Death Day (Book 1): A Night Without Stars Read online




  WHAT READERS ARE SAYING

  ABOUT LOLA SANCHEZ…

  “[Lola] is one kick ass chick.” Genie (Goodreads)

  “She’s the perfect heroine, with the right amount of fear mixed in with courage… Lola is in it to stay alive.” Rola (XO Reads)

  “I loved Lola! She was gutsy, sarcastic, smart, but still down to earth.” Ornella (Goodreads)

  “Lola is pretty badbutt whether she’s hijacking a car or battling an angry horde of blood-thirsty apocalyptic vampires.” AnQui (Goodreads)

  A

  NIGHT

  WITHOUT

  STARS

  JILLIAN EATON

  A Night Without Stars is a work of fiction.

  All of the characters, organizations, and events

  portrayed in this novel are either products

  of the author’s imagination or

  are used fictitiously.

  Copyright © by Jillian Eaton 2014

  All Rights Reserved.

  Except for use in any review, the

  reproduction or utilization of this work in

  whole or in part in any form is

  strictly forbidden.

  ALSO BY JILLIAN EATON

  Young Adult

  A Night Without Stars

  Historical Romance

  The Runaway Duchess

  The Spinster and the Duke

  The Winter Wish

  The Risqué Resolution

  A Brooding Beauty

  A Ravishing Redhead

  A Lascivious Lady

  A Gentle Grace

  “Death is when the monsters get you.”

  STEPHEN KING, Salem’s Lot

  PROLOGUE

  The End of Everything

  I can smell the blood.

  It tastes metallic on my tongue and I close my mouth tight, clamping my teeth together until my jaw aches. Still the scent of it invades my nostrils, sweet and ripe as an apple left out to rot in the sun. My stomach cramps, a knee jerk reaction to what the smell of blood has come to signify: death.

  A drinker has been in the hotel. I can see the claw marks running down across the woodwork of the main desk. What little furniture remained in the lobby has been completely wrecked, as if the drinker went into some kind of mindless rage, destroying everything in sight.

  With my heart in my throat I sprint across the lobby and fly up the stairs, screaming their names with every step. But they aren’t in their rooms.

  They aren’t anywhere.

  I search the fourth floor. The second. The third. The first. Then all that is left is the basement, the one place we have never gone.

  Until now.

  When I see the light blossoming from the edges of a door at the end of the narrow corridor my knees nearly buckle with relief. I have found them and they are hiding away, just like they should have been. A breathless laugh forces its way past my lips. I have worried myself to death for nothing. Except the scent of blood is stronger than ever, and I cannot shake the terrible feeling of dread that is threatening to choke me.

  I push open the door and instantly cover my eyes, blinded by the light after running so long in the dark. For a few seconds all I see are two blurry shapes. One sprawled lifeless on the ground and another hunched over it.

  My vision refocuses like a camera lens. Sharpening slowly around the edges before spiraling in towards the middle until everything is clear. Clear as crystal. And I see who is on the ground. And I see who is standing over him. And I see what I have chosen to overlook for far too long.

  “Is he dead?” My words come out flat. Emotionless. It is a rhetorical question. I know he is dead. No one can lose that much blood and survive. It seeps across the tile floor, reaching all the way to the door, and I am forced to step in it as I walk across the room.

  The survivor turns to face me and my breath whooshes out to stain the air with shock and betrayal. I had not thought… I had never imagined… But the blood does not lie and his face is covered with it.

  “You,” I whisper in agony. “How could it be you?”

  His mouth opens and closes. Quick, so quick, but I see the flash of tell tale silver before he can conceal it. He reaches out his hand to me. A silent plea. Blood drips from his fingertips.

  “This is not what it looks like,” he says quickly. “Lola, you don’t understand. Let me explain.”

  “Isn’t what it looks like?” I repeat dully. “You’re one of them. You’re a… a… drinker. You’re a monster.” My voice thickens with tears. “And you killed him.”

  He says nothing. His eyes dart to my right hand.

  The gun. It has become such a part of me I almost forgot I had it. I raise it now and point the muzzle true. His face pales. He takes a step back, then stops. Goes still. “Do it then. I showed you how. One shot to the head, one to the heart. Just do it, Lola. If you think I could have done this I am dead already.”

  “No.” I look at the body on the floor. “He’s the one who is dead.”

  I aim the gun dead center of his chest. Aim it right at his black, lying heart.

  “Lola, I love–”

  I pull the trigger.

  CHAPTER ONE

  Fourteen Days Before

  Once upon a time there lived a beautiful girl. The beautiful girl had two parents who loved her and an older sister who doted on her. She had a golden retriever named Buddy who knew all kinds of tricks. She lived in a perfect house on a perfect street in a perfect neighborhood. The beautiful girl got straight A’s in school and wanted to be a veterinarian when she grew up. She was captain of the varsity soccer team and cheerleading squad. She had a handsome boyfriend who treated her like a princess and she was always very, very happy.

  Yeah, that girl is not me. If you want to read a fairytale, pick up another book. There won’t be any happy endings here.

  Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

  My name is Lola. My parents are divorced. My older sister hates my guts, and my dog got run over by a car two weeks ago. His name was Bacon, not Buddy, and he smelled like old takeout food.

  After the Big D my mom moved across the country to California and got married to some guy who rides a motorcycle and has a fu Manchu (for those of you who don’t know what that is, it’s a really stupid looking mustache). I decided to stay with my dad because I love him so much.

  Translation: My mom didn’t want me to come with her, so she only bought one plane ticket.

  We lived in a crappy apartment building on the wrong side of the tracks in Revere, Pennsylvania. It was where I’d been born and raised: a prestigious little town filled with old houses and family owned coffee shops and tree lined streets marked with signs like “have a wonderful day” and “please pick up after your precious pooch”. It was the quintessential home of the free and the stuck up middle class.

  Don’t even get me started on the hipsters.

  Big Sis followed Mom out to California after she graduated this spring and I haven’t heard from her since, which is probably for the best. It’s no secret we never got along. We were always too different. She worried about her hair and if her eyeliner matched on both sides. I worried people would figure out we were actually related.

  I’ve never had a boyfriend. I don’t play sports. The last time I got anything close to an A was in seventh grade English, and that’s only because I sat next to Patricia Clark, the smartest girl in the entire school. But this story isn’t about me. Not really. This story is about them. The drinkers.

  No one knows where they came from.

  In the end the government blamed the terrorists. The terrorists blamed the American people. The American people blamed the Jesus freaks. The Jes
us freaks blamed the sinners. The sinners blamed the hippies. The hippies blamed the owners of gas guzzling SUVs. The owners of gas guzzling SUVs didn’t blame anyone due to the fact that they were the first to die. Turns out gas guzzling SUVs can’t go very far before they run out of gas.

  Go figure.

  Personally, I am of the opinion that the drinkers have always been here. Lurking in the shadows. Biding their time. Waiting for just the right moment to strike.

  Curiously enough, they decided on a Tuesday in the middle of August to begin their attack on mankind. Just a normal day like any other. No holiday to speak of. Nothing to make the date significant. At least not then. Now we call it Death Day, but before that was just plain old Tuesday, the seventeenth of August.

  I wish I could say I was doing something life changing on the day the world came crashing down. Saving a life. Coming up with a cure for cancer. Rescuing a cat from a tree. Instead I was stealing a car.

  “Lola, are you sure you want to do this?” Travis Henderson, my best friend and reluctant partner in crime, peeked over the top of the dumpster we were huddled behind and quickly ducked back down. “I think it’s a bad idea.”

  I glanced at him sideways. Tall and thin with bright red hair, brown eyes, and crooked teeth Travis hadn’t exactly won the genetics lottery. He was a geek of the first order, but he was my geek and so I tolerated his chicken shit ways. Most of the time.

  “Don’t be a such a little bit…jerk,” I said, amending my word choice at the last minute. Travis was wound up so tight that any cursing would send him right over the edge. I reached across the gravel and patted his hand reassuringly. “It will be fine. It’s not as if we’re taking the car anywhere. We’re just starting it.”

  “But why?” he said miserably.

  “Because we can.” It was my new mantra for everything. Why steal one of my dad’s cigarettes and smoke it out behind the apartment even though it made me sick? Because I can. Why toilet paper Missy the cheerleader’s house even though we used to be best friends in the fifth grade? Because I can. Why make out with bad boy Everett James in the boy’s locker room at school even though he sucked at kissing and tried to feel up my boobs? Because I can.

  The truth of the matter was, I was bored. Bored of high school. Bored of summer. Bored of my entire mundane, predictable life. I craved change like a drug. I wanted excitement. I needed excitement. And what was more exciting than stealing a car?

  I mean starting a car.

  Yeah, right.

  Travis was so gullible sometimes.

  “Come on,” I said, grabbing his pencil arm – the guy seriously needed to work out if he ever wanted a chance with the ladies – and hauling him to his feet. “We have to go now, before the street lights kick on.”

  The car I had decided to hot wire was located on one of the quiet, tree lined streets with the lame signs, ten blocks away from my suck ass apartment complex. On this side of town the sidewalks were litter free and every lawn in front of the elegant row homes with their fancy shutters and crown molding was mowed to perfection. Even the garbage bin we were hiding behind smelled nice. Like some kind of fancy organic food and Febreze. I took a deep sniff as we slowly edged out to the street and my empty stomach growled in reply.

  “Shhh!” Travis hissed.

  “I can’t help it if I’m starving.”

  “What! We ate, like, half an hour ago.”

  “I didn’t eat that much,” I protested.

  “You had two cheeseburgers, an extra large fry, and a milkshake!”

  I elbowed him in the ribs. “What are you, the food police? You know I have a fast metabolism.”

  He muttered something that sounded suspiciously like ‘pig’ before he clamped his mouth shut. I let the insult pass. I have plenty of problems, but body image isn’t one of them. I am more than content with my height to weight ratio. I’ve always been able to eat whatever I wanted without having to worry about adding extra pounds. Just lucky, I guess. That’s me. Queen of Luck.

  I know you don’t see the irony in that now, but don’t worry. You will.

  Pulling my beat up cell phone out of the back pocket of my jeans I consulted it one last time. It was surprisingly easy to find out how to hot wire a car on the Internet. One site even had step-by-step instructions complete with pictures. “You have the screw driver and wire strippers?”

  Travis reached behind him to pat the orange backpack he had slung over both shoulders. I tell the guy to dress inconspicuously and he wears a button down shirt, khakis, and tops it off with the brightest bag known to man. You had to give him an A for effort.

  “Okay,” I said, cracking my knuckles. “Let’s do this.”

  Two weeks ago we had picked out the car. It belonged to a man who lived in the third house down on the left, a three story semi-detached townhouse with scary little garden gnomes scattered all over the lawn. A gold placard on the front door read The Livingston’s in fancy script.

  Oh, by the way: if you don’t want your car stolen by a sixteen-year-old with nothing better to do, don’t nail a gold placard to the door with your last name on it. Who are you, the freaking President?

  Give me a break.

  The Livingston’s drove a 2009 black Toyota Corolla. Kelly Blue Book said it got thirty-five miles to the gallon and was a top safety pick. Whatever the hell that meant.

  Side by side Travis and I walked down the sidewalk, trying our best to look like two regular teenagers out for a stroll at eight thirty on a Tuesday night. From somewhere across the street a dog was barking. A woman yelled and the dog shut up. Halfway to the driveway – a short, narrow rectangle of asphalt only big enough for the Toyota – a car pulled up behind us. I felt Travis tense and tightened my grip on his arm. The car’s lights flashed as it swung wide into the other lane and shot past, tires squealing.

  “Jackass,” I muttered.

  “Do you think they know what we’re doing?” Travis asked nervously. The poor guy was already sweating bullets. I squeezed his arm.

  “Calm down. This will be fun.”

  “Fun?” he squeaked. “You think stealing a car is fun?”

  I sighed. “Need I remind you that you agreed to this over a month ago? And besides, we’re not stealing. We’re just… starting. It’s not like we’re going to drive it anywhere.” Probably not, I added silently.

  “What if we get caught?”

  “Then I’ll take the all the blame, just like I told you yesterday. And the day before that. And the day before that. You know Travis if you didn’t want to come you didn’t have to. I’m not twisting your arm or anything.”

  “Uh, you kind of are.”

  I looked down to where my fingers were making little red marks on his skin and immediately let go. “Oh. Sorry.”

  He rubbed his arm and managed a weak smile. “It’s okay. A little nervous too, huh?”

  “I’m not nervous,” I scoffed. “This is going to be easy.”

  “Yeah, that’s what everyone sitting in jail said too.”

  I shot him The Look. He made The Face but stopped talking. We walked right past the Livingston’s driveway, just like we planned, and went to the next street up before we turned around and walked back down. Two teenagers. Out for a stroll. One dressed in black and the other on his way to debate team. Nothing suspicious here.

  The Toyota was sitting right in the middle of the driveway. The house loomed in front of it, every light extinguished save the one on the porch. A line of trees blocked our view of the neighbors and, hopefully, their view of us.

  I slinked up to the driver’s side door and Travis hovered just over my right shoulder, his breath hot on my neck.

  “Okay,” I said, mostly to myself. “Okay. First step is to get into the car without setting off the alarm. Travis, hand me the wedge and the coat hanger.” I held out my hand expectantly. Flexed my fingers. “Travis? Travis!”

  “I don’t think it’s locked,” he whispered. “The little nub is up.”

  �
��Of course it’s locked. What idiot doesn’t lock their car?”

  “We’re not on the West side, Lola. No one locks their cars here.”

  I clenched my jaw and counted to three. “Travis, just give me the damn wedge and–”

  Instead Travis reached past me and opened the door. His teeth flashed white in the encroaching darkness. “See?” he said triumphantly. “Told you.”

  I bumped him out of the way with my hip. “Whatever. So the Livingston’s aren’t the brightest. It’s not as if they – damn it!”

  “What? What? What is it? Is someone coming?” Travis flattened himself against the side of the car and dropped to the ground. It would have been funny if I wasn’t so angry.

  “He left the keys in the ignition!” Stupid yuppie East siders with their fancy nameplates and their antique houses and their top safety pick cars. They deserved to have their shit stolen. They really did.

  “That’s too bad,” Travis said, making no attempt to disguise his relief. He stood up and made a grab for my elbow. I snatched my arm out of reach.

  “No,” I said stubbornly. “We’re not leaving yet.”

  “Lola... If you’re thinking what I think you’re thinking –”

  “I think we said we were going to steal a car,” I interrupted, “and that is exactly what we’re going to do. Now get in.”

  “Get in?” He gaped at me. “Uh uh. No way. You said we were just going to hot wire it, not drive it. You promised.”

  I felt an irrational surge of anger. This wasn’t turning out anything like I thought it would. We were supposed to break in the car, start it, and drive off into the sunset like a modern day Bonnie and Clyde. Why? Because I can.

 

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