White Ravens (Ravens #3) Read Online A.E. Via

Categories Genre: Crime, M-M Romance, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Ravens Series by A.E. Via
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Total pages in book: 109
Estimated words: 109245 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 546(@200wpm)___ 437(@250wpm)___ 364(@300wpm)
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White Ravens

Gage

Twelve weeks later.

The night air was warm against Gage’s cheeks.

In spring, the forest was all damp leaf litter, budding branches, and the obnoxious buzzing of insects. The air tasted mossy and humid, with the mineral tartness of creek water somewhere to his left.

The woods weren’t quiet, as if nature didn’t sleep. Gage moved through it slowly, trying not to overanalyze every sound.

He held his cane tight in his right hand.

Through its accelerometer and contact sensor, he could feel the vibrations in the ground, the life beneath the soil. It read the terrain through the tip, and the handle answered with subtle taps and buzzes, a private language only his palm understood.

High above him, something large made the branches sway.

Valor’s voice didn’t come from any one direction. It slid between the trees, split and rejoined in the air as if the wind itself was speaking.

“The forest is the one place where hearing trumps vision. Stop hunting the loudest thing,” Valor said, low and calm. “The forest will drown you in its choir of sounds if you let it. Pick one note and hold it.”

Gage kept his pace measured and patient.

He’d spent three months learning what stillness cost and what it bought.

He’d read briefings in Braille until the dots felt like his first language. Zorion trained him how to slow his breathing until his body turned to silence, and he’d learned to enter a room without announcing himself, becoming so still others forgot he was there.

He practiced listening past chaos and isolating a single breath in a crowded room. The Browns trained him how to disarm instead of kill— studying anatomy and which joints, bones, and pressure points to break that would eliminate a threat without ending their life.

In his unique studies of mastering patience, discipline, and restraint, he became something more efficient… and far more dangerous.

Adrian and his personal combat team had ingrained habits in him until his body reacted before his mind could second-guess his decision.

Tonight, his brothers weren’t giving him simulated targets. The Greens were showing him their world.

A screech owl called once, twice, before tiny claws skittered up bark. Frogs whistled and crickets chirped alongside the heavier croaking of bullfrogs deep in the brush, and Gage was able to decipher and isolate one sound.

The threat.

He let his environment speak. He didn’t argue or negotiate with it. Instead, he listened and obeyed.

To his right, a tree took the weight of something solid, then released it.

Valor spoke again from someplace closer. “The forest doesn’t care about your courage, Gage. It’s waiting on your respect and submission.”

Gage angled his head, measuring the echoes of height and distance, letting the smallest nuances tell him where things were.

He absorbed the way the insects’ chirps lowered under a canopy and flared above another, the way the wind struck an open clearing, changing its pitch, and how a heavy body made a branch complain with a low groan.

A second presence moved above him. Lighter and faster than Valor. A different kind of quiet.

Zorion.

Gage didn’t speed up. He didn’t try to chase him. Zorion had a signature. All he had to do was wait for it.

It came as a whisper that wasn’t wind, a retraction and release of taut string before the faintest hiss of steel shot through the air.

Gage jerked left and dipped his shoulder as an arrow tore past where his throat had been and sank into bark with a wet thud.

“Good. You heard the lie. Nature can’t make artificial sounds.”

Valor taught like the master he was, trained by the great Grandmasters of Imuma Aga Khan.

His tone held the authority of a warrior shaped by discipline, knowledge, and a code of honor that Gage may never understand.

Another hissing sound pierced the wind from a different angle.

He felt the air pressure change a heartbeat before impact.

He planted his cane to anchor his balance and rolled forward as the arrow cut past his shoulder.

Heck yeah!

“Don’t celebrate,” Valor said. “You win a couple of clean dodges, and you think you’ve won the fight. But the forest despises arrogance…and so does the field.”

The branch above him flexed again. Zorion. A hawk’s tactic of repositioning when stalking its prey.

The third arrow came faster.

Gage picked the note Valor told him to hold, the string, the cut, the direction.

For half a second, he thought he had the trajectory. He wanted to catch one of those dang arrows instead of dodging it.

He’d heard Meridian could snatch a blade out of the air and look bored while doing it.

Gage reached, fingers opening toward the hiss. The arrow point nicked his knuckles before he yanked his hand back.

Valor’s voice was hard. “Cockiness in an assassin makes him forget he’s mortal, and the field has to remind him.”

Another arrow was fired lower, skimming through brush.

Gage tightened his hand around the pressure switch on his cane, and with a sharp, mechanical snap, it extended to a six-foot and met the arrow in the air.


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