by Бри Деспейн
I almost laughed in spite of my nerves. What were the odds that two werewolves had the hots for me? Like I was some gigantic monster magnet. Was there a sign on my back that said, bite me, i'm available !? I gave myself another shake and told Pete I'd be back in a minute.
His eyes didn't flash when he looked at me. He didn't seem crazed by any wolf. Anything that burned inside of him was purely testosterone-based.
The hall toward the restrooms was dimly lit, and I could hear angry voices at the end of it. Actually, one of the voices sounded irritated and very distinctly like my brother's, but the other was softer, cowering, and definitely female. I quickened my pace to see what was going on and found Jude with Lynn Bishop backed into a corner. He was practically shouting, waving his finger in front of her face.
"If you have a problem with Grace," he said, "then you come to me first before you start spreading your venom around school."
Lynn nodded, speechless for once.
My hands went into fists. "If she has a problem with me, then she should come to me first."
Jude turned. His stance softened. "It's okay, Grace. I'm taking care of this. Go back to your date."
I put my hands on my hips. "What gives you the right to 'take care' of things for me? I can 'take care' of myself."
"Well, you're doing a terrible job of it yourself."
"What is that supposed to mean?" I asked. I watched Lynn slink away, no doubt wanting to text our conversation to everyone she knew from a safe distance. "You know what? Never mind." I swung my purse over my shoulder and turned to walk away.
"You don't want to know what she said about you?" Jude called after me. "You don't want to know what the entire school is talking about behind your back?"
I turned. "No, I don't. At least not from you--not right now--because I'm pretty sure this has something to do with Daniel. And no matter what I say, you won't believe it because you made up your mind about him a long time ago, didn't you?" I pursed my lips. "You keep pretending everything will be fine if I stay away from him, but it won't be until you deal with all this hate yourself."
"You're siding with him? Maybe the rumors are true."
"And so what if they are? I love Daniel. I tried not to for your sake. But I can't stop loving someone just because you can't forgive him." I lowered my voice. My lips trembled. "You think you're the good one, but Dad says the good son is the one who's in the greatest danger."
Jude stumbled like I'd punched him in the gut. My nerve failed, and I ran into the ladies' room before he could say anything back.
IN THE CAR
I stayed in the bathroom until April came to collect me. She seemed more concerned than mad, and I was glad she didn't tell me that I'd ruined her night--I felt guilty enough already. We piled into the Corolla. I insisted on driving, and Jude relented without a light. We headed back to Rose Crest for the dance, even though it was the last place I felt like going. All I wanted now was to curl up in bed and wait for the full moon to be swallowed by the day--and I could be with Daniel again.
No one spoke as we drove, except for Pete, who yammered on and on about being overcharged for his drink refills--not exactly the concerns of someone fighting an inner demon. I tried to forget any thoughts of monsters and wolves and focused on surviving the torturous evening ahead of me. At least we were going to get to the dance at the tail end, and then we could go straight home.
But as I turned down Main Street on our way to the school, I saw a line of police cars in front of Day's Market. Their blue and red lights cast sinister shadows on the green awnings of the shop.
"Those are cops from the city," April said. She stuck her head out the window like an anxious pup. "I wonder what's going on."
I pulled the car over in front of Brighton's, across the street and kitty-corner to Day's. It was as close as we could get. A uniformed officer was stringing a line of police tape across the entrance to the market's parking lot, and a few bystanders had gathered to gawk. Word must not have gotten out yet, or half the town would be here.
"There's Don." I pointed at him.
He wrung his Day's Market apron in his giant hands as he spoke to a dark-haired man in a suit. The man patted Don on the shoulder and then went inside the shop.
"Where's Mr. Day?" April asked.
Where's Daniel? He'd told me he was going to finish up a late-afternoon shift since Mr. Day had promised him time and half if he wouldn't quit before Christmas. But he'd said he wanted to be done by nightfall. He'd be gone by now--but to where, I couldn't guess.
Is this what he had been worried about? Is this what he'd wanted to prevent? Did my going out cause this to happen?
I pulled the keys out of the ignition.
Pete grabbed my hand. "Let's just go to the dance. We'll miss the whole thing if we stop."
"Yeah," April said. "Maybe we should just go." Her voice had a high, doglike whine to it. "I told my mom I wouldn't stop anywhere else."
I opened the door and got out. "Don!"
He looked up. His face was distorted by shadows. He crossed the street and as he came closer, I saw that his eyes were puffy and blotched with red. "Miss Grace?" He came up to the car. "You shouldn't be here. It isn't safe."
"What's going on?" I lowered my voice, hoping the others wouldn't hear.
Don looked back at the market. "He was here."
"Who was here?" Jude asked, suddenly beside me.
April got out of the car and stood behind him.
"The monster." Don groaned. "The Markham Street Monster. He ... he ..." Don wrung his already crumpled apron.
"What is it, Don?" I put my hand on his arm. "You can tell me. It'll be okay." "He killed her." "Who?" Jude asked.
"Jessica," Don sobbed. "I was taking out the trash ... and I found her body. She was behind the Dumpster."
I covered a gasp. Where is Daniel? Did he know a body had been found right next to where we'd been kissing only a few hours before?
"And you're sure it was Jessica?" Jude asked.
Don nodded. "Her face was so clawed up, I wouldn't have known it was her if it weren't for her hair. When the cops came by to tell Mr. Day she was missin'---they'd said she had green hair."
"Green hair?" That girl! The one who rammed into me at the party. The one with all the piercings, and the huge eyes, and the green hair. No wonder it seemed like I knew her from somewhere. "Oh, my ... I saw her ... I saw her the night she disappeared."
"Where?" April asked.
"At Da--" I stopped when I saw Jude staring at me. "Just somewhere in the city."
"At Daniel's?" Jude grabbed my arm. "She was at Daniel's apartment on Markham Street. She was at that filthy party."
"What? How did you know--?"
"Then it's true?" Jude twisted my wrist. "She was there, wasn't she?"
"Yes," I said. "But Daniel didn't have anything to do with this. He told me--"
"He told you? And you just believed him?" Jude sank his fingers into my arm like they were teeth. "Of course you do. You'd believe anything he said."
"Stop this now," I tried to say to him like my father would, but Jude's fingers only bit harder.
"I don't understand," Pete said from the other side of the car. "You think Kalbi did this?"
"It wasn't Daniel," Don said. He lowered his voice as if he wanted to say something only to me, but his whisper was an echoing shout. "It was the monster, Miss Grace."
He glanced over my head at Pete. "The monster was the one who took James, too. Your dad and I stopped at the police station in the city. Your dad asked for the blood-test results--but they said they didn't have none. They said they couldn't even figure out if the blood was from a human or an animal. It had to be the monster."
"You see." Jude's hand trembled. He dropped my arm. "You see. This is him."
"No," I said. "It can't be. There must be someone else."
Jude reeled on me and grabbed me by both shoulders. "Where is he?"
"Jude, stop," I said quietly, all too aw
are of the cops across the street.
"Calm down, you guys." April yanked at Jude's arms, but he didn't budge.
"Where is Daniel?" Jude clenched my shoulders through my chiffon wrap and shook me.
"I don't know," I said. "I don't."
Jude let go. He backed away to the driver's side of the car.
How did he get the car keys?
"Jude, stop. This is insane. You've been drinking." I looked at Don for help, but he cowered away into the street.
"Please," April yelped.
"Hey." Pete stepped in front of Jude. "If you think this is Kalbi, then go tell the cops."
"No," Jude said. "They can't stop him." "Then what are you going to do?" "I'm going to find him."
"Then I'm coming with you." Pete opened one of the back doors.
"No!" I tried to grab the keys, but Jude shoved me away.
"Hey," someone called from the police line. "What's going on over there?"
Jude jumped into the driver's seat. As he gunned the engine I scrambled into the backseat next to Pete.
"Hey, stop!" someone shouted.
But Jude shifted the car into drive, and we went flying down Main Street, leaving April and Don behind.
We didn't go far. Jude floored it a couple of blocks and then skidded down Crescent Street. We flew past the high school, and just when I thought we were going to pass it, Jude whipped the car around and into the crowded lot. He drove up and down the parking lot, searching between every car.
"Turn the car around, Jude," I said softly. "Let's go home and talk to Dad. He can help."
Jude pulled the car to a stop in the alley between the parish and the school. He opened his door and got out.
"What are you doing?" Pete asked.
"He's here," Jude said. "I know he is." He stood still for a moment, as if listening. All I could hear was the echo of the music in the gym.
"Jude, please, listen to reason." I started to get out of the car.
"Stop her!" Jude said.
Pete grabbed my arm.
"Keep her here. Do whatever it takes." Jude took a couple of steps into the alley.
A police siren whirred past the school and continued on down Crescent.
"What are you going to do?" I asked.
"I'm finishing this." Jude turned toward me. And that's when I saw it: his eyes, once mirror images of mine, were twin tornadoes. Black, silver, sharp, twisted--glinting with the light of the full moon.
Human eyes don't glow in the dark. Only animal eyes do.
"No." I gasped. I tried to pry myself from Pete's viselike hands.
"I'm going to find Daniel and finish this," Jude said. And then he was gone.
Chapter Twenty-six hero
IN THE ALLEY
"Let me go!" I pushed against Pete's chest. I had to find Daniel before Jude did.
This was what he'd been afraid would happen tonight!
"Please, Pete. You have to let me go."
"So you can warn Kalbi?" Pete didn't look me in the eyes. "Why can't you just stay away from him?"
"I have to stop Jude. I have to stop this from happening. I'd do the same if he was after you."
Pete looked up at me, but he didn't loosen his grasp. "Relax, Grace. This is Jude you're talking about. He's just going to find out what's going on."
"He isn't Jude anymore," I said. "Can't you see that?"
Pete shook his head, confused.
"You have no idea what this is about, do you?" I asked. "You're in danger. We're all in danger. You have to let me go."
Pete's grasp weakened. I pulled away from him and grabbed the door handle. He snatched at me, but all he got was a fistful of my satin shawl. It trailed behind me like a purple banner as I jutted out of the car and down the alley. Pete bolted after me.
I stumbled in my heels and almost fell in a pothole. Pete grabbed me by the shoulder and swung me around.
"I'm trying to save you!" He slammed me against the outside wall of the parish. "Jude told me to keep you away from Kalbi. But you make it impossible. Why won't you stay away from him?"
"Stop, please." I tried to shove him away, but he was heavy and unmovable.
"I'm supposed to be your hero," he said. "i was supposed to save you on Markham Street."
"What?" But then I realized. "You were the one outside my car." No wonder he'd insisted I stay behind. "You tried to scare me just so you could play hero?"
"Jude said we had to keep you away from Daniel. He said all you needed was a good scare. The car broke down, so I used to the opportunity." Pete clenched my shoulder. "I would have been your hero if ..."
That noise. It was a howl. It was Daniel. "If something hadn't scared you away?"
"I ran," Pete said. "And then Kalbi came along before I got back." His fingers dug into my shoulder. "You're supposed to want me, not him!" Pete pressed his body against mine, grinding my bare back into the rough brick. His hot breath was a vile mixture of breath mints and alcohol.
"You're drunk, Pete. You don't really want to do this."
"You owe me this," he said. "I've wanted this for a long time. But you told me to be patient--so I was. And then you went off and did it with him."
"What--?"
''Don't deny it. Everybody knows. Lynn saw you leaving his place. She saw him follow you out half naked." Pete gritted his teeth. "So if you'll give it up for that piece of filth, then what's wrong with me? Am I not dark enough? Am I not bad enough for you?" His body crushed me against the wall. "I can be if that's what you want."
Pete smashed his lips over my mouth. The strap of my dress snapped in his clawing grasp. I slammed my fists into his back. He grabbed my arms and pinned them against the wall. I grated the heel of my shoe down his leg.
Pete wrenched back his head. "I knew you'd like it rough."
I sucked in a breath and called for help. Pete laughed and smothered my mouth with his. I felt completely trapped under his weight.
Pete's body suddenly lurched sideways, and he released me. He sputtered and grabbed his side. His Hps made a perfect O shape as his hand came up. Blood painted his fingers. He stumbled back. "Monstrrrr ..." he said, and fell to the ground.
"Oh, my ..."I cast about in the dark and saw it--a great, hulking, bear like thing--crouching in the shadows of the school's side entrance. Moonlight reflected off the bloody knife in its giant hand.
I screamed. It was such a shrill, foreign noise I didn't realize it was coming from me at first. But I couldn't stop.
The hulking shadow lunged at me.
I turned to run, but I tripped over something lying in the street.
The bear man caught me, crushing me around the middle as it wrenched me up away from Pete's crumpled body. The beast held my back to its chest, its ragged breath in my ear. I kicked at its tree-stump legs. I screamed louder, even though I knew no one in the school would hear me over the thumping music. A huge hand clamped over my face, covering my mouth and nose--silencing me.
"Don't scream." His voice was trilling, almost crying. He was afraid. "Please don't scream, Miss Grace." He wasn't a monster at all.
"Don?" I tried to say, but his hand pressed so hard over my mouth, no sound came out.
"I didn't mean it. He was hurting you. I thought he was the monster. I had to stop him. I'm supposed to he a hero just like my granddaddy taught me." Don's knife scraped my arm as he held me. It was sticky and wet with
Pete's blood. "But he's not the monster, is he?" Don's voice grew shriller. "He's ... just a boy." His hand tightened over my face. "I didn't mean to do it."
I couldn't breathe. I tried to tell him to let go, but I had no voice. I clawed at his hand.
"You can't scream, Miss Grace. You can't tell nobody. Pastor will be mad. He'll send me away like he almost did after the fire. I didn't mean it. I was trying to help."
Blood dripped off the knife--it slithered down my arm.
"You can't tell nobody!" Don bawled. A hot tear landed on my shoulder.
Stop! You
've hurting me. I can't breathe!
"I didn't mean it. I didn't mean it," Don cried over and over again. His hand tightened around my face as he sobbed, almost as if he didn't realize I was there anymore.
I blinked, fighting the long wispy fingers of darkness that slipped in behind my eyes. My body felt limp, uncontrollable. I couldn't fight the dark any longer.
THREE YEARS AGO
I stared into the still, quiet darkness from the front-room window. Watching. Waiting.
Mom paced behind me. "I don't know where he could be," she said, more to herself than to anyone else. "The Nagamatsus said he left Scouts two hours ago."
Dad said good-bye to the person on the phone and came out of the study, "Who was it?" Mom practically sprang on him. "What did they say?"
"Don," Dad said. "There's a problem at the parish."
Mom's breath caught. "Jude?"
"No. Something with the remodeling."
"This late?"
The keys jangled as Dad took them off the hook. "I'll be back soon."
"But what about Jude?"
Dad sighed. "He's a good kid. If he isn't home by the time I get back, then we'll start to worry."
Mom made a noise like she didn't agree with that plan.
My gaze didn't leave the blackness of the night. The storm clouds parted, and I thought I saw something moving near the walnut tree. I leaned into the window.
"Jude," I said. "I see him."
"Thank goodness," Mom said, but her voice had that edge to it like she was preparing a lecture.
"You could always get him a cell. ..." I started in on my favorite topic, but then I noticed that Jude wasn't walking toward the house from the side yard--he was stumbling.
And why was his face smeared with chocolate syrup?
Jude grabbed the porch railing. His legs folded under him, and he crumpled onto the porch steps.
"Jude!" I ran to the front door, but Dad was already there.
"No, Gracie," Mom shouted.
T couldn't see over their bodies that filled the doorway. "What happened?" I tried to squeeze between them.
"Da--" I heard Jude sputter. He coughed like he was choking. "Dan--"