Read Ties to the Blood Moon 2nd Edition Online
Authors: Robin P Waldrop
A puzzled expression flitted across her face, and then she smiled. “How do you like it here at H-H-S?”
“It’s okay, I guess. I mean, it’s hard to know for sure after only a week. But I guess as far as school goes, it’s fine.” I sat with my hands tucked under my legs, swinging my feet back and forth nervously. If she called my aunt, it would be reason enough for her to take me out of school and then I’d be a prisoner at home again. “Miss Baylor, please don’t tell my aunt. After my mom died and I came here to live, she wanted me to home school. I guess that’s her idea of protecting me. I had to beg her to let me come to school in the first place.
“I swear Luna and I were minding our own business when Elise came over and started picking on Luna. At first, I wasn’t going to say anything, but she put her hands on me. I was only defending myself.”
Miss Baylor picked up her phone and pressed a button. “Mr. Long, I won’t be calling Genevieve’s aunt after all.” She glanced in my direction and winked, said something else to the principal, and hung up the phone.
“You’re not?” I asked earnestly. She smiled and shook her head. I was stoked. “Thanks, Miss Baylor. I
really
appreciate it.”
“We’ve all made mistakes.” She paused for a minute and stared off somewhere. “I see so much of myself in you.”
“How?” I furrowed my brow.
“It’s not important right now.” She halfway grinned. “I want you to promise me that you will do everything in your power to conduct yourself as a young lady.”
“Yeah … I promise,” I said, dropping my head down. As soon as she finished talking, I thanked her again for not calling my aunt, and quickly left her office.
Luna was waiting for me down the hall by the girls bathroom. “Gen, oh-my-gah.” She hugged my neck. “You slapped Elise like, so hard, she turned a complete circle and I swear her eyes rolled back in her head.” She followed me into the bathroom.
Chapter 5
Friday was the longest day of my life, but as soon as that annoying buzzer signaled the end of the school week, a smile stretched across my face. I couldn’t wait to go to the bonfire. Luna told me how much fun we were sure to have. Finally, some time away from home with a bunch of kids my own age. I only had one obstacle standing between me and freedom … Aunt Bev.
When I pushed through the double metal doors of the school, spring brought the sweet smell of fir trees into the air. The brisk wind blew my hoodie back, but I didn’t care. I was on a mission. Somehow, during the ride home, I had to figure out a how I was going to convince Aunt Bev into letting me go to the bonfire.
Luna was standing next to my Jeep with a large group of kids. I wrinkled my brow and slowed my pace, not sure of what was going on. I heard Luna announce my presence, and everyone promptly stopped talking and turned to face me. I searched their emotionless faces for a sign of what they wanted from me.
All at once, everyone started cheering. There were people I swear I had never seen before patting me on the back. They were all congratulating me for putting Elise in her place. I smiled even though I knew I had handled the situation wrong. They actually made me feel pretty good.
My heart started fluttering when out of nowhere William stepped up next to Luna. I thought I was going to pass out when he spoke to me.
“How come you haven’t called me?” he asked. The corners of his mouth curved up, revealing a sexy smile.
My face suddenly felt hot, and I smiled sheepishly. “I, uh, wasn’t sure you really wanted me to call. I thought maybe my aunt had gotten you to pity me.” I quickly looked down at the ground, too embarrassed to look at him.
Luna walked up and looped her arm through mine. “So … William, are you coming to the bonfire tonight? Gen is coming,” she said, and nudged me at the same time.
He smiled and I knew his answer. Now all I had to do was convince Aunt Bev to let me go. I had a feeling it wasn’t going to be an easy task.
During the drive home, I went over in my mind all the different reasons I would use if my aunt said no, and I was ninety-nine point nine percent sure her answer was definitely going to be no.
My pulse rate continued to rise with each step I took toward the garage door. I stopped, took a deep breath and sighed before entering the house. When I went inside, I didn’t see Aunt Bev and was just about to call out to her when I heard her speaking to someone.
As I eased into the den her voice grew clearer; she was on the phone. Evidently she hadn’t heard me come in. I knew this because I heard mention of my name and something about it not being time yet.
Time for what?
I continued listening. My aunt became increasingly angry. I heard her say, “I won’t let you have it your way.” Even though it was wrong to eavesdrop I was compelled to listen.
“You’ll have to kill me first,” Aunt Bev said in a hushed, angry tone, and it frightened me.
I took a step and kicked an umbrella leaned against the wall. My heart all but jumped out of my chest when the umbrella slid down the wall making a scraping noise. Aunt Bev grew quiet, and I hurried back through the kitchen, opening and shutting the door leading in from the garage as if I had just come home.
“Aunt Bev?” I called out, trying unsuccessfully to hide the nervous tone in my voice.
“Hi, sweetheart.” She forced a smile through a pained expression when I walked into the room.
I tried not to stare at her. Her face had been washed of all color, looking as though she had seen a ghost. “Is something wrong? You don’t look so good,” I asked trying to sound innocent, even though I knew it had something to do with whoever she’d been arguing with on the phone.
“Not really. I just have this sudden taste for meat.” I put some of the meat back into the package, and then, when she wasn’t looking, grabbed half of it back out, rolled it up and downed it in two bites. “Maybe I was a little hungrier than I thought.” We laughed simultaneously.
She leaned against the counter with her arms crossed loosely over her chest and watched me practically inhale the sandwich. The whole time I was eating I kept going over in my mind all the different arguments I would use if she said no to the bonfire.
Finally, I just blurted it out. “There’s a bonfire tonight up at Wolf Point by the caves. Luna, her three brothers, and all the kids I’ve met at school are going. Can I please-please-please go?”
After I showered, I went into my room and my cell phone was chiming like crazy. It was text messages from Luna. There were two within three minutes of each other.
Are you coming tonight?
was the first message she sent.
Gen. Why aren’t you answering?
she texted, like, fifteen seconds later.
Chill Luna. I was in the shower. Yeah. I’m coming. I’ll text message you when I leave. You still want to ride with me?
She must have been staring at her phone, because as soon as I pressed send, one came right back.
Yeah. Hurry. We need to leave in an hour. You won’t want to miss a thing.
I laid my phone down and looked in the mirror; panic immediately set in. I hadn’t even begun to get ready yet. I was going to have to hurry if I expected to leave in an hour. I rushed to my closet and grabbed a pair of black ski pants, matching white and black top, and my new Ugg sheepskin boots.
Forty-five minutes later I dabbed on a little perfume, scooped up my jacket, and hurried down the stairs, taking two steps at a time. I’d almost made it to the door when I heard my aunt.
“Gen,” she called out for the gazillionth-and-one time.
I rolled my eyes. “Yeah,” I moaned, stopping just inside the kitchen door.
“I just wanted to tell you to treat that Jeep like it was yours … because it is.” When she hugged me I think I detected a tear in her eye. I smiled, thanking her and slipped out the door.
Chapter 6
I didn’t say much during the ride to Wolf Point. I wanted so much for William to be there, but at the same time I hoped he wouldn’t show up. Luna, on the other hand, had taken control of the stereo and was happily singing at the top of her lungs to a new Smashing Pumpkins’ song I was hearing for the first time. I kept giving her sidelong glances.
“What?” she tried shouting over the music while looking at me questioningly. Her whole face lit up with the prettiest smile. Her smooth complexion reminded me of melted caramel. She was such a free spirit. Nothing seemed to phase her, except … Elise. But, that was totally understandable. I didn’t even know the girl and she managed to push me over the edge within like five seconds of opening her mouth. I can’t remember ever getting that angry before.
Actually, since moving to Alaska, I’d been noticing things about me that were changing. Luna and I hadn’t really talked about what happened per se, except when half of the senior class congratulated me in the parking lot.
“Nothing,” I shouted back, shaking my head. “Just—” I was still shouting when Luna quickly turned down the stereo. “Nervous.”
“Why are you screaming?” she asked, and we both laughed in unison.
Luna guided me off the road and down a long gravel path. It suddenly grew into a darkened abyss. Thick masses of trees so tall I couldn’t see past the tops overlapping each other on both sides, blocking out the sky somewhere beyond.
We drove at least a mile or two before the trees finally parted to reveal a huge opening in front of a cave. There must have been fifty or sixty vehicles parked in no certain order. Kids were scattered all over the place in small groups. Some hung out on truck tailgates, some had already paired up and were busy fogging up car windows, and others, more serious about the art of the bonfire, gathered firewood, placing it atop an already impressive stack.
Jack, I was told his name by Luna, was the unofficial DJ. Dressed totally in black, with guy liner to match, he had the trunk open on his brand new red Audi A8, showing off a mobile sound system with two massive bass thumpers and a dozen other smaller speakers. “Radioactive” by Kings of Leon blared from his stereo and echoed through the trees and into the cave. I must say, I did like his taste in music.
I was moving around slowly, taking it all in, when Luna pulled me toward the cave. “Come on, Gen. You’ve got to see this.”
We stepped around a group of kids that had been blocking my view of the cave. I recognized them from one of the lunch room tables we had eaten at.
“Gen, you remember Nathan, Darcy, Samuel, and Katy, right?”
“Oh, yeah. Hi.” I waved and then realized I so must have looked like a dork. After we brushed past them, the cave opened up into this humongous room with a high ceiling. The light from the flames danced off small crystals embedded in the walls, which gave the whole room a glowing sparkle. It was so mesmerizing and beautiful I could hardly take my eyes off of it.
Several other kids from school sat around a small fire talking and laughing with someone a bit older than everyone else. She was dressed in Eskimo garb. When we got closer, I was shocked to find it was Miss Baylor.
“Hello, girls,” she said, smiling at us. “Are you going to be around later for the telling of the ‘Legend of the Adlet Royalty and the Blood Moon’?”
“All what people?” I wanted to say but didn’t. I was just as confused as I was when I saw Miss Baylor. “Let’s go back outside.” I nudged her back toward the opening.
We circled the whole place but I didn’t find William. Maybe he had decided not to come after all. I was completely bummed. Luna and some friends were heading into the woods and she asked if I wanted to go along. I was a good bit behind everyone else and called for Luna to wait up when I stopped to get a pebble out of my boot. I guess she didn’t hear me, because when I ran to catch up I came to a fork in the path and no one was in sight. I played the eeny-meeny-miney-moe game and the path on the left side won.
The deeper into the woods I walked, the darker it grew. Finally, due to the thickness of all the huge trees completely blocking the sky, it was too dark to see and I took that as my cue to turn around. However, I promptly discovered it was easier said than done. What I thought was taking me back out was only taking me deeper into infinite darkness. I stopped in the middle of the path and swallowed hard. My heart raced and fell at the same time when it hit me—I was completely alone.