Author: | Sofia King | ISBN: | 9781386656135 |
Publisher: | Amazing Publisher | Publication: | January 30, 2017 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Sofia King |
ISBN: | 9781386656135 |
Publisher: | Amazing Publisher |
Publication: | January 30, 2017 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
Dillon was so elated to have his first job for the summer before he started community college. He thought the pay was a bit measly compared to what his friend’s summer jobs paid. The hotel had a worn and haunted look to it, but it was in the route of his bus line. He did not want a job that his mother would have to drive him to at all. The chance to help his widowed mother held more value in his heart than anything else and he was eager to lighten her load. His father had loss his battle to lung cancer six months prior and because their insurance covered certain drugs their life savings was gone. His mother did not desire for him to work at all and she felt even more heartbroken that she had no choice, but to accept her son’s offer to help. Dillon’s mother had to get a part-time job to cover some of what his father normally paid and he knew that his mother could not do it all alone.
Dillon had heard a plethora of stories about room 666 at Hotel Savannah, which shaped great mystery for everyone that lived in the area.
A few deaths occurred in the room that he had seen reported on the news and what caught him by surprise was that every single death was a natural death. All the people who had died were all adults that were found by their children very next morning. The cops were so use to the causes of deaths being ruled as natural deaths that they paid no attention to the black cat that was always on each and every scene. The black cat would sit right next to the children until they were picked up by close relatives...
Dillon was so elated to have his first job for the summer before he started community college. He thought the pay was a bit measly compared to what his friend’s summer jobs paid. The hotel had a worn and haunted look to it, but it was in the route of his bus line. He did not want a job that his mother would have to drive him to at all. The chance to help his widowed mother held more value in his heart than anything else and he was eager to lighten her load. His father had loss his battle to lung cancer six months prior and because their insurance covered certain drugs their life savings was gone. His mother did not desire for him to work at all and she felt even more heartbroken that she had no choice, but to accept her son’s offer to help. Dillon’s mother had to get a part-time job to cover some of what his father normally paid and he knew that his mother could not do it all alone.
Dillon had heard a plethora of stories about room 666 at Hotel Savannah, which shaped great mystery for everyone that lived in the area.
A few deaths occurred in the room that he had seen reported on the news and what caught him by surprise was that every single death was a natural death. All the people who had died were all adults that were found by their children very next morning. The cops were so use to the causes of deaths being ruled as natural deaths that they paid no attention to the black cat that was always on each and every scene. The black cat would sit right next to the children until they were picked up by close relatives...