Feast of the Fallen (Villains of Kassel #3) Read Online Lydia Michaels

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Dark, Virgin Tags Authors: Series: Villains of Kassel Series by Lydia Michaels
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Total pages in book: 164
Estimated words: 156728 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 784(@200wpm)___ 627(@250wpm)___ 522(@300wpm)
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The man rushed forward, but stilled several feet away, as if purposely trying not to corner her.

“Don’t be afraid.” He raised his hands, palms out.

Firelight caught the hard angles of his jaw and the storm-grey of his eyes as his soaked clothes dripped onto the dark wood floor. His emerald vest and pants appeared black as the wet fabric clung to his frame.

She knew him. The hunter from the balcony. The one who had danced with her. The one who had pressed a gun to Hadrian’s skull.

Her back hit the wall as she pressed herself into the corner, pulling her knees to her chest. Cold air bit at her exposed skin and she shivered uncontrollably.

He watched her for a long moment, his expression unreadable. Then he turned and walked away.

Daisy’s heart hammered against her ribs as she tracked his movement. The door. If she could get to the door before him, she could run. But he was already there. Her feet throbbed with every racing heartbeat as his fingers found the gilded lock.

Metal scraped against metal as he twisted a heavy brass key. He held it up so she could see, carrying it toward the center of the room. He held it out to her like an offering. Like a trap.

“For your safety,” he said, his voice low and measured.

She didn’t move. Didn’t breathe.

He wanted her to come to him. Looked prepared to wait her out.

After a long moment, when it was clear she wasn’t falling for his trick, he set the key down with a soft click on a low table positioned between the fireplace and the seating area.

Stepping back from the table, he put distance between himself and the key. Between himself and her. His hands remained visible, open, unthreatening.

“It will stay there unless you move it.” He glanced to the open doors where dark curtains waved and rain had left tiny puddles on the floor then to the one he’d just locked. “No one can hurt you here.”

Except him.

“Who are you?” The words scraped past her ruined throat like broken glass.

“I’m Jack.”

Jack? Her gaze dropped to his right hand, to the heavy signet ring that caught the firelight. She had seen those initials before, during their dance. R.A.

“That’s not your name.” She pressed harder against the wall, as if she could phase through the plaster and disappear. “Your ring says R.A.”

A muscle twitched in his jaw as he let the lie stand between them.

She tensed when a bell tolled above, loud and close, making the implication that much harder to ignore. Beyond the rain-streaked glass, darkness still blanketed the grounds. The sky was black, still hours from dawn.

“Where am I?”

“My suite.”

Still at the Feast, then. Still trapped on this godforsaken island. Was this where the hunters stayed, in this house of horrors and its twisted games?

Her eyes darted to the windows. Distant shouts and laughter blended with music that belonged to another world. Another time.

He took a step forward.

Daisy scrambled sideways, knocking into a heavy table along the wall.

“Careful.” He stopped.

Her spine scraped against the cold plaster, her ruined feet too swollen to stand.

“I won’t hurt you.” His voice dropped, quieter now, stripped of command. “You’re safe here.”

Safe. The word meant nothing.

He’d been out there tonight, masked and hunting like all the rest. Drunk on privilege. Entitled to take at will. Whatever compelled him to stop Hadrian, didn’t make him trustworthy. It made him unpredictable.

She recalled the way he threatened him. His tone, more than his words, was personal. He wasn’t rescuing her. He was punishing an enemy.

Where was his gun?

Her gaze swept the room, cataloging exits and obstacles with the desperate clarity of prey. One door behind him, locked, key on the table. Windows to her left, but they overlooked an extensive drop to the gardens below. A balcony beyond the heavy curtains. She would never reach it before he caught her.

They like when you run…

The suite itself dripped with masculine power. A massive bed dominated one wall, its garnet velvet curtains hanging from an ornately carved canopy, like the trappings of some dark fairy tale. Leather chairs flanked the fireplace where flames crackled and popped. A wet bar gleamed in the corner, crystal decanters catching the light like captured stars.

Everywhere she looked, she found evidence of his advantages. Heavy candlesticks that could crack a skull. An iron poker beside the hearth. His size, his strength, his knowledge of this place. Even soaking wet and shivering, he radiated the kind of power that came from certainty. From control.

She had neither.

He lifted a staying hand. “Stay.” The word landed soft as a whisper, a plea more than a command.

Daisy didn’t move. She watched, unblinking, as he moved toward the wet bar.

Crystal clinked against crystal as he poured water from a silver pitcher into a glass. He walked it toward her, stopping several feet away, and held it out.


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