After eleven years in a maximum-security black site, ex-Delta Force operator Alton Combs was paroled and exiled to a toxic Appalachian wasteland. The corrupt town mayor thought he was bullying a broken man, tricking Alton into trading his family's prime estate for a poisoned, worthless shale field. The locals treated Alton like a rabid beast, spitting on his shoes and waiting for him to rot in a collapsed cabin. But they had no idea the "worthless" land hid a billion-dollar rare-earth mineral vein. While surviving the town's hostility, Alton found a freezing baby girl dumped in a biohazard bin with needle marks on her tiny arm. He took her in, named her Eden, and built an electrified fortress guarded by a tamed mountain lion and a rattlesnake. He spent the next seven years quietly extracting the minerals to build a massive mining empire, raising the girl not as a victim, but as a ruthless apex predator. Hundreds of miles away in Washington D.C., a high-ranking Pentagon official wept over an empty grave, completely unaware that his evil second wife had ordered his infant daughter thrown to the wolves. He also didn't know the baby had been rescued by the most dangerous killing machine alive. Now, his parole was officially over. Alton handed his seven-year-old daughter an elite academy acceptance letter. "If the dogs try to bite you, you tear their throats out. I will handle the bodies." Stepping into a bulletproof Hummer, the undisputed king of the valley prepared to unleash his little wolf into the human world.
"This heat is a joke," Fletcher snapped.
He slammed his palm against the dusty dashboard of the black Ford SUV. The plastic groaned under the force.
Fletcher twisted the air conditioning dial, but the broken vent only spat warm, stale air into the confined space. Sweat dripped down his neck, soaking the collar of his federal agent windbreaker.
The SUV hit a massive pothole on the gravel road. The chassis violently shuddered. Fletcher cursed, grabbing the handle above the door.
In the rearview mirror, Senior Agent Kowalski locked eyes with the prisoner in the back seat.
Alton Combs did not flinch.
Despite the brutal impact that sent the agents bouncing in their seats, Alton's body remained perfectly rigid against the vinyl. He was welded to the car. His heavy steel handcuffs clinked softly, but his arms didn't sway.
His gray eyes were empty voids, staring out the window at the dying Appalachian trees blurring past. He looked less like a man and more like a hollowed-out corpse.
Suddenly, a wild deer darted across the dirt road.
Kowalski slammed on the brakes. The tires screeched, kicking up a cloud of thick brown dust. Fletcher yelled, bracing his hands against the dash.
Alton didn't even blink. His breathing remained at a steady, slow rhythm.
Kowalski's stomach tightened. He felt a cold prickle of unease crawl up his spine. He quietly rested his right hand on the grip of his holstered Glock. There was something deeply unnatural about a man who didn't react to a near-crash.
The SUV finally crossed the rusted iron sign that read: Welcome to Bottle Creek.
Rows of dilapidated trailer parks appeared through the windshield. Several locals sitting on their rotting wooden porches stopped chewing their tobacco. Their eyes narrowed, shooting hostile glares at the federal license plates.
Kowalski pulled the SUV to a stop in front of an overgrown wasteland on the edge of town. A half-collapsed wooden cabin sat in the center of the weeds.
Mayor Cletus McCoy and two of his heavy-set goons were already waiting by a pickup truck. Cletus wore a fake, superior smile that made Fletcher's jaw tick with disgust.
Kowalski stepped out and opened the rear door. Fletcher unlocked the heavy iron shackles around Alton's ankles, but left the handcuffs on.
Alton stepped out. His worn canvas shoes sank into the mud. He took a deep breath. The air smelled of pine needles and rust. It was his first taste of unfiltered oxygen in eleven years.
Cletus swaggered forward. He ignored the agents and kicked a piece of rotting wood near Alton's feet.
"Welcome back to the trash heap where you belong, Combs," Cletus sneered.
Alton didn't look at him. His empty eyes slowly scanned the structural integrity of the collapsing roof. Deep in his pupils, a rapid, tactical assessment was taking place.
Fletcher shoved a clipboard at Cletus. "Sign the parole residency confirmation."
Cletus scribbled his name. "It's the only dump in town that'll take a killer."
Kowalski stepped up to Alton and unlocked the handcuffs. The heavy metal fell away.
"You report to the office thirty miles from here on the first of every month," Kowalski ordered, his voice hard. "One slip-up, and you go straight back to the hole."
Alton slowly rubbed his wrists, his thick fingers tracing the deep, purple indentations left by the steel.
"Understood," Alton said. His voice was a harsh, mechanical rasp, like a machine unused for years. It was the first word he had spoken to anyone outside the prison's most secret, subterranean corridors in over a decade.
The agents didn't waste another second. They got back into the SUV and sped off, desperate to escape the suffocating poverty of the town.
The dust from the tires coated Alton's faded shirt. He stood there, a motionless statue.
One of Cletus's goons laughed. He hawked up a wad of thick phlegm and spit it directly onto the toe of Alton's shoe.
Alton slowly turned his head.
His dead, gray eyes locked onto the goon. The air temperature in the wasteland seemed to plummet. There was no anger in Alton's stare. It was the clinical, emotionless gaze of a butcher looking at a slab of meat.
The goon's laughter died in his throat. His chest seized. His legs moved on their own, stumbling backward until he bumped hard into Cletus.
Cletus felt a flash of panic. He covered it up by shouting.
"Don't start trouble, Combs!" Cletus yelled. He dug into his pocket and pulled out a rusted brass key.
He threw it hard into the wet, mossy mud.
"Stay away from the center of town," Cletus warned, before shoving his goons toward the truck. They drove away fast.
Alton stood alone in the wasteland. He watched the taillights disappear.
Slowly, the rigid tension in his broad shoulders relaxed. He bent down. His large, calloused hands-covered in faded, jagged scars-picked up the key. His thumb wiped the mud away.
He walked to the cabin and pushed the door. It screamed on its rusted hinges.
The stench of black mold and animal feces hit his face. His eyes immediately tracked to the dark corner of the ceiling. A nest of highly venomous brown recluse spiders crawled over the rotting beams.
Alton ignored them.
He crossed the room to the only corner that still seemed clean-a small patch of floorboards spared by the settling dust. With one slow, deliberate sweep of his foot, he brushed the fine gray film aside, clearing just enough space for himself.
Then he lowered himself down, folding his legs beneath him on the worn wood. He closed his eyes.
The image of the highly classified government pardon agreement flashed in his mind. The corners of his mouth twitched, forming a brutally cold smile.
My Husband's Betrayal: The Lost Heiress Returns
CAMILLE BERRY
Werewolf
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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