A Cage of Crimson (Deliciously Dark Fairytales #5) Read Online K.F. Breene

Categories Genre: Dark, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Magic, Paranormal Tags Authors: Series: Deliciously Dark Fairytales Series by K.F. Breene
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Total pages in book: 164
Estimated words: 152666 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 763(@200wpm)___ 611(@250wpm)___ 509(@300wpm)
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His laughter was loud and jubilant. People glanced back, making me slouch behind him again. He didn’t mind the contact at all. He’d never once flinched away or tightened up. I could’ve been his best friend for how comfortable he was with my touch. I found I liked it—the easy, friendly closeness.

“Usually I don’t spell it out so clearly,” he said, still chuckling. “If I’m flirting, the hint is sexual. If it’s a new person in the castle, I might be more lewd.”

“But with me?”

“I’m obvious and your reaction is priceless. Welcome to debauchery, my darling. We’re going to have a whole lot of fun. Now, quit stalling. It’s your turn for a story. I told you about my scary encounter with the Mighty Vagina that had teeth. You tell me something from your life.”

His stories were so insane that they all just seemed like crass fabrications of reality, like a never-ending party with unlimited product at his disposal. He’d take my concoctions in stride. I’d told him so. They might not even be enough to compete with his past.

Then he’d mentioned addiction and dying and we agreed to disagree. Because while maybe I would allow that people were getting addicted based on their desire for the effects, they were not dying. We’d never had one fatality. Not one! It’s why I’d put in fail-safes. It’s why I’d designed the product a certain way. If people were taking hallucinogens and dying from them, they weren’t taking my product. End of story.

Hadriel hadn’t pushed like Weston always had. Instead, he listened to a story that didn’t at all relate to my village, Granny or my job. I told him about my mom finally scraping enough money together to buy a forever home for us, and how we’d created a vegetable garden and planted flowers.

“That sounds lovely,” Hadriel said when I’d finished. The light continued to decay around us. “I love flowers. I’m absolute shit at keeping them alive, but I love them.”

“I’m not great, either.”

“And where is your mom now?”

I leaned harder into him, resting my cheek on his shoulder, my fingers stilling in tracing the dicks on his jacket. “The townspeople didn’t like that we’d moved in. They used to throw things at us and call us names when we shopped. I remember someone standing on the other side of the lane from us as we walked home one day, yelling that we had no business in the shifter lands. We didn’t belong.”

“Why is that?”

“Because we had no magic.”

“Your mom was suppressed also?”

“I’m—we aren’t suppressed. She wasn’t suppressed. She didn’t have magic. She was a dud. I’m sure you’ve heard the term.”

“Riiiight . . .” He drew out the word. “But many people call shifters duds when that shifter is just suppressed. A strong alpha can usually pull out the animal. It doesn’t even need to be the same shifter type. A dragon pulled out my wolf.”

He’d told me stories of his animal being suppressed by the demons, their whole kingdom cursed and living without the magic that made them shifters. I believed him when he said he knew what it was like not to feel an animal inside or have the benefits of healing and strength. Weston, too, it seemed, had lived for a time without his animal.

“She went to the strongest alphas she could find to try and pull out her animal. It didn’t work. They couldn’t even feel one inside her. The last alpha apparently made me, and when she’d told him she was with child, he banished her from the kingdom.”

“Wait.” Hadriel half turned to look back at me. I clutched onto him, worried I’d slide down the side of the horse. “Wait, wait, fucking stop. Stop. Everyone just calm the fuck down.”

“What?” I glanced around but no one so much as looked over. “Are you talking to me or the horse or . . .?”

“Banished her from the kingdom?” Hadriel asked, still trying to turn and look at me. “That’s not a thing unless you’re royalty.”

“She was anything but royalty. She grew up poor. Her family didn’t have much, including power.”

“And the alpha that put something in instead of pulling something out?”

I spit out a laugh and then snaked my hand between us to wipe him down. “Sorry.“

“Don’t worry about that, spit is the least of the terrible substances that have been sprayed on me. Talk faster, love, I’m dying from curiosity.”

I shook my head slowly, trying to remember the scant things she’d said about it. I’d never pushed, seeing how much it hurt her.

“I don’t think the alpha was royalty, no. But she did go to the court to ask for help, and I think she was granted an audience by one of the staff or something. She was really beautiful, my mom. Really lovely. She had this . . . way about her. Men could be calling her a name one moment, and then asking her over the next. She never went, not that I saw. I get why. It’s demoralizing when all they want is your body and then are disgusted with themselves after they have it. I had to learn that the hard way.”


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