Seconds Before Sunrise (The Timely Death Trilogy) (7 page)

BOOK: Seconds Before Sunrise (The Timely Death Trilogy)
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“This is going to be a harsh winter,” he said, turning the wheel as he pulled out of the parking lot. I agreed, but I was unfamiliar with Hayworth’s average winter.
Since arriving in January, it had only snowed once.

“It doesn’t normally get this cold un
til October,” he continued.

I fought the urge to argue
with a local. October was only a month away.

My stomach twisted again, for no reason in particular, and I closed my eyes to fight the feeling away. My body was reacting to nothing.

“It’s those nightmares, isn’t it?” Robb’s brown eyes left the road and pierced me through the darkness. “You told me, remember?”

“That was weeks ago.”

“But you haven’t been the same since.” His grip loosened on the steering wheel. “You always look tired.”

“Thanks.”

“I didn’t mean it as a bad thing,” he clarified. “I’m saying it because it’s true.”

I turned
to the window and felt him glance over a number of times before he accepted my silence. I didn’t want to talk about it with Robb. He had blown me off the first time, and I didn’t want it to happen again.

T
he Suburban came to a squeaking halt. My bedroom light spread onto the front lawn, and I exhaled, calmed by the familiar sight.

“Want
me to walk you up?” Robb asked.

I shook my head, but h
e got out anyway, leaving his car running. I jumped out and walked next to him.

We didn’t talk, and I reached into my purse for my keys. They curled around my fingers, and I pulled them out. They jingled as I lowered my hand to my hip. “Thanks for driving me, Robb.”

His eyes darted around the lawn, and I looked over my shoulder. “What are you looking at?” I asked.

H
is neck snapped as he turned it back. “Nothing,” he said. “I thought I saw something. Probably an animal.”

“I hope so,” I said, fighting the urge to search the neighbor’s trees for whatever he saw. A part of me hoped it was an animal, but a bigger part of me wished to see one of the boys from my dream.

I barely turned to the door before Robb spoke up again, “What are you dreaming about?”

M
y neck tightened like I was being choked. “Nothing important.” I cleared my throat, but Robb didn’t budge, and I dropped my eyes to the ground. “A boy.”

The words, spoken a
loud, sounded weirder than I expected. It sounded dangerous, not comforting, and I could sense Robb’s discomfort. He’d shifted away, and his back was pressed to the wall. He crossed his arms before uncrossing them and shoving his hands in his pockets.

“Have you thought about calling the police?” he asked.

“Why would I do that?” I squeaked. “It isn’t real.”

Robb’s lip pulled into a smirk, but it dissipated qui
ckly, leaving me to wonder if I had seen what I did. “You seem upset enough that I figured you thought it might be.” His eyes searched my yard again.

“Do you think I should?”

He pushed his back off of the wall. “I think the more attention you give your dreams, the more dreams you’ll have,” he said. “The dreams will stop if you want them to.”

“I’ll try that,
” I said, but I wasn’t sure I wanted them to stop.


I should get back to Zac and the others.”

“Thanks again,
” I said.

H
e threw his arm over my shoulders. He hugged me from the side before striding down the sidewalk and disappearing into his car. I went inside before he drove away and tried to ignore my gut.

S
omeone − or something − was in my yard, and it didn’t feel protective like the boys from my dreams. It felt malicious, and it was focused on me.

 

Jessica

 

He stood beneath the shadows of the trees, but he was immune to the darkness. His blond hair illuminated without light, and his face didn’t cast a single shadow. The man didn’t move, but he seemed to be vibrating, causing the leaves to shiver above him. On a windless night, he was the eye of a storm – still, but awaiting something.

I, immediately, feared I was that something.

His eyes, widened past the usual circumference, were black pits, but I somehow knew he was staring at my bedroom. And I wasn’t awake.

The image flashed on and off in my mind as I clutched my blankets, desperately searching for reality, but I was stuck. I couldn’t wake myself up, and my skin was burning. Even my pajamas felt like they were ignited by electricity.

He was in the yard, but I could feel a hand on my chin, a blade to my neck. The air was warm, but my mind was frozen. I wanted to move − fight and run − but I couldn’t. I could only scream.


My scream shattered the nightmare, and I sprung up, blinking the image away furiously. I leapt from my bed, sprinted across my bedroom, and slammed against the window as I searched my front yard for him. He was gone, nothing more than a nightmare, but I didn’t want to believe it. I could feel him. His presence remained.

“Jessie?” My father burst in
my bedroom with my mother following. His puffy eyes were red when they met mine.

M
y mother’s face was pale. “Are you okay?”

My chest knotted, pushing against my breath,
and I rubbed my forehead. I couldn’t speak. I didn’t like lying. I never had.

“We heard you scream,” my mother continued as my fath
er walked over to the window.

H
e looked out the window, and his eyes scanned the same yard I had looked at. I wanted him to see what I couldn’t, but he grabbed the blinds.

“I wish you’d shut these,” he said, pulling the cord. The blinds slammed into the windowsill
.

I fought the urge to argue. If the blonde man was there, I wanted to see him coming.

“I must have been sleepwalking,” I suggested, grabbing my jacket off of my desk chair. I draped it around my shoulders. The clothing felt like the embrace I needed.

“Let’s get back to bed,” my dad said, moving past me as if he were the one sleep
walking.

M
y mother hung behind. She teetered on the edge of speaking, but her lips pushed to one side. She grabbed my door as she walked out of my room. “Goodnight, Jessie,” she said, shutting it softly behind her.

I was alone again, and I
stood with shaking knees. I grabbed the cord and pulled my blinds up, half-expecting the blonde man to reappear. But he didn’t. Even his presence was gone now.

I sighed, and my breath fogged over the window. When I touched the glass, it was cold,
and goose bumps trailed over my arm. I wanted to let go, but I couldn’t. I wanted to feel the cold until it meant something − like it was supposed to mean something − and I curled my fingers against the condensation. I had to dream again.

I was ready for t
he insanity to consume me if it meant I could understand what was happening.

 

Eric

 

A Light was at her house, and it was a powerful one.

I slammed on
the breaks, and my car’s engine vibrated through my sudden panic. My hand slapped against the door as I shoved it open, and the electric air sizzled against my lips.

“What are you doing here?”

I whipped around with my fist in the air, but Pierce grabbed my wrist. I sucked in breath as he tossed my hand to the side. He was glaring, and I was too.

“Do you feel that?” I asked, spreading my fing
ertips out, but everything that had been there had dissipated.

“No,” Pierce said.

“You were here for a reason,” I argued, gesturing toward Jessica’s house. It was only a few yards away.

“I bet you were, too.”

“I was driving by,” I said, attempting to keep my voice down. He was keeping something from me, just like the elders. “A light was at her house.”

“Near her house,” he corrected. “Not at it.”

“Is that relevant?” I spat.

Pierce eyed my car. “Are you going to turn that off?”

“No.”

His sigh came out rigid as he swiftly shut the driver’s door. “We shouldn’t be talking out here,” he said, remaining in his shade form.

“Why aren’t you a human?” I asked, knowing he was prepared for something. The light was powerful, and it was near Jessica. That wasn’t something to ignore, yet Pierce wanted me to. “What’s going on?”

“We’re handling it.”

I surveyed the road. “Who else is out here?”

“Eu and Bracke.”

My hands shook. “My father?” This was a big deal.

“It’s not
a big deal,” Pierce spoke as if he could hear my thoughts.

“Where is he?” I asked, searching
my radar for my father.

The neighbors were up, and a few
kids were smoking cigarettes in the park. A dog walked around by itself, and Pierce touched my shoulder.

“He’s busy—”

As I prepared myself to disappear, a circle of smoke curled through the air, and my father appeared. His shoulders rose, and his eyes were in slits. I knew the look. He was preparing to yell at me.

“You’re looking
for me?” he asked.

I ignored
the accusation. “All I want to know is what happened,” I said, surprised by my hardened voice.

My fath
er didn’t react to the tone as I had hoped. He remained calm, and he pointed to my car. “Go home, Eric.”

“I know more than any of you,” I growled, but my father walked toward me as i
f he could shepherd me to my Charger. “She’s frequently dreaming.”

He stopped. “What are you talking about?”

I repeated myself. “She told me,” I said, “in class.”

My father
turned to Pierce, but his hands went into the air. “They’re in homeroom together,” he defended. “I can’t stop her from talking to him.”

“You shouldn’t have talked back
, Eric,” my father said.

M
y eyes shot to the ground. “It doesn’t matter,” I said. “She told me, and it means something, especially if lights are coming near her.”

My father’s jaw locked as mine did, and Pierce put a hand on my father’s shoulders as
if he needed to be held back. My father shrugged him off.

“Why would she ta
lk so openly?” he asked.

I had to defend her.
“She only told me.”

“How do you know that?”

“She didn’t say a word to her friends. She was too busy griping over—” I cringed. “Zac.”

My father blinked. “Who’s Zac?”

“Don’t ask,” Pierce interrupted.

M
y father turned back to me. “Did Jess say anything else?”

“She ha
s dreamt every night since school started.” My words didn’t seem real, but they were. She’d opened up to me more as a human this time around, and I wondered how strong her subconscious was.

“You’re telling me Luthicer’s spe
ll only worked for one month?” My father continued his interrogation, but I couldn’t answer. Only Jessica could. “Someone had to trigger something.”

Pierce and my dad focused on me, and my anger sizzled like the Light. “I didn’t do anything.”

“Eric.” My father didn’t believe me.

I grabbed my hair with fists. “I’m trying to help, and you’re accusing me of being the problem.”

“Because I don’t believe you.”

“I’m
leaving,” I muttered, yanking my car door open before getting inside.

My dad grabbed the door. “
Calm down before you drive.”

I pulled hard, and he moved his hand before
the door squished his fingers. My foot laid on the clutch and gas, and I was gone, speeding away until the trees became blurs of midnight blue. I had to get away, far away.

Eric.
Pierce’s voice broke through the sound of my engine, and I shifted again. I wanted to see how far I had to go before the Dark couldn’t penetrate my thoughts.

Don’t speed,
he continued.

Get out of my head,
I said, blocking him.

M
y father’s voice echoed behind.
You’re going to crash.

I never crash,
I replied, downshifting to take a corner. I was getting on that highway whether they liked it or not.

His voice paused, but his presence floated around, and I knew he was sensing my actions. I saw the highway, sped up, and aimed for the on
-ramp. My fingers drummed against the steering wheel as the car flew across the blackened pavement, curling up to my escape.

You’re going to crash,
my dad repeated quickly.

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