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Everneath
Everneath
Everneath
Ebook347 pages5 hours

Everneath

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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About this ebook

Last spring, Nikki Beckett vanished, sucked into an underworld known as the Everneath. Now she’s returned—to her old life, her family, her boyfriend—before she’s banished back to the underworld . . . this time forever. She has six months before the Everneath comes to claim her, six months for good-byes she can’t find the words for, six months to find redemption, if it exists.

Nikki longs to spend these precious months forgetting the Everneath and trying to reconnect with her boyfriend, Jack, the person most devastated by her disappearance—and the one person she loves more than anything. But there’s just one problem: Cole, the smoldering immortal who enticed her to the Everneath in the first place, has followed Nikki home. Cole wants to take over the throne in the underworld and is convinced Nikki is the key to making it happen. And he’ll do whatever it takes to bring her back, this time as his queen.

As Nikki’s time on the Surface draws to a close and her relationships begin slipping from her grasp, she is forced to make the hardest decision of her life: find a way to cheat fate and remain on the Surface with Jack or return to the Everneath and become Cole’s queen.

Everneath is a captivating story of love, loss, and immortality from debut author Brodi Ashton.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateJan 24, 2012
ISBN9780062071156
Author

Brodi Ashton

The Lady Janies are made up of New York Times bestselling authors Brodi Ashton, Cynthia Hand, and Jodi Meadows. They first met in 2012, when their publishers sent them on a book tour together, and they hit it off so well they decided to write My Lady Jane so they could go on book tours together all the time. Between the three of them they’ve written more than twenty published novels, a bunch of novellas, a handful of short stories, and a couple of really bad poems. They’re friends. They’re writers. They’re fixing history by rewriting one sad story at a time. Learn more at ladyjanies.com. 

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Reviews for Everneath

Rating: 3.841463428861789 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    First of all, that cover is gorgeous! I think this is one of my favourite books cover ever - it’s beautiful and evocative, and I love the smoky effect. The plot line of Everneath is interesting, with intriguing ideas about life and death based on Greek mythology. I really enjoyed the mythical element to the story. I felt that the action began much too late in the book - too much time was devoted in the beginning to Nikki mooning over Jack. I did not understand Nikki at all. She went back to Earth to say goodbye and make the most of the six months given to her, and yet the book features only a handful of interactions with her family, and only two with her ‘beloved’ brother. I feel the author only used the family when she needed them and focussed the whole story on Jack and Cole, which I think is odd because it’s made clear that Nikki only went back to Earth to be with her family. The other characters were sweet, especially her father and of course, Jack. Cole is also interesting, but he kept getting in the way of Jack and Nikki’s romance, and involvement felt a bit forced to me. I enjoyed the premise and got into the book after the half way point. I really liked the format of the book, where the story was told from the past and present and eventually they blended together. The start of each chapter features a six month count down, so we always know how much time Nikki has left. However I was disappointed in the execution when I finished the book. I think the language used could be a lot tighter, especially when Nikki says of Cole: “He gave me a smile that I could have sold on the internet for money.” I don’t even know what this means. It was quirky lines like this that kept me from really immersing myself into the story. I think this is a good book, and worth reading for those who enjoy paranormal stories and Greek mythology. Brodi Ashton is talented, and I look forward to see her writing skills develop and mature as she writes her trilogy. I am looking forward to reading the trilogy, especially because of the enormous twist at the end of Everneath. Read more of my reviews here!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Orginally posted at The Wandering Fangirl.I was really looking forward to this since I first heard about it, and boy, was I disappointed. The way Brodi Ashton retells the Orpheus and Eurydice myth, as well as her take on the Underworld is great, but the execution doesn't live up to the idea at all. I knew going in that it would involve a lot of true love, but I wasn't expecting 300 pages of our main character, Nikki, moping about and trying to figure out a way to say goodbye to her loved ones by doing absolutely nothing. Everything that happens to her is due to outside forces -- and by forces, I mean Cole and Jack, the boys in her life. Nikki doesn't do much but do some sleuthing and a lot of knitting. I did enjoy Jack, and the last 20 pages of the book picked things up considerably, but that didn't make up for the rest of it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As posted on booknook - YA and Fantasy book reviewsWow, did this book have me hooked! I started reading it, sat down, and somehow wound up on page 232, with no sense of how long I had been sitting there reading. I just got sucked right in and didn’t want to stop (but got dragged away to a family dinner!).The way this story is written is awesome! It’s done in such a way that you’re hooked from page one and have to keep reading to find out more. The book starts off throwing you into the midst of things. Nikki is in the Everneath but you have no idea what that is, how she got there, who she’s with, or how long she’s been there. Slowly, we find out the story through alternating chapters. Nikki tells us about what’s happening in her life now — post-feeding, and then she tells us how the story unfolded pre-feeding and why she decided to become a Forfeit. We switch back and forth between the two different times to slowly piece together the story and learn how she came into that situation, and then how she’s going to deal with it now.So six months before the ‘current time’ in the story, Cole convinced Nikki to come with him to the Everneath, where he would feed on her energy and take away the pain in her life. 100 years later — which is 6 months in normal time — Nikki is back in her old life. She has six months to say goodbye to her family and friends before she is forced to return to the Everneath forever… but she didn’t realize how hard it would be to say goodbye. Nikki struggles to find a balance between comforting her family and friends, but trying not to get too close to them since she knows she’ll have to say goodbye again in six months… this time for good.This book made me so emotional! It was probably because I had to read about Nikki trying to find a way to say goodbye to her ex boyfriend Jack, and I hadn’t seen my own boyfriend in 2 weeks. Just the nature of the story made me miss him even more! I kept thinking that if I had to be around him, but force myself to not get too close to him, and find a way to say goodbye to him, I would constantly be in tears. I don’t know how Nikki held herself together! My eyes were literally tearing up for half the time I was reading.The one thing that annoyed me was how Nikki put up with Cole. He was a real ass. He practically stalked her, showed up in her bedroom every night to bother her, practically threatened her little brother, etc. I really wanted Nikki to rage at him or throw sharp objects at him. She obviously wasn’t pleased, but she didn’t have the kind of forceful reaction I would have expected. She usually just calmly told Cole to stop and left it at that. If it were me, I would have really raged at the guy!Also, I’m a stickler for details and this kind of made me roll my eyes a bit:Jack came over that night, so we could research the Daughters of Persephone. We didn’t know where to start other than Google and the search produced just two results.Of course then I proceeded to do a Google search for “Daughters of Persephone” and got:About 12,300 results (0.23 seconds)I’m weird and things like that just bug me. And just to be clear, Nikki wasn’t saying that there were only two *relevant* search results, because one of the two was completely irrelevant. So she did mean two overall.I guess the story did move pretty slowly. It kind of drags on and takes you a while to figure out exactly what happened to Nikki to make her want to become a Forfeit, and then it takes a while for her to actually make progress with Jack in ‘current time.’ But the book is so intense and full of emotion that the slow paced nature of the book is not not too big of a deal. There were a few parts were I was like, “Okaaay, I’m ready for her to make progress!” But most of the time I was really into the story and hungry for more!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    How do I explain what made me love Everneath so very much? It wasn't just the characters, who are so realistic that you can feel their emotions emanating from the page. In fact it wasn't just even the amazing story line that had me reading voraciously. It was the two of these things blended together, my ability to get lost inside Nikki's story, that left me breathless at the end. Everneath is beautiful, plain and simple.

    Every story has a heroine, and this one is no different. I fell in love with Nikki from the very beginning. Her emotions were so palpable and real. Even when she made decisions I didn't quite agree with, I saw her motivations behind. Everything about her was so selfless. Flanking her on either side are two very different boys with two very different motivations. I loved Jack. Can I say that again? I loved him. He is the epitome of what we all want in a relationship. Sweet, giving, unshakable in his loyalty. His story with Nikki blew me away. Then there is Cole who, even though he is technically the "villian", I just couldn't help but love. There is so much wrapped up in his character that despite how he acts sometimes he is just too broken to dislike.

    These stunning characters are placed in an even more gorgeous story line, as Brodi Ashton whisks us away into the story of the Everneath. I'm not going to share any details that might be spoilers. I believe that this is the type of book you'll just have to experience for yourself. Still, I could not believe how perfectly Ashton blended myth with reality. Nikki's story mirrors a myth almost perfectly and, even when you know what's going to ultimately happen, she provides enough hope to keep you hanging on. Love plays a big part in this story. The link between two people who love each other so much that time, nor space, can separate them. It broke my heart with its beauty.

    Reading Everneath was effortless, if that makes any sense. It was such a pleasure to turn every page that it was almost like I wasn't reading at all. What Brodi Ashton has created within this pages is absolutely wonderful. There is no way I can explain to you why this book touched me so much, only that it did. I ended the story with tears in my eyes and something beyond a need to find out what happens next. More of an ache.

    I haven't been as in love as I am with these characters in a long, long time. That alone makes Everneath one of my top reads, not just of the year but of all time. If you are a hopeless romantic, if you are a fan of mythology, or if you just enjoy rooting for the good in the world, this is a book you'll enjoy. I recommend Everneath with all my heart.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The novel was an interesting take on the persephone story. I did have a few problems with the story: I found the characters to be a bit immature and a lot of questions still on my mind. I felt that Nikki's time in the Everneath was an interesting idea, although I would've loved for Ashton to go more in depth with that. I felt that Jack was sort of empty as a character - you don't really see much of who he is until the end when he finally breaks free from his shell and decides to pretty much sacrifice himself. Even though I did have some problems, I enjoyed the book overall and found Cole to play the role of the sinister love-struck villian quite well.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Lately, I 've been in a sort of reading slump. Everything I pick up turns out to be exactly what I'm not looking for at that moment. I decided to give Everneath a try because I was definitely in the mood for a tragic love story and that's exactly what I got.After leaving the Underworld called Everneath just six months ago, Nikki Beckett is thrown back into the life of the living with one goal: to say goodbye to those she loves most. But will these six months be enough time for her to find the words to say goodbye to her father, her brother, her friends and her boyfriend? To ready herself for what's coming next when the Everneath comes to claim her? Will she be able to part with the surface to live an eternal life in hell?I know, dramatic right? I can't help it, this book made me feel like I do when I read Romeo and Juliet: sad, mushy, happy and excited. Everneath is a retelling of the Persephone myth and as always, I'm a little weary to start books that retell this story in particular. I'm a huge fan of the Goddess Test series by Aime Carter, another Persephone retelling and I'm very into Percy Jackson, which covers Greek Mythology in general. Last month, however, I picked up Abandon by Meg Cabot and completely hated it. So, when I began reading this story, I was somewhat apprehensive, but I ended up falling in love with Everneath.Ashton set a beautifully dark tone throughout this novel and it was such a joy to read. I loved how much of the story explained the Everneath. Her own personal Underworld is very different from the traditional tellings in Greek Mythology and is quite unique. Her way of explaining Everneath was so powerful and terrifying and it was great reading her creative explanation of the realm of the dead.Our main character Nikki is one of the best parts of this book. She works the entire novel to be unselfish and to give her family a happy ending when she leaves to go back to the Everneath. She grapples with her own feelings, wants and needs and struggles to put the needs of her loved ones before her own. Of course, she wasn't perfect and I was glad. The story would have been pretty boring if all she did was act like a saint on her road trip to hell.I really liked the male characters as well. Jack, her boyfriend, is a rarity in YA fiction. He isn't a pompous, arrogant jerk who lives to annoy the living daylights out of Nikki. He is a wonderfully loving and giving person who cares for Nikki's wellbeing above all else. Our dark night, Cole is mysterious and darkly sexy, but Ashton does a fabulous job making you want to punch him in his sexy face most of the time.Overall, I loved this tragic story of star crossed lovers and it was exactly what I needed to recover from my book slump. I absolutely cannot wait to see what Ashton brings to the table in her novella and her book two, Everbound.9 out of 10Happy Reading :)
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Due to copy and paste, formatting has been lost.For the first 4 or 5 chapters of this book, I honestly thought about putting it down. Then came the sixth chapter. The chapter that started the characters real development, and shot you right into the world of Everneath. Because for the first few chapters, nothing really made sense, and everything kind of sucked. But once you got into it, you just had to know exactly what happened next!I really loved how Nikki described what had happened to her, and how it happened, by using scenes of her life before the feed, and after the feed. Now if you don't really understand what the feed is, which was my problem at the beginning of the book, it can be kind of confusing. Because your sitting there thinking, "How did we get here from there?" and maybe it doesn't make sense. But as you go through the events leading up to the feed, you maybe start to get why she did it, and why she returned.Now, Jack and Nikki's relationship was really complicated, because they weren't really together, but they weren't ever really apart. They remembered each other. And it helped Nikki get through the feed, and everything else, because Jack remembered her. He never let her go. At which point we realize, Jack is Swoon-worthy. I love characters like him. The handsome hero, that's maybe not such a hero after all. He doesn't try to be, he just is. Nikki's life is kind of dark after the feed, but it didn't stop her from trying to reconnect to Jack, and that's what makes Nikki a likeable enough character. That kind of kick-ass determination.This story is a modern retelling of the myth of Persephone, but it doesn't really make you think Persephone, it makes you think about Greek gods, mixed with Egyptian Hieroglyphics. Odd, no? Because why would a greek myth use Egyptian Hieroglyphics? It's weird. But it works. The plot was fast, but I enjoyed this book a lot. Was I surprised at the ending? Yes, yes I was. I imagined every other scenario, but this is the one that came true.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    When Nikki Bennetth wakes up after a hundred years "in the tunnels" with immortal Cole, who has been feeding off of her emotions during those hundred years, she is given a reprieve of six months to say her good byes before she returns to the tunnels forever. She left home after seeing her boyfriend in a compromising situation and feels a great deal of guilt at the way she left things with her family and friends and she really wants to make things right before she disappears again. When she returns she finds out that she has been missing for only six months, but even so, she has a lot of work ahead of her to fix the damage that she has done, starting with her father and brother. When her mother was killed by a drunk driver she had a really hard time dealing with that, and her relationship with her father never quite recovered. She also has to try to distance herself from her boyfriend, Jack, when she realizes that he was actually the person most affected by her disappearance since she knows that she is going to have to go away again and she wants to make it as easy on him as possible. Unfortunately, that's easier said than done when all of her old feelings for him resurface and she just can't imagine never seeing him again. The biggest problem she has, though, is Cole, who wants her to return to the Everneath with him as the queen of the underworld, and she is definitely not on board with that! Jack and Cole are very well defined as the bad boy and the knight in shining armor respectively, but as you read further into the book, the lines between good and evil are not so clear. Ms. Ashton does an awesome job of pulling Cole back from the brink of being purely evil whenever he gets so close that you think he can't be redeemed, which I loved! Nikki finds herself drawn to him against her will due to the 100 years he spent siphoning off of her emotions, as well as the physical closeness between the two of them in the tunnels - they were literally wrapped around each other as close as two people could be, and her body betrays her time and time again by yearning for that closeness again. While Cole may be insufferable, arrogant and selfish, his Achilles' heel is his very real love for Nikki, which plays out well here. Jack also has a very deep connection to Nikki since it was his love and constant thoughts and dreams of Nikki while she was gone that allowed her to return six months later with her memories intact, which is a rare thing for someone who has been fed on for 100 years. This is what makes Cole realize that there is something special about her, and this in turn makes him realize that she could be that one in a million person who could actually become queen of the underworld, and he in turn could be the king. Unfortunately, Nikki doesn't share this dream with him, and when she decides that she would rather go back to the tunnels than be his queen, he becomes desperate to change her mind.I really enjoyed this book because the characters were very well written and grew so much from start to finish that you felt drawn to them and really wanted everything to work out in the end, which was of course not to be since this is the first book of a trilogy and ended with one whopper of a cliff hanger!! I can't wait to read the next book in the series, Everbound, and already have my copy ready to go! I also have to mention the absolutely beautiful cover art on this book, as well as Everbound! I know we're not supposed to judge a book by its cover, but I totally did that with this book! Lucky for me, the inside of the book lived up to the awesomeness of the cover :)I give this book an enthusiastic 5 stars and recommend it to lovers of YA, paranormal romance, and Greek mythology :D
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    First of all the cover art for this book is amazing, and even more so in person. I felt like I wanted to blow it up and hang it on my wall. With this amazing cover came an amazing book. I adore the way Brodi Ashton has written Everneath. Starting in the core of the conflict then kind of spreading out both backwards and forward from there. It made the characters a little more endearing I felt by being able to pick and choose the flashbacks. You didn't have to waste time with the filler. It also kept my attention, not only did I want to know what was going to happen, I wanted that glimpse of what did.

    Normally I'm all about the bad boy, but I loved Jack's dedication to Nikki. I felt like Cole couldn't hold a candle in that respect. He was interesting and mysterious but I'm not sure I really ever got a grasp on him. Is he really in love with her or does he just want power. He kind of seems confused on the subject himself. While Jack, even though he gets mad at times, even though he was hurt by Nikki, he wants to help her anyway. He cares enough about her to see through all the nonsense. Jules the conflicted best friend fell a little flat for me, but I didn't think she was pivotal to the story so I don't think she was supposed to stand out.

    When I was a kid, I read book after book of mythology so I loved how this incorporated some of the myths. I found it was unique and well done, giving them that slightly modern twist but still preserving some of the romanticism myths are known for. It actually made me want to pick up a couple of my mythology books and reread some of the stories.

    Honestly I couldn't get enough of this book, I can hardly wait for book two.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Initially exciting retelling of the Persephone myth, this offering stalls a bit and should have been more carefully and tightly edited. That said, it's a solid addition to fans of Twilight (the competing pull of the dangerous Cole vs. Jack who loves her as she is) and Robin McKinley's fans who are looking for another modern myth might be interested.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Until the very last few pages, I was ready to give this 2 stars. But the ending was very sweet. I might even read the next one.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    First, let me just say that Ms. Ashton gave me a vicious Chuck Norris punch to the middle with Everneath! It's actually been a few months since I read Everneath and I'm still struggling for breathe. Hence, those pretty five stars.Now on to the usual, lets begin with the cover.As everyone knows by now, I'm not a big fan of 'Prom Girl Sytle', BUT those shadows totally take over Everneath's cover, making me think of the dark underworld in which the story begins with. I love how Nikki's dress itself seems to be dissolving into those shadows like wisps of smoke, hinting she belongs to it. Even with the beautiful dress, this cover hints at a darker side.Simply put, I LOVE THIS FREAKING COVER!The Plot. Remember that Chuck Norris punch?OMG, this plot is amazing! I know, I know, it's a rehash of the Persephone and Hades Myth, and not the first one to grace the YA book world, BUT it is the best. So well done and yet utterly original with new aspects to the myth added by Ashton.Like the Tunnels. Amazing and so beautifully dark and scary.It also helps that Ashton started off the plot already neck deep into trouble and never let the action drop below that expectation she originally set.Also, my goodness at the twists! Especially the ending one. Brilliance was in that moment! Don't get me wrong, I've seen amazing plot twists before but Ashton was able to convey such a deep level of loyalty that I could literally feel the desperation and love coming from the MC's when it was tie for Nikki to return.Every aspect of Everneath's plot was well thought out and it showed in the book itself.The Writing. Remember that Chuck Norris punch?I'm still reeling from the proof of Ashton's ability. The prose was beautifully done. The detailing, missed nothing and yet didn't overwhelm. I literally could FEEL myself in Nikki's woes, her desperation!Ashton has a gift and I will freely admit that if 3 wishes were granted me, the first would be so I could have Brodi Ashton's writing ability. (Think Little Mermaid's trade off with Ursula)Even though, Ashton started Nikki's story after her introduction to the Everneath, it didn't matter. No detail was really left untouched, as Ashton often returns to what led up to Nikki's presence in the underworld. Now, normally I detest flash backs with a deep passion unparalleled. If I know a book has them, I avoid them like I do my five year old nephew who has a runny nose. Honestly, I probably wouldn't have touched Everneath if I had any idea of the now and then writing. I'm so glad I was ignorant! In Everneath, Ashton pulled off flashback so efficiently that I actually enjoyed the past as much as the present chapters.The Characters. Remember the...er you get the picture.I'm in awe. Sometimes characters just come off as contrived, puppets that do the obvious. In Everneath, it's not the case. Nikki has no hope and yet she clings to it. The emotion rolling through Everneath was so vivid that if all books were guaranteed to be like this one, I would trade in all three of my LCD flat screen tvs AND the DVRs.Also, the relationship in Everneath (though a love triangle) is probably my favorite one, simply because of the selfless act towards the end. If anything the relationship was on par with Romero and Juliet's for me.Overall....Just WOW... on all aspects!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Everneath is a phenomenal modern-day mythology retelling of Persephone and Hades story.(Hades, the god of the underworld who viciously kidnapped Persephone to make her his queen. You can read more about the myth here.) I actually read this book in March, and until now, I had not been able to find the right words to put into a review. I knew of Persephone's very sad story and Brodi Ashton was able to capture the heartache and enchantment of it so perfectly and unforgettable that it has stayed with me since then.At the start of the story, we are immediately right by Nikki's side in the underworld as known as the Everneath. It is a bit confusing at first and that is because Nikki is too. There is such a darkness and overwhelming feeling of being lost and sad, that I couldn't help myself get pulled in and feel stuck and helpless just like Nikki did. It was a such a realistic state of mind that I hope to never feel again.When Nikki slowly comes to her senses alongside Cole, she not only discovers that she's not suppose to have any memories, but that she is lucky to have had survived. Cole is mesmerized by her strength and is determined to have Nikki as his queen so they can overrule and take over the underworld. But Nikki knows that she survived for a reason. There is someone that she is suppose to find... Jack... and chooses to go back to her reality and ignore the consequences, for now.Even though she was in the Everneath for a year, in our reality, she was only gone for 3 months. She was a star student with a promising future, but after she disappeared, everyone assumed that the fell to drugs and ran-away from home. Her comeback is hard on everyone, especially on Nikki, because when you are in the Everneath all of your feelings and emotions have been drained right out of you and it takes a long time for a little bit, if any, of your happiness to return. But when you meet Jack, as quickly as your heart will swoon for him, it will ache just as much too.The ending was completely unpredictable to me. I cried and couldn't believe what had happened.I cannot wait to read the next book, Everbound, and find out what happens next!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I wasn't sure what to expect from this book as it seemed like people either liked or disliked it. Let's just say I was definitely pleasantly surprised. I rate this book 4.5 stars.Everneath by Brodi Ashton is a play on the mythological story of Persephone and Hades as well as Orpheus and Eurydice. We are introduced to the protagonist Nikki, who is already currently in the Underworld with Cole, a sinister yet intriguing antagonist. There is one thing that keeps her sane during the 100 years that she is bound, and it is thoughts of her first love, Jack. Only 6 months pass in the upper world, and she returns to Earth for 6 months before her ultimate fate of feeding the energy of the Underworld until she is used up. Jack and Nikki frantically try to find a "cure" and discover secrets along the way.I'll put this right out there. I absolutely loved this book. Perhaps part of it is that I love Greek mythology to start with, but that said, I thought this book was well done. The characters were very well developed and I really got Nikki's relationships with both Cole and Jack. I understood her progression from despair to hope and the symbolism to drug use with what Cole represented. The prose was very clear and many times poignant, and I blazed through the entire book in a few hours, never losing interest. I was in tears at one point. For me, that's not a usual response. I enjoyed how the book was told in both present day and past day, and thought that this method of storytelling worked very well for the story that was to be told.So why did I rate this 4.5 stars since it's obvious that I loved it? There were a few things that I saw that for me would propel it even to a higher level. I wish that I had even more details of Nikki's past with Jack. Jack seems like such an interesting character, but in the beginning he's painted as the player guy who sleeps with everyone, which is such a dichotomy from the guy he is with Nikki. There's a reason he does that and I want to know what it is. Second, I'm not sure if this is left for the second book, but there is a huge misunderstanding between Jack and Nikki which leads to her going to the Underworld in the first place. I guess we can chalk up her emotional state to being a teenager, but I wasn't quite convinced. And lastly, I felt that the ending could have been done a little better-- in fact, if it had ended two chapters before, it would have been a better ending I believe.That said, it's obvious that I loved this book even with its flaws, and I highly recommend it to any lover of YA fiction.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    3.5 stars
    The first half was a 3, the second half was a 4. I especially enjoyed the elements of Greek mythology interwoven within this paranormal romance.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    No-one realises that when Nikki was gone for six months she wasn't anywhere she could be found, not by her family anyway. She had been lured into the underneath, to serve as a power source for immortals, she's back, but she only has six months to say her goodbyes, to resolve her issues, before she will be drawn back into the everneath, this time forever.Interesting use of myth and story and while the flashbacks are somewhat jarring occasionally and there isn't quite enough emotion sometimes when people are dealing with Nikki, it's a good read with strong characters that I cared for and wanted to succed.Worth reading.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Mythology, immortals, romance…..but with a modern twist. Broken hearted Nikki Beckett has just returned to the surface to look for her love, Jack, but to do that she made a deal with an Everliving, Cole. Cole had helped with Nikki’s heartbreak by feeding off off her emotions, taking the energy from them for himself. Nikki agreed to it because she thought feeling numb was better than feeling pain. But it isn’t that simple; he wants her to be his queen, but Nikki Returns because she wants to get back to her high school love, Jack.

    I had high expectations for Everneath based on the synopsis and other reviews, and of course the cover is absolutely stunning. However, I never really got into the book and I found I kept putting the book down easily. Overall I liked it, but I never fell in love with any of the characters, and in all honesty I wanted Nikki with Cole (the bad guy) not Jack the sweet, gorgeous quarterback.

    The story itself is intriguing with the intertwining of all the mythology and daughters of Persephone. It also goes back and forth in time, and each chapter is clearly labeled so that didn’t confuse me, but I just didn’t love it. I think I would have rather it just start at the beginning, not look at things in hindsight. On that note this is why the story just didn’t seem to go anywhere, it felt stagnant to me, I didn’t get any answers until the last 30 pages or so. The ending was FABULOUS! Now don’t get me wrong, I love a good mystery, but clues seemed to come very slowly for my liking.

    The ending totally redeemed the book in my eyes. It was paced quickly and I was ready! I found I still loved Cole and was rooting for him. I thought he had a magic pull with Nikki and the whole book I wondered why it wasn’t touched on why she was so special to him. To me they seemed to belong together, but she was just caught up in her high school romance. Maybe that is why I didn’t go gaga over the book. Will I read the next installment? YES. I still need to know what happens, the story ended on such a happy and at the same time sad note. I would still recommend this book as it was a fun read and I think the next one might be more intense.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Everneath is the story of a girl named Nikki (commonly refered to as "Becks" by her close friends) and her journey after she wakes up from the Feed. For a century, she was in the Everneath with a boy named Cole who 'feed' off her- meaning he drained every emotion she had inside her and used it to prolong his life as an immortal. When the Feed is over, he is shocked at her seemingly normalish behavoir, and she, very confused, pictures the face of a boy whose name she can't remember and chooses to go back and find him.That is the very, very beginning of the story, but I do not want to give any spoilers away, because part of the journey in reading this book is finding out the clues as Nikki does. I can say that I really enjoyed this book. I felt the ideas of how an immortal lives were very unique, and I thought the mythology attached was a very nice touch. While I am against stories being too predictable, I almost felt in parts that this story was too uncertain, like some of the paths the characters could go on were not defined as well as they could be. Even so, that is really the only big criticism I have for this book. I highly liked it, and I can't wait to read the sequel.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    What a pleasant surprise! Truly enjoyed this book! It was different than the vampire or witch books that I have read. The author was very creative in the way she incorporated a Greek legend as a backdrop for the whole story. Till the end, we had no way of knowing if things would end well for Nikki. Great suspense! The only reason that I did not give it 5 stars is because at some points, I felt as though the characters were repeating themselves in their thoughts...
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    For me personally, this book is AMAZING! The cover in itself got my attention...Then when I read the cover, I saw how unique and different this story was going to be. It took me a little bit to figure out exactly what was going on in it until she started going back and explaining what got Nikki Beckett where she was in her life.

    I wasn't sure whether I would actually enjoy this book as much..I just knew it was something totally different than what I was normally reading {angels & vampires...mostly angels}...But once I began to grasp the concept of this story..It began to suck me in to the point I couldn't put it down. And it only took me a couple days to read it {hey, if I didn't have a home to run & kids (2) to tend to, I may have finished it in a day and a half or less...lol...But for me personally, the book was AMAZING!{Yes, I had to say it twice...:o)}...I am so ready for book two to come out...OH THE WAITING!!! :o)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Obviously, I have been wanting to read Everneath for most of this year. I say obviously, because who could resist this cover? Certainly not me. However, I feared Everneath might turn out to be a crushing disappointment, since pretty dress covers have lured me into many traps in the past. In case you had similar concerns, lay them to rest. Everneath has incredible world building, compelling characters, and solid writing.

    The Persephone myth has inspired numerous authors, but those attempts at a young adult retelling which I have read have been ill-considered to say the least. Both of the other two YA adaptions I've read, Abandon by Meg Cabot and The Goddess Test by Aimee Carter, involved an intense immediate attraction for the Hades figure. A big part of why these attempts failed is this perversion of the myth, trying to forge an immediate romantic connection between Persephone and a misunderstood version of Hades. Well, sorry, but that just does not fly. One of the main elements of the Persephone myth is that she is taken and that she is kept. If right from the beginning she kind of wants to hang out in the Underworld, the author's kind of missing the point.

    All of that lead up is to say that I think Brodi Ashton hit the nail on the head with the Persephone myth. Of course, she put a lot of twists on things, but a lot more of the core of the myth remained. Though Nikki doesn't hate Cole, who is not Hades but one of the Everliving who lives in the Everneath, she does not trust him either. He did take her there and he did keep her through the months, with her having no say once she let him in a little bit. Cole has a proper amount of darkness to fill this role, and Nikki begins with a sort of weakness I identify with Persephone.

    Actually, I loved just about every single thing that Brodi Ashton did with her reworking of the myths. Instead of the Underworld, we have the Everneath, a land populated by the Everliving, humans who have found the secret to eternal life, and Shades, ghosty type things. The Everliving survive by feeding off of the emotions of humans on Earth, but have to bring a particular human to the Everneath every hundred years to Feed. This human is a Forfeit, and once they've completed their service, they are buried in the Tunnels to power the Everneath. It's a wee bit confusing, but mostly just creepy and awesome. Ashton puts a fascinating and unique twist on not just the myth of Persephone, but also that of Orpheus and even incorporates mythologies outside of Greek too.

    Nikki, Cole and Jack are the only characters to receive any real attention, but, thankfully, Ashton does a marvelous job with them. Nikki very much has her own way of being, and feels quite real. She is not the most sympathetic heroine, quite passive and depressed much of the time, but she has a core strength, one that she's slowly finding. Seeing her slowly unfold, like a flower after a long winter beautifully matches the arc of the tale. Because of her coldness, I did have some trouble emotionally connecting with her, but I very much appreciated her as a character.

    With the listing of Cole and Jack, you might be worried about yet another love triangle, and I do suspect things are heading that way. In Everneath, though, I hardly felt the romance as a main part of the plot. Much of the time, Nikki is too drained of emotion to feel anything. She doesn't trust Cole and is unsure what she wants from her ex, Jack. Their interactions are complicated, and all of the emotions are well established and believable. The closest comparison for the romantic arc in this book is definitely Wicked Lovely by Melissa Marr.

    My only real complaint is that I would have liked even more of the stellar world building. During the dramatic opening scene, Nikki declares her desire to go to the surface, Shades fly at her, and then she wakes up in a convenience store. Yes, this is dramatic, but it made no sense. Then, all of a sudden, she seems to know the terms of her sentence up above, but, if some of the things she knows are explained to her, I missed them. I want to know every single thing about this world, and I feel like sometimes some information was kept back from me.

    If you enjoy original takes on mythology, Everneath is most definitely worth your time. From what I hear, the second book, Everbound improves on the beginning established here, so I most definitely recommend that you give this one a try.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    OMG, I loved this book. Review to come whenever I can form coherent sentences.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Everneath was a story I didn't expect to enjoy. I really did like the unique outlook on mythology, immortals, and teen romance. The protagonist is fascinating; she is so changed by her experiences, and it affects everything she does. You feel for her, you want to see what she does next, what silly mistakes she makes and how inconsistent she is. Cole is tantalizing and awesome, and Jack is a cool boy next door. This was a great modern mythological tale.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I've been reading some fantastic debut author books recently and Brodi Ashton's Everneath is currently at the top of the list. I bought it on Tuesday and by Thursday had read it twice.

    In her inventive take on the Greek myths of "Hades and Persephone" and "Orpheus and Eurydice," Ashton introduces us to the Everneath, a world between Earth and the afterlife where the Everliving bring human Forfeits to feed off their energy and thereby gain 100 years more of existence. The story centers on Nikki (a human Forfeit in the Everneath), Jack (Nikki's boyfriend from the Surface), and Cole (the immortal who took Nikki to the Everneath). After spending six months in the Everneath, Nikki has returned to the Surface for six more months to tie up loose ends in her life before being banished to the Everneath for eternity.

    I really liked the main characters in this story. Nikki is strong, yet vulnerable, and takes responsibility for the decisions that led to her following Cole to the Everneath. Jack is the good guy boyfriend, but he has enough of an edge to keep him interesting. Cole is the bad boy, but while he definitely has his own agenda there are moments that hint at him actually caring for Nikki more than he should.

    The story is told in a non-linear fashion; we start in the present but are constantly moving back and forth between it and the past so we can see what events led up to Nikki choosing the Everneath. The time is clearly indicated throughout the book, so it is easy to follow along and not feel lost. Very well done.

    This is a stellar edition to the YA Paranormal genre with its fresh storyline, interesting style and great characters. Since this is the first book of a trilogy we are left with a cliffhanger, but we can clearly see where book 2 should be going. While this book sets up the characters and situation, the author has indicated book 2 will have some major world-building. It should be fascinating to explore the Everneath in depth.

    The only reason I gave this book four stars instead of five is because I was left wanting a bit more development in the secondary characters. Nikki's younger brother Tommy and best friend Jules look like they may be great characters (Tommy especially), but with so much going on with the main characters it felt like these two got a little shortchanged. I'm looking forward to seeing how they are developed in the future.

    All in all, highly recommended to YA paranormal lovers everywhere.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The Story
    Everneath is loosely based on the Greek mythology of Persephone and Hades and of Orpheus and Eurydice with mentions of the Egyptian gods Isis and Osiris.  The story starts 6 human months after the feed where the main protagonist Nikki awakens after being sent to the Everneath (or the Underworld).  The Feed or Feeding is the way an Everliving (those immortals that live in the Underworld) can continue their immortal lives by stealing/freeding on the emotions and memories of the living (humans).  The feed lasts for a hundred years which is like 6 months of human time.  Once you have been fed upon, either the sacrifice dies, becomes old, or in rare cases, survives.  When a sacrifice survives, she then has a chance to become the Queen of the Underworld, with her Everliving the King.  If the sacrifice survives however, becomes old, she is then taken by the shadows and is brought to the Tunnels (Hell, if you wish).  The three main characters of the story are Nikki, Jack and Cole.

    Cole is the Everliving that took Nikki into the Everneath and bonded with her by taking all her emotions and memories.  They spend bound together for a hundred years when Nikki was able to leave the Everneath by keeping a thought/memory of her human love alive.  She is then taken over by a shade and awakes in a mini-mart in their town 6 months after the was supposedly gone.  She then tries to repair her relationship with her family while staying away from Jack and trying to repair her life.  This basically comprises most of the middle part of the story with the end resulting in Nikki staying above and Jack going to the Tunnels.

    My Thoughts
    Now, on to my review.  I was surprised that I liked the story of Nikki and Jack even though I had serious problems with the inconsistensies and the impossibilies of the whole story.  Let's start of on why I liked it.  The premise of the story IS intriguing.  I was curious about how the author would execute the Persephone and Hades' story.  Another thing that I did like about the story is the way Nikki comes off as a relatable character, although there are just times that you just want to bash her on the head for being so stupid.  Jack, on the other hand, comes off as a love-struck boy that apparently hasen't forgotten Nikki at all with Cole, adding to the romantic tension.  I see Cole as the perfect bad boy and secretly wish that this was a love story about Cole and Nikki.

    I love how the author gradually introduced us to the backstory by giving flashbacks of Nikki's memories 6 months ago.  It was integrated in a way that did not deter or confuse the reader and I was able to follow through without digitally flipping the pages back or forward to get what the author was trying to say.

    Despite my liking the whole story, or shedding a tear or two (it may just have been my raging hormones or something *shrugs*), I had problems with the story.  I just didn't get why no one put an Amber Alert out for Nikki when she went missing, why her father, being the Mayor of Park City didn't do anything in his power to find his only daughter, why everybody accepted that Nikki came back from Rehab when there were no signs of her acting like she needed to go to rehab before she went with Cole.  The only bad behavior I saw her do was going to concerts with Cole and his band which was not really bad at all since I went to concerts as a teen and was never in any risk of going off to rehab!  *Sigh*  True, she pretty much flipped out when she found out the hit-and-run driver who killed her mom got acquitten AND she caught Jack cheating on her.  That could have been a catalyst but still...

    I also thought that the whole time Nikki was pining away for Jack and not talking to him the whole middle part of the book was pretty stupid.  I mean, I am pretty straightforward and with her not talking to him was just stupid.  Jack, on the otherhand, I also expected him to confront her and ask her what her baggage is.  I know guys don't do the confrontation thing but with him saying that he loved her, I thought that would prompt a confrontation.

    Now, let's talk about Cole.  I thought that he was the hero in the story!  He had all the makings of a bad-boy alpha hero and I would have liked the story be based on Cole and Nikki.  True, he stole from Nikki but that would have made an awesome love story instead of Jack and Nikki's meh romance.  As a villain, Cole didn't do much of anything; just stalk Nikki like crazy and appearing in her room uninvited (what is it with creeps appearing in girls rooms uninvited?  THAT is not romantic!).  I thought that was serial killer/rapist creepy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Pain comes in many forms, for Nikki Beckett her emotional pain has been held at bay due to her strong relationship with boyfriend Jack. After the death of her mother she clings to that love and manages to find daily peace. But after one night of betrayal, Nikki without even considering the consequences makes a choice that alters her life forever.Sucked into the underworld, or the Everneath, as the Everlivings call it, Nikki is in the Feed for a hundred years- a process that sucks the life force from a mortal and transfers it to an immortal. When Nikki awakens she's weak and confused but has one memory that helps her pull out of the fog and wanting back up to the surface...that thought would be Jack. However going back to her mortal life means she will pay a price to the Everneath and that price is the Tunnels, the life source the immortals send Forfeits to, to be drained of any life that is left. Six months is all she has left to make amends before the Tunnels come to take her home, clogging her throat with dirt and suffocation, six short months, its not a lot of time to figure out how to dupe the immortal who sucked you dry.Cole, the Everliving who enticed Nikki to the Feed is shocked that Nikki remains young, pretty and mind intact after the one hundred years and follows her up to the surface. Its rare that anyone can survive the Feed and he wants Nikki for his queen so together they can rule the Everneath, but Nikki only wants to reconnect to her family and to Jack. Due to her choices six months ago, Nikki is now faced with choosing Cole and becoming his queen or choosing the Everneath Tunnels, which will come for her and bury her under the ground sucking her life out until she fades to nothing. As the days go by and Cole fights to gain her trust and Nikki's powerful connection to Jack begins healing her mind the knowledge of whats coming for her makes the future horrifying to process. None of them want to give up though, all three characters have a piece to be played on the game-board called Nikki's life and only one can win.Everneath was an alluring story of myth, love and betrayals...the biggest of the three being love. Ashton's world was like a toxic drug, with its simple yet complex mix of mythology, romance and mystery, it had me addicted at page one and unable to stop until it was over, leaving me craving for more once I finished. I couldn't help but race to the end as each chapter revealed a little layer of the present and little peal pack of the events leading up to the Feed. I enjoyed every minute I spent with characters, Cole as the immortal, Jack as the tortured boyfriend and Nikki the young girl with huge amounts of mixed, tangled emotions, ones that were understandable due to her state of mind and due to what she was facing. While in the beginning I was irritated that Nikki made the choices she did, I couldn't help but feel sorry for her due to the overwhelming and unfortunate circumstances in her life. Everneath was highly entertaining and by the end my emotions were almost as bad as Nikki's....a tangled mess of shock, swoon and sadness, that left me with a sigh when I turned the last page. I loved this take on the story of Hades and Persephone and the combination of another surprise mythology couple. Oh yes, somebody call the cheese police, because this book had me in swoon overdrive and made me cry. Outrageous acts of bravery or love always pull at my heart strings and Ashton offers a heaping spoonful in Everneath, I loved it and cant wait for book two.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Everneath has one of the most beautiful and compelling book covers I've seen in a while. Really, just take a moment and look at it -that gorgeous red dress, the fascinating echoes of a world deeply routed in the reality of Heaven and Hell...it's Photoshop at its best. And it's this cover that first drew me to Everneath.Everneath is a somewhat frothy, escapist novel about Nicki, a despairing teenage who was stolen from Earth during the Feed and taken to Everneath, where immortal souls could feast on her emotions. Now, she's back for just six months -six months to say goodbye to her former life before being pulled back into the Everneath.Everneath was an oddly uneven read for me, peppered with moments that jumped off the page with electrifying excitement in a sea of primarily run-of-the-mill, semi-boring storytelling. To me, around three-quarters of this book read as a fairly slow-paced, smoldering teen romance that attempted to create something of a love triangle with some paranormal elements. I had to drag myself through much of it. In fact, what bothered me the most was the fact that Nikki seemed resigned to her dark fate for most the book and goes through the motions of normal life while trying to say goodbye, especially to her boyfriend. I don't know about you, but if I found out I only had six months left on Earth, I would be spending it very differently than going to school or trying to do something normal -maybe backpack Europe or something. But most importantly, if I knew there was a way out of it, I would be fighting tooth and nail to save myself, which it seems never occurred to Nicki until much later in the book (come on girl, fight back!).It wasn't until about the last one hundred or so pages of Everneath that things started to really take off. By then it seemed like the romance aspect of the novel had been sorted out, so the author could take the time to focus on other plot points. This is where the unique mythology of the book grew into something more interesting than just a re-telling of the Persephone myth and finally took on a life of its own. From this point on the plot spiraled into an excellently-woven web of action and unexpected twists before crashing toward an explosive ending.Though uneven, Everneath is still an enjoyable debut novel. It's the perfect read for fans of teen paranormal romance, but the author seems to have a little trouble with balancing multiple elements and subplots within the overarching plot. Ashton, however, has so much potential in this new series that things can only get better.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I had heard a lot of good things about Everneath before I picked it up from the library so I was expecting a lot when I got to reading it. While it took me a little while to get into it, i am so glad i persevered because in the end it became quite a compelling read.


    At first glance, to me at least, the synopsis reads like a sequel. I kept checking to see if it was actually a book 2 in a series. The beginning of the book felt a little like this as well and I felt like I had missed something when it started and that feeling took a little while to shake.

    Brodi Ashton juxtaposes the past and the present so that we can see the events leading up to the feed and how it connects with the now, in which Nikki has returned to the surface. At first this was a little confusing ( me, with my issues of having missed something) but as story progressed, this juxtaposition actually made the story more cohesive and added to the tension of the story as you learned what had gone before and how it related to present events.

    I loved the connection between Nikki and Jack and though the reason for her leaving in the first place is never really resolved, I loved the fact that he was constantly there for her.

    As mentioned, it took me a little while to get into this story as I felt like in some ways I spent the first third of the book 'catching up' however as the story went on I found myself turning the pages quicker and quicker and I think I read the last 200 or so pages in less time than it took me to read the first 100.

    There are a lot of stories that play around with the myth of Hades and Persephone around at the moment and I liked this spin on it with the immortals feeding on humans and making out the underworld ( or Everneath) to not be the romantic place of so many of these stories and making Cole definitely not the hero.

    Overall I really enjoyed this book and am ever so glad there is a sequel forthcoming as the ending... Well let's just say I am glad the is another book coming. One which I am placing on my Wishlist right now as soon as I finish this review.

    It is only the slow beginning that stops this from getting 5 stars. 4 stars for this great debut!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    For me personally, this book is AMAZING! The cover in itself got my attention...Then when I read the cover, I saw how unique and different this story was going to be. It took me a little bit to figure out exactly what was going on in it until she started going back and explaining what got Nikki Beckett where she was in her life.

    I wasn't sure whether I would actually enjoy this book as much..I just knew it was something totally different than what I was normally reading {angels & vampires...mostly angels}...But once I began to grasp the concept of this story..It began to suck me in to the point I couldn't put it down. And it only took me a couple days to read it {hey, if I didn't have a home to run & kids (2) to tend to, I may have finished it in a day and a half or less...lol...But for me personally, the book was AMAZING!{Yes, I had to say it twice...:o)}...I am so ready for book two to come out...OH THE WAITING!!! :o)
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Everneath starts with Nikki waking up from the Feed in the Everneath with Cole, an immortal who has been feeding off her energy for the past 100 years. Since she has survived the feed, she has six months to return home and say her final goodbyes, and then either go to the tunnels, a hell-like extension of the Everneath, or go back with Cole, who now wants to make her his queen.I had so many problems with this book, the first of which being the flashback/flash forward format. Every time I started to get even a little interested in what was going on, the story would jump to a different part of the timeline. It didn't add suspense, it was just frustrating. The love triangle here is horrible--Jack, Nikki's human boyfriend, is likeable but boring, and Cole is despicable from the beginning. I hated that Nikki's entire reason for going back home was to see Jack again, and it isn't until she re-kindles her relationship with him that she even considers trying to avoid the tunnels without taking Cole's offer. The mythological references through the book felt info-dumpy. I would expect most readers to know the Hades/Persephone story enough to not need such a detailed retelling in the middle of the book. I gave it 1.5 stars for what sounded like an interesting premise, just poorly executed. Not as bad as Twilight, but still, not recommended.

Book preview

Everneath - Brodi Ashton

PREFACE

History books call it the Underworld. Or even hell.

But I know it’s neither. It is really called the Everneath,

and it’s not a place for the dead. It’s a place for the

Everliving—beings who have discovered the secret to

eternal life. It’s a place for their Forfeits—the humans

who give up everything to nourish the Everliving. It’s

the world caught between this one and the next, a layer

between Earth and hell. I know because I was a Forfeit.

I would give anything to change this.

PROLOGUE

TWO WEEKS AGO

I was picturing his face—a boy with floppy brown hair and brown eyes—when the Feed ended.

At first I didn’t know what had happened. I didn’t know where I was or why it was so dark. I knew only that the pain inside me—the feeling that I was being drained from the inside out—had subsided, and now everything was numb. Maybe I no longer existed.

It’s over, Cole whispered in my ear.

I wanted to answer, but my mouth wasn’t working.

Nikki, try to open your eyes.

That was why it was dark. My eyes were closed. I’d been squeezing them shut for I don’t know how long. The muscles around them had forgotten how to relax, so it was some time before I could pry them open.

When I did, they stung, like a fresh wound exposed to cool air. After a hundred years they had forgotten how to produce tears.

It was still dark all around us, but as I worked on my eyes, the black forms that had bound me to Cole began to peel away, as if an oil slick were lifting from my skin.

I could see.

I looked at my arm, from my shoulder down to the elbow, and a little lower, to where it disappeared behind Cole’s back. My skin was so pale. Almost blue. I was wearing a black tank top. I tried to remember putting it on but came up with nothing.

Nikki. Try to stand up.

I shook my head, surprised that I could move my head at all. The Shades, with their black, fluid forms, had cocooned us so tight for so long. Cole’s head was next to mine, his chin resting on my shoulder, his blond hair touching my cheek.

You can take your time.

Mmm, I said. It was all I could manage.

I started with small movements, flexing my fingers and my toes, shocking my hibernating muscles awake. Cole did the same. I could feel his fingertips pressing into my back, restarting the circulation.

I worked up to my knees, my legs, my elbows, making small movements against Cole’s body. But where I tried to separate my legs from his, the skin stung. It was as if we had been sewn together, and I was ripping us apart.

I groaned in pain and pulled him tight against me again.

He let me. I know it’s going to be hard, Nik. We’ll just take it slow, okay?

I nodded, and he held me for a few long minutes before we tried to separate again. This time, he rubbed the affected skin as we went, and I had a brief memory flash of a woman ripping a Band-Aid off my knee, and then rubbing it to ease the pain.

But when I tried to focus on the image, it slipped away and I was in the dark again.

I shook and reached for Cole, but this time he grabbed my wrists, gently and firmly.

Nik, I’m sorry. The Shades say the Feed is over. I know it feels weird, but we have to get used to it.

I wasn’t sure I believed him. Without his embrace, my body felt empty and hollow, as though we were one person, divided. Except it wasn’t an even division. He had taken away everything that made me … me. And I would only be me again when I was next to him. I wasn’t sure my body would survive on its own anymore. I was no longer whole.

Even though I was trembling, I sat up. My legs dangled over the stone ledge of our alcove and I looked around. We were in a giant cavern, the walls of which were filled with hundreds of alcoves just like the one we were in, but they were all empty.

Somewhere in the back of my mind, I knew we were the last ones to start the Feed, so we were the only ones left. Stairs built into the rock zigzagged up the walls, leading to the alcoves above us. The ground was covered in a sea of black sludge that swelled and pulsed like a lake in a storm.

More Shades. Hundreds of them. Maybe thousands.

They’re stretching out too, Cole said from behind me. They should be. The Shades had been wrapped around us for the entire century, unmoving, funneling my own energy directly into Cole.

Cole.

I turned my head until I could see him in my peripheral vision, deeper inside the alcove. His was the only voice I’d heard for the past hundred years. The only name I knew anymore. He rubbed his eyes, trying to pry them open with his fingers. This part never gets easier, he said.

I faced forward again, looking out over the dark ground. I had this niggling feeling that I was forgetting something very important. The more I tried to figure out what it was, the more my heart pounded. If I could just remember, my heart wouldn’t explode.

And then it hit me. When I’d opened my eyes, I’d forgotten the face. His face. That’s what it was.

I closed my eyes again, and there he was. Hair that flopped forward in a tangled mess. Big brown eyes that could search me out in any crowd. Callused hands that could lead me anywhere.

I couldn’t remember the name that went with the face. I’d lost it years ago.

Nik?

Cole shifted so that he was sitting beside me. He had shaken off the shroud of a deep sleep. Nik, look at me. There was a strange urgency to his voice. I twisted my head to look at him and was struck by how attractive he still was. I had been in his arms, but I hadn’t seen his face for a century. It was the same. His blond hair framed his dark eyes—eyes that were wide open now, in surprise. His gaze roved over my face, my body. How did you do it?

Do what? My voice sounded strange. I wasn’t really paying attention to what he was saying because I was thinking about being wrapped up with him again. Being whole again. I started to lean toward him, but he put his hands on my shoulders and studied me.

"You … you’re still the same Nikki. You survived. He cupped my face in his hands, and then turned it left and right, as if he couldn’t believe what he was seeing. I found you."

What do you mean?

He shook his head with a strange smile on his lips. I mean, I’ve searched for you—for someone like you—for thousands of years. He tilted his head back and gazed up, as if he were thanking the cavern ceiling for something. He clasped my hands so tightly it hurt. You have no idea what this means. This. Never. Happens. Nik, you don’t have to go to the Tunnels. You can stay with me. Become an Everliving.

He jumped off the ledge and stood on the ground, the Shades there making way for his feet. He reached out his hand. Come with me, Nik.

I looked at his hand, and then up at his face. Where?

Out of here. He gestured to the giant cavern. You can live forever like me, and you won’t have to go to the Tunnels. His face involuntarily grew hard. It seemed even immortals were scared of the Tunnels.

I reached for his hand, then hesitated as I remembered that face. The one with the brown eyes. The boy with the hands that fit mine just right. I’m not sure how, but I knew if I went with Cole, I’d never see that face again. The boy with that face was not an Everliving.

He was a human, and he was on the Surface. Where I’d left him. I knew it like I knew I needed air to live.

No, I said. I pushed away from him and stood up on my own. Somewhere in the back of my mind, I knew I had another choice. I’m going home.

The Shades at Cole’s feet whipped into a frenzy at this. Wait, Cole said, the realization of what I’d said sinking in. Wait! She doesn’t know what she’s saying!

But they didn’t change course. One Shade rose from the whirlpool and, in front of my eyes, morphed into the shape of a dagger, driving itself into my shoulder. It felt like a hot poker, searing through my flesh. As I screamed, other Shades gathered round. They snatched me up, and in a whirlwind of black, I flew through the air as the sound of Cole’s voice grew faint behind me, shouting my name.

I landed with a thwump on a surface that was cold and hard, the side of my face smashed against what looked like industrial tile floor. I could smell ammonia, and it was so strong it made my eyes water.

Where am I?

I wasn’t in the Everneath anymore; the light was too bright, the odors too strong.

I rolled over onto my back and found myself staring into fluorescent lights that weren’t lit, yet I had to shield my eyes. I looked around. On my right, a mop leaned against the wall in the corner, next to a brown wooden door with a NO ADMITTANCE sign. On my left were rows and rows of potato chips and candy, a couple of soda fountains, and a counter with a cash register.

It was a store—a convenience store, probably—and despite the brightness of the place, it was the middle of the night. I realized how dark the Feed cavern must’ve been if even the middle of the night was too bright for me here.

I shifted, and a sharp pain shot through my shoulder, still tender from where the Shade had stabbed me.

I closed my eyes and pictured the boy with the brown hair, and as I took in my first really deep breath of Surface air, a name to match the face came to me. A name I’d been trying to cling to for a century.

Jack.

ONE

NOW

Park City High School.

Five and a half months of my Return left.

It was too soon.

But, really, I’d been gone for a hundred years. Everything about my old life would feel like it was coming at me too soon. Especially high school. I stepped through the doors of Park City High and nearly choked on the smell of fresh paint. I glanced around. None of the other students seemed to be affected by it, but it made my eyes water.

The halls of the high school looked the same, reminding me that aboveground—far above the Everneath—only six months had passed while I was away. Time moves differently in the Everneath. One hundred years to me was just months on the Surface. Everything was the same. And everything was different.

A banner hung above the entrance to the upper-class hall. PARK CITY HIGH: HOME OF THE MINERS. Right then a few large boys dressed in football jerseys and jeans ran under the sign, jumping and high-fiving the Miner’s chisel as they went.

Junior year. A waste of time in one respect, considering I’d never make it to the end of the year, let alone graduation. I only had six months before the Tunnels came for me.

But I needed to be here. Needed to glimpse, for a moment, the life I had before. The year I should’ve had. To see Jack one last time, despite how we left things. To see my family again.

This was my chance to say good-bye. It was a chance I didn’t get last time.

I scanned the hallway, searching for his face, but looked down quickly after catching a few questioning stares. I knew he was here somewhere in the building. The thought gave me goose bumps.

At least I had enough emotions left inside me to even get goose bumps. Blushes and chills didn’t take much— I’d recovered them about a week ago, along with all of my memories. But it was the stronger emotions, the ones that produced laughter and tears, that eluded me still.

I glanced down at my schedule. First-period English literature. As I checked the room numbers at the tops of the doors, curious whispers floated along the hall behind me, hanging in the air above my head.

Isn’t that Nikki Beckett? She looks awful….

Is she still using?

Has to be…. What else would do that to a person?

Poor Jack.

Does he know she’s back? Does he know she’s strung out?

When I found the right room, I clutched my books to my chest, lowered my head, and walked through the door.

Someone—probably the new English teacher—called from near the front of the classroom. Miss Beckett, is it?

Hearing my own last name did strange things to my heart. Made it beat a little faster. A little harder. It had been so long since I’d had a last name. For a hundred years, Cole had called me only by my first name. It was how the Everliving treated their Forfeits—if you didn’t have a last name, you didn’t have a life outside the Everneath. Nothing to want to come back to. Maybe that was why he was so surprised that I chose to Return.

I stopped just inside the doorway and lifted my head toward the teacher, keeping a few strands of hair in front of my eyes as I nodded in response.

Welcome. She hesitated as she took in my appearance. People did that a lot. My dad told me it was because I looked like a malnourished animal, ready to sprint. I’d lost a lot of weight, and my dark hair no longer held any curls. The principal told me to expect you. I’m Mrs. Stone. I see you have the textbook.

I nodded again.

There’s an empty chair in the back there, and here’s a supplemental book on mythology. She pointed toward the rear of the classroom, but I kept my gaze on her. You’ll have to work hard to catch up with the rest of the class.

I turned and shuffled down the middle row until I reached the empty place at the back. Once seated, I took out my notebook and pencil and leaned forward over my desk so my hair created a curtain on either side of my face.

I could do this.

But I could taste the curiosity in the air. Literally. Cole used to tell me that the Everneath would change me—make me more in tune with the emotions of others because I was so empty of my own. Now that I was back, I could taste emotions hanging around me.

Certain emotions were stronger than others, and would hit me when I wasn’t ready. Like when my dad told me he was so happy I was back and that he didn’t blame me, but his disappointment in the air tasted as strong as a clump of salt.

It wasn’t so easy to identify most of them, except when an entire group was feeling the same thing.

Like now. Thirty people in a room, all curious.

But as the class settled in for the lecture, one emotion, separate from the curiosity, floated to the top of the rest. I couldn’t figure out what it was. It would’ve been easier if I’d been prepared.

Hi, a familiar voice said from the desk next to mine.

I startled.

It was him.

Jack.

The boy who had gotten me through hell.

I wasn’t expecting him to be in my first class of the day. Here he was, my reason for Returning, but any words I used to know got caught in my throat. I wanted to run toward him and away from him at the same time, laugh and cry at the same time. Instead I froze.

All this way, just to see him, and I’d never planned for what to do next.

Jack’s voice sounded flat. Or more that he tried to make it sound flat. Maybe I was the only one who would’ve picked up on that.

I kept my head down, took a deep breath, and picked the easiest of the words that were stuck in my throat. I exhaled as slowly as I could, and the word slipped out. Hi.

The word had no accompanying voice to it. Just the escaping air behind my lips.

He turned away from me to focus on Mrs. Stone. I wondered how I was going to get through the hour.

I took notes furiously, transcribing every word Mrs. Stone said. Since my Return, my emaciated muscles made my hands shake, and I looked for ways to keep them busy. It was part of the reason I took up knitting. In the two weeks that had passed since I walked out of the Shop-n-Go and back through the door of my father’s home, I had knitted an entire wardrobe’s worth of clothes, a few dog sweaters for my neighbor, and a handful of toaster cozies.

Mrs. Stone spoke animatedly about the role of the hero in mythology. When she asked the class for their favorite stories or figures from myths, several students raised their hands. A large kid in the back said, Hercules. Another boy, wearing a MATHLETES ARE ATHLETES TOO shirt, said, Aphrodite.

People laughed. I didn’t know why. It seemed to be an inside joke and I was an outsider.

Then a blond girl in the front row raised her hand and said, Hades and Persephone.

I couldn’t help flipping forward in the textbook to the story. I didn’t know why it would be anybody’s favorite. According to myth, Hades, the god of the Underworld, fell in love with Persephone, kidnapped her, and tried to make her his queen. When he tricked her into eating six pomegranate seeds, she was bound to the Underworld for six months out of every year.

Kidnapping and imprisonment. It was a horrible myth. I wondered where her hero had been.

Jack’s leg bounced up and down, distracting me. I wanted to reach over and put my hand on his knee and tell him everything would be okay.

But that was impossible. I stared harder at my paper and tried not to think about Jack’s leg.

The bell to end class startled me, and I dropped my pencil. It bounced on the floor, toward Jack’s desk. I froze. Maybe he hadn’t noticed. I’d wait and get it when the rest of the class left. I stayed perfectly still. The room cleared out, but I couldn’t sense any movement from the desk next to mine.

Before I could stop myself, I looked up.

He was there, motionless, holding my pencil in his hand, watching me. My eyes drank in the sight of him, even as my body fought the urge to bolt. His hair was the same rich brown color, but it was longer and shaggier than before. And his face had lost any signs of baby fat, making me think his mom had stopped forcing meatball sandwiches down his throat like she used to during football season.

His eyes were exactly as I’d remembered, exactly as I’d pictured every day for the past hundred years. Chocolate. But there was one difference: a single steel post pierced one of his eyebrows.

It wouldn’t have belonged on his face a year ago, but it somehow fit the face looking at me now. This face was edgier. This face had been through something.

He was beautiful.

I started to tremble. It took all of my strength, which wasn’t very much, not to run out the door.

He’d obviously waited for me to look at him. Like his voice, his face held no easily identifiable emotion to pinpoint. No love, no hate. He held out my pencil for me.

I reached over and grabbed it, my fingers brushing lightly against the palm of his hand. I could hear my own intake of breath. He didn’t flinch in the slightest. He didn’t draw his hand back.

Mr. Caputo? Miss Beckett? Mrs. Stone called from the front of the classroom. Are you waiting for something?

No, Mrs. Stone, Jack said, keeping his curious eyes on mine. Just saying hi to an old … friend.

I gathered up my books and tried not to think about how it used to be.

LAST YEAR

September. Six months before the Feed.

Six months before I went under.

Hey, Becks! Jules, my best friend, called out to me from the end of the hallway. Most of the students clearing their lockers for the day turned to look. Jules had a way of grabbing attention. You going to the game tonight?

I was about to answer, but another voice rang out from just behind me.

She’d better, Jack said as he wrapped an arm around my waist and pulled me back against him. I could smell the fresh leather on his letterman jacket as I crunched against it.

Why is that? I asked, smiling and instantly warm in his arms. I still couldn’t get over the fact that Jack Caputo and I were … together. It was hard to think the word. We had been friends for so long. To be honest, he had been friends with me and I had been secretly pining for him since … well, since forever.

But now he was here. It was my waist he held. It didn’t seem real.

I can’t carry the team to victory without you, he said. You’re my rabbit’s foot.

I craned my neck around to look at him. I’ve always dreamed of some guy saying that to me.

He pressed his lips to the base of my neck, and heat rushed to my cheeks. I love making you turn red, he whispered.

It doesn’t take much. We’re in the middle of the hallway.

You want to know what else I love? His tone was playful.

No, I said, but he wasn’t listening. He took his fingers and lightly trailed them up my spine, to the back of my neck. Instant goose bumps sprang up all over my body, and I shuddered.

That.

I could feel his smile against my ear. Jack was always smiling. It was what made him so likable.

By this time, Jules had snaked her way through the throng of students. Hello, Jack. I was in the middle of a conversation with Becks. Do you mind? she said with a smirk.

Right then a bunch of Jack’s teammates rounded the corner at the end of the hallway, stampeding toward us.

Uh-oh, I said.

Jack pushed me safely aside just before they tackled him, and Jules and I watched as what seemed like the entire football team heaped on top of their starting quarterback.

Dating Jack Caputo just might kill you one day. Jules laughed. You sure it’s worth it?

I didn’t answer, but I was sure. In the weeks following my mother’s death, I had spent nearly every morning sitting at her grave. Whispering to her, telling her about my day, like I used to each morning before she died. Jack came with me to the cemetery most days. He’d bring a book and read under a tree several headstones away, waiting quietly, as if what I was doing was totally normal.

We hadn’t even been together then.

It had been only five months since my mom died. Five months since a drunk driver hit her during her evening jog. Five months since the one person who knew all my dreams disappeared forever. Jack was the reason I was still standing.

Yeah, I was sure he was worth it. The only thing I wasn’t sure about was why he was with me.

TWO

NOW

Lunch. Five and a half months left.

At lunchtime, my lunch sack and knitting needles in hand, I tried to weave my way through the crowded halls as fast as I could, searching for a quiet place to eat.

I turned a corner and a small group of cheerleaders broke out into some random rally song. The noise ricocheted off the metal lockers and rang in my ears and in my brain.

I ducked into an empty classroom and took a few deep breaths. It was hard for me to believe I had ever gone to school every day. How could anyone survive so many people in one place? Everything here was loud.

Even in this room, electric morsels of energy reached me, triggering my hunger, reminding me of where I’d been and how much of my own energy had been stolen. I closed my eyes and allowed myself a moment to wish that I had my own emotions back, that I wasn’t so empty.

I realized how much had changed. On the other side of a century, I had wanted to feel less, not more. Maybe most teenagers wouldn’t think like that, but when the drunk driver killed my mom, I wanted more than to stop feeling sad. I wanted to stop feeling. Period. I wanted it so bad that when Cole offered

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