Fire And Ash (18 page)

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Authors: Nia Davenport

BOOK: Fire And Ash
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“On a scale of one to ten how much do you like it?” I ask him.

“A ten,” he murmurs against my ear. “Definitely a ten.”

“And here I was thinking you would rate it a
three,
” I say light and teasing.
 

His mouth twitches with amusement. “Cass told you that huh?”

“Yes, she did,” I drawl. “And just so we are clear I am so not a three.”

He looks down at me with a heated look. “You’re right. I never thought you were by the way. I always thought you were more like an
eleven
too. Until you opened your mouth and then it definitely dropped to a three.”

Oh my God. Cassie told him I said that!

I playfully poke him in the chest. “My mouth is just fine thank you. Yours on the other ha-“

Derek’s mouth slants over mine cutting off my words. He tastes like cinnamon and Derek and I want to drink every last bit of him in. He nips at my bottom lip then sucks on it, well acquainted by now with how it effects me.

“You’re right. Your mouth is just fine,” he says against my lips. “What were you saying about mine?”

The hell if I know after the way you just kissed me.
 

“Less talking, more kissing,” I tell him and close the small distance between our lips.

******

The bonfire is more livelier than the dance. The annual homecoming ritual is held around Lake Leeland. There is a keg hidden in the back of Trevor’s pick up truck and a good number of people have flasks they keep pulling out and taking swigs from with much heavier contents than beer.

“Have you seen Trey? I can’t find him,” Daniella asks our group.

“Sorry we haven’t,” I tell her. I don’t add that he is probably off in the trees hooking up with some girl and cheating on her again.
 

Daniella says okay and narrows her gaze at the line of trees to our left. “I am so done with him this time,” she mutters as she takes off towards them.

“Trey is such a pig,” Cassie says once she is out of earshot. “If you ever act like him we are through,” she warns Matt. “And I don’t mean Daniella’s definition of through.”

He kisses her on the cheek. “I know babe. You have nothing to worry about. I’m a one woman man.”

“You better be,” I warn him for the dozenth time not to hurt Cass. I don’t think he will. Underneath the jock facade, Matt is a nice guy. But still he
is
a teenaged guy. Sometimes even the good ones don’t make the best decisions.
 

“I am,” Matt says holding up his hands. “Dude I’m surprised these threats don’t come from you,” he tells Derek.

Derek smirks. “I don’t have to. Ash is more than capable of kicking your ass. And it’d be more humiliating than if I did it. She’s a girl.”

I elbow Derek in the side for the
she’s a girl
comment
.

“It was a compliment,” he grins at me.

I roll my eyes. “Well it was a horrible one.”

Daniella’s scream pierces the air.
 

Derek and I both take off running in its direction. We find her with her back pressed against a tree. Her face holds a horror stricken expression. Trey’s body is sprawled at her feet. His dress shirt is torn open from the deep slashes across his chest.
 

Derek kneels down beside him and touches one of the four wounds. “The blood is still warm. This just happened.”

“Did you find him like this or did you see what did it?” I ask Daniella.
 

“An…an…animal. Red…red…eyes,” she answers hysterically.

I see a flash of gray fur in the distance between two trees behind her. Derek sees it too. He starts in its direction at the same time I do. There is nothing in the area when we get there and we continue deeper into the trees looking for it. But woods stretch on for miles on three of the four sides around us and it could have gone in any direction. There is no sound being carried on the wind or rustling of the leaves covering the floor to tell us which direction to pursue it in.
 

“Hey,” the Laurel Springs Police Chief shouts. “You kids shouldn’t be out here. We already have one dead tonight from an animal attack. We don’t need to add you to the list too. Go on and get out of here.”

When we get back to the bonfire the police have cleared most of everybody out. Matt and Cassie are already gone. I text her to make sure she is okay and she responds that she is almost to her house. She’ll see us when we get there.
 

******

“Ash,” Cassie whispers waking me up.
 

I fell asleep talking on the couch with Derek about how odd it is that two people from school were both mauled by animals recently. Wild animal sightings are not necessarily uncommon around Laurel Springs, but I can never remember there being an attack. If you include our encounter with the wolf at the lake, it makes three incidents within 4 weeks of each other. The pattern makes both of us uncomfortable, but we can’t really explain why. It’s not rogue phoenix behind it. They kill their victims by ritualistically burning them alive. They believe it is the only way the Fire God will accept them as sacrifices.
 

“Go away Cass,” Derek mumbles pulling me tighter against him. His body is warm and inviting and it feels like heaven lying against it.

“Shut up Derek,” Cassie whispers. I sleepily wonder if we are both awake now why she still does. “Ash, I was waiting to tell you something but you never came upstairs.”

“So tell me now,” I say still half asleep. “Umm.” Derek’s shirt is unbuttoned and my cheek is against his bare chest. My hands take on a mind of their own and run themselves along the smooth skin pulled tight over toned muscles beneath them.

Derek makes this noise that leaves me feeling flushed and then kisses me.

“Ash!” Cassie hisses stopping us short. “I can’t tell you in front of
him
. Come upstairs.”
 

“Can’t it wait until the morning,” I grumble. I want to wake up about as much as I want to move from out of Derek’s arms.
And that kiss…I could really use another kiss like that to fall back asleep too.

“No.” Cassie tugs on my arm pulling me away from Derek just as I am about to press our lips together again.
 

“I hate you right now,” I grudgingly tell her as I allow her to pull me up.

“That makes two of us,” Derek growls.
 

“Whatever,” Cassie says. “Ash can come back in a minute and you two can get back to making me not ever want to sit on the sofa again.”

******

“What is so important?” I plop down on Cassie’s bed.
 

She sits crosslegged in front of me. “I had sex with Matt tonight.”

Wait?! What?!
My mind sputters fully awake. “When?! After Trey?!”

Cassie blanches. “God no! That would be weird… and insensitive. It happened after the dance before we got to the bonfire. It’s why we got there a little bit after you guys.”

“Oh. So it was in the back of his truck?”

She blushes pink. “Yeah.”

“Okay,” I say because I have a policy that started with Becca not to judge my friends. Even when I disagreed with the things she did I respected that they were
her
choices to make.

“Is that bad?” She asks me.

I don’t judge, but I don’t lie to my friends either. “I think your first time could have happened somewhere better than the back of Matt’s truck.”
And I think he’s an ass for letting it happen there,
I don’t add.
 

“Did he pressure you?” I ask. “Because I will fu-“

“No,” Cassie rushes to cut me off. She blushes again. “I think I might have sort of pressured him. It obviously wasn’t his first time but he was actually trying to be sweet about mine. But I’m seventeen and I like him a lot and I figured why not.”

Oh okay.
That is not at all what I would have ever guessed. I also don’t think
why not
is a good enough reason to have sex with somebody, much less lose your virginity to them, but again it was Cassie’s choice to make so I don’t say what I think to her. I would have if she had told me she was considering it before hand but saying it now is pointless. It might only make her feel bad about something that has already happened.
 

“Were you safe?”
 

“God Ash you sound like Mom now,” she groans. “Yes we used a condom.”

“And how do you feel about it now?” I ask her.

She thinks about the question for a moment. “I feel…the same I guess. It wasn’t what I thought it would be, but it wasn’t bad either.”

“Do you regret it?”

“No. Like I said I sort of pressured him. It was something I wanted to experience.”

She doesn’t hesitate with her answer making me feel better about the situation.

“Have you are Derek h-?”

I cut her off before she can finish the question. “No, we have not.”

She arches an eyebrow at me. “Really? That’s not what it looked like on our couch.”

Seriously Cass?! Are we really having this conversation about your uncle.
“No, we really haven’t,” I reiterate to her. “I’ve thought about it. And Derek told me tonight he thinks about it all the time, but he said we can take things as slow or as quick as I want to. I think I’d like to take things slow. I mean it’s Derek who had the parade of randoms over the summer that we are talking about. I don’t want to be like one of them.”

“You’re already not like one of them. Derek has never had a girlfriend. Ever. And he sure as hell has never done things like go to football games and dances and to parks to see fireworks displays with a girl or anybody for that matter.”

“Derek does all of that for you not me,” I tell her.

Cassie looks at me like I’m out of my mind. “Derek does not do those things for me. Believe me. I’ve tried a lot of times in the past two years to get him to act normal again after Dad’s and Bethany’s deaths. Regardless of how much I’ve pestered him about being more social he has
never
caved. We moved so much because Derek would get into fights and get expelled. He’s how he is now because of you not me. He participates in things because I badger you into doing them and he comes along because you do.”

Cassie’s words stun me. I figured Derek was just being supportive of Cass wanting to be normal. The truth makes me feel something I can’t put into words but it’s nice and I like it.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Instincts

“Skinwalkers are a Navajo legend. The Navajo think them to be accomplished medicine men or witches who reach the highest level of priesthood but elect to use the powers they gain when doing so for evil. To become skinwalkers they must kill a close relative. Then they gain immense magical powers that include the ability to shapeshift into any animal they choose. Once they kill it, they can take on its form. The most feared or revered animals in Navajo mythology are usually their choice: coyotes, crows, wolves, owls, foxes. It’s rare, but some are powerful enough to even change into the skin of other humans. When they shapeshift it is for the singular purpose of inflicting pain. In their animal forms they appear larger than their natural counterparts and are marked by red glowing eyes. They are fierce, vicious and bloodthirsty. There is no creature more feared in Native American folklore than the skinwalker.”

Mr. Cordero concludes class with a Native American myth like he always does when he has assigned reading as homework for the night. It is his uncanny way of getting us to actually do it. Surprisingly it works with most of us. The stories are always about the Native American people our reading is over and they are just intriguing enough to make us read the boring source material.
 

The bell rings and Mr. Cordero reminds everyone of the homework on their way out the door.

I ease out of my desk, standing on shaky legs. I walk down the 400s hall still feeling unsteady and veer off into the bathroom between it and the 300s.
 

Someone is crying hysterically in one of the stalls. It sounds suspiciously like Daniella.

I knock on the stall. “Are you okay?” I ask the person.

“A...Ash?” Daniella’s voice comes through the door in between sobs, confirming that it is her.

“Yes, it’s me. Are you okay?”

“N…no.”

“What’s wrong?” I ask her realizing belatedly that it’s a dumb question. It was only two days ago that she found her boyfriend mauled by an animal at the bonfire.

“It’s…it’s…Trey,” she says.

“I’m sorry about Trey. I know it sucks. But it will get better.” I struggle for the right things to say. Apparently, I’m horrible at consoling people. “My mom… I found her dead when I was six. It was traumatic but I eventually got over it. My dad took me to talk to somebody and it helped. Maybe you should see about talking to somebody too?”

“Th-…That’s…That’s…not…wh-…what’s…wrong?”

“Then what it is?” I ask her.

Her breathing becomes more rapid and I hear her gasping for air. It sounds like she is hyperventilating.
 

“Daniella,” I tell her sternly. “Open the door. Let me help you.”

Her gasps become louder.
 

“Daniella!” I yell. “You need to calm down. I am going to start counting to twenty. Count with me okay?”

It helped me at six when I’d wake up from the nightmare memory. I still have to do it sometimes when the dream wakes me up in a particularly violent manner.

“One…two…three…four…” By the time I get to ten her breathing has calmed and she’s not struggling for breaths any more. By thirteen she starts counting with me. After twenty the lock on the stall clicks and she opens its door.

“Better?” I ask her.

“No,” she shakes her head as she says the words.

“Do you want to talk about it?”

“You won’t believe me.” She looks like she is on the verge of hyperventilating again.

I take her hand and gently tug her out of the stall. “I would believe more than you know. And I promise not to judge only listen.”

She nods her head meekly. She takes a deep breath then speaks. “Ever since Saturday,” she begins hesitantly. “I’ve been seeing Trey. Or something that looks like Trey.
 
My parents took me home after the police were done with their questions. I was in the bathroom when I heard something beneath the window. I don’t know why, but I went to look out of it. I swear I saw Trey standing below it. I blinked and when I opened my eyes he was gone. Then Sunday in the middle of the night the same thing happened. Only I thought I saw him outside my bedroom window. And today during seventh period I left Hamilton’s to come to the restroom and I thought I saw him at the other end of the long stretch of hallway that leads from the 300s to the 400s. I came in here and fell apart. Please don’t tell anybody about this. My dad is the principal and things always get back to him. My parents will make me go to Bellhaven for evaluation. My grandmother is there. She’s been there for years. They say she has paranoid schizophrenia and that it can be genetic. He and my mom are always watching me for signs that I suffer from the same disease as her. If they hear about this they will say I’m just like her, but it’s not true. I’m not crazy. I swear I’m not! It’s him I’m seeing!”

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