The Midnight Realm – Chronicles of the Stone Veil Read Online Sawyer Bennett

Categories Genre: Fantasy/Sci-fi, Paranormal, Romance, Suspense Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 85
Estimated words: 81261 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 406(@200wpm)___ 325(@250wpm)___ 271(@300wpm)
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Instead, I didn’t even have time to slam the door in Sorcha’s face and I knew I was in immediate danger. She twisted her torso and backhanded me in the jaw. I flew from the impact, landing hard on my back and sliding across the slick floor. The burst of pain blurred my vision, yet I flipped over and tried to get to my feet to run.

Didn’t matter, though.

She was on me, yanking my hair to pull me upright. “Been waiting for this,” she hissed, jerking me around, her face close to mine.

“Amell’s going to kill you for this,” I said through gritted teeth. I tasted blood.

“Amell’s a fool and has no business being in power. He’s become weak,” she spits with derision. “Falling in love with a lowly, piece of shit human. Refusing to carry out our former queen’s vision.”

Falling in love? He surely hasn’t. “If you think to use me as a pawn, Amell doesn’t care about me in that way. I’m of no use to you.”

Sorcha drags me down back halls so we stay out of the main portion of the castle. We haven’t passed a single fae, not anyone I could yell to for help. Not that any of them would help me. I think they stay away from me because they fear the Crimson River, but none would be moved to extend themselves for me. Maybe Calix, since he’s such an ass-kisser, but no others.

Sorcha pulls me through a doorway where we descend winding stone steps carved into the obsidian mountain. We go down, down, down, and it gets hotter. The air is thick, and my lungs burn.

It’s hot the way I thought Hell would feel, and sweat trickles down my back. After what feels like a thousand steps, Sorcha pushes through a door, and we walk out onto fine black sand. A gust of heat hits me, and I gape at the Crimson River flowing before me. Up close, it’s enormous, at least a hundred yards across, over which I see the twinkling lights of Otaxis.

The river itself puts off almost unbearable heat, and it’s far more colorful than I’d thought. It’s not just the reds, yellows, and oranges you’d expect from a thick lava-like flow but every shade of those colors. The viscous liquid froths and jumps as if alive and looking for a meal, and I remember how it made noises after every person was tossed in. Almost as if belching in satisfaction with each soul it consumed.

And now it looks like Sorcha’s going to throw me in, and I know I don’t have the physical strength to fight her.

Doesn’t stop me, though.

I dig my heels into the sand, and Sorcha is caught off guard by my unwillingness to come along peacefully. She looks over her shoulder and glares, giving me a hard jerk that causes me to fly toward her. Her free hand wraps around the front of my throat, and she puts her face close to mine. “I wish I had just a few minutes so I could peel you alive. But as it stands, we need you for something more important.”

We? Who is we?

Sorcha spins and drags me along in her wake, following the curve of the river and around the large rock outcropping upon which the base of the castle sits.

I nearly sag—hundreds and hundreds of fae and demons have gathered, stretching back as far as the eye can see.

An army.

Standing at the front is Jago, talking to two other Dark Fae dressed in what looks to be battle armor, all of them carrying swords. Beside him stands Calix, listening in on the conversation. He’s also a traitor.

“I have her,” Sorcha announces proudly, and Jago turns to look at us. Sorcha slings me forward, and I stumble before falling flat on my face in the black sand, right at Jago’s feet.

He laughs as Calix hauls me to standing, and I wrench free as soon as I’m upright. I take a step back from him, wrapping my palm over the area where Sorcha dug her claws into me to stop the bleeding, but the raw, open flesh is coated with sand and burns like the fires of Hell. I wonder if raging infections from dirty wounds are a thing down here.

“I hope you feel good about selling out your king,” I seethe at Calix, then turn to Jago. “And there’s no way you’re ever going to get his throne.”

Jago’s eyebrows rise in surprise as he shakes his head. “I want no such thing. Why would I want to rule this cesspit? And to be clear, Amell is not my king.”

“If you don’t want the throne, then what do you want?” I ask.

Jago moves in a blur, grabbing my arm and hauling me into him. “Ideally, fifteen minutes with you flat on your back beneath me so I can see what has Amell so intrigued, but I’m going to settle for him to open that veil and let us through.”


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