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Bite the Bullet (Bitten Book 5)




  Bite

  the Bullet

  by

  C.C. Wood

  Copyright © Crystal W. Wilson 2016

  Kindle Edition

  Do not share or distribute copies of this work. Karma is a good friend of mine and she doesn’t like pirates. This work is the property of the author and should only be purchased through reputable sales channels. No part of this work should be scanned, copied, or reproduced in any way.

  This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to persons living or dead is either coincidental or used with the persons’ consent.

  Editing by Tania Marinaro, Libros Evolution

  Cover Design by Jena Brignola, Bibliophile Productions

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Acknowledgements

  Contact C.C.

  About C.C.

  Titles by C.C. Wood

  Chapter One

  The study was silent except for the crackle and hiss of the wood burning in the fireplace. Conner sat perfectly still, his gaze steady. I wanted to fidget beneath the intensity of his stare, but I didn’t dare. I wanted him to understand that I was serious about what I’d just asked of him.

  The silence deepened and I began to wonder if I’d made a mistake. Maybe I should have spoken to Donna first. She would have at least listened to what I had to say.

  Well, no matter what I was thinking, it was too damn late to take it back. I would just have to convince Conner that what I was asking of him was the right thing to do. Although most people wouldn’t find the explanation a hunch I felt down to my toes as adequate.

  Since my friend Donna had met Conner months ago, her life, my life, and the lives of our friends had been turned upside down. When Donna and Conner started dating there was a female vampire named Vanessa who’d taken exception. She had plans for the vampire Council and for Conner. Those plans didn’t include a human mate for the male she wanted as her own.

  It was almost too late when Conner discovered that she was working for a group called the Faction. Vanessa was the first step in the Faction’s bid to take over the Council based in Dallas. From there, they had plans to take over the Southern states, then the entire nation, and eventually the world.

  One by one, my friends had found vampire or shifter mates and fought their own battles with the Faction. Donna was turned into a vampire and Ricki had become a werewolf after separate attacks nearly killed them both. They also discovered strengths within themselves they’d never known possible.

  Now, I was the only one still single. Not that it bothered me. Alpha men were sexy in books, but more of a pain in the ass in reality.

  It also left me free to do what was necessary to save us, but that wouldn’t happen unless I was turned. I knew it without a doubt.

  Finally, Conner spoke. “Why?”

  I sat up straighter in my chair. “Why do I want you to turn me into a vampire?”

  He nodded.

  That was the question I dreaded. I never discussed my gifts so it was difficult to explain how they worked. As a sensitive, I wasn’t fully precognitive. I didn’t have visions or exact knowledge. I had impressions of the immediate future, more like a sense really. It was good enough to defend myself in a situation or to avoid catastrophe, but not much else.

  However, since Conner and the other vampires had come into our lives, my gifts were growing in strength and breadth. I’d begun to have…vibes for lack of a better word. I would suddenly know with utter certainty that something was about to happen.

  It was what saved Ricki and me the night that several of Conner’s men revealed themselves as traitors and tried to kill us.

  Since then, I listened to those instincts, and over the last few weeks, as I fervently wished for a way to help protect my friends and myself, the belief that I needed to be turned began to fill my mind.

  Still, with vampires, honesty was the best policy. I could keep most of them out of my head, but it would only take one stray thought to lose the fragile trust I’d built.

  “I…know things,” I answered. “I can’t see the future in exact detail but I have these premonitions when something is about to happen.” I cleared my throat, my one concession to nervousness. “I have a strong feeling, Conner, that I need to be turned, that it will be vital to my survival. All of our survival.”

  He leaned back in his chair and laced his fingers together over his flat abdomen. “Is that the only reason?”

  I sighed. “No, it’s not the only reason. I’m not lying when I say that my abilities are part of it, but I can’t stand sitting idly by while others protect me, fight for me.” I shifted forward to the edge of my seat. “Conner, I know that, as a human, I’m a liability, but I’ve had training, experience—”

  “Experience? Training?” he asked, frowning at me.

  Shit. There were so many details of my life that I’d been required to keep secret, not because I didn’t want to share, but because of my former employer’s non-disclosure agreements.

  “You know I used to work at a private security firm?”

  He nodded.

  “Well, I wasn’t really an administrative assistant. Mostly I carried out surveillance and planning, but there were times I did more.”

  “So you were an operative?”

  “More or less an analyst who was occasionally needed in the field.”

  Without responding to my admission, he got to his feet and walked to the bar near the fireplace. “Wine?” he asked.

  “Sure.”

  I watched as he poured a glass of wine for me, and then a scotch on the rocks for himself. He walked over to me, handing me the wine and settling a hip against his desk.

  He waited until I sipped before he spoke. “I’m going to ask you a question, Shannon, but I don’t want you to be offended.”

  I suppressed a sigh because a statement like that usually meant I would most definitely be annoyed by the question.

  “Are you sure you aren’t feeling this way because you’re used to being in charge?”

  I laughed and Conner looked surprised. “I’ve been asking myself the same question for over a week. Unfortunately, I don’t think that’s it, because this intuition is getting stronger.” I took another sip of wine. “My abilities are also developing rapidly, Conner. Before all of this started, before you met Donna, my sensitivity would only kick in a few minutes prior to an event. In the last few weeks, I’m suddenly hearing snatches of people’s thoughts and I know when things are going to happen, even mundane things like a phone call or the
arrival of the mailman. These forewarnings are now coming hours or even days before the occurrence rather than just minutes.”

  Conner listened to everything I said, rolling his glass between his hands. “I see.”

  My heart sank as he tossed back the scotch and set the glass on the desk with a solid click, never once looking me in the eye. Though Conner was difficult to read, I could still feel tendrils of regret and worry emanating from him.

  “I won’t turn you, Shannon,” he finally stated, lifting his eyes to mine. “I can’t.”

  Though I knew it was coming, his words still made my stomach twist. My hands held a fine tremor, making the wine I held slosh. Setting my glass on the table next to me, I asked, “Why?”

  “You have to understand, when a vampire turns a human, it creates a bond between them. A strong bond. If a vampire has mated, that bond can create problems between them and their mate.”

  Comprehension washed over me. He wasn’t saying no because he didn’t want to help me. The understanding was swiftly followed by embarrassment. “Oh my God, Conner. I didn’t realize. I’m so sorry—”

  He shook his head and lifted a hand. “Stop, Shannon. Of course you didn’t know. You are still learning about my people.”

  I didn’t mention that I’d dealt with vampires during the course of my work before. I was still bound by non-disclosure agreements and my own ethics. The vamps I’d met had been disdainful of humanity, nothing like Conner and the rest of his men. Though I wanted to tell him, I nodded instead.

  “I will discuss your request with the unmated vampires I know.”

  Immediately I wondered if Asher Leroux would be one of them and a chill washed over my skin. Though I’d only been around him a few times, Asher stirred emotions in me I’d never experienced before. Like any intelligent woman, I began avoiding him because I didn’t know what to make of my feelings. Until I had a chance to analyze and classify my attraction, I intended to keep my distance. The last thing I needed was for a highly psychic vampire to catch one of my stray perverted thoughts about him, especially if he didn’t reciprocate my attraction.

  “Shannon, I want you to consider any offers you receive carefully,” Conner stated. “Even if you’re not romantically involved, you’ll have a psychic connection to this vampire until you’re strong enough to break it. That could take years, even decades.”

  I wanted to tell him that none of that mattered because all I cared about was keeping my friends and myself alive.

  Apparently, Conner followed my line of thinking and shook his head at me. “Don’t be too shortsighted. What happens when we defeat Cornelius and dismantle the Faction, Shannon? You’ll be stuck with someone for a long time. You’ll know what they’re thinking and feeling and they’ll know the same about you. That’s why vampires rarely turn humans unless they’re mates or family. It can easily become an uncomfortable relationship, especially if you don’t know each other well.”

  I sighed. He was right. Would I really want to listen to some misogynistic, five hundred year old vampire’s thoughts about me? Or have them know when I was angry, horny, or sad? It wasn’t something I’d considered before.

  “So there would be no chance of divorce, huh?” I quipped.

  Conner leveled a stern look in my direction and I shrugged in response to his lack of amusement.

  “If you can’t change a bad situation,” I commented, “You can at least find a way to laugh at it.”

  He closed his eyes and pinched the bridge of his nose as though his head hurt. “Jesus, you’re just like Donna.”

  I grinned at him. “Maybe she’s just like me. It’s been said I’m a bad influence on more than one occasion.”

  The tension that crackled in the study moments ago suddenly dissipated. I found myself taking a deep breath and felt the muscles in my back and neck finally relax. I hadn’t realized how tight my body had become during my conversation with Conner.

  Smiling back at me, he straightened from his desk. “Well, I have a training session scheduled with my men and I believe Donna was looking forward to spending some time with you before you go back to the safe house.”

  Recognizing a polite dismissal, I got to my feet. “Thanks for taking the time to talk to me.”

  Conner scowled at me. “You never have to thank me. Donna loves you like a sister, which means you’re family. You can talk to me about anything at any time.”

  My heart melted at his words. Though he wasn’t technically human, Conner was the best man I’d ever met, and it made me incredibly happy that Donna had found him. However, since I couldn’t handle intense emotions head on, I responded as I usually did; with humor.

  “So does this mean you won’t complain when I bring my laundry over and raid your fridge? Because that’s what annoying little sisters are supposed to do.”

  “Just like her,” he murmured. “It’s fucking uncanny.”

  Laughing, I walked with him toward the door of the study. Before I could open it, Conner laid a hand on my shoulder.

  “I’ll have more information for you in a few days, Shannon.”

  “Thank you.”

  He nodded and opened the door for me, letting me walk out first.

  “I believe Donna is waiting for you in the kitchen,” he murmured.

  He disappeared down the long hallway leading to the back of the house, leaving me alone in the foyer.

  Taking a deep breath, I pushed open the kitchen door to find Donna standing at the counter, pouring tequila into a blender.

  “Midnight Margaritas!” she called.

  I laughed, shaking my head as I walked to the counter and plopped down on a barstool. “It’s barely eight o’clock.”

  She added fresh lime juice, triple sec, and agave nectar to the pitcher. “Are you telling me you don’t recognize a line from your favorite movie?” she asked.

  I laughed again. “I do. I just wanted to point out the flaw in your use of that quote.”

  “Oh, shut up.”

  Before I could tease her some more, she dumped the ice in, snapped the lid on, and started the blender. Grinning at her, I didn’t say anything else.

  Finally, she shut off the machine and poured us each a huge glass. As she handed me mine, she casually asked, “So Conner is going to help find a vampire to turn you?”

  “Jesus, did you have your ear pressed against the door?” I asked.

  “No need. I could hear your conversation, even with the door closed,” she responded, sipping her margarita.

  I sighed. “Yes, he’s going to help me.”

  “Are you sure you want to do this, Shannon?” Donna asked, her expression somber. “I know that the whole vampire thing sounds sexy, but there will come a time when every human you know will die. You’ll lose everyone you care about.”

  I took a large sip of my drink. “Yes, I’m sure. I can’t explain it…I just know I need to become a vampire.”

  “Is this some weird psychic thing? If so, why in the hell didn’t you use it to our advantage before? Like say, winning the lottery?”

  I rolled my eyes. “It doesn’t work like that. Or at least it didn’t until a couple months ago. Ever since you met Conner and all this shit with the Faction started, my powers are getting stronger.”

  “Okay, so you couldn’t always do this?”

  “Only some of it, and usually only right before something was about to happen.”

  Donna took a drink, eyeing me. “Why didn’t you tell me any of this before now?” she asked.

  I laughed. “Before you met Conner, would you have believed me?”

  “Good point.”

  We drank our margaritas in silence for a few moments.

  “You still could have told me,” she murmured.

  With a sigh, I set my glass on the counter. “You have to understand, Donna, my parents always told me to keep my gifts a secret. It’s been for my own protection as well as for the safety of my friends and family.”

  “Do you think I would’
ve told people?”

  I shook my head. “No, of course not. But if someone discovered my abilities and wasn’t concerned about breaking the law, they might try to get to me through my friends.”

  “Isn’t that what’s happening now with the Faction?” Donna asked.

  “Yeah, I know. It sucks.”

  She nodded. “Hmm-hmmm.”

  We fell silent again, drinking our margaritas and lost in our own thoughts. Mine weren’t pleasant.

  I was relieved when Donna asked, “Do you want to go watch Conner and his guards train? Usually at least half of them are shirtless.”

  “That’s the best idea you’ve ever had,” I answered.

  Chapter Two

  Luca rushed me, moving so quickly he was just a blur. Still, I was expecting it, so I managed to evade the charge, but barely.

  Suddenly the room spun and I landed face up on the mats, all the air leaving my lungs in a whoosh. I stared at the ceiling as I tried to catch my breath. Luca’s concerned face appeared above me. This was not how I expected our daily training session to go.

  “Jesus, Shannon, you’re slow today. You usually would have seen that one coming.”

  I scowled up at him but I couldn’t speak.

  “Breathe in through your nose and out through your mouth, nice and slow,” he instructed.

  I narrowed my eyes in response because I was already doing that.

  He lifted his hands in mock surrender. “Just trying to help.”

  Since my diaphragm felt as though it were finally working again, I slowly sat up. Luca settled on the mat next to me.

  “Better?” he asked.

  I nodded and accepted the bottle of water he held out to me. In the last month, I’d begun daily physical training with the vampires Conner assigned to guard me. When I’d been forced into hiding because of the Faction, I’d also had to give up my job at the security firm. Used to being active and working long hours, it wasn’t long before I went stir crazy from being cooped up in the safe house all the time.

  Since going places wasn’t really an option, my guards Luca and Duncan had taken it upon themselves to find ways to keep me from driving them nuts, which I tended to do often because reading and watching television were my only other pastimes.