Joel Davis is stuck. Bound by family obligations and his father's influence, he's never imagined a life outside of the prestigious world he was born to inherit.
Until his car breaks down four hours from home and he's drawn into a world he never knew existed.
"Everything was easy until you showed up."
Dustin 'Razor' Cole knows that his wolf pack and his MC have his back. Family is everything, after all. But when he rescues a rich boy running from his father from the side of the road, Razor's world is turned upside down.
His wolf knows who Joel is the moment Razor spots him, and Razor knows he has to have Joel no matter the cost--even if it means going against the family he loves.
"Is this your way of putting distance between us?"
Drawn together by fate, Joel and Razor are thrown into each other's mismatched worlds. How can two people from vastly different walks of life find happiness when one is running from his past, and the other is forced to face his?
This M/M 48,000-word novel contains adult language and smoking sexual situations, a possessive werewolf, a fated mate, bikers, wildflowers, no cliffhanger, no cheating and a guaranteed happy ever after.
This was a nice combination of a lot of crowd pleasers: motorcycle club, identity angst, fated mates, and werewolves. I'm not an MC kind of girl but there were plenty of details in that direction to satisfy any fans. The whole my-father-dictates-my-life-and-now-I-break-free is well done here so if you like that kind of trope and angst you will really enjoy the story. It felt more like a standard contemporary romance than a shifter story although there was one scene of shifting .I felt that the fated mates thing was a little different than the usual. They were immediately drawn to each other and attracted, but there was none of that special smell or deep surety on Razor's part that you usually see. As I said, it was really more a contemporary MC kind of romance with a bit of supernatural touches. I liked it okay but think it will be a real draw for many others. A definite winner for the KU reader. I would definitely read other works by this author.
Things I did like: - Razor saying that Joel was his when they first meet (although this and the conversation with his dad is the closest we get to "Fated Mates") - Razor sneakily trying to convince Joel to stay in Edge (convincing him to work for their accountant)
Things I didnt like: - When Joel goes back to Edge he's still adamant about fulfilling his "obligations" and "responsibilities" even after he is offered a job as an accountant at an office he actually likes in Edge. - Razor telling Joel his hovering like a need wife when Joel asks him if he wants to watch a movie (he's sexually frustrated and mad at his father and taking it out on Joel)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.