Bull Moon Rising (Royal Artifactual Guild #1) Read Online Ruby Dixon

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Paranormal Tags Authors: Series: Royal Artifactual Guild Series by Ruby Dixon
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Total pages in book: 179
Estimated words: 169943 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 850(@200wpm)___ 680(@250wpm)___ 566(@300wpm)
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“What?” Gwenna asks, turning to me in a panic. “What now?”

“Remember how Lark said we’d landed in a graveyard?” I ask, tired. “And I said no, the Prellians buried their dead in their houses because they wanted them close by?”

“NO,” Gwenna cries, realization dawning on her. Kipp slumps, his hand on his snout.

I nod. “We found the crypt.”

The others sag with defeat. I know how they feel. It’s like we’re being hit with bad luck over and over again. The door shakes and rattles once more, and everyone looks uneasy. Lark and Kipp untie their rope leads, and I don’t blame them. I untie mine, too. We’re not going anywhere.

“We need to reinforce the door,” I point out. “I don’t think there’s another way out of here, but at least they can’t get in.”

“Yet,” Lark adds.

“All right, all right, enough sunshine from you,” Gwenna tells her. She holds the piece of shell back out to Kipp. “You can have this back. It’s caused enough trouble for us so far.”

He cradles it to his chest lovingly, stroking the hard, jagged edges.

The door jerks again.

“Reinforcements?” Mereden asks in a small voice.

“What can we use?” Gwenna looks around, frustrated. “I don’t see any furniture and this is the one place there are no fallen rocks.”

I hate myself even as I brush the dust off the bier at the end of the small crypt. “This has a stone lid. We can use it.”

We all pause, considering.

“Ugh,” Gwenna says after a moment.

“I know. I want to smack myself for even suggesting it, but I think whoever is in there would understand.” I want to wring my hands but my wrist feels like loose shards of glass. “It feels wrong, but to me it’s more wrong to let those things in.”

“Even more wrong than wrong if we let them kill us,” Mereden says. “I vote we grab it.”

“Let’s just do it and we’ll apologize to the dead later,” Gwenna says.

We five move to the side of the stone bier. The sides are high, the sarcophagus deep. The lid looks thin, barely two knuckles wide, but the weight feels near impossible. It takes all of us heaving and struggling to even lift it just enough to tilt it off to one corner. From there, we slide it to the floor and then continue to slide it over to the door. Once we lean the stone against the double doors, I collapse against it, exhausted.

Nothing’s coming in through this, that’s for damn sure.

“I could sleep for a week,” Lark says dramatically, flopping her pack down beside me.

“Even with all these dead bodies around?” Mereden asks.

“Even with.”

“Not me. I’m going to have nightmares about Magpie and Barnabus and rats,” Gwenna states as she slides down to the floor across from us. Kipp nods, still petting his shell fragment.

“Magpie and Barnabus and rats? Aren’t they all the same thing?” Mereden jokes. We groan, and she smiles with fatigue, looking over at Lark. “Sorry.”

Lark waves a hand. “She’s dead to me after this.”

It’s easy to say such things when you’re in a bad place and hurting, but something tells me that Lark will have a harder time detangling herself from her aunt’s influence, especially if Magpie remains our teacher. Just the thought makes me want to burst into hysterical laughter. To think I’d counted myself lucky—lucky!—that the famous Magpie was going to be teaching us.

I should have run for the hills.

Gwenna comes to sit next to me. “You all right, Aspeth?”

Her kind words make me shrug. I genuinely don’t know if I am or not. Of all of us, I’d thought I had the most to gain or lose—but it’s all the same when you’re about to die, isn’t it? The door shakes again, but it’s clear nothing is coming through, not with the heavy slab parked against it and us leaning on it. The ratlings aren’t leaving.

Well, neither are we. There’s nowhere for our Five to go.

But Gwenna wants a better answer than a shrug. I can tell by her expression. “Just thinking about Hawk. If he finds us, he’s going to be really, really mad.”

“At us or at Magpie?”

“Both.” I imagine his furious expression, his eyes narrowed and his nostrils flared, and instead of making me worry, I feel a bolt of longing so intense it hurts. I miss him. I wish he were here. Hells, I wish I were at his side instead of down here in the catacombs.

I’ve failed in my end of the bargain, too. I’d promised him I’d be his wife and partner through the Conquest Moon’s grasp and instead ran away into the Everbelow only to get trapped. He won’t have anyone for his Conquest Moon. He’ll think I’ve betrayed him, that I haven’t held up my part of our deal.

Poor Hawk will have to rely on sex workers. I picture him in the alley, women crawling all over him and begging for him to touch them, and something deep inside me dies.


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