Tears of a Friend (Sharp Shades 2.0)
Page 2
Claire lets out a little scream. ‘Are you crazy? Have you seen how white I am right now? I’m not going to wear a bikini until I’ve had my tan done. You’d better let me choose what we’ll do.’
I sigh. Some things never change!
More great reads in the
SHARP SHADES 2.0 series:
Sea Fever by Gillian Philip
Doing the Double by Alan Durant
A Murder of Crows by Penny Bates
Wrong Exit by Mary Chapman
The Messenger by John Townsend
Plague by David Orme
Witness by Anne Cassidy
Blitz by David Orme
Shouting at the Stars by David Belbin
Hunter’s Moon by John Townsend
Who Cares? by Helen Orme
Copyright
SHARP SHADES 2.0
Tears of a Friend
by Jo Cotterill
Published by Ransom Publishing Ltd.
Radley House, 8 St. Cross Road, Winchester, Hampshire SO23 9HX, UK
www.ransom.co.uk
ISBN 978 178127 488 0
First published in 2008
Copyright © 2013 Ransom Publishing Ltd.
Text copyright © 2013 Jo Cotterill
Cover photograph copyright © Shelly Perry. Other images copyright © Daniel Hughes, pollux, miappv, shironosov, pascalgenest, shank_ali, AndrazG
A CIP catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library.
All rights reserved. This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorized distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights, and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
The right of Jo Cotterill to be identified as the author of this Work has been asserted by her in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988.
MORE SHARP SHADES 2.0
Witness
by Anne Cassidy
Todd sees his ex-teacher Jason Ripley attacking a shopkeeper he knows from his paper round. He is shocked by what he has witnessed, so Todd informs the police. But Todd has no idea just how this will change his life.
Shouting at the Stars
by David Belbin
For singer Layla it’s all a dream come true. Her first album hits the big time and her concerts are all sold out. But a heckler starts to show up at her gigs and quickly turns everything into a nightmare.
Blitz
by David Orme
During World War Two Martin is evacuated to Winchester. He hates it there, so travels back home to London. But a bomb has destroyed his house. What future is there for Martin, homeless in a city at war?
Plague
by David Orme
It is 1665 and the plague has hit the city of London. Life will never be the same again for Henry Harper. His father is dead and his mother and brother have fled. Can Henry escape before the plague strikes him?
Wrong Exit
by Mary Chapman
When their mum wanders off in the fog to look for petrol, Grace Adam and Ruby wait in the car. Suddenly they enter a strange, terrible, new world. Nothing is quite as it should be. Did they take a wrong exit?
The Messenger
by John Townsend
Chris sees a Christmas glass angel smash at his feet. Then a trip to the moors with his girlfriend brings strange events. They even seem to be moving in time. What connects past, present and future?
Hunter’s Moon
by John Townsend
Neil is a young gamekeeper, left to look after the woods on his own. There are rumours of a panther on the loose, and now Neil notices odd scratch marks on the trees. Will Neil take action before it is too late?
Who Cares?
by Helen Orme
Tara hates her life and everyone around her. Most of all, she hates her special school, the Unit. Then she meets Liam. Things start to get better, but he wants Tara to kick her drug habit. Can she? Will she?
Murder of Crows
by Penny Bates
Only-child Ben moves to the country with his mum. Soon he is friends with a crow. This makes Ben a laughing stock. The bullies want him to hurt the thing he loves the most. But no one must forget Crow Law!
Doing the Double
by Alan Durant
Footballing twins Dale and Joe have always joked about swapping their identities for a day. Now Dale wants Joe to do the double and take his place on the football pitch – for real. How can Joe refuse his twin?