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Big Bad Becker: (An Outlier Prophecies Novella) (The Outlier Prophecies) Read online




  Big Bad Becker

  An Outlier Prophecies Novella

  Tina Gower

  Smashed Picket Press

  Contents

  Copyright

  Also by Tina Gower

  Newsletter Information

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  10. Conditional Probability of Attraction~Sneak Peek

  Copyright © 2016 by Christina Smith

  1st Digital & Trade Paperback Edition, 2016, cover design by Christina and Tyler Smith

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or person, living or dead is coincidental. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks, is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.

  For more books by Tina Gower, please visit:

  http://www.tinagower.com

  Also by Tina Gower

  Books in the Outlier Prophecies Series

  Romancing the Null (book one)

  Kindle

  Nook

  Kobo

  Coming soon:

  iBook

  Conditional Probability of Attraction (book two)

  Kindle

  Coming soon:

  Nook

  Kobo

  iBook

  The Werewolf Coefficient (book three)

  Kindle

  Coming Soon:

  Nook

  Kobo

  iBook

  Standard Deviation of Death (book four)

  Kindle

  Coming soon:

  Nook

  Kobo

  iBook

  Shifter Variance (book five)~Coming Fall 2016

  Big Bad Becker~A Outlier Series Novella

  Kindle

  Coming Soon:

  Nook

  Kobo

  iTunes

  Newsletter Information

  If you would like to receive free short stories in the Outlier Series, get the latest publication information, or a chance to win advanced reader copies of full length novels, please consider signing up for the newsletter. Your email and personal information will not be shared.

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  Please consider leaving an honest review of this book to help other readers find it.

  Chapter 1

  Ian Becker woke like he normally did. Breath sawing in and out like he’d run a marathon, sweat pouring off his temples, his sheets wrapped around him like a straightjacket, and his hands balled into a fist. And a hard-on.

  The hard-on was new and completely unwelcome.

  His phone buzzed against his thigh. Oh right, the reason he’d been pulled from what he assumed was another faceless, nameless nightmare. The kind where you can feel you weren’t enjoying it, but you don’t remember a gods-damned detail. Nothing to retell your counselor dad, so he thinks you’re being difficult when he asks you to describe it and you say, “I don’t know.”

  “Ian?”

  He blinked, his thoughts foggy. What? He gripped his phone. Oh shit, someone was talking to him.

  “What?” His voice was gravely and thick with sleep. He hadn’t mean to bark the word out, but you know what? Now that he thought about it, whoever it was had called him at four in the morning, and he’d gotten off his shift only an hour ago. “Hells, I was sleeping, asshole.”

  Make that: he’d gotten off two shifts. Back-to-back.

  “Ian. Shoot, man, I’m sorry, but I need your nose on a case.”

  Detective Wu, of course. Ian owed Wu, and he couldn’t afford to appear like he was slipping. Again. Wu wouldn’t turn him in to their captain at Angel’s Peak Police Department, but these things had a way of leaking out all over. Sure, Angel’s Peak was one of the largest cities in northern California, but it was still northern California, which meant the gossip mill worked overtime grinding out any useful nuggets of hearsay gold.

  He dragged his hand down his face in hopes to bring him back to reality. “Yeah, Wu. Gods. I’m sorry I snapped at you. I—” He shook away the excuse. “I’ll be right there.”

  “I got it with me. It’s not official, you know?”

  Right. That meant Wu had no leads beyond whatever scrap of fabric, paper, or decomposed food or human remains he wanted Ian to sniff. It meant it wasn’t exactly legal evidence.

  “I’ll just swing it by your house? I thought you’d be in the break room.”

  No. No, he wasn’t in the break room, damn it. He should have been sleeping in the break room. That’s where he always slept, but A.K. everything had gotten totally screwed up.

  A.K. After Kate. He’d started thinking of time recently as Before Kate and After Kate. Giving it a cute name didn’t paint it any prettier. It was becoming an obsession. Bad sign. Horrible, actually.

  He stretched his aching limbs as he rose from the bed, rubbing the shrink-wrapped, too-tight feeling from his skin. The dull headache had crept back as well. Early symptoms of pack bonding. The bonding didn’t cause the problem, but resisting it did. Attempting to stay away from Kate? Put that one in the “not working” column.

  “No. I’m on my way out.” Ian rattled off an address to a 24-hour diner just outside of town. It would take him about forty minutes to get there. It would be across the street from Kate’s apartment. See? Bad sign.

  He nearly called it off about a mile from the diner. Being this close to her would be too much of a temptation. Using Kate as pack was only meant to be the one time. In the beginning. One time that turned into two times. And to be fair, she had left the door open for him to return.

  “If you need more…”

  “I won’t bother you.”

  “But won’t quitting after starting—I thought you need pack. Ali says werewolves can’t—”

  “I’ll call you.”

  But the last brush off of “I’ll call” was said with a sigh and longing looks Kate hadn't seen. He'd meant to be clear that it had been the last and only time, but he hadn't spoken with enough feeling. Her body language was definitely holding up signs for him to return if he needed it. She had made the prospect all welcoming and warm. She shouldn’t have done that.

  He needed pack like he needed air. Wolves used touch, the pressure of bodies piled against each other, to sooth themselves, to stay calm and collected. He could use a human or partner of any other species to fill the emotional and physical need, but outside of other wolves, most people found bonding to be invasive. Lacking personal space. Clingy.

  A few days before, they’d worked a case together: Jack Roberts, a weather oracle, had been destined to die. Super high probability. They stopped it, only to have a ripple come back and bite Jack anyway. Well, more like slam into him in the form of a traffic accident. As in, a car hit him going full speed while Jack crossed the street, in a crosswalk, on a walk signal. He’d done everyt
hing right and The Fates just couldn’t have that. Those three bitches had to have it their way this time. Jack had landed himself in the hospital for the next month at minimum. But before that, before all that, he and Kate thought Jack had died.

  It had been a horrible day when Ian took that case. The anniversary of his pack’s murder was around the corner. He’d been following leads in his off time. Thought he had one in a Fae family, but when they turned up dead, he thought this was it. He was going to snap.

  He needed a reset. Something had gone wrong, and he’d started up the obsessing again. He had wanted answers, and thought he could get them without trading in his mental health. Apparently, he’d miscalculated. He’d have to call Lipski, his partner at the police department, and have him get Ian's dads to come out and do the whole routine all over again.

  This time he’d go willingly. The tranquilizer (if he was freaking). The therapy (he’d never admit it helped). The strict diet (a game changer).

  This time he’d do it with more dignity. He wouldn’t wait until he flipped out on his co-workers. (That’s where Wu came in—the guy had supported him and put in a good word after each of his outbursts). He wouldn’t break his desk or huddle in a corner rocking and crying while Lipski coaxed him out. He wouldn’t chew through the seat belt while Lipski drove him to his house so his dads could take him to his childhood home to “recover.”

  Funny how it had taken him four years to get to that point. You’d expect the grief to happen immediately, but he’d put it off by focusing on their case. Secretly. And the pack withdrawals? He chased those off with tequila.

  Anyway, he had mentally prepared himself, typed everything out in an email to Lipski. His finger had been hovering over the send button when Kate Hale smacked that folder over his tablet and demanded his attention.

  “Detective Ian Becker, I presume?”

  Just like that. She had no clue he was two seconds away from a breakdown. His lungs burned like they did before a panic attack. But her gross misunderstanding of his status amused and annoyed the hells out of him. Detective? Not ever likely at this rate. Was she being a jerk? Or did she truly not know how many times he’d failed the exam?

  But she didn’t make him feel less of a wolf. Not on Jack’s case. And not during what she'd done for him after. She’d pushed him to be a better cop than he’d been in the last year.

  See? This was why he needed to call Wu back and tell him to meet somewhere else.

  Except now, with a mile between him and the diner, he really could use some eggs. Eggs. It would be just the eggs and then he’d get back in his car and go home. Sleep. Curl around the scent she’d left on his pillow.

  Never mind. He’d go to the break room.

  Ironically, Food wasn’t quick at Speedy’s Diner. It wasn’t even the best diner in Angel’s Peak, not with the hefty competition of retro style diners dotted all over the north of the state. Hells, there were restaurants that would make the snobbiest of foodies salivate. But Speedy’s was less than a mile from a certain fateless.

  Damn, Kate had to be fateless of all things. It meant oracles couldn’t get a read on her. Speaking of irony, her entire job revolved around oracles’ predictions. They predicted and she ran the math on the likelihood the event would occur. She was the glue in the cogs of society and she couldn’t benefit from it. He couldn’t even look her probability numbers up to see if she was in danger on an hourly basis. And he had a feeling she would be in constant trouble. The threat of it followed her around like the afterbite of a cheap perfume.

  Not that she smelled like cheap perfume. More like coconut and vanilla. Not exactly like that, but his advanced werewolf olfactory system categorized it that way. One of the benefits of werewolf ancestry. You got the enhanced senses, but not the ability to shift, and all the burden of emotional irregularity. If you were wolf enough, which Ian was. Lucky him. There weren’t any real shifting wolves left. Latent werewolves, so-called experts dubbed people like him.

  His eggs arrived and his hunger took over. He took his frustration out on the meal.

  He was halfway through his eggs, shoving them in like a dying wish when Wu slid into the booth across from him.

  “Holy hells.” Wu whistled low under his breath. “Is that a seven egg spinach omelet? The plate is bigger than my head.”

  “You got something for me, or did you just come here to audition as my food critic?”

  Wu pinned him with a fine-be-a-dick stare and passed a baggie under the booth. Ian unzipped the plastic with a loud verp and took a long whiff. He should tell the guys not to put the items in plastic. Also to not remove them from the scene. He’d get more if he could place them in context. He closed the baggie up and shoved it aside, then went back to his eggs and definitely-not thinking about the dark-haired girl sleeping in her apartment across the street.

  “Well?” Wu prompted.

  “Mangos.” Ian managed around a bite of spinach and mushroom.

  “Mangos?”

  “Mangos.” He scooped in a few more bites and realized Wu wasn’t going to leave him alone. “Look, it’s not a science here. I’m telling you what’s different about the shirt, and it’s mangos. I can tell you what brand of detergent he uses, the fact he’s going Type II diabetic or losing a lot of weight and I can smell the keytones. My guess? Diabetic. Too much sugar and remnants of cinnamon rolls. But the mangos are fresh, just off a truck. I could smell the wood boxes they transport them in and a hint of juice on his shirt. So: mangos.”

  Wu sat back in the seat, his unhappy gaze wandering out the window where the lights from passing morning traffic glimmered. Ian watched him for a minute while he ate, attacking his eggs with a little less gusto than before.

  Wu’s shoulders slumped, as if he wasn't exactly excited to hear Becker’s profile, and Ian set his fork on the plate with a clatter. “Were you hoping I’d say it was the one armed man, cause—”

  “No,” Wu cut him off. “I was hoping you’d say drugs, or the prostitute who works the corner of Ninth and Warner.”

  Ian recoiled. His eyebrows slammed together. “How would I know what the prostitute on Ninth and Warner smells like?”

  Wu sighed. Then gave his chest a little rub, as if it hurt. He shook his head. “Listen, do me a favor and toss that, will you?” He nodded his head at the evidence bag.

  Ian shrugged. “Sure.”

  A waitress came over with a swing to her hips. A jinni, smelling like pheromones, cigarettes, and prozac. Her eyes danced all over Ian’s body. Mostly his chest and lips. If she could see his crotch, she’d probably be glancing there too. Ian knew the order of these things. His eyes snapped to his plate. That familiar heat rising in his neck. This was when it was embarrassing to be a wolf. She set a plate of two bacon strips next to him.

  “What’s that?” He managed, swallowing.

  “Bacon. It goes with your meal.”

  “I don’t eat bacon.” His mouth said no, but his stomach said yes. Fuck he wanted that protein more than he wanted to take his next breath. “I ordered the vegetarian plate. It doesn’t come with bacon.”

  “Of course you do, wolf.” She winked, as if she were on to some secret Ian was keeping from her. “It’s on the house.” Her fingers glided along his bicep.

  His stomach dipped, and his eggs threatened to come back and decorate his lap. Shit. Again, bad sign. He didn’t want touch from a stranger. He wanted it from pack. From someone he trusted. The waitress didn’t smell like coconut and vanilla. She didn’t smell like Kate.

  The waitress’s hand settled on his shoulder, and he shrank from her touch. She got the hint and stepped away.

  One of the bacon strips disappeared off the plate. Wu held it between his fingers and bit down on it with a crunch.

  Crispy bacon. Ian eyed the other strip.

  Bacon.

  Bacon.

  Kate.

  Bacon.

  Katekatekatekatebaconkate.

  He slammed his head against the backrest with
a thump. Stop. Stop thinking. Stop. Just stop. He gripped his head between his hands Deciding it was either the bacon or Kate. He couldn’t hold off two cravings at once.

  A second swipe and crunch took the decision away as Wu ate the last piece in two bites. Ian considered flagging the waitress down for more bacon. Not because he wanted to torture himself, but because if he ate meat he might lose the obsession to go back to Kate. He couldn’t, shouldn’t have Kate. It would be bad for her. Not just for her position in Accidental Death Predictions, but also for her health. Werewolves got too intense for humans and pretty much anyone who wasn’t a shifter. Ian was too intense even for other shifters. Even for his own pack.

  Yep. Dirty secret.

  But before, he’d had the group dynamic to tame his problem areas. How could he expect Kate to do it all? She was just one person. One.

  He thought about the meat again. Better not. Meat made the aggression worse. Even though his brain said it would help, Ian knew better. He could have meat if he had a stable pack. If he ate meat now, it would mean he’d accepted Kate as his pack. And despite what he was feeling, he wasn’t ready for that.

  Wu scratched his chin and shifted in his seat. There was something else. Thankful for the distraction from his own drama, he watched Wu struggle with some invisible dilemma.

  Ian tapped the table until Wu noticed. “Just come out with it.”

  Wu’s shoulders dropped. His eyes closed with relief. “Okay. That other thing wasn’t the case. There’s also this.” He dug into his pocket for a smaller item.

  Wrapped in plastic. Ian fingered the damn thing, holding it to the light. “Next time lose the plastic. Plastic masks subtle scents.”

  “But we need to bag it for evidence.”

  “Chain of custody? Right, because taking it through a little werewolf detour isn’t going to raise a few eyebrows.” Ian waved the coin wrapped in plastic between them. “Because this, what I’m doing, isn’t going to be admissible in a court of law anyway.” He opened the bag, took a big whiff.