Solstice

Read Solstice Online

Authors: P.J. Hoover

About SOLSTICE

After eighteen years of endless summer, Earth is dying a slow, hot death. Oceans are wastelands of dead fish, deadly heat bubbles threaten to wipe out entire cities, and the soil is so desiccated that plants are in danger of extinction. This is Piper’s reality, and her domineering, overprotective mother makes it even more suffocating.

Piper’s best friend Chloe is her only outlet from the bleak reality within and without. However, when Piper rebels by secretly opening a mysterious birthday present and getting a tattoo with Chloe, she just exchanges her Global Heating Crisis nightmare for a mythological one.

Suddenly, Piper’s world teems with murderous, deceitful gods, legendary monsters, and criminals damned to suffer eternal torments in hell. A creeping moss that only Piper can see coats the skin of the people around her, and a woman with fog-filled eyes stalks her, insisting that Chloe is about to die. As if all that isn’t enough, two gorgeous guys show up at her school, both claiming to know her, and they both pursue her. And, strangely, they might be the key to this mythical mystery.

The trouble is, Piper can’t resist either of them, even though they seem to be sworn enemies. She’s falling for brooding, passionate Shayne and for seductive, rebellious Reese. Piper needs to make a decision, and the stakes are high in ways she can’t even begin to guess.

Choose the wrong guy, and the uneasy boundary between the mythological world and the human world will disappear, Piper will never learn the truth about herself or her family, and … all hope for the future will be lost.

SOLSTICE

P. J. HOOVER

Copyright © 2011 Patricia Hoover.
All rights reserved.

Cover photograph by Ugla Hauksdóttir

Photograph copyright © 2011 Ugla Hauksdóttir

Cover design by Extended Imagery
www.extendedimagery.com

This book is a work of fiction.  Names, characters, places and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously.  Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.  All rights reserved.  No part of this publication can be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from the author or publisher.

Contents

Dedication

Chapter 1: Disaster

Chapter 2: Social Sciences

Chapter 3: Study Hall

Chapter 4: The Parlor

Chapter 5: Botanical Haven

Chapter 6: Hallway

Chapter 7: Bathroom

Chapter 8: Opportunity

Chapter 9: Plans

Chapter 10: Date

Chapter 11: Desire

Chapter 12: Creek

Chapter 13: Acheron

Chapter 14: Crossroads

Chapter 15: Paradise

Chapter 16: Rhadamanthus

Chapter 17: Disease

Chapter 18: Departure

Chapter 19: Shock

Chapter 20: Death

Chapter 21: Funeral

Chapter 22: Reunion

Chapter 23: Threat

Chapter 24: Asphodel

Chapter 25: Minos

Chapter 26: Phoenix

Chapter 27: Hurricane

Chapter 28: Retribution

Chapter 29: Dinner

Chapter 30: Tears

Chapter 31: Sleep

Chapter 32: Charon

Chapter 33: Sisyphus

Chapter 34: Aeacus

Chapter 35: Retrospection

Chapter 36: Confusion

Chapter 37: Awake

Chapter 38: Choices

Chapter 39: Betrayal

Chapter 40: Blame

Chapter 41: Jealousy

Chapter 42: Sacrifice

Chapter 43: Darkness

Chapter 44: Fire

Chapter 45: Descent

Epilogue: Pomegranate

A Glossary of Terms: Names and Places From SOLSTICE

About the Author

Author Q & A About SOLSTICE

Acknowledgments

For Mom and Dad,
who raised me to believe I could do anything.

Chapter 1

Disaster

M
om says, “Watch the heat today.”

I nod and hug her and go to school like normal. Her concern’s nothing out of the ordinary. And neither is the heat.

At school after lunch, I walk through the breezeway, keeping my head down so the mist doesn’t get in my eyes. The vapor sprays out from above, causing a layer of green gel to settle on my skin and hair. I reach up and run my hands through my hair to try to smooth it, but the cooling gel only makes the curls get wilder; it’s no use. My clothes stick to me, and under my backpack, I’m coated in sweat. Out on the old parking lot, heat waves ripple over what remains of the black tar, only disturbed by a random cactus here and there. Still, I take my time before Social Sciences, soaking in the heat. Every other kid at school complains about it, but to me, the heat finds a way to sink into my soul and give me strength.

For the school to be spraying gel, the heat has to be extreme. Just before I walk back inside, I glance up at the bright red numbers of the thermometer. It blinks one hundred and twenty-one degrees Fahrenheit, which definitely falls into the extreme category. The temperature hasn’t climbed this high since we moved to Austin four years ago. It rarely goes above one hundred and sixteen. I pull out my FON to double check it, and it registers the same. One degree more and…

The sirens start blaring in an earsplitting pattern of high and low, up and down. One degree becomes a reality. I step inside, and for a second, all the kids just look around at one another, like the sound hasn’t yet registered. Like they’re all waiting for someone else to move.

“It’s another drill,” one guy to my left says.

“Didn’t we just have a drill?” someone else asks.

I shake my head because I know this isn’t a drill; I’d seen the thermometer. But I don’t want to cause a panic. The principal comes on the intercom system and does the job for me.

“Report to your designated cooling areas immediately. This is not a drill.”

Realization sinks in, and the hall erupts in chaos. The crowd effect’s going on, so movement just stops. But I’m on the Disaster Student Council. I need to help out. I push my way through person after person until I escape into the science hallway; the emptiness makes the sirens seem even louder as the sound bounces from one wall to the next, then off the floor and ceiling and straight into my ears. I rush toward the end, checking in each classroom to make sure it’s empty, and from there, I circle around until I’m close to the gym—the designated cooling area for our high school. I take up my position at the door on the far left and start directing kids inside.

We have drills every month, but one degree makes everyone go crazy. Drills consist of kids walking, talking, and making stupid jokes about the Global Heating Crisis. But there aren’t any jokes now. Just a whole lot of pushing and screaming and everything they tell us not to do during a real disaster.

My job is to make sure everyone who comes through this door is accounted for. I stand to the side of the door and try to scan each person with my FON as they walk through. But the crowd’s too thick; I’ll have to wait until they’re inside.

Of the ten doors leading into the gym, only me and three other student council members are already in position. Chloe’s supposed to be next to me, but she must be trapped behind everyone. I don’t want to think about her getting stuck outside in the heat. The last time she got too hot, she passed out.

“where r u?” I text her.

She responds in under five seconds, “b there in a sec,” and when I look out across the crowd, I catch her waving.

My FON is almost back in my pocket when it vibrates again. I don’t have to look to know who it is.

“Hey, Mom.” I cover one ear with my free hand and yell into the FON over the sound of the sirens.

“Piper. Why haven’t you answered? I’ve called you five times today.”

She’s actually called me seven times, and I’ve ignored each one. “I’m at school, Mom.”

“You have to come home right now.” My mom is always oversensitive that the earth is going to swallow me whole or something ridiculous like that, but this time her voice has an extra layer of worry on top.

“I can’t,” I yell back. Two kids in front of me start pushing to get to the door faster, but one of the teachers breaks it up. I motion them inside with my free hand.

“You have to. Please.” Her pleading comes through even amid the disaster. But she has to hear the sirens in the background. Does she think I’m going to just cut out in the middle of the crisis?

“I’ll be home when this is over.”

“Now, Piper.” Instead of worry, she uses her authority voice. But it only makes me want to do the exact opposite of what she’s asking.

“I’m not leaving now,” I say.

“It’s a heat bubble. The whole city is covered in it.”

I don’t speak as her words sink in. A real heat bubble means we could be stuck with deadly temperatures for weeks. The last time one of the pockets of hot air formed, the city was evacuated, and even then, almost a thousand people died. An evacuation is going to be nothing short of a disaster.

“Piper?”

“I’m here,” I say, but a sick feeling forms in the pit of my stomach. Heat bubbles are the newest, worst threat of the Global Heating Crisis. Cities all around the world are testing different ways to get rid of them, but it seems like the more done to combat them, the more frequent the bubbles become. Three months ago, one formed over Central America, and a third of the population died. They’d suffocated from the heat. Scientists called it the most horrible natural disaster since the tsunami fourteen years prior that had wiped out most of Indonesia.

“The city’s going to disperse the bubble. And activate the domes,” she says.

Disperser missiles have never been tested on a real bubble. There’s no telling what’s going to happen. “But—” I start.

“Take cover. And get home before they seal the domes. Please,” she says, and then she ends the call.

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