Cross My Heart

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by Elizabeth Morgan




  Cross My Heart

  Blood Series: Book 1.5

  Elizabeth Morgan

  Urban Fantasy

  Cross My Heart

  (Blood Series: Book 1.5)

  Copyright © 2020, Elizabeth Morgan

  Smashwords Edition.

  Written in British English

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced electronically or in print without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in reviews.

  This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your eBook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  Cover Artist: Fiona Jayde

  Editor: Zee Monodee

  Blurb:

  Cross my heart, and hope to die… You should be careful what you wish for.

  Danielle Renaud would have never wished for this life of endless hunting and isolation, but it’s the only one she’s ever known. But while her second cousin, Heather Ryan, is off to single-handedly rid the world of Vampires, she is stuck on the side-lines.

  Frustrated and concerned when Heather hasn’t checked in for over a fortnight, she decides it’s time to take matters into her own hands. What she doesn’t expect is to learn her childhood friend, Nathan, is also missing, or to discover him half-naked and shackled, lurking around their old hangout. And he needs her help, because to her horror, he is now one of the undead. Although she is trained to kill his kind, something about his creation and the circumstances surrounding it just don’t add up.

  Promises should not be broken, but no one ever expects to die if one is.

  Nathan Kennedy was warned that Vampires existed, but he always believed his childhood friend just suffered from an overactive imagination. Boy was he wrong. Dragged into a world he once made fun of and “turned” against his will, he will soon discover he has a role to play that even his Slayer Bestie couldn’t have cooked up.

  Nothing is a coincidence.

  Though the circumstances are extreme, fate has brought them back together, and they need to find Heather, the first born Infected, to make sense of what’s going on. But neither of them could have predicted the path that lies before them, or how much their lives were truly about to change … for the worse…

  This title contains explicit language and some scenes with violence.

  Available at most online retailers. Also available in print.

  Author’s Note

  This book took a lot longer than I expected it to and I can’t even give a reason as to why that is, but like Sofia Renaud, I believe everything happens for a reason.

  I started writing this book in 2016 after Blood Secrets was published, but that was also a year where a lot changed for me in real life. Some not so good, but it brought me to where I am now, and I believe everything we do in life serves a purpose.

  I had been chipping away at this story since 2016, but it wasn’t until this year, 2020, when the world stopped and every day life ground to a halt that I was able to find my way back to this world again.

  COVID-19 has been horrendous and has affected every single one of us in one way or another, but if there is one thing that I will take away from this scary, crazy time – a silver-lining, dare I say – is it has helped put my priorities in perspective. And in having to isolate and therefore not worry or stress about everyday tasks and responsibilities, I have been able to focus on what I love, which is writing, telling stories.

  This book was never planned but was essential. Elle and Than’s story runs alongside the events of Blood Secrets. It doesn’t matter if you haven’t read book two in the series or even the prequel, She-Wolf. But I would highly recommend that for your own enjoyment and to understand the events of this book, you have at least read book one, Cranberry Blood.

  I’m so happy to finally be sharing this instalment with you and hope you enjoy every second of it and find it worth the wait.

  Elizabeth Morgan xx

  Blood Series:

  She-Wolf

  Cranberry Blood

  Cross My Heart

  Blood Secrets

  Table of Contents

  Author’s Note

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Epilogue

  Series Glossary

  Acknowledgement

  About the Author

  Cross My Heart

  Prologue

  ~ Nathan ~

  The sky was a mixture of orange and pink making the scattered, wispy clouds look like candy floss. It was hot, with next to no breeze, and somewhere in the distance, birds sang. But as always, our haven was as silent as a grave.

  I had never really understood that saying. Of course, a grave was silent—it was a patch of ground marked by a slab of stone ... and we were surrounded by them.

  “This isn’t fair. Switzerland is practically on the other side of the world,” I huffed, aiming the pebble in my hand toward the thin arch window in front of me.

  “Your geography is terrible,” Elle replied, climbing along the wall of what was once the left side of the friar’s house. “It’s not that far.”

  The monastic site had closed hours ago, a tourist attraction by day and our haven in the evenings. Sure, it was a graveyard, but it was historic and had a tower which allowed you to see far off into the distance. It had been the site where we had slain dragons and hid from the monsters lurking in the nearby forest. Where we had braved great peril to rescue the princess locked up in that very tall tower ... which Elle had never offered to play the part of. She’d always preferred to be on the ground, fighting by my side.

  We had played here as children and had hung out here as teens. It was our special spot, and right now, I had no idea if I would ever see this place again.

  “Still—” I reached down and grabbed another small stone from amongst the grass. “—I don’t understand why my da had t’take a job in a different country.”

  “I don’t think it’s necessarily his choice where the promotion’s based.”

  I snorted. “It’s his choice on whether t’take it or not, and he has, and now we’re off t’bloody Switzerland.” I lobbed the stone toward the glassless window.

  It wasn’t fair. How could my father just change our lives without even asking if I was okay about it?

  “It’s better money, isn’t it?” Turning, Elle lowered herself so she was sat on the uneven stones. “That’s why he’s taken it because he wants you and your Mamai to have a better life. That’s not a bad thing, Than.”

  “It’s easy for you to say. Your family has plenty of money.”

  Elle’s family were loaded—big house with acres of land... Not that I had ever gotten to see any of it, but from what I could see through the gaps in the iron gates at their entrance, it looked pretty damn cool. Her parents weren’t snobs, well, at least they didn’t seem to be, but they never allowed ‘strangers’ i
nto their home. Not that I was a stranger; Elle and I had been friends since reception. You’d think ten years of friendship would mean that you would at least be allowed to play in their garden occasionally, but apparently not. It didn’t matter, though—we had our own land to explore.

  “Besides, you’re supposed t’be on my side and be equally pissed off about this.”

  “I am on your side, butthead.” She sighed. “But it’s not like I can do anything about it.”

  “You could kidnap me?”

  A chuckle escaped her. “And take you where?”

  “Your house. Seems like the most secure place in the world.” I threw a stone over her head. “No one gets in, and hardly anyone gets out.”

  “My house would be the first place they’d come looking for you.”

  “They wouldn’t find me, though, because your father wouldn’t let them past the gates. It’s a perfect place to hide.”

  Her expression flattened. “Yeah, I guess it is.”

  “So, it’s settled, then.” My next aimed pebble hit her shin. “You’re kidnapping me.”

  “I kinda think you’re missing the silver lining here.” She threw her arms in the air, her hands indicating to everything around us. “You’re getting out of Wicklow and getting to see a different part of the world, a new ... adventure.”

  I rolled my eyes and threw another pebble toward her. “You always go on that our hometown’s so boring.”

  She caught the small stone. “It is. Hardly anything happens around here.”

  “You mean other than the fact there are Vampires creeping around at night?”

  “Shush.” She lobbed the stone at my upper arm. “I told you that in secret.”

  I shrugged, resisting the urge to rub the spot she’d hit. “We’re alone. No one can hear me.”

  “You’d be surprised.”

  A small shiver crawled down my spine. It creeped me out when she said stuff like that.

  I glanced over my shoulder, gaze darting around the sparse tombstones. “Remind me again why it’s safe t’hang out in a graveyard? Aren’t Vampires supposed t’burst through their coffins and claw their way through the dirt?”

  As cool as the idea sounded and looked on TV, standing alone on top of graves suddenly didn’t seem like such a smart idea.

  She cocked her eyebrow. “You’ve seen way too much Buffy the Vampire Slayer.”

  “Duh, that’s because Sarah Michelle Gellar is hot.” I casually and quickly made my way around the side of the crumbled building until I reached what remained of the front entrance.

  “Theory is Vamps can’t come on t’sacred ground. That’s why it’s safe.”

  With the help of a large slab of stone, I pulled myself up onto the uneven wall and carefully climbed toward her. “But you don’t know for sure?”

  “Let’s just say it boils down to superstition because I don’t think anyone has tested the theory in a long time.”

  I wanted to laugh but knew better by now. This was a fantasy world that Elle had lived in for six years and simply refused to step out of despite being older. Not to mention she would bite my head off for teasing her about any of it. No, I had learnt by now to just play along.

  It was creepy how serious she was about the whole Vampire mythology thing, but at the same time, interesting. Fun when we were children, but now we were teens, it was kinda bordering on obsession. Maybe the loon would eventually become a writer and put all these details to good use, because I highly doubted she was going to find paid work as a Vampire Slayer.

  I stopped by her side, standing tall on top of the ancient wall. The rays of the sun were already slithering away as the big ball of heat slowly sank behind the mountains. Since the light was withdrawing, it meant the shadows had sprung to life, crawling from the base of the below gravestones. Yeah, it was easy to believe in the undead when you stood in a graveyard amongst super old ruins.

  “God, if anyone could hear us, they would think we were both crazy.”

  “You believe me, though, don’t you?”

  I looked down to find her staring up at me.

  “Of course I do. That’s what friends are for.” I thumped down beside her, ignoring the discomfort of the uneven stones beneath my butt. “Sticking by each other, even if one of them is a little mad.”

  I laughed, grasping onto the jagged stone as she shoved me.

  “I’m not mad, you eejit. I just know more about the world than most people.”

  “I don’t think believing in Vampire means you know more about the world than anyone else.”

  “It’s not a belief, it’s a fact.”

  “Sure, sure.” Another fact: Danielle Renaud was crazy, but at least she was fun.

  The shadows had already crawled to the bottom of the wall—just a little farther, and they would touch our Converse-clad feet dangling above. It was almost time to go. Her father always wanted her home before it got dark. Apparently, Vampire hunting was a family activity. All my family ever did was go bowling or to the cinema.

  “There will be Vampires in Switzerland, y’know.”

  She spoke softly, unusually so, as if she didn’t want me to hear her.

  I nodded and gave a small sigh. “I wonder if they yodel before or after slaughtering all the mountain goats?”

  “You’re not funny.”

  I slanted a look at her. “Then why can I see a smile hiding at the corner of your lips?”

  She reached up and wiped her mouth as if trying to rub the evidence of her amusement away. “You might not want t’believe I’m telling the truth, but trust me, if you ever see one, you wouldn’t be making jokes. They’re ugly and violent creatures.”

  “Who look like the guy from Salem’s Lot?” I placed my hands to my mouth, using my index fingers as fangs.

  “The Master from Salem’s Lot is similar, but firstly, Vampires aren’t blue, and secondly, they only lose their hair when they transform.”

  “Because they actually look like normal people?”

  “Yes. When they transform, their eyes turn black, their jaws dislocate to accommodate their fangs, and their tongues fork and extend.”

  “Like a snake?”

  “Yes.” She didn’t bat an eyelid, didn’t stutter, didn’t even look like she was going to laugh at the idiocy of what had just come out of her mouth. She was serious, as always.

  “Come on, Elle.” I rolled my eyes. “That doesn’t sound like a Vampire at all.”

  “That’s because you’re use to watching Hollywood’s representation.” She pushed her palms into the stone and carefully stood up. “Trust me, they’re hideous.”

  “Uh-huh, and how many have you seen to date?”

  “Four.” She wiped her palms against her denim dungarees.

  “And how many have you killed again?”

  “Three.”

  There came that chill down my spine again. “Y’know, you scare me sometimes.”

  “Just promise me you will carry a pocketknife around with you when you’re out at night and get yourself something silver to wear.”

  “Because they’re allergic?”

  “Yes, and if you manage t’shove the item into their throats, it would buy you enough time to get away—”

  “Jesus, Elle.” I pushed myself up until I was eye to eye with her. “I’m not about t’start throwing jewellery down people’s throats.”

  “Not peoples. Vampires.” Her left hand landed on my right arm, steadying me. “I can’t ... I can’t protect you in Switzerland, Than.” Her green eyes suddenly looked bigger, wetter.

  In all the years we had been friends, I had never seen her cry, but right now, I was pretty sure she was close. It was an uncomfortable sight, and I was pretty sure that if I took the mickey out of her, she would push me off this wall, which wasn’t that high but high enough to still bloody hurt.

  “It’s alright, Elle.” I gave her a smile and took hold of her elbow, squeezing gently. “I know that you’re going t’miss me. I am your o
nly friend, after all.”

  That earned me an eye roll. “Besides Heather.”

  “She’s your second cousin, so she doesn’t really count as a friend.”

  I knew she and Elle were close, but Heather hardly ever left the house, which had to suck especially because she was home-schooled. Ten years old and no friends. Her mother had committed suicide only two years prior; it was sad. The few times Elle had brought her out with us, she’d always looked so damn uncomfortable and worried. Poor kid.

  “Well?” I gave her a little shake. “You going to admit that you will miss me, or do I have t’force it out of you?”

  Her gaze didn’t leave mine, her fingers flexing on my arm. “I’m scared I will never see you again.”

  My stomach flip-flopped at the whispered reply, and my earlier frustration reared its head again. My parents were moving me away from my hometown, my school, grandparents, and friends, from Elle. Did they even care or know what they were doing?

  “I’ll visit. My grandma is still here so we will be back at least a couple times a year, but more importantly, I will email you. We can be pen friends.”

  It wasn’t fair. My parents were ruining my life all for the sake of a job—a job my father started in a month, which meant we only had three weeks to pack up and do whatever the hell people did when they moved countries.

  I had to start all over again: new school, new friends, and I would be all alone. No Elle and her idiotic stories and crazy drama to make it all easier. This was one of the last times we would hang out … maybe the last time we would properly hang out.

 

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