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Alpha's Hunter, Lust for Vengeance

With Vengeance in her eyes, Jane, a half-Vampire embarks on a search to kill her father, an Alpha breed, the one responsible for wrecking her mother’s life. During her quest, she was apprehended by Max, a sexy night stalker, and a vamp-bounty hunter, and is forced into an improbable alliance with him. In exchange for help finding her father, Jane agrees to train with Max until her battle reflexes become stronger. She is amazed not to end up as his dinner. Pretty soon, Max will have to make her understand that being a vampire does not have to be all dangerous. But, before she can celebrate her status as Vamp-hunter, Jane and Max are been hunted by some group of assassins. Now Jane will have to choose a side … as Max is turning out to be as tempting as any man with a heartbeat.

Pasilo · Fantasy
Not enough ratings
10 Chs

The encounter with a sheriff

I harshen at the Rays of light flashing behind me because there was no way I could tell what was in the back of my truck. I pulled over, grabbing my breath as the cop came to my window.

"Hi. Is something wrong?"

My tone was all innocence while I prayed there was nothing unusual about my eyes. Why don't you control yourself? You know what results when you get upset.

"Yeah, you've got a shattered tail light. Your authorization and registration, please."

Crap.

That must have happened when I was piling up the truck bed. Speed had been of the individuality then, not exquisiteness.

I presented him with my significant authorization, not the phoney one. Then He flickered his flashlight back and forth between the designation and my face.

"Janet Larson. You're Merry Larson's girl, are you not? From the Larson Cherry Orchard?"

"Yes, sir."

Reasonably and blandly, as if I didn't have sustenance in the world.

"Well, Janet, it's nearly 5 a.m. Why are you out this late?"

I could tell him the fact about my actions, except I didn't want to join for a hard moment. Or a full stay in a padded compartment.

"I couldn't sleep, so I decided I had to drive around."

To my misfortune, he walked to the bed of the truck and flashed his light in it.

"What do you got back there?"

Oh, nothing strange. A withered body under some bags and an axe.

"Bags of cherries from my grandparents' orchard."

If my heartbeat were any louder, it would deafen him.

"Really?" With his flashlight, he shoved at a flexible lump.

"One of them is leaking."

"Do not worry."

My voice was nearly a squeak.

"They always leak. That is why I carry them in this old truck. They have stained the floor of it red."

Relief crashed through me when he discontinued his analyses and returned to my window.

"And you are riding around this late because you could not sleep?"

There was a knowing curl to his mouth. His stare took in my tight top and dishevelled fur.

"You think I am going to acknowledge that?"

The insinuation was obvious and I nearly forfeited my composure. He thought I had been out dozing around.

An implicit accusation hung between us, practically twenty-four years in the making. Just like your mother, aren't you?

It wasn't easy being illegitimate in a community so tiny, humanity however held that against you. In today's civilizations, you would not think it amounted to something, but Mason City, IOWA, had its couple of principles. They were archaic at best.

With tremendous effort, I restrained my hostility. My kindness tended to alleviate like a disposable membrane when I got mad.

"Could we just keep this between us, Sheriff?"

Back to the guileless blinking of my eyes. It had been conducted on the dead guy, regardless.

" I vow that I won't do it again."

He fingered his sash as he believed me. His huge abdomen toppled against the texture of his shirt, but I resisted comments about his perimeter or the validity that he scented like beer. Eventually, he giggled, uncovering a jagged front tooth.

"Go home, Janet Larson, and get that tail light fixed."

"Yes, sir!"

Violent with my salvation, I revved up the truck and drove off. That had been close. I'd have to be more careful next time.

People contended about having it For me, both were authentic. Oh, and don't get me twisted, I had not always known what I was. My mother, the only other person in on this extremely secret, did not tell me until I was seventeen.

I grew up with proficiency other children did not have, but when I asked her about them, she had get furious and told me not to talk about it. I found to save things for myself and conceal my differences.

To everyone else, I was only unusually Isolated. Liked to wander around at odd hours and retained a weird pale membrane. Even my grandparents did not realize what was in me, but then also, neither do those I ransack.

There was a hierarchy to my weekends currently. I went to any of the parties within a two-hour ride to peek for some action.

Not the kind of good officer believed I was into, but another denomination. I had to drink like a fish and stay to be picked up by that unique someone.

One I wished I could turn out planting in the backyard if I did not get slained. I had survived doing this for five years now.

Perhaps I had a casualty desire. Crazy, certainly, since technically I was half extinct.

Thus, my dearest this means, I understood I was making one person glad. My mother. Well, she had the liberty to clasp a complaint. I just hoped it had not brimmed over to me.

The party's audible music strikes me like a splash, jerking my pulse to its thump. I made my way carefully through the mobs, pursuing that apparent vibe.

The spot was loaded, on a particular Friday night. After I wandered around for half an hour, I felt the initial stirrings of setback.

There seemed to be only people here. With a sigh, I sat at the pub and demanded gin and mixture.

The first man who struggled to exterminate me had requested it for me. It was now my drink of preference. Who said I was not idealistic?

Men strode toward me occasionally. Something about being a sole young woman screamed "Screw me" to them.

Relatively and fairly impolitely I swivelled them down, counting on how persistent they were.

I was not here to date. After my first sweetheart, Mike, I never wanted to date again. If the guy was exiting, I was not eager. No wonder I had no liking being to speak of.

After three more alcohols I was deduced to roam the club again since I was having no chance of being enticement. It was almost midnight, and so far there had been nothing aside from drugs, alcohol, and dancing.

Stalls were amassed in the distant intersection of the club. As I enacted in front of them, I felt a seizure of charged air.

Someone, or something, was near. I strumbled and did a sluggish circle, striving to ferret out the territory.