Werewolves & Wisteria (5 page)

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Authors: A. L. Tyler

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal & Urban, #Sword & Sorcery, #Teen & Young Adult

BOOK: Werewolves & Wisteria
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Chapter 5

 

Vince came out of his psychosis that night. When I asked, Charlie blinked his cat eyes and reset his little apartment in the basement back to the way it had started.

Seeing him in a heap on the floor, in the middle of all the normalcy, was beyond surreal. He was at least ten pounds lighter than before, and I fretted that we hadn’t been giving him enough food. Charlie reassured me that he had offered everything he could think of, even live rabbits, but the wolf had refused.

“Wild animals aren’t meant to be in captivity,” he apologized.

Now dressed in sweatpants and a tee-shirt, Vince wordlessly accepted my help as I pulled one of his arms across my shoulders and steadied him as we walked up the stairs. I set him down at the table. With a vacant expression and sunken cheeks, he watched me go into the kitchen to fix dinner.

I opened the refrigerator to get a few things, and when I turned back, I found Vince standing at the window, looking out at the street. The sun was setting, and his eyes were fixed on the moon just rising over the horizon. For a moment, I worried.

“He’s fine, Thorn…” Charlie said quietly, jumping up onto the countertop next to me. “We only have to worry about the waxing moon.”

“This goes on,” Vince said quietly. “This is going on in the world right now, and people don’t know about it. And the world keeps going. What day is it?”

I got a glass of water and offered it to him, going over to stand with him by the window.

“Sunday,” I said. “Classes start tomorrow.”

He turned back to the street, taking three large gulps of the water. “I didn’t buy my textbooks yet.”

Without even thinking, I looked meekly over my shoulder. “Charlie…?”

“Right,” he responded. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw something appear on the table, but I didn’t actually look to check. I had faith that the textbooks were there.

I turned back to see Vince analyzing me with a frown.

“Is this normal for you?” he asked, looking down at the water before finishing it.

I raised my eyebrows, and went back to the kitchen to give him some space. I got together what I needed to make a salad.

“No,” I said, finally able to look at him again. “Even as far as normal goes, for me, you’re my first werewolf. Was it… um, very bad? The room, I mean?”

I instantly regretted asking the question. I had been trying to level the playing field by showing him that he had some knowledge that I didn’t. It had never failed to brighten his day in the past, but this was different.

He went back to the table and sat down, sighing. He gave me a long look, and didn’t say anything.

It upset me more than I would have thought. I had hoped that he might have forgotten some of it, or at least felt somehow disassociated from his time as a wolf, but he remembered it. I felt my hands start to shake, and I had to put down the knife I had poised over the lettuce.

My cheeks flushed, and I turned away, trying to breath, and trying to stay calm. The last thing that Vince needed right now was to see me panicking, but I couldn’t stop the knot rising in my throat.

“I think grass might help next time,” he said suddenly. I closed my eyes as he continued to talk, and relief washed over me. “A window would be nice. A real window, I mean, because I think the lack of fresh air really got to me. That might not be possible, but still.”

He had walked over, standing next to me in the kitchen, and I barely managed to hold back the tears gathering in my eyes.

“We could go to the sandwich place instead, if you want.” He offered it like it was nothing. “If my wallet’s still around, I’ll pay. It’s the least I can do for you after staying here all week.”

I was breathing deep and shaking my head, hardly able to believe that he could still manage to even
act
normal after what had happened.

“I’ll need my phone, too,” he said, looking over his shoulder and back toward the bedroom. “I promised my mom I would call her when I had a chance, but she knew I was going to be busy getting ready and settling in the week before classes.”

I couldn’t say anything. I didn’t know what to say to someone who could be so broken in one moment, and so nonchalant the next.

“I know you were there,” he said. He looked away, uncertain. “It didn’t look any easier for you. So I just thought, sandwiches might be easy…”

I couldn’t help myself, and I pulled him into a hug, which he hesitantly returned.

“Thank you,” I whispered.

He patted me on the back, and I let him go. “For what? This wasn’t your fault.”

“For still being you, after all of that.” I ripped a paper towel off the roll by the sink and used it to dab at my eyes. “Gates hasn’t been the same since… Gates got turned into a cat. Did I tell you that?”

“Your sister told me,” he said, leaning back against the edge of the counter.

I nodded, wiping my nose with the paper towel before tossing it in the trash. “She hasn’t been nearly as loud-mouthed since it all happened. I kind of miss it.”

He cracked a smile, shifting, and I was once again reminded how much weight he had lost. “Do you remember when that teacher asked her if her name was a weird Mexican thing, and she called him a—?”

“Yeah,” I said, grinning through my tears. “I remember.”

“And then she kept calling him Mr. Bunker for the rest of the year?”

“Yeah,” I laughed.

He smiled at me. “I’m glad she’s not lost in Hungary. Or dead, I guess, is what most people were saying. Come on, let’s go get dinner.”

“Oh—!” I stopped him just as his hand landed on the door, and rushed over with the protection charm that Lyssa had left for him.

I explained what he needed to do, and why. Charlie added an addendum to look out for Walter, or any of his kin, who might be around. Vince brushed off our warnings like they were nothing, though I could tell from the look in his eye that he was paying very close attention to how the charm needed to be used. He asked me to meet him back at the sandwich place by the apartment in an hour so that he would have time to find a place to bury the charm.

I spent that time changing my clothes five times, and then trying to do my hair without it looking like I had actually done it.

“You just saved his life,” Charlie called from the living room, where he was lying on the couch and watching the news. “He’s seen you right out of bed. You’ve seen him naked—”

“Covered in fur!” I corrected.

“—Do you really think he cares what your hair looks like?”

I didn’t answer. I had tried putting it up. I had tried leaving it down. I had it pulled back into a ponytail, but quickly decided that it made my head look small and bald, so I let it back down again.

I came out of the bathroom, and checked the clock. I still had fifteen minutes.

“Wear a low-cut shirt,” Charlie teased. “He won’t even bother looking at your hair.”

“Unhelpful,” I replied.

I finally slipped out of the apartment and thirty feet down the sidewalk to the sandwich place. I saw Vince waiting for me at a table by the window as I approached, and gave a little wave.

We ordered our food, and he paid, and made a comment about my hair. I thanked him for the compliment and asked about his mother, and he said that she was happy to hear from him. We sat down and ate our food, and talked about the classes that we had signed up for, and pretended that nothing had happened. He mentioned that he might see about switching his schedule in the first two weeks to more closely match mine, just in case he had to miss any lectures. I said that would be great, because he took better notes than I did anyway.

We skirted the issue the whole meal, and when we were done eating, we went back to the apartment. Charlie blinked at me through narrow eyes, still lounging across my couch, and Vince asked me if I wanted to come downstairs to watch a movie.

His television was bigger, and his couch was less occupied.

So that was what we did.

We didn’t cuddle. We didn’t even touch. I kept waiting for him to make a move, but I guess we were both too worn out after the week we’d had. I got a little freaked out by his sallow cheeks every time I looked over at him because he looked seriously ill. It was a good movie, anyway.

I said goodbye and goodnight as the credits rolled, then went upstairs to get ready for bed.

I cried out of relief in the shower. I didn’t know how much of it he was faking—probably a lot—but the fact that he even had the will and the energy to fake it was a good sign. It was odd, because even though I’d had Lyssa and Gates with me, I had felt alone in my dilemma up until now. Charlie gave me some support, but after having glimpsed what his life as a demon was like, it was hard for me to imagine that he could really feel the same toward me.

Vince had seen me cry that day, and even though he was sick, tired, and facing an uncertain future, he had made me laugh. He had taken me out to dinner, and he had made me feel normal.

I was never going to forget what he had done for me, just for having courage in that one moment. For the first time in a long time, I felt like I might have a chance at living my life.

 

~~~~~~~~~

 

The next day Vince left for classes early. It was a little odd, rolling over in the morning to find him creeping past my bed and trying not to wake me. I was forced to admit that I might need to ask Charlie to move the door hatch into the living room, even if we would have to move the furniture to accommodate it.

I had picked my schedule to group my classes in the afternoon so that I could work in the morning, but with Charlie hiring on extra help for the greenhouse, it really wasn’t necessary anymore. I had no doubt that I would still be pulling a few hours at the greenhouse to care for certain plants and collect needed spell items. Today, I was sleeping in.

I had one class overlapping with Vince’s on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and one that overlapped on Tuesday and Thursday. If he moved his classes, we would have more together.

Around eleven I set off toward my Intro to Women’s Literature class, and then I had two astronomy classes that ran from one to three in the afternoon—the first of which was shared with Vince. I had a break between three and four, and then a Japanese literature class. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, I had an intro to computer science class at four with Vince, and that was followed by a late astronomy lab at seven.

I found astronomy interesting, but I didn’t really have an interest in becoming a career astronomer because I didn’t think there were many job opportunities. I had always loved books, but I felt the same about becoming an English or literature major. I reflected mournfully that I hadn’t even spent any time in the reading nook that Charlie had made for me yet.

Computer Science was really the only class I was taking that I saw a practical use in, but the others filled the college’s requirements for humanities and science, so I felt good about the schedule I had put together.

The walk across campus was nice, and my women’s literature class was uneventful. The changing fall leaves were a nice distraction from my thoughts, but I kept waiting for something awful to happen. I didn’t know what, exactly, but the thought that it had been a week since Walter and Stark had dropped Vince on my doorstep weighed heavily on my mind. I hadn’t heard from them since, and I wasn’t sure if that was a good thing or a bad one.

Maybe Vince had been a warning to stay away, and Walter felt that he had done his piece unless I tried to start something. I hadn’t done anything to openly threaten him, even if he did have certain assumptions, which were probably normally correct, about people who kept the company of demons.

Maybe Vince had only been the beginning, and I feared that was much more likely. As Charlie said, escalating things to such an extent so quickly felt strange.

After Women’s Literature I met Vince in astronomy, and we once again exchanged polite pleasantries like nothing was wrong. I didn’t ask, but he didn’t say that anything strange had happened to him that day, either, so I assumed everything was okay. At two, he went to his math class and I went to the classroom next door for my next astronomy class, and at three I went to the university memorial center to buy a snack and start my reading assignments.

That was when things got strange.

I went to the cafeteria and walked up to the vending machines. I had a bag of chips in hand, and I had just hit the button to get a soda when I looked up and saw Stark watching me from a table nearby.

He smiled sardonically.

I got my soda and tried to calm myself with a firm reminder that he couldn’t harm me because of the charm that I had buried.

If
Lyssa had done it right.

If she hadn’t, it was too late now. I took my things and walked up to his table, hoping my confidence would deter him if I didn’t have the protections I thought.

“Do you live here?” I asked.

His eyes wandered over me, and I waited for the air to suck from my lungs or the feel of claws digging into my side, but nothing happened.

“Out in public, and without Charlie, even,” he said lightly. “I saw your new dog earlier. How long do you think that’s going to last?”

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