Authors: Sharon Buchbinder
When she stood, he lifted her out of the tub, and toweled her off with a huge fluffy terry cloth robe she didn’t recognize. Then, he brushed her hair until her scalp tingled, and she felt a glow of warmth trickle down to her fingers and toes. At last, satisfied with his labors, he led her to the bed, plumped up the pillows, tucked her under the covers, and told her to stay there.
A short while later, he returned with a tray of food and two glasses of wine. She wondered where the meal came from, but the thought disappeared when he pulled up a chair next to the bed and began to feed her. Between sips and bites, she tried to speak. But he would only say, “Shhh, you need to rest. Tomorrow, you’ll have answers to most of your questions.”
He turned down the lights, and as she felt herself drifting off, he leaned down, gave her aching forehead a feathery kiss, and breathed, “I love you. I have loved you since the first time Jessie showed me your picture. And now that I have the real you, here with me in Eden, I am even more in love with you. You are my soul mate. Please sleep on this request: Marry me. Be my mate for life.”
Limp limbed and befuddled, she watched with heavy eyes as he opened her window, backed out of the room, and left the door slightly ajar, leaving a sliver of light to comfort her. She sighed, rolled over, and fell deep into sleep.
A strange thumping sound woke her. She sat up in bed, heart racing—and stared into glowing eyes at the foot of the bed. She gasped, a scream caught in her throat.
I must be dreaming.
It looked as if the creature shimmered and coalesced into the form of a large silver wolf. The animal jumped down to the floor, walked over to the side of her bed, and nuzzled her hand.
She recoiled. Then, thinking it was a dream she reached out and touched a solid nose. She walked her fingers up his head and began to stroke his ears and neck with care. The wolf was real, as real as the dark metal chain collar he wore.
Wide awake, heart in her throat, Charlene dropped her hand, scooted back up the bed, and took a deep shaky breath. “Where did you come from?”
The iridescent wolf gazed at her for what seemed like a very long time. He cocked his head to one side, then went to the door and nosed it open. He looked back at her, his eyes glowing.
Puzzled, she sat upright and clenched the sheet in her fists. “Am I supposed to follow you?”
He shook his head.
“Wait here?”
He nodded twice and trotted out the door.
Super intelligent wolves? Not possible. She must be asleep.
She pinched herself—hard. “Ouch!”
Just as she yelped, the wolf walked back into the room with one red rose in his mouth. He put his paws on the bed next to Charlene, and placed the flower on her lap.
Tears filled her eyes. He stared up at her, his eyes shimmering from green to gold.
If he was going to hurt her, he’d had ample opportunity.
At last, she threw her fears aside and wrapped her arms around his neck. His fur was so soft, but beneath that velvet, she felt the iron of his collar and the vigor of his strong muscles. A familiar scent enveloped her—soap and a musky spice. The tingles of her skin told her this was no ordinary wolf
and
that he was without a doubt
very
male.
She lifted her head, put her nose to his, and gazed into now sea green eyes. “What—who are you?”
He shook his head, loped over to the open bedroom window, and bounded out.
Red rose clutched in her hand, she flopped back onto her pillow, and her mind raced until she was dizzy. What just happened? What and who was that beautiful creature? Where had he come from? Other than the mysterious pack of black dogs, when had she last seen a dog, much less a wolf, in Eden?
Never.
There were no dogs—or wolves—in Eden. Yet sometimes, she heard
something
howling at the moon.
Where were all the dogs?
CHAPTER TEN
~*~
Dead Letters
The next morning, still puzzling over the curious incident of the wolf in the night, Charlene shuffled out to the kitchen to make coffee and found a freshly brewed pot and a dozen apple cinnamon muffins, still warm from the oven. A note propped up against a mug said, “I have Joey and I’m driving the route. I’ll take Joey to Rebekkah after school. You need to get some rest and do some reading. Love, Zack.”
She smiled and placed the now limp red rose from the night before next to the note. “Maybe I
will
keep him.”
She pulled out the kitchen chair to sit down and found a shoebox with her name on the lid. She opened it, and saw stacks of envelopes addressed to her Aunt Jessie, postmarked from Baltimore, Maryland. Her breath whooshed out.
Was she really ready for this?
She plopped into the chair and fanned the letters out with shaking hands. She began with the oldest one.
“Dear Jessie—
I miss Eden so much. I can’t tell you how lonely I’ve been. I’ve been trying to decide what to do about the baby. Here in Baltimore, there are options—but I can’t bring myself to do any of them. Please don’t tell Father I’ve decided to keep the baby, raise it myself. I found a job as a nurse’s aide. I’ll write when I can.
Love, Joanna”
She thought of her mother—pregnant, young, alone, afraid to go home, terrified of her father. Charlene wondered what she would have done.
“Dear Jessie—
I’ve met a nice man. His name is Fred Johnson. He wants to marry me, doesn’t care that I’m pregnant.
Can you believe that? He’s working on a doctorate in genetics. I think I will marry him. He is very kind. He would never hurt me or my baby.
Love, Joanna.”
Tears blurred Charlene’s vision. Her mother married Fred because he was kind. Not because she fell madly in love with him. But they loved each other. Didn’t they?
“Dear Jessie—
Fred and I were married in a courthouse in Baltimore. We have a nice little apartment near Hopkins and our neighbors are all students too. The baby is due any day now.
Love, Joanna
PS: I’m looking forward to your visit.”
Jessie had gone to Baltimore?
“Dear Jessie—
It was so good to see you. And so nice you arrived right after Joey was born. If you hadn’t been here to help, I think I would have lost my mind! The doctor kept reassuring me that my ‘pregnancy related hair and skin condition’ would go away after I delivered. If they only
knew
! Thank you for telling Fred that Joey’s problems run in our family. He is convinced that he will find a cure for whatever it is. Isn’t he a dear sweet man?
Love, Joanna”
Charlene flipped through the years, and found the news of her birth.
“Dear Jessie—I wish you could be here to meet your niece. She is
PERFECT
. Not a single thing wrong. I cannot bring myself to give her a J name as a first name. I know it’s our family tradition, but thanks to Fred, she has a fresh start in life, untainted by Eden and our ‘condition.’ I’ve decided to name her Charlene Jessie Johnson.
Isn’t that pretty? Here’s a photo of your beautiful, perfect, perfect, perfect niece.
Love, Joanna
PS: I hope this pregnancy mask goes away soon. It reminds me too much of you-know-what.”
Smiling, she pulled the snapshot out of the envelope. A perfect infant peered up at the camera from her mother’s arms. Joanna had long, luxuriant shiny blonde hair and a symmetrical brown discoloration across her cheeks, the pregnancy mask.
What did she mean by ‘you-know-what?’
The letters were filled with chitchat about daily life in Baltimore. The tone was always upbeat, and each missive extolled Charlene’s brilliance and perfection. Why was her mother so hung up on her being “perfect, perfect, perfect?”
“Dear Jessie—I cannot thank you enough for the loan. I
promise
we will pay it all off. The school is so good for Joey. He’s happy there and now we can give Charlene the opportunities and attention she needs, too. She’s so smart. She loves her science classes. I think she’s going to be a scientist like her father.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Love, Joanna”
Now she knew where the money came for Joey’s school. That horrid Mrs. Morton was right. It
was
expensive, more than her parents could afford on two incomes. Money was tight, but they made sure she had ballet lessons, summer camp, and never had to work while she was in college. The year she entered her doctoral program and moved out of the house, the letters began to take a darker turn.
“Dear Jessie—
I miss my darling Charlene. As long as she lived here, I could focus on her, on her perfection. When it was that time of the month, I took the injections to control my urges, to protect her from the knowledge of what her mother really was. But now the moon calls to me, and I want to run, run, run. It is getting harder to resist. Poor Fred tries to understand, but how can he? Do you think you could come visit?
I miss you, and some nights, I confess, I miss the family and Eden, too. Sometimes I think I made a mistake by running away. But then I remember my perfect daughter.
Love, Joanna”
So Joanna had misgivings about Eden, after all. But why keep warning Charlene away from the town, when she herself was homesick and lonely?
“Dear Jessie—
Joey’s urges have become difficult to control. He’s gotten so big, so strong, and so
aggressive
, the sedatives don’t hold him now. Fred was able to bring some experimental genetic treatments home from the lab. But Joey doesn’t have
Gorlin-Chaudry-Moss Syndrome. The charade has worked for over twenty years, but how long will I be able to keep the truth away from Fred? What do the other mothers do with the boys Oblis sired? How do they control them when the moon is full? Call me. Please. I am desperate. I fear Joey will hurt someone.
Love, Joanna.”
Charlene had to re-read the letter three times.
“Joey doesn’t
have
Gorlin-Chaudry-Moss Syndrome?” She blinked once, twice. No, there it was in her mother’s own writing. “Oblis.” “The other mothers.” “When the moon is full.” The words ricocheted around in her head, and she thought of the night of the accident, the boys’ distress, and Joey’s snapping teeth.
She set the letters down and wandered back to the parlor. The photos of Joanna, Jessie, Jethro, and Rebekkah stared back at her—their gazes now heavy with meaning. She looked at each of them, and tried to piece the story together.
Joanna was raped by a predator—Oblis—who carried a mutant gene of some sort. Jethro killed Oblis—but terrified his daughter so much she ran away. Jessie kept in regular touch with Joanna—and colluded with her to fool poor Fred into thinking the family carried Gorlin-Chaudry-Moss Syndrome. But it wasn’t Joanna’s genes that caused Joey’s condition. The mutant gene Oblis carried caused Joey’s problems. Joanna’s final letter to Jessie, was angry, desperate.
“Dear Jessie—Fred has gone and done something foolish. His boss called to tell me that his NIH funding is being pulled because he has gone off the deep end. Fred has been harassing psychiatrists to give him their patient records for cases of people who think they’re
werewolves
. I can’t believe he’s doing this, risking his funding and
our
lives. Why couldn’t he have just stayed with genetic diseases? I can’t do anything about Joey or me, but I’ll be damned if I’ll let him ruin Charlene’s life. I have to stop him.
Love, Joanna”
Fred’s love for Joanna and obsession with finding a cure for Joey led him to the
last
place Joanna wanted him to look. When Hoffman called Joanna, she became terrified all would be exposed and her ‘perfect’ daughter’s life would be ruined. Charlene picked up Joanna’s photo as a pretty woman in the bloom of her youth.
Her mother a werewolf?
She scoffed out loud.
Not possible. Look at her. She’d been beautiful. Perfect.
She closed her eyes, thought back to happy times in high school—and flashed back to her mother and father fighting.
It had been in the middle of the night and she’d gotten up to go to the bathroom.
Her mother’s voice had been uncharacteristically whiny. “I really
need
that medicine, Fred.”
“The moon won’t be full for another week.”
“
No
. I
need
it now.” Her mother was crying. “Please, please,
please
.”