Psyop Kings (The Crowne Conspiracy #1) Read Online K. Webster

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Dark, Thriller Tags Authors: Series: The Crowne Conspiracy Series by K. Webster
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Total pages in book: 84
Estimated words: 82068 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 410(@200wpm)___ 328(@250wpm)___ 274(@300wpm)
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I nearly crash into two girls when I round the corner to head down her hallway. They both grumble in irritation, but I pay no attention to their words.

I’m on a mission.

Find Megan and gripe her out.

When I reach her dorm room, I pound on the cheap wood with my fist. The difference in where we dorm here at USC is like night and day, a real testament to our dissimilar financial upbringings. Everything here smells weird and is aging, and yet, I still like her place better than the stuffy, prestigious building I live in.

No one answers, so I start banging on the door again. Finally, I hear the bolt disengage before the door swings open.

“You dropped! How could you do that without telling me?” I demand, already pointing a finger in her face.

Except it’s not her face.

A sleepy, freckle-faced girl with seven facial piercings stares at me without emotion. “What are you going on about, Barbie?”

I don’t bristle at the name because it’s not the first time Megan’s roommate, Drea, has called me that. Barbie may or may not have driven a cherry-red Audi like me, but I know for a fact she wasn’t batshit crazy.

“You’re not crazy.”

Maura flashes her disapproving frown whenever I call myself that.

“Where’s Megan?” I push against the door, but the girl standing behind it has at least sixty pounds over me, so it goes nowhere.

“Gone,” Drea says, scowling at me. “You woke me up. You can go now.”

This time, I put all my effort into muscling past her into the room. Drea curses at me but allows me to pass. I scan the small space, looking for my friend.

Her usually neatly made bed has been stripped. The pictures of her cat back home no longer pepper the paint-chipped walls. A once huge stack of YA dystopian and vampire novels is nowhere to be seen.

“What the hell?” I mutter under my breath. “Where is she?”

Drea huffs before crawling back into her bed. “Gone. Like I said.”

“Where? Why? How?”

“I’m not her keeper,” Drea grumbles. “All I know is she was all moved out when I got in late last night.” She shrugs one shoulder. “It’s not like she left a note or anything.”

I sit down on Megan’s bed and survey the empty side of her room. “This is all so weird.”

“I had three different roommates freshman year,” Drea says. “Not that strange. Some people can’t cut it.”

But she can cut it.

Megan is smart and hardworking.

Things just aren’t adding up.

“I need to talk to her,” I say to Drea, “but she’s not answering. I’m really worried.”

Drea sits up on one elbow. “Don’t look at me. I don’t have her number.”

They’ve been sharing a room all semester and they never exchanged numbers? It irritates me more than it should. Drea seems to be a strong, confident girl. Megan could have used someone like her in her court.

All she has is me.

The thought saddens me. Maybe she’ll call me later and tell me everything. We may be new friends, but I already feel a gaping hole in my chest. Nothing about this feels right.

I slide my backpack off to pull out a notebook. Quickly, I scribble down my number with Romy, not Barbie, at the top and then tear out the sheet of paper.

“Call me if you get word from her or if she comes back,” I instruct as I set the paper down on the end table. “I really need to speak to her.”

“If I promise, will you leave, Barbie?”

I have the urge to flip this girl off, but I refrain. “Yup.”

After I tuck my notebook into my bag, I throw it back on my shoulder and scan the room one last time for clues.

Nothing.

I head for the door to let myself out but stop when I see a blue and yellow crumpled pamphlet sitting on top of the trash in the tiny bin near the door. Drea doesn’t gripe at me for digging in her trash, but I also don’t stall any longer. I grab the pamphlet on my way out.

Once I’m in the Fabulosa hallway again, I hurry toward the building lobby. As soon as I find an armchair, I plop down and roll out the crumpled pamphlet.

Crowne Unity Project.

“Never heard of it,” I mutter as I start reading.

The Crowne Unity Project is a gift to the world. We make it our mission to uplift and transform individuals who have been left behind in modern society, providing them with the necessary resources and support they need to reach their full potential and contribute meaningfully to the world.

I get the odd sensation of someone watching me, but when I look up and scan the lobby, I discover I’m the only one here. This whole thing is creeping me out. I quickly check my texts, but Megan has left me on unread.


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