'Tis said of love that it sometimes goes, sometimes flies; runs with one, walks gravely with another; turns a third into ice, and sets a fourth in a flame: it wounds one, another it kills: like lightning it begins and ends in the same moment: it makes that fort yield at night which it besieged but in the morning; for there is no force able to resist it.
--Miguel de Cervantes
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The last thing Tucker Bay needed the day after he celebrated his twentieth birthday was the improbable popping up of a long-forgotten marriage contract. As if the eerie reappearance of this connubial covenant was not enough, he now has to deal with an unwanted band around his ring finger and an extreme case of the queasies which apparently will only be vanquished by being in the presence of his fellow winged horse shifter Laird Roan.
Laird's less than felicitous welcoming of Tucker to his Vancouver home is met head on by Tucker who refuses accept Laird's crappy attitude, even if he has had an enormous crush on the guy for far longer than he would care to admit. However, as they spend time together and work through their differences, Tucker begins to feel that maybe there is more to this marriage contract business than he'd originally reckoned.

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