Cross My Heart Elizabeth Morgan (novels for beginners TXT) đ
- Author: Elizabeth Morgan
Book online «Cross My Heart Elizabeth Morgan (novels for beginners TXT) đ». Author Elizabeth Morgan
âNot panicking isnâtan option when I had you going on all night, stressing that if Igot caught by the Vampires, they would kill me, so would wolves,and getting killed by either would be Heaven compared to what itwould feel like tâbe burnt tâdeath by the sun.â
âJust laying outsome home truths,â she replied with a shrug. âBesides, wefound you somewhere nice and safe.â
âI donât really classbreaking and entering into the first unoccupied house we cameacross as safe.â
âYouâre stillalive, arenât you?â
âAlive?â
âExcuse me, MrSensitive, mobile.â She shook her head. âJesus, youâre sotetchy.â
âYou would be, too, ifyou were the living dead.â
She angled a look atme. âIâm not even real.â
Which was another keypoint added to my list of new superpowers ... I appeared to havegone mad because I was talking to an imaginary teenage Elle. Hadbeen talking to her for weeks, and even though part of me was fullyaware she wasnât real, I was still able to see and hear her.Although, could you still be classed as insane if you were awareyou were seeing things, if you knew you were talking toyourself?
âYes.â
âOh, hush you.â Beingundead had another perk: the ability to not feel the cold, whichwas a blessing considering I was still topless and barefoot.
âEven if we foundyou a top, how would you have put it on? Your shackles are in theway.â
âYeah, I realizethat.â Apparently, I had the strength to bend metal, but thatdidnât include silver, which was what my cuffs were laced with. Ivaguely remember Elle mentioning such allergies to me ...
âPlus, it wasmentioned at the facility.â
âKnowing I have a newallergy doesnât help me. What I need is a spare set of hands and achainsaw tâget me out of these damn things.â And my only hope wasthe real Elle who I was praying would have some form of tools tofree me.
âGuess we will findout shortly.â
My feet knew the wayto Elleâs family home, and without having to concentrate on asingle step, I found myself there in no time, but I wouldnât stepany further than the large, black, iron gate that marked theentryway to their estate. Guarded by six-foot walls, the place wascompletely cut off from public view, not that I imagined manypeople would travel down this back road. The next house was atleast five miles away, the Renaudsâ nearest neighbours separated byfields and woodland.
It was crazy. Aschildren, I wasnât allowed past this point. I wasnât allowed downthat drive or in the house at the end of the long garden. Elleâsparents knew me, knew we were friends, knew my parents, but it wasa no-entry zone for anyone who wasnât family. Her father was a veryprivate man, though Elle had once admitted the reason they neverallowed guests in their home was because none of them wanted tohave people associated with them, that it was for everyoneâssafety. If Vampires caught scent of me, they could come after me toget to them ...
I didnât understand.Apparently, it was mainly to do with her cousin Heather. Somethingwas wrong with the younger girl, not that there seemed to beanything physically wrong with her, but Elle never went intodetails about it. I knew Heatherâs father had died before she wasborn and that her mother was ill which lead to her taking her ownlife when Heather was eight. Heather hadnât had an easy life, andif she was mixed up in all this Vampire hunting bollocks also,well, no wonder she always seemed so ... aloof.
It was annoying. Icould never quite see the entire house from the gate, not throughthe structure of hedges and trees, but it always looked big andexciting. I guess it was because my house was small and ordinarycompared to the manor house that hid behind these walls. Mainly itwas because Elle had told me her family were Vampire Hunters andthat she had to train in the basement. I used to have all thesewild ideas that they had cool equipment down there, swords andarrows, maybe even a stray Vampire locked up in a cage ...
âLike you?â
âNo, not like me. Likea bad Vampire, one that actually deserves tâbe locked up.â
âAnd you didnâtdeserve tâbe?â
âWhy would you evensay that?â I scowled at her. âI was on holiday, minding my ownbusiness. I didnât deserve what happened tâme.â
âJust wanted tomake sure you knew that before you started comparing yourself tothose original, cool ideas of yours.â
Elle had confessed herfamily secret to me when we were twelve. At the time, I had thoughtshe was joking about being a Vampire Slayer. Iâd thought sheâd madeit all up because things at home had become so badâher cousinAlexis had committed suicideâand she couldnât escape, couldnâtcope, so she made up stories and creatures to amuse herself.Pretending to have another life always seemed like a good idea whenyou hated the one you had, when you felt there was no way out or todeal. I accepted all the little facts and details, the descriptionsof the creatures, the fact she had started her training at eight,but she never let it go. She was adamant that her world was real,and I continued to amuse her, even after I had moved toSwitzerland.
âAnd now, you knowbetter.â
Now I knew thetruthâthat she wasnât mad, or over-imaginative. It was real. Allthe facts were true. One being that now I was a Vampire, I couldnâtenter her house without an invite. I could push the gates open andwalk down the drive, something I had wanted to do for years, but Icouldnât move. Fear kept my boots planted before the iron gate.
âWell, you canâtstand out here forever. Best tâget in there and get this donewith.â
âSay I go in there andI get to the door and ring the bell. Then what? What am I supposedtâsay tâher? âIâm sorry I havenât seen you in years, that Istopped writing. I know youâre probably pissed about it and that Iam no doubt the last person you want tâsee, but youâre right,everything you ever told me about Vampires ... itâs all real, whichmeans you probably are a Vampire Hunter and funny story, Iâm now aVampire. Please donât kill me, I need your help.â
âSounds
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