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The Savage Fae’s Mate Wild Hunt 1 Lola Glass Contents Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21 Epilogue Afterthoughts Free Novella Please Review Also by Lola Glass: Stay in Touch About the Author Copyright © 2022 Lola...
The Savage Fae’s Mate Wild Hunt 1 Lola Glass Contents Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21 Epilogue Afterthoughts Free Novella Please Review Also by Lola Glass: Stay in Touch About the Author Copyright © 2022 Lola Glass authorlolaglass.com All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Names, characters, and places are products of the author’s imagination. Cover by Francesca Michelon https://www.merrybookround.com/ To the books and people that don’t break your heart. One The sound of Christmas music playing from speakers above my head melded with the unfortunate melody produced by the wheels of my rolling trash cans. Cleaning the strip-style outlet mall was never a blast, but it was much worse at this time of year. A cold gust of wind blew past, making me shiver and tug the hem of my beanie further down my face. It cut off my vision a bit and awkwardly smooshed my long, dirty blonde hair against my neck, but it was better than being cold. The lights on the carousel a ways ahead of me had been left on, and the ride was still spinning slowly. The stragglers at the movie theater to my left were finally leaving, but my crew had at least another three hours of cleaning to do. Yay. I picked up trash as I walked past the wishing fountain that everyone and their dog tossed coins into. I wasn’t one of them—didn’t have a penny to spare, anyway. Living in my car didn’t exactly leave me with much spending money. “Hey, Ari,” my closest work-friend called out. I didn’t bother to turn around, waving at her over my shoulder. We couldn’t have been less alike if we tried. Linsey was a rich girl, whose daddy was forcing her to work this job for a few months so she could learn how the “lower class” lived. She’d only be there one more day; it was December 21st, and she would be done on the 22nd. And me? This was the only job I could get. Turns out a few years in juvie for killing the foster dad who assaulted you doesn’t exactly make you look like a golden candidate for a job. Or an apartment. Or anything else, really. “Ooh, the fountain.” Linsey sighed happily as she caught up to me, not even bothering to reach out for the trash can she was supposed to be pushing. That was why we were friends—because I didn’t give a shit whether she helped or not. And she never did. “My wish came true yesterday,” she announced, brushing a strand of her thick, dark hair behind her ear. Her skin was light brown, her eyes a stunning blue, and her clothes clearly expensive. I bit my lip to stop myself from rolling my eyes. “Jake called me back, and we totally hooked up. It was fucking awesome.” She dug into the pocket of her fancy red coat and came up with a couple of pennies. “Come on, you need to make a wish too.” She grabbed one of my trash cans and used it to drag me toward the fountain. “It’s a waste of money,” I said with a sigh, accepting the penny she handed me. I knew from experience that she wouldn’t take no for an answer. Usually, I just tossed the coin in without a second glance. The only thing wishes would do was give me false hope, which was the last thing I needed. “It’s a penny. You’ll survive. Actually try to wish for something, and maybe it will even work.” She tossed me a dirty look that said she knew exactly what I had been doing every time she handed me a penny. Then she stepped up to the fountain and lifted the coin to her lips, murmuring her wish to the damn thing. Sometimes she really seemed her age, and sometimes, I wondered why the hell I’d been forced to grow up so fast. We were both twenty, but experience-wise, we might as well have been from different planets. She delicately tossed her penny in delicately, then turned and watched me expectantly. I sighed again. “Come on, it’s not going to kill you,” she teased. Damn, I hated her positive attitude sometimes. I dragged my thumb over the head of the penny, my gaze lingering on the fountain. It was nothing fancy, but then again, neither was I. I didn’t want to make a wish—to let myself hope. But Linsey wasn’t going to let me walk away without making at least a fraction of an effort. So, as I tossed the penny, I murmured almost silently, “I wish for a way out.” Out of my shit-show of a life, out of living in my car, out of my dead-end job… Out of everything. The penny landed in the water with the tiniest plop, and I watched it sink. A long, silent moment passed. My heart clenched. I shouldn’t have let myself wish. Wishing could be detrimental to my— In the blink of an eye, the water fountain exploded. Water shot in every direction, spraying from the damn thing like it was an erupting volcano. And along with the water, came the men. Almost half a dozen of them, each of them massive and scarred. They had different skin colors, different hair colors, different tattoos, and different clothing—but they all towered over me, with the kind of muscles that people didn’t just have. Their ears were long and pointed. That, coupled with the size of them, and the way they’d
Author: Jean-Paul Bouchon; Alain Bouchon
Year: 2023
Views: 4650
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