THE HOLLOW REMEMBERS
The story is the first in a new series that takes place in Wild Hollow, West Virginia, where there are two rival wolf packs, the McKinleys and the Rawlings. They each have boundary lines and their side of the mountain. The McKinley pack is known for making and distributing moonshine. The Rawlings are adjusting to the return of Hudson, who left and served in the military, and after the death of his father, he has returned, the new Alpha of the Rawlings and also the Sheriff of Wild Hollow. Do any of the families even remember what the rivalry is about?
“The Universe must have a twisted sense of humor.”
The story will revolve around rivalries, unexplained happenings, people missing, and memories changed. Kathryn ‘Kate’ McKinley is running the store that has been in her family, along with her protector, a Canada goose named Hank, whom she rescued from being their family's Christmas dinner. Luke McKinley went missing many years ago, without a trace, but Kate believes he is out there, and someone knows, but isn’t talking. Hudson feels the same way. Both of them will encounter stone markers that are boundary lines for the two packs defaced.
“Someone’s carving up pack stones on their land—markers that haven’t been touched in decades, defaced like they mean nothing. It’s not just disrespect. It’s a message. And whoever’s sending it is smart enough to know exactly what those stones mean to us. Sacred ground. Boundaries drawn in blood. You don’t scratch at old walls unless you want war.”
The story will have Hudson and Kate going head to head. He knows, and is sure she does too, that they are fated mates—forget family rivalries, fate overrules. They were friends as kids, including Luke, and now these two are working together—and that isn’t something his pack is pleased with.
Hudson: Kate, wait.
Kate: I’m busy.
Hudson: I’m only saying what I should’ve said days ago—what we both know.
Kate: D… right, you should’ve. At the very least, you should have said it to me first. But, if you think you can just claim me like I’m a slice of pie at the diner…
Hudson: You’re not a slice of pie. You’re the fire I can’t put out. The instinct I can’t override. You belong to yourself, to this pack, and to me. If you give me the word, I’ll burn down the world and anyone that tries to touch you. I meant what I said to Eddard.
Kate: I know. Is it weird that I found it oddly arousing?
The story has the good, the bad, and the evil. Who, what, where, when, and why have caused issues in Wild Hollow? How is Luke connected? The story is shrouded in mystery, suspense, life and death danger, and discoveries. Kate and Hudson look past their family ties and acknowledge that fate has brought them together—and they make an excellent team. I loved how Hudson respects her, protects her goose (not a euphemism), and together, they go after the enemy.
“We run not as two creatures, but one rhythm—wild, primal, bonded even before the bite.”
“It’s strategy. I can feel it—the slow coil of a plan taking root in the dark. Not a challenge for dominance. Something quieter. Sharper. Sabotage. Deceit. Someone isn’t going to come at me head-on. They’re going to aim where it hurts most—her.”
I loved all the descriptions and details in the story because, as a reader, I became immersed in the location, as if I were there. Ms. Delta James described what was being seen, how things smelled, and painted such a vivid picture of the landscape, the destruction, and what they discovered. The chemistry between Kate and Hudson oozes off the pages, from their tête-à-tête banter to their sizzling erotic encounters.
The story doesn’t end on a cliffhanger, but more of a segue into the next story of Luke and Elena.