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Evol: Vampire Romance

ohamare
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Synopsis
Brooke Miller moved. She moved to a new town, without knowing a single soul. When she arrives, she can already tell how old this town is, how outdated - she's certain fitting in will be impossible. Meeting Julian Jones is both a curse and a prize. Yes, he's gorgeous. Yes, he's cruel. Yes, everyone stays clear of him. But there's something about Julian that just isn't normal - besides his inability to stop staring at Brooke. She doesn't understand him. And yet, she finds herself wanting to - but, there are monsters crawling the town, monsters nobody knows about. A series of events pushes Brooke and Julian closer, but he's not what he seems. The shocking truth has to be revealed soon enough - whether Brooke can still love him is uncertain. A threat becomes lethally dangerous as Brooke's atheist nature turns out to be the key to getting something that every vampyre wants, especially the oldest of them all - Julian's father. When everyone wants something, and protection is limited, chances are they'll get it. But when it's one thing Julian can't stand to lose, how far will he go to keep Brooke alive?
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Chapter 1 - Prologue

He slammed the door, hoping it was loud enough to hear in the living room, where his father sat. Anger curled, burning in his stomach. The boy marched to his dresser, scrabbling for the stash of cigarettes; taking it out, he dug in his back jean pocket and took out the cracked black lighter.

The window was shut tight; with his free hand he shoved it out and smoked out of it, feeling the thick, nicotine-riddled smoke fill his lungs.

Gazing out of the window, his dark eyes scanned up and down the street, not expecting there to be anyone out so far from the town centre at this time of night. Streetlights cast orange shadows on the pavement; his house was on the outskirts of the town, away from the bustle and neon signs. He still didn't know if he liked it better that way.

His eyes snagged on something - or rather, someone. He squinted, moving one hand to push back the wild curls falling in his eyes. Still smoking, he watched with mild interest as a young girl, maybe nineteen, dawdled down the street. When she became boring, he turned to go, but her face was lit by the streetlight for one moment. In that moment, he saw her, and didn't recognise her.

No recollection at all. He was pretty sure he hadn't seen her even once around town.

So she was new? That was strange in itself. They hardly ever had new people come into Grove Hill.

The orange streetlight lit her bronze hair like fire, reflecting off the round lenses of her glasses. He watched intently until she rounded the corner, lost in the shadows.