Pitch

Pitch by Jillian Eaton

Book: Pitch by Jillian Eaton Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jillian Eaton
what other helpful tidbits I had learned in the defense class. Too bad I hadn’t paid closer attention. Mrs. Hamilton had been right – you never knew when you would have to kick a guy’s ass.
    The idea came to me suddenly, like all great (and ridiculously crazy) ideas do. If it did work it would give Maximus one open shot where I could only pray he wouldn’t hit me by mistake. If it did not work I would most likely end up with a broken neck. Not great odds, but what else was I going to do? Wait for Prince Charming to come rescue me? I just wasn’t that kind of girl.
    I tucked my elbows to my sides and buckled at the knees, throwing the Drinker off balance. Humping my back like some kind of deranged whale I charged at the lamp post and slammed on the brakes an inch before hitting it, twisting sharply to the side and simultaneously dropping my left shoulder. Caught by surprise the Drinker went soaring rather gracefully over top of me. The lamp post broke his fall.
    I scrambled away on my hands and knees, shouting something highly intelligent along the lines of, “SHOOT HIM SHOOT HIM SHOOT HIM.”
    Maximus was very obliging. I watched between my fingers as he shot three bullets into the Drinker. Head, heart, and stomach. The Drinker stutter stepped to the side and collapsed forward onto his knees.
    “Why?” he managed to groan.
    Maximus walked up behind the Drinker and put one foot between his shoulder blades. “You touched her,” he said harshly before he drove the heel of his boot down and the Drinker turned to ash.
    “Holy shit,” I gasped, scuttling back on my hands and feet crab style. “Holy shit. What happened? What did you do? He – he vanished . Where did he go?”
    “He’s gone. That’s all that matters. Get up, Lola. We can’t stay here.”
    I took his offered hand, still staring at the spot on the sidewalk where the Drinker had simply… disappeared. Shaking my head, I looked dazedly at Maximus. “So you were what, like following me or something?”
    Maximus’s fingers reached out toward my face. I flinched automatically and his hand hesitated in midair. “Your hair is tangled,” he said softly.
    I held my breath as he pushed my hair behind my shoulders, using his fingers to comb out the worst of the snarls. For an instant his thumb lingered on the curve of my collarbone before he withdrew his hand and cleared his throat. “The bruises on your neck are already fading. You didn’t get rid of the scars yet, I see.”
    I cleared my throat as well. Maximus had managed to do it with a quiet hem hem . I sounded more like a car engine backfiring. So ladylike. “Ah, no. Not yet. I wanted to ask you about that, actually.”
    His eyebrows lifted. “Ask away.”
    “Well…” How, exactly, did one ask if they were turning into a vampire? “The thing is…”
    Maximus offered me one of his rare smiles. “You are not becoming one of them.”
    “I’m not?” I said with relief.
    “No. Consider your fast healing a side effect of the bite. When the scars are removed, it will go away.”
    “Oh.” I glanced down at the scars. Such tiny things to have caused so much worry. At least now I could tell Dad and Travis the real reason I had survived going through a windshield.
    “What are you doing out here in the open so close to night?” Maximus asked, all traces of compassion vanishing as quickly as the Drinker’s body had. “Do you have a death wish?”
    “Of course not,” I said indignantly. “For your information I have found a perfectly safe place to stay.”
    “That doesn’t exist.”
    “What doesn’t?”
    “A safe place,” he said.
    I stiffened. “We tried to get out of town but they must have detonated some kind of bomb in the road. We couldn’t get to the interstate.”
    “We?” His head cocked to the side. 
    Damn it. I wasn’t going to tell Maximus about Dad and Travis. “Nothing. No one. Nevermind. I misspoke. It happens when I’m nervous.”
    “You don’t trust me.” He

Similar Books

Last Things

C. P. Snow

Murder in Foggy Bottom

Margaret Truman

Twisted Winter

Catherine Butler

Chance Of Rain

Laurel Veil

Ghost Stories

Franklin W. Dixon

The Arm

Jeff Passan