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The White Rabbit Chronicles Page 36


  Q: If you ever met a zombie in real life, you would...?

  A: Kick him in the teeth then high-five my mother for teaching me how to kick zombies in the teeth. Then, of course, Mom would do a little kicking of her own. We’d tag team!

  Q: Okay, let’s talk about Cole, who, let’s face it, is hot and skilled. Can you tell us anything about his first time fighting a zombie?

  A: Cole...my darling Cole...I have such a cougar crush on him! (Sorry, Ali, but it’s true—and you’re lucky I allowed you to survive that car crash. Just sayin’.) As for Cole’s first zombie fight, let’s just say he had his butt handed to him and leave it at that. Or, better yet, let’s just say you’ll actually get to see this scene in book two.... Oh, the joy of YouTube. You can’t hide from it, Cole Holland. You can’t hide!

  Q: What’s next for Alice and her friends?

  A: Well, the hazmats are ticked, so you just know they’ll be up to no good. Ali and her grams are now living with Reeve, even though Ankh wants Reeve kept out of the war. Kat’s kidney-clock is ticking. A new slayer returns to town, and oh, is he hot. Cole and Ali are gonna have to face something terrible...something— Wait, wait, wait. I’m giving away all the secrets! I’ll end it here before I start writing a synopsis I’ll never follow. What? It’s true.

  Thanks so much, Gena!

  THROUGH THE ZOMBIE GLASS

  Gena Showalter

  Zombies stalk the night.

  Forget blood and brains. These monsters hunger for human souls.

  Sadly, they’ve got mine…

  Alice Bell has lost so much. Family. Friends. A home. She thought she had nothing else to give. She was wrong.

  After a new zombie attack, strange things begin to happen to her. Mirrors come to life, and the whispers of the dead assault her ears. But the worst? A terrible darkness blooms inside her, urging her to do very wicked things.

  She’s never needed her team of zombie slayers more, but ultra bad-boy Cole Holland, the leader and her boyfriend, suddenly withdraws from her…from everyone. Now, with her best friend, Kat, at her side, Ali must kill the zombies, uncover Cole’s secret and learn to fight the darkness.

  Praise for Through the Zombie Glass

  “Romance readers will eagerly await the next title.”

  —Booklist

  “Readers will love the fast-paced plot and the increased character development.”

  —RT Book Reviews (Top Pick)

  Praise for Alice in Zombieland

  “I enjoyed every moment of this book.… If you want a completely new twist on zombies, then pick up the White Rabbit Chronicles. You won’t be sorry!”

  —USA TODAY.com’s Happy Ever After blog

  “Readers will love the brave girl trying to reclaim her life.”

  —RT Book Reviews

  “A zippy story with crossover appeal that highlights the power of guilt, faith, and self-confidence.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “Showalter has created a promising playground for future story installments.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  Books by Gena Showalter

  available from Harlequin TEEN

  The White Rabbit Chronicles

  (in reading order)

  ALICE IN ZOMBIELAND

  THROUGH THE ZOMBIE GLASS

  THE QUEEN OF ZOMBIE HEARTS

  The Intertwined Novels

  (in reading order)

  INTERTWINED

  UNRAVELED

  TWISTED

  To three bright lights in my life—Shane, Shonna and Michelle

  Contents

  Epigraph

  A Note From Ali

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  A Note From Cole

  Dedication

  “The battle line between good and evil runs through the heart of every man.”

  —Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

  A Note From Ali

  Where should I begin?

  With travesty? Heartache?

  No. I don’t want to begin with where I am now.

  I don’t want to end that way, either.

  We’ll start with this. A truth. Everything around us is subject to change. Today is cold. Tomorrow, heat will come. Flowers bloom, then wither. Those we love, we can grow to hate. And life...life can be perfect one minute and in shambles the next. I learned that lesson the hard way when my parents and beloved little sister died in a car crash, shattering every corridor of my heart.

  I’ve done my best to weld the pieces back together, but—tick, tock. Another change.

  A change that cost me everything.

  The respect of my friends. My new home. My purpose. My pride.

  My boyfriend.

  And it’s my fault. I can blame no one else.

  One mistake gave birth to a thousand others.

  I knew there were monsters out there. Zombies. I knew they weren’t the mindless beings movies and books portrayed them to be. They exist in spirit form, unseen to the ungifted eye. They’re fast, determined and, at times, smart. They hunger for the source of life. Our spirits.

  I know, I know. That’s laughable, right? Invisible creatures determined to feast on humans from the inside out? Please. But it’s true. I know, because I became an all-you-can-eat buffet—and offered my friends as dessert.

  Now I’m not just fighting the zombies. I’m fighting to save the life I’ve grown to love.

  I will succeed.

  Tick, tock.

  It’s time.

  Chapter 1

  Begin at the Beginning

  A few months earlier

  More and more I’d been dreaming about the crash that killed my parents and younger sister. I relived the moments as our car flipped end over end. The sounds of metal crunching into pavement. The stillness when everything was over, and I was the only one awake...maybe the only one alive.

  I’d struggled to free myself from the seat belt, desperate to help little Emma. Her head had been twisted at such an odd angle. My mother’s cheek had been slashed open like a Christmas ham, and my father’s body had been thrown out of the car. Panic had made me stupid, and I’d hit my head on a sharp piece of metal. Darkness had swallowed me whole.

  But in my dreams, I watched my mother blink open her eyes. She was disoriented at first, moaning in pain and trying to make sense of the chaos around her.

  Unlike me, she had no problem with her seat belt, freeing herself and turning, her gaze landing on Emma. Tears began to rain down her cheeks.

  She looked at me and gasped, reaching out to place a trembling hand on my leg. A river of warmth seemed to rush through me, strengthening me.

  “Alice,” she shouted, shaking me. “Wake up—”

  I jolted upright.

  Panting, my body dotted with perspiration, I scanned my surroundings. I saw walls of ivory and gold, painted in swirling patterns. An antique dresser. A furry white rug on the floor. A mahogany nightstand, with a Tiffany lamp perched next to a photo of my boyfriend, Cole.

  I was in my new bedroom, safe.

  Alone.

  My heart slammed against my ribs as though trying to burst free. I forced the dream to the back of my mind and moved to the edge of the bed to peer out the large bay window and find a sense of calm. Despite the gorgeousn
ess of the view—a garden teeming with bright, lush flowers that somehow thrived in the cool October weather—my stomach twisted. Night was in full bloom, and so were the creepies.

  Fog that had brewed on the horizon for hours had finally spilled over, gliding closer and closer to my window. The moon was round and full, set ablaze with orange and red, as if the surface had been wounded and was bleeding.

  Anything was possible.

  Zombies were out tonight.

  My friends were out there, too, fighting the creatures without me. I hated myself for falling asleep at such a critical time. What if a slayer needed my help? Called me?

  Who was I kidding? No one would call, no matter how badly I was needed.

  I stood and paced the room, cursing the injuries that kept me tucked inside. So I’d been sliced from hip to hip a few weeks ago. So what? My stitches had been removed and the flesh was already scarring.

  Maybe I should just arm up and head out. I’d rather save someone I love and risk another life-threatening injury than do nothing and stay out of harm’s way. But...I didn’t know where the group had gone, and more than that, if I did manage to track them down, Cole would freak. He would be distracted.

  Distraction killed.

  Dang it. I would do as I’d been told and wait.

  Minutes stretched into hours as I continued to pace, a sense of unease growing sharper with every second that passed. Would everyone come back alive? We’d lost two slayers in the past month alone. None of us were prepared to lose another.

  The hinges on my door squeaked.

  Cole slipped inside the room and threw the lock, ensuring that no one would bust in on us. Relief plucked the claws right out of the unease, and I thrilled.

  He was here. He was okay.

  He was mine.

  His gaze landed on me, and I shivered, waiting for a vision...hoping for one.

  Since the day we’d met, we’d experienced a small glimpse of the future the first time our eyes locked on any given day. We’d seen ourselves making out, fighting zombies and even relaxing in a swing. Today, like almost every day since my stabbing, I experienced nothing but crushing disappointment.

  Why had the visions stopped?

  Deep down, I suspected one of us had built up some sort of emotional wall—and I knew it hadn’t been me.

  I was too entranced by him.

  Always he threw off enough testosterone to draw the notice of every girl within a ten-mile radius. Though he was only seventeen years old, he seemed far older. He had major experience on the battlefield, had fought in the human/zombie war since he could walk. He had experience with girls, too. Maybe too much experience. He knew just what to say...how to touch...and we melted. I’d never met anyone like him. I doubted I ever would again.

  He wore all black, like a phantom of the night. Inky hair stuck out in spikes, with leaves and twigs intertwined in the strands. He hadn’t bothered to clean his face, so his cheeks were streaked with black paint, dirt and blood.

  So. Danged. Hot.

  Violet eyes almost otherworldly in their purity shuttered, becoming unreadable, even as his lips compressed into a hard, anguished line. I knew him, and knew this was his let’s-just-burn-the-world-to-the-ground-and-call-it-good face.

  “What are you doing out of bed, Ali?”

  I ignored the question as well as the harshness of his tone, understanding that both sprang from a place of deep concern for me. “What’s wrong?” I asked. “What happened out there?”

  Silent, he disarmed, dropping daggers, guns, magazines of ammo and his personal favorite, a crossbow. He’d come to me first, I realized, not even bothering to stop at his house.

  “Were you bitten?” I asked. Suffering? Zombie bites left a burning toxin behind. Yes, we had an antidote, but the human body could take only so much before it broke down.

  “I saw Haun,” he finally responded.

  Oh, no. “Cole, I’m so sorry.” A while back, Haun had been killed by zombies. The fact that Cole had seen him again meant only one thing. Haun had risen from his grave as the enemy.

  “I suspected it would happen, but I wasn’t ready for the reality of it.” Cole’s shirt was the next to go.

  The blade-sharp cut of his body always stole my breath, and now was no exception, regardless of the horror of our conversation. I drank him in—the delightfully wicked nipple ring, the sinewy chest and washboard abs covered with a plethora of tattoos. Every design, every word, meant something to him, from the names of the friends he’d lost in the war to the depiction of the grim reaper’s scythe. Because that was what he was. A zombie killer.

  He was total bad boy—the dangerous guy monsters feared finding in their closets.

  And he was closing the distance between us. I buzzed with anticipation, expecting him to draw me into his arms. Instead, he bypassed me to fall onto the bed and cover his face with scabbed hands.

  “I ashed him tonight. Ended him forever.”

  “I’m so sorry.” I eased beside him and brushed my fingers over his thigh, offering what comfort I could. I knew he understood that he hadn’t actually ashed Haun, or even the ghost of Haun. The creature he’d fought hadn’t had Haun’s memories or his personality. It had had his face and nothing more. His body had simply been a shell for unending hunger and malevolence.

  “You had to do it,” I added. “If you’d let him go, he would have come back for you and our friends, and he would have done his best to destroy us.”

  “I know, but that doesn’t make it any easier.” He released a shuddering sigh.

  I looked him over more intently. He had angry cuts on his arms, chest and stomach. Zombies were spirits, the source of life—or afterlife in their case—and had to be fought by other spirits. That was why, to engage, we had to force ours out of our bodies, like a hand being pulled out of glove. And yet, even though we left our bodies behind, frozen in place, the two were still connected. Whatever injury one received, the other received, as well.

  I padded to the bathroom, wet several washrags and grabbed a tube of antibiotic cream.

  “Tomorrow I start training again,” I said as I tended him, distracting us both.

  He glared up at me through lashes so thick and black he looked as if he wore eyeliner. “Tomorrow’s Halloween. All of us have the day and night off. And by the way, I’m taking you to a costume party at the club. I’m thinking we’ll stick with the whole battered and bruised theme and go as a naughty nurse and even naughtier patient.”

  My first outing in weeks would be a date with Cole. Yes, please. “I think you’ll make a very sexy naughty nurse.”

  “I know,” he said without missing a beat. “Just wait till you see my dress. Slutty doesn’t even begin to describe. And you will, of course, require a sponge bath.”

  Don’t laugh. “Promises, promises.” I tsked, then tried to continue more seriously. “But I never mentioned hunting.” Too many people would be out, and some would be dressed as zombies. At first glance, we might not be able to tell the real deal from the fake. “I only mentioned training. You are working out tomorrow morning, aren’t you?” He always did.

  He ignored my question, saying, “You’re not ready.”

  “No, you’re not ready for me to be ready, but it’s happening whether you like it or not.”

  He scowled at me, dark and dangerous. “Is that so?”

  “Yes.” Not many people stood up to Cole Holland. Everyone at our school considered him a full-blown predator, more animal than human. Feral. Dangerous.

  They weren’t wrong.

  Cole wouldn’t hesitate to tear into someone—anyone—for the slightest offense. Except me. I could do what I wanted, say what I wanted, and he was charmed. Even when he was scowling. And it was strange, definitely something I wasn’t used to—having power over someone else—but I’d be lying if I claimed not to like it.

  “Two problems with your plan,” he said. “One, you don’t have a key to the gym. And two, there’s a good chance your ins
tructor will suddenly become unreachable.”

  Since he was my instructor, I took his words as the gentle threat they were and sighed.

  When I’d first joined his group, he’d thrown me into the thick of battle without hesitation. I think he’d trusted his ability to protect me from any kind of threat more than he’d trusted my skills.

  Then I’d proved myself and he’d backed off.

  Then he’d accidentally stabbed me.

  Yep. Him. He’d aimed for the zombie snarling and biting at him; I’d stepped in to help, and, with a single touch, ashed the only thing shielding my body from his strike. Cole had yet to forgive himself.

  Maybe that was why he’d built a wall.

  Maybe he needed a reminder of just how wily I could be.

  “Cole,” I said huskily, and his eyelids lowered to half-mast.

  “Yes, Ali.”

  “This.” A slow smile spread as I circled my hands around his ankles—and jerked. He slid off the bed and thumped to the floor.

  “What the hell?”

  I leaped on top of him, pinning his shoulders with my knees. The action caused the scar on my stomach to throb, but I masked my wince with another smile. “What are you going to do now, Mr. Holland?”

  He watched me intently, amusement darkening his irises. “I think I’ll just enjoy the view.” He gripped me by the waist, squeezed just enough to make sure he had my full attention. “From this angle, I can see your—”

  Choking back a laugh, I took a swing at him.

  “Shorts,” he finished, catching my hand just before impact. I wasn’t given the chance to tug free. He rolled me over, stretched my arms over my head and held me down.

  Tricky slayer.