Creep Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Creep (Creep, #1) Creep by Jennifer Hillier
43,067 ratings, 3.93 average rating, 3,841 reviews
Open Preview
Creep Quotes Showing 1-11 of 11
“Did you kill her?”
“Ha. Right. I was just a kid when she died.”
There was a minimum age requirement for monsters?”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep
“It’s okay to be pissed. It doesn’t mean you love her any less or that she isn’t worthy of finding. You can be worried and pissed at the same time.”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep
“You know those FBI shows on TV? Where they do the profiling?”
“Yeah.”
“Cops hate that stuff. While it's all well and good to sit behind a desk and have assigned characteristics and fancy medical names for criminals,” Jerry said in a prissy voice, “at the end of the day, you just don't know what anybody's gonna do. You gotta prepare for everything. Human beings are unpredictable. After three decades with PD, I still get surprised.”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep
“Five minutes passed. Or five hours. She didn’t know. She had passed out, and when she woke up, the lights were off and the room was pitch-black.”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep
“breath. “I watched our video again last night, Sheila, and I am this close to making you famous. Go ahead. Push me.”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep
“The dinner with Sheila’s fiancé had been enlightening, though Ethan’s blond wig had itched the entire time. He’d had to excuse himself several times to go to the restroom to scratch his head. Damn cheap wig.”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep
“There was no point in arguing with people who were delusional. There was no way to win—their logic defied reason.”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep
“Sociopaths are beautiful liars.”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep
“the problem with addicts is not that they don’t know the difference between right and wrong. The problem with addicts is that they do it anyway.”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep
“It doesn’t mean you love her any less or that she isn’t worthy of finding. You can be worried and pissed at the same time.”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep
“Every man she met presented an opportunity to erase the insecurity and unworthiness she’d felt during her marriage.”
Jennifer Hillier, Creep