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
It wasnât fair. Howcould my father just change our lives without even asking if I wasokay about it?
âItâs better money,isnât it?â Turning, Elle lowered herself so she was sat on theuneven stones. âThatâs why heâs taken it because he wants you andyour Mamai to have a better life. Thatâs not a bad thing,Than.â
âItâs easy for you tosay. Your family has plenty of money.â
Elleâs family wereloadedâbig house with acres of land... Not that I had ever gottento see any of it, but from what I could see through the gaps in theiron gates at their entrance, it looked pretty damn cool. Herparents werenât snobs, well, at least they didnât seem to be, butthey never allowed âstrangersâ into their home. Not that I was astranger; Elle and I had been friends since reception. Youâd thinkten years of friendship would mean that you would at least beallowed to play in their garden occasionally, but apparently not.It didnât matter, thoughâwe had our own land to explore.
âBesides, youâresupposed tâbe on my side and be equally pissed off about this.â
âI am on yourside, butthead.â She sighed. âBut itâs not like I can do anythingabout it.â
âYou could kidnapme?â
A chuckle escaped her.âAnd take you where?â
âYour house. Seemslike the most secure place in the world.â I threw a stone over herhead. âNo one gets in, and hardly anyone gets out.â
âMy house would be thefirst place theyâd come looking for you.â
âThey wouldnât findme, though, because your father wouldnât let them past the gates.Itâs a perfect place to hide.â
Her expressionflattened. âYeah, I guess it is.â
âSo, itâs settled,then.â My next aimed pebble hit her shin. âYouâre kidnappingme.â
âI kinda think youâremissing the silver lining here.â She threw her arms in the air, herhands indicating to everything around us. âYouâre getting out ofWicklow and getting to see a different part of the world, a new ...adventure.â
I rolled my eyes andthrew another pebble toward her. âYou always go on that ourhometownâs so boring.â
She caught the smallstone. âIt is. Hardly anything happens around here.â
âYou mean other thanthe fact there are Vampires creeping around at night?â
âShush.â She lobbedthe stone at my upper arm. âI told you that in secret.â
I shrugged, resistingthe urge to rub the spot sheâd hit. âWeâre alone. No one can hearme.â
âYouâd besurprised.â
A small shiver crawleddown my spine. It creeped me out when she said stuff like that.
I glanced over myshoulder, gaze darting around the sparse tombstones. âRemind meagain why itâs safe tâhang out in a graveyard? Arenât Vampiressupposed tâburst through their coffins and claw their way throughthe dirt?â
As cool as the ideasounded and looked on TV, standing alone on top of graves suddenlydidnât seem like such a smart idea.
She cocked hereyebrow. âYouâve seen way too much Buffy the VampireSlayer.â
âDuh, thatâs becauseSarah Michelle Gellar is hot.â I casually and quickly made my wayaround the side of the crumbled building until I reached whatremained of the front entrance.
âTheory is Vamps canâtcome on tâsacred ground. Thatâs why itâs safe.â
With the help of alarge slab of stone, I pulled myself up onto the uneven wall andcarefully climbed toward her. âBut you donât know for sure?â
âLetâs just say itboils down to superstition because I donât think anyone has testedthe theory in a long time.â
I wanted to laugh butknew better by now. This was a fantasy world that Elle had lived infor six years and simply refused to step out of despite beingolder. Not to mention she would bite my head off for teasing herabout any of it. No, I had learnt by now to just play along.
It was creepy howserious she was about the whole Vampire mythology thing, but at thesame time, interesting. Fun when we were children, but now we wereteens, it was kinda bordering on obsession. Maybe the loon wouldeventually become a writer and put all these details to good use,because I highly doubted she was going to find paid work as aVampire Slayer.
I stopped by her side,standing tall on top of the ancient wall. The rays of the sun werealready slithering away as the big ball of heat slowly sank behindthe mountains. Since the light was withdrawing, it meant theshadows had sprung to life, crawling from the base of the belowgravestones. Yeah, it was easy to believe in the undead when youstood in a graveyard amongst super old ruins.
âGod, if anyone couldhear us, they would think we were both crazy.â
âYou believe me,though, donât you?â
I looked down to findher staring up at me.
âOf course I do.Thatâs what friends are for.â I thumped down beside her, ignoringthe discomfort of the uneven stones beneath my butt. âSticking byeach other, even if one of them is a little mad.â
I laughed, graspingonto the jagged stone as she shoved me.
âIâm not mad, youeejit. I just know more about the world than most people.â
âI donât thinkbelieving in Vampire means you know more about the world thananyone else.â
âItâs not a belief,itâs a fact.â
âSure, sure.â Anotherfact: Danielle Renaud was crazy, but at least she was fun.
The shadows hadalready crawled to the bottom of the wallâjust a little farther,and they would touch our Converse-clad feet dangling above. It wasalmost time to go. Her father always wanted her home before it gotdark. Apparently, Vampire hunting was a family activity. All myfamily ever did was go bowling or to the cinema.
âThere will beVampires in Switzerland, yâknow.â
She spoke softly,unusually so, as if she didnât want me to hear her.
I nodded and gave asmall sigh. âI wonder if they yodel before or after slaughteringall the mountain goats?â
âYouâre notfunny.â
I slanted a look ather. âThen why can I see a smile hiding at the corner of yourlips?â
She reached up andwiped her mouth as if trying to rub the evidence of her amusementaway. âYou might not want tâbelieve Iâm telling the truth, buttrust me, if you ever see one, you wouldnât be making jokes.Theyâre ugly and violent creatures.â
âWho look like the guyfrom Salemâs Lot?â I placed my hands to my mouth, using my indexfingers as fangs.
âThe Master fromSalemâs Lot is similar, but
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