The Ringmaster’s Secret (The Misfit Cabaret #1) Read Online Aria Cole

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: The Misfit Cabaret Series by Aria Cole
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Total pages in book: 35
Estimated words: 31355 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 157(@200wpm)___ 125(@250wpm)___ 105(@300wpm)
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As she finished, her chest heaved slightly, a soldier exhausted by her own battle. I leaned back in my chair, the leather creaking under the shift of my weight, and allowed myself a small, knowing smile. “Ava,” I said, the words rolling off my tongue with a mixture of admiration and a hint of admonition, “did you ever consider that there might be more to this story?”

Her brow furrowed, the line between confusion and understanding blurred as I stood and moved closer to her. The proximity was deliberate, a dance of shadows and light as old as time. “I’ve known about your investigation from the start,” I confessed, watching the flicker of shock—and was that betrayal?—pass through her eyes.

“But why?” Her voice cracked, the façade of the intrepid journalist crumbling for a moment to reveal the woman beneath, vulnerable and achingly real.

“Because, my dear, you were the perfect bait,” I whispered, leaning down so that my breath brushed her ear, sending shivers down her spine despite the heat of our confrontation. “And not just for them,” I gestured vaguely to the documents, “but for me as well.”

The space between us charged with an intensity that was as dangerous as it was undeniable. “There’s a traitor in our midst,” I continued, pulling back to look into her eyes, “someone who’s been orchestrating this from the shadows. I needed to flush them out, and you… you were the perfect distraction.”

Ava’s lips parted, her breaths shallow, each one a silent question. Had she really been just a pawn in my game, or had she become something more? The air around us was thick with the scent of ink and paper, of secrets and lies, but beneath it all, there was something else—an undercurrent of desire that neither of us could deny.

“You used me,” she accused, but her voice was thick with something other than anger.

“I did,” I admitted, “but not just as a means to an end.” I reached out, my fingers grazing her arm, feeling the goosebumps rise under my touch. “Tell me, Ava, amidst all this deceit, did you find what you were really looking for?”

Her eyes locked with mine, and in them, I saw the tumult of her emotions—anger, betrayal, but beneath those, something that mirrored my own deep-seated longing. Here, in the heart of the circus, amidst the chaos of unraveling mysteries, we stood at the precipice of an unknown that was as thrilling as it was terrifying.

As the morning sun streaked through the blinds of my office, casting sharp lines across the worn carpet, the tension between Ava and me palpitated with an almost tangible electricity. Her shock at discovering my foreknowledge of her true identity and purpose reverberated through the cramped space, a silent yet deafening echo following her accusation.

"Ava," I began, my voice steady despite the storm brewing in her eyes, "I knew from the start. From the moment you walked in here, with your camera and notepad, aiming to unearth secrets you couldn't possibly understand." My revelation hung between us, a stark truth that seemed to widen the gap her investigation had already carved.

Her response was a mixture of disbelief and hurt. "You used me, Dante," she whispered, the sting of betrayal not just coloring her tone but reshaping the very air around us. The pain in her voice clawed at me, an unexpected guilt tightening around my chest.

Without a word, I turned to my desk and pulled open a concealed drawer, revealing a cache of documents and surveillance photos I had painstakingly gathered. "It's not just about using you," I said as I spread the contents before her, each photo and report a testament to the unseen war I had been waging. "It's about protecting everything we stand for—this circus, its people."

I guided her through the documents, each one meticulously annotated with my own observations. My fingers brushed against hers as I handed her a photo, the brief contact sparking a charge that seemed at odds with the gravity of our discussion. "Here," I pointed to an image showing one of our trusted staff in a clandestine meeting with known criminal elements. "This is the real enemy, Ava. And you were the perfect distraction, yes, but also potentially the perfect ally."

Moving to the computer, I clicked on a video file, the grainy footage showing the same staff member exchanging envelopes with shadowy figures in the dim lighting of our equipment shed. "I've been tracking this for months," I explained, my voice a blend of frustration and resolve. "And I couldn't risk exposing my hand too soon, not even to you."

Ava watched the screen, her initial shock slowly morphing into a complex expression of understanding and continued suspicion. "Why keep me in the dark? Why not trust me?" she asked, her voice a mix of anger and something else—was it hurt? Or perhaps a hint of the connection that had been simmering between us, now laced with betrayal.


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