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The King's Game Chapter Three Betrayal
Coles
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The King's Game Chapter Three Betrayal in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $10.99
Original price: $12.99

Coles
The King's Game Chapter Three Betrayal in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $10.99
Original price: $12.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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Dave Stewart is not a man given to grand illusions, yet he finds himself drawn into one.
It begins with a quiet rupture: a wealthy mentor, long revered, turning away from the country that shaped him, siphoning his fortune toward an improbable vision. What first appears as personal ambition soon reveals itself as something more: a deliberate unmaking, a rejection not only of borders, but of consequence.
Dave follows, though not without hesitation.
As the venture deepens, so too does a sense of fracture within their small circle. Conversations narrow. Silences lengthen. And beneath the surface, an unspoken suspicion takes hold-that one among them has already chosen another allegiance, trading loyalty for protection, and feeding their fragile enterprise to the quiet machinery of the US Government.
What emerges is not simply a question of betrayal, but of belief: in country, in friendship, in the stories men tell themselves to justify their actions.
Dave Stewart is not a man given to grand illusions, yet he finds himself drawn into one.
It begins with a quiet rupture: a wealthy mentor, long revered, turning away from the country that shaped him, siphoning his fortune toward an improbable vision. What first appears as personal ambition soon reveals itself as something more: a deliberate unmaking, a rejection not only of borders, but of consequence.
Dave follows, though not without hesitation.
As the venture deepens, so too does a sense of fracture within their small circle. Conversations narrow. Silences lengthen. And beneath the surface, an unspoken suspicion takes hold-that one among them has already chosen another allegiance, trading loyalty for protection, and feeding their fragile enterprise to the quiet machinery of the US Government.
What emerges is not simply a question of betrayal, but of belief: in country, in friendship, in the stories men tell themselves to justify their actions.


















