Authors: Amy Meredith
A Dark Toch Novel
Amy Meredith
RED FOX
This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
Version 1.0
Epub ISBN 9781409096276
With special thanks to Laura Burns and Melinda Metz
DARK TOUCH: SHADOWS A RED FOX BOOK 978 1 849 41051 9
First published in Great Britain by Red Fox, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books A Random House Group Company
This edition published 2010
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
Series created and developed by Amber Caravéo
Copyright © Random House Children’s Books, 2010
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publishers
The Random House Group Limited supports The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), the leading international forest certification organisation. All our titles that are printed on Greenpeace approved FSC certified paper carry the FSC logo. Our paper procurement policy can be found at
www.rbooks.co.uk/environment
Set in 12/16pt Minion
Red Fox Books are published by Random House Children’s Books, 61–63 Uxbridge Road, London W5 5SA
www.
kids
at
randomhouse
.co.uk
www.
rbooks
.co.uk
Addresses for companies within The Random House Group Limited can be found at:
www.randomhouse.co.uk/offices.htm
THE RANDOM HOUSE GROUP Limited Reg. No. 954009
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Bookmarque, Croydon, CR0 4TD
To Cliff Bryant, top of the Shoe Scale
Eve and Jess didn’t stop running until they’d turned onto Marigold Lane, where the church was. Eve could see the spire jutting up in front of the full moon. Gasping for breath, they slowed to a walk – a fast walk. Only one block to go.
Here the only light came from scattered windows in the houses – houses that felt like they were miles back from the street.
That’s why the shadows feel thicker
, Eve told herself.
That’s why it’s darker now. That’s the only reason
. Except that didn’t explain why the shadows looked like they were moving; twining around her ankles.
She glanced at Jess. Was Jess seeing what she was seeing? Eve didn’t want to ask.
But the shadows were sticky. As if they were made of thick black treacle or something. Walking through them got harder with every step. And the shadows – they were murmuring.
No, Eve decided. The murmuring – all hisses and low moans – was in her mind.
But the murmuring continued. It deepened, grew louder …
And then Jess screamed.
The ghost slipped between the two pine trees, moving silently, not even leaving footprints in the pine needles on the ground. Then it stopped, as if it could smell something – something
living
.
Don’t be scared
, Eve Evergold told herself as her heart began to pound.
I’m strong and I’m brave. I’ll get through this
, she thought. She wrapped her arms around herself, and tried to stay absolutely still. But that was impossible. She had to keep breathing, and that meant chest-up-and-down movement.
The ghost moved its head, a fraction at a time, sensing, searching. Its face – smooth, pure white and inhuman – was expressionless. The creature moved its head another fraction, and now it was staring right at Eve. Its eyes shone with a deep red fire. It felt as if those eyes seared everything they gazed at, including Eve’s skin. If it kept looking at her, she was sure those eyes
would pull her straight to the burning centre of hell.
Eve turned towards Jess, her best friend practically since birth. Jess’s face was twisted with terror as she stared at the ghost. The fire in its eyes brightened. Eve could hear crackling as it moved towards them. It was—
Jess screamed. Almost immediately handfuls of popcorn rained down on both of them. Jess got a few ‘shhh’s from other people in the theatre, but a lot more simply laughed.
No more horror movies for Jess and me
, Eve promised herself.
From now on, there will be nothing scary in my entire life!
‘I can’t believe I screamed. Out loud,’ Jess complained as she and Eve stepped out onto the broad sidewalk in front of the movie theatre.
‘Is there actually another way to scream? Like, in writing?’ Eve teased as they started down Main Street. ‘Anyway, I can believe it. You always freak at scary movies.’
‘This one wasn’t supposed to
be
scary,’ Jess said. ‘I heard it was going to be like a
Twilight
movie. And there wasn’t even any kissing.’
‘We deserve a treat after that,’ Eve told her.
‘Shoes?’ Jess asked hopefully, gazing at the array of sling-back wedges in the window of the Jildor shoe boutique.
‘I don’t think we’re quite that traumatized,’ Eve said. ‘Also, I’ve almost reached the limit on my AmEx.’ Well, her parents’ AmEx. Parents who would not be happy if she went over the limit they set. The very generous limit, as they often reminded her. ‘I was thinking something more like—’
‘Ice cream,’ Jess finished for her.
‘Two scoops.’ As they strolled towards the ice-cream shop, Eve looked for the strings of white fairy lights that were twisted among the branches of the elm trees lining the street. They went on every day at dusk, but she guessed it wasn’t quite dark enough yet. Eve loved those little lights. And the elm trees. She loved Main Street – all two and a half blocks of it.
She’d missed Deepdene, the tiny, exclusive town in the Hamptons where she’d lived her whole life, even though summer in Kauai with her family and Jess had been awesome.
Eve and Jess walked through the yellow door of Big Ola’s Ice Cream Shop at the end of the block. As usual on a Friday evening, every table and booth was taken. In their little town, the ice-cream place was one of the
three possible teen hangouts – Java Nation and the pizza place being the other two.
Eve turned to Jess. ‘OK, who do we know?’
They both scanned the small room. ‘Pretty much everyone. My brother’s over there, with the other stooges,’ Jess commented.
‘Shanna and the crew are by the window.’ Eve gave them a wave.
‘You’re back!’ Katy Emory called from her seat next to Shanna. She gave them the ‘call me’ sign.
Jess moved closer to Eve and lowered her voice. ‘And I think – no, I’m sure – that’s the new minister’s kid, Luke Thompson, sitting by the postcard rack.’
‘Who?’ Eve asked.
‘I talked to Megan. Remember? It was about a week ago, that day you were getting the hot rock massage but I was too sunburned,’ Jess said. ‘Anyhow, Megan said that Luke has floppy blond hair that falls into his eyes all the time – which that guy totally does. Love it, by the way! And she said he’s going to be a freshman like you and me. I told you, she met him over the summer.’
‘Oh yeah. Of course,’ Eve said. Jess’s next-door neighbour, Megan Christie, always got to meet new people first because her parents ran the best – and only – real estate agency in town. They were full-service,
even finding movers and hiring household help for the buyers of Deepdene’s huge houses, which ranged from French country-style estates, complete with barns, to ultra-modern, all-glass-and-angles mansions right on the white-sand beach. And that meant that Megan was involved with newcomers from the very moment they set foot in town. It was a big deal in Deepdene, population 2,704, especially because some of those 2,704 included the very rich and very famous, in the categories of movie directors, pop stars, fashion designers, news anchors, celebrity spawn and other magazine-cover staples. Anyone who was anyone and lived in New York City also had a house in Deepdene or one of the other villages that made up the Hamptons, 120 miles away from Manhattan. As long as they had enough money, of course.
Eve was giving the cute new boy a stealthy from-under-the-eyelashes look. His hair looked so silky. It made her want to run her fingers through it.
‘I still think Megan might have had a little thing going with Luke over the summer,’ Jess said. She started to hum ‘Son of a Preacher Man’, a song from the CD her mother played almost every time she drove them anywhere.
‘Of course she did,’ Eve said again. Megan’s ability to
flirt was legendary. So was the fact that she’d gotten breasts in fifth grade, before anyone else. Eve and Jess were a year younger than Megan, and they’d been deeply impressed. And deeply concerned about what – and when – their own bodies would pop out. Eve’s had never popped quite as much as she’d hoped, but the guys didn’t seem to mind that she was more on the sleek and slender side. Who knew – maybe she still had some popping in her future.
‘Megan moves fast,’ Jess agreed. ‘But, when I spoke to her, it sounded like she was already done with him and interested in somebody else. She wouldn’t say who. You know what a drama queen she is. She loves to hint and make you beg. But I didn’t get time to find out any more. She said she was tired and going to bed, even though it was only nine o’clock – her time – when we were talking. She was practically falling asleep on the phone. She said she hadn’t been sleeping a lot. Nightmares or something.’ Jess gave another glance over at the guy who had to be Luke. ‘Let’s go sit with him,’ she suggested.
Eve laughed. ‘Why not? He’s had to wait all summer to meet the glorious us. Poor deprived boy.’ She led the way over to the table and slid into one of the empty chairs. ‘You look bored, Luke. We decided you
need entertaining,’ she told him, giving him a smile.
‘I’m Jess. And she’s Eve. Welcome to Deepdene,’ Jess said, giving Eve a little shove with her butt. Eve moved over, letting Jess share her chair. Luke was at a table for two.
Eve moved an empty ice-cream dish out of the way with her elbow. Somebody had been sitting here with Luke.
Wonder who?
she thought. Not that it mattered.
‘Thanks, but I’ve been here for a month. Where were you?’ Luke asked.
‘Kauai,’ Eve and Jess answered together.
‘Right. Hawaii. Rich people love to go beach-hopping,’ Luke said, nodding. ‘Even when they already live on top of a perfectly good beach right here in the Hamptons. I keep forgetting that, being poor myself.’
Jess immediately looked concerned, but Eve laughed. The guy was kidding – she could tell by the little smirk on his face. ‘Poor?’ she said sceptically.
‘OK, no. But we definitely don’t summer in Europe. Or, you know, Hawaii,’ Luke said. ‘Though maybe you two will invite me with you next year. I’m lots of fun, I promise.’ He winked.
Eve was too surprised to answer, and she could see Jess’s cheeks turning red. This boy was pretty flirtatious for a minister’s kid!
‘So go ahead, ask,’ he said. ‘I know that’s why you came over.’
Eve and Jess looked at each other, baffled. He couldn’t know that Eve sort of wanted to curl her fingers into that silky blond hair of his. Could he?
‘What’s it like to be a minister’s kid?’ Luke prompted.
‘You don’t know that’s what we were thinking,’ Jess told him.
‘But we kind of were,’ Eve put in. ‘Specifically, are you the kind of minister’s kid who is extra, extra good?’ she joked. ‘Or are you one of those wild ones who will do anything to prove they are extra, extra bad?’ She had a feeling she knew the answer already.
‘Because it has to be one or the other, right?’ Luke laughed. ‘So using that logic, you’re spoiled. Because rich girls are always spoiled. And you spend every free second shopping or thinking about shopping. Because spoiled rich girls love to spend money,’ he added with a teasing smile.