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Ace Of Shades. Amanda FoodyЧитать онлайн книгу.

Ace Of Shades - Amanda Foody


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ENNE

       LEVI

       ENNE

       DAY THREE

       LEVI

       ENNE

       DAY FOUR

       LEVI

       ENNE

       DAY FIVE

       ENNE

       DAY SIX

       LEVI

       ENNE

       LEVI

       DAY SEVEN

       ENNE

       DAY EIGHT

       ENNE

       LEVI

       DAY NINE

       ENNE

       LEVI

       LEVI

       ENNE

       LEVI

       ENNE

       DAY TEN

       ENNE

       LEVI

       ENNE

       LEVI

       EPILOGUE

       ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

       Extract

       About the Publisher

       DAY ONE

      “To be frank, reader, you’d be better off not visiting the city at all.”

      —The City of Sin, a Guidebook: Where To Go and Where Not To

       ENNE

      If I’m not home in two months, I’m dead.

      Her mother’s warning haunted her as Enne Salta lugged her leather trunk down the bridge leading off the ship, filling her with an inescapable sense of dread.

      If I’m not home in two months, I’m dead.

      It’d been four.

      For the first time in fifteen days, Enne stepped onto dry land. Her balance veered from side to side as if she expected the gray cobblestones to tilt like the sea, and she white-knuckled the pier’s railing to compose herself. If the ground weren’t so littered with cigar butts and grime, she might’ve kissed it. Two weeks battling seasickness on a floating monstrosity could do that to a lady.

      A woman shoved past her, not noticing Enne’s petite frame. The force of it nearly knocked Enne over. She glared at the woman’s ostentatiously feathered hat as it disappeared into the crowds.

      Hmph, she thought. A lady shouldn’t rush. Barely five seconds in the so-called City of Sin and already people were rude.

      As more passengers disembarked from the ship, the crowds around the customs tables swelled with hundreds of people, hollering and waving passports and jostling each other in an effort to reach the front of the lines. Most were young men, probably visiting New Reynes to sample its famous casinos and nightlife—but the number of families present surprised her. This city was no place for children.

      And, she reminded herself, staring up at the sinister, smog-stained sky, it was no place for her, either.

      As Enne joined the queues, she dug through her belongings for her tourist documents. Her purse was stuffed: her passport, a handful of gingersnap cookies leftover from last night’s dinner and a copy of The City of Sin, a Guidebook: Where To Go and Where Not To. As she fished out her papers, something fell and clinked when it hit the ground. Her token.

      She scooped it up and clutched it to her chest. Her mother, Lourdes, had given her this token. It was two inches long and gilded, with an old Faith symbol of an eye etched on one side and a cameo of a past queen on the other. The Mizer kings had used these tokens as party invitations. It was probably illegal to own it—any remnants from before the Revolution twenty-five years ago had been destroyed, just like the Mizers themselves. But Enne couldn’t bring herself to throw away something so rare and precious. She tucked it safely back into her pocket.

      With nothing to do but wait, Enne pulled out her guidebook and compared its cover to the city in front of her. The photograph of Luckluster Casino matched the stories of New Reynes: red lights that flashed without flame, women of loose morals dancing on street


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