by A. M. Hudson
“Ara-Rose! Now!”
“Coming,” I called to Vicki.
David grabbed my hand as I fell away from his arms. “Don’t go? Emily can call back later.”
“No—I’m up now. I won’t be long, okay?”
He groaned, then rolled over, snuggling into the pillow where my body had just been. “Be quick. It’s cold here without you.”
“I will.”
Since David closed my curtains when he came through my window earlier, I didn’t notice the grey day until I stepped into the fresh, cool air of the hallway. The windows all around the house were open, same as every weekend, and the soft lemon scent of Vicki’s bathroom cleaner mixed with the moist weight of freshly cut grass, drying the back of my throat as I drew a deep breath. I tucked my hands under my arms, wishing I’d put on a sweater to come down. “Morning, Dad.”
He smiled over his newspaper. “Morning, honey.”
“Any good news?” I hurried past him to the phone on the wall.
“You know what I always say,” he moaned, lowering his nose into the paper again.
“Yes, I do. No need to say it, Dad.” I took the phone from Vicki. “Hey, Em.”
“Hey, Ara. What are you two doing today?”
By ‘you two’, I assumed she was referring to David and I. “Lazing around. Why?”
“Everyone’s going bowling tonight. You guys wanna come?”
“Um—” Bowling versus bed with David. I leaned against the wall. “Maybe. What time?”
“About six.”
“Oh, okay, well, yeah. I’d say we will, but I’ll have to check with David.”
“Okay. When will you see him?”
“When I hang up the phone.” I grinned, watching Vicki. She had no clue what I was talking about, thank God.
“Oh my gosh, Ara. You rebel. Did he stay last night?”
“No, no. Nothing like that. Just...early,” I hinted, hoping she’d catch my drift—and couldn’t help smiling suggestively.
“Oh. Okay. So, like, sneak through the window sort of thing?”
“You got it.” I giggled; Vicki looked at me with a raised brow. “So, six then?”
“Yep.”
“Okay, see you then.”
“See ya.”
The phone clinked, and suddenly I was back in the kitchen with my parents.
“What did Emily want?” Vicki asked.
“They’re going bowling tonight.”
“Are you and David going?”
“Yeah, so far. I’ll have to check if he wants to—but I’d say we probably will.” I shrugged.
“What time is David coming over today?”
He’s already here. “Don’t know. But I’m going to get some more sleep before he does.”
“Sleep? It’s nine in the morning, Ara,” Vicki stated.
“So?” I shrugged. “I’m a teenager. Aren’t we supposed to hibernate?”
The only other sound Vicki made as I walked away was a loud sigh. What could she say, really? This is what she wanted; a normal teenage girl.
The soft strumming of guitar filled the hallway with an easygoing air as I stomped back up to my room. When I pushed my door open, expecting to see the outline of a vampire, my smile dropped as the bright yellow light of morning shone through my open curtains—onto my empty bed. My eyes darted quickly to the iPod, in its dock, with a song playing at a volume my dad would approve of. And as I watched the rain spatter on the glass of my window, blurring my vision of the outside world, I listened to the words, gathering that my vampire meant them as a musical sticky-note saying, My love, I shall return soon.
Not that that’s what the words were, but that’s how David would say it.
With the absence of an all-hearing vampire in my room, I took a moment to be human, then jumped into the welcoming, enveloping heat of the shower, washed my hair quickly and jumped out, wrapping the towel around my chest and tucking it under my arm.
As I stepped back into my room, a sudden breeze swept through my window and knocked all the papers off my desk. “Damn it, David,” I said to myself, squatting down to pick them up. I was sure that was closed a second ago.
“It was. I opened it.”
“Agh! David!” My heart splattered in my chest; I looked up from my precarious squat on the ground to the vampire perched on the windowsill like a pterodactyl. “You scared the living bejeezus out of me.”
“Sorry.”
“What were you doing out there?” I stood up, tapping the edges to force them into a neat stack. “You ruined my homework pile. Now I have to reorder these before I hand them in to Dad tomorrow.”
“I’ll do it for you.” He shrugged, obviously in no hurry to remove himself from the path of the whipping breeze.
“Why are you just sitting there?” I looked at him suspiciously. “Are you hiding something?”
He shook his head, one of his eyes narrowing slightly into his smile as he looked over my wet, towel-covered body. “I’m just admiring the view.”
“You better mean the stunning panoramic view of the hills and my backyard, David Knight.” I dumped my disordered papers on my desk and took a step back.
“Nope. I meant my beautiful, almost-naked girlfriend.” He jumped down from the ledge, slowly pushing the window closed behind him. “So—bowling?”
“That’s the plan,” I said, inhaling the fresh cologne wafting off this suave boy as he stepped in front of me, hair all wet and brushed back, for once, showing his forehead. He looked more like a man today in that black hoodie and grey V-neck shirt than he ever had before. It almost made me sad that he’d never grow older than nineteen. “So, do you actually want to go bowling?”
“As long as I’m with you, I will do anything.” He smiled down at me, his eyes becoming small with warmth. “But you shouldn’t stand in front of me like this, my love. You make me think inappropriate things.”
“Oh. Sorry. So—” I took a wide step back, “—are you any good at bowling?”
“You forget—” he used a louder voice to call out as I disappeared into my wardrobe, “—I lived through the fifties. Bowling was huge then.”
“Doesn’t mean you’re any good at it,” I stated, slipping my emerald-green sweater over my head.
“True. It’s more like I have to try to be bad. I’m a little too precise. I’ve also been known to break a pin or two.”
I turned around, buttoning my jeans, and met cheek-to-chest with the rain-dotted fabric of David’s jacket. “Hey! How did you even know I was finished getting dressed in here? I could’ve been naked.”
He tapped his temple, grinning.
Hmpf! “Is there any point in me even dressing in a different room—with you and your mind-reading invading my privacy?”
“Etiquette?” He shrugged. Then, as his eyes traced over the low, rounded neckline of my sweater, his finger copied. “I like this.”
I closed my eyes. “I like you touching me like that.”
“So—” His finger came away, a sudden tone of urgency making my eyes open. “Are you up for a little outing today?”
“I can’t. I have a few notes and references to finish on my paper.”
“Which paper?” He followed me out of the wardrobe.
“The mythology one—on vampires,” I teased.
“The subject I told you not to do?”
“Yup.”
David smiled, nodding toward my suddenly very neatly reordered pile of papers. “Or do you mean the report I just finished for you? The one on angels.”
“Angels?” I ran over to my desk and flicked through the pages. “No! I spent hours working on that, David!”
“I know. And it was a great report. But I told you not to do vampires—you didn’t listen.”
“But, why?” I spun around and leaned on the desk. “What does it matter?”
“Because you know things you shouldn’t, and if you happen to publish any minor detail of fact, and my Set were to somehow find out, I could be
punished, and you—” His words trailed off.
“I…what?”
“You could be killed. It’s not worth the risk.”
“Killed?”
“Shh.” He rested a finger to his lip. “Your dad doesn’t know I’m here, remember? Look, I didn’t want to tell you that because I didn’t want you to worry. I just hoped you’d listen to me—for once.”
“That was naive.” I smiled.
David smiled too. “I know that now.”
“So, that’s what you were doing—when I came out of the bathroom?”
“Yes.” He laughed, wiping a hand across his jaw. “You actually snuck up on me—for once. The evidence was still in my hands. I had to leave it on the windowsill and hope it didn’t blow away while you were standing there.”
“You could’ve just told me the truth.” I stepped into him, tucking my arms along his ribs. “That would’ve made me change my mind.”
“I’ll remember that for the future.” He kissed the crown of my head.
“So—what punishment?”
“Huh?”
“You said they’d punish you if I published any facts. What would they do?”
“Oh, I don’t know, maybe a seven-day-burial, a month being tortured by the First Order, or a personal favourite of my Set...a complete draining,” he said casually.
“Draining?”
“Mm.” He nodded, his mouth small. “They drain every ounce of blood from your arteries and leave you parched and partially insane in a dark room for a few weeks.”
“How do they drain you? You heal like superglue—how do they get the blood out fast enough?”
“They place a metal vise, right here—” he pinched his fingers, then spread them outward a few inches above his wrist, “—it holds the arteries open—prevents closing and healing of the wound.”
“That’s horrible.”
“That’s why I didn’t want to tell you. I knew you’d ask these questions and not let up until you had all the gory facts, well—” he stopped with a non-committal shrug, “—either that or not speak to me for three days.”
“Okay, well, with that in mind, a paper on angels will be great.” I pointed into his face. “And I better get an A.”
David laughed. “Don’t worry, you will. So—” he scratched his nose, “—an outing then?”
“Where to?”
He walked away and opened my bedroom door, then turned back with a grin. “I thought I might teach you a little about history.”
“You know, I live with a History professor.” Our hands linked back together. “There’s not much you can teach me.”
“Oh, I don’t know about that,” he mused. “Come on, meet me at the front door in twenty seconds.”
“Twenty?”
He kissed my cheek and, with less than a sweeping breeze, disappeared out the window—closing it behind him.
“Ara?” Sam called. “Prince Charming just pulled up.”
“I told you not to call him that, Sam.”
“You’re not the boss of me.”
“Argh. You’re such a pain!”
“Better than being a troll.” The front door opened. “Hi, David.”
“Sam,” David said.
Do me a favour, I thought, for David’s purpose, tie his shoelaces together when he’s not looking?
“I see you two still haven’t managed to find common ground.” David walked in and looked up expectantly at me.
“Hard to find a way to relate to a serpent,” Sam said, keeping his nose in his book. “Maybe I’ll just have to dumb myself down a little so we can hold a decent conversation one day.”
“See what I have to put up with?” I said to David, grabbing my coat as I shut my door.
“Good morning, Ara.”
“Morning.” I stomped down the stairs.
“Sleep well?” he asked, pecking me on the cheek.
“Better than ever before.” I grinned suggestively.
Sam groaned, rolling his eyes. “Get a room.”
“Grow up, Sam,” I said, slamming the front door behind David and I, but an almighty crash from inside stopped me in my tracks.
“Hey!” Sam’s high-pitched screech echoed across the street. “Who tied my laces together?”
I looked up at David.
He shrugged and smiled.
The car door opened, and a cool breeze eased the dread compressing my lungs. Across the road, wiry branches guarded iron gates, warding visitors away from the dwelling of the dead or, perhaps, imprisoning them. And the worst part was, something told me that was our destination.
“David?” I grabbed his sleeve, folding myself against his arm. “What are we doing here?”
“Come on—it’s okay. I wanna show you something.” He took my hand and led me through a gap in the creaking gates, lifting the heavy chain so I could duck under. The air smelled murky with rotting leaves under the diluted scent of dead roses, their brown petals blown away in the wind, littering the cobblestone path like confetti.
“I don’t like it here.”
“You will. I’m taking you to an older part of the cemetery—there are trees there and it’s not so—” he looked around the yard; I looked too, at the way the low cloud in the sky made everything look dark grey and… “Eerie,” he said finally.
“Yeah, eerie is exactly what I was thinking.”
He laughed softly and held me close as we strolled past rows and rows of headstones.
In the distance, a murder of crows blackened the day, gathering at the feet of a caretaker tending a grave. They cawed loudly, their sinister fables setting me on edge.
“See that grave there?” David pointed to a cracked plaque, barely able to stand within the stone grasp of its template.
“Mm-hm. Marcus Worthington—died eighteen-forty?”
He nodded. “He’s a friend of mine. Goes by the name of Philippe now.”
“So...he’s not actually buried there?”
“Nope. In fact, many of the graves in any ancient cemetery are actually empty. The bodies either still living, or removed for scientific research hundreds of years ago.”
“Freaky.”
“Mm. I suppose it is.”
“Well, I’m glad you’re not in one of these graves.” I snuggled against his shoulder.
“That’s just the thing—” He pointed to a towering oak tree at the top of a small hill, sheltering five small headstones from the threatening storm. “See that group of graves up there?”
“Yeah.”
“That’s my family’s plot.”
I stopped walking. David grinned and walked ahead.
Oh boy, when he said history, I had no idea he meant this kind of history. I caught up to him, huffing and puffing a little, and stood by his side, watching his nostalgic smile fall on the first headstone.
“See this?” He pointed down.
“Here lies Thomas Arthur Knight. Beloved father and husband. Died nineteen-oh-four,” I read aloud. “Who was he?”
“My father.”
My head whipped back up to look at David. He stuffed his hands in his pockets, wearing a cheeky grin.
“You were nine when he died?”
“Turning ten.”
“Well, who was this?” I stepped around the base of the grave, so as not to walk on the dead, and dusted some dried orange leaves off the next stone. “Mary Elizabeth Knight?”
“My mother,” his tone softened on the word.
I looked back at the grave with wide eyes, kneeling down to dust a few more leaves from the base, then traced my fingers over the stone carving of letters. “Died in childbirth, eighteen-ninety-four.”
The inscription on her headstone made me sad. She never made it to motherhood; they couldn’t even give her the dignity of citing that she’d been a beloved wife and mother? Only died in childbirth. It seemed so cold.
“It wasn’t cold, sweetheart. Not intentionally.”
“Even still,” I said, dusting off my jeans a
s I stood back up, “it sounds cold.”
“I know.” He nodded, considering the grave. “My father was destroyed when she died. He was expected to put up a strong front, but his grief was so deep that he became a recluse—couldn’t even make arrangements for her burial. In the end, Father John had to step in and take charge.”
“That’s so sad.”
“Yeah. The worst part is—” he pointed to the word Mary, “—no one ever called my mother by her real name. She was known as Elizabeth. That name should have marked her final resting place, but the priest didn’t know.”
“Why didn’t you change it?”
“Uncle Arthur wanted to. He and my mother were...close, but my father forbade him. Even when Father passed, Arthur would not go against the right of a husband.”
“How noble of him.”
“Well—” David took my hand and led me away, “—he’s been around a while. He’s old-fashioned.” When we stopped in front of the next two headstones, David smiled, rocking back on his heels. “These two are the best.”
“Jason Gabriel Knight. Nineteen-sixteen,” I read, but it was the second one that grabbed my attention straight away; my heart jumped into my chest when I saw his name written there, even though I was standing right beside him;
David Thomas Knight—beloved son and hero.
1894-1918.
“Why did you die?”
“There was an explosion. A bomb.” His tight smile caged laughter. “There was no way anyone could’ve survived it. Pertinent to our laws, I had no choice but to move on and become somebody else.”
“Were you the only one killed?”
“Thankfully, yes. But, I had established quite a good life for myself; had plenty of money in the bank, a house, friends—but no will. So, with my brother and only kin supposedly dead, my estate became ward of the government, and I had to start all over again.” He laughed; I covered my mouth. “Talk about learning from your mistakes.”
“Well, what good would mistakes be if you didn’t get to learn from them?” I shrugged, then looked down at the next headstone in the plot. The name didn’t match the others though; hers was Deveraux.
“She was my mother—” David answered my thought, “—my aunt by blood, but mother by choice.” He stepped away and drew the dried brown vine hugging the stone top away, revealing a name and an inscription on the bronze plate: