Pirate of the flesh throw back your head and part your jowls to sing a lunar song.
The forest paths are dark the night is long.
She shivered in delicious shock.
He knows, she thought.
He knows what’s in the picture.
Anger edged out the excitement and her eyes narrowed. Who was this Aiden Teague? Why should he know forest paths?
But she was intrigued. Maybe she should seek him out and have a look at this person who wrote of the crunch of bones, see if she approved of him.
And what if she didn’t? Set the Five on him? She laughed softly, baring sharp white teeth.
The morning was tentatively warm, and the smell of early roses drifted over from a neighbor’s yard. The day would be hot later; she was glad she’d decided to wear shorts.
Not much school left now, Vivian thought as she walked down the tree-lined street.
What will I do in the summer?
Move, she hoped. Get out of this place.
“Hey, Viv.”
A lean, muscular figure peeled out from behind a stone gatepost, and her eyes widened briefly. “Rafe,” she said in casual greeting, and kept on walking. If she hadn’t been daydreaming she would have sniffed him out.
Rafe fell in beside her. She noticed that he was now cultivating a goatee and mustache. He ran a hand through his thick, long brown hair and shifted his grip on a package wrapped in newspaper he carried under one arm. “Going to school?”
“Some of us do.”
The Five were more likely to be found hanging out by the diner around the corner from school, or down by the river.
“Yaaaaahhhhhh!”
“Whoooooooooooooooo!”
Two boys dropped from a roadside tree in a jingling of chains, hair flying. This time she did start slightly, and cursed herself. She should have known the others were near. The twins, Willem and Finn, looked pleased with themselves. Round-faced Willem slipped an arm around her waist and gave her a friendly squeeze. “Didn’t scare you, did we?” he asked, obviously hoping he had.
“You are such a puppy,” Vivian said, removing his arm. He’d been her favorite of the twins as they were growing up. He was sweeter and more predictable than his brother, but his affectionate gestures had lost a great deal of their innocence in the last year or so.
Finn, the gaunter twin, smiled sardonically.
She was expecting the others now, so it came as no surprise when Gregory, the twins’ lanky, fair-haired cousin, stepped silently out from behind another tree and folded in with them, and Ulf hopped over a white picket fence to dance his jittery way backward up the sidewalk, laughing wildly, until Rafe cuffed him to the rear.
They wore their usual uniform of boots, black jeans, T-shirts, and assorted tattoos. Rafe had his sleeves rolled up to show off his biceps.
My bodyguards, Vivian thought.
“Saw your mother go into Tooley’s bar with Gabriel last night,” Finn said. “She was all over him.” His lips sketched a spiteful thin leer, and his eyes narrowed expectantly.
Vivian bristled, but she wasn’t going to say anything.
“Yeah, Astrid wasn’t far behind,” said Rafe. “And she looked pissed.” He laughed.
“Hey, leave my mom out of it,” Ulf piped up.
So that’s who they were fighting over, Vivian thought.
Gabriel.
That was disgusting. He was only twenty-four. And full of himself, from what she could tell.
Rafe took the parcel he carried out from beneath his arm, and Vivian heard Ulf giggle. Rafe pulled at the knotted string to loosen it. His eyes were more red than brown when he glanced up at her, a wicked grin playing about his lips, and Vivian knew he was up to mischief.
“Vivian, I’d like to give you my heart,” Rafe said, suddenly serious, then immediately grinning again. “But since that might be inconvenient, I’ve brought you someone else’s.”
The newspaper unrolled, and he slapped a brown slimy gob down on the sidewalk.
“Rafe!” She looked around wildly, hoping no neighbors were in sight. “What the hell are you up to?”
The Five were helpless with laughter.
Vivian grabbed the newspaper from Rafe’s hand and scooped up the mess.
“Give you my heart…,” he gasped, and bent over laughing again.
Where could she put this? Where was the body? She started to rewrap the disgusting trophy. Then, “Rafe, you jerk,” she cried. “This is a sheep’s heart.”
More howls of laughter exploded from the Five.
She didn’t know whether to be angry or relieved. “You were over at Uncle Rudy’s store, weren’t you?” Rudy was a meat cutter at Safeway. When no one answered her, she growled and flung the whole package in Rafe’s face. That set the others off even worse. Ulf had tears in his eyes.
She turned and left them, but they followed at a distance anyway, and she heard their bursts of laughter all the way to school.
Mom thinks the Five have learned their lesson, Vivian thought. “Hah!” she said out loud.
When Axel had come home from jail, her father had passed judgment swiftly. The punishment for endangering the pack was death.
Vivian couldn’t save Axel, but she pleaded with her father for the Five. They were just kids like her. They had only killed to prove the witness wrong and protect the secret of the pack. They wouldn’t do it again. So Ivan Gandillon made them beg forgiveness of the Moon and run the Trial of the Fang down a narrow path lined with the pack in their fur, and all could take their bites. Some said that he let the Five off too lightly, although they licked their wounds for weeks. Maybe those people were right. Vivian hadn’t quite trusted the Five ever since.
It wasn’t until almost lunchtime that Vivian remembered that she wanted to track down Aiden Teague.
Yeah, why don’t I have a look at this poet, she told herself.
See if I like him writing about things he shouldn’t know about.
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