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Seduced by Shark Shifters II: Logan's Tail
Seduced by Shark Shifters II: Logan's Tail
Seduced by Shark Shifters II: Logan's Tail
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Seduced by Shark Shifters II: Logan's Tail

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Recent college grad Logan White has always strayed a bit from the beaten path, and his brother Sam and his best friend Tom have always helped guide him back. So Logan is more than a little surprised when his father sends him away to check up on Sam. Reluctantly leaving his recently widowed father, and the best friend who has started to fill Logan with all kinds of odd feelings, Logan ventures to Shark Beach. But as Logan explores Shark Beach, and meets sexy Stefano and Stefanie Magnussi, he finds out that Sam really is in danger. Determined to rescue his brother, Logan searches for the mysteries of Shark Beach, and soon finds that sometimes the only thing you can do is put your tail on the line for those you love.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherRafe Jadison
Release dateDec 29, 2015
ISBN9781311886552
Seduced by Shark Shifters II: Logan's Tail
Author

Rafe Jadison

Rafe Jadison is the author of The Divorceary, Little Tree, Snowed In: Dane and Heath, Seduced by Shark Shifters, Seduced by Shark Shifters II: Logan’s Tail, Seduced by Shark Shifters III: Tom's Turn, Seduced by Shark Shifters IV: Mark's Midlife, Reap This, Reap This Too, Blake Blacks Out, and Peter Passenger and the Mothman. He has a great love of the water and of people, and tries to show that in his writing. You can find out more about Rafe at rafejadison.com. He looks forward to hearing from people legally old enough to read the things he writes.

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    Book preview

    Seduced by Shark Shifters II - Rafe Jadison

    Seduced by Shark Shifters II: Logan’s Tail

    By Rafe Jadison

    Copyright 2015 Rafe Jadison

    Smashwords Edition

    Smashwords Edition License Notes

    This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    Prologue

    Chapter One

    Chapter Two

    Chapter Three

    Chapter Four

    Chapter Five

    Chapter Six

    Chapter Seven

    Chapter Eight

    About Rafe Jadison

    Other Books by Rafe Jadison

    PROLOGUE

    I never dreamed that I would find myself naked in a pool with sharks, but even at the tender age of twenty-two, I knew that life had a way of surprising you sometimes. It was kind of like finding out that your older brother, the one who had always been so dependable, is now gay and in love, and living with, not one, but two guys. Or the surprise you get when your father sends you, the not-so-dependable son, off to talk some sense into your older brother. Or the kind of surprise that comes when you realize that maybe your older brother is not the only one who is gay, and that at twenty-two, you’re exploring a whole new side of yourself that you never thought existed. Or perhaps the scariest surprise, the one that came before all the others was the one that came when you were twenty and your dad called to tell you that your perfectly healthy mother died from a heart attack while jogging.

    Yes, those are the surprises that scare the hell out of you. They’re the ones that make you breathe as fast as you can one moment, and not at all the next. They’re the ones that make you glad to be alive one second, and then suddenly questioning your whole existence. They’re the kind of surprises that those of us who live by the water expect. They’re the kind of surprises that I went through. My name is Logan. This is my story.

    CHAPTER ONE

    It still had only been about two years since my mother died, and the idea of abandoning my father, even at his request, didn’t leave me feeling good, but Dad insisted I go.

    I really think you’re brother has gone a little crazy down there, and he’s not listening to me, my father said. I’m hoping that you can talk some sense into him.

    The whole idea seemed crazy. Sam was in law school. I was home with a recently earned English degree, no job, no prospects, and the expectation from my father, who thinks I am talented, that I should be seriously working on my first novel. I had not written a word.

    How was I supposed to tell Sam how to live his life? Sam was the one always telling me to pull my head out of my ass, and I hate to admit it, but Sam was always right. He gave great advice. I was frequently screwing up and not seeing the big picture, and Sam was always there to bail me out. Like the time I stole my parents’ car when I was fourteen and wrecked it. It was Sam I called. He immediately came to the scene and had his friend Brady take me home and sneak me in a window they had left open for me. While I was covering my ass, so was Sam. He got into the driver’s seat and called my parents and told them that he was the one who had smashed the car into a stop sign while switching radio channels. I remember the way my parents looked at Sam the next morning, and how my mom said to me, Well, I’m glad you’re not doing crazy stuff, Logan.

    I tried not to laugh when she said it. That was probably the first time in my life that anyone had ever said that to me. I was always the one getting into trouble at school, the one whose teacher was calling because I was reading something entirely inappropriate and too mature. I was the one whose soccer coach phoned because I blew off soccer practice to swim at the beach, and the one whose math teacher emailed because I wrote stories during math.

    Of course Sam wasn’t the only one who knew how to deal with my screw-ups. My parents were really understanding about them also. For instance when they moved me from soccer into the swim team, even though my dad had played on the American Olympic Soccer Team when he was young. Or when my mom picked up the too mature book from my teacher and then read it. My mother walked into my room that night and said, Hey, I know you’re curious, but you’re only fourteen and I don’t like the way women are portrayed in this book. She handed me a book that was different from the one she had picked up from my teacher.

    Maybe this can be our compromise. It’s a little racy, but more appropriate for your age. You can let me know what you think.

    I looked at the book, and then at her. The book did look mildly interesting, but nothing like the one I had been reading at school.

    Okay, I’ll try it, I said grudgingly.

    The next morning at breakfast I was still holding the book she had given me. I had finished it. Thank God it was the weekend and I didn’t have school. When Mom walked into the kitchen, I pounced on her.

    Okay, it’s a deal. It’s our compromise, if we can go to the library and get everything else this woman’s written, I said.

    My father looked up from his morning paper and then at the title of the book. He raised an eyebrow and looked at my mother.

    He’s reading, she said to my father. The youth librarian recommended it. She said he wouldn’t put it down. This author wins awards for the way she draws in teens.

    My father nodded at her and smiled.

    You’re good at this, he said to her.

    My mother smiled back at him, and then she looked at me and said, It’s a deal, but you need to read them at home. You might have that teacher for the rest of the year, and she’s not terribly open-minded.

    Deal! I shouted. It’s almost summer time. Only two weeks left. I’ll read them at home until summer, and then I’ll have them read by the time school starts.

    I did finish reading everything that woman had written by the time the next school year started. Then my mother took me to the library again, and again. It became our ritual. Anytime I had a bad day, or even stayed home sick from school, my mother would take me to the library. One time I was in a bathrobe and slippers when we went.

    Sometimes, you just need to escape, she said.

    And I did. I escaped. And escaped. And escaped. I read everything I could, every time I could. I ended up getting along really well with that English teacher when I had her the next year again; that was the only class I had consistent A’s in. My other passion was swimming.

    That was something we all did. Not only did I spend my early mornings at swim team practice before school every day, but my parents loved to take Sam and me to the ocean as much as possible. Sometimes, we spent all weekend swimming at the beach. Our house was only a half-hour away, and it was my other escape. Sam says he went to Suncoast for law school because he got a full scholarship, but I think he went because it was close to the water, and to Dad.

    Looking back, I realize how lucky I was to have parents who were so understanding, and so loving. As an adult, I realize my mother was right, the book my teacher took from me was too old for me, and it didn’t show women how it should have. Also, if my mom had never introduced me to the other author, I may never have found my love of reading. My parents always seemed to know how to do the right thing.

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