Moonglow (37 page)

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Authors: Michael Griffo

BOOK: Moonglow
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“Dominy,” he repeats. “You do not want to hurt me. You don't want to hurt any of us.”
There's something in his eyes that I've never seen before, something that makes me remember I'm not alone, that I share this soul with another. Kindness.
“Remember who you are, Dominy, and remember that we're your friends.”
I can feel the girl stir inside of me, begging me to let him go, imploring me not to hurt these people. I turn to look at the others, and they're more afraid than he is, but they're all looking at me with the same kindness in their eyes, even the girl surrounded by the silver mist.
Inside of me I can feel the girl become stronger, struggle to take over. I need help; I need more power so I howl at the moon. My sound is long and desperate, but there's no response because the moon has disappeared.
The entire room is pulsating with light, golden yellow and blinding in its intensity. Whatever it is, wherever this magic light is coming from, it's come for the girl, to help her, infuse her with just enough strength to take over, to take control, and to escape.
“Jess!”
I hear the girl scream from deep within our soul, and when her scream is acknowledged, there's nothing I can do to fight it. I feel my body run toward where the moon should be and crash through the window to escape to the outside. The cool air does nothing to change things; the yellow light has followed me, and now sparkles of dust are falling all around me, making me weary, putting me to sleep. I know that this Dominy is taking over, and there's nothing I can do to prevent it. She has too much power on her side and too many allies.
“Jess?”
“I'm right here, Dom.”
The voice is finally accompanied by a shape, and Jess emerges from the center of the light, looking the way she did the last time I saw her, as if she's been dipped in shimmering gold, still a breathtaking sight. Thanks to her intervention I'm completely merged with the wolf-spirit now; we've become one, but why? Why did this happen again? Why did Luba lie to me?
“You said I could believe her; you said she was telling the truth!”
“She was,” Jess replies.
“That's impossible! If she was telling the truth, the spell would be broken.”
“Follow me.”
I walk behind Jess, fragments of her light piercing through me, warming my fur, but unable to calm my racing heart. We walk away from the houses and cars, past an area filled with trees and bushes, and only stop when we reach a small clearing. Blinking my eyes to adjust to the mixture of moonglow and sunlight, I let out a low growl when I see the black-haired woman standing in the middle of the clearing, only dirt surrounding her, as if her presence has made it impossible for any life to grow.
“I'm sorry, Dom,” Jess says.
I have no idea what she's sorry for until Luba brings her hands up to her mouth and laughs. I've seen her do this before; I remember it clearly. We were in my mother's hospital room at The Retreat. Both of my worlds must be starting to connect, to merge together. Next, I know that she'll raise three fingers of her left hand and point them in my direction. And then she'll speak.
“The original sinner was killed,” Luba says, barely able to conceal her laughter. “But not by the original sin.”
No! No, this can't be true!
“You tricked me!” I scream.
“No!” Luba rages. “You didn't kill your father!!”
What? That can't be possible. Can it be? I don't remember it, but . . . if not me, then who? “Who?! Who killed him?!”
“Someone who wanted my child's death to be properly avenged,” she hisses. “Someone who believes in vengeance and didn't want my curse to be removed.”
Two sounds fill the night—Luba's spiteful laugh and my mournful wail. Both sounds feel like knives slicing through my flesh and my heart, their impact leaving me devastated and so wounded I want to lash out at anything and everything, but I'm too angry to move.
“Now my curse can never be broken!” the witch screeches.
This can't be happening! This can't be real! My father gave his life for me so this curse could be lifted, so it would be over and I could live my life the way my parents always dreamed I would. And now this! It isn't fair!
I don't know if Luba melts into the night or if Jess's blinding sunshine makes her flee, but when I catch my breath, when the shock settles into my body, she's nowhere to be found.
“I'm sorry, Dom,” Jess says, sitting on the ground next to me, looking as if she's sitting in a pool of liquid gold. “I couldn't tell you.”
Well, tell me now! “Who killed my father?! Jess, please, you have to tell me!”
“I can't,” she replies.
“What do you mean you can't?!” I cry.
“I told you, Dom; I have limitations.”
Oh my God! I can't believe this is happening! We thought this was over! We thought this was finished, and it's only just begun!
“What am I supposed to do now?!”
Jess doesn't respond right away. She lets me howl and cry and growl; she lets the pain and the anguish settle into my bones. When I appear to be calm, when Jess senses that I'm ready to hear her, she does what she always did when she was alive: She tells me the truth.
“You have to do what I did and make the best of a really, really bad situation,” she says. “How else do you think I got to be a sun goddess?”
That's my Jess. I feel the warmth of her hand travel along my back, and in response I nuzzle my snout up against her leg. It's comforting, like sitting next to my father. My poor father. He gave his life for me and for what? It was all for nothing. No! It can't be. And it won't be, not if I have anything to say about it. There is no way that I'm going to let Luba get away with this. Not her or whoever did her bidding.
But right now is not the time for revenge; right now is not the time for action. It's the time to think about how to fight back and how to overcome this evil for good. I know Jess can't give me the answers I need, I know she can't give me my old life back, but she can give me one thing which I know she always will—her friendship.
Epilogue
Jess's grave is the only one surrounded by cherry blossoms.
“I thought they were a nice touch,” Jess says, appearing next to me.
“A little show-offy, don't you think?” I reply.
“That was the point!”
Of course it was.
“Look at me, Dom,” she says, raising her arms to create waterfalls of sunshine. “I'm not exactly subtle.”
I don't care if anyone's looking; I don't care if anyone sees me and thinks I've lost my mind. I tuck my arm inside Jess's and watch as her sunlight dances and sparkles all around us. Together we laugh like the girls we used to be, even though we'll never be those same girls again.
Where this curse will lead me, I have no idea. It's already brought me to places I never conceived existed, and now that I'm determined to find out who really killed my father, I can't imagine where it will take me next. The bad news: I don't know how much longer I can keep the lid of the honey jar screwed on tight to prevent the honey inside from being scooped out and devoured. I don't know what other secrets I'll need to uncover or what obstacles I'll be challenged to overcome, but against all odds I won't be taking this journey alone. Because there's good news too: All my invisible strings are intact.
I carry my parents' love with me every day, especially my father's. Caleb and Archie have both proven I can trust them with my life, and Arla's stood by me, although she has every reason to hate me, and has even become a surrogate big sister to Barnaby. The jury's still deliberating on the fate of the bee and the butterfly—Nadine and Napoleon—but for now I consider them friends.
My friends. A group that thankfully still includes Jess as its president and now its guiding light. A group committed to helping me and traveling with me wherever this curse may lead us. It's totally
subarashi.
“Remember, Dominy . . .” Jess starts.
“Yeah, yeah, I know,” I reply. “I'm blessed.”
And finally, I am starting to believe it.
Dear Reader,
 
Now that you've read
Moonglow
and have gotten to know Dominy, Jess, Archie, and the rest of their friends, families, and even their enemies, I thought I'd give you a peek at some of the intriguing stuff that's coming up in
Sunblind,
the next book in the series.
Right on page one, Dominy starts to question who she is and why she became a werewolf. She knows the
how,
she knows that Luba set the curse into motion, and as difficult as it's been to grasp, she's coming to terms with her mystical fate. But she can't stop thinking about the bigger picture and the ramifications of Luba's spell. How is being part teenager and part wolf really going to affect the person she is and the person she hopes to become? Will the guilt she feels over her father's death ever go away? And how can she stop Barnaby from wandering over to the dark side? Those are the things Dom wants to know. The problem is she hardly has any time to think.
Turns out, the citizens of Weeping Water are not a quiet bunch. They want to put an end to the terror that's seeped into their sleepy little town, and they've decided to take action in order to rid themselves of this serial killer. Unfortunately, they have no way of knowing what kind of danger they're really in, because Luba isn't working alone; she's got her own army of witches who are almost as powerful as she is. And they're about to unleash even more supernatural forces that threaten to destroy Weeping Water and everyone in it.
Despite all the physical action and drama, there's some happiness too. Relationships are flourishing even while the world seems to be going crazy. Archie, Nadine, and even Mrs. Jaffe all find boyfriends, and, trust me, you're not going to believe who they are. Even I was shocked when I found out! And don't worry, Caleb continues to prove why he should be crowned Boyfriend of the Year, even if Dominy is afraid and reluctant to fully commit to him.
A lot of secrets are revealed in
Sunblind
too. We learn the true history of what happened on the night Luba cursed Mason and, as a result, Dominy, and how that history is very much a part of the present. Luba is hell-bent on destroying not only Dom, but her entire family. We also find out what's up with the bee and the butterfly—Nadine and Napoleon. Are they good? Are they evil? Are they working together? And, most important, what's the real reason they returned to their hometown?
But through it all, the central theme of this second book in the Darkborn Legacy is the undying friendship between Dominy and Jess. Both girls continue to grow as individuals as they become more acclimated to their newly acquired identities—the werewolf and the sun goddess—but it's as friends that they shine. They become closer, each more in tune with what the other is feeling and thinking, and more loyal to each other than either one ever imagined. The future is nothing like they thought it would be, but it's turning out to be a destiny that they're going to share.
So lives change even more drastically as the harsh light of the sun exposes the truth. But even though the truth is blinding, Dom doesn't become defeated; she doesn't try to hide from her fate. Just the opposite: She embraces the wolf spirit that's living inside of her. And by the end of
Sunblind,
Dominy becomes more determined than ever to use that primal passion and strength to defeat the evil that's lurking within the shadow of the moon.
Thanks for reading—and enjoy!
 
Michael Griffo
Please turn the page for an exciting sneak peek of
SUNBLIND,
the second book in Michael Griffo's
Darkborn Legacy trilogy,
coming in September 2013!
The morning comes, the moonglow fades
Replaced by what the night forbade.
 
A relentless light that reveals the worst
Of what I am—
A blessed curse.
Prologue
Which came first, the wolf or the girl?
That's the question I've started to ask myself these past few months, especially right before I transform. Right before my blood turns to fire inside my veins and starts to burn my arms. Just as my legs break and my knees point in the wrong direction, just as I see my skin disappear underneath a cloak of red fur. It should be an easy question to answer. The girl came first, and sixteen years later the wolf showed up. But that's not really the truth. The wolf was conceived long before the girl was born, long before the girl's father even thought of having a child. So doesn't that make the girl an afterthought? Doesn't that put her in second place behind the wolf? A subset instead of the whole package or even some kind of weird descendent to the wolf spirit? I thought it was an easy question, but the more I think about it, I realize it isn't. And now, quite frankly, I don't care. Because right now I'm hungry.
Saliva drips from my mouth like thick water oozing out of a leaky faucet. A low, constant growl drones out of me like metal scraping against stone. There's a dull ache in my empty stomach that needs to be filled, and it needs to be filled now.
I'm trying to control the hunger, keep it from consuming me so I can still be in control, so I can remain languid, but ready to strike. My razor-sharp teeth are exposed and my blue-gray eyes alert, but my soft red fur ripples in the breeze, and my body sways gently with every step I take. Could be out for a stroll, could be out for a hunt, no one can tell. But one thing is clear: Underneath the silver light of the full moon my body looks nothing like that of the girl I was and everything like the thing I've become. A wolf. A wolf that desperately needs to feed.
The problem is, at this very moment, I'm the one who's being hunted.
Behind me are sounds, sounds that shouldn't be heard at this time of night and definitely not in the middle of the woods. These aren't sounds from nature; they're human. Well, part human, because the sounds I hear are coming from one very sick and demented and vengeful woman.
Luba.
When I whip my head around, keeping my snout low to the ground, I can see her right in front of me. I can see her wrinkled face, the skin so pale and thin it looks like it could be peeled away, and her jet-black hair, long and straight, as lifeless as her eyes.
I can hear her laughing, her voice rough and childish and foul, echoing all around me. Instead of dying out the farther it gets from its source, her laughter grows louder until it destroys the peaceful quiet of the night. It's a sound that makes me sick.
There she is, standing before me, her body emaciated, her white hospital gown lifting in the wind to expose bony, scarred knees, her spindly fingers pressed against her chapped lips that form a gruesome smile. I can feel my heart beat faster; I can feel my empty stomach churn, because when I look at Luba, it's like looking in the mirror. We're completely different, and yet we're the same. We both violate the laws of nature. We're both creatures that do not belong in the world. We're wrong, we shouldn't exist, and yet here we are.
Or are we?
I blink my eyes, and Luba's gone. Twisting my head to the left and the right, I scour the darkness, but can't find her. Is she hiding? Was she ever here in the first place? Have I started to hallucinate?! No, she's not in front of me; she never was. I imagined her presence. But she is close by. I know that because I can smell her.
Her anger fills my nostrils like dead flesh. I follow my instinct and turn to run, because her anger is stronger than ever before, and now it's mixed with another emotion that I never expected I'd sense from her—fear.
Why is Luba afraid of me? She's never been afraid before; she's always been confident and vicious and proud. What's changed to make her become fearful? I wish I could waste time trying to figure that out, but I can't because anger mixed with fear is a dangerous combination that makes people do crazy things. And when that mixture of emotions lies within the heart of someone as evil as Luba, dangerous can quickly become deadly.
My slow gait turns into a run, and I make sure to avoid breaking twigs with my paws or overturning rocks. I need to be quiet; I need to remain undetected. I jump over a small puddle filled with rainwater and have to swerve quickly to the right to avoid disrupting a small pyramid of crushed beer cans. The litter is evidence that humans have been here, which means I can never assume the woods are safe. Crouching, I crawl under a spray of low-hanging branches, their mass of leaves tickling my fur as I pass through, and come out to stand on the edge of a clearing. A wide, flat expanse of lush green grass decorated with wildflowers in colors that brighten the night—yellow and pink and orange—colors that turn the earth into a galaxy of vibrant stars. It's a beautiful sight. But one that offers no protection.
How wonderful would it be to lie in this field for a moment, let the coolness pierce through my fur and put out the fire I can feel raging inside of me? But even just a moment is too long to hesitate, to let down my guard. Even just a moment will surely get me killed, especially when Luba's right behind me.
But why is she hunting me? And why does her hatred for me now contain fear? I look up, and it's almost as if the full moon is pulsating, trying to communicate with me in some sort of supernatural Morse code, telling me to use my natural instinct to make sense of a situation that doesn't seem to contain logic. I force myself to hold still, to not breathe, to do nothing but accept the full moon's message. It's a complete waste of time! All I can feel is the painful ache that's returned to my stomach. And then all I smell is blood.
The stench is so glorious I open my mouth to howl, to announce to whomever or whatever is bleeding that I'm coming to feed, but my howl turns into silence. The wolf wants to cry; the girl is cautious. So even though the wolf wants to make a sound, the girl knows that it will only help Luba discover the location of her prey. It's the perfect example of how the wolf and the girl have learned to coexist.
The other thing I've learned is that if I ignore the hunger, there are consequences. The violence and aggression and primal urges I feel as a wolf spill over into my human form after the transformation reverses itself if I don't indulge in wolfen hunger when the feeling overcomes me like it's doing right now. So even though I can hear and smell and sense Luba is approaching and I know I should keep running, I can't. The hunger pains have become more intense, as if a sharp-edged claw is burrowing through my skin from the inside out. I have no choice; I have got to feed.
And only a few feet away is my meal.
A mound of fur and blood. A family of rabbits all huddled together, clinging to one another as if they're sleeping and trying to keep warm. Except this family is dead and lifeless and bloody. Such a beautiful sight.
A string of saliva drips from one fang and is lifted into the air by my hot, anxious breath. The unmoving bodies are pulling me closer to them as if they're a magnet and I'm a piece of steel. I am unable to resist, powerless to do anything else but take one step toward the bloody mound and then another and another. When I'm a foot away I regain some self-control and begin to circle the carcasses just so I can look at the heavenly display from all sides, my long tongue dripping wet and gliding over my teeth. Halfway around I can wait no longer. The hell with Luba, right now quenching my hunger is more important than guaranteeing my survival.
I lunge forward, but instead of burying my teeth into flesh and bone and blood, I crash into something hard and fall back. I look up, and separating me from my meal is a yellow wall. No, not a real wall, but a huge block made up of what looks like golden marble. Furious, I ram my body into it again, my front paws colliding into the barrier with all my might, only to careen back again, my side slamming into the ground.
Dazed, I shake my head, strings of saliva whipping into my snout and my eyes. What the hell is going on?! I turn toward the glowing wall, and my lips form a sneer as a growl escapes from my body. The wall starts to glow with a yellow light, growing brighter by the second, and I try to keep my eyes open, try to see what's creating this display, but the light is blinding. For a few moments darkness replaces the light as if they're joined together, and I can't see a thing. I'm consumed by blackness, utterly alone and utterly afraid.
Until Jess appears.
The yellow wall melts into a thin vertical line that hangs in the air, slicing into the dark night, and then bursts open like a fireworks display, shooting sparks into the sky that twinkle and fall and combine to create something unimaginable, an Amaterasu Omikami, a legendary Japanese sun goddess, or simply the new person that Jess has become. The supernatural being that she became after I killed her. And now I want to kill her again.
What the hell are you doing?!
“Saving your life,” Jess replies to my silent cry.
By interrupting my meal?! By making me go crazy with hunger?!
Ignoring my unspoken comments, Jess flicks her wrist, and a piece of sunshine flies into the air. I watch it twist and turn and hover for a second over the dead rabbit family until it falls on top of them, dousing them in golden light, so they look as if they're bathing in honey. The light is immediately extinguished when I hear a loud crash that makes me jump back. The rabbits were huddled together not because they had been sleeping; they were arranged that way so they could conceal a bear trap.
Oh my God, you really did save my life!
Floating several inches above the ground, Jess smiles at me. “I'd say you'll have to do the same for me someday, but it's a little late for that.”
Involuntarily I bow my head and scrape the dirt with my front paw. I know Jess doesn't blame me for her death, but still, I am the reason she's dead. I tug at the earth one more time, sending clumps of dirt into the air. My stomach hurts, my head hurts, and now my heart hurts. Enough! I don't have time for this; I don't have time for reflection; I have to focus on the matter at hand—someone has gone to a lot of trouble to try to lure me to my death, and that someone has got to be Luba.
But why? She has amazing powers of her own; she doesn't need to resort to something so basic. Unless, of course, she wants to make it look like it was an accident and not the result of some sick, demonic intervention. Get rid of me and keep her secret safe. Yes, that's got to be it!
“Wrong.”
I'm not sure what's more annoying—being contradicted or seeing Jess's smirk.
I'm not wrong. This is a trap!
Sitting cross-legged, but still several inches above the ground, Jess smiles at me. She extends her arm to touch my fur, which I know she loves to play with, but I'm not in the mood to be caressed so I flinch, which only makes Jess roll her eyes at me. Now we're even; we're both annoyed with each other.
“Yes, it is a trap,” Jess relents. “But no, Luba wasn't the one who set it.”
It takes a second for the reality of Jess's statement to sink in.
If Luba didn't set the trap, that means she has help; she isn't working alone.
“Well, kind of,” Jess replies cryptically.
Once again I'm reminded that in Jess's current superior state she is still limited, and she can't tell me everything that she knows. She's bound to a different set of rules that even she doesn't completely understand. But I've learned that you don't have to have the answer to everything to know the truth. I may not know who's working with Luba, but I do know that if Jess hadn't intervened, I'd be dead right now, split into two separate pieces by that bear trap.
Thank you.
“Don't thank me yet,” Jess says, looking behind me. “Luba isn't your only enemy.”
What?!
I turn around, and I don't see anything, but the noises I heard earlier are back, and they're getting louder. I have no idea what's going on, but now I'm the one who's afraid.
“People are scared, Dom,” Jess explains. “And when people are scared, they act foolishly.”
I want Jess to tell me more, I want her to explain what she means, but there's no time left; the sounds are getting louder with every second. I'm about to find out just who my enemy is.
“The trap is right up here!”
Barnaby!
The voice is unmistakable; it belongs to my brother. I am frozen in my spot; the only thing I can do is take a deep breath. The smell I thought belonged to Luba is my brother's, and it's the smell of anger and hatred and fear. He's the one who's hunting me; he's the one who set this trap; he's the one who wants me dead. The air around my throat seems to want to strangle me. Luba doesn't want to kill me; my brother does.
“Get behind me!”
Lost in my own thoughts, I can't respond to Jess's command.
“Do I have to do everything myself?!”
Jess disappears into the night, and I'm left alone. Suddenly the air is cold, but it's not actually the air; it's me. It's like the opposite of when I transform; my blood has turned to ice and has stopped flowing through my veins. In the distance I can see shadows approaching and then a light. My brother is at the front of a group holding a torch like the leader of some modern-day witch hunt. Except the witch is a wolf and the wolf is me. I want to run; I want to get as far away as I possibly can, find somewhere safe to hide, but I can't. And anyway, where can I go when so many people are hunting for me?
Maybe this is my destiny: to die at my brother's hand like my father was supposed to die by mine. But I'm not ready to die! I'm not ready to give up! Thankfully, Jess agrees with me.

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