Read Marked by Moonlight Online
Authors: Sharie Kohler
To my little princess,
whose fascination with the paranormal
already rivals my own.
I promise,
one day you can read Mommy's werewolf book.
This book has been a long time coming. That
Marked by Moonlight
has found its way into the hands of readers is due to the support of many. Sincere thanks go out the following people:
Tera, Leslie, and Ane, you were there for me at the very beginning. Thank you for patiently reading and rereading every page and listening to all my plot woes.
Robin T. Popp, who assured me this manuscript was destined for publicationâyour support was the encouragement I needed to push myself through the hard spells.
Sandra K. Moore, whose full manuscript critique sent me into a weeklong migraineâthank you! Without your input, who knows when the lightbulb would have gone off?
My husband, for understanding when deadlines arose and the laundry baskets piledâI love you.
My agent, Maura Kye-Casella, for singling out this manuscript from her slush pile, sinking her teeth into it, and, in true lycan form, never unlocking her jawsâthank you doesn't begin to cover it.
And to my editor, Lauren McKenna, whose guidance and insight helped bring this manuscript the final stretch homeâyou rock!
Never turn your back on an unfamiliar dog.
âMan's Best Friend:
An Essential Guide to Dogs
T
hey were coming. The 911 operator's voice droned steadily in his ear, urging him to stay on the line, to wait, to remain as he was, crouched in a ball at the side of his bed. But when a second howl rent the night air, the phone slipped through his fingers and thudded softly to the carpet. Gideon drifted to the bedroom door as if pulled by an invisible string.
They were coming. But not soon enough.
With a shaking hand, he grasped the doorknob, the brass cold and slick in his sweaty palm. His family was on the other side of that door. He couldn't wait. Filling his lungs with a deep breath, he pushed open the door, the creak of oil-hungry hinges a familiar sound in an unfamiliar night.
His sister stood alone in the moon-washed hallway. Moonlight limned her blonde hair silver, giving her an unearthly aura. Her ragged bear dangled from one hand, its foot grazing the hardwood floor in rhythmic sweeps as she gazed in silence at their parents' door.
“Kit,” he called, trying to keep his voice low.
She glanced over her shoulder at him before lifting a small, pink-nailed finger to the door in mute appeal. He hurried to her side and grabbed hold of her pointing hand while silently vowing to shield her from whatever lay within.
“Momma,” she whimpered.
His gaze skittered away, then back to that wood-paneled door. A man's tortured cries echoed from the other side.
This had to be a dream. A horrible nightmare he would wake from at any moment. Only the bite of Kit's nails digging into his hand told him this was real. His parents would expect him to protect his sister, to get her far away from here.
With that sole thought burning in his mind, he closed his ears to his father's cries and swung Kit, light as a feather, into his arms and fled.
He didn't get far. The sudden splintering of his parents' door immobilized him. Clutching his sister close, he turned.
In that moment, he learned monsters were real. Horrifyingly real.
They did exist
.
This one bared its fangs in greeting. The tawny fur at its mouth and neck glistened black crimson. A glint of gold flashed in the hair of its chest, catching Gideon's eye. But only for a moment. That wet fur surrounding its mouth recaptured his attention, its exact nature unmistakable.
Blood.
He released his sister. Her gangly legs slid the length of his body to the floor. He shoved her behind him. She clung to him, locking her arms around his waist in a death grip. Tearing her hands free, he flung her back.
“Go,” he commanded over his shoulder. “Get outta here!”
Her slight body shuddered where she stood, but she made no move to obey.
Never taking his eyes off the creature, he raised his voice and pushed her again. “Move!”
Maybe it was his sudden movement. Gideon would never know, but at that moment the monster attacked, surging forward like a spring uncoiled.
He had no chance. But his sister did. Against his every instinct, he turned his back on the beast and shoved Kit in one final attempt to save her.
A sudden, cracking pop pierced the narrow hallway, blending with Kit's high-pitched scream. Both sounds buzzed in his ears. In a quick, jumbling assessment, he surveyed himself and found his limbs intact. The beast had not ripped him to shreds. Turning, he watched it crumple to the floor inches from his feet, groping its chest with wild, frenzied movements.
A smoking pistol cast its shadow over the wall. Gideon turned, his gaze sliding past the pistol to the young man in police blues who cast an even larger shadow than the gun.
“Silver bullet,” the officer said flatly. “Works every time.”
The distant song of sirens congested the air, growing steadily louder. The officer's eyes, as dark and flat as his voice, drilled into him. “Don't say anything, kid. There's gonna be a lot of questions. Let me do the talking.”
Gideon nodded, unable to speak, and looked back at the dead beast littering his hallway.
Only it wasn't a beast.
The beast had vanished.
In its place sprawled his motherânaked except for the familiar gold cross nestled in the indentation of her collarbone.
And through the open doorway of his parents' room lay his father's mutilated bodyâa mangled, broken toy, blood pooling around him in an ever-enlarging circle.
Beware the silent dog.
âMan's Best Friend:
An Essential Guide to Dogs
S
tepping out of her car, Claire Morgan sniffed the smog-laden air warily. Locking her door, she faced the run-down apartment building and sighed. Brushing the salt of French fries off her slacksâevidence of her weak-willed drive-through detourâshe eyed the gray building made all the more ugly by painted-on shutters framing every window. Even armed with her city map, it had taken her over an hour to find it. Apparently in this neighborhood, when street signs went missing, no one bothered to replace them.
Distracted, she failed to notice the two adolescents on skateboards launching themselves down the center of the street in her path. One of the skaters clipped her hip, nearly knocking her to the pavement.
“Hey!” she cried.
One of the youths turned back and flicked her an obscene gesture.
“What am I doing here?” she muttered, shaking her head.
But she knew the answer to that question even as she asked it.
She was here for Lenny.
By all accounts, Lenny Alvarez had been a lost cause. Seventeen, repeating his sophomore year, he'd originally sat in the back of the class with his head down, buried in his arms. Gradually, as the year progressed, he'd started paying attention, even staying after class so she could tutor him for his SAT, which he was scheduled to take tomorrow. It was the one test he couldn't miss; he would be there if she had to drive him to school herself.
Squaring her shoulders, she faced Lenny's apartment building. A radio played in the distance. The Tejano music that echoed off the row of apartment buildings lining the block had a liveliness that contrasted with the eerie stillness of the neighborhood. Sweat dampened her nape and she lifted the hair off her neck to let the faint breeze cool her skin.
Normally, she would be popping in a movie right about now, a plate of pizza on her lap like most Friday nights. A Saturday of grading papers would follow, and then a Sunday of church and dinner with the parents. She shrugged one shoulder. A break from routine wouldn't hurt.
And this was Lenny
.
Stepping onto the sidewalk, she prayed she wouldn't have to confront Lenny's drunken foster father.
A dog hurled itself, spitting and growling, against the filth-encrusted screen of a ground-floor apartment. Jumping back, she dubiously eyed the tiny screws holding the screen in placeâthe only thing preventing the animal from mauling her.
Gripping the iron railing with a clammy palm, she fled up the steps, doing her best to ignore the sudden memory of her cousin's mastiff attacking her when she was only eight.
The barking grew fainter as she neared the door of apartment 212. The sound of a television blared through the steel-framed door. She rapped on the door. No answer. She tried again, harder this time.
Suddenly a hard voice demanded, “What do you want?”
Claire spun around, clutching the stinging knuckles of her hand. An elderly woman with sagging jowls and deeply carved wrinkles peered from a cracked door across the way.
“I'm looking for Lenny. The boy who lives here. Do you know him?”
Small, piercing eyes studied her above the sagging chain lock. “You a social worker?” Before Claire could answer, the woman rushed forth with, “'Cause you should've taken that boy away a long time ago.”
“I'm not a social worker.” Claire shook her head vigorously. “I'm his English teacher.”
The old woman snorted. “What kinda teacher makes house calls?”
“He's been absent three days.” Three days. And Lenny
never
missed class. “I'm worried. Tomorrow's his SAT, and I want to make sure he's there.” Claire didn't voice her other concernâthat she feared his foster father had harmed him.
The woman absorbed this. Her disdain seemed to abate, and the hard glint to her eyes softened. She peered cautiously to the left and right before undoing the chain and opening the door wider to stick her salt-and-pepper head out. “The boy's gone. Forget 'bout him.”
“Gone?” Claire frowned.
“Yeah, gone.” The woman shooed Claire with her wrinkled hand. “Now you go on home. You shouldn't be here.” Her head bobbed up and down. “Go on now. Leave. And don't come back here again.”
She blinked at the strange command and jabbed her thumb at the apartment behind her. “Has something happened to Lenny?”
Those piercing, ancient eyes narrowed. “I seen the boy. These ol' eyes seen a whole world of things.” She paused, pointing two gnarly, arthritic fingers to each of her eyes. “I seen the boy. And he's gone. Just forget 'bout him.”
Claire gave her head a small shake, suspecting the woman with her strange words wasn't quite right in the head. “Thanks.”
“You see that boy, run the other way! Hear me? Run the other way!”
Her smile wobbly, Claire moved toward the stairwell, pausing on the top step. “Er, yes, ma'am.”
The dog's frenzied barks followed her as she crossed the street to her car. Disappointment squeezing her chest, she dug for her keys, noticing a figure streaking across the empty playground in front of her car. Suddenly he tripped and fell, stirring up a cloud of red sand. Resting her elbows on the roof of her car she waited, the teacher in her compelled to see the youth rise to his feet.
The sun had disappeared below the rooftops, tinting the sky a hazy purple. Visibility fast fading, she squinted across the distance, watching the boy rise. He glanced over his shoulder to check behind him.
And she saw his face.
“Lenny!”
Their eyes met across the playground. Recognition flashed in his face. He slapped a hand in the air, batting her away before sprinting off in the opposite direction.
Oh, I don't think so
. She hadn't tutored him hours after school and paid his testing fee so he could blow her off and skip his exam. Stuffing her keys in her pocket, she slung her purse over her shoulder and took off after him. He was taking his SAT tomorrow. She would see to that. Few teenagers could turn their lives around so late in the game, especially at her high school, where the students were predominantly “at risk.” She wasn't going to let Lenny slip through the cracks.
Her khaki-clad legs ate up the ground, her sensible shoes pounding the earth as dusk sank into night. Darkness encroached and the shadows took on a life of their own, pressing all around her. Only streetlights kept night from swallowing her entirely. Up ahead, Lenny passed beneath one, its beam a spotlight on him as he turned and disappeared between an all-night Laundromat and a nail salon with pink blinking lights. Halting, she peered into the alley's dark, cavernous depths.
Panting for breath, she lifted her face, watching as the clouds parted, breaking to reveal a full moon. The alley was suddenly awash in a pearly glow. A lone Dumpster sat against one wall, its putrid scent reaching her nostrils. The alley looked empty. No sign of Lenny anywhere. A dead end loomed ahead, so he couldn't have escaped. He had to be on the other side of the Dumpster.
Legs aching from her run, she moved the toe of one shoe into the alley.
“Lenny!” Her voice bounced off the two buildings on either side of her. “It's Miss Morgan! Please come out. You're not in trouble.”
A low, anguished groan answered her.
“Lenny?” She advanced one sliding step at a time, concern for him swelling in her heart. Had his foster father hurt him? “Are you okay?”
“Stop! Don't come any closer,” came his muffled voice, almost indistinguishable. “Can't stop it, can't helpâ” His voice faded into a moan.
Then nothing.
Silence.
Nearing the Dumpster, the soles of her shoes scraped over loose gravel, the only sound in the unnatural silence. She heard nothing beyond the rasp of her breath, and she could not help thinking the city was never this quiet.
“Lenny? Are you hurt?” Her voice cracked on the air.
Shadows pressed in, closing upon her. Her nape tingled and she trembled. The world beyond vanished, the narrow space becoming a tomb, blotting out all life, trapping her within.
A desperate whisper flew through her mind.
Go! Get out of here!
Her feet rooted to the ground, unable to obey the silent command. She stole another glance at the sky. Her breath caught. A red-tinged moon. No longer pearl white. Blood moon, her mother called it.
Blood moon, someone's dying soon.
As that litany echoed in her head, her feet shuffled backward. She hugged her leather purse to her chest, the strap slung limply over her shoulder.
Abruptly, the moon's glow vanished like a candle snuffed out. Darkness descended. With a shuddering breath, she searched the dark sky for a glimpse of moonlight to get her bearings. The tiny hairs at her nape tingled anew. She squinted against the murky air just as a large shape materialized in front of her.
“Lenny? Is thatâ”
Pain exploded in her face. She staggered and fell, her head hitting the ground with a sickening smack. Tears sprang to her eyes.
A massive weight fell on her, so crushing she couldn't draw air. She raised hands to push it off, encountering only fistfuls of coarse hair. Dazed, she wondered how the dog had gotten loose and followed her.
Then all thought fled.
There was only agony.
Pain ripped into her shoulder. She screamed as she was hoisted off the ground. The pain sharpened into a million pinpoints of fire as she was shaken side to side, her mouth opened wide in a silent, frozen scream.
Stop. Oh God, make it stop.
As if in answer to her prayer, the stabbing pressure in her shoulder abruptly ceased. The weight bearing her down vanished. She lifted her hand to clutch her shoulder and encountered the slippery stickiness of blood.
Using her uninjured arm, she flattened her palm against the pavement and struggled to her feet, eyes straining to see through the gloom.
She made out two figures locked in struggle moving deeper into the alley, away from her. One was definitely a man. But the other? She shook her groggy head. A dog? No. It was too large.
Whatever it wasâshe was leaving while she still had the chance.
She staggered off, but even numb with pain something nagged at her, niggling in the back of her mind. A memory flashed in her head with crystalline precision, like an old reel-to-reel home movie.
A blinding, bright day. The kind of hot, thick air she could grab with both hands and taste on her tongue. The prickly, sharp edges of freshly cut grass scratching her ankles as she ran, then her face as her cousin's growling and snarling mastiff tackled her to the lawn. The heavy paws on her back. The rank, hot breath on her neck. The paralyzing fear as sharp teeth sank into her flesh.
Tonight marked the second time in her life a dog had attacked her. Except tonight the animal had been silent. No barking. No growling. Not a single sound to warn of its attack.
As if it had been lying in wait.
Â
Gideon March had killed before. He'd faced stronger than the one before him and come out on top. Tonight marked another victory.
Squatting, he inspected it with clinical dispassion, one hand braced on a hard, denim-clad knee. He pulled the nine-millimeter from its holster and with a few deft twists screwed on the silencer. The silver-bladed knife protruding from the creature's burly chest would only impede it temporarily. There was just enough time to finish the job before it was on its feet again.
Pointing the gun, he fired. The eyes widened, transforming from icy silver to dark brown as the bullet penetrated a thick pelt of hair, muscle, and bone. Sitting back on his heels, he waited, observing his quarry thoughtfully as the creature shifted one final time.
This one had been alone. The older and more experienced never left themselves open to ambush, but Gideon had spotted him a mile away. The instant he'd entered the pool hall, Gideon had marked him. His eyes stood out, a beacon among mortals. No colored contacts to camouflage his silver eyes from hunters.
Gideon glanced over his shoulder to verify they were still alone. Just as he thoughtâthe woman was long gone. Turning, he watched the shifting complete. The dark fur disappeared and the musculature shrank, revealing a scrawny adolescent body clinging to the last moments of life.
“Ah, hell.” He ran a hand over his face, suddenly feeling older than his thirty-two years. His dispassion slipped a notch as he suffered a stab of regret. In the smoky pool hall, he had appeared young, and now Gideon saw he was just a kid. No more than eighteen. The naked body lying on the pavement looked barely out of puberty. This did not bode well. He knew the nature and habits of lycans well, had spent half his life making it his business to know. They would never bring someone so young into their fold and then leave him to roam alone.
Had he been accidentally infected?
The kid coughed, trying to speak, but blood gurgled in the back of his throat. Too bad. Gideon wished he could press him for information. Instead, he placed his hand over the kid's brow, compelled to end his suffering.