The Plan Commences Read online Kristen Ashley (The Rising #2)

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Magic, Paranormal, Romance, Witches Tags Authors: Series: The Rising Series by Kristen Ashley
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Total pages in book: 208
Estimated words: 209645 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 1048(@200wpm)___ 839(@250wpm)___ 699(@300wpm)
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True had not been among them.

They were his men and they were not hiding from me True’s participation in these shenanigans for fear of what I might think.

I could tell by the smile on True’s face that it was grounded in gladness his men had these adventures, not nostalgia at memories of times shared.

I twisted on my steed to look back at Alfie, who was riding at our rear.

He caught my gaze and his head tipped to the side in inquiry.

I could not ask, not then, of course, maybe not ever. It would not be right to speak of True behind his back. Especially with one of his men.

I turned forward and again gave my attention to True.

“Did you ever try to ride a greased pig?” I asked after what Wallace and Luther were squabbling about.

He smiled at me. “No.”

“Even as a child?” I pressed hopefully.

He shook his head.

Of course he had not.

Because, from what I could ascertain, he had not had a childhood.

He had been too busy being trained by his mother to be king.

I faced forward, feeling my jaw set.

“You seem disappointed in hearing the information that I was not foolish enough to try to mount a greased pig, my sweet,” True teased.

“It was foolish, ask Luther,” Wallace said.

“I would not know, ask Wallace,” Luther added.

I did not respond to their gibing because I was what True thought I was.

Disappointed.

I had never tried to ride a greased pig, for that was lunacy. And the poor pig. Why would anyone do such a thing to an animal? It was bad enough they were raised only to be slaughtered and eaten. Forcing that indignity on them?

But I wished True had stories of something that was fun (even if it was also lunacy).

“Farah?” True interrupted my thoughts.

“Mars and I played at the paints,” I shared suddenly.

“The paints?”

“Bows with arrows tipped in small bags filled with cotton saturated in paint. If an arrow struck you, it stung, but did not wound. What it did do was brand you with a splotch of paint. I beat him. Often. It made him very angry.”

True chuckled. “I can imagine.”

I looked to True. “Did you do something like that?”

He nodded.

I was heartened.

“I began my archery practice at six,” he stated.

I felt my face fall. “Your archery practice?”

“Mother desired I hit a bulls-eye by seven. I achieved that.”

I was in no doubt.

I looked again forward but then twisted and scowled behind me at Alfie.

True’s captain was serious-minded.

He was also smart.

I had a feeling he was understanding my scowl for his gaze darted to True before he returned my scowl and the sentiment behind it.

“Is something amiss?” True asked as I righted myself in the saddle, and I glanced out the sides of my eyes to see him looking back at Alfie.

“No,” I lied.

“Why do you look at Alfie?”

I did not want to lie again.

Therefore, I didn’t.

“It does not seem you had much of a childhood.”

I didn’t know if True desired to answer, but it didn’t matter for I forged on.

“Or adulthood, for that matter.”

“I don’t understand.”

I looked to True. “Tell me one story where you had fun.”

“Fun?”

By the gods.

My heart lurched for it appeared he didn’t even understand the word.

“Fun, True,” I said softly. “Something silly or trivial or frivolous that had no reason but to make you laugh or make you happy.”

“I’m taking you to see The Doors.”

“That doesn’t count.”

He turned his attention forward, but I could see he felt awkward.

And I immediately felt badly.

“I do not wish to—” I began.

“When I was younger, whenever we visited Bower Manor, or her parents brought her to the castle, I would play hide and seek with Silence. She was wicked good at it. I could search for hours and not find her, and I would swear, when I did, she made herself be seen because she felt pity on me.”

“That’s lovely, I think,” I murmured.

“I’m eight years older than her, and for the most part, it was felt I was looking after her while the adults did adult things.”

“It’s still lovely.”

“It did not take long before my mother shared she thought it was beneath me to play such childish games.”

“Even doing it with a child?” I asked.

He did not answer my question.

He said pensively, “Silence was devastated. Though she never spoke a word, certainly no childish tantrums, she just went back to playing with her dolls, but it was a ruse. She had no interest in them. She loved her cousin and spending time with me. She also had no friends.”

“That’s heartbreaking, True,” I whispered.

“I think I was more upset.” His voice dropped. “A boy of fourteen, stripped of his only playmate. A six-year-old girl.”

I stared at him, the gentle sway of the horse, the beauty of the trees around us not relaxing me in the slightest.

“Farah.”

And I continued staring at him, eyes burning, throat prickly, something I had not felt or called upon in many years scratching at my spine.



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