Read A Touch Mortal Online

Authors: Leah Clifford

Tags: #Social Issues, #Love & Romance, #Eschatology, #Angels & Spirit Guides, #Body; Mind & Spirit, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Fiction, #Religion, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Angels, #Dead, #Future life, #General, #Religious, #Demonology, #Death & Dying

A Touch Mortal

A Touch Mortal
Leah Clifford

To Karen Prickett and Marie Ricotta,
my second-and fourth-grade teachers

“For her house leads down to death
and her paths to the spirits of the dead.


PROVERBS
2:18

Contents

Chapter 1

Eden dug her hand into the damp sand, black polish…

Chapter 2

“I’ll take whatever’s most expensive, please.” Eden handed the menu…

Chapter 3

He’s kissing a dead girl. Gabriel dove again as a…

Chapter 4

Az opened the door to the hotel room. One glance…

Chapter 5

Ivy grew thick across the back of the house, the…

Chapter 6

Being Bound had its advantages. First off, faster travel options.

Chapter 7

Az reached forward and tucked a few strands of her…

Chapter 8

One split second passed where she could have reacted, could…

Chapter 9

Gabe’s hands clutched the rock, his legs quaking, threatening to…

Chapter 10

Eden nuzzled deeper into the covers, letting the warmth lull…

Chapter 11

The hesitant rapping on wood was enough to pull her…

Chapter 12

Eden descended the stairs, scoping out the room below, but…

Chapter 13

Eden wiggled her fingers, the gloves on her hands too…

Chapter 14

Every morning they’d climbed onto the train, she and Kristen,…

Chapter 15

All she needed was one loose screw. Eden slipped her…

Chapter 16

“Eden,” Az sighed. He tried to hide what was left…

Chapter 17

Az is alive. Every time Eden thought it, her heart…

Chapter 18

Eden reached blindly for her phone and shut off her…

Chapter 19

The bell on the coffee shop’s door sounded when she…

Chapter 20

Gabe stalked past the corrugated metal covering the storefronts, his…

Chapter 21

A quartet of police cars broke around the corner, lining…

Chapter 22

First it had been a car alarm; that had been…

Chapter 23

It was just after one in the morning when they…

Chapter 24

“I think she’s coming around.” The voice floated out of…

Chapter 25

Libby was first out the door. Over her shoulder, Eden…

Chapter 26

Hours passed before anyone dared knock, but finally a soft…

Chapter 27

Eden pressed her ear against her bedroom door, listening. She…

Chapter 28

The windows and doors were locked, the shades drawn long…

Chapter 29

“She has got to be kidding.” Eden shook her head.

Chapter 30

Eden rubbed her eyes, trying to concentrate. She hadn’t slept,…

Chapter 31

The sound stole into her room through the keyhole. She’d…

Chapter 32

She heard the screams through the door. Bloodcurdling, murderous screams,…

Chapter 33

It was snowing as they made their way across the…

Chapter 34

No, Gabe thought, watching the pink clips bobbing in and…

Chapter 35

Eden pushed her way through the dancing bodies to the…

Chapter 36

“Bend your knees,” Az said as their speed slowed. Eden…

Chapter 37

Next to her, Adam was curled tight into the blankets.

Chapter 38

The tension hadn’t cleared since the first night Gabe and…

Chapter 39

Az stood near the door, leaning against it as if…

Chapter 40

Eden didn’t have a chance to buy a bottle of…

Chapter 41

Snowflakes melted on the window of the cab, headlights flicked…

Chapter 42

Hours later, but before the black sky had begun to…

Chapter 43

She stared into the alley, her heart thumping wildly. For…

Chapter 44

She grabbed Az’s hand. “I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean…

Chapter 45

Gabe jumped from the couch as Eden burst through the…

Chapter 46

“She won’t help,” Eden repeated yet again. Gabe still hadn’t…

Chapter 47

“Are you out of your fucking minds?” Kristen gripped the…

Chapter 48

The fire burned. Logs popped as they dissolved into ash.

Chapter 49

Eden’s mind fluttered through the subway ride, up the stairs,…

Chapter 50

Gabe staggered, the weight of the ungainly things throwing him…

Chapter 51

It wasn’t Az.

Epilogue

Hovering behind them, Gabe let his gaze wander to Az.

E
den dug her hand into the damp sand, black polish chipping off the tips of her fingernails. The sand was cold, the beach pockmarked by late afternoon raindrops. A gust of wind ruffled through her dark hair. Eden sighed.

Last month there had been a string of parties, out-of-control times. She checked her phone. No missed calls. She couldn’t figure out what she’d done to get the cold shoulder from everyone the last few weeks. Even her mom no longer questioned where she was, if she was even alive.

Screw them. I just have to hang on until graduation and I’m out
, she thought, trying to convince herself she’d make it that long. An entire year. But then she could hit the road, go somewhere else where every day wasn’t bullshit. Start over.

Even in her head the words sounded like lies. It wasn’t like she had a college fund, or could take off to some faraway campus. She didn’t have the grades to get in anyway.

So that’s the extent of your brilliant plan?
Eden sifted her fingers through the sand, coming back to the same facts. No car. No money. No job. If she got lucky, she’d spend the next fifty years working the front desk at one of the hotels in this crappy tourist town.

Her mind went to her other option, the one she considered more every day. What was the difference between feeling dead, knowing her whole life would be that way, and actually being dead? It wasn’t like anyone would miss her. They clearly didn’t now.

This time she didn’t push the idea away. She wanted the thought of death to hold some thrill, terror. Wrongness. Instead, it held an empty acceptance her body ached for.

She dug her fingers deeper, and something distinctly not sand hit her fingers.

“Sick.” She yanked up her hand, taking a cluster of decayed scales with her. The wind changed direction, bringing the faint smell of salty dead fish. “Little late for the warning,” she muttered, scanning the area for an abandoned towel, anything to wipe off the goo. She grabbed a soggy magazine page out of the sand and tried to scrape her fingers clean. “God, can
nothing
go right?”

As if in answer, Eden’s skin prickled. She raised her head.

The beach had cleared out while the sun finished
setting. Only two couples remained, but she could barely make out their horizontal outlines in the darkness. Carnival sounds and the scents of popcorn and cotton candy floated down from the boardwalk. There were two guys walking close to the water’s edge coming down the beach. They were still a good fifty feet away, but closing the distance. She watched them for a moment, wondering if she knew them. They seemed to be heading right for her.

Eden rolled her eyes once she realized she didn’t recognize them, preparing herself. It was Jersey; getting hassled by guys was just another fact of summer. She normally put a few hours’ effort into achieving her normal balance between the fashionable “leave me alone” and a more stylish “I’m not afraid to knee your groin.” Lately though, even makeup seemed like too much work. She settled for a glare, hoping it would be enough.

The blond one was in a dark green polo, the color setting off his hazel eyes. With the short sleeves and his tattered-to-be-trendy jeans, he had to have been freezing.
Suffering just to pander to underage cheerleaders. Clearly a winner
, she thought, and then second-guessed herself. Something about him set her gaydar screaming.
Lovers’ stroll?
She eyed the other one. Brown curls, dark sweater, paired with cargo pants.
Be gay. Be gay and keep walking.
He noticed her giving him the once-over and smiled in a
way no gay boy in history had ever smiled at a girl. She shifted her eyes back to the water, but they stopped next to her. Perfect.

When she turned toward them, the one who had smiled at her brushed his hair back from his face.

“Your eyes are blue, like the ocean.” She raised an eyebrow in annoyance, unable to believe he went with a line so pathetic. Slightly behind him, the other’s mouth cocked an apologetic half smile. At least he knew his friend was an idiot. “I think I’m lost at sea,” lover boy continued, his voice sincere. A snort of laughter burst from somewhere between her throat and nose.

“You can’t be serious.” She stood, brushing the sand from her black leggings.

“Damn. Gabriel, did you hear that? That was the sound of my heart shattering.” His face twisted in mock pain. He gripped his sweater so tightly it left behind divots. Next to him, Gabriel rolled his eyes.

“Come on, Az.”

“Fuck off,” Eden enunciated each word, trying not to sound as amused as she was. “The water’s not even blue, jackass.”

She turned toward the stairs to the boardwalk and the guy grabbed her arm. Even through the material of her thermal top, his fingers were frigid. He offered up another smile and shrugged. “‘Storm-tossed’ seemed a
bit cliché.”

Her lips twitched before she could stop them.

“Was that a smile?” He dipped a bit, studying her face.

She fought the treasonous grin, managed to smother it away. “Are you kidding me with this?”

She met his eyes for the first time. He jerked forward suddenly, more of a stumble than a step, as if she’d yanked him closer by some invisible string. She should have shot off some comment about staying out of her personal space but the retorts vanished, her thoughts melting away like scorched snowflakes. It was almost too bad his pick-up lines weren’t as pretty as his eyes. Their color like cooled anger. Blue sea glass.

“Wow,” she whispered. He looked equally stunned, his smile bringing out dimples so subtle she hadn’t noticed them until now. How could she not have noticed them?

“Az, stop.” The voice was faraway. She didn’t bother to really register it at all, just let it slide by as she sank deeper into those eyes.
Nothing’s wrong
, she wanted to say.
Everything’s perfect
.

“I’m not doing anything, Gabriel,” he said slowly. She couldn’t take her eyes off Az. A tingle started deep in her chest. She gasped as everything inside her seemed to come back to life, shift into place.

“Who
are
you?” Az asked, his words coming honey
slow.

“No one,” she managed. “Nothing.” She hesitated before she ripped her gaze away, dizziness rolling in as the connection broke.

A pressure at her elbow held her upright as she slumped, unsteady. It was the blond one, Gabriel.

“I’m fine, it’s just…” She pulled her arm away slowly, trying to get her bearings. What the hell had that been? Az reached out to her, concern in his eyes. She stepped back, unsure and off-kilter.

“You look kinda shaky,” Gabriel said. He’d moved aside, but looked ready to step in if her legs gave out. Luckily, they seemed to be in working order again.

“Dinner,” she said. “I haven’t eaten yet.”
Wasn’t even hungry
, her brain spat out,
let alone starving enough to hallucinate some dreamy lost-in-his-eyes stare down with a stranger.
She pushed away any contradictions, forcing the excuse into reality. Just hungry. Which didn’t do much to explain how different she’d felt.

How alive.

“Would you let me take you out to dinner, then?”

She glanced up at Az, expecting the same rush when their eyes met, not sure whether to be disappointed when it didn’t come. “I don’t think so.”

“Why not?” He offered her a tentative smile. His hand hovered there between them, looking more orphaned
as the seconds passed. But he didn’t move, a picture of patience as he waited. “Tell you what. You
don’t
smile, and dinner’s off.”

“Don’t smile?” She stared at him in confusion. “Easy enough. Why the hell would I have dinner with you, anyway?”

“Because I’m an amusing young gentleman wooing you into a better mood. Because, with your high standard of pick-up lines, I think you’d be able to hold a decent conversation.” He shrugged, his eyes dancing. “Because I’m paying?”

Eden crossed her arms, rubbing her lips together to crush his victory before it fully formed.

“Did I just see one?” He tilted his head, eyebrow raised. “Was that a yes?”

“Damn it,” she said, giving up, letting the smile break loose.

His own grin brought back the dimples.

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