Cover of Twisted Games (2-Twisted)
    Fiction

    Twisted Games (2-Twisted)

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    Twisted Games by Ana Huang is a captivating, steamy romance that follows the intense, forbidden love story between a princess and her bodyguard. Filled with sizzling chemistry, emotional depth, and plenty of twists, this book explores themes of power, trust, and love against a backdrop of royal intrigue. Perfect for fans of contemporary romance with strong, complex characters and a thrilling plot.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    42
    RHYS
    IT WAS FUNNY HOW ONE MOMENT COULD CHANGE YOUR LIFE.
    One moment, my moth­er was alive, then she wasn’t.
    One moment, my squad mates were alive, and the next every-
    thing got blown to hell. Lit­er­al­ly.
    One moment, I knew my place in the world, only for it to get
    turned upside down with the sim­ple unfold­ing of a paper.
    Last night had been a mind fuck in every way, and I was still de-
    bat­ing the sound­ness of my deci­sion to pay my broth­er a vis­it as I
    stared at the town­house in front of me. There wasn’t as much securi-
    ty as I’d expect­ed, though the town­house was in one of the safest
    neigh­bor­hoods in north­ern Athen­berg.
    Until now, the only broth­ers I had were the ones in my SEAL
    unit. The idea of hav­ing a real broth­er? It kind of fucked me up, to be
    hon­est.
    I walked to the front door and knocked, my skin crawl­ing with
    antic­i­pa­tion.
    Chris­t­ian had left that morn­ing. His had been the quick­est trip in
    the his­to­ry of inter­na­tion­al trips, but he had a mess on his hands in
    the U.S. so I couldn’t blame him.
    It was just like him to drop a bomb­shell then leave, though.
    My broth­er answered on the sec­ond knock. If he was sur­prised to
    see me stand­ing on his doorstep unan­nounced on a Thurs­day after-
    noon, he didn’t show it.
    “Hel­lo, Mr. Larsen.”
    “Hel­lo, broth­er.” I didn’t both­er beat­ing around the bush.
    Andreas’s smile dis­ap­peared. He regard­ed me for a long moment
    before he opened the door wider and stepped aside.
    I walked in, my shoes squeak­ing on the shiny mar­ble floor. Oth­er
    than a few touch­es of white, every­thing in the house was gray. Light
    gray walls, gray fur­ni­ture, gray rugs. It was like step­ping into an ex-
    pen­sive rain cloud.
    Andreas led me to the kitchen, where he poured two cups of tea
    and hand­ed me one.
    I didn’t take it. I hadn’t come for tea.
    “You knew.” I got straight to the point.
    He appeared put out by my refusal and placed the extra mug on
    the counter with a frown. “Yes.”
    “Why the fuck didn’t you say any­thing?”
    “Why do you think, Mr. Larsen? The world thinks I’m a prince. I
    am a prince. Do you real­ly think I’d jeop­ar­dize that to claim kin­ship
    with an Amer­i­can body­guard who, I might men­tion, has been quite
    rude to me in every inter­ac­tion we’ve had?”
    I stared Andreas down. “How did you find out?”
    When Chris­t­ian hand­ed me the paper with my father’s and
    brother’s names, I’d almost thrown it out. I knew in my gut open­ing
    it would lead to trou­ble. But in the end, I couldn’t resist.
    Two names.
    Andreas von Ascheberg, my half-broth­er.
    Arthur Erhall, my father.
    Our father.
    I was relat­ed to the two peo­ple I despised most in Eldor­ra. Go
    fig­ure.
    Andreas was silent for a long while. “When I found out Niko­lai
    was abdi­cat­ing, I was…worried. About Brid­get. She’d nev­er cared
    much for the throne, and I didn’t think she even liked Eldor­ra that
    much. She cer­tain­ly spent enough time away from it to give that im-
    pres­sion. I thought she wasn’t suit­ed for the role of queen.”
    Barbed wire dug into my heart at the sound of Bridget’s name.
    Blonde hair. Sparkling eyes. A smile that could light up even my
    cold, dead soul.
    It’d only been three days, and I already missed her so god-
    damned much I would’ve cut off my right arm for the chance to
    glimpse her in per­son, but she’d been locked up tight at the palace
    since she left the hos­pi­tal. Prob­a­bly busy plan­ning her engage­ment
    to Stef­fan.
    Acid seeped into my veins, and I forced myself to focus on what
    Andreas was say­ing instead of spi­ral­ing again.
    “I real­ize you don’t have a high opin­ion of me, but I do want
    what’s best for the coun­try. Eldor­ra is my home, and it deserves a
    good ruler.”
    I bris­tled at the implied insult. “Brid­get would make a damn
    good ruler.”
    “Yes, well, you’re biased, aren’t you?” Andreas drawled. “I had
    some­one dig into what she’d been doing dur­ing her time in New
    York. Fig­ure out where her head was at. They men­tioned you two
    seemed…close. Clos­er than the aver­age body­guard and client.”
    “Bull­shit. I would’ve noticed a tail.”
    “You were dis­tract­ed, and it wasn’t one. It was mul­ti­ple.” An-
    dreas laughed at my dark expres­sion. How the fuck had I missed a
    tail? “Don’t feel too bad. They weren’t there to hurt her. Just gath­er
    infor­ma­tion. I was curi­ous about you, the body­guard who seemed to
    have my cousin so enam­ored, so I had my peo­ple dig into your back-
    ground, includ­ing your parent­age.” His smile hard­ened. “Imag­ine
    my sur­prise when I found out we had the same father. Small world.”
    His tone remained light, but the tense­ness of his jaw sug­gest­ed
    he wasn’t as unboth­ered as he want­ed me to think.
    The sto­ry was plau­si­ble, except for me miss­ing the tail. I had been
    dis­tract­ed, but I didn’t think I’d been that dis­tract­ed.
    My mind flashed back to my unchar­ac­ter­is­tic con­fronta­tion with
    Vin­cent in Bor­gia, the last-minute trip to Cos­ta Rica, and the thou-
    sands of tiny things pre-Brid­get me would’ve nev­er done.
    I do not become per­son­al­ly involved in my clients’ lives. I am here to
    safe­guard you from phys­i­cal harm. That is all. I am not here to be your
    friend, con­fi­dant, or any­thing else. This ensures my judg­ment remains
    uncom­pro­mised.
    I scrubbed a hand over my face. Fuck.
    “Say that’s true. Want to explain to me how you’re a prince when
    your father is a mere lord?”
    Erhall. Of all the peo­ple, it had to be Erhall.
    Bile rose in my throat at the reminder we were relat­ed.
    Andreas’s eyes shut­tered. “My moth­er had an affair with Erhall.
    My father—my real father, even if he wasn’t my bio­log­i­cal one—
    didn’t know until she told him before she died. Six years ago, can­cer.
    I guess she want­ed to go with a clear con­science. My father didn’t
    tell me until before he died, three years ago.” He barked out a short
    laugh. “At least my fam­i­ly can take secrets with them to their graves.
    Lit­er­al­ly.”
    “Does Erhall know?”
    “No,” Andreas said a lit­tle too sharply. “And he won’t. My father
    was the one who raised me, not Erhall. My father…” A shad­ow flick-
    ered across his face and dis­ap­peared. “He was a good man, and he
    loved me enough to treat me like his own son even after he found
    out I wasn’t. Erhall, on the oth­er hand, is a snivel­ing weasel.”
    I snort­ed. At least we agreed on some­thing.
    Andreas’s smirk returned as he took anoth­er sip of tea. “Here’s a
    secret for you. I don’t want the throne. Nev­er did. I’d step up if I had
    to, of course, but I would much rather have some­one else fill that
    role—as long as they’re capa­ble. The throne is the most pow­er­ful
    seat but also the small­est cage in the palace.”
    “That’s utter crap,” I growled. “You’ve made your inten­tions
    clear mul­ti­ple times. The meet­ings with the king and Speak­er, the
    ‘help­ful’ vis­it to my guest­house the night before Nikolai’s wed­ding.
    Remem­ber those?”
    “Brid­get need­ed a push,” he said cool­ly. “I want­ed to see if she’d
    fight for the crown. But I also came back because…” He hes­i­tat­ed for
    a brief sec­ond. “I want­ed to give Erhall a chance. See if we could
    con­nect some­how. That’s why I asked to shad­ow him dur­ing his
    meet­ings, more so than me want­i­ng to be king. As for the guest-
    house, I was try­ing to help you. I’m not an idiot, Mr. Larsen. Or
    should I call you Rhys, now that we both know we’re broth­ers?”
    I glared at him, and he chuck­led.
    “Mr. Larsen it is,” he said. “I knew some­thing was going on with
    you and Brid­get long before the news broke. I didn’t have con­fir­ma-
    tion, but I could see it in the way you looked at each oth­er. It’s a
    tough choice, love or coun­try. Niko­lai made his. Brid­get, well, I
    guess she made hers, too. But before she agreed to mar­ry Stef­fan”—
    the acid in my veins thick­ened and pooled in my stomach—“you
    two had a shot. Thought I’d give you a lit­tle nudge. You are my
    broth­er, and she is my cousin. Two of the few fam­i­ly mem­bers I have
    left. Con­sid­er it my good deed for the year.”
    “What char­i­ty,” I said, my sar­casm evi­dent. “You should be
    saint­ed.”
    “Laugh all you want, but I was will­ing to push you two togeth­er
    because you were so clear­ly in love, even if it meant I had to take up
    the man­tle should Brid­get abdi­cate. Is that not a sac­ri­fice?”
    It was a sac­ri­fice. But I wasn’t admit­ting that to Andreas.
    My head pound­ed with the vol­ume of new infor­ma­tion rush­ing
    in. There was every chance Andreas was bull­shit­ting me, but my gut
    told me he wasn’t.
    “I almost told her about our father, you know. At Nikolai’s wed-
    ding recep­tion. It doesn’t help much with the Roy­al Mar­riages Law,
    since it requires the monarch to mar­ry some­one of legit­i­mate noble
    birth. You were born out of wed­lock and nev­er acknowl­edged by Er-
    hall as his son—he doesn’t even know you are his son—so you don’t
    qual­i­fy.” Andreas fin­ished his tea and set it in the sink. “But she dis-
    appeared from the recep­tion and before I could talk to her, The Dai­ly
    Tea alle­ga­tions broke.” He shrugged. “C’est la vie.”
    Dammit. I’d hoped, now that I knew I was the son of a lord…
    “If it doesn’t help with the law, why would you tell her?” I
    demand­ed.
    “Because I have an idea of how it might help in a round­about
    way.” Andreas smiled. “It might even help you get Brid­get back if
    you work fast enough. Holstein’s sched­uled to pro­pose next month.
    I’m will­ing to help you…”
    “But?” There was always a but in these kinds of games.
    “But you stop treat­ing me like an ene­my and as…perhaps not a
    broth­er, but a friend­ly acquain­tance. We are, after all, the only direct
    fam­i­ly left besides our love­ly father.” Some­thing flick­ered across An-
    dreas’s face before it dis­ap­peared.
    “That’s it.” Sus­pi­cion curled in my stom­ach. It seemed too easy.
    “That’s it. Take it or leave it.”
    Some­thing occurred to me. “Before I answer, I want to know. Did
    you ever snoop around my guest­house when I wasn’t there?”
    He gave me an odd look. “No.”
    “The truth.”
    Andreas drew him­self up to his full height, look­ing affront­ed. “I
    am a prince. I do not snoop around guest­hous­es…” the word dripped
    with dis­dain, “…like a com­mon thief.”
    I pressed my lips togeth­er. He was telling the truth.

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