Mated by Midsummer
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3.9 • 47 Ratings
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- £2.49
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- £2.49
Publisher Description
Weddings are awesome, as long as they're not hers.
Not so awesome? Facing the Alpha she ran from...
After living for years amongst humans, Kelli Copeland has to go home for her brother's wedding. She's hoping that a decade is enough for pack alpha, Max, to forget her, settle down and have a passel of kids. If she's lucky, he'll be old and grey to boot... No. Such. Luck.
She's his. She's always been his...
Alpha werewolf Max Daniels could have the pick of the females in Stratton, but he only wants one woman, the one who ran from him years ago. She's his fated mate. He let her slip through his fingers once, he's not about to make the same mistake twice. When he learns Kelli is back in town, he'll do everything in his power to make sure she doesn't leave again…
The problem is, he isn't the only wolf in town with an agenda. This time, Kelli's departure might the more permanent kind.
Customer Reviews
a technicality that captured my imagination
Why can a ‘light tap’ from a werewolf break the bones in a humans arm?
This is touched upon briefly without any hint at it being hyperbole (it is presented as a fact, introduction the persistent motif of the strength of werewolves) and it concerns me deeply.
Can werewolves not high five humans? Can they touch them at all without massive risk??
We know this cannot be true as canonically there are inter-species relationships where some sort of physical contact must occur.
Does this mean that the wolves are always holding back to a huge degree or are there many mangled humans in this world that Kellie just does not mention - too engrossed with Max’s virility to pay attention to the presumably worryingly conceivable accidental murder of her brother’s wife.
Even if it’s just a matter of control still we must recognise that any relationship with a human would undoubtedly be like walking on ice for a werewolf - particularly a strong alpha like Kellie (who has in fact canonically dated humans).
A ‘light tap’ (direct quote) being enough to ‘break’ an entire arm (again, im not being misleading here, this is what is said) is inconceivable.