Read The Moon Dwellers Online

Authors: David Estes

Tags: #Speculative Fiction

The Moon Dwellers (15 page)

BOOK: The Moon Dwellers
11.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Tawni
stops abruptly, her eyebrows r
ising.
“Sorry.
Your father first, then the other stuff.”

She si
t
s on the bed and motions for me to join her.
I don’t feel like sitting, feel
too wired to do anything but pace
around
the room, but I don’t want to argue
,
as I’m afraid it will
delay
the conversation further.
I si
t next to her, tapping my toe rapidly on the stone floor.

Tawni
looks
at me wit
h
sincere blue eyes and says
, “My parents were the ones who recommended t
hat your parents be taken away.”

It wouldn’t sti
ng any
more if she’
d
slapped me across the face.
My parents dragged away in the middle of the night, out
through the kicked-
down door; E
nforcers swarming through our home, smashing picture frames and tables and chairs and anything
they could
get their hands on; m
e, fighting li
ke an animal to defend my family, who are
eventually wrenched away
anyway
.
The most disturbing image f
rom that night:
m
y father’s eyes, intense and scared
, not fearful for his own life, but for mine and Elsey’s.

All because of
Tawni
’s parents.
I don’t think kids should be judged by what their stupid parents do.
Tawni
’s words from
before sud
denly mak
e sense.

I want
to walk away from her, to leave her and her evil fam
ily behind forever, but I stay
for three
reasons.
First, because I owe
her for sitting down and talking to me in the first place, in the yard; for not walking away when I was rude and acting like a nutter
.
Second, because she still hasn’t told me everything she kno
w
s about my father—and I have
to kn
ow.
And third, because I want
to believe in her words about kids having the potential to be different than their parents.
I wa
nt
to believe it for T
ristan’s sake.
Because if he i
sn’t different than his father, then all my thoughts and feelings ove
r the last day—and my dream!—have
been fake, pure fantasy.
Which mean
s that my heart will
die again, and me with it.

As I t
ry
to make sense of my thou
ghts, of my feelings, I realize
Tawni
i
s c
rying.
Her earlier strength gives way, her body crumples
,
she tucks her face into her hands.
I know she’s
been
putting on
a front—an attempt
to be strong, to chase away her sadness
w
ith a brave face.
She thinks I’m going to leave.
She doesn’t know I
have three reasons to stay.

I feel
warmth in my bones, welling up from b
eneath my feet, until it reaches
th
e top of my head.
The warmth i
s compassion for
Tawni
.
She didn’t ask for her parents to be trait
ors.
And from what I understand, their treachery
caused her to run from them, to leave home all alone, and to eventually be caught and
brought to the Pen.
No, she i
sn’t like her parents at all.

The sudden compassion
I feel reminds
me
of my mother.
I always think I am
more
like my dad, but now I wonder if there i
sn’t a lot mo
re of my mom in me than I realized.
I hope
so.
My mom is a special soul.

Instinctively,
I
put my arm around her and pull her close.
Her eyes flick
open for a moment
, red and wet, and then reclose as she buries
her head in the nook between my shoulder and chest.

I’m so sorry, Adele,” she moans
.

I say nothing—there is nothing to say.
I just hold her while sobs shake her body.
I rub her back, smooth
her hai
r—even kiss
her forehead.
Tho
se were the things my mother used to do to me when I was scared—usually
when
still stuck in the throes of a waking nightmare about
drowning.
Slowly
,
Tawni’s body stops
shaki
ng and her
muffled sobs relent.
Her choked breaths beco
me deep and consistent.
For a
moment I think
she might’ve
fallen asleep.

But then she says, “Why a
re you forgiving me?”

I have
n’t s
aid a word to her, certainly have
not uttered the words
I forgive you
, but I guess my actions speak louder.
But I have
n’t forgiven h
er, not really, because there i
s no need.

“You hav
en’t done anything that requires
my forgiveness,” I say
.

Her puffy eyes look into mine as she si
t
s
up straight again.
“Thank you
,” she says
.

“My father?” I say
.

Her words co
me out in a rush, without pause to breathe.
“He’s been taken to a camp set up for traitors—my parents called it
Camp
Blood
and Stone—where the prisoners are made to work in some of the most dangerous mines in the Moon Realm.
I understand it’s somewhere in one of the Northern subchapters,
my parents mentioned subchapter
twenty-six
, I think
.”

“What about my mother?” I say
, realizing
Tawni
has
n’t mentioned her.
She was very specific:
Your father is alive
.

“I don’t know,”
Tawni
says
, “they only mentioned your dad.”

“How did you know they were talking
about my dad?”
My questions a
re coming rapidly n
ow, as all of the investigative skills that my father has taught me a
re coming back.

“The
y said that the traitors they’
d turned over to the authorities had two daughters, A
dele and Elsey.
Your name isn’
t that common, so when I heard it and then later you told us about your parents, I made the connection.”
Tawni
crinkles up her nose, like she kno
w
s what my next question will
be
and i
s dreading it
.
But I have
to ask it.

“Why didn’t you tell me last n
ight when you realized?” I ask
.

“I do
n’t know.
I should have.
We’
d just met and I usually talk to Cole about stuff before I do anything.
He’s my best friend.
Has been for a long time
.”

I’m not
mad
at her.
S
he wa
s in a tough position, not knowing
how I would react when she told
me, an
d yet she told
me anyway.
She could’ve just kept it to herself
, told me to go stuff it when I eavesdropped
on her, but she didn’t.
She did the right thing.
She’s not
like
her parents.

“What
about the other stuff?” I ask
, not wanting to specifically mention Tristan’s name.

“You mean about Tristan?”
Tawni
says
, unders
tanding immediately what I mean
.

I nod
, feeling my face flush slightly.

Tawni
says
, “We should include Cole in the conversation.”

My heart si
nk
s
.
Cole
.
For a
moment I’ve forgotten about him.
He
looked so angry at me.
I’
ve
j
ust met the guy, so I shouldn’t
care
what he thinks
abo
ut me, but to my surprise, I do
.
Probably because of what he did for me yesterday during the riot.
Or perhaps because he i
s
Tawni
’s best friend, and she seems
like a good person, so that must
mean he is
,
too.
Or it might
just be because I actually like
hi
m.
Certainly his sarcasm works
well with me.

“Will he sti
ll be pissed off at me?” I ask
, frowning.

Tawni
laughs
.
“Don’t worry about him.
Sometimes he has a bit of a temper, but he makes up for it by forgiving and forgetting faster than anyone I know.”
Wiping the tears from her cheeks,
Tawni
rises
, offerin
g her hand to help me up.
I ta
k
e
it.

I allow
myself to be pulled down the hall.
Already some of the juveniles a
re leaving the cafeteria, looking unsatisfied by their breakfasts, heading outside for another long, boring day spent lounging in the yard.

When we enter the crowded eatery, I notice
Cole right away, sitting alone i
n the corner.
Thankfully, he i
s facing away from us, so h
e does
n’t stare at us as we approa
ch
.
When
Tawni
slid
es
onto the
bench across from him and he sees
her tearstained face, he
nearly knocks over the table as he leaps
to his feet.

“What h
appened?
Are you okay?” he says.
His eyes flit
back and forth between
Tawni
and me
, one minute showing concern for his friend and the other angry and glaring, like
how he’d looked
at the janitor’s closet before.

“I’m fine.
Please calm down, Cole,”
Tawni
says
, reaching across the table to put a comforting hand on his should
er.
At first his body stiffens at her touch, but then he relaxes
and
melts
back into his seat
.
For a second I am
jealous of
the kind of relationship they have.
It i
s
a
true friendship i
n every sense of the word.
I’
ve
never had that kind of frie
ndship—probably never will.
There i
sn’t room for it in my world.

I tense
up, waiting for the next s
pout of anger from Cole.
It does
n’t come.

“I’m sorry,” Cole says
.

Never would I have expected those to be his
next words.
To be honest, I do
n’t understand why he should speak them.

“What for?” I say
.

Th
e corners of Cole’s mouth turn
up slightly, a complete one-eighty from his tense expression a moment ea
rlier.
The steely twinkle I saw
in his eyes the day before i
s back.
“For my temper,”
he says
.

Tawni
tries to help me with it, but it usually gets the
better of me.
Sneaking around and
spying on us wasn’t right, but my reaction was even worse.
I should’ve let you explain.”

BOOK: The Moon Dwellers
11.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

TheBrokenOrnament by Tianna Xander
Snow by Ronald Malfi
Beloved by Stella Cameron
Louder Than Words by Laurie Plissner
Monkey Wars by Richard Kurti
Watch Them Die by Kevin O'Brien
My Year in No Man's Bay by Peter Handke