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

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Mirage
Mirage
Mirage
Ebook311 pages4 hours

Mirage

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Danger looms large in the sequel to Haven, which Booklist called “a blend of the Gemma Doyle trilogy, the Twilight saga, and Lois Duncan’s thrillers.”

Violet McKenna is back for her senior year at Winterhaven and thrilled to be with Aidan after a long summer apart. But while their love for each other is as strong as ever, their troubles are far from over.

News of a rogue vampire on a killing spree sets everyone on edge. While Aidan is determined to stop the killer, Violet is chilled by a horrifying vision she simply must prevent...for if she can’t, two people she loves will meet a violent end.

In the midst of Violet’s fear, a mysterious newcomer enters her life—and he has some vital information not just about her past, but about her future as well. Now everything Violet held as truth is upended, and she is left not knowing whom to trust, if she is in danger, and—worst of all—whether she and Aidan are really meant to be together.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 5, 2012
ISBN9781442443013
Mirage
Author

Kristi Cook

Kristi Cook also publishes adult titles under the names Kristina Cook and Kristi Astor. Her YA novels include Haven, Mirage, Eternal, and Magnolia. Kristi lives in New York City with her husband and two daughters. Visit her at Kristi-Cook.com.

Read more from Kristi Cook

Related to Mirage

Related ebooks

YA Social Themes For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Mirage

Rating: 4.102272736363636 out of 5 stars
4/5

44 ratings6 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Loved this book! This takes you through so many emotions while reading it. If you have some great stories like this one, you can publish it on Novel Star, just submit your story to [email protected] or [email protected]
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    SO GOOD

    beware: there's another cliffhanger
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I didn't really remember much from Haven except that I enjoyed Violet's character, I was in love with her boyfriend Aidan and the story swept me away. Getting back into the Winterhaven world was easy though. There was enough recap to catch me up but not take away from the story. It continues on as the new school year is starting, and keeps dealing with the issue of the cure, and other plotlines from Haven. There are some steamy moments with Aiden and Violet and I loved those. There was also reasonable doubt placed in Violet's head, and I like that she pushes for the truth despite the consequences, and that she loves and accepts even when she finds out the truth. There were some new characters and also some rocking returning secondary characters, and I also enjoyed getting to know them better in this one. There are hints at a love triangle/square thing, and a bit of flirting going on, but I am glad that it didn't go beyond those hints. But I am glad that it explored that line with boy and girl friendships and how those work, and can be confusing and cause serious jealousy. I really enjoyed this sequel and flew through it. Bottom Line: Great sequel. Loved being in Violet's head again, and swooning over Aiden.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Read this one awhile ago and don't remember why I did not review. A good sequel and a reminder of how this story is similar to other genres, such as Buffy, X-Men, and more. The school of Winterhaven and ther overall cast of characters are fun and interesting- a whole lot more so than the Fallen series in my opinion. While the storyline between Violet and Aiden and the other cast may be a bit cliche, it is still a fun read and I am anticipating the next one! A good read overall.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Review courtesy of All Things Urban FantasyMIRAGE, the second book in Kristi Cook’s Winterhaven series, once again draws inspiration from popular sources such as Buffy The Vampire Slayer, The Vampire Diaries, and Twilight creating a sequel that is no less fun for it’s familiar story types.Yes, Violet is a mystically chosen vampire slayer who falls for a vampire. Yes, the Aiden refuses to bite her and despises his own nature. Yes, it turns out Violet looks basically like the clone of Aidan’s first love (something she discovers by finding an old picture in his room). And yes, there are plenty of other similarities, but just like with HAVEN, the blend and borrowing is mixed with just enough new twists and subtle differences to make the story work.Apart from those basic premises, MIRAGE tells a unique story as Violet struggles to interpret her increasingly violent visions, harness her psychic gift with the help of a dreamy new teacher at Winterhaven’s school for skilled students. Aidan is consumed with his quest for a cure to vampirism no matter what the risk. All this happens while a vampire serial killer is stalking the streets. None of that detracts from the ongoing emotional and romantic entanglements that Violet and her friends experience during their second year at Winterhaven.Familiar but fun, MIRAGE is a worthwhile read for anyone who loves vampire YA in any medium. The third and final book in the Winterhaven series will be published in 2013. I’m already looking forward to it.Sexual Content:Kissing. Mild sensuality. References to sex.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Library Summary: “Seventeen-year-old Violet McKenna, back for her senior year at Winterhaven, finds her friends in danger, a mysterious new teacher as her psychic coach, and her Sabbat tendencies threatening her relationship with Aidan.”I personally think that this is ten times better than Haven! It has way more romance and mystery!I really like Violet. She’s not one of those girls who can’t survive without the love of her life. I bet you anything that if Aiden left her the way Edward left Bella in New Moon, she would just go on with her life. I mean, sure she’d miss him with all of her heart, but she wouldn't do what I like to call “pulling a Bella Swan” (Which is sit in her room for months, crying about how she misses him).I also really like Aiden. He’s the kind of guy that trusts his girlfriend to take care of herself. Sure he wants to keep her safe but, like he says in Haven, he doesn’t want to treat her like a fragile flower. He knows that she can take care of herself and he lets her do just that.Overall, I think this book is really good and I recommend it to all fans of Paranormal Romance books.

Book preview

Mirage - Kristi Cook

EVERYONE’S DYING OVER

Cook’s first YA novel reads like a blend of the Gemma Doyle trilogy, the Twilight saga, and Lois Duncan’s thrillers.Booklist

"Seriously sexy. … Hand this one to fans of Gray’s similarly themed Evernight and to all the girls who have broken the bindings on their Twilight books." —BCCB

"With a fast-paced plot line, continuously unfolding drama, a bit of romantic anticipation, and a few well-timed twists, Haven is bound to be a favorite." —New York Journal of Books

Moments between Violet and Aidan crackle with sexual longing. … A final sweeping fight scene provides needed resolutions while opening the door for a sequel.Kirkus Reviews

KRISTI-COOK.COM

THEIR LOVE WILL FACE GREAT ODDS….

Violet McKenna is back for her senior year at Winterhaven, and thrilled to be with Aidan after a long summer apart. But while their love for each other is as strong as ever, their troubles are far from over.

News of a rogue vampire on a killing spree sets everyone on edge. While Aidan is determined to stop the killer, Violet is chilled by a horrifying vision she simply must prevent … for if she can’t, two people she loves will meet a violent end.

In the midst of Violet’s fear, a mysterious newcomer enters her life—and he has some vital information not just about her past, but about her future as well. Now everything Violet held as truth is upended, and she is left not knowing whom to trust, if she is in danger, and—worst of all—whether she and Aidan are really meant to be together.

© Tara Kearney

As a child KRISTI COOK took her nose out of a book only long enough to take a ballet class (or five) each week. Not much has changed since then, except she’s added motherhood to the mix and enjoys penning her own novels as much as reading everybody else’s. A transplanted southern gal, Kristi lives in New York City with her husband and two daughters. Visit her online at kristi-cook.com.

Jacket designed by Angela Goddard

Jacket photograph of mirror copyright © 2012 by Carlo A/Getty Images

Jacket photograph of butterfly copyright © 2012 by Thinkstock

Simon Pulse

Simon & Schuster, New York

Watch videos, get extras, and read exclusives at

TEEN.SimonandSchuster.com

ALSO BY KRISTI COOK

Haven

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP

This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

SIMON PULSE

An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

www.SimonandSchuster.com

First Simon Pulse hardcover edition June 2012

Copyright © 2012 by Kristina Cook Hort

All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

SIMON PULSE and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

The Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau can bring authors to your live event. For more information or to book an event contact the Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau at 1-866-248-3049 or visit our website at www.simonspeakers.com.

Designed by Mike Rosamilia

The text of this book was set in Berling LT Std.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Cook, Kristi.

Mirage / Kristi Cook.

p. cm.

Sequel to: Haven.

Summary: Seventeen-year-old Violet McKenna, back for her senior year at Winterhaven, finds her friends in danger, a mysterious new teacher as her psychic coach, and her Sâbbat tendencies threatening her relationship with Aidan.

ISBN 978-1-4424-4299-3 (hardcover)

[1. Psychic ability—Fiction. 2. Supernatural—Fiction. 3. Boarding schools—Fiction. 4. Schools—Fiction. 5. Orphans—Fiction. 6. New York (State)—Fiction.] I. Title.

PZ7.C76984Hav 2011 [Fic]—dc23 2011041952

ISBN 978-1-4424-4301-3 (eBook)

For my mom, Laurie,

my number one fan all these years

Contents

1 There’s No Place like Home

2 England and Scotland and France, Oh My!

3 Love Bites

4 … And Vampires Suck

5 Tick, Tock

6 The Wolf’s Tale

7 You Lie like a Rug

8 This Kiss

9 To the Manor Born

10 Inked

11 Shattered

12 Blast from the Past

13 Timeless

14 Oh, No, You Didn’t

15 Strange Bedfellows

16 Tea for Three

17 Under Where?

18 Four out of Five Dentists Surveyed …

19 Lockdown

20 The Scooby Gang

21 Friendship 101

22 You Gotta Have Faith

23 Dogfight

24 What, No Tacos?

25 Dude …

26 Angels and Demons

27 A Nip Here, a Tuck There

28 The Gloaming

29 Broken

30 … Beyond Repair

Acknowledgments

1 ~ There’s No Place like Home

I’d never thought too much about friendship before I came to Winterhaven, mostly because I hadn’t had many friends. Not because I didn’t want to, but because I couldn’t. The more people I got close to, the more people I saw in my visions, which were harbingers of awful things to come. Besides, the more friends I had, the more people I had to hide my secret from, the more I had to pretend that I didn’t know about things before they happened.

But now … now I had friends. Friends I didn’t have to pretend with. I looked around the classroom at them, their heads bent over their desks—Marissa, her dark hair falling across one pale cheek; Kate, her chin propped in one hand as she stared dreamily out the window; Sophie, pushing her strawberry-blond curls off her forehead, her brow furrowed in concentration. Jack and Joshua, sitting side by side, as if there were nothing weird about a telekinetic football star and a shape-shifter outcast being friends. And Cece—wonderful, amazing Cece—my roommate, my best friend.

Together, they had risked their lives for me. And for Aidan.

I glanced over one shoulder at the tall girl sitting two rows back, her model-perfect face pale and taut. Jenna Holley. Jenna hadn’t been a friend—not even close—and yet she’d saved us all.

Why? I still didn’t know. I wanted answers, and now that we were back at Winterhaven—

Five more minutes, a voice called out, startling me. I looked up and saw Dr. Byrne pointing to the clock on the wall.

I glanced down at the page on my desk, blinking hard. There were still a half-dozen little circles that I hadn’t filled in. Good thing this was just the SAT practice test, and not the real thing. There was no way I could concentrate right now, not with all of us back together again. All I could think about was that horrible day in May—a day I’d never forget, as long as I lived.

On the plus side, my friends knew the truth now—that Aidan was a vampire and that I was some supposedly rare kind of vampire slayer. A Sâbbat. I was finally getting used to it, and even coming to terms with the fact that I’d actually slain not one but three vampires with my trusty little hawthorne stake. The Sâbbat’s weapon of choice, apparently. Ironically, mine was lovingly crafted by a vampire, which had to be a totally new one in the Sâbbat world—not that I’d know, as I’d never met another Sâbbat. Chances were pretty slim that I ever would, since that there were only three in the world at any given time. At least, according to the legend.

Two minutes, came Dr. Byrne’s voice, interrupting my wandering thoughts. Dr. Hottie, the girls at Winterhaven liked to call him, and I had to admit it was a fitting nickname. I briefly wondered what his talent was, since everyone here at Winterhaven had one. Maybe he was an empath, like my friend Marissa, I mused. That would make him ideal for teaching the SAT prep course—he could make us all feel relaxed and confident, if he chose to.

One minute, he intoned, and I began to hastily fill in the remaining circles. If I marked them all C, chances were I’d get some right. At least, I hoped so.

It was the first day of orientation, that weird transition time at Winterhaven when the upperclassmen had to hide their gifts and talents from the freshmen till they all caught on. And while the other upperclassmen were busy finalizing their schedules and signing up for extracurriculars, my friends and I were all stuck making up the final SAT prep class, the one we’d missed last spring after the whole showdown thing. None of us had been in any condition then to finish the class, much less take the actual SATs.

So here we were, stuck inside this stuffy classroom, trying to remember everything we’d learned three months ago. Everyone except Aidan, that is. He was still at home in Manhattan, but he’d promised he would be here tomorrow. I could barely wait to see him—the minutes were dragging by. It had been too long. Way too long.

After all, my summer hadn’t exactly gone as planned. Instead of spending a few weeks in Atlanta, I had spent the entire break there. I hadn’t really had a choice. On the last day of finals, Gran had had a stroke—a fairly serious one—and so I’d packed up my trunks and flown down there to help out the moment classes were over.

Not that I was complaining. Sure, I missed my friends. And I missed Aidan, especially since our telepathy didn’t seem to have a long-distance channel and we were forced to use more conventional methods of communication to keep in touch. But Gran and her companion/housekeeper, Lupe, needed me, and family comes first. Besides, it had given me a chance to catch up with Whitney, my best friend since kindergarten, even if we had grown apart lately. How could we not, with all the secrets I was forced to keep from her?

Anyway, my Winterhaven friends had mostly scattered over the summer, and Aidan had remained at school, working obsessively in the chemistry lab on his cure for vampirism. And since the only way we could ever really be together was if he did manage to find a cure, let’s just say I’m very supportive of his work.

And so summer had come and gone. Whitney and I had successfully rekindled our friendship. Gran had gotten stronger and fully regained her speech, and I’d helped Lupe hire a full-time home health aide who moved in with them just last week. The aide, Melanie, seemed great, and that alleviated my guilt about leaving them. I knew they were in good hands, and I was excited to get back to school and start my senior year.

Time! Dr. Byrne called out, and I realized that he’d given us way more than the one minute he’d promised. With a sigh, I set down my pencil and followed the chattering crowd up to Dr. Byrne’s desk to drop off my answer sheet.

Don’t forget the senior meeting in the auditorium, he yelled over the din. We’ll be talking about college applications.

Great. I glanced over at Cece, who rolled her eyes. It seemed like we were never going to get any time to just hang out and catch up. Cece and I reached his desk together, slapping our answer sheets onto the top of the pile.

Oh, and Miss McKenna?

I glanced up in surprise at the sound of my name.

Can I see you for just a few moments, after we’re all done here?

The whole room seemed to go silent at once, everyone glancing from me to Dr. Byrne and back to me again. Sure, I said, feeling the heat rise in my cheeks. What in the world did he want with me?

Do you want us to wait? Cece asked, tipping her head toward Sophie, Marissa, and Kate, who stood by the door, goggling.

No, it’s okay. Just save me a seat, okay? I stood there awkwardly by his desk as the room emptied. Jenna was the last out, glancing back curiously over her shoulder as she stepped into the hall.

Dr. Byrne picked up the answer sheets, adjusting them into a neat stack before he shoved them into a manila folder. Finally his gaze met mine, and he smiled. Which, embarrassingly enough, caused my heart to do a little flip-flop. Since I had no idea what his gift was, I kept my thoughts locked up good and tight—a preventive measure. At Winterhaven you never knew who might be listening in.

Do you want to sit? He gestured toward the seat in the front row, right across from his desk.

Sure, I murmured, slipping into the seat he’d indicated while he leaned back against the desk, his arms folded across his chest.

Don’t worry, he said with a laugh. You’re not in trouble or anything. I didn’t mean to scare you.

I looked scared? Well, I guess that was better than looking flustered.

I was just speaking with Mrs. Girard, and she tells me you were getting some psychic coaching from Sandra Wilkinson last year. She’s a mind reader, right?

Yeah, I answered, wondering where this was going. At first she was just teaching me to block. But then we started working on my visions. It’s not really her thing, but she tried to help as best she could.

Well, you’re in luck. I’ve got a little extra time this semester, and I told Mrs. Girard that I’d be willing to help out. I’ve never really coached before, but I’m willing to give it a try if you are.

I wasn’t quite following him. Give it a try? He was offering to coach me?

I’m a precog, he clarified, noting my confusion. Visions. Pretty much just like yours, from what I understand. Generally bad stuff, and almost exclusively about people I’m close to. Sound familiar?

Yes, I said breathlessly, leaning forward in my chair. Are you able to control them? You know, summon a replay, or anything like that?

He nodded. Pretty much. It’s not an exact science, but I know a few tricks. Anyway, if you’re interested, I’m willing to share what I know.

Definitely, I said, nodding. The idea of working with someone with the same gift as me, someone who actually understood what it was like and who might even be able to help me—well, it gave me a new kind of hope.

Great, Dr. Byrne said with a smile, and I couldn’t help but wonder how old he was. Rumor put him right around twenty-five or so, but that seemed awfully young, considering he had a PhD and had been teaching at Winterhaven for a year already. How are Saturday mornings for you? he asked, drawing me from my thoughts. I’m living on campus this year. Assistant West Hall dorm master.

Marissa had said as much, just this morning. The school was abuzz with the news that we’d now have Dr. Hottie around seven days a week, instead of five.

Sandra and I always met on Saturdays at eleven, I offered. We’d met in my dorm room, which I supposed wasn’t an option with Dr. Byrne, considering the no guys on the girls’ floor and vice versa rule—even if he was a teacher.

Okay, then. Eleven on Saturdays it is. We can meet in my office. It’s in the science wing, corridor C. I’m on the fifth floor. Probably more comfortable than a classroom.

Sure, I said with a shrug, going for nonchalance. But oh my God, my friends were going to die. Truly, I was never going to hear the end of this one. Because they all had crushes on Dr. Byrne—pretty much the school’s entire female population did.

Unaware of my current train of thought, Dr. Byrne nodded, pushing off from his desk. Great. We’ll start this Saturday, then.

I nodded, a little too stunned to do much else.

After a pause, he glanced down at his watch. You should probably get over to the auditorium. The senior meeting’s just about to begin.

Sure, thanks, I managed to mumble, my cheeks burning with embarrassment. I reached for my bag and slung it over one shoulder, suddenly anxious to get out of there, and fast.

I hurried out, my sneakers squeaking against the tiles as I made my way through the now empty hall toward the auditorium. For the, oh, perhaps fiftieth time that day, I wished Aidan was there beside me. The anticipation was driving me nuts. I could feel it—a living, breathing thing pulsing through my veins, making my heart beat faster. After an entire summer apart, Aidan had never felt so close yet so far away.

He should have been there at LaGuardia to meet my plane; he should be at school with me now, suffering through orientation like the rest of us. Instead, he was out hunting murderers and rapists, drinking their blood to slake his thirst so that he could come to me completely sated and not at all tempted to drink my blood. Not that he’d ever really had the urge to do so, except when we were making out.

Of course, he had no idea about my urges—the ever-increasing desire I had to feel his teeth against my neck. I couldn’t understand it—it went against all my natural Sâbbat tendencies. And I’d certainly never admit to it, especially to Aidan. It would only alarm him, and probably rightfully so. It definitely alarmed me.

Increasing my pace, I made a sharp right turn and hurried down the corridor till I came to the last set of doors on the right. I stepped into the auditorium, scanning the crowd for my friends. I saw them near the back, a row of familiar heads all bent toward each other in conversation. As if she sensed my presence, Cece turned. Spying me just inside the door, she waved me over.

A slow smile spread across my face. Aidan or no, it was awfully good to be back home at the ’Haven.

2 ~ England and Scotland and France, Oh My!

Hey, the Sorbonne is on this list!" Kate exclaimed, plopping down on the little loveseat next to Sophie.

I glanced down at the sheet of paper I held in my hands. Yeah, there’s a couple of schools in France listed. England and Scotland, too.

Kate kicked off her shoes and tucked her feet beneath her. Cool. Can you even imagine going to school in Europe?

Marissa perched on the edge of my bed beside me. Nope. My parents would never let me.

Yeah, mine either, Sophie agreed glumly. But hey, at least they’ve got most of the Ivies covered. Harvard, Princeton, Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth, Cornell. No Yale or Penn, though. Interesting.

I flipped the page over and scanned the back. I’m surprised there’s so many. The two-page sheet included all major universities with faculty members who were sympathetic to our situation, as they’d termed it in the senior meeting. An asterisk by the school’s name meant a significant psychically gifted population. A cross meant psychically gifted faculty members on the admissions committee. Schools with both an asterisk and a cross would be a best-case scenario. Still, Dr. Ackerman, the senior adviser, reminded us that we were free to apply anywhere we chose. The list was just a helpful guide, she said.

I was kind of leaning toward Columbia or maybe NYU—both on the list—thinking I’d like to stay in New York City, close to Aidan. I was hoping to convince him to apply too, though I knew that if he hadn’t gotten any closer to finding his cure, he’d think it was pointless.

Still, I harbored this crazy little vision of the two of us living cozily together in Aidan’s town house on the Upper East Side while studying at Columbia. Of course, my step-mom, Patsy, would never in a million years allow it—but still.

Once the happy glow of the daydream wore off and I was faced with reality, I had no idea what our future together held. If Aidan didn’t find his cure, he would remain a perpetual boy—like Peter Pan—while I’d continue to age, to mature into an adult. I knew he’d never stick around if that were the case. Or worse, he’d try to convince me to destroy him. I didn’t want it to come to that. Ever.

Well, we don’t have much time left to decide, do we? Kate said, then let out a sigh. I wish we could just freeze time and stay here at Winterhaven forever.

Me too, I murmured. That way, I’d never have to worry about the future—about my developing Sâbbat tendencies or anything like that.

Anyway, Kate continued, setting aside the list, did the rest of you see how fast Jenna got out of there when the meeting ended? I was trying to get her attention, but she totally blew me off.

Sophie nodded. Yeah, she definitely doesn’t want to talk to us. I don’t get it—it’s not like we’re going to spill her secret. I mean, c’mon. If it wasn’t for her … She allowed that thought to trail off, and we were all silent. I’m sure we were all picturing it—that bloody scene beside the chapel where we’d fought Julius, the rogue vampire who’d tried to force me to kill Aidan.

She’s got to talk to us at some point, Marissa said. You don’t just save someone’s life—she swallowed hard—and then refuse to tell them why you did it.

Because it had been Marissa’s lifeblood staining the grass when Jenna had appeared in wolf form and started ripping out the vampire’s throat. It had been that action that had set off a new chain of events, events I hadn’t foreseen in my gruesome vision. Jenna’s unexpected appearance had been the catalyst, the turning point that had allowed us to change what I’d seen. Because of her we’d won and Aidan was still alive.

Finally Marissa spoke again. Hey, where’s Cece?

Student council meeting, I said, my voice thick now. Declaring her candidacy for senior class president. She thinks Stacy Dalton is going to run against her.

Kate raised her brows. That should be interesting. I guess Stacy’ll lock in all the clairsentient votes.

Except for mine, Sophie put in cheerfully.

Well, we’ve got the tellies, Kate said. The telekinetics, she meant. More of us.

And I assume the shifters are in too, thanks to Joshua, Sophie added. Which way do you think the empaths will go? she asked Marissa.

Marissa shrugged. Dunno. Either way, I guess.

It still amazed me the way kids grouped into cliques according to their psychic abilities. As far as

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1