Thursday, January 30, 2014

1...2...3... Run!

"Give me your phones," Emily said to the others. Adelaide had a smart phone, but Brett's was just a flip phone. "Okay, you're going to have to use mine. Me and Adelaide will stick together." She drew a sigil on Adelaide's phone. It glowed blue for a second, then went out. Emily handed Adelaide's phone to Brett. "Me and Adelaide are going first. We have a... it's not exactly invisibility. It's more like a Don't Notice Me smell, so they can look right at us and think we're as important as trees. We'll go in and extract Levi from the cave where they've hidden him. I've downloaded an app so that you can track the movements of the monsters. It should be able to keep up with anything below a level 4, but be careful. Something bigger might be out there. And make sure they don't see the light on the phone."

"Can't you do the invisibility thing on me?" Brett asked.

"No, we need you to be a distraction. Don't run in though, they're waiting for you. See if you can circle around instead, take out the patrols on the edges. Get them worried about one spot and then run somewhere else. Don't stay too long though."

"I told you I can handle myself."

"Brett, pay attention." She flipped open her own phone. She clicked an icon like a shield made of the wings of two crows. A map of the park zoomed into view. Three little green specks sat huddled in the parking lot, while all around them red specks circled. Dozens of them. About three hundred yards into the forest, another little green dot flickered.

"There are 37 wolves. Can you handle 37 wolves by yourself?" Emily asked sarcastically.

Brett stared at the screen, mind blank. A cold chill shivered up his spine. I would have walked right into that, he thought. I wouldn't have stood a chance.

"Brett! Pay attention!" Emily snapped.

"All of those red dots are giant wolves?" Adelaide asked. She sounded remarkably calm about it. "But they can't see us, right?"

"They know where Brett is right now, but they won't as soon as he sprints away from the car. I set up an enchantment so that they'll sense three different Bretts running in different directions. That way he has a chance to draw them off. We'll already be heading to get Levi, and the wolves should be too preoccupied, and my enchantment should hold." Emily shook her head. "I'm not going to lie, this is insanely dangerous. I, ah, didn't expect..." she swallowed. "There are allot more fenrir than I expected." She glanced down at the screen, then outside. "Okay, looks like the wolves are getting antsy. Time for us to go. Count to 10 before you head out, or the wolves might trip over us, and they would definitely notice that."

Emily opened the car door a crack and slipped out into the still night, Adelaide close behind. "And Brett," Emily whispered. "I'd take off my shoes and socks if I were you. It'll help. Trust me."

Brett swore at the girl's retreating figures, quietly. Gritting his teeth, he shucked his shoes off, counting to ten as he did so. "One," he grimaced.

He hoped the girls would be okay. This was a horrible plan. "Two," he whispered quietly to himself.

Was that movement under that tree? "Three"

Both his shoes and now his socks were discarded onto the floor of the car. A rank, toe-like smell wafted up. "Four."

Definitely movement. Coming from two different directions. "Five."

He glanced down at the phone. Maybe eight of them were circling his car, just outside the parking lot. "Six."

His breath came faster. "Seven."

"Eight."

"Nine." One was running towards his car.

"Ten!" Brett launched himself out of the vehicle, slamming the car door into the wolf-creature's face as he did so. He rolled on the ground and pelted in the opposite direction of the girls. He felt a sensation like two shadows crossing over his shoulders, and a moment later out of the corner of his eyes he saw two mirror images of himself streaking in opposite directions. Laughing madly, Brett leaned into the run, sprinting through the cool night air.

Brett was probably the best football player on his team. He played varsity as a freshman. He knew how fast he was, how strong. He'd been getting into fights for years. He'd never lost once. This was his field. Brett knew it, he could feel the wolves coming for him, faster than linebackers, faster than startled deer, and still they seemed to move through molasses. This was his game.

He could feel one of the wolves closer than the rest, her breath- he could tell it was female somehow- damp-hot on his legs. He leaped towards a tree, kicking off just as the beast sailed below him, pulling out the nail and twisting in mid-air to avoid another wolf-monster's swiping claws.

A moment later he held a sword in his hand.

Brett didn't let them get close enough to grapple. One on one grappling was fine, but a death wish against so many. Brett slashed in a wide arc with his sword, directing it towards movement more felt than seen. The blade sang through the air, and a moment later monstrous howls of rage filled his ears.

He glanced down at the phone in his other hand. Ten more were headed in his direction to join these three. Brett ran again, bursting between the two in front of him with a quick jab into the ear of the right and a quick slice of the sword across the hind quarters of the left. They fell back a moment, disoriented, before hurtling like comets of fur and fury at his heels again.

Brett realized he was still laughing. He stopped abruptly. A short bluff loomed up ahead. Brett leaped, sword changed back to nail and in pocket, phone between teeth, leaped and scurried up the shear rock wall like a lizard. Down below the wolves scrabbled after him, but they weren't built to climb. The cool stone was welcoming beneath his feet. He reached the summit and kept running, grinning into the darkness.

They wanted to hunt him, did they? He would show them who was hunter, and who was hunted.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Stop!

            Malaspina Park didn’t look like much and was hard to get to. The park didn’t have any real open spaces and was pretty much just a bunch of trails that ran through the woods. Brett didn’t feel like walking to the trailheads so he went up some windy roads until he could pull off onto a dirt power line road that went by the trailheads. All the trees had been cut back to make room for the power lines so you had a thirty foot wide snake of space bordered on both sides by trees. On one side just a little past the trees was the North Vancouver suburbs and on the other was a vast never ending forest.
            “What is she doing?” Brett asked and not for the first time as he pulled onto the dirt road. “We’re almost there.”
            “Brett shhhh.” Adelaide said quietly. “Emily said she needed to concentrate for this to work.”
            Emily the weird had been sitting in a trance like state for the last ten minutes. It had been so frustrating to have her say ‘oh there is so much stuff I know Brett but your too dumb to understand it all, you’re just going to have to wait until I find my picture books, I’m not sure I can teach jock monkeys to read’ okay she hadn’t said it like that but that’s what it had felt like she had been saying. Telling them she knew about what was going on than saying she would explain it latter and then telling them they had to be quite so she could concentrate and hopefully get them all back alive.
            Emily started speaking under her breath in some language that Brett had never heard but that sent shivers down his spine and made his hair stand up. The quick glances that Brett had sneaked as they drove along showed Emily head bowed and eyes closed mumbling and moving her arms and hand in funny gestures. Adelaide looked on with a face of worry and concern. Suddenly Emily’s hand shot out and griped his arm “stop the car” she said in an urgent horse whisper.
            “Now what?” Brett sighed as he stopped the car.
            “There are too many of them. Even you would be overwhelmed.” She said with certainty. Again she didn’t tell them how she knew.
            “I’d like to see them try.” Brett growled and almost kept driving but the tightening of Emily’s hand on his arm stopped him.
            “Brett, please don’t be an idiot. We need to use the subtle approach here.”
            “I don’t know if Brett knows how to be subtle.” Adelaide said a little smile twitched on her lips.
“I know how to be subtle.” Brett said defensively. He was glad it was dark so the girls couldn’t see his face. It felt hot.
“Well you don’t show it very often.” Adelaide said with a giggle.

“I’ve been using magic and contemplating. And I think I now a way to get Levi out without getting any of us killed in the process.” Emily said with confidence. But Brett could see the worry lining her face.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Another Car Ride

They got to Adelaide's house a few minutes later. She was sitting on the porch, her white hair giving her a faint halo from the moonlight and porch light. Her first aide backpack was next to her, and as soon as she saw them pull up, Adelaide hopped to her feet and ran to the car.

"I told my parents that I needed to help some friends from school with some things," she said breathlessly. "Well? What's going on?"

"Well," Brett began, a little disgruntled that she had also sat in the back seat.

"Oh, I'll explain it. You'd just mess things up," Emily said crossly. She turned to Adelaide. "I know you've dealt with some crazy things before. Unusual injuries," Emily waved at Brett in the front seat. "Perhaps seeing unusual things, something like that. The reason I know that is because everybody here has experienced something similar."

Adelaide gave herself some time to think while she pulled a dry towel out of her backpack for Emily. "I've always been really good at medicine. People say it's because I'm smart, and I really do love learning about how to help people, but sometimes," She said, "Sometimes I feel like I'm healing people with magic or something. Like I will them better." She looked at the other two curiously. "I kind of figured something similar might be happening with Brett,"

"Does everybody know my biggest secret?" Brett interrupted incredulously.

"You're a rather obnoxiously obvious target," Emily stated. She toweled her damp clothes vigorously, as well as her hair.

"I figured Brett might have had something similar going on," Adelaide continued, "but I didn't think you might have..."

"There are quite a few of us here at school." Emily said, still toweling. When she finished, she looked pointedly at Brett, who stared back until realizing he was still sitting in front of Adelaide's house. Muttering about obnoxiously bossy females, he started the car up again and started driving.

"I can't tell you who everyone is yet, but that's not the point. The point is that there are monsters as well as kids with gifts. Monsters that really want to kill the kids with gifts. Most of the time we manage to hide the people from them before it becomes too much of a problem." Emily went on. "The bracelet I gave you for you birthday? That's a protective charm. It keeps the monsters from noticing you. I never did manage to give one to Brett though."

Adelaide tugged self-consciously at the braided hemp bracelet set with a single carved green stone.

"Wait a minute, who's we?" Brett interrupted.

"I don't have time to explain everything right now," Emily shot an irritated glance at the Brett, and then continued on. "The most important thing right now is that somehow Levi got involved with all of this. He's a normal, but I think some monsters are using him as bait to get Brett to come and save him. I'm not sure why."

"I killed one of them earlier today," Brett growled. "Just like I'm going to kill the rest when we get there."

The girls sat in uncomfortable silence after that last comment. Outside houses gave way to gas stations and strip malls, and Brett started driving faster. Adelaide said, "Shouldn't we try focusing on getting Levi safely out of there, instead of walking into the trap like this?"

"That's what me and you are here for," Emily said, smiling. "Levi is probably seriously injured; they're likely to try using him as a bargaining chip with Brett, to get him in a vulnerable position, and then take him down. But they don't know about you or me. Our job will be locating and extracting Levi while Brett keeps the fenrir occupied."

"I thought they were werewolves," Brett said.

"I'll explain that later too, I promise. But right now the most important thing is making sure Levi is safe." Emily shook her head. "I'm breaking so many rules today," she said wryly, "But monsters have been moving allot more openly lately. Maybe it's time for people like us to do the same."

"And Brett's going to take care of the wolves," Adelaide said, doubt in her voice. "By himself."

"I'm going to give him a little help before he goes in," Emily assured her. "And both of us will be there if things get too hairy." She pulled a couple nails, big as railroad spikes, out of her coat pocket. "Each of you take one of these."

Adelaide took one dubiously, but her mouth firmed a second later. "I'm ready. Just," she said, patting Brett quickly on the shoulder, "Just be careful out there, okay?"

Brett blushed a little, but when he spoke, his voice still carried angry undertones, like the distant rumble of an earthquake. "Don't worry. I can take care of myself."

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Well this is Painful

Pain shot through Levi’s entire body. He didn’t want to move or open his eyes. It hurt even to breath. Each one shot lances of pain through his battered frame. One of his ribs must be broken Levi thought dully. Although right now nothing seemed to be working and everything might be broken for all he knew.
The last thing Levi remembered was walking home. The light from the sun had set and now the twilight glow was all that was left. His phone rang again; he looked at the screen monotonously. It was Emily; she had been calling for the last hour. He watched his screen until the light stopped flashing and it went blank. He sighed, he felt guilty for not answering. But at the moment he didn’t want to talk to her.
He was almost home, his steps slowed noticeably as he got closer. It wasn’t that he didn’t like his foster family. He did, but then again he didn’t. Interesting would be the best word for them. Levi’s foster father drank a lot and played jokes and pranked people a lot. When asked what he did he always had a different answer but Levi always thought of him as a con artist. Levi’s foster mother worked long hours at a butchers and always wanted to know where he was at and what he was doing. Half the missed calls on his phone were from her. There was the older Goth sister who liked to play zombie. She was okay half the time. There was the older brother who worked at the pet store. He shaved his head bald and had a snake tattoo that covered his entire body. Then there was the dog. Levi didn’t know why he always included him with the family but it just seemed right. It was the biggest dog that Levi had ever seen. Levi foster father laughed and said he was some malamute, husky, wolf mix with horse thrown in for good measure. He was chained up in the back yard and stayed there with his head poking out of his too small dog house. Baleful eyes watching and waiting for someone to make the mistake and come to close to his domain. Ironically it was Levi’s foster father’s girlfriend that Levi liked the most. She was nice and loved horses and liked to tell Levi about them.
Lost in thoughts about his foster family and how he was going to convince Brett he didn’t tell Emily anything. Levi had no idea what happened. He was walking the next thing he knew he had the wind knocked out of him and his face smashed against the sidewalk. He was desperately trying to suck in air when pain ached up his body from his arm and he blacked out.
Levi opened his eyes now. Squinting down he tried to look at his arm. It was hard to see anything it was so dark. He had his back against a pine tree and it looked like he was in the forest that surrounded North Vancouver. He was shirtless and cold. He could tell his back was scrapped up and he was sure that he had cuts all over his torso.
The ground elevated to the right and was the forest proper. To the left the ground sloped down and Levi could see a ways into the distance the forest broke in a long clearing a road running through it. Further and a little past the clearing and road Levi could see house lights.

Turning again to the right his view was obscured by white teeth and yellow eyes. Levi screamed and fell over onto his side coughing and curled up in pain. For a moment Levi thought it was the family dog. But the giant gray wolf wasn’t him. There was the crunch of boots in the dead foliage and Levi looked up into the face of what he thought was Camdon, before realizing it wasn’t him, a moment before he blacked out once again.

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Levi is still alive, the note said. Barely.

Brett bristled, but stepped out onto the porch and closed the door quietly.

"What are you doing here?" He hissed. "I don't want you, or Levi, or anybody coming around he-"

Emily thrust the shirt and note at him. "Before you ridicule me, perhaps you should consider the consequences of your own actions."

Brett took them without thinking, grimacing at the wetness of both. Halted mid-rant he glanced down at the shirt and caught his breath. It was Levi's shirt, green with a Chinese dragon printed across the back. It was ripped, and mud and deep red spattered his hands where he touched it.

"Couple of wolves just left that on your porch. Horse-sized wolves. I ended up in your neighbor's kiddy pool to keep them from smelling me," Emily said, tossing her wet hair. "Did you read the note?"

Your friend is still alive, godspawn, scrawled in blotchy, spidery black letters. Will you be, before the night is over? Come to Malaspina Park. Hurry. My wolves are hungry, hungry for vengeance. The little one might not last much longer.

Brett felt a wave of heat, then chills, sweep over his whole body. He crumpled the paper, his whole body trembling. Pebbles on the ground started trembling. Without a word he started toward the car.

Emily jumped into the back seat with him before he'd started the ignition. "Adelaide," she said. "We need Adelaide. I don't know how badly Levi's been injured." She pulled out her phone, already dialing the number. "Hopefully my phone still works after that dunking."

Brett glared back at her furiously. "Get out, you-"

"It's your fault," Emily said. "You pushed him away. You left him defenseless." The phone in her hand was ringing.

"Shut up," He said quietly. "You don't know what you're talking about."

"What possible reason could you have for abandoning him like that?"

"He told you about me! He told you about the wolves, the goblins, and now you're sticking your nose into my business! You want to get Adelaide mixed up in this crap too? I'm trying to protect you, you idiot! I'm trying to keep the nightmares from getting you, like they- like they-" Brett stopped, his voice stuck in his throat. He realized vaguely that pebbles floated lazily around the car. That's new, he thought, vaguely disconnected. Everything seemed so unreal. All his life, Brett had been confident that whatever happened, he'd be able to handle it. Now Levi was gone, and Brett couldn't handle it. He'd never felt helpless before.

"Levi didn't tell me anything," Emily said softly. Her eyes burned in rage. "Not. One. Thing."

A click on the other end of Emily's phone brought them both up short. "Hey, Emily. What's up?" Adelaide's voice seemed to drain the tension out of the too-close atmosphere of the car. Still, neither Emily or Brett spoke. "Emily? Is everything okay?" Adelaide's voice asked.

"Adelaide, I-" Emily stopped for a moment when Brett motioned. "Hold on, somebody wants to talk to you.

Brett took the phone. "Adelaide?" He asked, his voice uncertain. "I, um." He took a deep breath, held it.

"Brett? What's going on?"

"Nothing's wrong Adelaide," Brett said.

"Brett," Adelaide said. "It's going to be okay."

"No it's not," Brett said woodenly. He took a deep breath. "I messed up, Adelaide, and now Levi's- hurt. Maybe. I don't know. Everything's messed up." He wanted to crumple the phone in his hand, but he forced himself to keep talking. "I need to do something really dangerous tonight, and I- well, I don't want to get you involved. But you're probably the best person, the only person I would trust to help, and-"

"Come over to my house, I'll have my stuff ready by the time you get here," Adelaide hung up.

Brett crushed the phone in his hand.

"Start driving," Emily ordered from the back seat.

"You still here?" Brett asked sarcastically. He turned on the ignition, his mom's little car roaring to life. She'll probably want to know where I had to go in the middle of the night, he thought to himself. Another lie. The lights puled on and he backed into the road, then roared down the street, slightly faster than necessary.

"I assume you know where Adelaide lives," Emily said. "You owe me a new phone, by the way."

"If Levi didn't tell you about stuff, how do you know?"

Emily chortled unpleasantly. "Oh, this is too rich. You actually thought you were the only one?" Brett glanced back. Emily's eyes glittered like chips of moonlight. "I knew what you were from the first moment I saw you."

She looked out the window, up where the night twinkled with stars. "It took a bit longer for me to identify others. Adelaide is one of us too."

"Godspawn?" Brett recalled the word from the note.

Emily hesitated for a moment. "I'm not sure. I can see the power lingering around certain people, like sparks hover around a campfire. You have it really strong. Adelaide has less." She shivered, her clothes still damp. "I saw it on the wolves too. And I've seen it on others. When I first met you, I thought you were one of the monsters."

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Take Out

            “So how was school today?” Valarie Bingham said setting groceries down on the counter and looking over at Brett. Brett quickly got up to help her.
            “Nothing much happened today. You know same old same old. Just class and practice that’s it.” Brett’s mom nodded as she put some apples and vegetables in the fridge.
            “Oh okay, so just a regular boring day then?” she asked still putting away the foodstuff she had gotten.
            “Yep pretty much.” Brett said. An uncontrollable guilty feeling attacked him when he thought of what had happened with Levi but anger quickly snuffed it out.
            “So nothing to say, oh, to make you wear those bandages on your arms?” this time Brett’s mom looked right at him with those piercing gray eyes that reminded him of the birds that he took care of. “Or are you just wearing them for fun?”
            Crap Brett thought he had completely forgotten about the bandages. He couldn’t lie to his mom. She had taught him better than that. She was a park ranger and was gone for most of the day but she always seemed to see everything that Brett tried to hide as soon as she got home. In Brett’s mind she was the best mom in the world and his best friend. But he couldn’t drag her into this craziness he couldn’t do that to her. It wouldn’t be right, it wouldn’t be fair. She would worry about him more then she already did. Brett knew it wasn’t easy for her to raise him practically by herself. He didn’t want to add to her load.
            “Oh just something that happened at school. Adelaide fixed it up for me, it doesn’t even hurt.” Brett said turning to put some cans on the higher shelves. The worry melted from his mother’s face replaced by curiosity and amusement.
            “Now this isn’t the Adelaide is it? The one that you are madly in love with?” Valarie asked.
            “what!? Mom! I never said I liked Adelaide?” Brett said taken aback.
            “You didn’t have to kiddo. You talk in your sleep.” She said turning and winking at him. ”mmm, I feel like a movie tonight. That way you can tell me all about Adelaide. Did you feed the birds, and is your homework done?”
            “ya I feed the birds and my homework’s done.” Brett shook his head and smiled. “Don’t think you can get information out of me so easy. I’m a locked vault.”
            “We’ll see about that. I ordered some chines for us and it should be here soon. Can you finish putting things away I’m going to check up on the raptors?” Brett mom asked already heading for the door.
            “Sure mom. I’ll take care of it.” Brett said. His mother was then gone the back door swinging shut behind her.
The backyard to their house was mostly just a long run of aviaries. Along with being a ranger Brett’s mother rehabilitated Raptors in their backyard. Brett was just putting the last can away when there was a knock on the front door. Grabbing some spare cash from the lucky jar that they had on top of the fridge he went to go pay for dinner. As he got closer to the door the bell rang again accompanied by loud banging.
“Shish what’s your problem man I’m coming?” Brett said as he turned the handle and opened the door. It wasn’t a deliveryman on the doorstep. Wet and shaking with rage from head to foot stood Emily Weird. Her eyes were red and she looked angrily up at Brett.

“You’re an idiot.” She said simply holding up a bloody shirt and a piece of paper.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

The Hunt

Vragi, Rhod, and Sporhunda had been trailing the small one for the past 7 hours, ever since Vragi had gotten back to his den. The Great One would have been displeased if he'd done otherwise. Besides, the blood of Utskjar, known as Camdon to the mortals, would be avenged. 

The large one, the demigod, was dangerous. Utskjar had been Vragi's second in command, a patient hunter and powerful warrior. That a lone demigod, practically unarmed, had killed him was incredible. Hunting him required caution and not a little cunning. 

The small one, the friend of the demigod, was strange. He had accepted a token from the witch, but it was twisted. Normally such a thing would have hidden the manlings scent from Vragi and his pack, but upside it brought the manling's scent into vivid focus. He smelled of growth, of the green vitality and and strange ozone charcoal that marked the witch's amulet, and he also carried the dangerous, blood-drenched scent of the demigod. Underneath was the human smell, the markers that told Vragi the manling had eaten nothing for lunch and a roll for dinner, a metallic woody edge that spoke of a guitar. Vragi could smell a the night on him and knew he spent hours in under the stars. He smelled the faint touch of alcohol on his skin, probably from someone he lived with, the spatter of Utskjar's blood that bespoke one who knew more of the morning's events than would be expected in a mortal. Under it all, a single strand of scent warned Vragi away. There was something, some scent he couldn't quite place. He could smell more the absence of the smell than its presence, like a memory of something remembered. Vragi hesitated. 

No. This one would do nicely. The large one would come to rescue his friend, and in the meantime, perhaps some information could be gleaned from the small one.

The small one seemed preoccupied. Vragi doubted the manling would have noticed if they'd walked right behind him in wolf form, but he and his pack kept to the shadows anyways, trailing far behind, keeping track of him more by scent than by sight. 

Vragi could smell the path the boy always walked home, down into the ranker parts of the city, down where trees disappeared from the boulevards to be replaced by beer cans. The roads here were darker, the city lights flickering vainly against the darkness. 

Vragi smiled. They were close enough to hear the manling's heartbeat now, close enough to smell the warmth of his blood surging beneath his pale, thin flesh. At his silent signal, Rod and Sporhunda circled around, cutting the boy off. 

He was lost in his own world, headphones in, more blind in his own thoughts than in the shadows that obscured the night. 

Vragi felt a moment of regret that this hunt wouldn't end in a kill, but he consoled himself by imagining the frantic worry the demigod would feel when he discovered his friend missing, a bloody shirt left on his door, and the note that would be his doom. 

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Playground

            “Beep, beep, beep, the number you are trying to reach…” Emily slammed her thumb against the off button. She wanted to throw the phone on the ground and step on it. She wanted to throw back her head and scream. She wanted to get rid of this worry in the pit of her stomach.
            She had been trying to get ahold of Levi for the past hour. At first she just got his mailbox but now she didn’t get anything. The tension had been building inside of her as soon as the Librarian and she had arrived home after school. They had started to unload the boxes of books and Emily was certain that any moment the Librarian would ask her where the Prophesies of the Volva was at.
            Finally she couldn’t take it anymore she had quickly made some excuse and slipped outside into the cool night air. Breathed a huge sigh of relief that she couldn’t quit keep in. Emily pulled out her cell phone and tried calling Levi. It rang for a while until his answering machine picked it up.
            “Hey this is Levi. Leave me a message after the tone. Toooooooooooooooone, just kidding it’s a beep.” Levi’s answering machine said with Levi’s voice growling out the tone. The phone beeped and Emily quickly left her message.
            “Levi I need to know if Brett gave you anything today.” She said turning around to make sure the librarian wasn’t there. Emily knew it was silly but she did those things because when you don’t they happen.
 Not wanting to go back to the house and chance Levi calling her back and having to talk in front of her guardian Emily headed down to the park. It was getting dark the sun kissing the tree tops. Emily sat down on the steps to a slide and waited. Finally impatience won over and she called Levi again. She left another message and then called him one more time for good measure. When he still didn’t pick up she decided to call Brett.
“Hey this is Brett, who’s this?”
“Brett this is Emily have you given Levi the book?” there was quit on the other end of the line. Then she head footsteps and a door swinging open then shut.
“How did you get my number?” Brett demanded from the other end. “You know what I don’t care. I gave your darn book to Levi. Stay out of my business. I’m not going to talk to you about it. I’m sure Levi already told you enough as it is. I can deal with the wolves and goblins on my own. And if any more wolves show up today I’ll handle it. I don’t need your help. Or his help! I can’t trust any of you anyway.” with that Brett hung up the phone.
Emily stared in shock at her phone. She had some inclination that Brett was more then what he appeared. He had about him an area of power. She had tried to keep her distance because along with the power she had felt conflict. It was like he drew conflict, just as a bee was drawn to the flower. While most people couldn’t feel that somewhere in there subconscious they knew it and stayed away. Along with the fact that Brett fit your typical jock mold, almost to a T. this among other things wouldn’t allow him to make too many friends with non-jocks. Levi on the other hand seemed immune to this. It was one of the reasons why Brett and Levi where such good friends, Emily speculate. Levi stuck around when others would leave.

Emily kept calling Levi’s phone. After about 20 minutes she began to get worried. After an hour she was frustrated worried and scared. She could feel it, something was not quite right. It felt like goose bumps over your arms. The stone the librarian had given Levi was both a blessing and a curse and she doubted very much that the librarian had told Levi about it.

Monday, January 6, 2014

It's Dangerous to go Alone. Here, Take This!

"Hey Brett, what's up?" Levi asked curiously.

Brett was already unzipping his backpack. He pulled a book out, keeping the cover hidden, and thrust it at Levi, who accepted it gingerly. "What the heck you studying there, Levi?" Brett said, "Female anatomy?" He said in a hurried whisper, ears burning red.

"What?" Levi looked the book over. It was bound in green leather, about the size of a paperback. Small dark stones like red amber studded the binding. The pages, when he flipped it open, were handwritten in beautiful, even calligraphy. Incredibly detailed sketches of symbols, mystic circles, and strange creatures dotted the pages and crowded the margins. "Hey Brett, where'd you get this? It's pretty cool!" The writing was small and so ornate it took him awhile to figure out what it was saying:

There Nidhogg sucks the corpses of the dead, the wolf tears men 
Understand ye yet, or what?
Further forward I see much; can I say of Ragnarok and the gods conflict? 
Brothers shall fight and slay each other; cousins shall kinship violate 
The earth resounds, the giantesses flee, no man will another spare.

"Hey, this is about Norse mythology!" Levi said excitedly. "Where did you say you got it?"

"What? Hand me that," Brett said. Levi handed it over, and Brett flipped through the pages. "Oh," he said in a slightly strangled voice. "I guess this is pretty cool."

"What'd you think it was Brett?" Levi asked curiously.

"You didn't read the cover? Look." Brett handed the book back, gesturing at a highly detailed, embossed Celtic tree. Beneath the tree were the words Prophecies of the Volva.

Levi laughed. "Oh yeah, I had the same reaction the first time I heard that. Emily told me that's the word for priestess in old German, or Norse, or whatever it was."

"Couldn't they have picked a better word?" Brett muttered to himself. "Emily stole it from the Librarian. Gave it to me in the hallway earlier."

"What?" Levi said curiously. "Why'd she do that? She could read any of the Librarian's books any time. The Librarian's sort of her mom, you know. Well, not really. It's difficult to explain." He continued flipping through the pages. On one, a great wolf-like creature, looking eerily like the kid-monster Brett had killed, stood quietly while a viking man with a winged helmet stuck his hand in its mouth. Twine wrapped around the monster's legs. "Hey Brett, does this one look familiar to you?"

Brett took the book back. "Yeah, it does." He kept flipping the pages. Another picture showed five grotesque, wide-mouthed little men leaping around a huge black cauldron. "And these look really close to the goblins I fought last year." Brett looked up, suspicion in his eyes. "You talked to her."

"What? No!" Levi said quickly, but he could see Brett didn't believe him.

"I trusted you!" Brett kept his voice to a whisper, but Levi shrank back. Brett's face was angry-red, his fists clenched. He flung the book to the floor, where it smacked and slid a short distance away.

"Dude, no I didn't!" Levi's own face started turning red. "I can't believe you would think that!"

"Then how does Emily know exactly what book to give me that has exactly the right kind of stuff in it?" Brett's asked bitterly. "Tell me that, huh?"

"Emily just knows things! It's like a superpower!" Levi shot back, "Or, maybe she just thought I'd like to read it. I don't know! Come on, you gotta believe me."

"No," Brett said, turning away. "That was a crap move, Levi." He started walking quickly away.

Levi was left, mouth open, standing on the steps, book down the staircase below him. Slowly he went down the stairs, picked up the book, and stuck it in his own backpack. He didn't know what to do, so instead he did nothing. After a couple more hours, when the school lights started turning off, he decided he should probably head home.

Levi didn't notice the two forms shadowing him on his way out.

Friday, January 3, 2014

Kissing Corner

Levi stared at the small green stone nestled in the palm of his hand. It was small but somewhat heavy with a smooth surface as if it had just been pulled from a river. The golden ruin glistened in the florescent light. Levi couldn’t help thinking how strange it had been when the librarian had given it to him.
Levi had never heard of the librarian giving anything to anybody. Of course he was just a freshman and so hadn’t heard everything in the schools gossip pipeline. But still he didn’t think people just went around handing out strange little stones from another age to someone that just helped take things to their car. It was weird and creepy and he just wanted to throw it away. Yet he couldn’t, he wanted to say that the reason was because she might have meant it as a loan and the librarian would be wanting it back, but the real reason the reason that scared and crept Levi out even more was that he couldn’t. His mind would scream no and the muscles in his arm and hand wouldn’t let go of the little green stone. So he sat there staring at it wondering what he should do.
“Did you even go to class today?” Levis hand tightened reflexively around the stone and he had to force it open. He looked up into a pair of emerald green eyes. “I’ve already walked by you like three times and you didn’t even say hi. See if I give you the notes from geometry.”
“Sorry Holly it’s been an umm… weird day.” Levi gave her a cheesy little shrug and a smile, hoping that it would help his case.
Holly was really pretty; in a, I go hiking every day and collect my own pine nuts and berries kind of way. Okay she was gorgeous, and honestly Levi would have been more interested in her if her brothers didn’t scar the spit out of him. They were quit literally the giants of the school. Holly had the fieriest red hair of anyone Levi had ever seen and she wore it wild. It wasn’t curly more of a wavy bounce and it looked like she had just woken up. On most people it didn’t look good but for Holly it just fit. She was unusually tan for a redhead and it brought out a cute little line of freckles that run over her cheeks and across her nose.
“Oh.” Holly said winkling her face. “I had all of my weirdness come out last weekend. Well do you want to talk about it?”
She plopped down next to Levi. Levi hadn’t noticed before but she had a hall pass strapped to her wrist. As she was settling down Levi scooted over a little bit. It wasn’t that he didn’t want to sit next to her. He sat next to her all the time in geometry class. It was the spot that they were in that made him uncomfortable.
Levi had been sitting under one of the big stair cases. It was a split level staircase and was in a long hallway lined with lockers. Because of the stairs you had to be sitting down to be against the wall at the back and it was a little dark. For that reason couples would sit back here to make out. So it was now known around school as the kissing corner. Levi had sat down here to be alone. Sitting there next to Holly was making him a little uncomfortable.
“Um this might sound a little strange but how long have I been sitting here?” Levi asked.
“Well I saw you sitting here after 5th period and…” she pulled out her phone to look at the time. “It’s almost the end of 7th period. So that means schools almost out. So for as much as I know you’ve been sitting here for a couple of hours.”
“Oh” Levi said. He turned and stared at the carpet between his feet. For some reason it had become really interesting.
“Do you want to talk about it?” Holly asked leaning forward to look Levi in the face. As she did a small silver hammer necklace fell out of her shirt.
“No. Thanks though Holly I appreciate it. It’s not really my place to tell that’s all. And I was asked to keep it a secret.” Levi said guiltily.
“Oh, that’s okay then.” Holly said. She then just sat there not saying a word as minutes went by. Finally she stood up. “Well the bells about to ring I better go return this.” She said holding up the hall pass. “You’ll be in class tomorrow right?”
“Ya I’ll try to make it.”
“Good. It’s about time you take your own notes.” She said with a wink and headed off down the hall.

Levi sat there as the bell rang to signal the end of school. The hallway got loud with the sound of students grabbing there things and heading home. Finally the hall started to quit down as students headed home. Soon it was only Levi in the hall again. He was about to get up and leave when he looked down the Hall and saw Brett headed right for him.