The Robin on the Oak Throne (The Oak and Holly Cycle #2) Read Online K.A. Linde

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Paranormal Tags Authors: Series: The Oak and Holly Cycle Series by K.A. Linde
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Total pages in book: 194
Estimated words: 187021 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 935(@200wpm)___ 748(@250wpm)___ 623(@300wpm)
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Laz was already stepping out, opening the back door, and helping her get the fake cauldron inside the limo. “Fine. But the actual cauldron?”

“Gone,” she said on a sigh.

“Not gone,” another voice said on the line.

“Graves,” Kierse said with relief. “What happened?”

“I’ll fill you in later,” he promised. “Schwartz got a tracker on both boxes. I’m sending the connection to George. I’ll meet you there with Edgar.”

“Got it, Boss,” Laz said.

Of course Graves had a Plan D when A, B, and C went to shit.

George pulled away, heading south. Kierse kept glancing at the decoy box, wondering at the magical signature and whether she’d be able to break through the security. At first glance, it was deceptively easy, but she knew what sort of traps were locked into it. A dangerous smile came to her as she thought about learning its secrets.

George continued south until 9th Avenue turned into Hudson through the West Village, then veered left onto Bleecker Street. The darkness brightened as they entered the Village and its nightlife ignited through the charming streets and artists’ center. Late-night restaurants were packed. Music filtered out from the bars. A comedy club off of MacDougal had a line wrapped around the block.

Kierse gaped. “Wow.”

“Looks like the tracker stopped,” George said.

“Fuck,” Graves growled on the line.

“What?” Kierse asked.

George pulled over, and Kierse glanced out the window. Her heart dropped. Graves was right. “Fuck” was absolutely the correct word.

Kierse stepped onto the cement behind the comedy club and looked up at the New York City entrance to Nying Market.

“I’m ten minutes out,” Graves said.

“We don’t have ten minutes,” Kierse said with Laz at her back.

“Fuck,” he snarled again.

George was suddenly at her side, offering her a coin and the phone tracking the cauldron. “Is there anything else you require?”

“Thank you, George. I think I have it from here.”

Then she stepped into the goblin market, alone.

Interlude

George watched her disappear into Nying Market without a backward glance. Brave girl.

Boss was going to be furious.

He answered the phone on the first ring. “She’s already inside.”

“Do you have a second coin?” Graves asked gruffly.

“Just the one, sir.”

Graves was silent a moment as if he was trying not to rip his hair out. George had known him a long time. He had never seen him quite like this until Kierse McKenna had entered his life.

It was a change for the better, in his opinion.

Not that anyone asked the opinion of the driver. They never had when he had been shuttling billionaires around for his father’s business. He’d been just seventeen in San Francisco, and the only thing he’d wanted to do was escape. Take his surfboard and travel the world chasing the next big, daredevil maneuver. He’d tried skydiving, cliff jumping, and cave diving. His buddy had sold him a beat-up motorcycle that he’d fixed up with the scraps from his day job, and had been working on his pilot’s license. Anything to piss off his parents, who wanted him to focus on school so he could graduate and take over for his father.

It had taken someone far more powerful than them to curb his enthusiasm.

After crashing his motorcycle in a street race, George had been forced to spend his spring break driving for his dad’s business instead of on a surf trip with his buddies. He’d gotten Graves for the entire week.

The man was mercurial at best. George was intrigued despite himself by the strangely scary man who tipped generously and was always reading in the back of his limo.

Graves had gotten into the car on his last day in town. “How fast can you drive this thing?”

“Sir?” George had asked in confusion.

“I need to get to the airport as fast as you can get me there.”

A slow smile spread on George’s face at Graves’s instruction. He’d driven for people who wanted him to do shady shit, but never anyone who wanted him to floor it to the airport. Could he get in trouble for that? Did he care?

“Yes, sir,” he said smoothly.

He put the car into Drive and his foot to the floor. Someone was following them. Someone was shooting at them. He was pretty sure that something was blowing up in the distance. Was that the location they’d just left?

Not enough time for questions. Airport was all that had mattered. And he’d gotten there in record time. Not even a cop on their tail, miraculously. He’d followed Graves’s directions to the private runway he’d rented for his jet and George had driven out onto the tarmac.

He’d calmly turned around with a wide smile, his heart beating to the tempo of the chase. “Was there anything else you require, sir?”

Graves had tilted his head at him. He’d assessed him, seen something there, something he’d appreciated. He’d offered George a job, a bargain, a life.

George had taken the deal and never looked back. Sure, while much of his job was still shuttling around a billionaire, there were times when he’d gotten to race in Monte Carlo or fly through Thailand or surf in Tahiti, and he’d known it was all worth it. Today proved it all over again. The adrenaline still hummed in his veins from the chase.


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