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Dreamwalker's Bride

“You are the least objectionable groom of all the ones I’ve seen,” Anaisa replied seriously. “Thank you for the glowing compliment,” Trace grinned, “but that didn’t quite answer my question.” ___ Anaisa is an orphan and a pariah. In an ultimate act of betrayal, her father, a Count of the Realm, is accused of deserting and betraying the army in a time of war. Not only is he immediately executed for the offense, but the king declares he must have been a fake all along! His two daughters are stripped of their titles and inheritance, replaced by a distant cousin and cast out of their home with nothing. Anaisa swears someday she will get her title and lands back, but in the mean time, she and her sister Katia have to figure out how to survive. Trace is an anomaly among his people; instead of revealing their son as a magic user and thrusting him into the public eye, his parents kept it a secret to allow him to choose the kind of life he wanted. Trace found himself content to rest and play in his own dream world instead of invading the nighttime visions of others. As an adult, his choice to remain unknown is thrown into jeopardy when a mysterious blackmailer forces Trace to enlist in the territorial war between nations, threatening to reveal his secret if the demand is not met. With the war now over, Trace believes he can finally go home to his farm and live the simple, unremarkable life he’s always desired. When Anaisa and Trace are thrown together by a royal edict, the sisters find themselves unwittingly tangled in the web of mystery and intrigue that surrounds the blackmailer’s escalating assignments for Trace. Anaisa begins to suspect it may be connected to the plot to replace her family in the noble court. As the scheme continues to unfold, lives, loves, marriages, and magic will be put to the test to see what forces in the world are strongest.

TheOtherNoble · Fantasy
Not enough ratings
347 Chs

Silent observation

Ford watched the scene from far too close. The night before, he had circled around behind Daniel. He was fairly confident the boy either had somehow missed him appearing and disappearing—from trying to keep himself hidden–or had written it off as a hallucination or mirage.

Following behind the boy meant that Ford did not have as good a view of the main party, but he also felt a strange urge to protect Daniel.

The child was oddly competent. Ford was shocked that the boy was able to saddle his horse on his own, and mount it without aid. 

Ford was still having trouble with that last bit, granted, he had lingering pain from his wounds and broken leg when he wasn't masking it. Even so, he learned a bit from watching Daniel move about, how he sat when he rode, and how he managed to follow at a distance and keep himself from being detected.

It had taken Ford over a day to notice the boy… or perhaps he had only caught up to them after most of the day.