The Dawn of the End Read online Kristen Ashley (The Rising #3)

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Erotic, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Magic, Paranormal, Romance Tags Authors: Series: The Rising Series by Kristen Ashley
Advertisement1

Total pages in book: 157
Estimated words: 156907 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 785(@200wpm)___ 628(@250wpm)___ 523(@300wpm)
<<<<8797105106107108109117127>157
Advertisement2


There was no back. The silk that covered my behind held in place by the four thin straps that held the front.

And as you pulled it on like a dressing gown, the two sides came together at the front, meaning when I walked, quite a bit of leg was exposed.

I wore my hair in a bundle of curls at the top and it was threaded with gold chains on which were affixed tiny seed pearls.

The silk was clingy, the gown revealing, it was meant to garner attention.

And my husband was entertaining a beautiful woman in his study.

I moved to standing between the two chairs in front of Mars’s desk and looked up at her, lamenting my lack of height for perhaps the millionth time since I gained conscious thought.

“Ines,” I said. “Lovely to meet any family of Farah.”

“Your queen,” she replied oddly.

I did not understand her words.

But I did feel Mars’s reaction to this.

As did Ines.

Thus, she smiled enchantingly at him. “I’m sorry, Mars. Of course, she is my queen, but she is Dellish, so in a sense, our Farah is hers.”

“A queen has no queen, Ines,” Mars stated in a flinty voice, and it was at that I fully understood her words.

Thus, I fought seething.

She dipped her chin in a way that seemed an invitation and murmured, “Of course.”

“You’re in the city for how long?” I broke into their discourse.

Ines looked to me. “Oh, I don’t know. At least through Miet.”

“You’ll of course dine with us this evening,” I invited.

“Yes, of course, for Mars has already asked me.”

I tipped my head back and to the side to look at him, finding him peering down his nose at me.

Blankly.

It was not my favorite expression of his, but it was all I had been treated to since our quarrel (if I saw him at all).

“Well,” I stated, again shifting my attention to Ines. “I shall tell Francesco you’ll grace our table tonight. But I’m afraid I will have to get to know you then, Ines. I’ve been away, visiting a friend, and not seeing to my duties. I’m sure my secretary is keen to get me to my desk.”

“How extraordinary,” she murmured. “You’ve already made friends in Firenze?”

I stiffened, wondering why she would say such, and forced through tight lips. “Yes.”

“Hmm, I would be about much different endeavors as a new bride,” she remarked.

“Yes, well, when you are one, you will not also be a new queen,” I retorted.

Her eyes flashed with ire.

“Until dinner,” I murmured, sliced my gaze across Mars’s chest and kept murmuring, “My king.”

And then I turned and walked out of the room.

With determined steps, I strode down the hall, catching Angelo’s eyes, wondering why the man didn’t come to me for if he wanted me at my study, it was right across the hall from Mars’s.

Nevertheless, upon seeing me, he looked relieved.

This being, he did so until Tril veritably stumbled down the stairs into the entryway.

“Silence!” she cried. “There you are. I need a moment.”

Angelo’s expression turned beleaguered.

I stopped at the foot of the stairs amongst them both.

“I need to get to my study, Tril.”

Although, what I’d do there, I had no idea, for I had very little idea what I was doing a’tall.

“You didn’t…” She gazed down the hall, then at me, down the hall, and back to me. “Did I not catch you before you saw King Mars?”

“No, you didn’t,” I told her.

She examined me.

She then turned to Angelo and asked for, “A moment.”

His gaze came to me. “My queen, we really must—”

He did not finish for Tril took my hand and was dragging me up the stairs.

“A moment,” I said to Angelo, following her.

She only went as far as the landing before she stopped us, facing me, and took my other hand.

She then began babbling.

“They wanted you to know, the staff that is, that it was nothing. It happened. It was over. It meant nothing. In fact, from what they could tell, he didn’t even like her.”

I shook my head in confusion.

“What are you talking about?”

“That chit in with King Mars.”

My stomach dropped.

“She causes troubles,” Tril went on. “This why they warned me to be sure to warn you. She’s the opposite of Farah. There was even talk about how some witch somewhere broke the dawn to separate the dark and the light, for they were born on the same day, nearly at the same time, this being at the dawn. That one down there first, then Farah. That one down there the dark. Farah the light.”

I barely heard a word she said.

It happened. It was over. It meant nothing. In fact, from what they could tell, he didn’t even like her.

“Silence,” she shook my hands, “are you listening to me?”

I focused on her.

“I really need to know what Miet is.”

She stared at me.

“It’s crucial, Tril,” I continued. “What it is. How it’s celebrated. What has happened in the palace at Miets past. Can you ask the staff?”


Advertisement3

<<<<8797105106107108109117127>157

Advertisement4