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covencraft 02.5 - carnival moon

Page 3

by Margarita Gakis


  “I can feel traces of her magic lingering on it,” Paris said softly, his fingers still running over the bridge of the nose and then the brow-bone of the mask. “Thank you. I would be honored to wear this mask.”

  Lucia then turned to Jade, holding out another mask. This one seemed to be made from fine wire, in a filigree style, although it very much had the look of a wolf about it. It was as though someone had taken fine, tensile silver and black and draped it over the face and snout of a wolf, capturing the shape, but all the while keeping it airy and light. It was neatly divided in two, color wise - half silver, half black down the center. There was a small black nose at the tip of the snout, done up in a denser collection of wire. Little ears perched up at the top of the mask - pointed and fine. Once Jade had it on, the ‘ears’ would sit just about her eyebrows. There was a splash of color at the inset of each eye - green. Jade swallowed, nervous as she reached out for the mask. She turned and gave one more questioning look at Paris who nodded for her to go ahead. Jade took the mask from Lucia, finding it a little heavier than she thought it would be.

  “If it is acceptable to Paris, as your Alpha, I would like to ask you to run with us tonight, Jade.”

  Jade looked at Paris, eyebrows coming into a ‘v’ - she didn’t know what the term ‘run’ meant.

  “I appreciate your offer, however, I make no decisions for Jade,” Paris replied, his voice respectful and low. Lucia smiled as though she expected this answer. Jade got the feeling her asking Paris was more symbolic than necessary. Lucia turned to Jade.

  “Will you run with us tonight?”

  “Uh, what does that mean?” Jade asked, running her fingers over the filigree of the mask.

  “Tonight, in honor of the Wolf Moon, we run into the forest as a pack - all of our pack members, human and shifters, wearing our wolf masks. We honor the moon goddess and all she has given us, although we stay in our human form tonight, so that we may celebrate as equals - all in our pack feeling the call of the wolf, though some cannot shift. It’s why we had you wear such utilitarian clothing - better for traipsing around in the forest.”

  “So, you just… want me to hang out in the forest with you guys?” Jade asked. She had the feeling she probably should have asked in a better, more ‘political’ way, but she really wanted to ensure she understood. Jade didn’t want to say, ‘yes’ and then find out she’d agreed to dancing naked in the moonlight.

  “Yes. We’ll run for a bit in the forest, each member going as far as they choose, and then we’ll return back to the estate for a meal, to celebrate under the full moon. Paris will wait here with our seer and a few members who are staying behind to watch the younger children.”

  Jade turned to Paris with a grin on her face. “Does he have to sit at the kids table when we eat, too?” she asked, smirking.

  Lucia laughed, a full deep sound that lit up her whole body. “I think you’ll fit in well with us, Jade,” she answered. “Will you run with us?”

  Jade couldn’t help but dart her eyes over to Paris once more, who stood still with an open, easy expression on his face. She got the impression he would be okay with her saying yes or no. She took a deep breath and answered.

  “Yes.”

  ***

  The sharp night air bit at Jade’s cheeks and neck, making her wish she’d brought a scarf. Lucia had taken one look at Jade’s work shoes and offered for Jade to browse through the pack’s mud room for a pair of hiking boots. Lucia assured Jade no one would mind her borrowing a pair, certainly not after the Alpha had offered.

  Jade stood outside now, at the tree line, the estate house several meters behind him. She’d left Paris in the kitchen with some other pack members, watching over the kids. They had all the makings of paper-mache masks - forms, glitter, glue, paper - and Jade had to bite her lip to keep from teasing Paris. He, like the other pack members, wore a mask in the kitchen, but it seemed strange and out of place in the domestic environment.

  Now, outside, Jade was very much glad for hers. Lucia had tied it securely around Jade’s head, the satin ribbon wide enough not to cut into her scalp, but not so broad that it felt like a blindfold. Jade was hyperaware of her mask at the edges of her vision - sparks of moonlight dancing off the wire and reflecting back at her. She looked at the other members of the pack, she guessed perhaps forty in all, standing in their own masks, waiting for Lucia to start the run. “I’ll let them know when to begin,” Lucia had said and Jade got the impression it would be a very clear signal, although she still had no idea what it would be. Lucia had also indicated she would fall back, from the rest of her pack, and take Jade’s first run with her.

  The way she said it made Jade think she’d be coming on more runs in the future.

  Lucia’s mask was magnificent. It was feral and sleek - dark chocolate brown with a long nose that came out from the faceplate and had delicate, long whiskers that glistened in the silver light. The headpiece crept up and over the top of Lucia’s head, making the ears of the mask settle properly on Lucia as they would on a real wolf - at the top of the skull. They eyes were outlined in a dark, jet colored satin and it fit so closely, so perfectly over Lucia’s frontal bones that it was hard to tell where the mask ended and Lucia’s eyes began.

  Jade shuffled her feet, stamped her borrowed boots and shook her arms, trying to stay warm. The moon was sharp and bright in the sky - the kind of bright that made her eyes hurt to look at it for too long and left a burning after-image against her retinas after she looked away. It was still relatively early in the night, not yet eight o’clock, and Jade could see some of the younger members of the pack, those too old to stay behind with the kidlets, but still too young to be responsible for themselves, start to vibrate with energy.

  Her magic was pulsing beneath her skin, feeling like it wanted out and Jade took a deep breath trying to calm it.

  “No,” Lucia said with a smile, “let it run out a bit. Coven magic used to bother us; it felt wrong and strange, but your magic…” she sighed. “Your magic is like a cold glass of water on a hot day.”

  Jade let her power out a bit, feeling it tingle in her fingertips and itch through across her scalp. Some of the younger wolves started bouncing up and down and then, without warning, Lucia dropped her head back and howled, startling Jade. The pack all tipped their own heads back and howled in return, their voices almost brought tears to Jade’s eyes, though she didn’t know why. She felt a nudge at her hip and looked back at Lucia.

  “Come on, give it a whirl,” she said, winking. She turned to the moon and howled again and this time, when the pack answered back, Jade tried it, feeling her voice warble and wobble, not at all like the clear, clarion call of the wolves. She laughed at herself, feeling Lucia chuckle beside her.

  “Not bad. For a witch,” Lucia said. She let out a loud ‘yip’ sound this time and the pack surged forward as a unit, except for Jade and Lucia. Jade watched as the pack scrambled for the trees, some howling, some yipping, some shoving each other playfully, all of their masks in the shape of wolves - pointed snouts and sharp ears. It was strange to know that these creatures, these werewolves chose to wear the mask tonight and to run as humans. She wondered how the tradition started, if they had any other werewolf carnivals throughout the year other than tonight and the other one Lucia mentioned, the Sanguine Moon.

  The moonlight hit the masks at odd angles, making some of the faces strange and foreign - a snout too long, ears too broad. Jade felt surrounded, not by mortal creatures, but instead by shapes and shadows, shifting in the night. She felt safer wearing her own mask, as though the deepest parts of herself were hidden better with the thin, finely turned wire covering her face.

  Lucia walked at a brisk pace, Jade easily keeping step beside her. The moonlight was bright enough that she could see, but she wasn’t as sure-footed as Lucia was beside her, the other woman easily picking her way through the woods.

  “I hear you work in Counter-Magic at the Coven,” Lucia said, ambling through th
e woods, her footfalls light and easy. Jade could hear other pack members yipping and traipsing about, snapping branches and hollering after each other.

  “Yeah, I’m still learning a lot.”

  “Have you ever thought about working more with magical creatures?”

  Jade paused. “No, I mean, not yet. I’m still pretty wrapped up in what I’m learning.”

  “Would you ever consider working for our pack?”

  Jade stopped dead in her tracks, staring at Lucia’s back. Lucia paused as she realized Jade was no longer beside her.

  “Is that what all this is? Are you offering me a job?” Her voice sounded huffy and tight, even to her own ears.

  “I hope you aren’t offended. We’ve lived so long with Coven magic on our borders, trying not to be bothered by it and then suddenly, it feels better, it feels right. It matches us more. When I found out it was because it had been set to your personal magic, I had to meet you and… just find out more about you.”

  “Are now you’re trying to steal me from the Coven?”

  “Not at all. I admit, I have nothing specific in mind for you, only that I think you’d fit in well with my wolves.”

  “Well, I’m happy at the Coven,” Jade said stiffly. Okay, so she was only just now starting to fit in better and find her niche or whatever, but that didn’t mean she wanted to chuck it all and join up with the wolves.

  “I meant no offense,” Lucia repeated, stepping closer, into Jade’s space. Jade backed up a step automatically and then forced herself to stand still. Lucia reached out a hand and placed it carefully on Jade’s shoulder, giving it a squeeze. Jade thought of it as a weird gesture until she recalled how tactile all the wolves had seemed with each other. She supposed she simply wasn’t used to it. It wasn’t creepy - it just wasn’t something Jade was used to.

  “Let’s run for a bit,” Lucia said, turning off into the woods at a graceful kind of lope-skip. Jade followed after her feeling her nerves drain away with the exercise. It was hard work keeping up with Lucia, even though she didn’t go very fast. She moved through the trees gracefully, dodging around them artfully, making Jade feel clumsy and awkward by comparison. A few youngsters joined them, coming up alongside Lucia. She playfully batted at them and bared her teeth. Jade thought she might have heard her growl a bit. The younger kids shrieked and hollered and then came up next to Jade. Feeling playful, she zapped them with a mild spell - sending ticklish pins and needles down their arms and fingers. They hooted and yelled, giggling and laughing, yipping back at Jade and her earlier discomfort was forgotten. Jade was caught up in the feeling of romping in the forest, under the light of the full moon. She couldn’t remember the last time she’d been so happy.

  Steve darted up next to her, startling her a bit and he smacked her on the shoulder, like you would a kid playing tag or keep-away. Feeling more daring using her magic on adults, Jade let loose with a fire spell - bright orange and yellow flames billowing up in front of her, offering sharp and blinding light but no heat. Steve laughed, darting back out of the way and Jade heard a sharp intake of breath from the youngsters and one of them whispered, “Whoa!”

  She laughed. If Jade couldn't remember being so happy, she certainly couldn’t remember the last time she played.

  Steve grinned and zipped off into the forest again. Jade must have gotten turned around following Lucia and the youngsters because she thought she was further in and to the left of where they entered, but somehow, they’d done a half circle and she was coming out of the woods again. She followed Lucia and some other wolves, including Steve and Galen, ending up to the right of where she’d started.

  Note to self - she possessed zero navigational skills in the woods in the dark.

  Although Jade supposed she could have followed her nose. She could smell food cooking - barbecue, if she wasn’t mistaken. As the werewolves tromped into the house - shedding their boots but leaving their masks on - she could also smell bread and spices. It made her mouth water and she craned her neck, trying to see past the jostle of bodies in front of her to where the mysterious food must be.

  Jade finally made it around the corner of a long hallway and found herself in a banquet room of sorts with long tables set out, buffet style. The little kids were already waiting in front of the tables, eyes large at the site of meats, cheeses, bread, vegetables, and fruits. Jade sought Paris out until she spotted him, bending down and tying a little boy’s shoe, his fingers securing the bow of the knot tightly as the young boy jutted his foot out in that expectant, ‘You are big so you must be able to help me,’ way. He wore his mask - the plain white face with its satin finish. As the light hit it, now and then, she could make out the rune markings on it. She worked her way through the crowd - although the food was set out and waiting, no one was serving themselves yet and Jade wondered why as she came along side Paris who was just finishing up with the ankle-biter’s shoelaces.

  “Got you on rug-rat duty?” Jade asked, still riding the high of her run in the woods. Her mask made her nose itch a bit and she wiggled it trying to assuage it, not wanting to disturb the mask with her fingertips. It was in place still, and she liked the way it made her feel - sort of pretty and anonymous - even though everyone here knew who she was.

  “I assisted in the making of several masks tonight,” Paris said ruefully, wiping his hands together. They were covered in kiddie glue, and Jade made a face in sympathy.

  “Heavy hangs the head that wears the crown,” she said solemnly.

  “Indeed.”

  Jade looked over toward the table where no one was eating yet and she fidgeted a bit. She was kind of hungry. How long were they going to have to wait?

  “They’re waiting for Lucia to serve herself first. As the Alpha, it’s her place,” said Paris, as if sensing Jade’s question. Sure enough, just as he spoke, Lucia stepped forward, grabbed her own plate and piled it with food - some meats, some cheeses, a few vegetables. As she did, people filed forward, led by the little, eager kids who rushed the table. Jade winced. She’d hoped to beat them there. They’d probably be touching everything with their little hands. She guessed ‘paws’ wouldn’t be out of context here either. She and Paris were ushered toward the table by a few people, and Paris thanked them for their hospitality, tipping his head toward Jade to speak closer to her ear.

  “As guests of tonight’s carnival, we hold a special place - eating higher up in the pack ranking.”

  “But there’s going to be enough food, right?” Jade asked, suddenly nervous. What if there wasn’t enough for everyone? She looked at the buffet plates, piled high, and then at the crowd of people. It’s not like it was madly crowded, but there were a lot of good-sized people and they all did just spend however long running in the woods. Plus, everything smelled so good.

  “There will be more than enough. No one ever goes hungry at a werewolf party.”

  As if to cap off Paris’ sentiment, an excited howl went up sparking off about five or six more in chorus. Now at the front of the line, Jade was handed a plate by a shy young boy who looked up at her through his eyelashes and smiled. He turned away, blushing a bit when Jade smiled and thanked him. She loaded up her plate, trying to eye the dishes up ahead in order to make the best use of it.

  “What are you doing?” Paris asked, watching her crane her neck.

  “Buffets are all about real estate. Don’t wanna fill up too early and not leave room on your plate for something good at the end. Is that garlic toast do you think? Or like a sweet pastry bread?” she asked, pointing at something a table away.

  “Garlic toast,” the person behind her said, tapping her nose with a finger. “Heavy on the garlic.”

  “Nice,” Jade said in admiration, her mouth already watering at the thought.

  Once Jade’s plate finally full of delectables, Paris touched her arm once, drawing her attention to where Lucia and Galen sat. Lucia waved them over with a gracious sweep of her hand. There were a few circular tables set up, but the kids had
chosen to hunker down on the floor, making impromptu little clusters that Jade and Paris had to weave their way through.

  The food was simply spiced but flavorful and tasty. Jade wondered if they grew their own vegetables or raised their own meat because everything tasted so real - the carrots were juicy, the meat was tender, the potato salad wasn’t salty and yet still tasted so good. She pulled apart her bun and wanted to whimper at the flaky goodness. While Lucia ate, several wolves would pause by her chair and she would rest a hand on their arm, give them a hug, or touch them in some way. Once the pack member had gotten a touch from Lucia , they moved on to another table, seemingly satisfied. While Lucia touched her pack member, her focus wasn’t ever pulled from the conversation she was holding with Paris and Galen about the latest Supernatural Council meeting. Jade wondered if her ability to split her focus was just the nature of being the Alpha or if it was something to do with Lucia personally. A few small children popped up next to Lucia, and she stroked their hair or kissed them on the cheek before tapping their butts and sending them along on their way, all without breaking stride in the conversation.

  The pack definitely seemed more like a family than the Coven did. Maybe that was because it was smaller, numbering about forty-five people to the Coven’s two hundred. Watching the pack interact Jade felt, however, it had more to do with their nature than their numbers. She didn’t know any group of witches, even as a subset of the coven, who were as tactile or as familiar as the pack seemed to be. They touched one another in passing, there was food sharing off plates, friendly slaps to the shoulders, kids running around with parents chasing after them. The werewolf carnival was a far cry from the Coven ball Jade attended a short while ago. The wolves were more relaxed and fun, without any formal speeches or ceremony.

 

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