Grave Matter – Dark Gothic Thriller Read Online Karina Halle

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, BDSM, Dark, Erotic, Forbidden, Thriller Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 117
Estimated words: 113051 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 565(@200wpm)___ 452(@250wpm)___ 377(@300wpm)
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“Are you okay?” Lauren cries out as she hurries over to me. “Rav told me what happened.”

He didn’t tell you everything, I think. Because none of you know everything.

After the wolf encounter, Kincaid sped us back to the lodge as quickly as he could. He didn’t even slow down around the otters, though they didn’t seem to care. We got back before Nick’s team did, and he quickly ushered me in to see Everly.

“I’m fine,” I assure them, lying through my teeth. How the fuck can I be fine after all that?

I hear the door close behind me and see Kincaid step out of reception.

“Dr. Kincaid,” I say, trying to sound as professional as possible. “Is it possible I could talk to you. In your office?”

He swallows. “Of course,” he says, striding over to the lodge door and holding it open. “After you, Ms. Denik.”

I give the others another reassuring look before I step outside.

It’s a wall of grey, so misty now that the air is wet with it, almost drizzling. I follow Kincaid toward the north dorm, neither of us speaking. In the distance, I can hear the goats bleating on the farm section and the sound of an ATV. A raven close by makes a hoarse clicking sound before it swoops down in front of us, nearly touching the top of Kincaid’s head before it lands in a cedar on the other side of the path.

“That’s Poe,” Kincaid says. “He’s one of our resident corvids.”

“Original name,” I remark. “Don’t tell me he’s tame.”

“He can be when he wants to,” he says, glancing at me over his shoulder. “But he doesn’t belong to anyone but the forest. He’s good luck to have around.”

“I always heard that ravens were omens.”

“They are,” he says, opening the door to the north dorm. “But it’s up to the beholder to decide what kind of omen it is.”

The image of the dead wolf, its furry white beating heart, slams into my brain, along with Clayton’s words.

I saw a fortune teller. She told me I was going to die here.

No, wait. That’s not what he said. He said, She told me I would never leave this place.

Already, I can’t seem to trust my memory.

We go down the dark hall, and he leads me into his office. I notice he keeps it unlocked.

“Take a seat,” he says, going over to the window and pulling at the blinds enough that it dims the room. I’m reminded of my dream and have to force my brain to push the images away. I concentrate on him turning on his camera and then lighting a candle on his desk with a silver Zippo engraved with something. He slips it into his pocket before I can get a better look, the air filling with the scent of santal and musk.

“Do you have to film this?” I ask, sitting down in the leather chair. “This isn’t another counseling session.”

“I don’t know what this will be,” he says, taking his seat across from me and folding his hands on the desk. “And yes, I do have to film it.”

“What do you even do with the videos? Watch them?”

“Yes,” he says simply.

I shift in my seat, hit with a strange sense of desire. “Why?”

“Because you fascinate me, Syd,” he says. “And I’m your doctor. I’m trying to…make you better.”

I hope I’m not blushing. “Why do I fascinate you?”

“Many reasons. One of which is why I suppose you wanted to talk to me. You think a dead wolf attacked you.”

“I don’t think, I know! It was dead,” I tell him adamantly. “Was being the operative word.”

“Tell me what happened, from the beginning,” he says, taking out a pad of paper and a pen.

“Well, first, I had to deal with Clayton, who followed me through the woods.”

His gaze snaps to mine. “He did what?” His tone is incredibly sharp.

“He followed me…” I say uneasily. The change in Kincaid is palpable, like he’s turned into a predator.

“Did he touch you?” he grinds out.

“No! No, nothing like that. He was just trying to make me uncomfortable. Telling me weird shit.”

His expression hardens. “Like what?”

“It’s hard to explain. He wasn’t making much sense. He kept saying that I was special, but he, like, had no basis for it, and yet the idea angered him. And that neither of us deserved to be here. That this place was…cruel.”

He inhales sharply through his nose. “Cruel? In what way?”

“I guess because we’re all just doing busywork, and we’ll never be shown what work you actually do in the lab. Like Madrona is just leading us on and making us think we’re important when we’re not.”

Kincaid runs his tongue over his teeth while he sits back in his chair. “That simply isn’t true. You have lab with Janet, I mean Dr. Wu, first thing in the morning.”


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