Thanks for the lovely comments last week, by the way. The funeral was as good as those things get, and it was nice to see most of my family.
***
You
couldn’t sneak up on a werewolf.
It
wasn’t possible. Everyone agreed on that, from a million pop culture references
to the people who actually ran ops with the real ones. Werewolves had
hyper-developed senses, and they were incredibly protective of their territory
and their pack. You could trap a werewolf, you could trick a werewolf, you
might even be able to bargain with a werewolf―I was banking on that―but you
couldn’t sneak up on one. They could tell where you’d stepped almost before
your foot hit the ground.
So
why was I standing outside a chain link fence in the snowy twilight, slowly
freezing to death while waiting for someone to notice I was there? I’d been
counting on being found quickly; I really hadn’t packed for the snow. My
bad―Davis had told me I needed more than a sweater and a jacket better suited
to a California winter than a Colorado one, but I’d been too frantic to listen
to him.
If
I died clinging to a fence in the middle of nowhere, Davis might bring me back
to life just so he could kill me again for being such an idiot.
“Avoid
the guardian,” he’d said, thin lips terse as he’d handed me the map. An actual
physical map, not GPS—nothing I could program into my phone. “You can’t take
the obvious road without getting stopped, so you’ll have to hike in to another
part of their preserve. And burn that map when you’re done with it. I’m fuckin’
serious, Ward. If that’s found by the wrong people, it could cause a domestic
terrorism incident.”
“I’ll
destroy it,” I’d promised hastily, glancing at it before I stuffed it in my
pocket. At that point, Ava had been gone for three months. At least she hadn’t
been missing, not anymore. Davis had located the pack she’d been sent to. I’d
just had to find it, get the nearest werewolf to ask questions before shooting
or biting or whatever appealed most at the time, and persuade them to let me
stay.
Well,
at least I’d managed the first part of it.
“Don’t
you people have cameras?” My lips were so cold I could barely articulate the
words, but the act of speaking seemed to break through the layer of ice that
had chilled my anger ever since I’d started hiking.
I’d
gone seven miles through the snow after abandoning my car, the pale winter sun
doing little to warm me as I trudged along, hoping against hope for a sign that
I was going in the right direction. Finding the fence had felt like a godsend
at the time, but I’d been here for over an hour now, waiting for anything and
getting nothing at all. My breath rasped in my thin chest, and I’d had to stop
and use my inhaler twice. Much more than that and I’d be courting real trouble,
so I kept my breaths shallow and my scarf pulled across my mouth.
“Seriously,”
I went on. “What wolf pack doesn’t have cameras covering every part of their
territory? If you’re not as goddamn paranoid as I was led to believe, I’m going
to be so pissed.” Also probably deceased, but that was my problem, not theirs.
Actually,
no, I was going to make it their
problem too.
“I
will climb this fence,” I announced to the growing darkness in front of me.
“I’ll climb this fucking fence and I’ll get all snarled in the barbed wire at
the top and then you’ll wish you’d found me while I was still alive, you
assholes, because you’ll be untangling me for fucking hours!” I don’t think I’d
sworn this much since my brother’s funeral.
Okay,
I was angry but I was also being serious. Someone should have seen me on camera
by now. Davis had been very clear about that. Maybe the one I was closest to
was dead—I needed to move, then. I needed to pick a path and go, because if I
didn’t start walking now I might not be able to before long. Right or left?
Which direction had the road that passed the guardian been on, again? I’d
already burned the map, shit, shit…
I
went right. If I hit the road, at least the guardian would probably keep me
alive if they found me. I wouldn’t be able to help my daughter if I was dead.
My feet felt dangerously numb, and my nose might’ve been blue by now. The wind
made my eyes water, and tear tracks froze on my cheeks. I clung to the fence,
using it half for guidance, half for support. “I’m gonna find you, baby.” I
would. “I’ll find you.” I had to. I wasn’t going to sit back and let the
government take her from me just because she’d turned out to be a werewolf.
The
mutation had been around since the early forties, when a super-soldier
experiment resulted in men that, instead of having all the heightened senses of
wolves, actually turned into wolves.
They escaped the confines of Pine Camp in northern New York, crazy with fear
and adrenalin, and went on a biting spree. Most of the bitten died after
turning into wolves.
A
few of them managed to turn back into people, though.
The
government took responsibility for their mistake and divided the werewolves
that had survived into packs. Hollywood loved them, scientists wanted to study
them, and bigots wanted to kill them, but for the most part werewolves stayed
firmly out of the spotlight. The only exception to that rule was when someone
turned unexpectedly. Someone like my Ava.
The
bite didn’t manifest in lycanthropy for everyone bitten. Some people, a tiny
percentage of those exposed to the mutation, were simply immune to the shift.
They could carry it, though, and they could pass it on. For Ava, the gene must
have come from her mother. Carriers were almost always incredibly healthy, and
I was far from a model of vitality.
Every
now and then, maybe half a dozen times a year, a child would shift. Usually it
didn’t happen until puberty, or some other time of extreme stress. For my
daughter, it was her first day of preschool.
“Daddy, nooo.”
I
could still hear her voice from that morning in my head. I’d been running late,
stressed by the start of a new semester and the challenge of trying to get my
daughter dressed, fed, and into her car seat before eight in the morning. She’d
been clingy, more than usual.
“I want to stay with you!”
“But you’re a big girl now,
sweetheart. Big girls go to school. You’ll have so much fun and make so many
new friends.”
I’d
gotten the call about her change at lunch, right after dismissing forty
freshmen from my Physics 101 class at the community college where I’d taught. I
hadn’t recognized the number at first―I’d almost let it ring through to my
voicemail. “Hello?”
“Mr.
Johannsen?” The woman’s words had been almost too warbly to make out. She’d
cleared her throat. “It’s Maria Kostakis. Ava’s teacher.”
“Oh,
boy.” I’d sighed and sunk down into my chair. “Is she okay? She’s not sick, is
she? She was pretty unhappy this morning, but she wasn’t running a temperature
back at the house.”
“She’s…”
I’d never had a professional trail off like that with me. It made my heart beat
harder in my chest.
“She’s
what?” I’d snapped. “What?”
“She’s
turning.” Those words seemed hard to
get out, but once she’d managed them, Ms. Kostakis had continued faster and
faster. “She told me at snack time that her hands hurt, and when I looked at
them I saw—there were claws coming
out the end of her fingers, and her palms were changing color. I got her to the
nurse’s office before things got much worse, but our school doesn’t have the
sort of containment facilities needed to handle a shift, so—”
“Containment
facilities?”
“It’s
standard procedure, Mr. Johannsen. If a child shifts in a public environment,
they have to be contained immediately so they can’t infect others. The nurse
called the police, and when the SWAT team arrived—”
“A
SWAT team? She’s four years old!” I knew the basics of dealing with an
unexpected shift—I worked in public education—but SWAT seemed excessive.
“A
four-year old werewolf. The danger
she put our entire school in, I just…”
“She’s
a kid, not a bomb!”
“She
might as well be a bomb!” Ms.
Kostakis had shrieked at me.
It
had taken longer than I’d wanted to get the rest of the chain of events out of
her. SWAT had come, ushered my baby girl into a cage and taken her to the
nearest government facility equipped to deal with werewolves. By the time I’d
gotten there, Ava had already been transported again. And this time—
“We
can’t tell you where she’s gone, Mr. Johannsen.”
“The
hell you can’t.” I’d never been so angry in all my life. Never: not when I’d been laid up in the hospital for weeks at a
time, not when Rick and Davis had enlisted, not when Ava’s mother left us. “She’s my daughter.
I’m her parent, her legal guardian. You can’t just take my child from me.”
The
state official behind the bulletproof glass had weathered my outrage without
batting an eye. “Actually, under the Safety In Isolation Act of 1946, we can.
Your child is a member of a protected but dangerous species, and the best place
for her is in a pack where she’ll get proper care and oversight. Werewolves
need to be in packs in order to be mentally and emotionally stable.”
“How
will ripping her away from everything she’s always known make her emotionally
stable?” I’d demanded. “Ava is an only child―she just started school this
morning! I’m all she knows, and she needs me. We need to be together.”
“Werewolves
adapt differently to change than humans, and Ava is very young. She’ll do
better in her new situation than you’re giving her credit for. Regardless, Mr.
Johannsen, you’re not going to be allowed to see her.” Cool eyes had regarded
me dispassionately. “It’s best if you accept the government’s transition
payment and forget you ever had a child.”
“I
refuse.” I’d stood, furious enough that I barely had any energy left for
standing. My breaths had been so shallow I was lightheaded, but I’d be damned
if I showed any weakness in front of a soulless bureaucrat. “You can expect to
hear from my lawyer.”
“If
that’s how you want things to go. You won’t get anywhere with it, though.”
“Fuck
you.”
I’d
left full of righteous indignation, enough to drown out my fear. Eventually the
tables had turned, though, and fear replaced confidence as I learned that the
official was right. No lawyer would take my case. The law was ironclad:
werewolves weren’t classified as human. They were a dangerous subspecies, and
they were the property of the government. Any attempt to locate my daughter
would result in my imprisonment, which I’d have risked if I could have gotten
anywhere, with anyone.
In
the end, the only person who would help me was Davis, and I still didn’t know
everything he’d had to do to get the information he did. I’d asked, but he
wasn’t sharing his sources. I didn’t care as long as he was right. His
information had led me here, to Middle Of Nowhere, Colorado, where he said I’d
find Ava.
God,
I was so cold. And when had my feet stopped moving? I glared down at them
through my frozen lashes, willing them to get going again, but they refused. How
far had I come from where I’d first found the fence? Was there another camera?
My arm felt as heavy as an anvil, and it was so hard to keep holding onto the
fence when all I wanted to do was rest. Just for a moment. Just…
“Hey.”
Pressure
so light I barely felt it against my hand made me turn. There was someone on
the other side of the fence—an actual person. Hallucinations might be able to
talk, but I wouldn’t feel them, right? She was mostly concealed by a hooded,
fur-lined parka, but I could see the top half of her face. Her eyes looked
worried.
“Please,”
I croaked. The cold had ripped my voice to shreds. “Let me see her. I need to
see my baby.”
“Who
are you talking about? How did you get here?”
“Ava.
My kid. She―I know I’m not supposed to be here, they told me to just forget
about her, but she’s all I have. Please. I’ll do anything to see her.” Anything at all.
Her
mittened hand gripped mine harder. “What’s your name?”
“Ward
Johannsen.”
“How
did you find us?”
“Please.”
I was so cold, and my hand was so heavy. It fell from the fence, even though
she was trying to hold onto it. My knees collapsed, and I heard the woman cry
out. “P-please.” I leaned my head against the unforgiving metal links, the only
things that were keeping me from pitching into the snow. She knelt down on the
other side of the fence and stared at me.
“Mr.
Johannsen. Mr. Johannsen! Ward!” I
blinked at her.
“Shit.”
She glanced away for a moment. “Henry’s going to kill me.” She looked back at
me. “Fuck it. I’ll be to you in two
minutes, Ward. Do you understand? Don’t lie down.” She shook the fence for
emphasis. “Do not lie down! Say you understand me.”
“I…”
“If
you lie down, you’re not going to get to see Ava. You hear me? Ava needs you to
stay awake!”
My
baby needed me. “I’ll stay awake.”
“Good.”
She pushed to her feet. “Two minutes, Ward. I’ll be right back.” I heard the
crunch of her footsteps vanishing into the dark, and I pressed my forehead hard
to the fence.
Two
minutes. I could do that.
As
long as I didn’t die first.
wow!! self-publish i need to read this!
ReplyDeleteno, i know, the rates are bad. but don't give up, it'll be accepted :)
it's so good!!
on a different note, i really hope you feel better soon and that it's nothing serious. <3
Cari
ReplyDeleteThis is great! The story, I mean, not the sick...I do hope you feel better soon. It sucks being ill so I'm sending positive energy your way. But as far as the story goes, this is great! I'm glad to see you branching out (even though I miss my Jonah!). I really really like this already! A very different concept from the usual werewolf chew-'em-ups right from the start. Not that those are bad, I'm just saying this seems to have a bit more substance to it. Beautiful. Love it!!
Scottie
Hope you feel better soon and it doesn't turn into anything serious.
ReplyDeleteOMG, the excerpt was awesome and has me completely hooked!