Lena
The neon sign buzzed like it had a vendetta.
Grizzly’s Bar & Grill, where the burgers were greasy, the coffee was scorched, and the owner wore a “Kiss the Cook” apron unironically despite being a 5’2” chain-smoker named Tammy who could knock a man out with one punch and a dirty look.
I didn’t plan to be here. Not in this town. Not in this life. Not with aching feet and a name tag that read “Lena” like it was a brand instead of a choice.
But here I was. Running. Again.
A fresh start in a nowhere town with my hair dyed darker and a pepper spray keychain that I wasn’t afraid to use. New job. No friends. Just tips, tired eyes, and a strict no-men policy.
Which made it extra annoying that I felt something the moment I walked up to his table.
Tall. Broad. Bearded. Sitting alone in the corner booth like he was made of stone and secrets. Hands wrapped around a chipped coffee mug, knuckles scarred. T-shirt tight across a chest that definitely bench-pressed regrets and chopped wood for breakfast.
I cleared my throat, gripping my notepad. “You want anything besides the coffee?”
He looked up.
And holy hell on toast.
Eyes like molten gold. Not hazel. Not brown. Just… gold. Wild. Sharp. Like a forest fire that decided to take human form and smolder from across the table.
“I’m good,” he said, voice rough as gravel and twice as heavy.
Sure. He was good. I was the one who suddenly forgot how to breathe.
I blinked. “Right. Coffee. Great. I’ll, um, top that off in a bit.”
I turned too fast and almost tripped over my own damn feet. Smooth. Very sexy of me. Add that to my highlight reel of cringe.
Behind the counter, Tammy raised an eyebrow. “You okay, sweetheart? You look like you just saw Bigfoot ordering the soup special.”
“I think I did,” I muttered. “Only hotter. And built like a Greek god with a lumberjack kink.”
Tammy cackled. “That’s Logan. Local weirdo. Comes in every day. Tips twenty bucks on a two-dollar coffee. Doesn’t talk much. My kind of man.”
“Does he always stare at people like they owe him a life debt?”
“Only women. And only if they’re pretty.”
I scowled. “Not interested.”
Tammy lit another cigarette. “Honey, if you were any more full of it, I’d have to mop the floor again.”
I ignored her and went back to Logan’s booth.
Except this time, he looked up before I even got close. As if he heard me coming. Or felt me.
His eyes locked on mine. Something in my chest fluttered. Or panicked. Same thing, really.
“You new here?” he asked.
“Just started last week,” I said, pouring more coffee and pretending I wasn’t short-circuiting under his stare. “Trying to stay under the radar.”
“You’re not good at that,” he said, voice softer now, but just as intense.
I swallowed. “I’m not here to date anyone. Just FYI.”
“I’m not here to date you.”
My stomach flipped.
Then he added, “I’m here to protect you.”
I stared. “From what? Bad tips and worse burgers?”
His mouth twitched—almost a smile.
Then he said something so low I barely caught it. “From what’s coming.”
And just like that, I forgot how to breathe again.
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Logan
The bear in me knew the second she walked in.
Mate.
I didn’t move. Didn’t blink. Just watched her glide through the room with a half-fake smile and haunted eyes. She wore armor in the shape of sarcasm and didn’t trust anyone past arm’s length.
Smart girl.
But the bond didn’t care about logic.
It roared through me—hot, wild, primal.
Mine.
My bear clawed at the inside of my ribs, ready to shift, to take, to claim. I clenched my fists and forced him down.
Not yet. She was human. She didn’t know what we were. Didn’t know who I was. Didn’t trust the world—and probably for damn good reason.
She had the scent of someone who’d been hurt too many times to believe safety was real.
So I stayed quiet. Let her serve the coffee. Let her stare at me like I was dangerous and interesting and a little unhinged.
All true.
But what I didn’t say was this: anyone who tried to touch her, hurt her, or look at her wrong… I’d bury them in the woods and sleep like a baby.
Because the mate-bond didn’t come with an off switch.
And now that I’d found her?
Hell or high water, I wasn’t letting her go.