Juliet Immortal

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Book: Read Juliet Immortal for Free Online
Authors: Stacey Jay
classes together.”
    When he speaks, his voice is as husky as mine. “Right.
Dulces sueños
, Mermaid.”
    Sweet dreams
. Not likely. Not after a shift that’s started like this one.
    “You too.” I turn and rush up the concrete steps and through the creaky screen door, cozy in my borrowed shirt if not my borrowed skin, the smell of ocean breeze and Ben following me in out of the night.

SIX
    T hat wasn’t the same boy you left with.” Ariel’s mom—
my
mom—stands in the center of the kitchen, hands fluttering from the neck of her blue robe to the tie at her waist and back again. She leans to one side, peering around me through the screen door as Ben drives away.
    Her blue eyes are a different color than Ariel’s. But the rest of Melanie Dragland—white-blond hair, narrow nose, thin lips, willowy frame—is nearly identical, as if she created her daughter from a piece of her own flesh. She’s pretty, or would be if it weren’t for the tension that sours her features.
    “What happened to Dylan?” she asks, voice rising. “And what are you wearing? What happened to your new shirt? Andyour makeup?” She sucks in a scandalized breath as she crosses the kitchen, wide eyes roaming over my face. “It looks like you rubbed it all off. All of it!”
    “It’s fine, Mom, I can—”
    “It’s not fine. I can see everything,” she says, the pain in her voice making me flinch. The pain is
her
pain, but it would be so easy to take it personally. It would be so easy for Ariel to look into her mother’s horrified eyes and believe that
she
is the thing that’s horrible.
    I would have fallen into the same trap if it hadn’t been for my father. He was always there with a hug and a smile, balancing the cold consideration of my mother. In her eyes, I was simply a reminder of her failure to give my father a son. If they’d been my only reflection I would have gone mad.
    It’s no wonder Ariel has such a distorted view of herself. The mirror Melanie holds to her is warped, cruel. I have to find some way to change things in this house or I can’t see Ariel’s life improving in the near future.
    I take a deep breath and try my best to keep my dislike for this woman from my voice. “Dylan and I went to a party on the beach. I got some spray on my face. I guess it washed my makeup off.” My eyes roam around the kitchen as I think how to explain why Ben drove me home. Unfortunately, there isn’t much to look at. Just white cabinets stenciled with blue Danish wooden shoes and windmills, cracked white countertops, and linoleum that was probably new around the time Melanie was born.
    She obviously doesn’t choose to spend her nurse’s salary on home improvements. The kitchen feels cold and unlived in and smells of cheap coffee, bleach, and … cabbage. It doesn’t bode well for the rest of the house.
    “It’s too cold to be down at the beach.” Melanie crosses her arms over her chest. “It’s barely fifty degrees
here
, and it’s always colder on the coast.”
    “I know. I was freezing,” I agree, the lies coming easier now. “So a friend gave me his sweatshirt, and a ride home.”
    Melanie shakes her head. “But what about Dylan? What happened?”
    He’s dead. Your daughter killed him, and now a monster is living in his body
.
    I lower my eyes, studying the brown stars on the linoleum, wishing Ariel had never met Dylan Stroud.
    “I thought he really liked you,” Melanie pushes, refusing to take the hint. “He actually came inside to say hello to your
mother
. That’s kind of a big deal, isn’t it? I thought boys didn’t do that anymore.”
    “I guess.” I shift my gaze to the ceiling, where lumps of paint bubble like an untreated rash. Ariel’s memory tells me the style is called a popcorn ceiling. The artist within me is unimpressed.
    “So? What happened?” Melanie’s impatience is sharp in the air. This is the point when Ariel would usually scream for her mom to leave her alone and run to her

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