The Waning of the Raining of the Storm
#90 of The Moonrise Chronicles
I hope I got this chapter straight. If not, point out any mistakes and I'll correct them. Today has not been the best day for me, so my editing has been cursory.
He arrived in the open meadow, sniffing
intently to try and find a scent to follow. Even his enhanced olfactory ability
was hard put to find the proper molecules to stimulate his nose. He searched
the grounds, sniffing back and forth until he found a smell that he recognized.
His hair stood on end.He turned and race off, heedless of
the pouring rain as it came down in sheets, driven into a climatic frenzy by
the storm. He ran to the edge of a ravine, sniffed the air and turned to chase
after the scent. His mind was only dimly aware of what he was doing, but the
connection between the scent and his quarry matched up in his head. He knew
that when he found the source of the odor he would find the one thing he was
looking for.The Kindred were all huddled
together, hardly bothered by the storm. The Atlantic coast was often hit by
severe storms, common holdovers from hurricanes brewed in the Caribbean. Leeds himself was still in his feral form,
ignoring the rain as he worked to lessen his pain. The chemicals he had already
healed from, but the loss of his child would stay with him until the end of his
days.The storm howled and raged, not
unlike another party who was out in it at the moment, searching with a ken nose
set to finding someone to whom he could pay his respects. No one had any
inkling that this fellow was now completely out of his head, for if they had,
they might have realized that he was now more dangerous than at any other time
in his brief existence as a werewolf.Somewhere else in the storm, a
group of wolves was trying desperately to get back to their compound. Their
leader called them to a halt, taking refuge under an overhang of rock. They were wet and miserable, but then, rain
wasn't the worst thing they might have to deal with. Lightning and thunder
might rattle the nerves, but they had just seen things only hinted at by the
tales passed down through generations of the wolf kind. They had a shared,
inherent understanding that there were things out in the world far greater than
they were, and those things where not mere humans. Humans were a different set
of problems altogether.Back in the human city of Pittsburgh,
Billy was pacing the floor. "I don't like it. He shouldn't keep
running off like this. It's stupid. I know he's young when it comes to being
one of the Kind, but it's still an irresponsible thing to do."Edward's father shook his head. "We
tried so hard to let him have a normal life. When he got into the accident, we
knew what had happened to his lucky coin. We thought that it might harm him,
but when he didn't react, we felt it might be just the thing to prevent him
from ever changing. We were right."Billie smashed his fist into the
wall. "Yeah, about that. Why did you think you would know enough about it to
allow that little chunk of metal to hinder his natural being?"No offense was taken. "We knew that
there were forces after us. From what you've told us these forces to a partial
degree have been eliminated. We wanted Edward to survive, and after his
grandparents were murdered, we knew we were in trouble. So we burned down our
own house and disappeared from the sight of most mortals. We felt bad; losing
him like that nearly broke our heart, but there seemed to be little else we
could do."Marcus nodded, understanding their
predicament better than most. "I think he has turned out fine, assuming he
makes it through this rough spot. His heart seems pretty much entwined with
this Maggie girl's, and her loss will fall hard on him."Edward's mother was still wiping
away tears. "He's too young to be getting serious."Kathryn nearly choked. "He's too
young?! What about my little girl? Doesn't anyone think she was too young?""Yes dear and we are terribly sorry
we couldn't have been more successful in preventing this tragedy. But we did
our best to lie low and not attract the attention of those who pursued us."Billie slapped his fist into his
hand. "This has gone on long enough! Eddie wanted us to live like normal
people. His rings have made that possible. Now, either you can all sit here and
talk about how this happened or that happened, or you can get your asses off of
those cushions and we can go back out there and back him up."Leonardo was still keeping a low
profile, not wishing to stir up more trouble than his presence seemed to
instigate. This wasn't his time period, and this country wasn't his either. But
he did have opinions on this matter. He might not fully know Edward's family
line, for in his time they didn't quite exist as they did later on, but he knew
Edward."Excuse me.""Yes?"He cleared his throat. "Edward is
more than capable of handling himself right now. I would suggest we stay out of
his way, or else we might get drawn into a matter that is beyond our control. I
have seen him at his worse, or at least I hope it was his worse. If he has gone
to seek revenge for her death, then getting in his way even in an attempt to
help him is a fool's errand."Edward's parents were still not up
to speed on everything that had happened to their son, including the important
fact that he had the same metal as the special rings riding around inside his
head. They were aware of the nature of the ring, but not who had created it (or
them in general) and that the gentleman talking to them now was really the one
and only Leonardo da Vinci. He was wise enough to not try to press that point
just yet. There were some things that needed time to sink in before going on to
more unbelievable topics."But are you sure he can survive
against this foe? Of all the things I could possibly imagine pursuing me, that
creature is not one that I would wish even on my worst enemy.""He can survive anything.""Are you sure he can survive
anything? That's an awfully general statement." Billie was listening and as
unusual, was unable to follow the master's words. But he could figure out what
was being said. "Eddie is tough, but the one thing that metal will not protect
him from is a broken heart.""This is all too true. I did not
expect him to react so strongly. I guess it can be safely said that I never
lost my heart in such a manner. I don't know whether to envy him or pity him."That bit was relayed to Billie. "I
say that you should do neither. He needs our help. I don't think that we need
to get into the details of why.""But son, what can we do? Those
creatures make us look almost normal!""I don't know pop, but what else
are we going to do? The same thing you
always do? We can't always weather the storms. One of these days we will have
to get up and fight for what is ours or else just lay there and get
steamrollered. I for one would rather die than live like this. Eddie knew that,
even if his method for going about fixing it was foolish. It can't be helped
that Maggie was equally foolish. Both of them still had a lot of learning to
do."Maria stood. "I agree. I am too old
to care about what the world views me as. If we must return and fight a proper
fight, then I say we do it."There were a few words of dissent spoken
and the house erupted back into intense arguing.Edward was tearing up the ground
searching for his quarry. Time and again he had to backtrack, searching out the
scent and retracing his steps until he found the trail again. The rain was
working to effectively remove any evidence, both spore and scent, and he was growing
more frustrated as time wore on. If he had been thinking logically, then his
brain would have easily figured out the direction the group had gone. But he
was presently blinded by feral fury and unredeemable rage. His howls competed with the thunder
for which of the two was the loudest. Several
trees fell to the gorund, victim to the combined fury of two storm fronts; one
natural and the other a bit more supernatural. The poor werewolf was torn
between what he knew he should be doing and what he had been doing. His mind
was mixed up for the moment and all he wanted to do was search, locate, and
destroy. And yet, even the last part was muddled. Destroy what? His
mind remembered the winged creature. He could see it clearly. He could tear the
wings from it and shred the rest. But would it help? He shook his head in rage.
He couldn't remember why he was even after this thing. Had it harmed him in
some way? His body was intact, so that couldn't be it.. It was all too
confusing. He remembered mating in a woods like this, only not like this. He
remembered...he remembered... He roared in rage. His memories were faulty;
spotty; incomplete. His
nose caught the barest of scents. With a howl he was off, barreling though the
wilderness past isolated houses and through the back yards of posh suburban
homes. In his wake he left dogs barking and security lights flashing as his
sinuously agile bulk tore up the miles. If nothing else, he was going to expend
his anger in his movements, which were so fast even a helicopter would have had
trouble keeping him in sight. Anna
was rubbing her hand over a healed wound, partially thankful for being alive.
Her gratitude was diminished by the fact that her granddaughter was now gone.
She had focused on preserving her family line as best as she was able, but in
the end she had been unsuccessful. Maggie was dead. Now these others talked of
going back. It was sheer madness. This Edward fellow could go off and fight his
own battles and leave them out of it. She said as much. That
brewed more dissent. Alexei
was quick to point out those things he thought should be obvious. "Look sister,
your daughter would still be lying in bed in a coma if it weren't for him. He
is not at fault here. She took it upon herself to drink poison, and she did so
without contemplating what it would do to the rest of us. Edward is probably
half mad with grief, for this isn't the first time he has lost her. Those two
have been in plenty of scrapes, and one way or another they came out of them
intact. But everyone has a breaking point. I fear that if left to his own devices,
he'll revert to being nothing more than a mindless brute. It's in his nature,
and he has alluded to this before." "But
that is not my problem. Let him go take his battles as far from here as he can.
I for one wish that I had never been bitten nor removed from my grave. Damn
Gregori! My hopes were on Maggie. Now my hopes are gone." Billie
started to say something but Leonardo placed his hand on the biker's hairy arm. "Let it go. There is great anger in the air
right now. Edward will come to no harm, not even from your arsenal of mighty
weapons. I think he has only one thing on his mind right now, and it would be
best to allow him to carry through with it. As much as it may chafe you to do
this, I think that we must all stay here." "If you say so old man. I
don't like sitting out during a fight." "But this fight is no longer yours. It is
Edward's and in the end, he will either come through it triumphant, or there
will be hell on Earth like your people have never ever seen. I have faith in
him. He has qualities that even he has yet to discover. If his love for the
girl was true, then the phrase love conquers all will prevail." "Love
has a way of turning sour. The girl snubbed him in the end." "And you judge this as something less than
love? I for one will not comment on it. There are too many variables to the
human heart. I would like to think she did what she had to." Billie
growled a little. "You know, you can be sort of cold and calculating at times." "Emotion will get you only so far my friend.
You should know that. All I am saying is that Edward must do what he feels he
needs to do. I for one would not consider trying to stop him. Would you?" "No.
He's way too massive when he's ticked off." "Correct. So for now, at least until this
storm abates, there is little we can do except drink, sleep and pray that the
almighty has compassion on his soul." Edward
had no soul. Not at the moment. Theologians say that animals don't have them,
and anything human inside him was deeply suppressed at the moment. In his rage,
his form needed no moral compass with which to guide his actions. Once he found
his target, he would salve the deep pain inside with blood. The
rain was slowing, easing up on the relentless downpour that had been carpeting
the region for hours. Even back at the ravine, the chemical solution of silver
nitrate had been diluted to the point that it wasn't concentrated enough to be
toxic to anything. It ran in rivulets down the side of the embankment. The
puffy ashen form at the bottom had all but washed away, leaving just a hint of
charred sticks and leaves plastered on the ground. It was as good a way of
dissolving back into the earth as any. Nature found many ways of reclaiming its
own. Under
an overhang there stood, wet and miserable, a pack of wolves still hoping to
get back to their pens before morning. It wasn't likely to happen, and only a
few of the wiser ones really shared that concern. After all, what would the
humans do? Lock them up again? It's what humans did. In the end they, the
wolves, would still be fed every day, watered every day, and they would have
the limited freedom they always had. The humans would be left like the last
time, scratching their heads and wondering how this had happened. A few members
of the pack ranged outside of the safety of the outcrop. They might have been
raised in pens, but their natural instincts still held sway. Protection of the
whole was paramount to their personal, individual safety. Unlike their normal
method, they were now searching the skies, such as they could. The storm had lessened
but still rain came down in sufficient quantities to make their vigilance to
the treetops difficult. Edward
too kept his eyes upward, knowing in the back of his mind that these woods were
home to something almost as formidable as him. From time to time, when the
massive oak, cottonwood or elm made an appearance in his path, he clawed his
way up to the top to search the horizon for winged creatures. It didn't occurred
to his clouded brain that they could just as easily be on the ground in human
form. Humans didn't strike his brain as being particularly dangerous. When he
found nothing in the canopy, he returned to plowing along on the ground,
sniffing and searching the forest floor for the slowly fading scents that would
lead him to his quarry. The big problem was, he was getting multiple faint smells
and was unable to isolate the one he wanted. If he had been operating with his
full brain, he would have come to the conclusion that where one was, the rest
would most likely be. He
resumed his search, going from ground to treetop in a concerted effort to
locate his target. He forgot how some of the weres could alter their smell. It
had happened to him in the past. But those memories belonged to a mind that was
more rational than his present one. Leeds was no different than any other, if
that individual had mastered all of the nuances of having multiple forms. It
was part of the reason their kind was so hard to find, rarely encountered or
recognized for what they were. There were
stirrings among the Kindred, for the loss of their own was a great to them as
it was to the normal werewolf clan members. A few took to the air, more than
happy to do battle with the winds as the storm beat down. It was times like
this when no one would see them, and even if they did, the ill weather would
make them question the accuracy of their eyes. Lightning could make even the most innocuous
of shapes seem sinister. And so
it was that there was a mix of creatures out there in the woods again, even
after a battle that had killed one and maimed others had been birthed and then
ended. One way or another, someone was going to find someone else. The end
result was likely to be catastrophic, depending on who met who and where. The
wolves were preparing to move out from under their shelter. Their part in all
this had been minor, to the point that a few of them openly complained at being
pulled away for such a foolish errand. Their superiors hushed them, and the lone
Alpha female among them didn't even spare them a glance. They had done what was
expected of them and they had suffered no causalities. There were worse ways to
come out of a confrontation like that. But
that feeling fled when one of the scouts came racing back to the group. "Intruder!"
she panted out as much as her heaving breath allowed her. "Air or
ground?" "We
heard it in the trees. The wind has shifted so we didn't catch a scent. But whatever
it is, I think it means trouble for us." "Alright,
let's get a move on it then. I doubt we'll outrun those freaks with wings, but
we'll put as much space between us and it." The
Alpha had hardly gotten that thought out when a great crashing disrupted the
pack. Brush was thrown aside as a hulking form erupted into the small glen
where they had sought shelter. The great hulking feral was panting heavily and
sniffing the air. He looked from one to another of the wolves, apparently
looking for wings. He sniffed again, and then again. He shook his head in a
dazed manner. He went
from one to another of the wolves, sniffing them in an ever more exited manner.
Somewhere in his head he remembered them from before. They had been fun! He remembered
that! They had been fun! He liked their kind of fun almost as much as he liked
fighting. He liked to fight too, but these weren't the enemy. They were
different! He avidly
sniffed one after another, getting greeted with many a submissive lowering of
the head and shoulders. But one wolf did not greet him in such a manner. He sniffed
it and it bit him! He wasn't angry, but he was surprised. He stood back and
looked at it with an appraising eye. He seemed to remember something familiar about
it. The
wolf morphed and stood on two legs. "God dammit Edward!"