Wanted: A Roommate Who Isn't Evil (High Court of the Coffee Bean, #3)
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so focussed that he lost track of hours and missed work.
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hardly acknowledged his existence.
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the girl went missing.
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puddles formed in the uneven places.
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he felt himself trapped back in a place he had been before—the subject of their hatred.
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so they don’t send you back to me.”
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couldn’t.
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cou...
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no
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No.
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could not
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Not...
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Dranian shoved his father aside.
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That this was goodbye.
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“I’ve been sold, too,”
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“You’ll never find me,” she promised.
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he promised her. “And I will find your ship and purchase your freedom.
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captain of the Mycra Sentorious had been driven mad with nightmares
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No one aboard the ship had survived.
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This one single grace gave Dranian the courage to survive;
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He became useful.
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he had decided to forget about.
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her ship must have gone down, too. That she had likely drowned an entire crew, along with herself.
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Cressica Alabastian, and he was the greatest fighter Dranian had ever known in his young faeborn life.
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should it be required. Never once did he regret
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the Last Thing He Wanted to See
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“How do they glide on their toes like that?”
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“Can I try?”
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He’d snuck into the woods to watch the fairies dance every month after that, carefully mimicking their moves
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He wanted to show his mother once he had mastered the routine.
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after his mother had left forever, Luc had wandered back to the dancers’ lair in the woods. He’d watched them to pass the time, to ease ...
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one secret refuge that his father did not know about and therefor...
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even if Luc had never recognized himself as one.
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no such place to ease his cravings.
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having a complete meltdown.
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What a herd of idiots.
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imagining how nice it would be if he wasn’t joking.
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He left the sugar on the counter beside the coffee pot instead.
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might possibly be more faithful than a fairy.
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dogs seemed to always come back. Like an unspoken promise to never leave forever; to never abandon their owner.
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this wasn’t forced one bit.
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“Don’t flatter me so much,
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lest he intentionally toss his ice cream in her face and make a scene by throwing her off the building afterward.
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Had he been born a human, he might have become a therapist. Or a serial killer.
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Dog-Shayne barked like he got spooked by another bug. But Luc knew there was no bug.
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Their faces were haunted with malice,
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dark shadows curling around their bones.
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“Is the reason he dragged me out on this tiring walk today because some part of his pathological, murderous brain was a teensy tiny bit concerned for my well being?”
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“Oh dear. It’s a long, uninteresting story,”
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“And why is my dog covered in blood?!”