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MoonFall: A Paranormal Werewolf and Urban Fantasy of Suspense (Supernatural Siblings Series Book 2)

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by Drew VanDyke




  MoonFall

  A New Adult Werewolf and Paranormal Romance

  Supernatural Siblings Series

  Book 2

  by

  Drew VanDyke

  and

  David VanDyke

  © 2015 Drew & David VanDyke. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form, or by any means whatsoever (electronic, mechanical or otherwise) without prior written permission and consent from the author. This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, businesses and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  BOOKS BY DREW AND DAVID VANDYKE

  Supernatural Siblings Series

  SwitchBack - Book 1

  MoonFall - Book 2

  BloodMoon - Book 3

  For more information visit:

  www.davidvandykeauthor.com

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

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  Chapter 1

  “One man’s miracle is another woman’s wishcraft.” – St. Drucifer of Holy Hill

  Dear Diary:

  Well, it’s three weeks until Fourth of July and the gang’s all here. The usual suspects.

  There’s Dad, who believes that anything miraculous or supernatural went out with the closing of the Canon at Vatican II, along with his wife Rhonda, trying hard not to be an evil stepmother and sometimes succeeding.

  My own dead mother, of course, who haunts me, never failing to give me her take on my behavior, my spiritual development and the formation of my character even from beyond the grave.

  My older brother Adam, who I am convinced is part of some secret government conspiracy committed to saving us all from ourselves.

  And then there’s my identical twin sister, Amber, who mirrors both what I love and what I hate about myself in our every interaction. Oh, and she’s psychic, though she seldom admits it.

  Then there’s me, Ashlee Marie Scott, part-time wolf-girl, freelance travel writer and full-time misfit, looking for a place to belong.

  Throw in the extended family, significant others, spouses and exes, and of course, my nephew, who may or may not be a mutant and needless to say, yes, there will be drama.

  Sigh. Cue the fireworks.

  ***

  “This is absolutely crazy-making!” My twin sister Amber’s voice echoed off the pristine ivory walls of the guest bedroom where I’d temporarily holed up while we prepared for the remodel of the pool house, but I think my welcome was wearing as thin as the fabric in my socks. “You realize that you are certifiably insane, don’t you, Ashlee?” Her voice ratcheted up a notch at the end and sent the skeeby-jeebies down my spine.

  It’s not every day you tell your identical twin sister that you see dead people. But Mommy Dearest doesn’t take “no” for an answer any better than Joan Crawford tolerated wire hangers. And if you think our Mother was a force to be reckoned with in life, you have no idea the kind of power she’s wielded since she’s been dead.

  “I know it sounds nuts, but hear me out!” I yelled right back, following her out into the foyer.

  Foyer. Sheesh. I thought they only had foyers in churches, but Amber’s entryway sure qualified, with gleaming marble tiles and a pin-light chandelier.

  “You know you’re handling this all wrong.” Annabelle Scott, aka Ghost Mom, breezed into the room on a ray of light and with the musical scent of Jean Nate – at least her top half did. Her lower body got stuck outside the front door. She still seemed to be struggling, getting the hang of the translocation or bilocation or whatever you call it since she’d taken up residence with us in the sprawling single-story ranch-home Amber and Elle had recently purchased in the gated community of Knightsbridge Commons.

  Stupid name, if you ask me. There was nothing common about any of the seven-figure homes that fronted the sloping wilds of Knightsbridge Canyon, not to mention the increase in property value I brought to the table when I turned the dilapidated old pool house into my own private writer’s retreat. I mean, hell, I loved my sister, but each of us really needed to have our own habitable space since she married Elle, and since Will and I were now officially dating and since I still did that wolfy thing every full moon.

  “Really? You think?” My sister glared at me.

  “I could so say the same thing,” I deadpanned, returning the thread of conversation to my mom as I went to the front door and let in her wandering lower half while Spanky pawed at the air beneath her torso.

  “Do not even try to pull that one on me.” Amber pursed her lips, tossed her hair over her shoulder and stuck her hand on her hip.

  “Now, Amber. You know that Spanky has been acting odd lately,” Elle said on her way to the garage for a beer during halftime.

  My twin looked past me in confusion when her miniature Schnauzer stood on his hind feet and pawed and licked at the air as my dead Mother ruffled his muff and made kissy noises in his ear.

  “Yes, but to tell me it’s because our deceased mother is haunting us is just a bit more than I can stomach. Oh, and that not only you can see her and apparently speak with her, but that the dog can too. That’s just adding insult to injury.” Amber crossed her arms, pressed her glossy lips together and began to tap her toe.

  “So, you can accept that I’m a werewolf, but you can’t accept the fact that Mother’s an apparition?”

  “The word is ghost, Ashlee. G-H-O-S-T. Why do you always have to be so pretentious?”

  “I’m pretentious? Who has to wear brands on her clothes in order to keep up with the Joneses and suck up to traditional society! I’m a writer, in case you forgot. Are my words too big and scary for you?”

  Holy Crap. I must have done it this time. You know, they say honesty is the best policy. But sometimes saying nothing is better than saying anything at all. My mother must have thought so too, because the next thing I knew she’d vanished like Hurricane Endora in a displacement pressure zone and all of the doors in the house suddenly slammed open with the inrushing wind. Spanky and I cowered on the floor, hands and paws over our ears.

  “Honey, we really need to have the airflow in this home analyzed.” Elle sauntered by on her way back to the living room, detouring to shut the front door. “My ears just popped. And why are Ashlee and Spanky on the floor? Oh, and, cute shoes,” she said as she picked up my mother’s flats, which had miraculously stayed behind and taken on physical form when she disappeared. And please, don’t ask me. Ghost Mom defies all logic.

  Elle continued, “And they don’t belong in the middle of the room, anyway. You taught me that.” Then she sauntered away to wherever she goes after she drops her one-liners.

 
I looked up into Amber’s face and she gave me a look that about broke my heart.

  “Ouch.”

  Ouch is our safe word. If you don’t know what a safe word is, Google it. In this case, it means that in the sparring of our everyday lives, one of us has crossed the line. It’s like the difference between guilt and shame.

  Simple metaphor? Ouch is like the bell and the referee returning us to our own corners to lick our wounds. A little too much truth in a raw and angry moment can often feel like betrayal. Amber would probably explain it better, but suffice it to say this was like ramming a katana blade through her abdomen.

  Yeah, I know, right.

  Ouch.

  “Amber. I’m sorry.” I looked up at her as she stood there with tears brimming in her eyes. “I didn’t really mean it.”

  “Yes, you did.” She turned her ire against me. “You judge me, Ashlee. And I don’t need it. Elle and I get enough of it from the closed-minded community around here. And we do our best not to complain about it. I really don’t need it from my family too.”

  “You’re judging me too. It’s not like I asked to have Mom flitting around like the blobby green thing in Ghostbusters. It’s her choice who to manifest to, I guess. Either that, or it’s an unexplainable supernatural thing, A fact of life. Or afterlife. Anyway, not my fault!”

  “It never is, Ash, but you keep running away anyway, gallivanting around on your spa junkets.”

  I pointed a finger. “Now that’s just envy.”

  Amber put her hands on her hips. “Okay, so what if it is? Do you ever invite me along?”

  I stared at her. “I never thought about it.”

  “Exactly!”

  “But you have Elle, and JR, and…”

  “And I’d like to get away now and then, don’t you think?”

  “It’s my job,” I mumbled, but she’d made her point. “Okay, tell you what. You have a standing invitation to join me at any resort I’m reviewing – but it’s on your own dime, unless I can get it comped. It’s not like the magazines are going to cough up.”

  “Fine.” It didn’t sound fine, but it was progress.

  “Okay.”

  “Good.” Amber glared.

  “Well, you started it,” I mumbled, as if that was a good reason for overreacting.

  Elle walked past again shaking her head and I felt even worse.

  I looked to Spanky for comfort, but he scurried away.

  Wow. Why do I even try?

  You know you’d better take stock when even the dog cringes from your presence and your ghost of a mom refuses to haunt you. But Amber was right. I was out of line. Here I was spinning the story of her life into my interpretation of reality and that never gets you anything except a bunch of hurt feelings.

  I swear, I get so mad at myself for some of the stupid things I do I just want to disappear for a while, make myself invisible, you know.

  So, I did the next best thing. I left the house.

  It never works trying to salve your conscience with externals.

  There’s liquor. But personally, I think the hangover is too high a price for the buzz.

  There’s weed, which is medically legal in California, but problematic for a lot of people and just makes me paranoid.

  There’s food, but that takes its toll on your body regardless of whether you keep it down or barf it up.

  There’s spiritual bypass, but that’s only as good as your theology.

  And in the midst of all of this, sometimes the stickiest dependency to manage is a relationship.

  Believe me, I know. I’d ended up with Will now and again in our own private Codependents Anonymous sessions. Which is why when I tried to get him to take my side, he wasn’t having it.

  “I’m sorry Ash. You crossed the line. I love you, but I can’t tell you any different. I’d be lying to you if I did.”

  I sulked away from him in on the loveseat, but he wouldn’t let me do that either and stuck his handsome face against mine.

  “Nose to nose like Eskimos.” He grinned.

  I pushed him away. “You look like you’re in a fishbowl when you get that close to me. Like Ellen DeGeneres in Finding Nemo,” I said, blowing out my cheeks and bulging out my eyes. “It’s very unattractive.”

  He laughed and nipped me on the nose, and then left me on my own to sulk.

  “I think I’m coming down with something.” I muttered. The sound of smooth jazz echoed from the kitchen where Will was helping his mother can apples in old-fashioned jars. She hadn’t been feeling well and Will was spending more time at home to keep an eye on her. And speaking of mothers…

  “It’s called a conscience, darling,” my mom said as she settled her diaphanous frame on the throw pillows next to me. I guess her ditching me was short-lived, no pun intended. “They’ve really done marvels with this place, haven’t they?” She waved her hand at the living room and I watched an eighties motif superimpose itself like a mirage on the remodeled house I’d grown up in. “This is what it looked like when your father and I bought it in 1980.”

  Oriental rugs over polished wood and glittering chandeliers vanished, replaced by shag carpeting. Mobile lighting and the tasteful oil paintings on the wall in my time gave way to mirrored triptychs of the Golden Gate.

  “Your Dad and I had lots of dreams for this place, but where I mastered in creativity, clearly I failed in execution.” The double image winked out and the twenty-first century re-imposed itself. I blinked the previous scene out of my retinas and continued, ignoring my mother’s digression.

  “But why can’t I just keep my big mouth shut?”

  “Impulse control? Seriously, though, it’s because you care, honey. You see something off about a picture and you comment on it. It’s the writer in you.”

  “Yes, and it ultimately bites me in the ass.”

  “Only because you don’t give yourself time to process your reality. If something affects you emotionally, you feel it. But if you don’t take time to interpret what you’re feeling and look at the situation from more than just your personal perspective, your vision gets a bit myopic. Your problem is not necessarily how you see things, or how you interpret the world, it’s how and when you articulate that to others. Sometimes, pumpkin, observations are best kept to yourself. I mean, you know what they say about opinions.”

  “I know, I know.” I sighed. “Opinions are like assholes. Everybody has one, and most of them stink.”

  “If your motivation isn’t love, it’s just an opinion.”

  “So, I’m the problem.”

  Mom shrugged and squeezed me, once again delivering one of her favorite sayings. “We all are, dear. Our judgment gets in the way of our joy.” And with that, she evaporated from the room, leaving me alone to wrestle like Jacob with the worse angels of my nature.

  I caught up with Amber at church the next morning. Amber still went to the same one we grew up in. It was a modern edifice whose cold stone walls were offset with rich velvet over the windows and a stained glass Jesus behind the front altar rising into the sky above the tagline, “In Remembrance of Me.” The place had gone non-denominational since I’d been there last, but it still felt very evangelical and conservative. Though my style would fit in with the kids in the place, I still felt underdressed for an adult, especially on high holidays.

  Some of the men were worse than the women in using their industrial strength cologne and I wondered if they realized how distasteful it truly was to drown in cheap perfume. The cloying chemical scents stuck to the back of my tongue and threatened a sneeze on every breath. Stupid advertising. First you tell us that we stink, then you sell us smelly stuff to try to make us more alluring. It’s such a racket. Personally if you don’t like the pheromones, no amount of Christian Dior’s Poison is gonna work anyway. You’re better off going to the herbalist downtown for some essential oils, IMHO.

  That’s why I tended to sit in the back row when I actually did go in to services, just in case I inhaled too much fragr
ance and needed to make a quick getaway for a coughing fit or a clove cigarette, not to mention a bout of conscience. And before you get on me about my smoking, let me tell you that it helps to mitigate most of the distasteful odors I am bombarded with every day. Rather than wear a mask over my muzzle I’ll take a nostril full of cloves, thank you very much. Besides, a wise man once said, don’t ever ask me to give up something unless you have something that satisfies to replace it.

  Anyway…

  When I found her, Amber had just dropped off her son John Robert at his Sunday school class and though she looked like a million bucks as usual, I could see the weariness in her eyes.

  “Hey Am…” I began.

  “I’m not speaking to you right now.” She said it nonchalantly, but we weren’t at bygones yet, so I plowed forward.

  “I want to apologize.”

  “I’m listening.”

  “For what I said last night.”

  “Which part? That we’re plastic people or that Mom doesn’t love me enough to appear to me in person, but she haunts you like the plague?”

  “But that’s not what I meant at all.”

  “Then say what you mean and mean what you say.” She looked at me expectantly. Expecting to get hurt, that is. Daring me, because then it would be my fault again and she would win, the classic passive-aggressive trap.

  Damn, it’s hard to be a grownup, but I was gonna try.

  I took a deep breath and continued. Navigating emotions with my sister was like walking in stilettoes over a minefield. Which of course, I wouldn’t do, silly. It’s just hyperbole.

  “All I know is that for some reason Mom wanted me to tell you that she’s still here, she’s still around, and she cares about us.”

  “But I can’t see her.”

  “Well, no. Not yet. But that could change. It’s not like I’m making it that way.”

  “Oh, good, it could change. Because there is no way I am ever going to have a conversation with her while you’re playing translator.”

 

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