by Olivia Arran
Guardian
Alpha Protectors
Olivia Arran
Contents
Copyright
1. Chapter One
2. Chapter Two
3. Chapter Three
4. Chapter Four
5. Chapter Five
6. Chapter Six
7. Chapter Seven
8. Chapter Eight
9. Chapter Nine
10. Chapter Ten
11. Chapter Eleven
12. Chapter Twelve
13. Chapter Thirteen
14. Chapter Fourteen
15. Chapter Fifteen
16. Chapter Sixteen
17. Chapter Seventeen
18. Chapter Eighteen
19. Chapter Nineteen
20. Chapter Twenty
21. Chapter Twenty-One
22. Chapter Twenty-Two
23. Chapter Twenty-Three
24. Chapter Twenty-Four
25. Chapter Twenty-Five
26. Chapter Twenty-Six
27. Chapter Twenty-Seven
From the Author
Copyright © 2016 Olivia Arran
All rights reserved worldwide. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the author.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locals or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. Please note that this work is intended only for adults over the age of 18 and all characters represented as 18 or over.
Edited by Jersey Devil Editing and Craft Write Editing
Cover Design by Jacqueline Sweet
If you’d like to know when Sentinel, Book 2 in the Alpha Protectors series, releases, please sign up for Olivia’s newsletter!
Chapter One
Cole
“Are you going take the assignment?”
Lining up the shot, I tuned Vin’s clipped British accent out. Narrowing my eyes, I tried to calculate how much of a spin I needed to sink the black.
“Hello? Earth to Cole—”
“Hey, if he’s not going to take the job, I will,” Angel drawled, snagging the photo out of my back pocket and flicking it between his fingers.
I blocked them out, knowing how this would end—in a game of pool or a bet of some sort. It always did, at a dollar a pop, and Greg kept score. It was good for the team, a way of settling our differences without resorting to violence, and with a team made up of powerful, unmated wolf shifters, the testosterone could run fucking high at times.
My mind drifted back over the last year, to when Jason and Macey, a mated Alpha pair from my old pack, had asked me to head up the first shifter division of their security firm here in the city, I had jumped at the chance. I was already restless, and watching the other Colstone Pack lieutenants find their mates and settle down had made up my mind for me. I’d moved out of the packhouse, relocated to the city, and hadn’t looked back.
So, here I was. In charge of what they aptly dubbed Freelance Undercover Resolutions. Or just FUR. Cringeworthy, but hey, I wasn’t the big boss. Though why I had been chosen to lead the team, fuck only knew. Macey, as one of my best friends from the pack and fellow ex-lieutenant, I could understand. But Jason? White-haired motherfucking coyote.
A low growl trickled from my lips at the thought of Macey’s mate.
Coyotes still got my back up, even if they were supposedly friendly and on our side. Yeah, whatever, old habits died hard.
My first job had been to recruit a team of strong alpha shifters. The only catch? They had to be willing to leave their packs and go it alone. I’d found Angel first, then Vin and Greg. Abel had been the last one in.
Our assignments covered anything from covert missions on foreign soil—the kind that the government requested while being able to deny any involvement—to the kind of job I had just been offered. Basically, babysitting duty. Which was a waste of my skill set and time. So why was I even considering accepting it?
And there you go, back to her. My latest assignment.
Taking a deep breath, I dragged my attention back to the game. Easy… I exhaled, the cue cracking into the ball and sending it flying across the table to smash into the black. Standing up, I watched with satisfaction as the ball bounced around the table before sinking into the top left pocket.
“Shit,” Vin grumbled, shoving his cue back into the rack and taking a long swallow of beer. His mouth was twisted in a snarl of defeated bravado. I chalked up the win on my mental scoreboard.
“Better luck next time, Brit,” I said, grabbing my own beer off the table and taking a long pull.
Vin slouched into a chair, snagging the picture out of Angel’s hand. “And to think, I’m wearing my lucky Union Jack boxers.”
“Hey, easy on the sharing, bro.” Angel covered his ears, his eyes crossing comically.
Vin stared at the photo, his brow creasing. “She really is gorgeous. Maybe I should—”
I snatched the five-by-eight card out of his hand, folding it back up. “Jason tasked me with this job, so—”
“But you don’t want it. You said so.” Angel’s deep voice sounded suspiciously like a whine. Figures. Angel was a good-looking son of a bitch, and he knew it. There was something about him that made grown women act like teenagers. I’d seen the phenomenon enough times now that it didn’t surprise me, but it was a hell of a show to watch. He only had to zero in on them with his big blue eyes, and they were like putty in his hands. God forbid if he actually flexed a muscle in their direction. Then we were talking heart failure.
I snorted under my breath as I slid the photo into my back pocket. I didn’t know if I was going to take the job. Hell, I knew I shouldn’t want to—it was a run-of-the-mill protection assignment, nothing to get excited about. I should be shoving the photo back in Jason’s face and demanding he send me on a job that suited my skills, or at least made use of them.
But I hadn’t. Why? Burn out?
The woman’s face floated into my mind, her dark cloud of hair, her sultry hazelnut-brown eyes, her pouting lips. Eyes that whispered wicked, naughty things, promises of naked flesh and sweaty moans. And I wasn’t even going to think about her body. Nope.
“The Natasha Silk, can you believe it?” Greg piped up, his fingers pounding his laptop, as per usual, despite being in a bar surrounded by people enjoying their weekend. “Here,” he said, his voice triumphant as he spun the screen around to face us.
I peeled my tongue off the roof of my mouth. Every inch of the screen was filled with her face and her killer curves. She was clad in a swimsuit that stretched and clung to wet skin. And the guys were all staring, identical expressions on their faces, their tongues nearly hanging out. Like the dogs they were.
I slammed the laptop shut, cutting short the peep show. “She’s a client,” I snapped, annoyed that my voice came out a little hoarse. “Show a little respect.”
“It’s not our fault that she’s a famous model, or that she likes to have her picture taken in a swimsuit.” Angel shrugged, leaning back in his chair and tilting it onto two legs. “If you ask me, we’re allowed to look, what with her dressing like that for the camera.”
“It’s her job, asshole,” Abel muttered, shooting his teammate a disparaging look before he stalked off to the bar, the crowd parting around his six-foot-three, leather-clad frame like a stream around a tumblin
g boulder.
I glanced up in surprise. For Abel to speak meant he must have strong feelings about it. Or more likely, he thought Angel was acting like an asshole and decided to call him on it. Who knew when it came to Abel? The man was a silent enigma, though good at his job, which was all that really mattered in the end.
“Abel’s right. It’s her job,” I stated, glaring at Angel, who held his hands up, an easy grin on his face.
“Hey, easy there, Boss. Don’t get your snickers in a twist.”
“It’s knickers in a twist,” Vin muttered under his breath, but his lips were twitching at Angel’s attempt at British slang.
Angel jumped to his feet. “That’s what I said!”
“No, you said…”
“Guys!” I barked out.
Their attention snapped back to me, Angel shrugging, his smirk saying he wasn’t sorry one bit.
“Are you going to take the job?” Vin was persistent, I had to give him that.
I spun a coaster on the beer-sticky table, watching it turn. There was no reason not to take the job; it would be easy and I was due a little downtime after the last mission, a job that had taken the whole team into the middle of a hellhole located in the middle of nowhere anyone with an ounce of sense wanted to go. Maybe it had been the twinkle in Macey’s eye as she’d handed me the photo that was bugging me. Playing the best friend card, Macey liked to stick her little snub nose into my business, and this time there was no doubt in my mind that she was scheming. Nothing new there. The woman needed a new pastime. Maybe I should have a word with Jason, suggest he try a little harder at keeping his mate busy and occupied.
Abel arrived back carrying a handful of beers, unceremoniously dropping them onto the table before resuming his position against the back wall of the bar. The man never relaxed and was always on the lookout for trouble. I knew I should try and dig the reason out of him; after all, we had been a team for over six months now, but I was still hanging on to the hope that eventually he’d relax and I wouldn’t have to. I sucked at the whole touchy-feely thing. If I couldn’t solve the problem with a beer and a bet… Yeah, six months and we still didn’t know a damn thing about him, other than he could shoot the wings off a fly with one eye closed. The man would come around or he wouldn’t. Either way, the team worked, and I wasn’t about to go rocking the apple cart.
The sharp crack of balls colliding and the tinkle of glass mixing with the loud roar of people enjoying their weekend washed over me, the noise a dull roar to my heightened shifter senses. Grabbing a new bottle, I forced myself to relax, letting the cold beer fill my mouth and trickle down my throat. A change of pace would do me good, and maybe Natasha Silk might provide a welcome distraction. My cock twitched at the thought, her face filling my mind.
“I’ll go see her.” The words were out before I’d had chance to engage my brain.
Vin nodded once, like it was a given, then strolled away to take his shot.
Anything had to be better than sitting in the house with nothing to do but daydream about a life I couldn’t have. I lurched to my feet, draining the dregs out of the bottle.
There was no time like the present.
Chapter Two
Natasha
The kettle whistled, the sound shrieking through the silence of the apartment. Padding over, I grabbed a towel and lifted it off the burner, flicking off the gas. Grabbing a mug out of the cupboard, I contemplated the box of tea bags. Which one? I eyed the chamomile, then picked out a lemon balm, splashing hot water over it. Citrus lemon steam tickled my nose as my hands uncurled from where I had inadvertently been gripping the counter.
It’s too quiet. I didn’t want to hear myself think. Grabbing a remote from the counter, I waved it around the room, still not one hundred percent sure where the sound system was hidden in this luxurious apartment. For a short-term rental, it was way over the top, especially given that I barely spent any time in it. But my agent had insisted, quoting appearances as her reason. Who was I to argue with vigorous air-quotes?
I heard a faint buzz, then deep bass thumped out of the walls, vibrating up through my feet and throbbing through my spine.
I jabbed a button, the sound switching to jazz, then wailing guitars, then sugar-syrup pop. Nope. I jabbed again, gritting my teeth against the assault. All I was asking for was something decent to listen to, for heaven’s sake! Just something... I paused as a man’s voice filled the room, his deep tone crooning along to a single guitar. That’s better.
Grabbing my rapidly cooling tea, I padded back over to the couch and curled up. Tugging a blanket over my bare legs, I closed my eyes to take my first sip. No thinking, no worrying. Just relax.
I jerked at a loud bang on the door, liquid sloshing over the rim and splattering my thankfully blanket-clad lap. I didn’t know anyone here. Well, apart from the advertising campaign’s creative team, that is. But none of them knew where I was staying. It was a part of the contract. I liked my privacy. Needed it.
Frozen, I stared at the wall, beyond which lay the front door. It had to be a mistake; someone had the wrong apartment. Silence. I let out a breath I hadn’t realized I’d been holding, the air whooshing out noisily. A mistake, that’s all—
Another bang, this time even louder. Whoever it was, they didn’t think they had the wrong apartment.
I didn’t have to answer; no one knew I was home. Okay, my personal security detail did, but they were the only ones and they should be watching the front door. And there was the man on the front desk, but he wouldn’t tell anyone. Would he? He’d been made to sign a non-disclosure agreement before I’d moved in.
Skepticism soured my thoughts as my heart sunk. With the right offer, anyone could be bought. After all my years in the business, nothing surprised me anymore. Friends, staff, lovers—they’d all sold me out, feeding the tabloids with juicy tidbits of what the real Natasha Silk was like. And when the truth wasn’t lucrative enough, they’d lied. So many lies. So many disappointments. And nobody ever understood why it bothered me, like having money and fame would be enough to stop the ache each betrayal brought.
I’m not home. I forced my jaw to loosen and took a sip of my tea. The guys my agency had hired would deal with whoever it was.
When they got back from wherever the hell they’d disappeared to!
Unease spiked in my stomach. Where were they? They wouldn’t bother me at this time. They were under strict instructions not to disturb me and they knew to phone my cell, not bang on the door. Unless it was an emergency. I muted the music, the sudden silence unnerving. Unease flared into panic, wrapping around my chest and pulling tight.
The banging sounded again. I was already halfway to the door, my bare feet flying over the cold tiles.
“Natasha Silk?” The voice was a deep, lazy rumble through the door.
I froze, pulling my ratty cardigan tight, my hand creeping to my neck.
“Are you going to let me in, or are we going to have this interview through the door?” Whoever he was, he sounded amused, his voice dripping with thinly veiled sarcasm.
“Who...who are you?” Damn my voice for coming out in a squeak.
“Natasha?” I could hear the frown that must be on his face, his confusion coming through loud and clear.
I nodded, then realized I was an idiot. “Yes.” This time I sounded like me, my distinctive voice low and throaty. The voice that had made me millions and launched my modeling career into the stratosphere, landing me campaigns for the biggest and brightest in the advertising world, and according to some magazines, could make a grown man weep. Ridiculous. Even now, I had to stifle a snort of derision as I remembered that particular article, the same one that had trashed me, implying that I was a talentless whore who only won modeling jobs by flaunting my more distinctive assets. Yeah, I have big tits and an even bigger ass. Deal with it. I mentally gave the popular men’s magazine the finger. Again. No way in this life was I going to starve myself to be the same size as some of those stick-thin, le
ttuce-nibbling models out there. And why should I? My curves hadn’t stopped me from rising to the top, or my vertically challenged height, despite everyone’s predictions and prejudice.
“Right. So, are you going to let me in?”
“Why should I? You could be a psychopath. Or a stalker. Or an assassin. Or a—”
“I’m not any of the above. Listen, did your agency not call you to let you know I’d be coming over? I’m from Freelance Undercover Resolutions.”
Ah. That rang a distant bell. But still. “Where is my personal security? What did you do with them?”
“Those idiots took one look at my ID, and when I suggested they take a coffee break, they didn’t stop until their feet hit the stairs.”
What the—? I made a mental note to call my agent first thing in the morning. “Slide your ID under the door,” I demanded, making sure my voice didn’t break.
“Sure thing, sweetheart.” A small scuffle reached my ears, then a leather wallet appeared in sight.
“And don’t call me sweetheart,” I muttered, scooping it up.
“Anything you say, Ms. Silk.”
Flicking open the battered leather, I scanned the laminated card. Marching back over to the couch, I grabbed my cell, speed-dialing my agent. Screw the fact that it was after eleven. I paid her enough to work 24/7, if need be.
“Natasha! What a lovely surprise! How is the shoot go—”
I cut her off mid-schmooze. “Karen, I have a man at my door saying I should be expecting him. A Mr.—” I squinted at the card, then giving up, fished my glasses out of my hair and shoved them on my nose. “Mr. Cole Colstone of Freelance Undercover Resolutions.” Cole Colstone? That was a model’s name if I’d ever heard one. Or maybe an actor?
“Oh, yes. You said to make inquiries about securing someone to deal with your…situation.” Karen coughed politely at the other end of the phone, her absolute refusal to deal with anything resembling the grittiness of real life once again making me grind my teeth.