Pumpkin patch pack, p.1

Pumpkin Patch Pack, page 1

 

Pumpkin Patch Pack
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Pumpkin Patch Pack


  Pumpkin Patch Pack

  J. Ever

  Copyright © 2025 by J. Ever

  www.jeverauthor.com

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise without written permission from the publisher. It is illegal to copy this book, post it to a website, or distribute it by any other means without permission.

  This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author's imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

  This book is published exclusively on Amazon. Any other version found outside of Amazon is an illegal, pirated copy. Please support the author by reading through legitimate channels. Thank you for reading responsibly.

  Editing: Caity Hides

  Cover illustration: Anastasia Khmelevska

  Ad: J. Ever

  Chapter headers: Canva

  Contents

  Blurb

  Content Note

  Dedication

  For The Modern Omega!

  Preface

  1. Emma

  2. Emma

  3. Inbox Notification

  4. Emma

  5. Liam

  6. Emma

  7. Maple

  8. Emma

  9. Rowan

  10. Inbox Notification

  11. Inbox Notification

  12. Emma

  13. Emma

  14. Inbox Notification

  15. Emma

  16. Liam

  17. Emma

  18. Theo

  19. Emma

  20. Inbox Notification

  21. Emma

  22. Emma

  23. Rowan

  24. Emma

  25. Theo

  26. Emma

  27. Emma

  28. Maple

  29. Emma

  30. Rowan

  31. Emma

  32. Epilogue

  Alpha-Away!

  Thank You For Reading!

  About The Author

  Blurb

  Three hot farmers, one determined goat, and an omega in hiding.

  What could go wrong?

  After escaping an attempted forced bond and the betrayal of those who should’ve protected me, all I want is to disappear. So I flee to a sleepy small town where no one knows my name. A seasonal job running the local pumpkin patch’s social media is the perfect cover to stay quiet, stay busy, and stay forgotten.

  But Harvest Home Farm has other plans.

  Rowan, the alpha co-owner, smells like burnt sugar and looks at me like he knows I’m his.

  Theo, his cinnamon-sweet beta brother who’s too charming for my own good. And

  Liam, the flannel-wrapped alpha farmhand with smoke in his scent and pain in his eyes.

  Then there’s Maple, their four-legged troublemaker who’s determined to blow my cover.

  When my past catches up, I’ll have to choose: keep running or finally trust the pack that would do anything to protect what’s theirs.

  Full of cozy sweetness, scent-matched tension, and flannel heat, Pumpkin Patch Pack is a standalone Omegaverse Why Choose romance perfect for fans of slow-burning tension and fall-in-a-book vibes.

  Content Note

  This is a cozy slow-burn, why-choose Omegaverse romance that contains references to a controlling ex, assault, and a parent’s substance abuse recovery. The FMC is never harmed by her mates. Includes brief violence during climax. HEA guaranteed.

  Best enjoyed with a cozy blanket and a warm mug of apple cider.

  Dedication

  For Maple, the real star of this book. And for troublemakers everywhere.

  Order Alpha-Away today!

  Preface

  This is all Maple’s fault.

  Not the tree, the syrup, or the particular shade of orange leaf stuck to your boot in the fall.

  No, I mean Maple… the goat.

  The four-legged troublemaker.

  Granted, she’s adorable with her white, fluffy hair and pink collar. Those big expressive eyes seem to understand every word you say.

  But don’t be fooled.

  Maple doesn’t just want your affection or contraband apples (which I definitely have not been sneaking to her). She wants your complete and total surrender to her tiny-hooved agenda.

  She’ll strike when you least expect it.

  You’ve been warned.

  But really…

  Who takes goat warnings seriously?

  1

  Emma

  The rearview mirror shows nothing but an empty road behind me, but I check it anyway.

  Again.

  Like I have every five minutes since I’ve left the motel.

  The “Welcome to Autumn Falls” sign appears suddenly around a curve in the road. Its weathered wood is painted with cheerful orange and red leaves, some of the paint chipping away at the edges.

  I ease my foot off the gas, my old, rusted car chugging in protest as I slow to the posted twenty-five miles per hour.

  Slow is good. Small is good. Forgotten is best.

  A place where no one knows my name or my past.

  My fingers tap nervously against the steering wheel, a rhythm that matches my heartbeat; fast and loud. The leather covering is worn thin where countless previous owners have gripped it, and I wonder briefly if any of them were running too.

  I drive through what passes as downtown, a strip of quaint storefronts with hand-painted signs. A café with checkered curtains has a chalkboard sign advertising Pumpkin Spice Lattes. A cute boutique displays knitted scarves in its window, and a hardware store that looks like it hasn’t changed since the 1950s.

  No one glances twice at my car, a beat-up 2002 Honda Accord.

  The relief is so potent that my eyes sting, and I blink rapidly.

  “You’re fine,” I tell myself, a habit I’ve developed over the past 5 months of solitude. “Just another face in the crowd. Just another stranger drifting past.”

  Except I’m not passing through. I’m staying, at least for the harvest season.

  For the next three months, I’ll be running the social media for Harvest Home Farm, a job I secured through a spotty Zoom interview in which I kept my camera angled to hide the bruise still healing on my cheek.

  Three more months to breathe; to plan and decide if I need to run further or if this tiny speck on the map might actually be far enough away.

  The GPS on my phone directs me to take a right onto a narrow road that winds up a gentle slope. The pavement gives way to gravel, and tall trees form a canopy overhead, their leaves just beginning to turn gold at the edges.

  The air from my cracked window smells different here; earthy and clean, with none of the city’s pollution.

  After a mile of forest, the trees part to reveal what can only be Harvest Home Farm spread across the hillside before me.

  Rows of pumpkins dot the nearest field, their orange vivid against the dark soil. Beyond them, an orchard stretches toward the horizon, and to the right stands a large red barn with white trim that looks like it belongs on a postcard. A beautiful farmhouse, larger than I expected, sits at the center of it all, its wide porch wrapping around at least two sides.

  Several smaller buildings cluster nearby: outbuildings, a farm stand, and what appear to be small cottages set back near the tree line. According to the email instructions, one of these will be mine.

  I pull into the gravel lot where a hand-painted sign reads “Visitor Parking” and cut the engine.

  I hear birds calling to each other, a tractor’s distant hum, and leaves’ soft rustling. My heart pounds in my chest, each beat a reminder that I’ve made it this far.

  I check my reflection in the rearview mirror, pushing a strand of hair behind my ear. I look thinner. My eyes are too large in my face now. They stare back with a wariness that never used to be there.

  I ensure my scent patch is securely in place on my neck, pressing the edges down with my fingertips. Before leaving the motel, I took my morning dose of hormone suppressants; they do a good job of both blocking my scent and my ability to pick up on scents, but the patches offer insurance.

  I wrap a light scarf around my neck to hide the patch. Because nothing screams I’m definitely an omega, quite like visible scent-blocking patches. With the suppressants and patch working together, I’m like any other beta female. My scent should be masked entirely to alphas; theirs won’t affect me either.

  Win-win.

  Being an unbonded omega can be dangerous, even without the added complications of my past. When alphas catch the scent, it can easily send them into a rut. And the last thing I need right now is that kind of attention, especially when it comes with possessive, growling alphaholes.

  “You can do this. Just be forgettable. Do your job. Stay quiet.”

  I check my phone; my battery is at 3%, and my anxiety is at DEFCON one.

  The screen flickers as I pull up the email with instructions to meet Rowan at the main house.

  I should have charged it last night, but the motel’s only outlet was across the room, and I couldn’t sleep without it next to me under my pillow, along with my Alpha-Away spray. I manage to open the email file as my screen goes black.

  Well, I guess I’d better find my new boss.

  The slam of my car door echoes across the parking lot. I smooth down my oversized swe ater, another layer of protection hiding my thinning shape. Being on the run has meant keeping a roof over my head for as long as possible and thinking about food later.

  I head toward the farmhouse, each step kicking up little clouds of dust that settle on my worn-out sneakers.

  As I approach the porch steps, movement catches my eye—a flash of white from behind a barrel of apples. I freeze, my heart pounding in my ears, fingers tightening on the strap of my bag, already searching for my Alpha-Away spray, eyes searching the growing shadows.

  But it’s not a person.

  It’s an animal.

  A small one with white fluffy hair and a pink collar, its rectangular pupils fixed on me. My breathing evens out, and the panic ebbs as I realize I am looking at a goat.

  “Hey there, cutie pie,” I say, my voice rusty from disuse. My grip on my bag loosens as I take in the sweet little creature on the porch.

  The goat steps closer, its tiny hooves clicking on the wooden deck. It tilts its head as if assessing me, and lets out a bleat that sounds almost like a greeting. Then, darting away, it disappears around the corner of the house with surprising speed for something so small.

  “You’ve got this,” I give myself one last pep talk. “Just smile, nod, and don’t say anything weird”.

  “Hello?” I call out.

  The screen door swings open before I can knock, and a man fills the doorframe so entirely that I instinctively step back, my hand darting into my bag.

  He’s more handsome than I remembered from our video call, and taller than I expected too, not that I could tell when he was sitting down. He has broad shoulders and cropped dirty blond hair. His expression is serious, almost stern, and he’s wearing a shirt with the sleeves rolled up to reveal golden forearms corded with muscle.

  I catch the briefest whiff of sweetness coming from him, even through my suppressants, and I praise myself for adding the patch. It was obviously necessary.

  Rowan. The alpha co-owner of Harvest Home Farm.

  His nostrils flare, a common alpha reaction when meeting someone new, but his expression doesn’t change. If he can smell anything beyond “generic beta female,” he doesn’t show it.

  “Emma,” he says, his voice deep and rumbling. “You found us alright.”

  It’s not a question, but I nod anyway, my fingers fidgeting with the hem of my sweater. “The directions were good.”

  His light brown eyes, which remind me of maple syrup, scan over me quickly and clinically. I resist the urge to hunch my shoulders or squirm. Showing weakness around alphas only encourages them to push boundaries.

  “You’re earlier than I expected,” he says, stepping aside to let me in. “The cottage’s ready, though.”

  I hesitate before crossing the threshold into his territory. Every omega instinct screams caution around unfamiliar alphas, but I’ve gotten good at ignoring those instincts.

  The farmhouse interior is unexpectedly modern. It is open-concept, with wooden beams overhead, a large kitchen with granite countertops, and comfortable-looking furniture around a stone fireplace.

  His scent is stronger inside: a faint burnt sugar threaded with musk mixed with something warm like cinnamon and vanilla. It feels comforting, inviting, and unexpected, like stepping into a kitchen where someone’s been baking all afternoon.

  Taking a deep breath is a mistake. The sweet spiced warmth curls through me like a blanket from the dryer, coaxing my inner omega to stir when she should be silent.

  This shouldn’t be happening. Not with the suppressants in my system. They should block this reaction completely, not just dampen it. Instead, I catalog every note like I’m some scent sommelier.

  I haven’t had this kind of reaction since… well, ever.

  I clench my fists, trying to focus on the pain of my nails digging into my palms, instead of my body’s traitorous reaction to this sweet-smelling alpha male.

  Every omega wanting to join the regular workforce must take extra-strength suppressants—federal law, for "our protection." I’ve been on the maximum legal dose for years, ever since I landed my first job. Before that, I’d taken the regular strength ones since my omega designation manifested at fifteen.

  Most omegas will go off of them occasionally for their heats, but I’ve always been more focused on my career; not many omegas make it to my level in the workforce before they pack up and start families.

  Since fleeing the city, I’ve added the scent patch to my regimen for extra security and sanity. I don’t need anyone figuring out my designation or identity, lest it get back to him. The combination should make me virtually undetectable and immune to alpha pheromones. But right now, with Rowan standing so close, my body is responding in ways it shouldn’t.

  Only a dominant alpha could have such a potent scent. That or my anxiety must be affecting the suppressants’ effectiveness. Stress hormones can do that; it was in the fine print of the medication pamphlet I’d memorized.

  I’ll need to add a second patch tomorrow.

  “Coffee?” Rowan asks, already moving toward the kitchen. “You’ve had a long drive.”

  “Yes, please.” My voice comes out steadier than I feel, which I count as a win.

  He pours from a carafe into a mug that says Harvest Home Farm in cursive letters, then slides it across the island counter toward me, without coming too close, which I appreciate.

  I wrap my fingers around it—the warmth seeping into my perpetually cold hands—and inhale deeply; the delicious aroma briefly covers the alpha’s scent, and helps to calm my nerves.

  “So,” he says, leaning against the counter. “In person at last.”

  I take a sip to avoid responding immediately. The coffee is good, rich, and strong.

  “Thank you for the opportunity,” I finally say. “I’m looking forward to helping with your social media presence.”

  His mouth quirks slightly at one corner, not quite a smile. “We need it. My brother Theo is convinced we need to ‘expand our digital footprint’ or whatever he calls it. Says the younger crowd won’t come unless we’re on all the platforms.”

  “He’s not wrong,” I say, immediately wondering if I’ve overstepped. But Rowan just nods thoughtfully.

  I catch myself staring and quickly look back down at my coffee.

  “Marketing was never my strong suit. I handle the financial and business side of the farm, Theo does events and staffing, and Liam manages the animals and maintenance.” He takes a swallow of his coffee. “Between the three of us, we keep things running, but none of us have time to post… whatever it is people want to see.”

  “Pumpkin patch content is very popular in the fall,” I tell him, feeling firmer when discussing work. “People love the aesthetic—the colors, the activities. If you’re offering hayrides, mazes, cider, those are all things that photograph well. And with the right hashtags—”

  A loud BANG from somewhere outside makes me jump. Coffee sloshes over the rim of my mug, scalding my fingers. My heart hammers against my ribs, and I’m halfway to the door with my Alpha-Away gripped tightly in my hand before I even realize I’ve moved.

  “Just Liam,” Rowan says calmly, not moving from his spot. “Probably fixing something on the tractor again. He gets frustrated when machinery doesn’t cooperate.”

  I freeze, suddenly aware of how I must look. I release the canister back into my bag without revealing my hand.

  Carrying Omega Guard spray would be a dead giveaway.

  Heat crawls up my neck as I force myself to breathe normally. I unclench my fingers from the mug handle as hot coffee trickles down my hand.

  “Sorry,” I mumble, eyes fixed on the floor. “Startled me.”

  When I finally look up, Rowan’s gaze feels too perceptive, too knowing. There’s something in the way he watches me that makes my heart speed up.

  “No need to apologize,” he says quietly. He reaches for a dish towel and offers it to me without comment. I take it, careful not to let our fingers brush, and wipe the coffee from my hand.

  The silence stretches between us.

  “Let me show you around,” he says, setting his mug down. “You should see what you’ll be working with.”

 

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