Read The Curse of the Wolf Girl Online
Authors: Martin Millar
Tags: #Literary Fiction, #Fiction / Literary, #Fiction
The young woman looked anguished and also confused. “Who are you?”
“Thrix MacRinnalch.”
The light of partial understanding dawned in Susi’s eyes. “Oh. I liked your clothes.”
“But you didn’t write about them, did you? Do you know how embarrassing that was for me after I told the buyer at Eldridges you were going to? It cost me the contract.”
“I’m sorry.”
“What’s the idea of calling your website ‘Slay the Wolf’?” asked Dominil. “In Finnish?”
“Because I wanted to die,” wailed Susi and burst into tears. “You don’t know how I’ve suffered. I thought I was the only werewolf. It’s been so terrible. I couldn’t take it any longer.”
“That doesn’t explain the Finnish language.”
“I come from Finland.”
“Oh.”
Thrix let go of Susi.
“How did you find me?”
“We tracked you over the Internet. We’re smart werewolves. Are you about to cry again?”
“Perhaps we should give her a moment to compose herself,” suggested Dominil. “Discovering you’re not the only werewolf in the world may perhaps be a shock.”
It was just terrible on that volcano. There was fire everywhere and soldiers and I had to merge my own essence with lava and feed it to Xakthan and then there was more fire and everything and then I got my foot blown off.” Agrivex sighed and peered at her foot. “They stuck it back on. It hurts.”
Vex was lying on the couch. After returning from the exam, her strength had given out completely. Kalix had helped her upstairs into the living room and onto the couch. Kalix herself lay on the floor, in front of the fire, unable to move. Her hair splayed out around her in a huge semicircle. The cat was sleeping contentedly at her side.
“So what was it like in Scotland?” Vex asked.
“Fighting. Hunters. Killing. That sort of thing.” Kalix ached from her exertions. She’d filled herself up with laudanum, but it hadn’t taken away her pain. It seemed to her that she ached more than she should, even with the injuries she had, and had done so since returning from Scotland. “I hurt.”
“So do I.”
“At least we did the exam.”
“I thought I’d feel better afterwards.”
For some reason, neither of them felt much elation at finishing their college work.
“I expect I failed,” admitted Kalix.
“Me too.”
They lay in silence for a while.
“Do you think Moonglow will be very angry about the money?” asked Kalix.
“Yes.”
“We paid it back.”
“She’ll still be angry.”
The downstairs door opened and closed, rather noisily. Two pairs of footsteps sounded on the stairs. Moonglow came in, followed by a sheepish-looking Daniel. She halted, glared at Kalix and Vex, then slammed her bag onto the table. Not satisfied with the noise, she took some papers from her pocket and slammed them on the table too. “There you are! Do you know the trouble I’ve had because we didn’t have money to pay these bills? I had an arrangement with my bank that would have started clearing all the debts. Except I was supposed to pay money into the bank. Which I couldn’t. Because you took it.”
Kalix felt herself shriveling up on the floor. She hadn’t been looking forward to this and had no idea how to defend herself.
“We paid it back,” volunteered Vex. “Kalix put it in your room.”
“It’s too late! My bank canceled the payments, and now all my debt schedules are messed up. We’ll need to pay even more to get it straightened out! I’ve had to borrow money from my mom! Do you have any idea how humiliating that was? I’ve never been in debt before! You knew how important that money was! We spent enough time collecting it. And what happened? You just decided to steal it!” Moonglow stood with her hands on her hips, transferring her hostile glare from Kalix to Vex and back again.
“I had my foot blown off,” said Vex.
“You probably deserved it,” raged Moonglow, displaying a lack of sympathy the young Fire Elemental found quite upsetting. “And it doesn’t excuse you stealing money!” She looked at Kalix. “What’s your excuse?”
“I needed to get to Scotland.”
“Really? More than we needed electricity? More than we didn’t need bailiffs from the council coming around and taking away our stuff? Have you ever met bailiffs? They’re not pleasant.”
“Well,” began Daniel, “if we have the money back now, we can work out some new schedules for paying the debts and—”
“Don’t you talk to me about new schedules!” roared Moonglow. “You’re just as bad as them. If you hadn’t spent all your money on CDs and comics, we wouldn’t have gotten into such a mess in the first place.”
“That’s harsh!”
“No, it isn’t! Why am I the only one who can be sensible about money? Why are you three all so stupid and irresponsible that we get into this mess every time there’s a bill? I’m not your mother, you know. You have absolutely no idea how to behave. Daniel, you think it’s fine to spend everything on whatever you like, and look what happens. You can’t pay the bills. And you know what else? I’m
really
sick of your music. If I hear We Slaughtered Them and Laughed one more time, I’m going to throw the CD out the window and then I’ll wipe it off your computer too. As for you—” Moonglow whirled towards Vex. “You’re as bad. Worse in fact. When you moved in here, you were supposed to be acting like a responsible person, and you’ve just been a complete disaster from the first day. You buy clothes, makeup, boots, and you never save money even though I’ve told you time and again you need to. So we end up in a mess. And when I finally get it all sorted out, what happens? You help Kalix steal the money anyway. Probably because you were drunk at the time. You drink too much as well. I’m sick of you.”
Vex shrank back on the couch. “My foot hurts,” she said, but Moonglow showed no signs of sympathy.
“As for you, Kalix,” Moonglow continued. “I’m more than sick of you. I’m just completely fed up with your behavior. You can’t join in normal society. No matter how much we try to encourage you, you just spoil everything. You don’t save money for bills, probably because you’re spending it on alcohol and laudanum. You won’t eat, so you get ill; you cut yourself so you get even more ill. You’re hostile, unfriendly, you won’t let anyone help you, and you spend most of your time sulking in your room anyway. Have you any idea what a terrible flatmate you are? Why should I have to put up with that? We’ve helped you enough times; we’ve been understanding about everything, and what happens? You end up stealing from us. I’m sick of you. I’m sick of you all.”
Moonglow paused for breath, with every sign of launching into a fresh tirade, but was halted by the sudden arrival of the Fire Queen.
“Forgive me for interrupting,” said Malveria. “I hovered nearby for a while, enjoying your verbal assault, which is no doubt entirely justified.”
“I think it was unsympathetic,” said Vex.
“Silence, dismal niece. Every word of Moonglow’s was quite fair. It is a miracle she lasted so long before losing her temper with you. Moonglow, I do apologize for my niece’s appalling spendthrift ways and general idiocy. Agrivex. It’s time to return to the palace. I must attend to your healing. You should not have left, though I accept that it was spirited to insist on taking your exam.”
“Exam?” asked Moonglow. “You did your exam?”
Vex nodded.
“Did you do it too?”
“Yes,” muttered Kalix.
“Oh. I didn’t realize that. I thought you’d missed it.”
“So does that make everything all right?” asked Kalix, hopefully.
“No, it doesn’t. It makes it a bit better.” Moonglow’s anger faded slightly. She’d assumed that Kalix and Vex had missed their exam. She was slightly mollified, though not enough to forgive them for embarrassing her in front of her mother and her bank manager.
“I have just endured the most stressful meeting of my advisory council,” announced Malveria. “For some reason, there is a terrifying backlog of official business. Would a cup of tea perhaps be possible?”
Moonglow nodded, and her natural good manners pushed her bad temper temporarily aside. She went off to the kitchen to put the kettle on.
“Moonglow’s really mad at us,” sighed Vex.
“No wonder,” said her aunt. “You humiliated her in front of her mother. No one likes that. And her bank manager also. I am not sure what that entails, but I know Thrix hates it too.” Malveria studied Kalix for a moment. “Your aura is unusual. But it always has been. Not quite the same as other werewolves.”
Kalix didn’t reply. She knew she wasn’t quite the same as other werewolves.
“The eclipse spell didn’t affect your power to transform. Truly, you are very resistant to sorcery. I expect you ache now, most painfully?”
Kalix nodded.
“The effects of running around fighting while all other werewolves were suffering, I imagine. Though you resisted the spell, it still had its effects on you. You will hurt for some days to come, I’m sure.” The queen turned to Daniel. “The curse on yourself and Moonglow is lifted. Through Agrivex’s intervention, it’s now removed. So that is some good cheer for your household. Although—” She paused and gazed out the window at the terraced houses opposite. “It is one thing to pine in a romantic fashion for someone you are not allowed to have. It’s quite another when there is no barrier preventing the union. The prospect of romance, once unhindered, may not be quite as pleasant as you imagined.”
“Thanks for that,” said Daniel, not looking as happy as might have been expected.
Susi Surmata’s rustic little home was packed with clothes. Frocks, hats, shoes, and coats hung from the walls and over every available chair and table. The enchantress was briefly diverted from her mission. “This is a fantastic collection.”
“I’ve been collecting since I was a child,” sniffed Susi. “These days I get free samples as well.”
“Of course,” said Thrix. “Since you’ve transformed yourself into the nation’s most influential fashion blogger, you must get a lot of free clothes.”
Susi burst into tears again.
“I’d have thought that was a good thing.” Thrix looked at Dominil. “Isn’t that a good thing?”
“I believe she’s still crying about being a werewolf.”
“Yes, I suppose you’re right. Do you think that’s what made her blogs so effective? A love of clothes mixed in with angst about being a werewolf?”
“I thought I was alone…Oh, my life has been so terrible. My adopted parents kept it all secret when I grew up in Finland. I was an orphan, and they took me in when I was a baby. Since they died, I’ve hardly been able to stand it.”
Dominil felt herself losing patience. Tears annoyed her, and she found it offensive that anyone should be so upset about being a werewolf. “The MacRinnalchs like being werewolves,” she told Susi.
“Really?”
“Of course. We’re very civilized.”
“What do you do?”
“I kill people for money.”
Susi burst into tears again.
“Dominil! Try and be tactful. It must have come as a great shock to her, learning there are other werewolves. Susi, I suggest the best thing for you is to get straight back to work. A well-written review of my latest fashion collection would probably do wonders for your self-confidence.”
Susi didn’t seem to hear the enchantress. “Eventually I couldn’t stand it anymore. I hid my loneliness with my love of clothes—”
“I can understand that,” said Thrix.
“—but all those nighttime fashion shows became too much for me. I was always frightened I was going to lose control, change into a werewolf, and eat someone.”
“We don’t eat people.”
“Kalix might,” said Thrix, darkly. “But really, Susi, there’s no need to despair. There are plenty of werewolves at the castle in Scotland. Once you meet them, you’ll feel better. After you’ve written your article, you can go straight there.”
“It means so much to me to know there are other werewolves around. I thought I was a freak!” wailed Susi.
Thrix pursed her lips. “I really could do with that article being written.”
“I don’t want to write anymore! I want to go to Scotland and meet my fellow werewolves!”
Thrix moved a little closer to Susi. “Write the article,” she said, “or you won’t make it out of this room, never mind go to Scotland.”
“You told me werewolves were civilized creatures,” protested Susi. “Now you’re threatening me!”
“We did go to all the trouble of finding you,” said Dominil. “So why don’t you just get it done, and then we’ll send you off to Scotland.”
“Is the article really that important?”
“If Eldridges doesn’t buy my stock, I’m going to go out of business.”
Susi dried her eyes and looked thoughtful. “I did like your clothes. I suppose I could write it. Eldridges usually does what I tell them. I don’t think much of their chief buyer, really.”
“She’s an idiot,” agreed Thrix, “but she generally follows your advice.”
Dominil and Thrix retired to the kitchen to give Susi a moment to compose herself. Thrix looked with interest at the vintage clothes stacked on top of the washing machine.
“I hope she toughens up in Scotland,” said Dominil. “No one likes a werewolf who sobs all the time.”
Kalix sat with Decembrius in his car not far from her home. It was late in the night. The streets were deserted, and the nearest streetlamp wasn’t working, casting Decembrius’s car into a deep shadow.
“So where were we?” asked Decembrius.
“We weren’t anywhere.”
“I’m sure we were somewhere. That’s right. We slept together, then you robbed me.”
“I paid you back.”
Decembrius didn’t care at all that Kalix had taken his money and had been surprised when she repaid him. “It was a good night together anyway.”
“If you say so,” grunted Kalix.
Decembrius grinned. “I didn’t think it was so bad.”
“I did.”
“Didn’t sound like it at the time. I think you enjoyed it well enough.”
Kalix made a face. Decembrius never seemed abashed in any way. His confidence was intriguing, even if she still didn’t like him much.
Decembrius fiddled with the radio, trying to find music he liked.