Among the Heather (The Highlands #2) Read Online Samantha Young

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: The Highlands Series by Samantha Young
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Total pages in book: 105
Estimated words: 98965 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 495(@200wpm)___ 396(@250wpm)___ 330(@300wpm)
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Somehow, I just knew how to channel all my young angst and trauma into my performances. Ms. Anderson, our director, mentored and sent me off for auditions. I starred in a couple of local TV ads, and I landed a few episodes of a Scottish soap. Between that, my theater work, and my grades, I could audition for the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland. It’s one of the top performing art schools in the world. And to my awe, I got in.

Because I was eighteen with no financial aid from a parent, they even provided a scholarship and bursaries to help with the fees. I worked my arse off to get my BA in acting, and I was a working actor during my studies there. While performing at the school, an American producer saw me and asked me to audition for her upcoming rom-com. I had to do it with an American accent, and I got the part. From there, I landed a stream of rom-coms until I grew worried I was being typecast. Most of the world didn’t even know I was Scottish. It used to surprise the hell out of talk show hosts.

But I did that.

I clawed my way out of poverty. I was a discarded child. And I shattered what should have been my fate and gave everything to my pursuit of betterment.

Now the world wanted to take it away from me.

How fucking dare it.

I whipped the journal across the bed and braced my head in my hands.

I needed something to change.

An abrupt hammering on my suite door brought my head up. Reaching for my phone, I saw it was nearly midnight. What the hell?

“North, you in there?”

The female voice was familiar.

Hurrying across the room, I threw open the door to find Allegra Howard standing in the hall. “Something wrong?”

She gave me a pained smile. “Sorry to disturb you at this hour, but Aria sent me to get you.”

Worry scored through me. “Is she okay?”

Her eyes rounded. “I’m not sure. She just asked me to come get you. She said she really needs to talk to you.”

What? I scowled. “At midnight?”

Allegra shrugged. “That’s all she told me.”

Finding it all a bit strange, my guard was up. But my curiosity was also pricked. What if she needed to cancel my membership? And to save face, they were booting me off the estate in the middle of the night, so there were no witnesses to my humiliation. Bloody great. That would be the icing on the worst fucking cake. Well, if so, I wanted my goddamn membership fee back.

“One second.” I closed the door on Aria’s sister and impatiently shoved on socks and shoes and grabbed my key card.

Allegra seemed to sigh in relief when I reopened the door, her eyes darting over my body. But not as if she were checking me out. “You didn’t bring your phone, did you?”

“No, why?”

“Aria has some … privacy issues.”

“Among many others,” I muttered as we walked down the hall.

“I heard that.”

I chuckled darkly. “I meant for you to hear it. So, why is Her Majesty commanding me to meet her in her office at midnight?”

“Oh, not her office. She asked me to bring you to the library.” Allegra stared up at me, wide-eyed and confused. “And like I said, I’m as clueless as you are. In fact, I’m kind of worried.”

What on earth?

Tension settled between us as my concern grew. Allegra seemed anxious. If I had any dignity, I’d tell the sisters where to stuff their cloak-and-dagger games, but honestly, I was bored out of my mind. I’d probably have agreed to listen to one of them read from Proust’s Remembrance of Things Past at this point.

The castle was eerily quiet. Last summer, it buzzed nightly until one in the morning, but there were fewer guests this month and as we passed the dining room and lounge, they were dark. There was no sign of Wakefield or any of the underbutlers.

“Aria told everyone to finish up for the night at eleven,” Allegra whispered. “She said it’s the quietest week she’s ever seen at Ardnoch.”

“So why the hell is she still here?”

“Hey, that’s what I asked.” She wrinkled her nose. “I’m beginning to think she truly is a workaholic. In here.” Allegra pushed open the large, heavy library door and ushered me past her.

Frowning, I strode in.

To an empty room. I spun around. “Where is she?”

Allegra whispered again, “She’s in her office, but she told me to bring you here. I’ll go tell her.”

“Why are you whispering?”

But she left without replying.

Bloody hell.

This was not how I wanted to spend my night.

Liar. You asked for something to change.

I exhaled heavily. How low I’d been brought to find excitement in a clandestine meeting with a woman who hated me for the mere fact that I was born.


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