Release Day Party: Afterlife Academy by Jaimie Admans- Excerpt
Afterlife Academy
Author: Jaimie Admans
Release Date: TODAY! (March 15, 2013)
Summary:
Even being dead isn’t enough to get you out of maths class.
Dying wasn’t on sixteen-year-old Riley Richardson’s to-do list. And now, not only is she dead, but she’s stuck in a perpetual high school nightmare. Worse still, she’s stuck there with the geekiest, most annoying boy in the history of the world, ever.
In a school where the geeks are popular and just about everything is wrong, Riley has become an outcast. She begins a desperate quest to get back home, but her once-perfect life starts to unravel into something not nearly as great as she thought it was. And maybe death isn’t really that bad after all…
Welcome to Afterlife Academy, where horns are the norm, the microwave is more intelligent than the teachers, and the pumpkins have a taste for blood.
Book Links:
About the Author:
Jaimie is a 28-year-old English-sounding Welsh girl with an awkward-to-spell name. She lives in South Wales and enjoys writing, gardening, drinking tea and watching horror movies. She hates spiders and cheese & onion crisps.
She has been writing for years but has never before plucked up the courage to tell people.
Afterlife Academy is her third novel and she hopes you enjoy it. There are plenty more on the way!
Website: http://www.jaimieadmans.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/be_the_spark
Facebook: http://facebook.com/jaimieadmansbooks
Twitter: http://twitter.com/be_the_spark
Facebook: http://facebook.com/jaimieadmansbooks
Excerpt:
CHAPTER 1
I have always been a good girl. I’ve always been a girl who never
gets into trouble. In fact, the one and only time that I do something even
vaguely wrong, do you know what happens?
I die.
At least, that seems like the most
logical explanation, given the circumstances.
I remember impact.
And then nothing.
I open my eyes and look around. I am
standing in front of the school gate.
Of all places.
It’s freezing. Something feels wrong.
I’m just pulling my jacket further around myself when I hear a voice to my
left.
“You,” it says angrily.
It startles me and I spin around to
see Anthony.
Of all people.
Somehow I have gone from being in the
car with Wade to standing in front of the school gate with the geekiest, most
boring, weirdest nerd boy from my form.
“You,” I snarl back at him.
He sighs.
I huff out a breath, which appears in
front of my face because it’s so cold. It’s the middle of April. It shouldn’t
be this cold.
I look around and realise something is
really wrong with this place.
We’re standing on the road outside our
school gate.
Except we’re not.
On the road, that is.
I mean, we’re outside the school. Our
school. And we’re standing on a road. But this isn’t the road.
There are no cars. No houses. No sandwich shop opposite. There’s nothing but an
endless country lane. There is nothing in either direction. Just a plain tarmac
road. And trees. Lots of trees.
I glance back at Anthony to see if
he’s seeing this too. Obviously he is because he’s looking around, clearly just
as bewildered as I am.
“What happened?” I say, more to myself
than to him.
I don’t usually talk to him. Sophie,
my best friend, would laugh at me for even looking at our school’s biggest
geek.
“Oh, so I’m allowed to speak to you
now?” he snaps.
“Are you even seeing this?” I snap
back. “What the hell happened?”
“How am I supposed to know?”
“You’re the one so enthralled by
chemistry classes.”
“There’s nothing wrong with wanting to
improve your mind. I happen to find science interesting. Probably in the same
way that you find painting your fingernails interesting.”
“Oh, shut up. Don’t you think we have
more important things to worry about at the moment? Like where the hell we are,
for instance?”
“We’re at school, genius.” He scowls.
“Yes, but look…” I indicate wildly
with my hands. “Do you think there’s been some kind of nuclear war or
something?”
“I find that highly unlikely,” he
says, but he does look a bit freaked out.
I look up at the school that looms in
front of us. And then I notice something else wrong.
The school is grey. Everything is
grey. The building itself, which is usually a shade of ancient red brick, is
grey. Even the grassy hill outside is an unhealthy-looking shade of grey.
This is wrong.
I look at Anthony. He’s staring at the
school too. Even he looks a bit dull. Not that he isn’t dull anyway, but even
he doesn’t usually look this washed out.
There’s a low cloud hanging
everywhere. It’s shrouding the school. It’s covering the tops of the trees that
line the road. It looks like an ordinary foggy morning. But really, really
foggy and grey.
And again, that doesn’t follow because
it’s late afternoon. I know it is because Wade and I just cut last class.
“Do you have the time, please?” I ask
Anthony.
“Check your own watch,” he mutters.
“Like a watch goes with this outfit.”
“Fine.” He makes a big show of pulling
his sleeve up and looking at his wrist. “Oh,” he says, sounding surprised.
“It’s stopped. This watch never stops. It’s radio controlled.”
What a loser. Who cares if their watch
stops occasionally?
I’m about to say something to that
effect when he talks instead.
“What’s with all the mist?”
“Like I’m gonna know.” I shrug.
“Maybe there’s been some kind of
holocaust. What’s the last thing you remember?”
“I don’t…” I trail off as I think.
“You,” I say suddenly. “You… In the car… Wade… He…”
Memories flood my mind and make me
shudder. “What do you remember?” I ask as I try to shake the cold feeling that
has crept down my spine.
He shrugs. “I was on my way home. You
and that idiot boyfriend of yours were speeding around in some car that
obviously didn’t belong to either of you. I yelled at him to slow down, there’s
a nursery school just down the road, he could have killed someone…”
The cold feeling intensifies.
I think he did.
“We hit you,” I say suddenly. “I know
we did.”
It was his brother’s car. Wade had
grabbed me at lunchtime and persuaded me to meet him outside just before last
lesson. And really, who needs to learn French? So I had cut class, hiding
behind the exam wing until the coast was clear of roaming teachers, then snuck
out through the fence and met Wade down a side street. We are experts at
cutting class now. At the end of the day, as long as you’re not failing, I
don’t see the need to attend every single class. Unlike some geeks.
I cast a sideways glance at Anthony.
His hair is too long and now a shade of charcoal instead of the usual dull
brown, and he has a faraway look in his grey eyes. I know he’s thinking about
what happened.
I suddenly realise that the blood is
gone. The last time I saw Anthony, he was covered in blood.
Because of Wade.
Because of me.
Wade had borrowed his brother’s car. I
use the term borrowed loosely because I doubt his brother knew he had borrowed
it. We’d cut the class and gone for a drive. Not very far and nowhere that
would attract attention, because neither of us has a driving license. We were
on the way back to school so I could jump on the bus with Sophie and arrive
home as usual, that way my parents would never know anything about it. It’s not
like they approved of Wade anyway. They certainly wouldn’t approve of skipping
school and riding in cars without a licensed driver.
I remember that Wade sped up as we
approached the school. He had to show off. We flew past the nursery school, gaining
a few angry glances from mothers picking up their kids. I had the window down,
my head leaning out of it, hair flapping around in the wind and feeling like a
rock star. Wade had the music cranked up as high as it could go and was
thumping his hands on the steering wheel to the beat.
And then we saw Anthony. Head down,
trudging along the pavement. His usual stance.
“What a prick,” Wade had yelled to me
over the music.
I nodded.
“Hey!” Wade rolled his window down and
yelled at Anthony. “Been to after-school maths club, dude? Off home to see
Mama?”
“Get lost,” Anthony muttered.
“Oh, it speaks, it speaks,” Wade
mocked him.
Anthony turned to face us. “You
shouldn’t be driving like that. There are kids around here.”
“Why don’t you go and tattle on me to
a teacher, little baby?” Wade yelled. “You’re good at that. But see how many
teeth you have left when I get my hands on you.”
“Sod off,” Anthony said and carried on
walking.
“Stupid little twit,” Wade said to me.
“We’ll show him.”
He put his foot on the accelerator. We
shot off down the road, almost reaching the school before Wade braked so
sharply that I was sure I’d have a seatbelt-shaped indentation across my chest.
He spun the car in a perfect circle, complete with screeching brakes and the
smell of burning rubber.
“What the hell are you doing?” I
screamed.
“I’ll teach that geek to tell me to
slow down.” Wade grinned.
We flew back up the road, approaching
Anthony again within seconds.
“Wade, don’t,” I said, but he didn’t
hear me over the music. “Slow down!” I yelled at him.
“Don’t be such a baby,” he said
dismissively.
I groaned. We were going too fast. We
sped past Anthony again before Wade slammed on the brakes and did another
screeching turn.
“Stop it!” I yelled at him.
He ignored me.
“Hey, you!” he’d shouted as we passed
Anthony again. He slowed down this time to taunt him some more. “Where’ve you
been? Extra-credit science class, because A-plus grades just aren’t enough?”
“You’re only jealous,” Anthony shouted
to him.
“Oh yeah. Jealous of you. The stupid
little bastard whose granny makes him sandwiches every morning in case he gets
his lunch money stolen.”
“Screw you.”
“Wade, stop,” I said again.
“Why?” He snapped his head in my
direction. “Tell me you don’t feel sorry for this geek?”
“We should go home,” I said, avoiding
the question. “I’ve already missed the bus. You’re going to have to drive me.”
“Then there’s no rush.” He smirked.
“Hey, freak,” he yelled at Anthony who
was hurriedly walking away. “Going home to see Mama and Daddy? Oh wait, that’s
right. You can’t, can you? They’re both dead! Probably killed themselves
because you’re such a prat!”
“Wade, don’t,” I said as he
accelerated again and we sped off.
“Why not?”
“Because it’s cruel.”
“Cruel, my ass. Making me sit next to
that moron in form room is cruel.”
“They only make you sit by him because
you cause too much ruckus with your own friends.”
“If you like him so much, why don’t
you sit by him?” Wade slammed his foot on the brake so the car spun around
again. We came dangerously close to the side barrier and I screamed.
“Stop being such a girl,” Wade told
me.
“Hey, Anthony,” he yelled as we came
up to him again. “Going home to see your… Oh, shit!”
This time we didn’t slow down as we
approached Anthony. This time there was a noise under the car and we swerved.
We more than swerved. We careened across the road, and Anthony stood there
frozen as we went right into him.
I remember the sound of his head as it
cracked against the windscreen. Blood spilled everywhere. It splattered through
the passenger window that was still open. I screamed. I couldn’t see where we
were going. The lifeless body blocked the view and bright red blood poured over
the glass.
Wade screamed beside me.
“Do something!” I shrieked at him.
Then there was impact. Anthony’s body
was crushed right in front of my eyes as we hit something else head-on.
There was the loudest bang I’ve ever
heard in my life.
Then there was blackness coming
towards me.
Then I was here.
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