Book Cover for Soul Sisters by Janiera Eldridge |
Rebecca
Thomas dipped her brush into the small pot of lip gloss and dabbed it softly on
her lips. Today had been a long day at the Lola department store. The two rich
old bitties that were usually bothering her at the makeup counter had been
there earlier. Lord they got under her skin! She checked her watch and noticed
there was only forty-five minutes until the store closed for the night. Rebecca
turned from the mirror and rolled her eyes when she noticed the door to the
ladies room creak open and a beautiful cocoa-colored brunette briskly walk
through it. All she wanted was a few minutes of silence but another woman in
the bathroom always spelled noise. Damn those pesky ladies room discussions.
The
bathroom was painted a soft brown with gold trim around the counters and
stalls. There was a small loveseat in the resting area. Rebecca never
understood why there was a loveseat, no one ever used it. This powder room was,
however, a place of peace where Rebecca could take a few minutes to exhale.
Rebecca couldn’t help but turn her head all the way around at such a natural
beauty. She whipped her head back to the mirror when she noticed the young
woman peering straight into her eyes with a raised eyebrow. She briskly swiped
the lip gloss across her lips once more.
“You
shouldn’t try so hard to be perfect, it isn’t becoming of anyone,” the woman
said, tousling her hair and looking into the mirror. She loosened the curls
around her face by gently extending them with her finger. Rebecca looked into
her deep, green eyes. She felt the amount of rudeness the woman was showing to
a stranger was pretty shocking. She was startled by the woman’s soft, but deep
voice. It was deep like hot chocolate, but soothing nonetheless. She felt she
had no choice but to listen.
“Well,
if you feel that way, then why are you looking in the mirror?” Rebecca rolled
her eyes, slipped the lip gloss brush and pot filled with red,
strawberry-tasting liquid back in her purse and headed for the door.
“I’m
not trying to be perfect,” the woman said, staring at the back of Rebecca’s
head. “My beauty comes naturally. Your need to be perfect despite the fact that
you are not is imposing on other people’s ability to be comfortable with
themselves and I find it very, very rude.” The woman’s face looked like stone
but there was a small smirk that formed at the corner of her mouth.
Rebecca
wrinkled her nose at the woman’s strange remark. Freak, she muttered in her
head. The woman’s nostrils flared, and in the second it took Rebecca to take
another step toward the door the woman was standing right in front of her.
“I
really despise rudeness,” the woman said tilting her head to the right. “Well,
you won’t be a waste. I’m starving anyway.”
In
a moment that seemed to defy time itself, the woman grabbed Rebecca by the neck
and sunk her teeth into a juicy vein laying right on the neck’s surface. When
her teeth punctured the flesh she could feel Rebecca’s butter soft neck break
with ease under the skin. Her blood was remarkably sweet and clean. The woman
knew that the girl must have been taking very good care of her body. No drugs
or cigarettes and very little alcohol. She gradually released her grip on
Rebecca’s neck when she felt the pulse slowly die in the rock hard palm of her
hands. Rebecca collapsed on the floor like a heap of dirty laundry. She had no
time to scream or cry for help and the woman felt lucky. She could enjoy her
meal in peace. The only sound anyone would remember hearing was the clicking of
her heels against the tile as she walked out of the bathroom. She glided
gracefully through the store and disappeared into the hot night air.
Dana’s
tambourine-like ringtone blared in her ear as she slept comfortably in her bed.
She wiped her eyes and stuck her head out over the bed to see the clock: It was
12:00 a.m. on a Monday night. Who the
hell could be calling me? She thought.
“Hello?”
She said into the phone. Her voice didn’t seem to be adjusting to the night
very well.
“Oh
my gosh Dana, did you hear about Rebecca?” Her friend Tasha said loudly. She
said it so loud it left her ears tingling. Dana knew it was her friend Tasha
because of the extra drama she poured into saying the simple words.
“No,
it’s 12:00 a.m. and I’m trying to get some sleep. What did she do now? Did she
steal your wallet instead of your boyfriend this time?” Dana chuckled as she
propped herself up against the soft feathered pillows crowning the top of her
bed. She could feel the fog fleeing from her brain a little at a time.
Tasha
and Dana had become instant friends since they started working together at Lola.
The only possible explanation for their immediate friendship was that maybe the
“opposites attract” rule really was true. They enjoyed talking about everything
from men to movies. Even though Dana loved horror movies and Tasha loved
romantic comedies they still enjoyed coming together and making fun of the bad
movies. They weren’t best friends, that spot was saved for her sister, Ani, but
Dana enjoyed every minute of hanging out with her.
“She’s
dead,” Tasha said dryly with her voice trailing off at the end, as if she
didn’t believe what came out of her own mouth.
“Seriously?
What happened?” Dana felt a chill run down her spine, she really couldn’t
believe that someone who had been the “it” girl for so long was gone. Questions
swarmed in her head: When, why, how?
“I
saw it on the news. The cops aren’t releasing what the cause of death was yet.
It might be too soon to tell. All the news anchor said was a young woman by the
name of Rebecca Thomas was found dead in the bathroom of the Lola department
store. They said they suspect foul play but they’re not saying much else.”
Dana
shook her head slowly from side to side in disbelief. Rebecca was the prettiest
girl to work at Lola. She made men want to leave their plasma TVs behind on a
football Sunday just to get a peek of her. They were always dying to see what
cute mini skirt she had on that day. Dana secretly felt jealous of Rebecca many
days because of how she constantly got the “perfume girl” shift, which
virtually meant doing nothing but spritzing rich women with perfume scents as
they drifted along through their expensive shopping trips. After days and days
of stocking shelves way too high for her slender arms to reach, the “perfume
girl” shift was ideal.
Rebecca
used to simply irritate Dana but she increased that level to hate when she went
out with a young man who had come in the store originally flirting with Dana.
Dana spent twenty minutes chatting up the chocolate hunk with dreads when Rebecca
sashayed over, batted a few eyelashes and swept him away to another part of the
store without saying a word to her. When Tasha told Dana during their weekly
Friday lunch together that the man eventually asked Rebecca out, she realized
how much she couldn’t stand the girl. Never in her darkest thoughts, however,
did she ever wish for the girl to die. Maybe she wished her to get smacked
around a little bit to knock her off of her pedestal but certainly not to be
found dead. Even at the age of 123 years old, but with the charming and
youthful look of a 25-year-old, Dana was envious of Rebecca’s beauty. Her long,
golden brown hair and bright hazel eyes with full pink lips were enough to send
any man over the edge and off a cliff where he’d never look at another woman again.
Dana had given up competing with the beautiful diva a long time ago.
“I-I
just don’t know what to say. I can’t believe it. I mean, you know I didn’t like
her but I would never, ever wish that on her, on anyone. Well, if they said her
name over the air that means her family already knows.” She closed her eyes and
laid her head down on the pillow; she was still half asleep but able to feel a
twinge of pain from the young woman’s sudden death. For some reason she got the
aching feeling that this death was connected to her. She knew Ani had something
to do with Rebecca’s untimely death. The shooting pain that bolted up and down
her blood stream told her she was responsible.
“Yeah,
I really feel bad for her family and for her of course. It seems like it was so
sudden. I hope it wasn’t anything brutal. I hope it was something simple and peaceful,
like her heart gave out.” Tasha seemed a little too upbeat to Dana.
“I
mean, she would be too young for that but, you know what I mean. I can’t imagine
it could have been anything like that because she seemed to be the pillar of
health.”
Tasha’s
voice was and borderline frenzied. It was just after midnight on Monday.
“Yeah, it’s really a shame. I feel bad for
them. Um, Tasha, I’m going to go back to bed, I have to be up early in the
morning for work and this is a lot to process, to say the least.”
“Oh,
OK honey. Well, try to relax and have a goodnight.”
Before
Dana could say her goodnight the phone line went dead. She really hoped Tasha
wasn’t offended, but after a long day of snooty customers she couldn’t bring
herself to conduct such a spirited conversation that time of night. She really
did feel a lot of pain for Rebecca as well as her family and the sleepiness was
not helping her get her feelings in order. She pulled the covers over her head
and let the darkness drag her full force into a new world.
Despite
a peaceful sleep, Dana woke the next morning feeling as if she had hardly slept
at all. She dragged herself into the bathroom and stared into the oval mirror.
She noticed the bags under her eyes as she pulled lightly on the fleshy folds
of skin around them. There wasn’t enough makeup in the world to cover up the
dark circles caused by the restless nights behind her.
Dana
showered, dressed, applied her makeup and swept her hair up into a bun. She
held the bun in place with a blue butterfly pin that still had a few sprinkles
of glitter left after all the years of use.
Her
mother had given her the pin in 1912. She told her whenever she was sad and
felt no one understood what she was going through, she could slip the pin into
her hair and all the problems in her world would go away. She also said no harm
would ever come to her while she wore it. Dana wasn’t so sure about that part
but the beauty of it always warmed her heart. Dana drove to work in a hypnotic
haze; she wasn’t sure how she wound up in the Lola department store parking lot
but she took a deep breath, grabbed her steaming cup of vanilla coffee and
headed toward the door.
The
store had an icy and lonely feeling that floated casually through the air, wrapping
its numbed feelings around everyone. There were hardly any snooty customers
wandering about or cackling groups of women strolling through the store. Dana
went straight to the employee lounge without looking anyone in the eye. She put
her jet black purse and baby blue coat in her worn down locker. Tasha was
sitting at a table sipping on her hot cup of more-cream-than-coffee. She must have showed up early to work again,
Dana thought.
“So,
how is everyone doing?” Dana said, pulling up a chair beside Tasha. She didn’t
expect to be engaged in conversation for long.
“Well,
it’s really quiet out there, now anyways. The cops left hours ago but there is
still this nasty sense of death floating around in the air. There are not a lot
of customers in here today; I’m going to assume they all saw the news
broadcast. I wouldn’t want to shop at this store either. It’s not every day a
young woman dies in a department store.”
“Well,
I’m going to go out there and give it my best. I mean, a quiet day is better
than a drama-filled one, right? It’s really tragic, but if the store ends up
closing because of this then we’re all in trouble.”
Tasha
shrugged and buried her face back into her steaming cup of coffee. After the slow
and lackluster conversation, the day got a whole lot worse. Today of all days
she was on perfume duty and during the entire time only one customer passed her
counter. The little old lady that had sauntered by was notorious among the
store employees for not letting any of the Black or Hispanic workers, like
Tasha or Dana, help her. Today was no different. When she spotted Dana she
simply turned her head and kept walking. Why Dana kept working there when she
didn’t need to was beyond her. Keeping up a normal appearance was not worth
working the job.
Five
o’clock could not have rolled around fast enough. When the shorthand reached
the five and the long hand landed on the twelve Dana grabbed all of her
belongings from her locker as fast as her arms would let her and nearly
sprinted for the door. She didn’t even take the time to say goodbye to Tasha;
it would mean she would have to spend a few more seconds in the death trap and
she just couldn’t stand to do it. As she gripped the handle of her red 2012
Dodge Avenger Ani suddenly appeared at her side sending a sharp jolt up her
spine that nearly knocked her over.
“Why
do you always insist on sneaking up on me?” Dana asked, breathing hard. “We
need to talk. Get in the car.”
She
knew Ani looked exactly like her but sometimes the powers of her emerald eyes
were overwhelming. When she was at her strongest they seemed to be bright and
beaming like a lighthouse shining over an ocean in the middle of the night. Ani
twisted her nose slightly trying to keep her agitation from spreading across
her face. She knew she was going to catch some flak for last night’s little
incident.
“I’m
not going to waste any time getting to the point about this because that would
be ridiculous. Did you have anything to do with Rebecca’s death?” Dana
demanded.
“Who
is Rebecca?” Ani swung her head around and looked out the car window at the
orange and yellow leaves barely hanging on the trees that lined the street.
“Don’t
play that game with me. You promised me you would only hunt the people who do
wrong, who are evil, remember? Rebecca didn’t do anything wrong.”
“Oh
really? What do you call talking behind your back saying things like: ‘Oh she’d
be much prettier if she did something with herself’? What about the time you
told me that hunky guy was flirting with you and she took him right from under
your nose?”
Dana
straightened up in her seat and refocused on the road as she felt the car
drifting over the line. Zeroing in at the back of another car seemed to prevent
her anger from building.
“You
know what I’m saying. We agreed on murderers, thieves, rapist and pimps, not
man stealers.”
“Well,
she stole $20 out of your purse one time and you didn’t even see it. Does that
count as a thief?” Ani raised one eyebrow and a mischievous smile spread across
her face. A subtle glow radiated from her persona, even with all of the clouds
hovering in the sky.
“Did
you ever think because we’re twins I could be the one caught for the murder and
the little bit of difference between our eyes is simply not enough to convince
people we’re not the same person?”
Dana
was not smiling at all. It simply wasn’t funny to her, although her sister
didn’t seem to agree. She enjoyed living a low profile lifestyle but Ani needed
to feel an adrenaline rush every now and then. She certainly loved the thrills
she got during her bloodiest killings. Drinking blood seemed to get very boring
to Ani after a while and she wanted to find some way to spice things up.
“I
wouldn’t let that happen,” Ani said, shaking her head and staring out the
window. She had been around a long time and was still amazed at all the changes
the world was constantly going through. The invention of the motor car
astounded her and now there were little computerized telephones that could be
cradled in the fleshy dips of her hands.
Ani
glared out the window as a woman rushed down the street in a short, red skirt
and matching tube top. Her hair looked like it would ignite if a cigarette was
lit up next to it from all the carbon dioxide that was floating around in her
hair. It must have taken a ton of hairspray to hold the blonde tower together
as she paced up and down the block. The woman ranted into a cell phone, complete
with annoying hand gestures. Ani could tell this lady really enjoyed her
personal drama. Ani was definitely considered a rebel of her time but it seemed
like women just didn’t know how to handle their lives today.
“Well,
whether you think it could happen or not,” Dana continued. “You really need to
think of how your actions affect us both.” She swore Ani’s angry gaze could cut
a hole through her glass car window. In half a second Ani turned her head
toward Dana. It felt like she was trying to bore a hole in her soul.
“Your
maker will be asking questions soon if any of this gets back to him and from
there I have no clue what’ll happen,” Dana said, trying to shake the
nervousness from her voice.
“So,
you mean to tell me I’m supposed to go along with draining small animals for
blood every damn time I want to eat? Do you know how boring that gets? And the
blood is not nearly as sweet. Not to mention I’m hungry all time because small
animals don’t have that much blood. It even takes a lot of deer’s blood to fill
up. I’d rather be out chasing a killer and feasting on his blood than an
innocent deer. Do you know how difficult this is for me?”
“No,
I don’t know because I don’t need blood but I understand that you do. Without
you, I’m nothing.” Dana’s voice dropped as she hit the last word. She tried to
imagine life without her sister but felt a shock shutter through her body when
she realized there would be no life without her.
“All
I’m saying is you can’t keep taking people down like this because they piss you
off. These are people you know. Just because it isn’t your family doesn’t mean
they don’t matter. Be more like those vampires everyone likes, you know, like
in the Twilight Saga. I love those movies.” Dana shook her head from side to
side and laughed.
“I
can’t help thinking about how scared people would be if they knew people like
them really existed. I think they’d rather be friends with an alien than hang
out with you, I’m sorry. ”
“Yeah,
and we don’t glitter in the sun either; although that’d be a really cool
feature,” Ani said smiling. People loved the vampires that glittered but she
knew they wouldn’t want to see her coming. Dana was relieved the conversation
had gone well. All of her car windows were still whole and she didn’t have any
claw marks on her arm. Ani had never physically attacked her, but with her
sister’s temper she secretly wondered if it were possible. They pulled up in
front of their apartment and Ani wrinkled her nose again. Dana rolled her eyes
at the thought of what could be running through her sister’s mind.
“What’s
wrong now?” Dana asked, tired of dealing with Ani’s diva attitude.
JANIERA'S LINKS
Purchase Soul Sisters at Amazon here:
http://www.amazon.com/Soul-Sisters-Janiera-Eldridge/dp/061568310X/ref=tmm_pap_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1344868094&sr=8-11
BOOK TRAILER FOR SOUL SISTERS
JANIERA'S LINKS
Purchase Soul Sisters at Amazon here:
http://www.amazon.com/Soul-Sisters-Janiera-Eldridge/dp/061568310X/ref=tmm_pap_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1344868094&sr=8-11
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