Packing It In
#15 of The Moonrise Chronicles
A little shorter than the last bit. Probably be the last for a little while. Need to think "were" I'm going with this now. No sex. Sorry. Can't have it all the time.
Maggie
had to stay there while I ran across the city to pick up some new clothes for
her. I had to agree with Reynaud that she was awfully impetuous, but after
having been only part way through a full transformation, I guess I understood.
She was like me. I was older, and I knew better, but all this was so novel that
I felt giddy and out of control. And I was torn between the feelings. As a
responsible adult, I fought for control. As a wild beast, I fought to be free. I told
the taxi driver to wait, and the hundred dollar bill ensured that he would. I
ran up to the suite, pulled out some underwear, shorts, and a nice top for her,
and a pair of sandals. I always knew kids outgrew their clothes, but this was
ridiculous. Sorry. I know that was bad, but I was trying to find some humor to
lift me up. It's not easy having someone tell you nonchalantly that they may be
forced to kill you. I knew
he had recanted that statement, but I was still uneasy. Maggie's idea was still
feasible, and it would make killing me, should someone jump to that conclusion,
all the more difficult. I just hadn't had a chance to run it past Verona. She
was the wild card in this. I had no idea if she would go with it or not. There were
probably a hundred reasons why she wouldn't. When I
got back, Reynaud and his wife Alupenia were still talking with Maggie. Verona let
me in and I tossed my bundle in the girl's direction. "Try not to get too excited
again!" She
grinned and ran to the bathroom to change. "So
Edward, she has been telling us all about you." My heart sank. "And?" "And it
seems you care for her a great deal. She told us how you first got acquainted. You
must have had great courage to follow her and to try and rescue her from that
factory. You are a brave and kind person!" I wish
I knew what all she had said. I was going to assume she might have decided that
telling them everything was a bad idea. I had no clue what these conservative people
would think of her calling me father all the while I was porking the living
daylights out of her. It was an adoption of convenience, but I was still looked
upon as her father, and she my daughter. So discretion was best. "She is
unusual, but the more in-depth I get to know her, the more I appreciate her
finer qualities." Verona
just glared at me, but her parents missed my insinuations. "Most
normal humans would have gone mad or else tried to kill her. There is a grave
mistrust of our kind, and rightly so. Still, in the long run, humankind has far
surpassed us. The bloodline is dwindling and given a few more centuries, we may
be gone for good." I wasn't
certain what I was supposed to say to that. "Can I ask a few questions?" "Certainly
young man," Verona's mother exclaimed. "Knowledge
is power, and you'll need as much of it as you can get." "Well,
I don't want to pry, but I found Maggie and Maggie found Verona. But how many
of you are there out there? I would think that the random killings, errr,
feedings would make your presence much more public. After all, it was Verona's
attack on that fellow in Central Park that brought us here." Verona
let out an indignant yell. "I didn't murder him! I was curious who did, and the
same for that other fellow Maggie admitted to killing." The
room went silent for several reasons. Reynaud spoke first. "Killings?" I had
to explain how we had managed to come to New York in the first place. How I had
determined that the best way of finding a werewolf was to track its kills. He
listened and nodded slowly. "Yes,
that is the problem. Nowadays, it is so easy to get caught. Of course, it's
difficult to pin it down, because we are as different as a feral as we are as a
human. It's hard to blame a murder on a living man when witnesses and evidence
point to a beast. Still, care should be taken to cover one's tracks." He turned
to his daughter. "Are you not using the potion?" She
turned green. "Not always. I don't like having to hide what I am. That's why I
like being with Edward, because he knows and he doesn't care. Sometimes it's
nice to go out and feed without fear of reprisal. But the death they speak of
is not from me." I was
getting the hang of this. "So what you're saying is that there is another
werewolf out there that you don't know about?" Reynaud
shook his head slowly. "This is not good. Suddenly, we have werewolves coming
out of the woodwork." "Woodwork?"
Maggie was back, all dressed and looking prim. "You,
me, and I guess there's a third one no one knows about." "But I didn't
smell anyone else at the park." "Neither
did I." said Verona, "but it rained right after the one you thought I committed,
and the scent fades fast. You probably followed my scent as I was trying to
track down the other. Here all along I thought that you had committed both
killings." "No, we
were still home. So I guess we have more to deal with than we thought. Is there
some way of tracking the murders here in the city?" Verona
shrugged. "I suppose so, but it's big and a smart werewolf will hide it's kill
until it decomposes enough to be unidentifiable." "Or
stuff it in the freezer!" piped in Maggie. Verona glared at her. Apparently her
parents would not have approved. Reynaud
ran with that, not seeming to get the connection to his daughter. "Yes, that's
true young lady. A freezer would keep the meat fresh for a later date." He
smiled. "I know from experience, so I guess she came by it honestly." He looked
at his daughter. "I will not shame you
for what you have no choice in being, and I will laud your discretion. As long
as you follow the rules I set down so long ago, than all will be fine." Verona
was visibly shaken. She must have a lot of respect for her parents. I know I
did for mine, but I couldn't help feeling cheated for having never known my
ancestry. There were a lot of mysteries to be solved, and I had no idea where
to start. Maggie yanked on my sleeve. I looked down. She was smiling, holding
something in her hand. "Now?" "No!" It was
too late. The damage was done. "What's going on?" asked Verona's mother. I
cringed. This was part of Maggie's plan, and I had figured that there would be
a far better time than this to try carrying it out. But now the element of surprise was gone.
Maggie, in true childlike fashion, blurted it out. I let her, because I wanted
to crawl back inside my own skin. I suddenly felt foolish. "I had
an idea. Father said it wasn't a good idea, but that it had merit. I think that
what we need right now is a common denominator. I say that a piece of metal
should not drive us apart, but bind us together." Alupenia
smiled. "Well said young lady, but I'm afraid we don't know what you mean. You
already know that removing the silver coin might prove dangerous, even deadly.
So it is in a way binding us together. We have no intention of leaving your
father in a lurch." Maggie
put her hands on her hips. "No? A little while ago you were threatening to kill
him. He has done nothing wrong to any of you. Didn't you said that you would do
anything to protect your family?" "Yes dear
and we would." "That's
what I thought. So my plan was this." She
held out a simple gold ring. "Father
can marry Verona and be part of your family, and then so will I, and then you
can never touch him. We'll all be one big
family of werewolves! " Reynaud
actually smiled. "That would be a pack dear." I
looked at Verona and she at me. I didn't love her, leastwise not yet, because I
had those feelings for Maggie. But she wasn't stupid, and I could see her
thinking it over. There was silence for a while as neither one of us wanted to
speak. Maggie
finally had enough. She kicked Verona in the shins. "Well?" "Well what?"
she said, hopping on one leg. "Will
you marry him?" "But he
hasn't asked me yet." "True.
Father?" She was glaring at me and smiling at the same time. What was I going
to do? "Uhhh,
Verona, will you marry me?"