Rise of the Moon (Moonlit Series Book 1) (5 page)

BOOK: Rise of the Moon (Moonlit Series Book 1)
8.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

I looked at her for a long moment. Were we crazy for wanting this so bad? It’s not like our lives were bad the way they are, that we needed an escape. But at the end of the day, it
was
just wishful thinking, right?

But, the words spilled from my mouth anyway. “Me, too.”

 

*              *              *

 

Maddie spent Friday and Saturday night at my house. Not that we did anything exciting. The weather was gorgeous, so we read a book outside on a blanket, like we had most of the summer. Sunday came along, and I walked Maddie back to her place. My mother would pick me up over there to take me to my shift at the parlour in four hours. Before that, though, she was taking my little sister to her piano lesson.

“And then the insects started rampaging because their kid was being hurt, but she rushed to go and save it on her glider thing,” I recapped a movie I had watched Thursday night, looking over my shoulder and down the road as a truck approached. A moving truck. The rest of Shayne’s stuff, or –

It drove past Shayne’s driveway, still nearing us. A tingling sensation grew in my fingertips, moving up my arms and through the rest of my body as it drew closer. My heart pounded in my chest as it passed, followed closely by a dark red pickup truck. I stopped walking, watching as it turned right at the next corner.

“Someone else is moving into this area?” Maddie said, sounding surprised.

“Country homes go up for sale all the time,” I pointed out. Not that they
sold
really well. Her dad was in realty, so she knew that.

We neared the corner of the end of the block, and Maddie glanced over in the direction that the moving truck had gone. I did, too, out of curiosity. And, to my surprise, there it was. Three houses down on the left side of the road. It was parked at an old farmhouse, white with a large front and back porch. An old couple had once lived there –but, after their grandchildren moved out, such a large farmhouse was too big for them.

I adjusted my glasses as three guys and a girl hopped out of the pick-up truck, two of the guys immediately going to the other truck to start unloading furniture and belongings. The third one, the one who had been driving, stared in our direction. From this distance I could see that he –as well as the others –was tanned, and his white shirt emphasized that. He had dark hair, but we were too far away to see any real facial details.

“Are they hot? Maybe our age?” she asked, gripping my arm. “Do you think they’re all siblings?”

“If you wore your glasses, maybe you’d be able to tell me,” I said, taking off my glasses and wiping the lens on my shirt. Her eyesight was not nearly as bad as mine. Lucky her, she only needed them in class.

“Even without my glasses I can see that they’re all looking over here,” she told me, giving a small wave.

“Let’s go,” I said, putting my glasses on in time to see them wave back. A part of me
did
want to go over there. But not to flirt –if I felt awkward flirting as it was, it was even more awkward with Maddie around. But there was something in me that wanted to pull me over to them. Though, it just might have been Maddie tugging on my sleeve.

I grabbed her wrist and began pulling her back on track.

“What? I’m not in a hurry,” Maddie resisted slightly.

“I am –I have a job to go to, and I thought you were tagging along before going to Kristy’s.”

“Maybe I don’t want to go to Kristy’s anymore?” she said, looking over her shoulder at the guys as we kept walking.

“Well, whatever, let’s get to your place so you can grab your purse and so my mom can pick me up and drop me off at work.”

“You should get your own car,” she said, finally walking instead of letting me push her along.

“I’m saving up for one. No worries,” I told her.

“At the rate you’re going, it’ll be years,” Maddie sighed.

“Except for the fact that my parents promised to pay for half,” I said.

“It’ll still be years,” she said, almost as if she was reassuring me. She glanced over her shoulder once more, but we were past the tree line, and any visibility we might have had was nonexistent.

 

*              *              *

 

Hours later, I was pulling my hair back into a ponytail and adjusting the ugly shirt that came with the job. It wasn’t flattering to the body shape, making me look square, despite the soft curves I knew I had. But this job wasn’t for looking good, though I tried –I mean, every girl tries, right?– but for the sake of getting a little money coming my way. It was the first place that had called me back after I handed out of résumé. I aced the interview, but almost didn’t take the job. But my dad had told me that any work experience was good work experience. By the time other places had called me for an interview, I’d come to like the people I worked with enough to not want to leave.

“Bye mom,” I said, opening the car door as I flipped the mirror on the visor back up.

“Bye,” she called, giving a small wave as I went to the other side of the car, where Maddie also got out, and together we walked into the parlour.

“Hey, Evelyn,” Harry, my boss, said from behind the counter.

“Hey, how’s it going tonight?” I looked around at the empty seats.

“The evening rush should begin soon,” he said, leaning onto the counter. Despite being my boss, owner and manager, he was young. Twenty-three, I think. But he was good-looking, with a little stubble on his cheeks and chin. He had a girlfriend, though, and she’d come by every once in a while. She went to college in the city, so she was often busy.

“I’ll go put my things in the back then,” I said, slipping behind the counter. I dropped my bag off in my locker in the break room and returned to the front for my shift.

“I love ice cream,” Maddie said as I came out, licking her spoon. “I’m so glad you got a job here, Evelyn.”

“It’s not like you get discounts,” I said, brushing my hair over my shoulder.

“No, but if I come here around your break time, I usually get to finish off the freebies you take for yourself.”

Harry just laughed. He was a pretty carefree guy, and even if I were to give Maddie a free scoop or cone directly I doubt he’d care. Not that I’d do it. I was, regrettably, a goody-two-shoe at heart.

“I never got around to asking,” Maddie began, leaning on the counter as she continued to eat her ice cream. “But, just how often do you text Shayne?”

“Often enough,” I murmured, grabbing a cloth, wetting it and wiping down the counter as Maddie let her ice cream drip.

“I hope he’s not giving you the run around,” she said. “Don’t get led around by some idiot, no matter how good-looking he is. Unless he’s a vampire or a werewolf.”

Harry chuckled, and Maddie cracked a smile.

“Admit it, Harry, if some hot vampire chick walked in, would you not want to have a shot with her?”

“I have Lizzy,” he spoke without hesitation.

“Loyal to the end, right? Man, the world needs some more guys like you,” she sighed.

“Are you hitting on me?” he joked.

“Nope, just stating facts that guys these days are just… well, stupid. No offence.”

“None taken, rest assured.”

“But –”

The bell over the door rang, and we all glanced up as a mother and her two children walked in. Maddie stood off to the side while they made their orders, and while I took their money and gave back their change, Harry prepared their cones.

“Thank you,” the two children chorused as they pushed on the door, making the bell chime again.

“Have a nice evening,” Harry and I called back.

“You guys are a nice team,” Maddie commented.

“Well, we’ve worked together for,” I cocked my head to the side and did the calculations, “for almost two years now? Wow, have I really been working here this long already?”

“Wanna quit while you’re ahead?” he asked teasingly.

“Nah,” I grinned.

“Well,” Maddie began, finishing up her ice cream. “I should get going to Kristy’s.”

“Then I’ll talk to you later,” I told her.

“Bye,” she waved as she pulled the door open. It chimed, and I smiled, watching her disappear beyond the window of the store.

“You guys are really close,” Harry commented. “I can’t tell where one aura ends and the other begins.”

“You’re an aura reader now, are you?” I couldn’t help but smirk a little bit. Harry always seemed to have this new fad going on. Once it was palm reading. Another time it was tea leaves. Apparently this time it was auras. Soon he’d be closing down the parlour and opening up a fortune-telling place.

“I’m quite good at it, unlike all the others,” he grinned. “But seriously, you and Maddie are really close.”

“Yeah,” I smiled. “Despite our personalities, we’re quite well balanced.”

“Do you guys finish each other’s sentences too?” he teased.

I hesitated before cracking a grin, “Actually, yeah. We do.”

“See? I know how to read auras.”

“Lucky guess. I wonder how many teenage girls can do the same with their best friends.”

“I suppose you’re right,” he laughed. “Perhaps I’m getting ahead of myself.”

“What else is new?” I snorted.

“Whoa, someone’s not playing nice today.”

“Oh, whatever,” I rolled my eyes.

“Remember that time when I read your tea leaves?”

“And you bull-shitted me and told me I was destined for greatness beyond my imagination?”

“Hey, I think I read them pretty well,” he spoke defensively.

“Yeah, well, my over-protective mother and the lack of adventure in my life say otherwise,” I stretched. “But I appreciate the vote of confidence in me.”

“Well, I really do think you’re destined for great things. You and Maddie both. Together you guys can accomplish anything… Anyway, my shift’s almost done; I’m going to start cleaning up in the back. You got it up here? Olivia should be here within the next half hour or so.”

“You’re going to leave me to handle an… empty parlour?” I mocked whispered. “How on earth will I ever survive?”

He laughed as he disappeared into the back, leaving me completely alone at the front. It was something I was used to at this time of night though, so I didn’t mind.

The bell above the door chimed again, and a flock of girls came in. One of which was Marissa. She didn’t hide the look of distaste on her face when she saw me –though she knew I worked here and had she truly wanted to avoid me she’d have gone to the other ice cream joint on the other side of town.

“Oh, if it isn’t Evelyn,” Marissa greeted coldly. “You know what? I think today I’ll have a sundae...”

“Coming right up,” I said, turning to make it as fast as I could –the sooner she was out of there the better.

“On second thought, perhaps a milkshake,” she said smugly. “Strawberry… No, then again, I think I’d prefer fudge.”

“Of course,” I said, trying not to grind my teeth. I moved slowly, in case she changed her order again, but just as I was finishing up, she spoke up again.

“No, strawberry really is better, isn’t it?”

“I’ll take the fudge,” one of the other girls spoke up. It was nice that not all of them were willing to put up with Marissa’s crap, which I supposed I was grateful for.

The bell rang once more. This was more like it for such a warm autumn evening. I looked up to see a group of white shirts, and when I raised my eyes to their faces, I was a little more surprised. I had never seen them around, but I recognized them. There was no mistaking it. They were the ones that had been unloading the truck down the road between Maddie’s house and mine.

The three piled in while one held the door. The first one to enter was a black guy. His skin was that rich chocolate colour, darker than most people out on the street, but not that darkest skin tone I’d ever seen. His jet black hair was short, looking like he was growing it out after shaving off all his hair. He was also, though just barely, the tallest of the four of them. He had a small grin on his face, one that said that he’d been laughing just before coming into the parlour. It grew even brighter when he met my gaze and gave a friendly nod.

The second to come had also been smiling when he entered, but his face darkened almost as soon as he saw Marissa. His hair was just as black as the first guy’s, though his lighter skin tone made it appear even darker. If I were judging based on appearance, I would guess he was the most serious out of the four. Maybe, though, it was just the way he had his arms crossed. His muscles twitched as he looked all of us over.

Number three was female, and she had the biggest grin out of all of them, and it seemed to grow even wider when she spotted me. Her light brown hair was tied at the base of her skull in a loose bun, her bangs pinned back leaving her forehead bare. She was gorgeous. Athletic, too, it seems, with the way her arms were toned. There was no fat jiggle as she hit the serious one in the arm, telling him to chill out. She could have been a model, except she stood only a little taller than me.

BOOK: Rise of the Moon (Moonlit Series Book 1)
8.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Good Mom by Cathryn Parry
The 37th Hour by Jodi Compton
Evil Valley by Simon Hall
Un antropólogo en Marte by Oliver Sacks
Homeless by Laurie Halse Anderson