Rescued (Book One of the Silver Wood Coven Series): A Witch and Warlock Romance Novel

BOOK: Rescued (Book One of the Silver Wood Coven Series): A Witch and Warlock Romance Novel
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CONTENTS

Title

Book Description

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

Book 2 (Excerpt)

More Books

Note from the Author

Copyright

RESCUED

SILVER WOOD COVEN BOOK ONE

By Hazel Hunter

RESCUED

Silver Wood Coven Book One

Templar Michael Charbon has been watching the young witch for months. Homeless, beautiful, and living in Central Park, she seems to charm everyone she meets. They shower her with kindness, and yet he never witnesses magic. Only when he rescues her from a rapist, does he understand why: Summer has no memory, not even of her real name. Though he barely resists her inexplicable pull on him, he would gladly break his vows to make her his own.

Magus Corps Major Troy Atwater is surprised to hear from Michael. But their long past together puts Michael’s word beyond doubt. Troy collects the beautiful, young witch from the Templar, before her strange attraction drives half of New York wild. A powerful warlock in his own right, Troy manages to veil her seductive appeal, so that he and the coven can help her. But a passionate bond quickly envelopes them that goes far beyond her charms.

For her part, Summer’s head is swimming. With barely a memory, she can hardly comprehend the ancient world of Wiccans and Templars. More than that she finds herself torn between two very different men. But as the extent of her powers reveal themselves and her deadly past returns in painful snippets, she finds that she isn’t meant to choose between Michael or Troy. She must have them both.

CHAPTER ONE

“EXCUSE ME, MISS,” a man with a rasping baritone said, “but can you tell us where the secret gardens are?”

Summer looked up from the dog-eared paperback she was reading to smile at a pair of elderly men sporting cameras and a Central Park guide book.
 

“They’re not really a secret. This is the Italian garden, and the English and French gardens are on either side.”

She pointed in the appropriate directions.

The shorter, heavyset man hooted with delight.

“I told you this was it, Jimmy.”

“No, Arthur, you said if we went too far north we’d get mugged,” his taller, rail-thin companion chided, and winked at Summer. “You come here often, young lady?”

Summer couldn’t tell him she actually lived in Central Park.
 

“Yes, I do. It’s quiet, and I like the flowers.”

That they were blooming in late fall under a slate-gray sky that promised frost before midnight was something else she couldn’t explain.

Arthur raised his camera to snap a shot of the vibrant pink peonies clustered around Summer’s bench while his companion made a show of breathing in the crisp, flower-scented air.
 

“I can’t believe how gorgeous it is here, Jimmy. Miss, how do they get all this stuff to bloom so late in the year? It’s October, for crying out loud.”

Summer felt an odd but familiar tug in her chest, and hoped ignoring it would make it go away for once.
 

“The people who look after the park do a wonderful job.”

Jimmy’s face wrinkled with concern as he nodded at the battered backpack next to Summer. “You all right, sweetheart?”

No, it seemed it wasn’t going away; it would never go away.
 

“I’m fine,” she lied as she stood and slung the backpack, which contained every possession she had in the world, over her left shoulder. “I hope you gentlemen enjoy the gardens.”

“Wait.” Now Arthur looked worried as well, and dug into his trouser pocket. “You look like you could use something to eat. Here.” He took a ten-dollar bill from his wallet and offered it to her. “Have lunch on me and Jimmy, okay?”

Summer didn’t want or need to take his money, but arguing with him would only make things worse.

“That’s really kind of you, thanks.”

She tucked the bill in her back pocket and smiled at them both before making a hasty retreat, glancing back once to see both men no longer watching her.

The strange pull she felt in her heart had already faded away. She wished the weird things that happened when she felt it would, too. Something about her drew complete strangers over to talk to her, and when they did they always offered help. They seemed obsessed with giving her things, too. Inside her backpack she had two jackets, seven hats, and innumerable packets of gum, granola bars and breath mints. She also had almost three hundred dollars in fives and tens. Even hard-hearted native New Yorkers, who were skilled at ignoring the homeless and needy, came to her offering to help her find everything from a job to a safe place to sleep. At least she now had the latter, thanks to a puppeteer. He’d insisted on giving her the spare key to the little cottage where he put on shows with his troop during the day for kids.

“You know it’s illegal to stay in the park at night, and now there’s some pervert going around raping the women he finds here after sunset,” he told her as he pressed the key into her hand. “In this cold weather you’ll need the shelter, too.”

It had been increasingly difficult for Summer to dodge the nightly police sweeps, and find spots to sleep where she wouldn’t be noticed by them or the criminals who crept in after dark looking for victims. She was particularly concerned about the rapist, who had already assaulted four women over the last month and had nearly beaten two of his victims to death.
 

Despite the offer of safe shelter she couldn’t help asking.

“Why are you doing this? How do you know I won’t steal anything?”

“You wouldn’t,” he said, with the assurance of someone who had known her all his life. “Not a lovely girl like you. Now come on––I’ll buy you a hot dog.”

Summer didn’t know what to do about her effect on people. She certainly wasn’t doing it on purpose, and with the thousands of visitors and locals that came to Central Park every day she couldn’t avoid people altogether. She also couldn’t leave the park because she had nowhere else to go. Refusing to take what anyone offered her made them even more insistent––to the point they wouldn’t leave her alone until she did. One boy from the Bronx had followed her around the park for hours, tearfully pleading with her until she finally accepted the brown bag lunch he’d been carrying. As soon as she had taken the bag from his hand, however, he went on his way, whistling cheerfully.

It’s almost like a relief for them to help me
, she thought,
and then they seem to forget about me the moment after they do. But why?

Summer walked back through the Vanderbilt gate to Fifth Avenue and turned south to take the long walk to the 79th Street Transverse, which crossed the center of the park. After three months she felt as if she knew every inch of the eight-hundred-plus acres of New York City’s biggest nature retreat. She also loved the Conservatory gardens with a passion, now that they seemed to be returning.
 

Why the gardens had come back to life was another mystery. Since Summer had begun spending most of her days in the northeast corner of the park, which was not as popular with visitors, it was as if fall was reversing itself. The lawns, shrubs and trees had grown greener and more lush, and flowers had begun blooming again. As with the generosity effect she had on strangers, Summer didn’t want to believe she was responsible. Then she had sat down to read on a bench covered in red and brown leaves, and when she got up to take a walk an hour later she saw that all of leaves nearest to her on the bench had turned green.

Now the hair on Summer’s nape prickled, and she slowed her pace toward the Miner’s Gate. For weeks she’d been convinced someone was watching her. But whenever she looked around she could never catch sight of who it was. Although she knew she should have felt frightened of being secretly watched, whenever she sensed the watcher she felt warm and safe, as if she were being guarded instead of stalked.
 

Summer had hoped she might cross paths with someone who knew her, but if that were the case why didn’t the watcher come and speak to her?

A laughing toddler running after a bouncing ball scurried past Summer and appeared to be heading straight into the busy street after it. As she turned to chase after the little girl, a tall, broad-shouldered man climbed out of a sleek black sports car. Watching him scoop up the child and her runaway ball with one arm made Summer stop in her tracks. He moved as silently and effortlessly as a big cat. He wore his blond hair in a short, military-precise cut that emphasized the rugged masculinity of his striking features and gave him the look of a gladiator. His plain gray T-shirt and black trousers clung as if sewn onto his heavily-muscled frame. He was so tall Summer doubted the top of her head would reach his shoulder––and she was no shrimp.
 

Summer took a step toward him and then halted again as a semi-hysterical woman rushed past her toward the man. He handed the little girl and her ball over to her. As the young mother clutched her child and gushed her thanks, the man nodded and looked directly at Summer.

Whoa.

The impact of the man’s gaze made her take a step back and hold her breath. She’d never seen a guy with such beautiful eyes; long and narrow, they had a slight tilt to the corners that gave him an air of mystery. As he moved the sun illuminated his irises, which were so green they looked like polished jade between the golden filigree of his thick lashes. But the intense way he looked at her was what made her heart skip a beat.

Are you the one who’s been watching me? Do you know me?

As if he could read her thoughts, the big man inclined his head, and then climbed back into his car and drove off.

CHAPTER TWO

MICHAEL CHARBON GLANCED at the rearview mirror to see Beauty, the woman he had been watching for weeks, still standing by the Miner’s Gate. Stopping the child from running into traffic had been imperative. He would never allow an innocent to die simply to maintain cover. Now that he had exposed his presence, however, the target knew what he looked like. Monitoring her activities in the park would now be more difficult, although he couldn’t keep his distance much longer.

Any Wiccan you can capture alive is to be brought in for interrogation,
Nathaniel Harper, his mentor and Temple Master of the North Abbey, had said.
If that is not possible, or you find one using their evil to harm mortals, you are to engage and terminate.

Michael felt the familiar stab of guilt as he drove to the west side of the park. He had not yet decided if he should bring in Beauty. While he was suspicious of her, he still had no proof that she was bespelling the humans around her. He’d watched the scenario play out dozens of times, and it always went the same way: the mortals initiated contact and after a moment offered the woman food, clothing or money. As for Beauty, she did nothing that made him believe she was casting lures or using charms, and she seemed genuinely startled whenever someone made an offering. On several occasions he had observed her trying to refuse the gifts, something she would hardly do if she were using magic to wheedle them out of the powerless.

Nor could Michael be certain that Beauty was Wiccan, for he had never witnessed her using any form of magic at all under any circumstances. Every time he came close enough to the woman to sense any power she might be concealing, she gave off the same simple warmth and ordinary life energy as any other mortal in the park.

Michael found a spot for his car and walked from it through the Hunter’s Gate toward the cottage where the woman had been hiding from the police every night. He couldn’t even condemn her for breaking in, for he’d seen her use a key to access the back door––doubtless another gift from one of her many protectors.

They all
do
want to protect her,
he thought as he walked to the vantage point he’d been using to watch the cottage. Everyone seemed driven to help Beauty; this in the middle of a city where no one stopped for anything, not even a toddler chasing a ball.

Michael walked up to his makeshift observation post, a remote spot between two large stones concealed by a thicket of trees. As he situated himself he checked the angle of the sun. The night would be creeping up over the horizon in less than an hour, which would send Beauty hurrying to the cottage that lay a few hundred yards away. He had been tempted to break into the place one afternoon before she arrived so that he could observe her unseen from within, but he didn’t entirely trust himself to be alone with her.
 

As he waited Michael once more silently mused on everything he found fetching about Beauty. She had the body of a dancer, with long, strong legs, an elegant torso and graceful arms. Watching her use her slim hands to caress a flower had made him wonder how they would feel on his skin. He didn’t allow himself to dwell on the ripe curves of her breasts and bottom––looking at either too long made his cock hard as an iron pike––but then so did staring at her solemn, full-lipped mouth. His hands itched to sift through her mane of dark, sun-streaked, chestnut brown hair to discover if it was as silky as it was thick, and breathe in the scent of her flawless, translucent flesh to learn if she smelled like the flowers she was always admiring. Her looks had entranced him so much that he’d even nicknamed her Beauty.

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