Patricia Wilson

Stories 10
Chapters 3,347
Words 163.4 K
Comments 0
Reading 13 hours, 37 minutes13 h, 37 m
  • by Patricia Wilson The third point of view: "Allen is so dead after this," Ailee said to Akim seated by her side. She knew her brother was always up to no good. Isabella had no choice but to step on the dance floor and even though the music had begun already, she stood still. "Hey, come on," Pedro tugged on her hand, "Just shake your body. I don't care even if you dance like a hippo... " Isabella glared at him. Pedro gulped, that came out wrong. "I mean, you would still look good doing what you plan to do,"…
  • by Patricia Wilson The third point of view: "You are the love of my life, Pedro. With this ring, I'm making it official. You are mine and mine alone for eternity, " Isabella declared, putting the ring in Pedro's finger as applause came from the crowd. The wedding went on uninterrupted; there was no Deborah to ruin their happy day nor another woman claiming to be the mother of his child. When it was Anabelle's ring to put the ring in Julie's finger, she had a bright smile on her face and giggled a few times before…
  • by Patricia Wilson The third point of view: "Hey, look over here! No, there! Turn your face! To the left. This angle. Isabella, don't move! Anabelle, stop eating!" the two brides to be received non-stop orders as to how to behave as the make-up artist and her team worked on them. Isabella was vexed beyond her limit and it only took Anabelle's charming and easy-going nature to get her to calm down and not murder the crew for doing their job. Anabelle was there to erase the furrows on Isabella's face with jokes and…
  • by Patricia Wilson The third point of view : "Didn't you say Akim is coming? Where is he already?" Elsa whined for the nth time already. Ailee and Allen were at the airport waiting for their cousin to arrive. And they were with their annoying siblings. Just like the many others at the arrival gate, they couldn't wait for Akim to arrive. Elsa was seated on top of Allen's shoulder while Diego was on Allen's, both kids waving cardboard in the air with Akim's name on it. Ella chooses to be on her own, playing a coloring…
  • by Patricia Wilson The third point of view: Akim could sense that Fiona was seriously considering Anika's words. Although the thought of being in-laws with Fiona deeply upset him, he had to go along with the act if that would save his life. Who was Anika kidding? In-law or not, Fiona would still go to trial for the crimes she has committed. "Just drop the gun, mother. Please." Anika pleaded, dropping her own gun. She stepped away from Akim, giving her mother a chance to trust her. She couldn't kill Fiona but she…
  • by Patricia Wilson The third point of view: No matter the evidence Akim brought on, Fiona had a way of encountering, so he gave up on trying to make the idiots see the truth because Fiona was quickly turning him into a clown. The thing about passion is that it turns people, even the smartest people into idiots. Everyone here in this room one way or the other was affected by the rebellion and the execution. They lost a parent or parents, brother, sister, son, daughter. A loved one. Instead of accepting their loss and…
  • by Patricia Wilson The third point of view: This was the showdown, Akim could tell. With him in Fiona's hands, she could do whatever she wanted with him. It was almost as if he was on stage with the rest of Fiona's people staring up at him like some entertainment. "Tonight is a special day because we finally have the son of our enemy in our hands. And tonight after he goes through our trial, we would judge him appropriately," Fiona said, receiving applause from the crowd. Akim watched as Anika climbed up the…
  • by Patricia Wilson The third point of view : "You really came," Akim spun around at the sound of that voice. It had been over five minutes since he arrived at the town square and hadn't caught sight of her. So he stood beside the stainless steel curved pond shower in the middle of the town square. The briefly polished silver structure drew immense attention from a distance and hence wasn't surprised she saw him first. Akim lifted his brow at her, "Were you expecting a royal entourage? You said you were going to tell…
  • by Patricia Wilson The third point of view: Of course, Anika knew what Akim was talking about and she knew as well that he didn't hold any evidence, just facts. He was only trying to snatch the truth from her lips and the only way to get out of this was to pretend to be ignorant. "I don't know what you're talking about, Akim. I intentionally got close to you because I wanted to be your friend. A girl got to dream and it's not every day one gets to see the mysterious prince of Lincolnshire," Anika managed to say amid…
  • by Patricia Wilson The third point of view: Back at Lincolnshire... Akim observed his punishment to the end: a week of being caged in at the palace. He attended to his princely duties but he didn't take a step outside the palace and had his cell phone confiscated. He was lucky enough that the secret cell phone that Max got him was not discovered, however, he made no effort to use that to call Anika either. Anika. That name made fury burn in Akim's heart and his fist clenched. To think that Anika was one of the…
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