But if anyone thinks that Julian plans to step back and let Jenny marry Tom, they obviously haven’t read THE FOBIDDEN GAME. Tom was missing from last night’s rehearsal (an emergency phone call from a partner at the law firm where he’s working as a summer associate).īut he makes it back the next morning for a quick whiskey and a cold shower and then music is playing and Jenny’s father is walking her down the nave and Jenny can sense the tears in his eyes, even if her veil is too thick to allow her to see them. But Jenny sets her teeth and lets Audrey and Dee help her into her finery. On the morning of Jenny's wedding there is nothing, which is almost more frightening than any message. On two subsequent days there are two more roses, engraved “. When her friend could hear Jenny’s cell ringing inside but Jenny not answering it, she got anxious. She wakes to Dee’s anxious face and a broken door. She faints, grazing her head on her nightstand. Nevertheless, the words from the past are too much for her. Jenny has known who sent the rose-or brought it, more likely-ever since her vision made it out clearly lying four inches from her face on the pillow. It’s engraved onto the stem in minuscule letters, barely scratches. At last a flash of light reveals the message she somehow knew was there. Rationality wars with post-hypnotic suggestion. But right now she feels strongly that she has to examine this object further. She needs help with this, she’s not so irrational as to deny it. She remembers how it had felt in her hand the first time, in the caverns of the dark elves. Sleek, glimmering, its bud halfway open, like lips open for a kiss. Moving slowly and almost hypnotically, she strips the cover off a pastel yellow pillow and then uses the cloth to pick the silver thing up. Jenny reaches for the phone, then stills. The room is empty except for herself and nothing has changed in it except the silver rose on her pillowcase. She abruptly slides off the bed and then whirls around, her heart hammering, to confront. Her sense of hearing seems to have increased to an almost painful state, but there is no sound. Finally, moving nothing but her eyes, she looks around her single dorm room in terror, peering into every sunlit corner. As completely awake as if she'd been doused with the remains of an ice-bucket, Jenny can only stare at the object for long, long minutes. And then her breath stops and her heart seems to stop with it. ![]() Something on the pillow comes gradually into focus. But when the wedding is only four days away, Jenny wakes up (alone!) in her bed. ![]() Since it's high summer, they're all in white, but below the white chiffon, Dee is in shimmering mint, Audrey in demure jasmine, and Summer in soft cornflower. ![]() Zach takes over sending the invitations, Tom works with the wedding theme designer while Dee and Audrey and Summer and Jenny pick out their multi-bridal finery. ![]() Her parents finally cave and Jenny begins to rush around-late again-for one of the most important days of her life. She intimates in her fight with Mom that in accordance with their strongly maintained family beliefs she's still a virgin, but that that's likely to change in the next month, whether she wears a veil and stands before a minister or not. Jenny has grown stronger and kinder since the first book, but she still has flashes of temper. (In different versions, she varies from 18 to 20-but anyway, her parents think she’s too young.) Jenny and her mom have a fight, Jenny storming that she's been in love with Tom since elementary school and her parents got married after knowing each other only six months. "So far, what I can tell you is that the story starts the week when Jenny is about to marry Tom. It is unknown if it will be released, though L. As of current information as of 2021, the book has been canceled. Rematch was a possible sequel to The Forbidden Game trilogy by L.
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