pay what the court said I need to. You got a problem with the amount, you take it up with the judge,” he snapped back.
I just shook my head, pinching the bridge of my nose. “It’s not about the money, Chuck. I just want you to be her freaking dad.”
“I let you bring her here three days a week, don’t I?”
“Yes, Chuck. You let me drop our daughter off to spend time with you. How generous of you.”
“Maybe I shouldn’t if you’re going to be such a bitch about it every time you come to get her.”
“You know what, I don’t have time for this. I need to get her to a doctor. She’s burning up.”
Whatever he’d said to me next, I just ignored as I got Ella strapped into her booster seat and pressed a quick kiss to her forehead.
“Mommy’s going to make sure you’re feeling better soon, baby girl. I’m sorry it took so long.”
She was mostly asleep, but murmured something so weak and vulnerable that it made my heart break and made me want to turn around and let Chuck have it all over again. But I’d already told him there was no time. The only doctor on the mountain was only open until seven and it was already twenty ‘til.
Which is why I was racing down the bumpy roads, driving recklessly, praying a deer didn’t jump out in front of me because I’d have no real time to stop. Because he was the only doctor around unless I wanted to take the two and a half hour drive down the mountain. And I wasn’t sure how bad Ella’s fever really was. I didn’t know how long she’d had it. And I knew with kids her age, time is of the essence. Those couple extra hours to get down the mountain could be more than we had.
So I just hoped and prayed that the doctor would still be in his office, that he didn’t decide to close up shop early — not uncommon in these parts; when business was slow or the weather was nice, it was common to find signs on shop doors saying they’d closed early. There was more pressure on the doctor to stay open, I’d guess, but that didn’t really mean a whole lot.
And I’d never been to this doctor, so I reall
y didn’t know if he was the type to abide by his hours or not. I just had to hope. I still remembered when he opened up his practice about a year ago. Folks were really excited to have a doctor up on the mountain, but I didn’t exactly have insurance being a small business owner and the hospital had a program for Ella to get all her shots and stuff, so I’d never had any reason to visit until this cropped up. A real emergency.
I still just couldn’t believe Chuck didn’t notice a thing. I knew it was too late to be mad about it at this point, but I was fuming. Even if he didn’t want to stop his work in the garage to take her in, he could have called me and I would have closed up the shop early to take her to the doctor. And then I wouldn’t be worried about him being closed or having to take a late-night drive down the mountain while my baby’s running a temperature and throwing up.
Luckily, she hadn’t done that again yet, but she’d warned me of the possibility and I was on high alert with a shopping bag at the ready.
“We’re almost there, baby,” I said to her as she whimpered in her sleep. I was probably trying to reassure myself more than her. If I let go of my anger at Chuck, all I was left with was worry for Ella. And anger was more familiar. Easier to deal with. The fear… well, there was nothing I could really do about that. I was helpless in this situation and it made me feel like a terrible mother.
I turned down the winding gravel path that led to Dr. Bradford’s office, my heart in my throat, my fingers clenching the steering wheel with white knuckles. “Please, please, please,” I muttered, peering through the thick cover of evergreens, trying to spot the building through the dim moonlight.
Finally, my lights fell on the parking lot and I let out a sigh of relief. There was another vehicle there. Hopefully, that meant the doctor was in.
But just as I rounded the corner, the lights in the building went off. I saw the man leaving the office, closing the door behind him, and his car lights coming on as he unlocked it.
I had no choice. I gunned the engine and skidded to a stop, dust flying up everywhere around the SUV, but I didn’t care. In the space of a heartbeat, I’d flung off my seat belt, jumped out of the driver’s seat and was already unfastening Ella from her booster seat.