Luca grabs my arm and hauls me back to his side the moment I gasp, my eyes going wide and shiny, and attempt to dash into Newtown’s main – and only – square.
“Ari,” he growls, shaking his head.
“But it’s so cool,” I whisper, fascinated, looking around at the little store and the three bars and the restaurant and all of the rooms above. Who lives here? What sort of stuff goes on in those rooms? And where do the -
“What are you talking about?” Luca says, laughing a little and drawing my attention suddenly back to him. “This place is a dump.”
“It is not a dump – why are you being so mean!?”
“Ari,” Luca says, a broad smile breaking out over his face as he gestures at the little town, “every single building here is made of plywood. It’s a dump – it would all fall over in ten seconds, if it wasn’t held up by Cadet lust and debauchery and the need to let of some Alpha steam.”
“That’s so cool,” I whisper, turning my head back to the square, fascinated. “I’ve never been anywhere like this.”
“Most people would count themselves lucky to be able to say that,” Luca says, dry.
But I just flap a hand and give him a scowl. Because Newtown might be…a little ramshackle, but it’s fascinating – there are whole lives happening here that I know nothing about! And which I’m desperate to explore.
“Okay,” Luca says, taking my other arm and turning me fully to him now so that I can’t get distracted by the town. “Come on, Ari, you’ve got to be cooler than this. You’re not the naïve princess fascinated by the seedy underbelly of Academy life anymore, right? Who are you?”
I sigh, realizing that he’s right. “I’m Daphne.”
“And what is the number-one rule?”
I sigh again. “To not be obvious or recognized.”
“And the number-two rule?”
“That if you say we go, we go, no questions.”
“Good,” Luca says, nodding once. But then he raises an eyebrow at me. “And? What are we not going to have?”
I stomp a foot, pouting at him. “But it’s no fair!”
“Are you talking about prostitutes?” Luca says, leaning close to me, baffled. I nod eagerly and he bursts out laughing. “Why are you calling them Ladies of the Evening? Are you some kind of like, scandalized pre-industrial waif?”
“Yes,” I say, nodding firmly. “That’s the fourth identity we’ll try tonight – I’ll be good at that one. See!? Fun!”
Luca can’t help but laugh as he shakes his head at me. “Look, I already have the feeling that your brother and your cousin are going to kick my ass for going along with this. So if we could please just take it easy on night one?” My mate looks at me with pleading eyes and I sigh, straightening my shoulders and nodding.
“Okay, okay,” I say, looking again over at the bars. “Which one are we going to?”
“That one,” Luca says, nodding towards a building called the Black Hawk.
“Why?”
“Because,” Luca says, his voice dry. “There are the fewest Ladies of the Evening there. I’m not taking any chances of anyone…mistaking you.”
“Me?” I gasp, pressing a hand to my heart. “People would mistake me?”
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: The Hidden Princess At All-Boys Alpha Academy
Thank you for a truly wonderful story. Heartwarming, full of humour with a dash of sass and eroticism. Absolutely love it. Need a better editor though. Lots of spelling mistakes, wrong words, grammatical error and missing chapters/ repeated chapters. Still, a thoroughly entertaining and captivating read....