Her Scent – A Steamy Standalone Instalove Read Online Flora Ferrari

Categories Genre: Fantasy/Sci-fi, Insta-Love, Paranormal, Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 47
Estimated words: 46587 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 233(@200wpm)___ 186(@250wpm)___ 155(@300wpm)
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There’s so much I want to ask, but the urgency is too sharp.

“There’s nothing we can do if Ramsey’s joy-changing. We have to wait.”

“Can’t we wake him up?” I ask.

Liam shakes his head. “If we wake him suddenly, he might abruptly change. There’s no telling what he’d do. It could hurt him.”

“He’d want us to,” Mom says, giving me a look. “I’m sorry, Ruby, but wouldn’t he? He’d want us to if it saved your life.”

Liam looks at me, nodding. “I think she’s right. But it’s too late. They’re already here.”

“What should we do?” I say.

“Stay with Ramsey. Both of you. I’ll try to stop them. They’ve made a mistake, only bringing one wolf. But I smell gunmetal. Fuck. I may have to talk him down. Try, anyway. This isn’t good.”

“He’ll kill you,” I say.

Outside, I hear a car pull up, followed by another, then another.

Mom shivers when his voice rings out. His. The voice that led so many lectures and lessons when I was a kid, the voice that told me I was fundamentally wrong, deficient, always.

“Don’t make me huff and puff,” he says, with his characteristic evil laugh. “I can smell you in there, Ilsa, reeking of fear as usual.”

Liam takes a step back, looking lost for a moment.

“What is it?” I ask.

“He stinks of murder. He wants to kill. He’s hungry for it. There’s no talking to a wolf like that.”

“So, what do we do?” I ask.

“Keep him talking,” Liam says softly, walking to the rear of the room. “I can change without alerting him. But I need to focus. Talk with him.”

“Ilsa,” Pete calls. “Are you in there?”

“She is,” I snap when Mom doesn’t say anything. “And she wants you to know, it’s so not impressive, your little wolf routine. It doesn’t change what you are.”

“Oh, and what’s that?”

“A pathetic little man!”

“Silly, silly Ruby,” Pete says, his voice getting closer to the barn door. “I can smell that wolf on you. You have no clue how shocked I was when I heard about what happened with that stupid kid, the tattooed idiot calling himself a hunter. Still, he came in handy. He’d taken your photo, and we hunters like to share. There you were, the daughter to the traitor, to the woman who left me. It felt like Christmas. I left the following hour.”

“You’re sick,” I snap, my head swimming, hardly able to believe this is real.

Let me wake up. It can’t be him. Anybody but him.

In the corner, Liam quietly groans, his bones making cracking noises and shifting. I want to check on Ramsey, but at the same time, I know Liam’s right.

I have to keep talking if I want to save us.

“I’m sick?” Pete laughs, his voice right outside the barn now. I can hear other men, the rustling of clothes, and metallic noises. “I’m not the one who fucked a wolf.”

Mom gasps, and I glare at her, fighting a note of rage.

“I love him, Mom,” I hiss.

“You do?” Her eyes widen. “Since when?”

“Since the first freaking time I saw him,” I snap. “That’s when.”

“How sweet,” Pete says, laughing.

I pause, wondering how he heard me, then it hits me. He can alter his hearing the same way Liam and Ramsey can. Liam’s half-changed now, quieting his growling, breathing steadily.

It’s a transformation unlike Ramsey’s, which was all rage and suddenness...or calm; serenity like he’s in a coma.

“Fuck. He’s changing,” Pete says, his voice getting more distant. “All right, boys. Take the girls alive if you can. I’ll handle the wolves.”

“Boss,” a gruff-sounding man says. “Let’s do it.”

Liam grumbles, walking toward the door on all fours, pacing up and down, and sniffing at the ground. He’s changed quickly, his clothes shredded, his silver fur bristling dangerously. It’s easier to study Liam as a wolf than Ramsey, easier to see more objectively the raw and deadly power of it.

When I look at Ramsey, I see my wolf. Liam’s just a wolf, letting me appreciate how terrifying they can truly be.

Turning, I walk over to the corner, to Ramsey.

He’s still on his back, his mouth shaping into a wolf’s jaw, his body heaving and muscular and hairy.

Please, I whisper silently. Soon, Ramsey. Please.

Outside, Master Pete – no, just Pete. I remember how pissed Liam got about that, the protectiveness in his voice. He didn’t want me to place myself beneath this so-called master.

But Pete is roaring, screaming as he changes.

It sounds like a fast one. Distantly, I note how strange that is, how regular that sounds. It sounds like a fast one.

As if changing into a wolf is the most regular thing in the world.

“I’m so sorry.” Mom walks in behind me, looking down at us. “Oh, Ruby.”

I place my hand on Ramsey’s forehead. Outside, a wolf howls, then another, closer.

It’s Liam.

His howl makes the walls of the barn rumble. Tools fall off the walls, and somewhere something snaps like a piece of wood tumbling to the ground.


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