Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Arise
Arise
Arise
Ebook338 pages5 hours

Arise

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

In Arise, the mesmerizing, romantic sequel to YA paranormal novel Hereafter, Tara Hudson takes the story of Amanda, a ghost girl adrift between the worlds of the living and the dead to New Orleans. Amanda has found love with Joshua, a human boy. But as powerful as their love is, it may not be strong enough to break the barrier between life and death.
 
Evil spirits have been threatening Amanda. She is terrified they will hurt those she cares about, especially Joshua. When Gabrielle, a beautiful girl Amanda meets at the Conjure Café in New Orleans, offers Amanda the possibility of a different life, Amanda agrees to meet her in at the St. Louis Number One Cemetery at midnight. There, Amanda finds a Voodoo circle. Once she steps inside, everything will change.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperTeen
Release dateJun 5, 2012
ISBN9780062114303
Arise
Author

Tara Hudson

Tara Hudson lives in Oklahoma with her husband, son, and a menagerie of ill-behaved pets. After receiving her law degree, she began writing to entertain her girlfriends. They read her story about a ghost girl who awakes in a cemetery and wanted to know more. This short piece inspired the Hereafter trilogy, which culminates in Elegy.

Related to Arise

Titles in the series (3)

View More

Related ebooks

YA Horror For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Arise

Rating: 3.6651981709251102 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

227 ratings58 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Amelia is a spirit, lost in the mortal world. Destined to relive the night of her death over and over. Not exactly the most pleasant existence. That is, until the night that she happens to rescue Joshua.

    I know that there are plenty of paranormal romance stories out there, but I'd be lying if I said that this one doesn't stand out. Amelia's character is so perfect. She's sweet and lost, but downright fierce when she needs to be. I loved watching her wake up from the fog and become more aware of herself as the story progressed. Amelia's story has the perfect balance between being utterly heartbreaking, and yet full of hope at the same time. It will tug at your heartstrings, that's for sure!

    Then there is Joshua. Wonderful and persistent Joshua. Want a guy who manages to be adorable without even trying? Here's your man. Dead set on being a part of Amelia's afterlife, apparently whether she wants it or not, he holds his own. The banter between these two and the stolen moments of closeness were too sweet for words. There were times when it was just so honest. Sure, they may be from two different planes of existence, but that doesn't stop them from being a perfect match for one another. Be warned, swoon worthy moments ensue.

    Lest you think that Hereafter is just a book filled with romance though, let me sate your need for action! As Amelia remembers more about her past, the book really picks up pace. Ghosts who are "unclaimed" are apparently a no-no in Tara Hudson's ghostly afterlife. This allows her to weave a wonderful romance that pits two very different worlds against one another. Amelia's life becomes a tug of war between the living, and the dead. I cannot say enough how much this added to the overall story! Love is great, but love that is fated to fail? Even more delicious.

    Let's be honest, I could go on about Hereafter for hours. However I'll wrap it up with the fact that while this may not be a new concept, Tara Hudson takes a story that has been done before and still manages to put her own gorgeous twist on it. Amelia and Joshua will make your heart soar, and then have you rooting for their continued existence together. Couple that with some all out action, and you have a book that is well worth your time.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Deus ex machina powers, activate!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Ahhh!!! What can I say about this book? I've got to say I am a fan of paranormal romance whether its adult, young adult, whatever. This book does not disappoint.Amelia is a young ghost caught in a memory fog. One night she saves Joshua from drowning and her world is changed for the better. With him, she begins to remember her life.She also meets Eli, a reaper of sorts. Will their love survive? Read and find out!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Amelia is dead, but is still hanging around her hometown. When she sees a car drive off a bridge, she rescues the young man inside - and discovers that he can see and feel her. Their developing romance is threatened by his exorcist grandmother, and an evil spirit who wants Amelia for his own.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    What a wonderful story! Told from a ghosts perspective, I baca me a ghost in love with a boy! A great story makes you become the character. Love the character , and all that she loves!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book had me hooked from the beginning until the next book. If you have some great stories like this one, you can publish it on Novel Star, just submit your story to hardy@novelstar.top or joye@novelstar.top
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Romance between a ghost girl and a living boy.
    Interesting and different. Now I need to find the other two.
    See what happens between these too.

    I don't understand what's going to happen when Joshua grows up and the ghost dosen't.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Oh man, it’s been a while since I’ve devoured a book like this. I fell in love so quickly, hooked so fast, and read half of it in one sitting. Would have read to whole thing, but it was three in the morning and I couldn’t keep my eyes open. The writing is beautiful, the scenery is gorgeous, we finally have a girl falling for the boy who treats her right and shunning the “bad boy” who only wants to control her. I love the suspense that’s kept throughout the entire book, and although I disliked Eli and his role in the beginning, it all worked in the end.

    I love the voice. We follow Amelia, a girl who drowned in a river, as she wanders around and tries to figure out who she was before she died. She falls in love with a boy in the living world, and they try to make things work despite Eli getting in the way. Joshua, the one she falls in love with, is absolutely adorable. She rescues him from the same fate she suffered, and after that, they’re pretty much inseparable. He’s an absolute sweetheart and it’s so refreshing to see a love story that shows a healthy relationship. Even if this relationship is a bit…abnormal.

    I would have been completely happy with this just being a story about how Joshua helped Amelia figure out who she was and left it at that. But the author went beyond that and added a little supernatural flair. The final showdown was a bit anti climactic, I’ll admit, but considering how wonderful the rest of the book was, I really wasn’t bothered by it. I absolutely recommend this book to anyone looking for a beautiful, although unusual, love story. And that’s coming from someone who would rather stay away from romance.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Fast paced and easy to get into. I liked the ghostly love story though I think a little more could have been added to the finale.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Not earth-shattering, but a good story from a new perspective. Very YA, with plenty of young love angst. Judging this book by its cover, though, I would have been disappointed. The story doesn't live up to that gorgeous cover.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I devoured this book.It left me without air till the last page.Tara Hudson really hit the target here. This impossible love story is amazing and the protagonist's discovery of her old and new self it's made in the right time and moment. written very well, can't wait to read the next of the series.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This was a good read for someone who likes all things paranormal, such as myself. It was a little hard to get into, but once I did, it was just as hard to put down. It is the first book in a series, so if you cant get enough of Hereafter,dont worry, there is more to the story!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    (From an ARC received from netGalley) Amelia Ashley has spent ten years being dead. The victim of a drowning, she isn't actually sure for most of that ten years that she is dead, but she has frequent nightmare-like sequences where she relives the horror of drowning over and over and cannot seem to get anyone else to acknowledge her existance. She drifts around in what is later referred to as "the fog", a kind of non-existance. All that comes to an end, however, when she witnesses the near drowning of a boy in the same spot where she herself died. Somehow Amelia manages to make Josh see her and encourages him to escape his watery fate. From that point on, they start a relationship of sorts, in which Amelia struggles to discover who she is now and what she can do and Josh tries to help her figure out who she was, all while trying to avoid Eli, the sinister ghost who seems to have evil plans for Amelia, and Ruth, Josh's seer grandmother who believes Amelia herself is evil and must be exorcised. Throughout it all, the more time she spends with Josh, the more Amelia finds herself able to feel and experience--even though as a ghost she's not supposed to feel anything at all. What does it all mean?

    I wanted to like this book more than I actually did. The premise is interesting, though the rules of Amelia's plane of existance got a bit confusing at times. It's never made exactly clear why she can start to feel things and why as the book progresses she's able to be more affected by various things--tripping, for example, and being grabbed by Eli--perhaps this will become clear in a sequel? My biggest issues were that Amelia seemed awfully ineffective as a heroine (even for a ghost) and that Josh was just pretty...clueless. How is it possible that he didn't know from the beginning that something wasn't normal about the girl he saw by the river? Near drowning aside, it just made him seem dense. Amelia spends a lot of time running around trying to find out things without actually managing to discover much of anything at all. Neither really inspired me to care too terribly much about what happened to them. I kept waiting at the big climactic scene for Ruth and her clan to at least show up if not make a difference, but they didn't. It just all felt a bit unfinished at the end. I'll probably read the next book, if there is one, in the hopes that the author will flesh out her characters more and succeed in making us care about them more. There is definite promise here, it just wasn't fulfilled in this novel.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Hereafter has an atmospheric, hypnotic quality and an intriguing premise. There is a living/dead couple, a ghost with a memory problem, evil spirits, and high stakes mysteries to solve. The premise is strong, the writing is descriptive and lovely, and the cover is gorgeous. On the flip side though, the pace is a bit slow for my taste. A little more action sprinkled throughout the book would have kicked it to the next level.

    Amelia has tragically died. As a ghost, she drifts alone at the site of her death with no memory of her life. Suddenly she awakens from her fog when she finds Joshua drowning in the same river where she died. Joshua’s brush with death triggers his ability to see Amelia. When Amelia saves Joshua, it’s love at first sight for the unlikely pair. To further complicate matters, Joshua grandmother is a Seer, someone who can see and banish ghosts. Joshua has picked up this seer talent, and his grandmother wants Amelia gone now. An evil spirit named Eli lurks around Amelia. He wants to recruit her to the dark side, but he seems to have some of the answers Amelia seeks about her death.

    Amelia leads a sad and lonely afterlife and is scared of everything around her. When she latches on to Joshua, that’s when she begins to wake up, so to speak. She starts to remember bits of her past but is frightened of what she might find out. She does eventually discover that she has some cool powers as a ghost, even though she can’t walk through doors by herself. Joshua is a nice guy and committed to their forbidden romance despite the many obstacles they have to overcome.

    Since this is the first book of a trilogy, there are many questions that linger. I would like for the sequel to address Joshua’s family history of Seers. It would be interesting to learn more about Amelia’s powers, and about Eli and the netherworld.

    The book did not stand out to me overall due to the pacing and the lack of character depth. It is an entertaining read but not as memorable as other Paranormals on the shelves.

    Although this book was not my favorite, fans of YA Paranormals such as Hush Hush or Fallen should give it a try. The book overall has a moody and dreamlike quality, and a love story that should appeal to many YA fans. The next book in the series is called Arise.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Here’s another one that I was really excited for. Luckily, this time, my hope wasn’t in vain. I truly enjoyed this book. It felt so original to me, and brought freshness to the paranormal romance genre. I’ve read a ton (probably literally) of YA paranormal, and I don’t ever recall anything like this. Woo for being fresh!

    I liked that the action started right at the beginning. At first, we don’t really know about Amelia or what she is. It’s pretty ambiguous, but we’re let in on the secret quickly. I like that it wasn’t a long, drawn out process of getting to THE REVEAL. Sometimes a book can go on and on and on forever, you know? It gets old. So I liked being let in on it quickly.

    And I liked Amelia. She wasn’t the typical ‘wait for the man to rush in and save the day’ kind of heroine that we frequently see. She does take matters into her own hands and discovers her abilities in her own way and in her own time. Nothing is completely thrust on her.

    I thought Joshua was a credible love interest. His ability to see/feel Amelia didn’t seem at all hokey to me once it was explained. It made sense that he’d be able to see her after having a death experience, especially with his family history.

    I liked the story, liked the way things flowed, and liked the way that Amelia gradually remembered more from her past as time went on. She had to grow, and I feel like as a reader, I was able to go on that journey with her with the way the story was written. I didn’t feel like I was being asked to swallow a load of garbage all at once.

    I’d recommend this to any fans of YA paranormal, and especially fans of ghost stories. I know I’ll be continuing on with this series. I’m giving this a ‘Drool Worthy’ rating.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Amelia's dead which kind of sucks, but it mostly consists of walking around feeling nothing and nightmares. Her ghostly existence vastly improves when a hottie, Joshua, nearly drowns in the same place she drowned. It's love at first sight for both of them. But can a boy and a ghost really make it work?

    Oh my god. This book. I just. Aaaaaaahhhh! To begin and explain simply, this book is definitely capitalizing off of the Twilight school of YA popularity. The writing and the plot are ridiculous. Even more ridiculous is the insta-love (just add water! - Get it?) between the main characters. In my last top ten list about the most obnoxious YA heroines, I mentioned Bianca from Evernight for the trait of immediate obsessive, ridiculously gooey love, but definitely would steal this crown from her without a contest.

    Ghosts are tricky heroines. For one thing, they're insubstantial, so what they can do is a bit limited. Of course, with any other paranormal thing, there are ways to play with the legend and make them a bit more interesting. Hudson has devised her own, rather inconsistent ghost lore. Amelia mostly can't do anything. She can't open doors or move things or go through them. Apparently though, she can cry and bleed and breathe and have a racing heartbeat. Well, I lied. She does get to touch one thing (well, a couple others too, but pretty much only in conjunction with this one): super smexy Joshua, whose life she saved. Yeah, they can touch all they want and he can see her because of his ghost-seeing and exorcism powers. Convenient that.

    Joshua couldn't actually see ghosts until he died just a lil bit in the water that night. He sees Amelia and thinks she's the prettiest thing in the world and goes back to the scene of the accident to ask her to meet with him the next day. Amelia hesitates but "stunningly, impossibly" agrees to go (32). She worries he will not like her when she learns she's a ghost, because, well, she's dead and no one else can see her. Instead, when he learns, he's like "Sweet! Let's make out!" No one should react to this news so happily. Getting over it would be one thing, but thinking it's the best? No freakin' way.

    Although I have to say that imagining Joshua out on a date with her was about the only thing I enjoyed in the book. I mean, even though she's invisible to pretty much everyone else, he talks to her in public, he holds hands with her in public, kisses her in public. He must look so incredibly cray cray. Just picture it. Oh, also, the second and third things he does after she tells him about being a ghost: invite her to calculus class with him and to dinner with his family. Lol, whut? Oh, and apparently, ghosts smell like peaches, or nectarines.

    The plot, with its number of villains, none of which I cared too much about, was not interesting whatsoever. However, what really makes this book so incredibly awful for any but Twilight fans is the writing, especially the writing about any scene that features Joshua and Amelia. Here's a sampling of quotes to illustrate what reading Hereafter is like:

    "The moment his skin brushed mine, a current shot through my entire body, from my scalp to the tips of my fingers. The current made the ache in my chest, and the tingles that races along my spine each time he looked at me, seem like low-burning cinders. My heart, my brain, my skin—all of it was momentarily engulfed in flame, a flame lit only by the spark on my cheek." (51)

    "The kiss sent a jolt through my entire body. The sensation was more intense than any I'd felt until now—a pure shock wave rushing along my spine and down each of my limbs. I gasped from the strength of it, dragging in a near-shriek of air." (115)

    "I simply nodded, too befuddled by his proximity to say anything even remotely clever." (140)

    "The heat of the little kiss spread across my lips, turning them into two smoldering coals." (155)

    So, if you like these quotes, you'll love Hereafter. If not, leave it to that first set of folks. This a story for people who believe that love can overcome any obstacle, even death and the fact that one of the beings involved will never age.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Hereafter was a fun YA ghost story with the right amounts of darkness and romance. The end was a little sudden, and I am not sure how this will work as part of a larger series, as I thought it was a good standalone. I am curious, though, now knowing there is more to the story.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I'm just going to say it, the cover is so freaking gorgeous. I admit that is the reason I bought this book. It's much like the cover of Die For Me, which I also bought due to the cover and LOVED!I really liked this book. The first 3/4ths more than the ending, which dragged. I loved Amelia, I adored Joshua and I even liked Eli.I do feel some characters could use some fleshing out: Ruth, Jillian, Eli, hell Joshua and Amelia for that matter. So I guess all the characters could. I am not saying they were all flat but most lacked motivation that I (a reader) could sympathize or relate to. I'm sure they had it. I'm sure they felt strongly about it but why? Why did Ruth hate Amelia? I know seer/ghost but why so passionately? Prejudice? Why was Jillian a huge bitch?At the end I also felt the author just made Eli do crazy bad shit so we didn't like him? Because the entire time I am sure we all felt like he was kinda annoying but if we just understood why he was like that. Why he was obsessed, besides lonely, he could be likable. We didn't know why Amelia was dead(teehee no pun intended) set against even attempting to befriend him so at the end the author had Eli go bat shit Cray Cray without us fully getting his motivation but only so we wouldn't care what happened to him? I am hoping book 2 gives us more and goes deeper. I recommend this book
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Review courtesy of Dark Faerie TalesQuick & Dirty: While the stakes were high enough to create a satisfying climax, I loved the characters so much it didn’t bother me. Opening Sentence: It was the same as always, but different from the first time.The Review: Amelia doesn’t haunt people. She doesn’t haunt places, either — at least not on purpose. She can’t help it if her nightmares drag her back to High Bridge and drown her again and again in the dark water there. She lives in a fog. She knows she drowned in the river beneath that horrible bridge, but she can’t remember it. She barely remembers her own name. Until the night Joshua drives his car off the bridge. Suddenly, who she is and how she came to wander the world doesn’t matter. Saving him matters. When she can hear his heartbeat counting down his last breaths, she thinks she’s lost him. But in those last few moments of death, he hears her. He sees her. Something so impossible Amelia can hardly believe it. Except that he speaks to her. He doesn’t drown. Which in the end creates a whole new spectrum of problems for Amelia. He’s the first person to see her in years (or at least, what she assumes were years) and though she doesn’t want to lose that, he deserves to know the truth. The truth turns complicated as Amelia realizes Joshua’s family is more than meets the eye. As their feelings for each other grow, they begin to search out who Amelia really is. Enter Eli, the only other ghost Amelia’s ever known. He reigns over the netherworld under High Bridge. He wants Amelia to rule it with him. Joshua is probably my favorite character in Hereafter. He is so sincere when Amelia meets him, I couldn’t help but love him. They didn’t share an insta-love, but it’s obvious from the beginning that they’re both attracted. The novel follows the progression of their relationship first and foremost, with the Eli-plot coming in second. Because of this, the reader spends a lot of time learning about Amelia and Joshua and the world Hudson’s built around their romance. Didn’t get me wrong, I devoured it, but if I didn’t absolutely love Joshua it would’ve made for a looong read. My biggest problem with the plot of Hereafter was that nothing really felt like it was at risk until the very, very end. It wasn’t tension that kept me turning pages, but the idea that there had to be more to this book than their romance. Eventually, it got there. The build-up eventually pays off, especially in the sequel. The writing of Hereafter is easy, Amelia’s narrative was easy to fall into and fun to read. She’s dead, but she isn’t mopey about it — instead Amelia’s funny. Her references to the 90s made me laugh out loud. Hereafter’s focus is the characters. Since Hudson builds such incredible love-able ones, the book flew by in a flurry of turned pages. Notable Scene: “Joshua?” she asked, her tone strained. “Who is that with—“ She didn’t finish the question but instead leaned forward to peer at the space beside Joshua. The space in which I currently stood. At that moment I froze, too. I had the instant, disconcerting notion that Joshua?s grandmother was about to ask him who was standing beside him. But that was impossible. Only Joshua and Eli could see me. I’d proved it today in Joshua’s classroom. Nonetheless, I itched with the impulse to run; and before I could give it any rational thought, I whispered, “Joshua, maybe I should come by some other—“ The entire sentence hadn’t left my mouth when Ruth jerked upright, rigid-straight again. Her eyes riveted on mine. Her right hand, which had previously clutched the mail, dropped to her side, scattering paper in noisy flutters across the kitchen floor. Still facing me, she drew in one sharp breath. And with that breath, she told me all I needed to know.FTC Advisory: HarperTeen provided me with a copy of Hereafter. No goody bags, sponsorships, “material connections,” or bribes were exchanged for my review.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I can’t really decide how I feel about this book. Did I enjoy it? For the most part, yes. Did I like the characters? Yes. Did I like the plotline? Yup. So why do I have so much hesitation? I don’t know. I just felt like something was missing but I can’t put my finger on it.This was a traditional good versus evil story with a few twists and turns along the way. Josh and Amelia were both good characters. Amelia is a lost soul who’s been wandering in nonexistence for years, until she meets Josh. She doesn’t remember anything about her life before death and she doesn’t want to. (She does, she’s just scared of what she’ll find). One of the things I really liked about Amelia was that she wouldn’t let anyone else tell her who she was supposed to be. When Josh’s grandma says that she is evil or when Eli tells her that she is fated to become his apprentice and help him drag souls into the underworld Amelia doesn’t listen. She knows deep down that she is not evil like everyone else says she is. She doesn’t want to hurt anyone and she fights till the end to prove that she is different than they say she is. That she is good.Josh is the only one who can see Amelia (besides his spirit-fighting grandma). Josh would try to ignore Amelia while they were in public, whisper to her or write her notes. But he slipped up a lot. So when he would talk to Amelia at school or kiss her in the middle of the park I couldn’t help but think about the fact that he must have looked insane to anyone normal, but Josh never seemed to think about that.If you like the whole love at first sight thing you’ll like Amelia and Josh’s relationship. It develops almost instantaneously and progresses at the speed of light. This is a huge downfall in my eyes. I find relationships like this one to be shallow and unbelievable. I like it when an author really takes the time to slowly develop a relationship.I knew this book was paranormal so I wasn’t really expecting a mystery as well but that it is. Amelia doesn’t remember who she is or even how she died. Did she jump of High Bridge, or did she fall? We slowly find out the answers to these questions along with Amelia. This was probably one of my favorite aspects of the book.I’m not sure if there is going to be a sequel to this or not. I think I’ve heard rumors of one. I also don’t know if I would bother reading it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I enjoyed this book. I was skeptical of how well the storyline could flow from the POV of a ghost. Yet, it worked out nicely! The relationshp between Amelia and Joshua. Some of the storyline became a bit predicatable but was still very enjoyable! I was hoping for a final ending but of course, in YA fashion, there will be a sequel or two... This one is a different take on YA paranormal romance and it works! It was a fresh change from vampires and angels etc... I would definitely recommend this book if you like YA paranormal and romance. Well written characters, a good (but a bit predicatable) plot, and a twist on the usual puts this book high on my list. I am a big fan of ghosts and found this book to be very much to my liking. A great read and looking forward to see what happens next!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Hereafter is a love story. It is your typical boy meets girl and then boy and girl fall head over heels in love with each other kind of story, only difference is, the girl is dead. The book tells us about Amelia, a wandering spirit who cannot remember who she is or the circumstances under which she died, except for the knowledge that she inexplicably drowned in a river. She wanders aimlessly within the realm of the living without being able to touch or affect anything, or anyone, around her. Her life, or rather, the lack thereof, takes a complete turn when she encounters a boy drowning in the same river where she drowned. As the boy himself drowns, and momentarily joins her in the afterlife where Amelia wanders, they have an instant connection that forces the boy, Joshua, to come back to life and is from that moment on able to see, hear, and even touch, Amelia.This is an okay story, with endearing moments and sometimes even surprising twists. You feel for the main characters, because all the while you are reading you are either thinking a miracle or a tragedy has to happen for them to be able to make it work, and in the YA fiction world, that's saying something. This is the type of story that is enjoyable to read, but won't keep you up late trying to read "just one more page."Hereafter" is currently slated for a trilogy. There are some unresolved plot points I would love to see addressed in the next book, such as what happened to Amelia's father, or to Eli, etc, so I am looking forward to the next installment. If you are looking for a scary ghost tale, this is not the book fo you, but if you are looking for a sweet love story that transcends even death, this book is right up your alley.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book was really quite good. I was interested in the premise from the start. Amelia is a dead girl who keeps reliving her death by drowning, and one day she meets a young man named Joshua who's drowning. She saves him. They fall in love. Sounds really simple, right?Yes and no.Their relationship is pretty rushed and they have the immediate love connection that is prevalent in TONS of YA lately. It's kind of the order of the day. I've started to get horribly bored with it, but this book does it much better. The two actually get to know one another, focusing on being friends. They don't even kiss until like 250 pages in, which was a good thing. The world of the ghosts was unique, and I loved it. Joshua's grandmother Ruth, the Seer who, obviously, sees ghosts, is also filled with (the holy spirit) and the desire to rid the world of ghosts. For her, Amelia is no different than the evil Eli, who wee meet early on but doesn't play a large part until the last 75-ish pages. She's a headstrong lady, and I liked her even though she was a kind of antagonist.The only real complaint I had about this book was the length. Sometimes it moved VERY slowly, like molasses in January. Thank goodness it only lasts for a few pages when it happened. If there had been more I wouldn't have finished the book. So overall, this book is amazing and I'd recommend it to many fans of YA. It's a great spin on a ghost story and I can't wait for the sequel.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Synopsis:Can there truly be love after death?Drifting in the dark waters of a mysterious river, the only thing Amelia knows for sure is that she's dead. With no recollection of her past life—or her actual death—she's trapped alone in a nightmarish existence. All of this changes when she tries to rescue a boy, Joshua, from drowning in her river. As a ghost, she can do nothing but will him to live. Yet in an unforgettable moment of connection, she helps him survive.Amelia and Joshua grow ever closer as they begin to uncover the strange circumstances of her death and the secrets of the dark river that held her captive for so long. But even while they struggle to keep their bond hidden from the living world, a frightening spirit named Eli is doing everything in his power to destroy their newfound happiness and drag Amelia back into the ghost world . . . forever. Review:This book has been on my TBR pile for ages. Finally, I wanted to read something different, and what could be more different than a ghost story with a twist.Sadly I was left a little bit underwhelmed. I liked the premise of the story, a girl ghost saves a boy from drowning and thanks to his Seer skills he's now able to see and feel her.The story is a narrative and deals with all sorts of complications. Amelia can't remember her last name, how she died, where she lives etc. But most pointedly how did she die? And how can she and Joshua begin their relationship, complications notwithstanding.I felt the flow of the story too slow in places. A few repeated emphasis' that could have been left out and a whole lot of extra filler which made the book stagnant. I actually wanted to reach the end just so that I could finish it. The story itself started well and had me gripped to find out what was going on but by the middle of the book I got the impression that there wasn't much more story to tell. The evil bad ghost was even a little too - lame? And the ending was tied up nicely but not with a ghostly haunted feel to it, more of a fizzled out firecracker.This isn't meant harshly in any way towards the book. It IS a sweet love story which I found refreshing and unique to the YA genre. I just wanted a little more action.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The concept of Hereafter had me interested from the very first time that I read a synopsis and Tara Hudson's perfect execution of this book is what makes it such a good read! I love ghost stories, so the whole ghost-human-romance thing is so up my ally and one of the many reason why I really enjoyed this book!One thing that I did notice about this book was that it didn't have as big of a cast of characters as a lot of other books (in fact, I would probably say that it had a rather small cast of characters). But it's quality over quantity, right? And I can definitely say that I really enjoyed reading about pretty much all of the characters in Hereafter. Our main character Amelia has a pretty lonely life (or death, if you will) at the beginning of the book, but that all changes of course when she meet Joshua. One of the main things that I found interesting about Amelia was the fact that she didn't remember how she died and I really loved discovering just exactly what happened to her when she died and what her life was like while she was still alive. I also felt like Amelia was an easy character for me to connect with, which is something that I'm always looking for in a book. I think that she made similar decisions to the ones that I would have made, although I must say that I don't think we would have chosen the same boy!Both of the love interests in Hereafter were swoon worthy, yet very different from one another. On one hand we have Joshua who is pretty much the golden boy. He's such a sweetheart; so kind, caring, gentle and loving. He is really accepting of all of the impossible things going on in his life (such as falling for a ghost girl) and he is also willing to fight for and protect the girl he loves. Now, on the other hand we have Eli, who is our rockstar/ghost bad boy. He carries with him an air of menace and danger, but I feel like he uses that as a cover to hide his loneliness. What I liked about Eli was that he had more depth to him then first meets the eye. Did I mention that he's a bad boy? Call me biased, but the bad boy is always my number one pick!The plot of Hereafter was great! As I said before, I was really interested in this book from the first time I read the summary. There is just something about the idea of this book that I find very intriguing! From the very beginning I couldn't put this book down and I zoomed through it so fast, always wanting to flip the page and read more! The fact that Tara Hudson's writing was awesome; smooth and easy to read, probably contributed to my fast reading of this book as well!All in all, this book was great! Fabulous story and plot, interesting characters, hot boys and awesome writing. I would definitely recommend picking this one up if you haven't already! I can't wait to read the sequel and see where Amelia's story goes. I really look forward to reading more from Tara Hudson in the future!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I find it hard to review books I love. The only thing I can think of when I’m about to write a review is repeating “I love this book so much” until the end of the review. Hereafter is one of those books that I loved so much I have a hard time writing the review.I love this book from the first page to last word. It’s a great supernatural romance read that I’m planning to reread. Absolutely amazing.When I first heard about this book, I thought, “typical story about a ghost and a boy falling in love.” I wasn’t planning to read it, but when I found it at the library and read the first couple of pages … I was hooked. The unique story was filled with romance and action, making it difficult to guess what might happen next. Hereafter is a book you'll never want to put down, and will leave you craving more. Joshua and Amelia are very likeable character.Amelia is an amazing character. She didn’t know a lot about who she was before and didn’t seem eager to want to figure it out until Joshua. With the help of Joshua, she started to put the pieces of her past together to figure out what happened to her and who she really is. Joshua was an average guy with a family—well, one of his family members—who wants to destroy ghosts. The promising romance between Amelia and Joshua slowly turns in to something more as they battle the fact that she is a ghost.Hereafter is a charming, easy, and sweet story with a nice twists. And I can’t wait to read the sequel. Hereafter is a 2011 debut and I thought Tara Hudson did an amazing job with this book. Fantastic.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Didn't like it that much.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I loved the ideas that shaped this book, the characters who inhabited it, and the settings that brought it all to life - or afterlife. I was also enamored with the beautiful, albeit complicated, love story. I found myself rooting for the impossible and hoping for a miracle.While I liked the book, I also thought parts of it fell a little flat. I don't want to go into too much detail here, and certainly no spoilers, but I will say there were definitely parts of the book that left me hanging and wondering what happened. Even though I would have preferred a few of the scenes to have a little more closure, or at least a little more information, I don't think the story was ever lost because of it. I was simply left wanting more answers, and I suppose that's a good thing since the sequel, "Arise," is currently scheduled to be released in July 2012. I've already added it to my book list for 2012! If you enjoy a good, against the odds, sweet, innocent-style, paranormal romance then this is definitely a story for you!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Long dead and alone, Amelia roams and wanders around. She can't remember how she died or who she was, she just knows that's she dead. It's been awful for her. Until one night when she rescues a boy drowning in the river where she had died. But she also meets an evil and creepy spirit named Eli who will do anything to take her to the ghost world with him.When Amelia wills Joshua Mayhew to live, she ultimately saves him. The midnight blue-eyed boy triggers senses that Amelia had long forgot about and brings back memories that Amelia couldn't even remember. Plus his strange ability to be the only one to see her, only brings them together and lets them form a sweet and tender bond.Amelia and Joshua's relationship throughout the novel, was developed in a steady pace that was enough to make me squeal with delight. The passionate and heartfelt moments just had me nearly jumping out of my seat to dance, grinning from ear to ear. I just fell in love with Joshua as hard as Amelia did. He stayed by her side, even when his bully of a grandmother threatens Amelia's very existence. And, okay, Eli was one creepy and sinister ghost, yet at one point you couldn't help but feel bad for him (then you remember what an ass he is and totally forget that).Hereafter was a haunting and awe-inspiring ghost story with the right, sweet romance to go with it. Beautiful and spine-shivering, I can't wait for the next tale.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Hereafter is the story of a ghost. She doesn't know much about how she died or who she is, only that she is doomed to roam alone until she meets Joshua.Before I get into the story, I want to take the moment to compliment Tara Hudson's writing. She writes with such imagery that I can easily picture the scene that she is describing. I was extremely impressed and excited because it felt like I was watching a movie in my head- if you couldn't tell that doesn't happen too often for me). Now for the plot.I knew this book wasn't going to be an instant favorite because I could go a day without reading it which only happens when I'm not interested. I had a hard time finding a rating for this book. The writing made it more than a three but the overall plot made it less than a 3.5 so I'm going to be extra difficult and say that I give this novel a 3.25. Yes. 3 1/4.Back to my review. The plot did not 'wow' me. In fact, some parts bored me. I was expecting a lot more than what I got. I really enjoyed when Hudson delved into Amelia's death and life and explained her lack of sensations in her afterlife. What I didn't like were the character interactions.I liked all of the characters. Amelia, Joshua, Jillian, Eli, Ruth, they were all exceptional characters ALONE, but their interactions felt so cheesy and bland.Side note: Who refers to their grandmother by her given name? Joshua does, isn't that kind of disrespectful? A glaring issue I had with this novel is the overuse of the word "evil." There were a couple of phrases where Amelia wondered if she was "evil" which just felt awkward. There were also descriptions of things that were "evil," but I really feel that the the "evil" situations or positions were just another side to the story. Hereafter tried to make some situations black and white when it was obvious that there were shades of gray.Overall the characters were great (when they weren't talking to each other), the plot was meh, the writing was great, and I was left feeling underwhelmed. I'm sure others will love this novel but it just wasn't for me.

Book preview

Arise - Tara Hudson

Chapter

ONE

The entire world had gone dark, and I had no idea why.

No matter how widely I opened my eyes, no matter how many times I craned my neck or spun around in search of even one speck of light, I found none. There was nothing but thick, impenetrable darkness.

Before I’d opened my eyes to all this pitch-black, I had the vague impression that I’d just been someplace warm, familiar. Someplace safe.

But wherever I was now, I didn’t feel safe at all. I felt sightless and trapped. Like I was on the verge of being consumed by the darkness … like it was trying to eat me whole.

Although I couldn’t see, I could still hear things: the swish of my long dress as I whirled in useless, searching circles; the hiss of my increasingly panicked breath.

I heard something else, too—some sound I couldn’t quite identify. Not at first.

It started softly, almost muffled. A strange noise echoing out from beneath layers and layers of cotton. But as the sound grew in volume, it also deepened. Slowly, it transformed into something stronger. Something that more closely resembled a continuous thudding.

When the thudding gained a certain steadiness—a rhythm—I sucked in one sharp breath.

I recognized the sound now, and it made me want to scream.

If I were anyone else—anything else—I probably wouldn’t have reacted that way. After all, the rhythmic thudding of a heartbeat usually meant something positive. It meant life.

But for me, an audible heartbeat meant only one thing: someone nearby was dying.

It wouldn’t be me, of course. I hadn’t felt a genuine heartbeat in my chest since the day I drowned, on the night of my eighteenth birthday more than ten years ago.

The sound I heard now was definitely made by a living heart. And I couldn’t fight the horrible suspicion that it belonged to someone I loved.

Joshua Mayhew, for instance. Or even his little sister, Jillian. Both very much alive, and both of whose heartbeats I monitored carefully after I’d worked so hard to protect them.

Hearing that terrible thudding now, I forced myself to calm down and focus more intently on the darkness. I strained and squinted, peering into the dark until, blessedly, weak light began to shimmer along the edges of my vision. I watched each new sliver closely, silently praying that it would reveal the owner of that heart. Selfishly praying that it wouldn’t be Joshua. As I waited impatiently, another realization struck me: I could rely on senses other than sight and hearing. This was strange, considering the fact that ghosts can’t smell, taste, or feel anything outside themselves. At least not very often.

Yet I could smell a sweet, musty decay all around me. It overlay the scent of damp air. Combined, the scents had an almost disorienting effect. The smells, the heartbeat, the shifting darkness—all of it made me dizzy and uncomfortable.

Thankfully, the light grew brighter, and I could finally see that I stood in a dim room. Across from me, heavily slatted shutters ran from a wood-planked floor up to a beamed ceiling. The shutters blocked most of the light from what could only be the sun, shining outside a wall of windows.

Furniture filled the room: randomly placed chairs and end tables, as well as a low coffee table that flanked a couch. Flung across the couch, in some sort of makeshift slipcover, was a white bedsheet. And flung across the sheet was a person.

At first I thought she might be a child. On closer inspection, I realized the tiny figure was actually closer to my own age. She had curled into a protective ball on the couch, spine pressed to the back cushions and sharp hip bone jutting up in the air. Her head lolled sideways onto one of the couch’s arms, and her dark brown hair cascaded in a tangle to the floor.

Even in the darkness of the room I could see the unhealthy sheen of her skin. Sweat glistened upon her sunken cheeks, and her eyes fluttered behind their closed lids.

Something about the girl’s face gave me an actual chill. Something about her features …

I leaned closer for a better look, and, at that moment, the girl opened her eyes to stare blankly into the room. Her eyes were red rimmed and unfocused, addled by either sleep or some kind of chemical. Probably the latter, judging by the overturned prescription bottle that had spilled a rainbow of pills across the table in front of her.

Under normal circumstances—if anything about this scene could be classified as normal—I would have been worried about this girl. However ineffectively, I would have tried to find someone to help her. I would have grasped at her with my dead, incapable hands.

But these were not normal circumstances.

Because just one sight of the girl’s eyes rooted me to the floor. Those eyes, though bloodshot and bleary, were still a luminous green, shining out from a face I knew very well.

My own.

Chapter

TWO

Death, a voice rasped in my head. It always starts with death.

I bolted upright with a shriek.

Immediately, I felt the press of a hand upon mine. My adrenaline surged at the unexpected touch, and I moved to jerk away from it. Whoever had pressed against my hand grabbed it more tightly and held me firmly in place. It took a few more seconds of struggling before I calmed down enough to look at the face of my captor.

He stared back at me, his eyebrows furrowed above dark blue eyes. With one of his hands grasping mine, he ran the other through his black hair and then rested his palm upon the back of his neck—a nervous, worried gesture.

Without warning, I threw my free arm around my captor’s neck and pressed my lips to his.

At that moment I didn’t care that I was dead and shouldn’t have been sleeping, much less dreaming; I didn’t care that I’d dreamed about myself in some unfamiliar, near-death state; nor did I care that I should behave more carefully around the boy I now kissed since I was invisible and he wasn’t.

All I cared was that Joshua kissed me back.

Wherever his hands clutched at my bare skin—my arms, my shoulders, my exposed thigh—they ignited a shower of fiery sparks. Even my lips burned from their contact with his.

This minor miracle happened every time we touched. At each press of my ghostly flesh to his living, Joshua and I both experienced waves of sensation that, with prolonged contact, turned into the actual feel of each other’s skin.

Maybe this was unique to me and Joshua, maybe not. For all I knew, every ghost-to-spiritually-aware-human interaction happened this way. Whatever the case, I knew one thing for sure: I never grew tired of it.

I sighed quietly when Joshua pulled his lips from mine. Although I sighed in disappointment that our kiss had ended, I also sighed in relief. As Joshua leaned away from me, I could see we were alone in his bedroom, lying on his bed. No one had seen us kiss.

But my relief turned into embarrassment when I realized that, during our kiss, I must have rolled on top of him. Joshua was now beneath me, with my thighs pressed against either side of his hips. My filmy white dress—the one in which I’d died and was now cursed to wear forever—had crept up to a seriously inappropriate height on my thighs.

Gape mouthed, I stared down at Joshua. His mussed hair and his lack of a T-shirt told me that my post-nightmare shriek had woken him up, too. And his broad grin told me he wasn’t even slightly embarrassed by our current position.

Yikes, I murmured. I moved to roll myself off, but he pinned me to him by wrapping one arm around my waist.

Aw, Joshua protested. No ‘yikes,’ Amelia. Why don’t you make yourself comfortable up there? His grin turned wolfish as he secured his other arm around me.

I scowled. "Joshua Mayhew, even if I’m in your bed every night, I’m not … cheap."

Although his bedside clock read 3 a.m., Joshua laughed so loudly his entire family could have heard him, if they were awake.

Amelia Ashley, Joshua teased. "The fact that you’re in my bed every night means I don’t think you’re cheap. And, for the record, I think it’s adorable that you used the word ‘cheap.’ You are aware it’s the twenty-first century, right?"

What can I say? I’m a twentieth-century kind of girl, I grumbled; but I let him tug me closer, until I had to drop my arms on either side of him to keep myself upright.

Hovering there, I studied Joshua’s face for a moment: his midnight-sky colored eyes, his full mouth, his high cheekbones. Then I peeked at the nearly bare body extending beneath that face. And beneath me.

Well, I murmured, since I’m already here …

Then I dipped down and pressed my lips to his again.

Beneath my kiss, I felt Joshua smile triumphantly. As he moved his mouth against mine, he placed his fingertips on the delicate skin beneath my jaw. Then he ran them down my throat to my collarbone, where he traced them lightly back and forth.

I moaned quietly, and, in an instant, Joshua rolled us over so that he stretched out above me. I closed my eyes and placed my hands on his bare back, anticipating the moment I would feel his skin, smooth and warm and real. In my excitement, I hitched one leg up and wrapped it around Joshua’s hip.

And with that gesture, I stopped feeling anything at all.

I opened my eyes and sighed, not really surprised by what I now saw above me. Instead of the ceiling of Joshua’s bedroom, a maze of trees branches—bare except for a heavy layer of frost—tangled together. A mix of rain and sleet now fell noisily around me. Luckily, I couldn’t feel the sting of ice as it battered my shoulders.

As I pushed myself into a seated position and took in the rest of my surroundings, however, I didn’t feel very lucky. To my right, a squat brick structure—a chimney, I think—rose up toward the sky. Beneath me, row upon row of shingles sloped precariously down toward a very familiar backyard.

Excellent. I always wanted to know what the Mayhews’ roof looked like.

At that dry thought, I pulled my legs into my chest, wrapped my arms around them, and lay my head on my knees. Then I puffed out a big, angry sigh.

I guess I should have been grateful, considering how short a distance I materialized tonight. The last time this happened, I’d opened my eyes to what I’m pretty sure was an entirely different county.

Before materializations like this one started occurring, I honestly thought I’d learned to control them—learned how to prevent the ghostly vanishings that transported me, unwilling, to someplace else, sometime else.

I was wrong, obviously.

It wasn’t that I wanted to materialize away from Joshua tonight. Far from it. But over the past few months, I’d come to the sad realization that we couldn’t go much further than we already had, physically, without me disappearing into thin air. Every time we kissed too long, or held each other too closely, I’d vanish. If Joshua’s fingers strayed too far below my collarbone—zap, to a deserted car lot. If I loosened just one of his buttons—poof, to the top of a picnic table at some rest stop on the side of the highway.

Each time I vanished, I could materialize back instantly, free from ice or any other kind of harm. But the mood was always dampened, to say the least.

And each time I vanished, I slowly learned my lesson: unless I kept a tighter guard on my emotions, and my actions with Joshua, I had no control over what happened to my body.

I guess I hadn’t learned the lesson well enough. Not yet.

I couldn’t help but sigh loudly. This situation was so unfair I could almost taste it, tart and bitter on my tongue. After all, my desire wasn’t so crazy, so outrageous, that it needed to be denied in such a harsh way. What I wanted—what Joshua and I both wanted—was simple, and normal, and genuine.

And obviously impossible.

I lifted my head from my knees and sighed again. There was nothing I could do about the problem now except get back to Joshua and try to make things right. As right as they could be anyway.

I closed my eyes and focused on the house beneath me. I heard a soft whoosh of air, and when I opened my eyes, I found myself sitting on a bed, staring into the familiar glow of Joshua’s bedside lamp.

If only all my materializations could be this controlled.

Behind me I heard the shifting sound of bedsprings. I threw a wary glance over my shoulder and saw Joshua. He’d propped himself against his headboard and faced forward, frowning in deep thought.

I’d expected to find him frustrated, or angry, or maybe even a little sad. Instead, Joshua simply looked … intent. Like he was trying to solve some difficult problem.

Sensing my presence, he stirred and caught my eye. Without leaning away from the headboard, he stretched his arm across the bed to me.

Hey, stranger, he said with a slight smile.

I groaned, turning more fully toward him before I took his offered hand. How long was I gone this time?

Not too long—only a few minutes. Getting better, I think.

I snorted. Better? Seriously? It’s hardly getting better if it just keeps happening.

Joshua shook his head and smiled wider, undeterred. You’re wrong, Amelia. The disappearances are getting shorter and shorter. I bet they stop happening altogether soon. It’s going to get easier—I promise.

In the face of his perpetual optimism, I bit my lip to keep my mouth shut. Or to keep my response locked inside, more like it.

How could I tell Joshua the truth about what I’d really been thinking lately: that our relationship would never get easier? That if things were this difficult now, when we were both young, they would grow insurmountable as Joshua aged.

Because, inevitably, Joshua would age. Very soon he would graduate from Wilburton High School and move away to college. At some point he would probably want a girl he could introduce to his family, one whom all of them could see and half of them wouldn’t want to exorcise. A girl he could make out with for more than ten minutes. A girl with whom, maybe someday, he’d start a family.

A girl I could never be.

Still biting my lip, I looked at Joshua more closely. The soft, hopeful look in his eyes told me that he didn’t share my troubled thoughts. At least, not at the moment.

So, where’d you go this time? he asked, taking his hand from mine and brushing a strand of hair off my face.

I pulled my lip from my teeth and tilted my head to one side. Your roof, actually.

Joshua’s eyes widened. After a long, stunned pause, he cleared his throat. In an intentionally calm voice, he asked, Oh? And how was it up there?

Icy. Probably freezing.

Joshua grimaced, from either the idea of the storm outside or the thought of me sitting in it. This one wasn’t like any of your old nightmares, was it?

No, thank God for that, I said, shuddering.

I hadn’t had a real nightmare in several months, at least not in the way I defined the word nightmare.

Before I’d met Joshua, before I’d saved him from drowning in the same river I had, a series of waking nightmares controlled my afterlife. In daylight as well as darkness, I would sometimes lose consciousness and then relive part of my death. Upon waking, I would find myself someplace other than where I’d been just before the nightmare occurred. I’d learned these nightmares were involuntary materializations, much like the ones I experienced now, but worse.

I still wasn’t entirely sure why the nightmares had ended. I suspected it had something to do with the fact that I now remembered the details of my death. Or maybe because I’d fought back against the dark spirits who had engineered that death.

Whichever the case, the end of the nightmares meant the beginning of an entirely new set of troubles. These new—but still unwanted—materializations, for example. And then there were the weird dreams, like the one I’d had tonight.

I didn’t like thinking about the dreams, but after one occurred, I just couldn’t stop. I obsessed over their details, trying—without much success—to find a pattern in them, or a reason for them.

So far each dream differed in content from the previous one. But they all shared a pretty common theme. All of them happened at night, when I shouldn’t have been sleeping, and all of them were incredibly disturbing.

In each dream I saw people for whom I cared but couldn’t speak to them, couldn’t touch them. Sometimes I saw Joshua, watching me with a cold, impassive expression while I begged him for help. Sometimes I saw Jillian drop to her knees in pain as Eli—the cruel ghost who had tried to acquire my soul for his demonic masters—tore the life from her.

Or sometimes I saw my father’s ghost, wandering lost beneath the ruins of the bridge I’d destroyed several months ago in an effort to protect Joshua and Jillian from Eli. In those dreams my father called out to me. He asked, in a broken voice, why I hadn’t yet freed him from the dark netherworld that waited just outside the living boundaries of High Bridge.

I hated those dreams the most.

Tonight’s dream, however, was a new one. Never before had I watched myself like some outside observer; never before had I seen myself hurting, maybe even dying, in a setting I didn’t recognize.

I didn’t exactly have the clearest memories of my life before death, but most things I recalled had at least a touch of familiarity to them. Nothing about tonight’s dream, however, seemed familiar—not the dark room or the shabby furniture. The only aspect of the room I recognized was the girl on the couch. Me, maybe.

So … what on earth was I supposed to make of that?

I shook my head and curled up beside Joshua without touching him. Joshua mirrored my position, facing me. My long silence didn’t seem to bother him, probably because I’d had so many of them lately.

Well, he finally said. "At least tonight’s materialization wasn’t a nightmare. But you did sit up screaming earlier. Do you want to tell me what that was about?"

My eyes darted down to the pillow beneath my head, away from Joshua’s intent gaze. I shrugged. Another one of those weird dreams I keep having. This one was different, though. Weirder.

I felt Joshua twitch beside me. How so? he asked.

I continued to study the pillow while I described the dream’s eerie details. When I finished, Joshua blew out a puff of air.

That’s … well, that’s creepy, Amelia.

"Very. And the even bigger issue is that I don’t sleep. The fact I’m dreaming at all makes me think these dreams are—I don’t know—important maybe? Tonight’s dream really makes me wonder. Everything seemed so real: the sounds, the smells."

And you’re sure you saw yourself alive in this one?

Well … not completely sure. The girl looked a lot like me, but there was something else about her. Something I can’t put my finger on.

Joshua frowned, thoughtful. Maybe the girl was just some, you know, manifestation. Of your worries.

Despite my apprehensive mood, I couldn’t help but laugh. Wow, Dr. Mayhew. Someone’s been doing his psychology homework.

My favorite elective. Joshua chuckled goodnaturedly. Then he yawned.

I propped myself up on my elbow, glanced over his shoulder at his bedside clock, and fell back onto the bed beside him.

We can talk more about this later, I said. It’s past four already, and you’ve got a calculus final today.

Don’t remind me. He groaned, pulling his own pillow around his ears in a U shape. Why sleep at all? I’ll probably get a better score if I just try to hallucinate the answers.

"I’m not going to let you hallucinate your way through your last final. We’ve been studying for weeks. So … sleep."

With the pillow still pressed to his ears, Joshua shook his head. But even through the fabric, I heard the muffled sound of another yawn.

I guess I didn’t need to give him any more commands or warnings because soon, without further protest, he began to drift off. Eventually, his breath deepened enough that I knew he’d fallen asleep again.

With an enormous sigh, I rolled over to stare blankly at the ceiling. For a while I tried to stay calm and restful. To run through a few of the calculus equations Joshua had struggled with the most. But soon, instead of numbers, my head started to spin with all the lingering questions that still plagued me.

Several months ago I thought I’d finally solved my greatest problems. I’d begun to piece together the sketchy details of my past and gain control of my ghostly powers. I’d prevented Eli from trapping me in the dark netherworld and forcing me to become a sort of grim reaper like him. Even Joshua’s grandmother Ruth and her coven of ghost hunters had left me alone as some sort of repayment for saving Jillian’s life.

So I’d earned a chance to enjoy whatever time I had left with Joshua, right?

Wrong.

Instead, my new, Eli- and Ruth-free existence had only become peaceful enough to allow another mess of problems into it. There were too many things to think about, too many issues I couldn’t resolve. Like the haunting image of my doppelgänger languishing in that dank room. Or my total inability to kiss my boyfriend for more than a few minutes. Or … or …

Ugh, I muttered in disgust, but then clamped my lips shut when I heard a small hitch in Joshua’s breath.

When he began to breathe evenly again, I carefully slipped off the bed and tiptoed to the broad window seat on the other side of the room. I curled up on the seat’s thick blue cushions, tucking my feet beneath me and pressing my forehead to the windowpane.

Right now I’d give just about anything to feel the glass, cold and soothing against my skin. No such luck, though. I felt only the numb pressure of the pane in front of me and the cushion beneath me.

Just two more objects in the living world I couldn’t really touch.

Forehead still pressed against the window, hair hanging around my face so I couldn’t see anything but the dark, icy view outside, I shook my head. Then I burrowed more fully into the cushions, settling in for another troubled night spent obsessing over the things I would never be able to change.

Chapter

THREE

A sharp clunk rang out beneath me as someone’s foot connected with the wooden leg of the chair in which I now sat. I looked up in time to see Jillian’s eyes dart guiltily down to her bowl of cereal.

I spared a quick glance at Joshua. He must have heard the sound too, because he glared at his sister across the breakfast table. I, however, just shook my head and pulled my elbows off the table. Obviously, I wouldn’t get to spend the morning sulking with my head in my hands as I’d originally planned. Instead, I would once again have to play peacemaker between the unwilling and the unreceptive. And these days I didn’t know which Mayhew sibling was which.

I placed what I hoped was a calming hand on Joshua’s arm, but he’d already begun to growl a warning at his little sister.

Jillian, I swear …

Don’t swear, Joshie, she taunted, the corner of her lips twitching. Mom and Dad don’t like it when you swear.

Joshua’s scowl deepened. Seriously, if you don’t stop it—

Stop what? she interrupted, raising her eyebrows innocently. She turned from one side to the other as if to solicit support from their parents. The older Mayhews, however, couldn’t have been more disinterested in their children’s fight. Joshua’s dad stayed buried behind his newspaper, and

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1